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RECOGNITIONS OF CLEMENT
BOOK X
CHAP. I.--PROBATION.
But in
the morning, after sunrise, I Clement, and Niceta and Aquila, along with
Peter, came to the
apartment
in which my father and mother were sleeping;
and finding them still asleep, we sat down before the door, when Peter addressed
us in such terms as these:[1] "Listen to me, most beloved fellow-servants:
I know that you have a great affection for your father; therefore I am afraid
that you will urge him too soon to take upon himself the yoke of religion,
while he is not yet prepared for it; and to this he may perhaps consent, through
his affection for you. Bat this is not to be depended on; for what is done
for the sake of men is not worthy of approbation, and soon falls to pieces.
Therefore it seems to me, that you should permit him to live for a year according
to his own judgment; and during that time he may travel with us, and while
we are instructing others he may hear with simplicity; and as he hears, if
he has any right purpose of acknowledging the truth, he will himself request
that he may take up the yoke of religion; or if he do not please to take it,
he may remain a friend. For those who do not take it up heartily, when they
begin not to be able to bear it, not only cast off that which they had taken
up, but by way of excuse, as it were. for their weakness, they begin to speak
evil of the way of religion, and to malign those whom they have not been able
to follow or to imitate."
CHAP. II.--A DIFFICULTY.
To this
Niceta answered: "My lord Peter, I say nothing against your right
and good counsels; but I wish to say one thing, that thereby I may learn something
that I do not know. What if my father should die within the year during which
you recommend that he should be put off? He will go down to hell helpless,
and so be tormented for ever." Then said Peter: "I embrace your kindly
purpose towards your father, and I forgive you in respect of things of which
you are ignorant. For do you suppose that, if any one is thought to have lived
righteously, he shall forthwith be saved? Do you not think that he must be
examined by Him who knows the secrets of men, as to how he has lived righteously,
whether perchance according to the rule of the Gentiles, obeying their institutions
and laws; or for the sake of the friendship of men; or merely from custom,
or any other cause; or from necessity, and not on account of righteousness
itself, and for the sake of God? For those who have lived righteously, for
the sake of God alone and His righteousness, they shall come to eternal rest,
and shall receive the perpetuity of the heavenly kingdom. For salvation is
not attained by force, but by liberty; and not through the favour of men, hut
by the faith of God. Then, besides, you ought to consider that God is prescient,
and knows whether this man is one of His. But if He knows that he is not, what
shall we do with respect to those things which leave been determined by Him
from the beginning? But wherein I can, I give counsel: when he is awake, and
we sit down together, then do you, as if you wished to learn something, ask
a question about those matters which it is titling for him to learn; and while
we speak to one another, he will gain instruction. But yet wait first to see
if he himself ask anything; for if he do so, the occasion of discourse will
be the fitter. But if he do not ask anything, let us by turns put questions
to one another, wishing to learn something, as I have said. Such is my judgment,
state what is yours."
CHAP. III.--A SUGGESTION.
And when
we had commended his right counsel, I Clement said: "In all
things, the end for the most part looks back upon the beginning, and the issue
of things is similar to their commencement. I hope, therefore, with respect
to our father also, since God by your means has given a good beginning, that
He will bestow also an ending suitable to the beginning, and worthy of Himself.
However, I make this suggestion, that if, as you have said, we begin to speak,
in presence of my father, as if for the purpose of discussing some subject,
or learning something from one another, you, my lord Peter, ought not to occupy
the place of one who has anything to learn; for if he see this, he will rather
be offended. For he is convinced that you fully know all things, as indeed
you do. How then will it be, if he see you pretending ignorance? This, as I
have said, will rather hurt him, being ignorant of your design. But if we brothers,
while we converse among ourselves, are in any doubt, let a fitting solution
be given by you to our inquiry. For if he see even you hesitating and doubting,
then truly he will think that no one has knowledge of the truth."
CHAP. IV.--FREE INQUIRY.
To this
Peter answered: "Let us not concern ourselves about this; and
if indeed it is fitting that he enter the gate of life, God will afford a fitting
opportunity; and there shall be a beginning from God, and not from man. And
therefore, as I have said, let him journey with us, and hear our discussions;
but because I saw you in haste, therefore I said that opportunity must be sought;
and when God shall give it, do you comply with my advice in what I shall say." While
we were thus talking, a boy came to tell us that our father was now awake;
and when we were intending to go in to him, he himself came to us, and saluting
us with a kiss,after we had sat down again, he said: "Is it permitted
to one to ask a question, if he wishes it; or is silence enforced, after the
manner of the Pythagoreans?" Then said Peter: "We do not compel those
who come to us either to keep silence continually, or to ask questions; but
we leave them free to do as they will knowing that he who is anxious about
his salvation, if he feels pain in any part of his soul, does not suffer it
to be silent. But he who neglects his salvation, no advantage its conferred
upon him if he is compelled to ask, excepting this only, that he may seem to
be earnest and diligent. Wherefore, if you wish to get any information, ask
on."
CHAP. V.--GOOD AND EVIL.
Then the
old man said: "There
is a saying very prevalent among the Greek philosophers, to the effect that
there is in reality neither good nor evil
in the life of man; hut that men call things good or evil as they appear to
them, prejudiced by the use and custom of life. For not even murder is really
an evil, because it sets the soul free from the bonds of the flesh. Further,
they say that even just judges put to death those who commit crimes; but if
they knew homicide to be an evil, just men would not do that. Neither do they
say that adultery is an evil; for if the husband does not know, or does not
care, there is, they say, no evil in it. But neither, say they is theft an
evil; for it takes away what one does, not possess from another who has it.
And, indeed, it ought to be taken freely and openly; but in that it is done
secretly, that is rather a reproof of his inhumanity from whom it is secretly
taken. For all men ought to have the common use of all things that are in this
world; but through injustice one says that this is his, and another that that
is his, and so division is caused among men. In short, a certain man, the wisest
among the Greeks,[1] knowing that these things are so, says that friends should
have all things common. Now, in all things unquestionably wives are included.
He says also that, as the air and the sunshine cannot be divided, so neither
ought other things to be divided, which are given in this world to all to be
possessed in common, but should be so possessed. But I wished to say this,
because I am desirous to turn to well-doing, and I cannot act well unless I
first learn what is good; and if I can understand that, I shall thereby perceive
what is evil, that is, opposite to good.
CHAP. VI.--PETER'S AUTHORITY.
"But
I should like that one of you, and not Peter, should answer what I have said;
for it is
not fitting
to take words and instruction at his hand,
with questions; but when he gives a deliverance on any subject, that should
be held without answering again. And therefore let us keep him as an umpire;
so that if at any time our discussion does not come to an issue, he may declare
what seems good to him, and so give an undoubted end to doubtful matters. And
now therefore I could believe, content with his sole opinion, if he expressed
any opinion; and this is what I shall do at last. Yet I wish first to see if
it is possible by discussion to find what is sought. My wish therefore is,
that Clement should begin first, and should show if there is any good or evil
in substance or in actions."
CHAP. VII.--CLEMENT'S ARGUMENT.
To this
I answered: "Since
indeed you wish to learn from me if there is any good or evil in nature or
in act, or whether it is not rather that men,
prejudiced by custom, think some things to be good, and others to be evil,
forasmuch as; they have made a division among themselves of common things,
which ought, as you say, to be as common as the air anti the sunshine; I think
that I ought not to bring before you any statements from any other quarter
than from those studies in which you are well versed, and which you support,
so that what I say you will receive without hesitation. You assign certain
boundaries of all the elements and the heavenly bodies, and these, you say,
meet in some without hurt, as in marriages; but in others they are hurtfully
united, as in adulteries. And you say that some things are general to all,
but other things do not belong to all, and are not general. But not to make
a long discussion, I shall speak briefly of the matter. The earth which is
dry is in need of the addition and admixture of water, that it may be able
to produce fruits, without which man cannot live: this is therefore a legitimate
conjunction. On the contrary if the cold of hoar-frost be mixed with the earth,
or heat with the water, a conjunction of this sort produces corruption; and
this, in such things, is adultery."
CHAP. VIII.--ADMITTED EVILS.
Then my
father answered: "But as the harmfulness of can inharmonious
conjunction of elements or stars is immediately betrayed, so ought also adultery
to he immediately shown that it is an evil." Then I: "First tell
me this, whether, as you yourself have confessed, evils are produced from incongruous
and inharmonious mixture; and then after that we shall inquire into the other
matter." Then my father said: "The nature of things is as you say,
my son." Then I answered: "Since, then, you wish to learn of these
things, see how many things there are which no one doubts to be evils. Do you
think that a fever, a fire, sedition, the fall of a house, murder, holds, racks,
pains, mournings, and such like, are evils?" Then said my father: "It
is true, my son, that these things are evil, and very evil; or, at all events,
whoever denies that they are evil, let him suffer them!"
CHAP. IX.--EXISTENCE OF EVIL ON ASTROLOGICAL PRINCIPLES.
