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RECOGNITIONS OF CLEMENT
BOOK V
CHAP. I. -- PETER'S SALUTATION.
BUT on the following day, (1) Peter rising a little earlier than usual, found
us asleep; and when he saw it, he gave orders that silence should be kept for
him, as though he himself wished to sleep longer, that we might not be disturbed
in our rest. But when we rose refreshed with sleep, we found him, having finished
his prayer, waiting for us in his bed-chamber. And as it was already dawn,
he addressed us shortly, saluting us according to his custom, and forthwith
proceeded to the usual place for the purpose of teaching; and when he saw that
many had assembled there, having invoked peace upon them according to the first
religious form, he began to speak as follows: --
CHAP. II. -- SUFFERING THE EFFECT OF SIN.
"God,
the Creator of all, at the beginning made man after His own image, and gave
him dominion
over
the earth and sea, and over the air; as the true
Prophet has told us, and as the very reason of things instructs us: for man
alone is rational, and it is fitting that reason should rule over the irrational.
At first, therefore, while he was still righteous, he was superior to all disorders
and all frailty; but when he sinned, as we taught you yesterday, and became
the servant of sin, he became at the same time liable to frailty. This therefore
is written, that men may know that, as by impiety they have been made liable
to suffer, so by piety they may be made free from suffering; and not only free
from suffering, but by even a little faith in God be able to cure the sufferings
of others. For thus the true Prophet promised us, saying, 'Verily I say to
you, that if ye have faith as a grain of mustard seed, ye shall say to this
mountain, Remove hence, and it shall remove.' (2) Of this saving you have yourselves
also had proofs; for you saw yesterday how at our presence the demons removed
and were put to flight, with those sufferings which they had brought upon men.
CHAP. III. -- FAITH AND UNBELIEF.
"Whereas
therefore some men suffer, and others cure those who suffer, it is necessary,
to know
the cause
at once of the suffering and the cure; and
this is proved to be nought else than unbelief on the part of the sufferers,
and faith on the part of those who cure them. For unbelief, while it does not
believe that there is to be a judgment by God, affords licence to sin, and
sin makes men liable to sufferings; but faith, believing that there is to be
a judgment of God, restrains men from sin; and those who do not sin are not
only free from demons and sufferings, but can also put to flight the demons
and sufferings of others.
CHAP. IV.--IGNORANCE THE MOTHER OF EVILS.
"From
(1) all these things, therefore, it is concluded that all evil springs from
ignorance;
and ignorance
herself, the mother of all evils, is
sprung from carelessness and sloth, and is nourished, and increased, and rooted
in the senses of men by negligence; and if any one teach that she is to be
put to flight, she is with difficulty and indignantly torn away, as from an
ancient and hereditary abode. And therefore we must labour for a little, that
we may search out the presumptions of ignorance, and cut them off by means
of knowledge, especially in those who are preoccupied with some erroneous opinions,
by means of which ignorance is the more firmly rooted in them, as under the
appearance of a certain kind of knowledge; for nothing is worse than for one
to believe that he knows what he is ignorant of, and to maintain that to be
true which is false. This is as if a drunk man should think himself to be sober,
and should act indeed in all respects as a drunk man, and yet think himself
to be sober, and should wish to be called so by others. Thus, therefore, are
those also who do not know what is true, yet hold some appearance of knowledge,
and do many evil things as if they were good, and hasten destruction as if
it were to salvation.
CHAP. V. -- ADVANTAGES OF KNOWLEDGE.
"Wherefore
we must, above all things, hasten to the knowledge of the truth, that, as
with a light
kindled
thereat, we may be able to dispel the
darkness of errors: for ignorance, as we have said, is a great evil; but because
it has no substance, it is easily dispelled by those who are: in earnest. For
ignorance is nothing else than not knowing what is good for us; once know this,
and ignorance perishes. Therefore the knowledge of truth ought to be eagerly
sought after; and no one can confer it except the true Prophet. For this is
the gate of life to those who will enter, and the road of good works to those
going to the city of salvation.
CHAP. VI. -- FREE-WILL.
"Whether
any one, truly hearing the word of of the true Prophet; is willing or unwilling
to
receive it, and
to embrace His burden, that is, the precepts
of life, he has either in his power, for we are free in will. (2) For if it
were so, that those who hear had it not in their power to do otherwise than
they had heard, there were some power of nature in virtue of which it were
not free to him to pass over to another opinion. Or if, again, no one of the
hearers could at all receive it, this also were a power of nature which should
compel the doing of some one thing, and should leave no place for the other
course. But now, since it is free for the mind to turn its judgment to which
side it pleases, and to choose the way which it approves, it is clearly manifest
that there is in men a liberty of choice.
CHAP. VII. -- RESPONSIBILITY OF KNOWLEDGE.
"Therefore,
before any one hears what is good for him, it is certain that he is ignorant;
and
being
ignorant, he wishes and desires to do what is
not good for him; wherefore he is not judged for that. But when once he has
heard the causes of his error, and has received the method of truth, then,
if he remain in those errors with which he had been long ago preoccupied, he
shall rightly be called into judgment, to suffer punishment, because he has
spent in the sport of errors that portion of life which was given him to be
spent in living well. But he who, hearing those things, willingly receives
them, and is thankful that the teaching of good things has been brought to
him, inquires more eagerly, and does not cease to learn, until he ascertains
whether there be truly another world, in which rewards are prepared for the
good. And when he is assured of this, he gives thanks to God because He has
shown him the light of truth; and for the future directs his actions in all
good works, for which he is assured that there is a reward prepared in the
world to come; while he constantly wonders and is astonished at the errors
of other men, and that no one sees the truth which is placed before his eyes.
Yet he himself, rejoicing in the riches of wisdom which he hath found, desires
insatiably to enjoy them, and is delighted with the practice of good works;
hastening to attain, with a clean heart and a pure conscience, the world to
come, when he shall be able even to see God, the king of all.
CHAP. VIII. -- DESIRES OF THE FLESH TO BE SUBDUED.
"But
the sole cause of our wanting and being deprived of all these things is ignorance.
For while
men
do not know how much good there is in knowledge,
they do not suffer the evil of ignorance to be removed from them; for they
know not how great a difference is involved in the change of one of these things
for the other. Wherefore I counsel every learner willingly to lend his ear
to the word of God, and to hear with love of the truth what we say, that his
mind, receiving the best seed, may bring forth joyful fruits by good deeds.
For if, while I teach the things which pertain to salvation, any one refuses
to receive them, and strives to resist them with a mind occupied by evil opinions,
he shall have the cause of his perishing, not from us, but from himself. For
it is his duty to examine with just judgment the things which we say, and to
understand that we speak the words of truth, that, knowing how things are,
and directing his life in good actions, he may be found a partaker of the kingdom
of heaven, subjecting to himself the desires of the flesh, and becoming lord
of them, that so at length he himself also may become the pleasant possession
of the Ruler of all.
CHAP. IX. -- THE TWO KINGDOMS.
"For
he who persists in evil, and is the servant of evil, cannot be made a portion
of good so
long as he
persists in evil, because from the beginning,
as we have said, God instituted two kingdoms, and has given to each man the
power of becoming a portion of that kingdom to which he shall yield himself
to obey. And since it is decreed by God that no one man can be a servant of
both kingdoms, therefore endeavour with all earnestness to betake yourselves
to the covenant and laws of the good King. Wherefore also the true Prophet,
when He was present with us, and saw some rich men negligent with respect to
the worship of God, thus unfolded the truth of this matter: 'No one,' said
He, 'can serve two masters; ye cannot serve God and mammon; '(1) calling riches,
in the language of His country, mammon.
CHAP. X. -- JESUS THE TRUE PROPHET.
"He
therefore is the true Prophet, who appeared to us, as you have heard, in
Judaea, who,
standing
in public places, by a simple command made the blind
see, the deaf hear, cast out demons, restored health to the sick, and life
to the dead; and since nothing was impossible to Him, He even perceived the
thoughts of men, which is possible for none but God only. He proclaimed the
kingdom of God; and we believed Him as a true Prophet in all that He spoke,
deriving the confirmation of our faith not only from His words, but also from
His works; and also because the sayings of the law, which many generations
before had set forth His coming, were fulfilled in Him; and the figures of
the doings of Moses, and of the patriarch Jacob before him, bore in all respects
a type of Him. It is evident also that the time of His advent, that is, the
very time at which He came, was foretold by them; and, above all, it was contained
in the sacred writings, that He was to be waited for by the Gentiles. And all
these things were equally fulfilled in Him.
CHAP. XI. -- THE EXPECTATION OF THE GENTILES
• But
that which a prophet of the Jews foretold, that He was to be waited for by
the Gentiles,
(2) confirms
above measure the faith of truth in Him.
For if he had said that He was to be waited for by the Jews, he would not have
seemed to prophesy anything extraordinary, that He whose coming had been promised
for the salvation of the world should be the object of hope to the people of
the same tribe with Himself, and to His own nation: for that this would take
place, would seem rather to be a matter of natural inference than one requiring
the grandeur of a prophetic utterance. But now, whereas the prophets say that
all that hope which is set forth concerning the salvation of the world, and
the newness of the kingdom which is to be established by Christ, and all things
which are declared concerning Him are to be transferred to the Gentiles; the
grandeur of the prophetic office is confirmed, not according to the sequence
of things, but by an incredible fulfilment of the prophecy. For the Jews from
the beginning had understood by a most certain tradition that this man should
at some time come, by whom all things should be restored; and daily meditating
and looking out for His coming, when they saw Him amongst them, and accomplishing
the signs and miracles, as had been written of Him, being blinded with envy,
they could not recognise Him when present, in the hope of whom they rejoiced
while He was absent; yet the few of us who were chosen by Him understood it.