Then I
answered: "Since, therefore, I have to deal with one who is skilled
in astrological science,[2] I shall treat the matter with you according to
that science, that, taking my method from those things with which you are familiar,
you may the more readily acquiesce. Listen now, therefore: you confess that
those things which we have mentioned are evils, such as fevers, conflagrations,
and such like. Now these, according to you, are said to be produced by malignant
stars, such as the humid Saturn and the hot Mars; but things contrary to these
are produced by benignant stars, such as the temperate Jupiter and the humid
Venus. Is it not so?" My father answered: "It is so, my son; and
it cannot be otherwise." Then said I: "Since you say, therefore,
that good things are produced by good stars--by Jupiter and Venus, for example--let
us see what is the product where any one of the evil stars is mixed with the
good, and let us understand that that is evil. For you lay it down that Venus
makes marriages, and if she have Jupiter in her configuration she makes the
marriages chaste; but if Jupiter he not regarding, and Mars be present, then
you pronounce that the marriages are corrrupted by adultery." Then said
my father: "It is even so." Then I answered: "Therefore adultery
is an evil, seeing that it is committed through the admixture of evil stars;
and, to state it in a word all things that you say that the good stars suffer
from the mixture of evil stars, are undoubtedly to be prononunced to be evil.
Those stars, therefore, by whose admixture we have said that fevers, configurations,
and other such like evils are produced,--those, according to you, work also
murders, adulteries, thefts, and also produce haughty and stolid men."
CHAP. X.--HOW TO MAKE PROGRESS.
Then my
father said: "Truly you have shown briefly and incomparably that
there are evils in actions; but still I should wish to learn this how God justly
judges those who sin, as you say, if Genesis compels them to sin?" Then
I answered: "I am afraid to speak anything to you, my father, because
it becomes me to hold you in all honour, else I have an answer to give you,
if it were becoming." Then says my father: "Speak what occurs to
you, my son; for it is not you, but the method of inquiry, that does the wrong,
as a modest woman to an incontinent man, if she is indignant for her safety
and her honour." Then I answered "If we do not hold by the principles
that we have acknowledged and confessed, but if those things which have been
defined are always loosened by forgetfulness, we shall seem to be weaving Penelope's
web, undoing what we have done. And therefore we ought either not to acquiesce
too easily, before we have diligently examined the doctrine propounded; or
if we have once acquiesced, and the proposition has been agreed to, then we
ought to keep by what has been once determined, that we may go on with our
inquiries respecting other matters." And my father said: "You say
well, my son; and I know why yon say this: it is because in the discussion
yesterday on natural causes, yon showed that some malignant power, transferring
itself into the order of the stars, excites the lusts of men, provoking them
in various ways to sin, yet not compelling or producing sins." To this
I answered: "It is well that you remember it; and yet, though you to remember
it, you have fallen into error." Then said my father: "Pardon me,
my son; for I have not yet much practice in these things: for indeed your discourses
yesterday, by their truth, shut me up to agree with you; yet in my consciousness
there are, as it were, some remains Of fevers, which for a little hold me back
from faith, as from health. For I am distracted, because I know that many things,
yea, almost all things, have befallen me according to GENESIS."
CHAP. XI.--TEST OF ASTROLOGY.
Then I
answered: "I
shall therefore tell you, my father, what is the nature of mathematics, and
do
you act according to what I tell you. Go to a
mathematician,' and tell him first that such and such evils have befallen you
at such a time, and that you wish to learn of him whence, or how, or through
what stars they have befallen yon. He will no doubt answer you that a malignant
Mars or Saturn has ruled your times, or that some one of them has been periodic;
or that some one has regarded yon diametrically, or in conjunction, or centrally;
or some such answer will he give, adding that in all these some one was not
in harmony with the malignant one, or was invisible, or was in the figure,
or was beyond the division, or was eclipsed, or was not in contact. or was
among the dark stars; and many other like things will he answer, according
to his own reasons, and will condescend upon particulars. After him go to another
mathematician, and tell him the opposite, that such and such good happened
to yon at that time, mentioning to him the same time, and ask him from what
parts of your Genesis this good has come to you, and take care, as I said,
that the times are the same with those about which you asked concerning evils.
And when you have deceived him concerning the times, see what figures he will
invent for yon, by which to show that good things ought to have befallen yon
at those very times. For it is impossible for those treating of the Genesis
of men not to find in every quarter, as they call it, of the heavenly bodies,
some stars favourably placed, and some unfavourably; for the circle is equally
complete in every part, according to mathematics, admitting of diverse and
various causes, from which they can take occasion of saying whatever they please.
CHAP. XII.--ASTROLOGY BAFFLED BY FREE-WILL.
"For,
as usually happens when Inert see unfavourable dreams, and can make nothing
certain
out of them,
when any event occurs, then they adapt what
they saw in the dream to what has occurred; so also is mathematics. For before
anything happens, nothing is declared will certainty; but after something has
happened. they gather the causes of the event. And thus often, when they have
been at fault, and the thing has fallen out otherwise, they take the blame
to themselves, saying that it was such and such a star which opposed, and that
they did not see it; not knowing that their error does not proceed from their
unskilfulness in their art, but from the inconsistency of the whole system.
For they do not know what those things are which we indeed desire to do, but
in regard to which we do not indulge our desires. But we who have learned the
reason of this mystery know the cause, since, having freedoms of will, we sometimes
oppose our desires, and sometimes yield to them.[1] And therefore the issue
of human doings is uncertain, because it depends upon freedom of will. For
a mathematician can indeed indicate the desire which a malignant power produces;
but whether the acting or the issue of this desire shall be fulfilled or not,
no one can know before the accomplishment of the thing, because it depends
upon freedom of will. And this is why ignorant astrologers have invented to
themselves the talk about climacterics as their refuge in uncertainties, as
we showed fully yesterday.
CHAP. XIII.--PEOPLE ADMITTED.
"If you have anything that you wish to say to this, say on." Then
my father: "Nothing can be more true, my son, than what you have stated." And
while we were thus speaking among ourselves, some one informed us that a great
multitude of people were standing outside, having assembled for the purpose
of hearing. Then Peter ordered them to be admitted, for the place was large
and convenient. And when they had come in, Peter said to us: "If any one
of you wishes, let him address the people, and discourse concerning idolatry." To
whom I Clement answered: "Your great benignity and gentleness and patience
towards all encourages us, so that we dare speak in your presence, and ask
what we please; and therefore, as I said, the gentleness of your disposition
invites and encourages all to undertake the precepts of saving doctrine. This
I never saw before in any one else, but in you only, with whom there is neither
envy nor indignation. Or what do you think?
CHAP. XIV.--NO MAN HAS UNIVERSAL KNOWLEDGE.
Then Peter
said: "These
things come not only from envy or indignation; but sometimes there is a bashfulness
in some persons, lest haply (they may
not be able to answer fully the questions that may be proposed, and so they
avoid the discovery of their want of skill. But no one ought to be ashamed
of this, because there is no man who ought to profess that he knows all things;
for there is only One who knows all things, even He who also made all things.
For if our Master declared that He knew not the day and the hour whose signs
even He foretold, and referred the whole to the Father, how shall we account
it disgraceful to confess that we are ignorant of some things, since in this
we have the example of our Master? But this only we profess, that we know those
things which we have learned from the true Prophet; and that those things have
been delivered to us by the true Prophet, which He judged to be sufficient
for human knowledge."
CHAP. XV.--CLEMENT'S DISCLOSURE.
Then I
Clement went on to speak thus: "At Tripolis, when you were disputing
against the Gentiles, my lord Peter, I greatly wondered at you, that although
you were instructed by your father according to the fashion of the Hebrews
and in observances of your own law, and were never polluted by the studies
of Greek learning, you argued so magnificently and so incomparably; and that
you even touched upon some things concerning the histories of the gods, which
are usually declaimed in the theatres. But as I perceived that their fables
and blasphemies are not so well known to you, I shall discourse upon these
in your hearing, repeating them from the very beginning, if it please you." Then
says Peter: Say on; you do well to assist my preaching." Then said I: "I
shall speak, therefore, because you order me, not by way of teaching you, but
of making public what foolish opinions the Gentiles entertain of the gods."
CHAP.
XVI.--WORLD THAT ALL GOD'S PEOPLE WERE PROPHETS."
But when
I was about to speak, Niceta, biting his lip, beckoned to me to be silent.
And when Peter
saw him,
he said: "Why would you repress his liberal
disposition and noble nature, that you would have him be silent for my honour,
which is nothing? Or do you not know, that if all nations, after they have
heard from me the preaching of the truth, and have believed, would betake themselves
to teaching, they would gain the greater glory for me, if indeed you think
me desirous of glory? For what so glorious as to prepare disciples for Christ,
not who shall be silent, and shall be saved alone, but who shall speak what
they have learned, and shall do good to others? I wish indeed that both you,
Niceta, and you, beloved Aquila, would aid me in preaching the word of God,
and the rather because those things in which the Gentiles err are well known
to you; and not you only, but all who hear me, I wish, as I have said, so to
hear and to learn, that they may be able also to teach: for the world needs
many helpers, by whom men may be recalled from error." When he had spoken
thus, he said to me: "Go on then, Clement, with what you have begun."