CHAP. XII. -- CALL OF THE GENTILES.
"But
this happened by the providence of God, that the knowledge of this good One
should be handed
over
to the Gentiles, and those who had never heard
of Him, nor had learned from the prophets, should acknowledge Him, while those
who had acknowledged Him in their daily meditations should not know Him. For,
behold, by you who are now present, and desire to hear the doctrine of His
faith, and to know what, and how, and of what sort is His coming, the prophetic
truth is fulfilled. For this is what the prophets foretold, that He is to he
sought for by you, who never heard of Him. (3) And, therefore, seeing that
the prophetic sayings are fulfilled even in yourselves, you rightly believe
in Him alone, you rightly wait for Him, you rightly inquire concerning Him,
that you not only may wait for Him, but also believing, you may obtain the
inheritance of His kingdom; according to what Himself said, that every one
is made the servant of him to whom he yields subjection. (1)
CHAP. XIII. -- INVITATION OF THE GENTILES.
"Wherefore
awake, and take to yourselves our Lord and God, even that Lord who is Lord
both
of heaven
and earth, and conform yourselves to His image
and likeness, as the true Prophet Himself teaches, saying, 'Be ye merciful,
as also your heavenly Father is merciful, who makes His sun to rise upon the
good and the evil, and rains upon the just and the unjust.' (2) Imitate Him,
therefore, and fear Him, as the commandment is given to men, 'Thou shall worship
the Lord thy God, and Him only shalt thou serve.' (3) For it is profitable
to you to serve this Lord alone, that through Him knowing the one God, ye may
be freed from the many whom ye vainly feared. For he who fears not God the
Creator of all, but fears those whom he himself with his own hands hath made,
what does he do but make himself subject to a vain and senseless fear, and
render himself more vile and abject than those very things, the fear of which
he has conceived in his mind? But rather, by the goodness of Him who inviteth
you, return to your former nobleness, and by good deeds show that you bear
the image of your Creator, that by contemplation of His likeness ye may be
believed to be even His sons.
CHAP. XIV. -- IDOLS UNPROFITABLE.
"Begin,
(4) therefore, to cast out of your minds the vain ideas of idols, and your
useless and empty
fears, that at the same time you may also escape
tim condition of unrighteous bondage. For those have become your lords, who
could not even have been profitable servants to you. For how should lifeless
images seem fit even to serve you, when they can neither hear, nor see, nor
feel anything? Yea, even the material of which they are made, whether it be
gold or silver, or even brass or wood, though it might have profiled yon for
necessary uses, you have rendered wholly inefficient and useless by fashioning
gods out of it. We therefore declare to you the true worship of God, and at
the same time warn and exhort the worshippers, that by good deeds they, imitate
Him whom they worship, and hasten to return to His image and likeness, as we
said before.
CHAP. XV. -- FOLLY OF IDOLATRY.
"But
I should like if those who worship idols would tell me if they wish to become
like to those
whom
they worship? Does any one of you wish to see
in such sort as they see? or to hear after the manner of their hearing? or
to have such understanding as they have? Far be this from any of my hearers!
For this were rather to be thought a curse and a reproach to a man, who bears
in himself the image of God, although he has lost the likeness. What sort of
gods, then, are they to be reckoned, the imitation of whom would be execrable
to their worshippers, and to have whose likeness would be a reproach? What
then? Melt your useless images, and make useful vessels. Melt the unserviceable
and inactive metal, and make implements fit for the use of men. But, says one,
human laws do not allow us. (5) He says well; for it is human laws, and not
their own power, that prevents it. What kind of gods, then, are those which
are defended by human laws, and not by their own energies? And so also they
are preserved from thieves by watch-dogs and the protection of bolts, at least
if they be of silver, or gold, or even of brass; for those that are of stone
and earthenware are protected by their own worthlessness, for no one will steal
a stone or a crockery god. Hence those seem to be the more miserable whose
more precious metal exposes them to the greater danger. Since, then, they can
be stolen, since they must be guarded by men, since they can be melted, and
weighed out, and forged with hammers, ought men possessed of understanding
to hold them as gods?
CHAP XVI. -- GOD ALONE A FIT OBJECT OF WORSHIP.
"Oh!
into what wretched plight the understanding of men has fallen! For if it
is reckoned the greatest
folly
to fear the dead, what shall we judge
of those who fear something that is worse than the dead are? For those images
are not even to be reckoned among the number of the dead, because they were
never alive. Even the sepulchres of the dead are preferable to them, since,
although they are now dead, yet they once had life; but those whom yon worship
never possessed even such base life as is in all, the life of frogs and owls.
But why say more about them, since it is enough to say to him who adores them:
Do you not see that he whom you adore sees not, hear that he whom you adore
hears not, and understand that he understands not? -- for he is the work of
man's hand, and necessarily is void of understanding. You therefore worship
a god without sense, whereas every one who has sense believes that not even
those things are to be worshipped which have been made by God and have sense,
(6) such as the sun, moon, and stars, and all things that are in heaven and
upon earth. For they think it reasonable, that not those things which have
been made for the service of the world, but the Creator of those things themselves,
and of the whole world, should be worshipped. For even these things rejoice
when He is adored and worshipped, and do not take it well that the honour of
the Creator should be bestowed on the creature. For the worship of God alone
is acceptable to them, who alone is uncreated, and all things also are His
creatures. For as it belongs to him who alone is uncreated to be God, so everything
that has been created is not truly God.
CHAP. XVII.-- SUGGESTIONS OF THE OLD SERPENT.
"Above
all, therefore, you ought to understand the deception of the old serpent
(1) and his cunning
suggestions, who deceives you as it were by prudence,
and as by a sort of reason creeps through your senses; and beginning at the
head, he glides through your inner marrow, accounting the deceiving of you
a great gain. Therefore he insinuates into your minds opinions of gods of whatsoever
kinds, only that he may withdraw yon from the faith of one God knowing that
your sin is his comfort. For he, for his wickedness, was condemned from the
beginning to eat dust, for that he caused to be again resolved into dust him
who had been taken from the dust, even till the time when your souls shall
be restored, being brought through the fire; as we shall instruct you more
fully at another time. From him, therefore, proceed all the errors and doubts,
by which you are driven from the faith and belief of one God.
CHAP. XVIII. -- HIS FIRST SUGGESTION.
"And
first of all he suggests to men's thoughts not to hear the words of truth,
by which they
might put
to flight the ignorance of those things which
are evils. And this he does, as by the presentation of another knowledge, making
a show of that opinion which very many hold, to think that they shall not be
held guilty if they have been in ignorance, and that they shall not be called
to account for what they have not heard; and thereby he persuades them to turn
aside from hearing the word. But I tell you, in opposition to this, that ignorance
is in itself a most deadly poison, which is sufficient to ruin the soul without
any aid from without. And therefore there is no one who is ignorant who shall
escape through his ignorance, bill it is certain that he shall perish. For
the power of sin naturally destroys the sinner. But since the judgment shall
be according to reason, the cause and origin of ignorance shall be inquired
into, as well as of every sin. For he who is unwilling to know how he may attain
to life, and prefers to be in ignorance lest he thereby be made guilty, from
this very fact is judged as if he knew and had knowledge. For he knew what
it was that he was unwilling to hear; and the cunning obtained by the artifice
of the serpent will avail him nothing for an excuse, for he will have to do
with Him to whom the heart is open. But that you may know that ignorance of
itself brings destruction, I assure you that when the soul departs from the
body, if it leave it in ignorance of Him by whom it was created, and from whom
in this world it obtained all things that were necessary for its uses, it is
driven forth from the light of His kingdom as ungrateful and unfaithful.
CHAP. XlX. -- HIS SECOND SUGGESTION.
"Again,
the wicked serpent suggests another opinion to men, which many of you are
in the habit
of bringing
forward, -- that there is, as we say, one
God, who is Lord of all; but these also, they say, are gods. For as there is
one Caesar, and he has under him many judges, -- for example, prefects, consuls,
tribunes, and other officers, -- in like manner we think, that while there
is one God greater than all, yet still that these gods are ordained in this
world, after the likeness of those officers of whom we have spoken, subject
indeed to that greater God, yet ruling us and the things that are in this world.
In answer to this, I shall show you how, in those very things which you propose
for deception, you are confuted by the reasons of truth. You say that God occupies
the place of Caesar, and those who are called gods represent His judges and
officers. Hold then, as you have adduced it, by the example of Caesar; and
know that, as one of Caesar's judges or administrators, as prefects, proconsuls,
generals, or tribunes, may lawfully take the name of Caesar,--or else both
he who should take it and those who should confer it should be destroyed together,
-- so also m this case yon ought to observe, that if any one give the name
of God to any but Himself, and he accept it, they shall partake one and the
same destruction, by a much more terrible fate than the servants of Caesar.
For he who offends against Caesar shall undergo temporal destruction; but he
who offends against Him who is the sole and true God, shall suffer eternal
punishment, and that deservedly, as having injured by a wrongful condition
the name which is unique. (2)
CHAP. XX. -- EGYPTIAN IDOLATRY.