CHAP. XVII.--GENTILE COSMOGONY.
And I
immediately rejoined: "Seeing
that when you were disputing at Tripolis, as I said, you discoursed much
concerning the gods of the Gentiles profitably
and convincingly, I desire to set forth in your presence the ridiculous legends
concerning their origin, both that you may not be unacquainted with the falsehood
of this vain superstition, and that the hearers who are present may know the
disgraceful character of their error. The wise men, then, who are among the
Gentiles, say that first of all things was chaos;(1) that this, through a long
time solidifying its outer parts, made bounds to itself and a sort of foundation,
being gathered, as it were, into the manner and form of a huge egg, within
which, in the course of a long time, as within the shell of the egg, there
was cherished and vivified a certain animal; and that afterwards, that huge
globe being broken, there came forth a certain kind of man of double sex, which
they call masculo-feminine. This they called Phanetas, from appearing, because
when it appeared, they say, then also light shone forth. And from this, they
say that there were produced substance, prudence, motion, and coition, and
from these the heavens and the earth were made. From the heaven they say that
six males were produced, whom they call Titans; and in like manner, from the
earth six females, whom they called Titanides. And these are the names of the
males who sprang from the heaven: Oceanus, Coeus, Crios, Hyperion, Iapetus,
Chronos, who amongst us is called Saturn. In like manner, the names of the
females who sprang from the earth are these: Theia, Rhea, Themis, Mnemosyne,
Tethys, Hebe.(2)
CHAP. XVIII.--FAMILY OF SATURN.
"Of
all these, the first-born of the heaven took to wife the first-born of earth;
the second
the second,
and in like manner all the rest. The first
male, therefore, who had married the first female, was on her account drawn
downwards; but the second female rose upwards, by reason of him to whom she
was married; and so each doing in their order, remained in those places which
fell to their share by the nuptial lot. From their intercourse they assert
that innumerable others sprang. But of these six males, the one who is called
Saturn received in marriage Rhea, and having been warned by a certain oracle
that he who should be born of her should be more powerful than himself, and
should drive him from his kingdom, he determined to devour all the sons that
should be born to him. First, then, there is born to him a son called Aides,
who amongst us is called Orcus; and him, for the reason we have just stated,
he took and devoured. After him he begot a second son, called Neptune; and
him he devoured in like manner. Last of all, he begot him whom they call Jupiter;
but him his mother Rhea pitying, by stratagem withdrew from his father when
he was about to devour him. And first, indeed, that the crying of the child
might not be noticed, she made certain Corybantes strike cymbals and drums,
that by the deafening sound the crying of the infant might not be heard.
CHAP. XIX.--THEIR DESTINIES.
"But
when he understood from the lessening of her belly that her child was born,
he demanded it,
that
he might devour it; then Rhea presented him
with a large stone, and told him that that was what she had brought forth.
And he took it, and swallowed it; and the stone, when it was devoured, pushed
and drove forth those sons whom he had formerly swallowed. Therefore Orcus,
coming forth first, descended, and occupies the lower, that is, the infernal
regions. The second, being above him--he whom they call Neptune--is thrust
forth upon the waters. The third, who survived by the artifice of his mother
Rhea, she put upon a she-goat and sent into heaven.
CHAP. XX.--DOINGS OF JUPITER.
"But
enough of the old wife's fables and genealogy of the Gentiles; for it were
endless if I
should set
forth all the generations of those whom they
call gods, and their wicked doings. But by way of example, omitting the rest,
I shall detail the wicked deeds of him only whom they hold to be the greatest
and the chief, and whom they call Jupiter.(3) For they say that he possesses
heaven, as being superior to the rest; and he, as soon as he grew up, married
his own sister, whom they call Juno, in which truly he at once becomes like
a beast. Juno bears Vulcan; but, as they relate, Jupiter was not his father.
However, by Jupiter himself she became mother of Medea; and Jupiter having
received a response that one who should be born of her should be more powerful
than himself, and should expel him from his kingdom, took her and devoured
her. Again Jupiter produced Minerva from his brain, and Bacchus from his thigh.
After this, when he had fallen in love with Thetis, they say that Prometheus
informed him that, if he lay with her, he who should be born of her should
be more powerful than his father; and for fear of this, he gave her in marriage
to one Peleus. Subsequently he had intercourse with Persephone, who was his
own daughter by Ceres and by her be begot Dionysius,(1) who was torn in pieces
by the Titans. But calling to mind, it is said, that perhaps his own father
Saturn might beget another son, who might be more powerful than himself, and
might expel him from the kingdom, he went to war with his father, along with
his brothers the Titans; and having beaten them, he at last threw his father
into prison, and cut off his genitals, and threw them into the sea. But the
blood which flowed from the wound, being mixed with the waves, and turned into
foam by the constant churning, produced her whom they call Aphrodite, and whom
with us they call Venus. From his intercourse with her who was thus his own
sister, they say that this same Jupiter begot Cypris, who, they say, was the
mother of Cupid.
CHAP. XXI.--A BLACK CATALOGUE.
"Thus
much of his incests; I shall now speak of his adulteries. He defiled Europa,
the wife
of Oceanus,
of whom was born Dodonaeus; Helen, the wife of
Pandion, of whom Musaeus; Eurynome, the wife of Asopus, of whom Ogygias; Hermione,
the wife of Oceanus, of whom the Graces, Thalia, Euphrosyne, Aglaia; Themis,
his own sister, of whom the Hours, Eurynomia, Dice, Irene; Themisto, the daughter
of Inachus, of whom Arcas; Idaea, the daughter of Minos, of whom Asterion;
Phoenissa, the daughter of Alphion, of whom Eudymion; Io, the daughter of Inachus,
of whom Epaphus; Hippodamia and Isione, daughters of Danaus, of whom Hippodamia
was the wife of Olenus, and Isione of Orchomenus or Chryses; Carme, the daughter
of Phoenix, of whom was born Britomartis, who was an attendant of Diana; Callisto,
the daughter of Lycaon, of whom Orcas; Lybee, the daughter of Munantius, of
whom Belus; Latona, of whom Apollo and Diana; Leandia, the daughter of Enrymedon,
of whom Coron; Lysithea, the daughter of Evenus, of whom Helenus; Hippodamia,
the daughter of Bellerophon, of whom Sarpedon; Megaclite, the daughter of Macarius,
of whom Thebe and Locrus; Niobe, the daughter of Phoronens, of whom Argus and
Pelasgus; Olympias, the daughter of Neoptolemus, of whom Alexander; Pyrrha,
the daughter of Prometheus, of whom Helmetheus; Protogenia and Pandora, daughters
of Deucalion, of whom he begot AEthelius, and Dorus, and Melera, and Pandorus;
Thaicrucia, the daughter of Proteus, of whom was born Nympheus; Salamis, the
daughter of Asopus, of whom Saracon; Taygete, Electra, Maia, Plutide, daughters
of Atlas, of whom respectively he begot Lacedaemon, Dardanus. Mercury, and
Tantalus; Phthia, the daughter of Phoroneus, of whom be begot Achaeus; Chonia,
the daughter of Aramnus, of whom he begot Lacon; Chalcea, a nymph, of whom
was born Olympus; Charidia, a nymph, of whom Alcanus; Chloris, who was the
wife of Ampycus, of whom Mopsus was born; Cotonia, the daughter of Lesbus,
of whom Polymedes; Hippodamia, the daughter of Anicetus; Chrysogenia, the daughter
of Peneus, of whom was born Thissaeus.
CHAP. XXII.--VILE TRANSFORMATION OFF JUPITER.
"'There
are also innumerable adulteries of his, of which no offspring was the result,
which
it were tedious
to enumerate. But amongst those whom
we have mentioned, he violated some being transformed, like a magician. In
short, he seduced Antiope, the daughter of Nycteus, when turned into a satyr,
and of her were born Amphion and Zethus; Alemene, when changed into her husband
Amphitryon, and of her was born Hercules; AEgina, the daughter of Asopus, when
changed into an eagle, of whom AEacus was born. So also he defiled Ganymede,
the son of Dardanus, being changed into an eagle; Manthea, the daughter of
Phocus, when changed into a bear, of whom was born Arctos; Danae, the daughter
of Acrisius, being changed into gold, of whom Perseus; Europa, the daughter
of Phoenix, changed into a bull, of whom were born Minos, Rhadamanthus, and
Sarpedon; Eurymedusa, the daughter of Achelaus, being changed into an ant,
of whom Myrmidon; Thalia, the nymph, being changed into a vulture, of whom
were born the Palisci, in Sicily; Imandra, the daughter of Geneanus, at Rhodes,
being changed into a shower; Cassiopeia, being changed into her husband Phoenix,
and of her was born Anchinos; Leda, the daughter of Thestius, being changed
into a swan, of whom was born Helen; and again the same, being changed into
a star, and of her were born Castor and Pollux; Lamia, being changed into a
lapwing; Mnemosyne, being changed into a shepherd, of whom were born the nine
Muses; Nemesis, being changed into a goose; the Cadmian Semele, being changed
into fire, and of her was born Dionysius. By his own daughter Ceres he begot
Persephone, whom also herself he defiled, being changed into a dragon.
CHAP. XXIII.--WHY A GOD?
"He
also committed adultery with Europa, the wife of his own uncle Oceanus, and
with her sister
Eurynome,
and punished their father; and he committed adultery
with Plute, the daughter of his own son Atlas, and condemned Tantalus, whom
she bore to him. Of Larisse, the daughter of Orchomenus, he begot Tityon, whom
also he consigned to punishment. He carried off Dia, the wife of his own son
Ixion, and subjected him to perpetual punishment; and almost all the sons who
sprang from his adulteries he put to violent deaths; and indeed the sepulchres
of almost all of them are well known. Yea, the sepulchre of this parricide
himself, who destroyed his uncles and defiled their wives, who committed whoredom
with his sisters, this magician of many transformations, is shown among the
Cretans, who, although they know and acknowledge his horrid and incestuous
deeds, and tell them to all, yet are not ashamed to confess him to be a god.
Whence it seems to me to be wonderful, yea, exceeding wonderful, how he who
exceeds all men in wickedness and crimes, has received that holy and good name
which is above every name, being called the father of gods and men; unless
perhaps he who rejoices in the evils of men has persuaded unhappy souls to
confer honour above all others upon him whom he saw to excel all others in
crimes, in order that he might allure all to the imitation of his evil deeds.
CHAP. XXIV.--FOLLY OF POLYTHEISM.
"But
also the sepulchres of his sons, who are regarded amongst these the Gentiles
as gods, are openly
pointed out, one in one place, and another
in another: that of Mercury at Hermopolis; that of the Cyprian Venus at Cyprus;
that of Mars in Thrace; that of Bacchus at Thebes, where he is said to have
been torn in pieces; that of Hercules at Tyre, where he was burnt with fire;
that of AEsculapius in Epidaurus. And all these are spoken of, not only as
men who have died, but as wicked men who have been punished for their crimes;
and yet they are adored as gods by foolish men.(1)
CHAP. XXV.--DEAD MEN DEIFIED.
"But
if they choose to argue, and affirm that these are rather the places of their
birth than
of their
burial or death, the former and ancient doings
shall be convicted from those at hand and still recent, since we have shown
that they worship those whom they themselves confess to have been men, and
to have died, or rather to have been punished; as the Syrians worship Adonis,
and the Egyptians Osiris; the Trojans, Hector; Achilles is worshipped at Leuconesus,
Patroclus at Pontus, Alexander the Macedonian at Rhodes; and many others are
worshipped, one in one place and another in another, whom they do not doubt
to have been dead men. Whence it follows that their predecessors also, falling
into a like error, conferred divine honour upon dead men, who perhaps had had
some power or some skill, and especially if they had stupefied stolid men by
magical phantasies.(2)
CHAP. XXVI.--METAMORPHOSES.
"Hence
there has now been added, that the poets also adorn the falsehoods of error
by elegance
of words,
and by sweetness of speech persuade that mortals
have been made immortal; yea more, they say that men are changed into stars,
and trees, and animals, and flowers, and birds, and fountains, and rivers.
And but that it might seem to be a waste of words, I could even enumerate almost
all the stars, and trees, and fountains, and rivers, which they assert to have
been made of men; yet, by way of example, I shall mention at least one of each
class. They say that Andromeda, the daughter of Cepheus, was turned into a
star; Daphne, the daughter of the river Lado, into a tree; Hyacinthus, beloved
of Apollo, into a flower; Callisto into the constellation which they call Arctos;
Progne and Philomela, with Tereus, into birds; that Thysbe in Cilicia was dissolved
into a fountain; and Pyramus, at the same place, into a river. And they assert
that almost all the stars, trees, fountains, and rivers, flowers, animals,
and birds, were at one time human beings."
CHAP. XXVII.--INCONSISTENCY OF POLYTHEISTS.
But Peter,
when he heard this, said: "According to them, then, before
men were changed into stars, and the other things which you mention, the heaven
was without stars, and the earth without trees and animals; and there were
neither fountains, nor rivers, nor birds. And without these, how did those
men themselves live, who afterwards were changed into them, since it is evident
that, without these things, men could not live upon the earth?" Then I
answered: "But they are not even able to observe the worship of their
own gods consistently; for every one of those whom they worship has something
dedicated to himself, from which his worshippers ought to abstain: as they
say the olive is dedicated to Minerva, the she-goat to Jupiter, seeds to Ceres,
wine to Bacchus, water to Osiris, the ram to Hammon, the stag to Diana, the
fish and the dove to the demon of the Syrians, fire to Vulcan; and to each
one, as I have said, is there something specially consecrated, from which the
worshippers are bound to abstain, for the honour of those to whom they are
consecrated. But were one abstaining from one thing, and another from another,
by doing honor to one of the gods, they incur the anger of all the rest; and
therefore, if they would conciliate them all, they must abstain from all things
for the honour of all, so that, being self-condemned by a just sentence before
the day of judgment, they should perish by a most wretched death through starvation.
CHAP. XXVIII.--BUTTRESSES OF GENTILISM.
"But let us return to our purpose. What reason is there, yea, rather,
what madness possesses the minds of men, that they worship and adore as a god,
a man whom they not only know to be impious, wicked, profane--I mean Jupiter--incestuous,
a parricide, an adulterer, but even proclaim him publicly as such in their
songs in the theatres? Or if by means of these deeds he has deserved to be
a god, then also, when they hear of any murderers, adulterers, parricides incestuous
persons, they ought to worship them also as gods. But I cannot understand why
they venerate in him what they execrate in others." Then Peter answered: "Since
you say that you cannot understand it, learn of me why they venerate wickedness
in him. In the first place, it is that, when they themselves do like deeds,
they may know that they shall be acceptable to him, inasmuch as they have but
imitated him in his wickedness. In the second place, because the ancients have
left these things skilfully composed in their writings, and elegantly engrafted
in their verses. And now, by the aid of youthful education, since the knowledge
of these things adheres to their tender and simple minds, it cannot without
difficulty be torn from them and cast away."
CHAP. XXIX.--ALLEGORIES.
When Peter
had said this, Niceta answered: "Do not suppose, my lord Peter,
but that the learned men of the Gentiles have certain plausible arguments,
by which they support those things which seem to be blameworthy and disgraceful.
And this I state, not as wishing to confirm their error (for far be it from
me that such a thing should ever come into my thought); but yet I know that
there are amongst the more intelligent of them certain defences, by which they
are accustomed to support and colour over those things which seem to be absurd.
And if it please you that I should state some of them--for I am to some extent
acquainted with them--I shall do as you order me." And when Peter had
given him leave, Niceta proceeded as follows.
CHAP. XXX.--COSMOGONY OF ORPHEUS.
"All
the literature among the Greeks which is written on the subject of the origin
of antiquity,
is
based upon many authorities, but especially
two, Orpheus and Hesiod.(1) Now their writings are divided into two parts,
in respect of their meaning,--that is the literal and the allegorical; and
the vulgar crowd has flocked to the literal, but all the eloquence of the philosophers
and learned men is expended in admiration of the allegorical. It is Orpheus,
then, who says that at first there was chaos, eternal, unbounded, unproduced,
and that from it all things were made. He says that this chaos was neither
darkness nor light, neither moist nor dry, neither hot nor cold, but that it
was all things mixed together, and was always one unformed mass; yet that at
length, as it were after the manner of a huge egg, it brought forth and produced
from itself a certain double form, which had been wrought through immense periods
of time, and which they call masculo-feminine, a form concrete from the contrary
admixture of such diversity; and that this is the principle of all things,
which came of pure matter, and which, coming forth, effected a separation of
the four elements, and made heaven of the two elements which are first, fire
and air, and earth of the others, earth and water; and of these he says that
all things now are born and produced by a mutual participation of them. So
far Orpheus.
CHAP. XXXI.--HESIOD'S COSMOGONY.
"But
to this Hesiod adds, that after chaos the heaven and the earth were made
immediately, from
which
he says that those eleven were produced (and sometimes
also he speaks of them as twelve) of whom he makes six males and five females.
And these are the names that he gives to the males: Oceanus, Coeus, Crius,
Hyperion, Iapetus, Chronos, who is also called Saturn. Also the names of the
females are: Theia, Rhea, Themis, Mnemyosyne, Tethys.(2) And these names they
thus interpret allegorically. They say that the number is eleven or twelve:
that the first is nature itself, which also they would have to be called Rhea,
from FLOWING; and they say that the other ten are her accidents, which also
they call qualities; yet they add a twelfth, namely Chronos, who with us is
called Saturn, and him they take to be time.(3) Therefore they assert that
Saturn and Rhea are time and matter; and these, when they are mixed with moisture
and dryness, heat and cold, produce all things.
CHAP. XXXII.--ALLEGORICAL INTERPRETATION.