"Although
this word GOD is pot the name of God, but meantime that word is employed
by men as
His name;
and therefore, as I have said, when it is used
reproachfully, the reproach is referred to the injury of the true name. In
short, the ancient Egyptians, who thought that they had discovered the theory
of the heavenly revolutions and the nature of the stars, nevertheless, through
the demon's blocking up their senses, subjected the incommunicable name to
all kinds of indignity. For some taught that their ox, which is called Apis,
ought to be worshipped; others taught that the he-goat, others that cats, the
ibis, a fish also, a serpent, onions, drains, crepitus ventris, ought to be
regarded as deities, and innumerable other things, which I am ashamed even
to mention."
CHAP. XXI. -- EGYPTIAN IDOLATRY MORE REASONABLE THAN OTHERS.
When Peter
was speaking thus, all we who heard him laughed. Then said Peter: "You
laugh at the absurdities of others, because through long custom you do not
see your own. For indeed it is not without reason that you laugh at the folly
of the Egyptians, who worship dumb animals, while they themselves are rational.
But I will tell you how they also laugh at you; for they say, We worship living
animals, though mortal; but you worship and adore things which never were alive
at all. They add this also, that they are figures and allegories of certain
powers by whose help the race of men is governed. Taking refuge in this for
shame, they fabricate these and similar excuses, and so endeavour to screen
their error. But this is not the time to answer the Egyptians, and leaving
the care of those who are present to heal the disease of the absent. For it
is a certain indication that you are held to be free from sickness of this
sort, since you do not grieve over it as your own, but laugh at it as that
of others.
CHAP. XXII. -- SECOND SUGGESTION CONTINUED.
"But
let us come back to you, whose opinion it is that God should be regarded
as Caesar, and
the gods as
the ministers and deputies of Caesar. Follow
me attentively, and I shall presently show you the lurking-places of the serpent,
which lie in the crooked windings of this argument. It ought to be regarded
by all as certain and beyond doubt, that no creature can be on a level with
God, because He was made by none, but Himself made all things; nor indeed can
any one be found so irrational, as to suppose that the thing made can be compared
with the maker. If therefore the human mind, not only by reason, but even by
a sort of natural instinct, rightly holds this opinion, that that is called
God to which nothing can be compared or equalled, but which exceeds all and
excels all; how can it be supposed that that name which is believed to be above
all, is rightly given to those whom you think to be employed for the service
and com- fort of human life? But we shall add this also. This world was undoubtedly
made, and is corruptible, as we shall show more fully by and by; meantime it
is admitted both that it has been made and that it is corruptible. If therefore
the world cannot be called God, and rightly so, because it is corruptible,
how shall parts of the world take the name of God? For inasmuch as the whole
world cannot be God, much more its parts cannot. Therefore, if we come back
to the example of Caesar, you will see how far you are in error. It is not
lawful for any one, though a man of the same nature with him, to be com- pared
with Caesar: do you think, then, that any one ought to be compared with God,
who excels all in this respect, that He was made by none, but Himself made
all things? But, indeed, you dare not give the name of Caesar to any other,
because he immediately punishes one who offends against him; you dare give
that of God to others, because He delays the punishment of offenders against
Him, in order to their repentance.
CHAP. XXIII. -- THIRD SUGGESTION.
"Through
the mouths of others also that serpent is wont to speak in this wise: We
adore visible
images
in honour of the invisible God. (1) Now this
is most certainly false. For if you really wished to worship the image of God,
you would do good to man, and so worship the true image of God in him. For
the image of God is in every man, though His likeness is not in all, but where
the soul is benign anti the mind pure. If, therefore, you wish truly to honour
the image of God, we declare to you what is true, that you should do good to
and pay honour and reverence to man, who is made in the image of God; that
you minister food to the hungry, drink to the thirsty, clothing to the naked,
hospitality to the stranger, and necessary things to the prisoner; and that
is what will be regarded as truly bestowed upon God. And so far do these things
go to the honour of God's image, that he who does not these things is regarded
as casting reproach upon the divine image. What, then, is that honour of God
which consists in running from one stone or wooden figure to another, in venerating
empty and lifeless figures as deities, and despising men in whom the image
of God is of a truth? Yea, rather be assured, that whoever commits murder or
adultery, or anything that causes suffering or injury to men, in all these
the image of God is violated. For to injure men is a great impiety towards
God. Whenever, therefore, you do to another what you would not have another
do to you, you defile the image of God with undeserved distresses. Understand,
therefore, that that is the suggestion of the serpent lurking within you, which
persuades you that you may seem to be pious when you worship insensible things,
and may not seem impious when you injure sensible and rational beings.
CHAP. XXIV.--FOURTH SUGGESTION.
"But
to these things the serpent answers us with another mouth, and says: If God
did not wish
these things
to he, then they should not be. I am not telling
you how it is that many contrary things are permitted to be in this world for
the probation of every one's mind. But this is what is suitable to be said
in the meantime: If, according to you, everything that was to be worshipped
ought not to have been, there would have been almost nothing in this world.