"She therefore (Rhea, or nature), it is said, produced, as it were, a
certain bubble which had been collecting for a long time; and it being gradually
collected from the spirit which was in the waters, swelled, and being for some
time driven over the surface of matter, from which it had come forth as from
a womb, and being hardened by the rigour of cold, and always increasing by
additions of ice, at length was broken off and sunk into the deep, and drawn
by its own weight, went down to the infernal regions; and because it became
invisible it was called Aides, and is also named Oreus or Pluto.(1) And since
it was sunk from the top to the bottom, it gave place to the moist element
to flow together; and the grosser part, which is the earth, was laid bare by
the retirement of the waters. They say, therefore, that this freedom of the
waters, which was formerly restrained by the presence of the bubble, was called
Neptune after the bubble attained the lowest place. After this, when the cold
element had been sucked down to the lower regions by the concretion of the
icy bubble, and the dry and the moist element had been separated, there being
now no hindrance, the warm element rushed by its force and lightness to the
upper regions of the air, being borne up by wind and storm. This storm, therefore,
which in Greek is called <greek>kataigid</greek>, they called AEGIS--that
is, a she-goat; and the fire which ascended to the upper regions they called
Jupiter; wherefore they say that he ascended to Olympus riding on a she-goat.
CHAP. XXXIII.--ALLEGORY OF JUPITER, ETC.
"Now this Jupiter the Greeks would have to be called from his living,
or giving life, but our people from his giving succour.(2) They say, therefore,
that this is the living substance, which, placed in the upper regions, and
drawing all things to itself by the influence of heat, as by the convolution
of tile brain, and arranging them by the moderation of a certain tempering,
is said from his head to have produced wisdom, whom they call Minerva, who
was called' A<greek>qhnh</greek> by the Greeks on account of her
immortality; who, because the father of all created all things by his wisdom,
is also said to have been produced from his head, and from the principal place
of all, and is represented as having formed and adorned the whole world by
the regulated admixture of the elements.(3) Therefore the forms which were
impressed upon matter, that the world might be made, because they are constrained
by the force of heat, are said to be held together by the energy of Jupiter.
And since there are enough of these, and they do not need anything new to be
added to them, but each thing is repaired by the produce of its own seed, the
hands of Saturn are said to be bound by Jupiter; because, as I have said, time
now produces from matter nothing new: but the warmth of seeds restores all
things according to their kinds; and no birth of Rhea--that is, no increase
of flowing matter--ascends further. And therefore they call that first division
of the elements the mutilation of Saturn, because he cannot any more produce
a world.
CHAP. XXXIV.--OTHER ALLEGORIES.
"And
of Venus they give forth an allegory to this effect. When, say they, the
sea was put under
the air,
and when the brightness of the heavens shone
more pleasantly, being reflected from the waters, the loveliness of things,
which appeared fairer from the waters, was called Venus; and she, it, being
united with the air as with her, its, own brother, so as to produce beauty,
which might be the object of desire, is said to have given birth to Cupid.
In this way, therefore, as we have said, they teach that Chronos, who is Saturn,
is allegorically time; Rhea is matter; Aides--that is, Orcus--is the depth
of the infernal regions; Neptune is water; Jupiter is air--that is, the element
of heat; Venus is the loveliness of things; Cupid is desire, which is in all
things, and by which posterity is propagated, or even the reason of things,
which gives delight when wisely looked into. Hera--that is, Juno--is said to
be that middle air which descends from heaven to earth. To Diana, whom they
call Proserpine, they hand over the air below. They say that Apollo is tile
Sun himself, which goes round the heaven; that Mercury is speech, by which
a reason is rendered for everything; that Mars is unrestrained fire, which
consumes all things. But not to delay you by enumerating everything, those
who have the more abstruse intelligence concerning such things think that they
give fair and just reasons, by applying this sort of allegory to every one
of their objects of worship."
CHAP. XXXV.--USELESSNESS OF THESE ALLEGORIES.
When Niceta
had thus spoken, Aquila answered:(4) "Whoever he was that
was tile author and inventor of these things, he seems to me to have been very
impious, since he covered over those things which seem to be pleasant and seemly,
and made the ritual of his superstition to consist in base and shameful observances,
since those things which are written according to the letter are manifestly
unseemly and base; and the whole observance of their religion consists in these,
that by such crimes and impieties they may teach men to imitate their gods
whom they worship. For in these allegories what profit can there be to them?
For although they are framed so as to be decent, yet no use is derived from
them for worship, nor for amendment of morals.
CHAP. XXXVI.--THE ALLEGORIES AN AFTERTHOUGHT.
"Whence
it is the more evident that prudent men, when they saw that the common superstition
was so disgraceful,
so base, and yet they had not learned
any way of correcting it, or any knowledge, endeavoured with what arguments
and interpretations they could to veil unseemly things under seemly speech,
and not, as they say, to conceal seemly reasons under unseemly fables. For
if this were the case, surely their statues and their pictures would never
be made with representations of their vices and crimes. The swan, which committed
adultery with Leda, would not be represented, nor the bull which committed
adultery with Europa; nor would they turn into a thousand monstrous shapes,
him whom they think better than all. And assuredly, if the great and wise men
who are amongst them knew that all this is fiction and not truth, would not
they charge with impiety and sacrilege those who should exhibit a picture or
carve an image of this sort, to the injury of the gods? In short, let them
present a king of their own time in the form of an ox, or a goose, or an ant,
or a vulture, and let them write the name of their king upon it, and set up
such a statue or figure in a public place, and they will soon be made to feel
the wrong of their deed, and the greatness of its punishment.
CHAP. XXXVII.--LIKE GODS, LIKE WORSHIPPERS.
"But
since those things rather are true which the public baseness testifies, and
concealments
have been
sought and fabricated by prudent men to excuse them
by seemly speeches, therefore are they not only not prohibited, but even in
the very mysteries figures are produced of Saturn devouring his sons, and of
the boy hidden by the cymbals and drums of the Corybantes; and with respect
to the mutilation of Saturn, what better proof of its truth could there be,
than that even his worshippers are mutilated, by a like miserable fate, in
honour of their god? Since then these things are manifestly seen, who shall
be found of so little sense, yea, of such stolidity, that he does not perceive
that those things are true concerning the unfortunate gods, which their more
unfortunate worshippers attest by the wounding and mutilation of their bodies?
CHAP. XXXVIII.--WRITINGS OF THE POETS.
"But
if, as they say, these things, so creditably and piously done, are dispensed
by so discreditable
and impious a ritual, assuredly he is sacrilegious,
whoever either gave forth these things at first, or persists in fulfilling
them, now that they have unhappily been given forth. And what shall we say
of the books of the poets? Ought not they, if they have debased the honourable
and pious deeds of the gods with base fables, to be forthwith cast away and
thrown into the fire, that they may not persuade the still tender age of boys
that Jupiter himself, the chief of the gods, was a parricide towards his parents,
incestuous towards his sisters and his daughters, and even impure towards boys;
that Venus and Mars were adulterers, and all those things which have been spoken
of above? What do you think of this matter, my lord Peter?"
CHAP. XXXIX.--ALL FOR THE BEST.
Then he
answered: "Be
sure, beloved Aquila, that all things are done by the good providence of
God, that
the cause which was to be contrary to the
truth should not only be infirm and weak, but also base. For if the assertion
of error had been stronger and more truth-like, any one who had been deceived
by it would not easily return to the path of truth. If even now, when so many
wicked and disgraceful things are related concerning the gods of the Gentiles,
scarce any one forsakes the base error, how much more if there had been in
it anything seemly and truth-like? For the mind is with difficulty transferred
from those things with which it has been imbued in early youth; and on this
account, as I said, it has been effected by divine providence, that the substance
of error should be both weak and base. But all other things also divine providence
dispenses filly and advantageously, although the method of the divine dispensation,
as good, and the best possible, is not clear to us who are ignorant of the
causes of things."
CHAP. XL.--FURTHER INFORMATION SOUGHT.
When Peter
had thus said, I Clement asked Niceta that he would explain to us, for the
sake of instruction,
some
things concerning the allegories of the
Gentiles, which he had carefully studied; "for," said I, "it
is useful that when we dispute with the Gentiles, we should not be unacquainted
with these things." Then said Niceta: "If my lord Peter permits me,
I can do as you ask me." Then said Peter: "To-day I have given you
leave to speak in opposition to the Gentiles, as you know." And Niceta
said: "Tell me then, Clement, what you would have me speak about." And
I said to him: "Inform us how the Gentiles represent matters concerning
the supper of the gods, which they had at the marriage of Peleus and Thetis.(1)
What do they make of the shepherd Paris, and what of less Juno, Minerva, and
Venus, between whom he acted as judge? What of Mercury? and what of the apple,
and the other things which follow in order?"
CHAP. XLI.--EXPLANATION OF MYTHOLOGY.
Then Niceta: "The
affair of the supper of the gods stands in this wise. They say that the banquet
is
the world, that the order of the gods sitting
at table is the position of the heavenly bodies. Those whom Hesiod calls the
first children of heaven and earth, of whom six were males and six females,
they refer to the number of the twelve signs, which go round all the world.
They say that the dishes of the banquet are the reasons and causes of things,
sweet and desirable, which in the shape of inferences from the positions of
the signs and the courses of the stars, explain how the world is ruled and
governed. Yet they say these things exist after the free manner of a banquet,
inasmuch as the mind of every one has the option whether he shall taste aught
of this sort of knowledge, or whether he shall refrain; and as in a banquet
no one is compelled, but every one is at liberty to eat, so also the manner
of philosophizing depends upon the choice of the will. They say that discord
is the lust of the flesh, which rises up against the purpose of the mind, and
hinders the desire of philosophizing; and therefore they say that the thee
was that in which the marriage was celebrated. Thus they make Peleus and the
nymph Thetis to be the dry and the moist element, by the admixture of which
the substance of bodies is composed. They hold that Mercury is speech, by which
instruction is conveyed to the mind; that Juno is chastity, Minerva courage,
Venus lust, Paris the understanding. If therefore, say they, it happens that
there is in a man a barbarous and uncultivated understanding, and ignorant
of right judgment, he will despise chastity and courage, and will give the
prize, which is the apple, to lust; and thereby, ruin and destruction will
come not only upon himself, but also upon his countrymen and the whole race.
These things, therefore, it is in their power to compose from whatever matter
they please; yet they can be adapted to every man; because if any one has a
pastoral and rustic and uncultivated understanding, and does not wish to be
instructed, when the heat of his body shall make suggestions concerning the
pleasure of lust, straightway he despises the virtues of studies and the blessings
of knowledge, and turns his mind to bodily pleasures. And hence it is that
implacable wars arise, cities are destroyed, countries fall, even as Paris,
by the abduction of Helen, armed the Greeks and the barbarians to their mutual
destruction."
CHAP. XLII.--INTERPRETATION OF SCRIPTURE.
Then Peter,
commending his statement, said:(1) "Ingenious men, as I perceive,
take many verisimilitudes from the things which they read; and therefore great
care is to be taken, that when the law of God is read, it be not read according
to the understanding of our own mind. For there are many sayings in the divine
Scriptures which can be drawn to that sense which every one has preconceived
for himself; and this ought not to be done. For you ought not to seek a foreign
and extraneous sense, which you have brought from without, which you may confirm
from the authority of the Scriptures, but to take the sense of truth from the
Scriptures themselves; and therefore it behoves you to learn the meaning of
the Scriptures from him who keeps it according to the truth handed down to
him from his fathers, so that he can authoritatively declare what he has rightly
received. But when one has received an entire and firm rule of truth from the
Scriptures, it will not be improper if he contribute to the establishment of
true doctrine anything from common education and from lib-oral studies, which,
it may be, he has attached himself to in his boyhood; yet so that, when he
has learned the truth, he renounce falsehood and pretence."
CHAP. XLIII.--A WORD OF EXHORTATION.
And when
he had said this, he looked to our father, and said: "You therefore,
old man, if indeed you care for your soul's safety, that when you desire to
be separated from the body, it may, in consequence of tills short conversion,
find eternal rest, ask about whatever you please, and seek counsel, that you
may be able to cast off any doubt that remains in you. For even to young men
the thee of life is uncertain; but to old men it is not even uncertain, for
there is no doubt that there is but little time remaining to them. And therefore
both young and old ought to be very earnest about their conversion and repentance,
and to be taken up with the adornment of their souls for the future with the
worthiest ornaments, such as the doctrines of truth, the grace of chastity,
the splendour of righteousness, the fairness of piety, and all other things
with which it becomes a reasonable mind to be adorned. Then, besides, they
should break off from unseemly and unbelieving companions, and keep company
with the faithful, and frequent those assemblies in which subjects are handled
relating to chastity, righteousness and piety; to pray to God always heartily,
and to ask of Him those things which ought to be asked of God; to give thanks
to Him; to repent truly of their past doings; in some measure also, if possible,
by deeds of mercy towards the poor, to help their penitence: for by these means
pardon will be more easily bestowed, and mercy will be sooner shown to the
merciful.
CHAP. XLIV.--EARNESTNESS.
"But
if he who comes to repentance is of more advanced age, he ought the more
to give thanks to
God, because,
having received the knowledge of the
truth, after all the violence of carnal lust has been broken, there awaits
him no fight of contest, by which to repress the pleasures of the body rising
against the mind. It remains, therefore, that he be exercised in the learning
of the truth, and in works of mercy, that he may bring forth fruits worthy
of repentance; and that he do not suppose that the proof of conversion is shown
by length of time, but by strength of devotion and of purpose. For minds are
manifest to God; and He does not take account of times, but of hearts. For
He approves if any one, on hearing the preaching of the truth, does not delay,
nor spend time in negligence, but immediately, and if I may say so, in the
same moment, abhorring the past, begins to desire things to come, and burns
with love of the heavenly kingdom.
CHAP. XLV.--ALL OUGHT TO REPENT.
"Wherefore,
let no one of you longer dissemble nor look backwards, but willingly approach
to
the Gospel
of the kingdom of God. Let not the poor man
say, When I shall become rich, then I shall be converted. God does not ask
money of you, but a merciful heart and a pious mind. Nor let the rich man delay
his conversion by reason of worldly care, while he thinks how he may dispose
the abundance of his fruits; nor say within himself, 'What shall I do? where
shall I bestow my fruits?' Nor say to his soul, 'Thou hast much goods laid
up for many years; feast and rejoice.' For it shall be said to him, 'Thou fool,
this night thy soul shall be taken from time, and whose shall those things
be which thou hast provided?'(1) Therefore let every age, every sex, every
condition, haste to repentance, that they may obtain eternal life. Let the
young be thankful that they put their necks under the yoke of discipline in
the very violence of their desires. The old also are themselves praise-worthy,
because they change for the fear of God, the custom of a long time in which
they have been unhappily occupied.
CHAP. XLVI.--THE SURE WORD OF PROPHECY.
"Let
no one therefore put off. Let no one delay. For what occasion is there for
delaying to do
well?
Or are you afraid, lest, when you have done
well, you do not find the reward as you supposed? And what loss will you sustain
if you do well without reward? Would not conscience alone be sufficient in
this? But if you find as you anticipate, shall you not receive great things
for small, and eternal for temporal? But I say this for the sake of the unbelieving.
For the things which we preach are as we preach them; because they cannot be
otherwise, since they have been promised by the prophetic word.
CHAP.
XLVII.--"A
FAITHFUL SAYING, AND WORTHY OF ALL ACCEPTATION."
"But
if any one desires to learn exactly the truth of our preaching, let him come
to hear, and let
him
ascertain what the true Prophet is; and then
at length all doubtfulness will cease to him, unless with obstinate mind he
resist those things which he finds to be true. For there are some whose only
object it is to gain the victory in any way whatever, and who seek praise for
this rather than their salvation. These ought not to have a single word addressed
to them, lest both the noble word suffer injury, and condemn to eternal death
him who is guilty of the wrong done to it. For what is there in respect of
which any one ought to oppose our preaching? or in respect of which the word
of our preaching is found to be contrary to the belief of what is true and
honourable? It says that the God the Father, the Creator of all, is to be honoured,
as also His Son, who alone knows Him and His will, and who alone is to be believed
concerning all things which He has enjoined. For He alone is the law and the
Lawgiver, and the righteous Judge, whose law decrees that God, the Lord of
all, is to be honoured by a sober, chaste, just, and merciful life, and that
all hope is to be placed in Him alone.
CHAP. XLVIII.--ERRORS OF THE PHILOSOPHERS.
"But
some one will say that precepts of this sort are given by the philosophers
also.(2) Nothing
of the
kind: for they do indeed give commandments concerning
justice and sobriety, but they are ignorant that God is the recompenser of
good and evil deeds; and therefore their laws and precepts only shun a public
accuser, but cannot purify the conscience. For why should one fear to sin in
secret, who does not know that there is a witness and a judge of secret things?
Besides, the philosophers in their precepts add that even the gods, who are
demons, are to be honoured; and this alone, even if in other respects they
seemed worthy of approbation, is sufficient to convict them of the most dreadful
impiety, and condemn them by their own sentence, since they declare indeed
that there is one God, yet command that many be worshipped, by way of humouring
human error. But also the philosophers say that God is not angry, not knowing
what they say. For anger is evil, when it disturbs the mind, so that it loses
right counsel. But that anger which punishes the wicked does not bring disturbance
to the mind; but it is one and the same affection, so to speak, which assigned
rewards to the good and punishment to the evil; for if He should bestow blessings
upon the good and the evil, and confer equal rewards upon the pious and the
impious, He would appear to be unjust rather than good.
CHAP. XLIX.--GOD'S LONG-SUFFERING.