For what is there that you have left without worshipping it? The sun, the moon,
the stars, the water, the earth, mountains, trees, stones, men; there is no
one of these that ye have not worshipped. According to your saying, therefore,
none of these ought to have been made by God, that you might not have anything
that you could worship! Yea, He ought not even to have made men themselves
to be the worshippers! But this is the very thing which that serpent which
lurks within you desires: for he spares none of you; he would have no one of
you escape from destruction. But it shall not be so. For I tell you, that not
that which is worshipped is in fault, but he who worships. For with God is
righteous judgment; and He judges in one way the sufferer, and in another way
the doer, of wrong.
CHAP. XXV.--FIFTH SUGGESTION.
"But
you say: Then those who adore what ought not to be adored, should be immediately
destroyed
by God,
to prevent others doing the like. But are
you wiser than God, that you should offer Him counsel?(1) He knows what to
do. For with all who are placed in ignorance He exercises patience, because
He is merciful and gracious; and He foresees that many of the ungodly become
godly, and that even some of those who worship impure statues and polluted
images have been converted to God, and forsaking their sins and doing good
works, attain to salvation. But it is said: We ought never to have come even
to the thought of doing these things. You do not know what freedom of will
is, and you forget that he is good who is so by his own intention; but, he
who is retained in goodness by necessity cannot be called good, because it
is not of himself that he is so. Because, therefore, there is in every one
liberty to choose good or evil, he either acquires rewards, or brings destruction
on himself. Nay it is said, God brings to our minds whatsoever we think. What
mean ye, O then? Ye blaspheme. For if He brings all our thoughts into our minds,
then it is He that suggests to us thoughts of adultery, and covetousness, and
blasphemy, and every kind of effeminacy. Cease, I entreat of you, these blasphemies,
and understand what is the honour worthy of God. And say not, as some of you
are wont to say, that God needs not honour from men. Indeed, He truly is in
need of none; but you ought to know that tile honour which you bestow upon
God is profitable to yourselves. For what is so execrable, as for a man not
to render thanks to his Creator?
CHAP. XXVI.--SIXTH SUGGESTION.
"But
it is said: We do better, who give thanks both to Himself, and to all with
Him. In this
you do not
understand that there is the ruin of your
salvation. For it is as if a sick man should call in for his cure at once a
physician and poisoners; since these could indeed injure him, but not cure
him; and the true physician would refuse to mix his remedies with their poisons,
lest either the man's destruction should be ascribed to the good, or his recovery,
to the injurious. But you say: Is God then indignant or envious, if, when He
benefits us, our thanks be rendered to others? Even if He be not indignant,
at all events He does not wish to be the author of error, that by means of
His work credit should be given to a vain idol. And what is so impious, so
ungrateful, as to obtain a benefit from God, and to render thanks to blocks
of wood and stone? Wherefore arise, and understand your salvation. For God
is in need of no one, nor does He require anything, nor is He hurt by anything;
but we are either helped or hurt, in that we are grateful or ungrateful. For
what does God gain from our praises, or what does He lose by our blasphemies?
Only this we must remember, that God brings into proximity and friendship with
Himself the soul that renders thanks to Him. But the wicked demon possesses
the ungrateful soul.
CHAP. XXVII.CREATURES TAKE VENGEANCE ON SINNERS.
"But
this also I would have you know, that upon such souls God does not take vengeance
directly,
but
His whole creation rises up and inflicts punishments
upon the impious; and although in the present world the goodness of God bestows
the light of the world and the services of the earth alike upon the pious and
the impious, yet not without grief does the sun afford his light, and the other
elements perform their service, to the impious. And, in short, sometimes even
in opposition to the goodness of the Creator, the elements are wearied out
by the crimes of the wicked; and thence it is that either the fruit of the
earth is blighted, or the composition of the air is vitiated, or the heat of
the sun is increased beyond measure, or there is an excessive amount of rain
or of cold. Thence pestilence, and famine, and death in various forms stalk
forth, for the creature hastens to take vengeance on the wicked; yet the goodness
of God restrains it, and bridles its indignation against the wicked, and compels
it to be obedient to His mercy, rather than to be inflamed by the sins and
the crimes of men. For the patience of God waiteth for the conversion of men,
as long as they are ill this body.
CHAP. XXVIII.--ETERNITY OF PUNISHMENTS.
"But
if any persist in impiety till the end of life, then as soon as the soul,
which is immortal,
departs,
it shall pay the penalty of its persistence
in impiety. For even the souls of the impious are immortal, though perhaps
they themselves would wish them to end with their bodies. But it is not so;
for they endure without end the torments of eternal fire, and to their destruction
they have not the quality of mortality. But perhaps you will say to me, You
terrify us, O Peter. And how shall we speak to you the things which are in
reality? Can we declare to you the truth by keeping silence? We cannot state
the things which are, otherwise than as they are. But if we were silent, we
should make ourselves the cause of the ignorance that is ruinous to you, and
should satisfy the serpent that lurks within you, and blocks up your senses,
who cunningly suggests these things to you, that he may make you always the
enemies of God. But we are sent for this end, that we may betray his disguises
to you; and melting your enmities, may reconcile you to God, that you may be
converted to Him, and may please Him by good works. For man is at enmity with
God, and is in an unreasonable and impious state of mind and wicked disposition
towards Him, especially when he thinks that he knows something, and is in ignorance.
But when you lay aside these, and begin to he pleased and displeased with the
same things which please and displease God, and to will what God willeth then
ye shall truly be called His friends.
CHAP. XXIX.--GOD'S CARE OF HUMAN THINGS.
"But
perhaps some of you will say, God has no care of human things; and if we
cannot even attain
to the
knowledge of Him, how shall we attain to His
friendship? That God does concern Himself with the affairs of men, His government
of the world bears witness: for the sun daily waits upon it, the showers minister
to it; the fountains, rivers, winds, and all elements, attend upon it; and
the more these things become known to men, the more do they indicate God's
care over men. For unless by the power of the. Most High, the more powerful
would never minister to the inferior; and by this God is shown to have not
only a care over men, but some great affection, since He has deputed such noble
elements to their service. But that men may also attain to the friendship of
God, is proved to us by the example of those to whose prayers He has been so
favourable, that He has withheld the heaven from rain when they wished, and
has again opened it when they prayed.(1) And many other things He has bestowed
upon those who does His will, which could not be bestowed but upon His friends.
But you will say, What harm is done to God if these things also are worshipped
by us? If any one of you should pay to another the honour that is due to his
father, from whom he has received innumerable benefits, and should reverence
a stranger and foreigner as his father, should you not think that he was undutiful
towards his father, and most deserving to be disinherited?
CHAP. XXX.--RELIGION OF FATHERS TO BE ABANDONED.
"Others
say, It is wicked if we do not worship those idols which have come down to
us from our
fathers,
and prove false to the religion bequeathed
to us by our ancestors. On this principle, if any one's father was a robber
or a base fellow, he ought not to change the manner of life handed down to
him by his fathers, nor to be recalled from his father's errors to a better
way; and it is reckoned impious if one do not sin with his parents, or does
not persist in impiety with them. Others say, We ought not to be troublesome
to God, and to be always burdening Him with complaints of our miseries, or
with the exigencies of our petitions. How foolish and witless an answer! Do
you think it is troublesome to God if you thank Him for His benefits, while
you do not think it troublesome to Him if, for His gifts, you render thanks
to stocks and stones? And how comes it, that when rain is withheld in a long
drought, we all turn our eyes to heaven, and entreat the gift of rain from
God Almighty, and all of us with oar little ones pour out prayers on God and
entreat His compassion? But truly ungrateful souls, when they obtain the blessing,
quickly forget: for as soon as they have gathered in their harvest or their
vintage, straightway they offer the first-fruits to deaf and dumb images, and
pay vows in temples or groves for those things which God has bestowed upon
them, and then offer sacrifices to demons; and having received a favour, deny
the bestower of the favour.(1)
CHAP. XXXI.--PAGANISM, ITS ENORMITIES.
"But
some say, These things are instituted for the sake of joy, and for refreshing
our minds;
and they
have been devised for this end, that the human
mind may be relaxed for a little from cares and sorrows. See now what a charge
you yourselves bring upon the things which you practise. If these things have
been invented for the purpose of lightening sorrow and affording enjoyment,
how is it that the invocations of demons are performed in groves and woods?
What is the meaning of the insane whirlings, and the slashing of limbs, and
the cutting off of members? How is it that mad rage is produced in them? How
is insanity produced? How is it that women are driven violently, raging with
dishevelled hair? Whence the shrieking and gnashing of teeth? Whence the bellowing
of the heart and the bowels, and all those things which, whether they are pretended
or are contrived by the ministration of demons, are exhibited to the terror
of the foolish and ignorant? Are these things done for the sake of lightening
the mind, or rather for the sake of oppressing it? Do ye not yet perceive nor
understand, that these are the counsels of the serpent lurking within you,
which draws yon away from the apprehension of truth by irrational suggestions
of errors, that he may hold you as slaves and servants of lust and concupiscence
and every disgraceful thing?
CHAP. XXXII.--TRUE RELIGION CALLS TO SOBRIETY AND MODESTY.
"But
I protest to you with the clear voice of preaching, that, on the contrary,
the religion
of God
calls you to sobriety and modesty; orders you
to refrain from effeminacy and madness, and by patience and gentleness to prevent
the inroads of anger; to be content with your own possessions, and with the
virtue of frugality; not even when driven by poverty to plunder the goods of
others, bat in all things to observe justice; to withdraw yourselves wholly
from the idol sacrifices: for by these things you invite demons to you, and
of your own accord give them the power of entering into you; and so you admit
that which is the cause either of madness or of unlawful love.