"But
you say, Neither ought God to do evil. You say truly; nor does He. But those
who have been
created
by Him, while they do not believe that they
are to be judged, indulging their pleasures, have fallen away from piety and
righteousness. But you will say, If it is right to punish the wicked, they
ought to be punished immediately when they do wickedly. You indeed do well
to make haste; but He who is eternal, and from whom nothing is secret, inasmuch
as He is without end, in the same proportion is His patience extended, and
He regards not the swiftness of vengeance, but the causes of salvation. For
He is not so much pleased with the death as with the conversion of a sinner.(1)
Therefore, in short, He has bestowed upon men holy baptism, to which, if any
one makes haste to come, and for the future remains without stain, all his
sins are thenceforth blotted out, which were committed in the time of his ignorance.
CHAP. L.--PHILOSOPHERS NOT BENEFACTORS OF MEN.
"For
what have the philosophers contributed to the life of man, by saying that
God is not angry
with men?
Only to teach them to have no fear of any punishment
or judgment, and thereby to take away all restraint from sinners. Or what have
they benefited the human race, who have said that there is no God, but that
all things happen by chance and accident? What but that men, hearing this,
and thinking that there is no judge, no guardian of things, are driven headlong,
without fear of any one, to every deed which either rage, or avarice, or lust
may dictate. For they truly have much benefited the life of man who have said
that nothing can be done apart from GENESIS; that is, that every one, ascribing
the cause of his sin to GENESIS, might in the midst of his crimes declare himself
innocent, while he does not wash out his guilt by repentance, but doubles it
by laying the blame upon fate. And what shall I say of those philosophers who
have maintained that the gods are to be worshipped, and such gods as were described
to you a little while ago? What else was this but to decree that vices, crimes,
and base deeds should be worshipped? I am ashamed of you, and I pity you, if
you have not yet discovered that these things were unworthy of belief, and
impious, and execrable, or if, having discovered and ascertained them to be
evil, ye have nevertheless worshipped them as if they were good, yea, even
the best.
CHAP. LI.--CHRIST THE TRUE PROPHET.
"Then,
besides, of what sort is that which some of the philosophers have presumed
to speak even
concerning
God, though they are mortal, and can only
speak by opinion concerning invisible things, or concerning the origin of the
world, since they were not present when it was made, or concerning the end
of it, or concerning the treatment and judgment of souls in the infernal regions,
forgetting that it belongs indeed to a reasonable man to know things present
and visible, but that it is the part of prophetic prescience alone to know
things past, and things future, and things invisible? These things, therefore,
are not to be gathered from conjectures and opinions, in which men are greatly
deceived, but from faith in prophetic truth, as this doctrine of ours is. For
we speak nothing of ourselves, nor announce things gathered by human judgment;
for this were to deceive our hearers. But we preach the things which have been
committed and revealed to us by the true Prophet. And concerning His prophetic
prescience and power, if any one, as I have said, wishes to receive clear proofs,
let him come instantly and be alert to hear, and we shall give evident proofs
by which he shall seem not only to hear the power of prophetic prescience with
his ears, but even to see it with his eyes and handle it with his hand; and
when he has entertained a sure faith concerning Him, he will without any labour
take upon him the yoke of righteousness and piety;(2) and so great sweetness
will he perceive in it, that not only will be not find fault with any labour
being in it, but will even desire something further to be added and imposed
upon him."
CHAP. LII.--APPION AND ANUBION.
And when
he had said this, and more to the same purpose, and had cured some who were
present who were
infirm
and possessed of demons, he dismissed the
crowds, while they gave thanks and praised God, charging them to come to the
same place on the following days also for the sake of hearing. And when we
were together at home, and were preparing to eat, one entering told us that
Appion Pleistonices,(1) with Anubion, were lately come from Antroch, and were
lodging with Simon.(2) Then my father, when he heard this, rejoiced, and said
to Peter: "If you permit me, I should like to go and salute Appion and
Anubion, for they are great friends of mine; and perhaps I shall be able to
persuade Anubion to dispute with Clement on the subject of GENESIS." Then
Peter said: "I consent; and I commend you, because you respect your friends.
But consider how all things occur to you according to your wish by God's providence;
for, behold, not only have the objects of proper affection been restored to
you by the appointment of God, but also the presence of your friends is arranged
for you." Then said my father: "Truly I consider that it is so as
you say." And when he had said this, he went away to Anubion.
CHAP. LIII.--A TRANSFORMATION.
But we,
sitting with Peter the whole night, asking questions, and learning of him
on many subjects,
remained
awake through very delight in his teaching
and the sweetness of his words; and when it was daybreak, Peter, looking at
me and my brothers, said: "I wonder what has befallen your father." And
while he was speaking my father came in, and found Peter speaking to us about
him. And when he had saluted he began to apologize, and to explain the reason
why he had remained abroad. But we, looking at him, were horrified; for we
saw on him the face of Simon, yet we heard the voice of our father. And when
we shrank from him, and cursed him, my father was astonished at our treating
him so harshly and barbarously. Yet Peter was the only one who saw his natural
countenance; and he said to us: "Why do you curse your father?" And
we, along with our mother, answered him: "He appears to us to be Simon,
though he has our father's voice." Then Peter: "You indeed know only
his voice, which has not been changed by the sorceries; but to me also his
face, which to others appears changed by Simon's art, is known to be that of
your father Faustinianus." And looking at my father, he said: "The
cause of the dismay of your wife and your sons is this,--the appearance of
your countenance does not seem to be as it was, but the face of the detestable
Simon appears in you."
CHAP. LIV.--EXCITEMENT IN ANTIOCH.
And while
he was thus speaking, one of those returned who had gone before to Antioch,
and said
to Peter: "I
wish you to know, my lord Peter, that Simon at Antioch, doing many signs
and prodigies in public, has inculcated
upon the people nothing but what tends to excite hatred against you, calling
you a magician, a sorcerer, a murderer; and to such an extent has he stirred
up hatred against you, that they greatly desire, if they can find you anywhere,
even to devour your flesh. And therefore we who were sent before, seeing the
city greatly moved against you, met together in secret, and considered what
ought to be done.
CHAP. LV.--A STRATAGEM.
"And
when we saw no way of getting out of the difficulty, there came Cornelius
the centurion,
being
sent by Caesar to the president of Caesarea
on public business. Him we sent for alone, and told him the reason why we were
sorrowful, and entreated him that, if he could do anything, he should help
us. Then he most readily promised that he would straightway put him to flight,
if only we would aid his plans. And when we promised that we would be active
in doing everything, he said, 'Caesar has ordered sorcerers to be sought out
and destroyed in the city of Rome and through the provinces, and a great number
of them have been already destroyed. I shall therefore give out, through my
friends, that I am come to apprehend that magician, and that I am sent by Caesar
for this purpose, that he may be punished with the rest of his fraternity.
Let your people, therefore, who are with him in disguise, intimate to him,
as if they had heard it from some quarter, that I am sent to apprehend him;
and when he hears this, he is sure to take to flight. Or if you think of anything
better, tell me. Why need I say more?' It was so done by those of ours who
were with him, disguised for the purpose of acting as spies on him. And when
Simon learned that this was come upon him, he received the information as a
great kindness conferred upon him by them, and took to flight. He therefore
departed from Antioch, and, as we have heard, came hither with Athenodorus.
CHAP. LVI.--SIMON'S DESIGN IN THE TRANSFORMATION.
"All we, therefore, who went before you, considered that in the meantime
you should not go up to Antioch, till we see if the hatred of you which he
has sown among the people be in any degree lessened by his departure." When
he who had come from Antioch had imparted this information, Peter, looking
to our father, said, "Faustinianus, your countenance has been transformed
by Simon Magus, as is evident; for he, thinking that he was being sought for
by Caesar for punishment, has fled in terror, and has placed his own countenance
upon you, if haply you might be apprehended instead of him, and put to death,
that so he might cause sorrow to your sons." But my father, when he heard
this, crying out, said with tears: "You have judged rightly, O Peter:
for Anubion also, who is very friendly with me, began to inform me in a certain
mysterious way of his plots; but unhappily I did not believe him, because I
had done him no harm.'(1)
CHAP. LVII.--GREAT GRIEF.
And when
all of us, along with my father, were agitated with sorrow and weeping, meantime
Anubion came
to
us, intimating to us that Simon had fled during the
night, making for Judaea. But seeing our father lamenting and bewailing himself,
and saying, "Wretch that I am, not to believe when I heard that he is
a magician! What has befallen wretched me, that on one day, being recognised
by my wife and my sons, I have not been able to rejoice with them, but have
been rolled back to the former miseries which I endured in my wandering!"--but
my mother, tearing her dishevelled hair, bewailed much more bitterly,--we also,
confounded at the change of our father's countenance, were, as it were, thunderstruck
and beside ourselves, and could not understand what was the matter. But Anubion,
seeing us all thus afflicted, stood like one dumb. Then Peter, looking at us
his sons, said: "Believe me that this is your very father; wherefore also
I charge you that you respect him as your father. For God will afford some
opportunity on which he shall be able to put off the countenance of Simon,
and to recover the manifest figure of your father--that is, his own."
CHAP. LVIII.--HOW IT ALL HAPPENED.