CHAP. XXXIII.--ORIGIN OF IMPIETY.
"Hence
is the origin of all impiety; hence murders, adulteries, thefts; and a nursery
is formed
of all
evils anti wickednesses, while you indulge in
profane libations and odours, and give to wicked spirits an opportunity of
ruling and obtaining some sort of authority over you. For when they invade
your senses, what do they else than work the things which belong to lust and
injustice and cruelty, and compel you to be obedient to all things that are
pleasing to them? God, indeed, permits you to suffer this at their hands by
a certain righteous judgment, that from the very disgrace of your doings and
your feelings you may understand how unworthy it is to be subject to demons
and not to God. Hence also, by the friendship of demons, men are brought to
disgraceful and base deeds; hence, men proceed even to the destruction of life,
either through the fire of lust, or through the madness of anger through excess
of grief, so that, as is well(2) known, some have even laid violent hands upon
themselves. And this, as we have said, by a just sentence of God they are not
prevented from doing, that they may both understand to whom they have yielded
themselves in subjection, and know whom they have forsaken.
CHAP. XXXIV.--WHO ARE WORSHIPPERS OF GOD?
"But
some one will say, These passions sometimes befall even those who worship
God. It is not
true. For
we say, that he is a worshipper of God, who
does the will of God, and observes the precepts of His law. For in God's estimation
he is not a Jew who is called a Jew among men (nor is he a Gentile that is
called a Gentile), but he who, believing in God, fulfils His law and does His
will, though he be not circumcised.(3) He is the true worshipper of God, who
not only is himself free from passions, but also sets others free from them;
though they be so heavy that they are like mountains, he removes them by means
of the faith with which he believes in God. Yea, by faith be truly removes
mountains with their trees, if it be necessary. But be who seems to worship
Cool, but is neither fortified by a full faith, nor by obedience to the commandments,
but is a sinner, has given a place in himself, by reason of his sins, to passions,
which are appointed of God for the punishment of those who sin, that they may
exact from them the deserts of their sins by means of punishments inflicted,
and may bring them purified to the general judgment of all, provided always
that their faith do not fail them in their chastisement. For the chastisement
of unbelievers in the present life is a judgment, by which they begin to be
separated from future blessings; but the chastisement of those who worship
God, while it is inflicted upon them for sins into which they have fallen,
exacts from them the due of what they have done, that, preventing the judgment,
they may pay the debt of their sin in the present life, and be freed, at least
in half, from the eternal punishments which are there prepared.
CHAP. XXXV.--JUDGMENT TO COME.
"But
he does not receive these things as true who does not believe that there
is to be a judgment
of God,
and therefore, being bound by the pleasures
of the present life, is shut out from eternal good things; and therefore we
do not neglect to proclaim to you what we know to be necessary for your salvation,
and to show you what is the true worship of God, that, believing in God, you
may be able, by means of good works, to be heirs with us of the world to come.
But if you are not yet convinced that what we say is true, meantime, in the
first instance, you ought not to take it amiss and to be hostile to us because
we announce to you the things which we consider to be good, and because we
do not grudge to bestow also upon you that which we believe brings salvation
to ourselves, labouring, as I have said, with all eagerness, that we may have
you as fellow-heirs of the blessings which we believe are to befall ourselves.
But whether those things which we declare to you are certainly true, you shall
not be able to know otherwise than by rendering obedience to the things which
are commanded, that you may be taught by the issue of things, and the most
certain end of blessedness.
CHAP. XXXVI.--CONCLUSION OF DISCOURSE.
"And, therefore, although the serpent lurking within you occupies your
senses with a thou sand arts of corruption, and throws in your way a thousand
obstacles, by which he may turn you away from the hearing of saving instruction,
all the more ought you to resist him, anti despising his suggestions, to come
together the more frequently to hear the word and receive instruction from
us, because nobody can learn anything who is not taught."(1)
And when he had done speaking, he ordered those to be brought to him who were
oppressed by sickness or demons, and laid his hands upon them with prayer;
and so he dismissed the crowds, charging them to resort to the hearing of the
word during the days that he was to remain there. Therefore, when the crowds
had departed, Peter washed his body in the waters which ran through the garden,
with as many of the others as chose to do so; and then ordered the couches
to be spread on the ground under a very shady tree, and directed us to recline
according to the order established at Caesarea. And thus, having taken food
and given thanks to God after the manner of the Hebrews, as there was yet some
portion of the day remaining, he ordered us to question him on any matters
that we pleased. And although we were with him twenty in all, he explained
to every one whatever he pleased to ask of him; the particulars of which I
set down in books and sent to you some time ago. And when evening came we entered
with him into the lodging, and went to sleep, each one in his own place.
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