Then,
turning to my father, he said: "I gave you leave to salute Appion
and Anubion, who, you said, were your friends from boyhood, but not that you
should speak with Simon." Then my father said: "I confess I have
sinned." Then said Anubion: "I also with him beg and entreat of you
to pardon the old man--good and noble man as he is. He was unhappily seduced
and imposed upon by the magician in question; for I will tell you how the thing
was done. When he came to salute us, it happened that at that very time we
were standing around him, hearing him tell that he intended to flee away that
night, for that he had heard that some persons had come even to this city of
Laodicea to apprehend him by command of the emperor, but that he wished to
turn all their rage against this Faustinianus, who has lately come hither.
And he said to us: 'Only you make him sup with us, and I shall compound a certain
ointment, with which, when he has supped, he shah anoint his face, and from
that time he shall seem to all to have my countenance. But you first anoint
your faces with the juice of a certain herb, that you may not be deceived as
to the change of his countenance, so that to all except you he shall seem to
be Simon.'
CHAP. LIX.--A SCENE OF MOURNING.
"And when he said this, I said to him, 'And what advantage will you gain
from this deed?' Then Simon said: 'In the first place, that those who are seeking
me may lay hold on him, and so give over the search for me. But if he be punished
by Caesar, that his sons may have much sorrow, who forsook me, and fled to
Peter, and are now his assistants.' Now I confess to you, Peter, what is true.
I did not dare then tell Faustinianus; but neither did Simon give us opportunity
of speaking with him in private, and disclosing to him fully Simon's design.
Meantime, about the middle of the night, Simon has fled away, making for Judaea.
And Athenodorus and Appion have gone to convoy him; but I pretended bodily
indisposition, that I might remain at home, and make him return quickly to
you, if haply he may in any way be concealed with you, lest, being seized by
those who are in quest of Simon, he be brought before Caesar, and perish without
cause. And now, in my anxiety about him, I have come to see him, and to return
before those who have gone to convoy Simon come back." And turning to
us, Anubion said: "I, Anubion, indeed see the true countenance of your
father, because I was previously anointed by Simon himself, as I have told
you, that the real face of Faustinianus might appear to my eyes; whence I am
astonished and wonder at the art of Simon Magus, because you standing here
do not recognise your father." And while my father and mother, and all
of us, wept for the things which had befallen, Anubion, moved with compassion,
also wept.
CHAP. LX.--A COUNTERPLOT.
Then Peter,
moved with compassion, promised that he would restore the face of our father,
saying
to him: "Listen, Faustinianus: As soon as the error
of your transformed countenance shall have conferred some advantage on us,
and shall have subserved the designs which we have in view, then I shall restore
to you the true form of your countenance; on condition, however, that you first
despatch what I shall command yon." And when my father promised that he
would with all his might fulfil everything that he might charge him with, provided
only that he might recover his own countenance, Peter thus began: "You
have heard with your own ears, that one of those who had been sent before has
returned from Antioch, and told us how Simon, while he was there, stirred up
the multitudes against me, and inflamed the whole city into hatred of me, declaring
that I am a magician, and a murderer, and a deceiver, so that they are eager,
if they see me, even to eat my flesh. Do therefore what I tell you: leave Clement
with me, and go before us to Antioch, with your wife, and your sons Faustus
and Faustinus. And I shall also send others with you, whom I think fit, who
shall observe whatsoever I command them.
CHAP. LXI.--A MINE DUG.
"When
therefore you come with them to Antioch, as you will be thought to be Simon,
stand in a
public place,
and proclaim your repentance, and say:
'I Simon declare to you, and confess that all that I said concerning Peter
was false: for he is neither a seducer, nor a magician, nor a murderer, nor
any of the things that I spoke against him; but I said all these things under
the instigation of madness. I therefore entreat you, even I myself, who erewhile
gave you causes of hatred against him, that you think no such thing concerning
him. But lay aside your hatred cease from your indignation; because he is truly
sent by God for the salvation of the world--a disciple and apostle of the true
Prophet. Wherefore I advise, exhort, and charge you that you hear him, and
believe him when he preaches to you the truth, lest haply, if you despise him,
your very city suddenly perish. But I will tell yon why I now make this confession
to you. This night an angel of God rebuked me for my wickedness, and scourged
me terribly, because was an enemy to the herald of the truth. Therefore I entreat
you, that even if I myself should ever again come to you, and attempt to say
anything against Peter, you will not receive nor believe me. For I confess
to you, I was a magician, a seducer, a deceiver; but I repent, for it is possible
by repentance to blot out former evil deeds.'"
CHAP. LXII.--A CASE OF CONSCIENCE.
When Peter
made this intimation to my father, he answered: "I know what
yon wish; do not trouble yourself further: for I understand and know what I
am to undertake when I come to the place." And Peter gave him further
instruction, saying: "When therefore you come to the place, and see the
people turned by your discourse, and laying aside their hatred, and returning
to their longing for me, send and tell me, and I shall come immediately; and
when I come, I shall without delay set you free from this strange countenance,
and restore to you your own, which is known to all your friends." And
having said this, he ordered my brothers to go with him, and at the same time
our mother Matthidia, and some of our friends. But my mother refused to go
along with him, and said: "It seems as if I should be an adulteress if
I were to associate with the countenance of Simon; but if I be compelled to
go along with him, it is at all events impossible that I can lie in the same
bed with him; but I do not know if I can consent even to go with him." And
when she stoutly refused. Anubion began to exhort her, saying: "Believe
me and Peter. But does not even his voice persuade you that he is your husband
Faustinianus, whom truly I love not less than you do? And, in short, I also
myself shall come with you." And when Anubion had said this, my mother
promised that she would go with him.
CHAP. LXIII.--A PIOUS FRAUD.
Then said
I: "God arranges our affairs to our liking; for we have with
us Anubion an astrologer, with whom, if we come to Antioch, we shall dispute
with all earnestness on the subject of GENESIS." And when our father had
set out, after the middle of the night, with those whom Peter had ordered to
accompany him, and with Anubion; in the morning, before Peter went to the discussion,
those men returned who had convoyed Simon, namely Appion and Athenodorus, and
came to us inquiring after my father. But Peter, when he was informed of their
coming, ordered them to enter. And when they were seated, they asked, "Where
is Faustinianus?" Peter answered: "We do not know; for since the
evening that he went to you, no one of his friends has seen him. But yesterday
morning Simon came inquiring for him; and because we gave him no answer, I
know not what he meant, but he said that he was Faustinianus. But when nobody
believed him, he went and lamented, and threatened that he would destroy himself;
and afterwards he went away towards the
CHAP. LXIV.--A COMPETITION IN LYING.
When Appion
heard this, and those who were with him, they raised a great howling, saying: "Why have you done this? Why did you not receive him?" And
when Athenodorus was going to tell me that it was my father Faustinianus himself,
Appion prevented him, and said: "We have learned from some one that he
has gone with Simon, and that at the entreaty of Faustinianus himself, being
unwilling to see his sons, because they are Jews. When therefore we heard this,
we came to inquire after him here; but since he is not here, it appears that
he must have spoken truly who told us that he has gone with Simon. This, therefore,
we tell you." But I Clement, when I understood the designs of Peter, that
he wished to make them suppose that the old man would be required at their
hands, so that they might be afraid and flee away, I began to aid his design,
and said to Appion: "Listen, dear Appion: what we believe to be good,
we wish to deliver to our father also; but if he will not receive it, but rather,
as you say, flees away through abhorrence of us--it may perhaps be harsh to
say so--we care nothing about him." And when I had said this, they departed,
cursing my cruelty, and followed the track of Simon, as we learned on the following
day.
CHAP. LXV.--SUCCESS OF THE PLOT.
Meantime,
while Peter was daily, according to his custom, teaching the people, and
working many
miracles and
cures, after ten days came one of our people
from Antioch, sent by my father, informing us how my father stood in public,
accusing Simon, whose face indeed he seemed to wear, and extolling Peter with
unmeasured praises, and commending him to all the people, and making them long
for him, so that all were changed by his speech, and longed to see him; and
that many had come to love Peter so much, that they raged against my father
in his character of Simon, and thought of laying hands on him, because he had
done such wrong to Peter! "Wherefore," said he, "make haste,
lest haply he be murdered; for be sent me with speed to you, being in great
fear, to ask you to come without delay, that you may find him alive, and also
that you may appear at the favourable moment, when the city is growing in affection
towards you."(1) He also told us how, as soon as my father entered the
city of Antioch, the whole people were gathered to him, supposing him to be
Simon; and he began to make public confession to them all, according to what
the restoration of the people demanded: for all, as many as came, both noble
and common, both rich and poor, hoping that some prodigies would be wrought
by him in his usual way, he addressed thus:--
CHAP. LXVI.--TRUTH TOLD BY LYING LIPS.
"It
is long that the divine patience bears with me, Simon the most unhappy of
men; for whatever
you have
wondered at in me was done, not by means of truth,
but by the lies and tricks of demons, that I might subvert your faith and condemn
my own soul. I confess that all things that I said about Peter were lies; for
he never was either a magician or a murderer, but has been sent by God for
the salvation of you all; and if from this hour you think that he is to be
despised, be assured that your very city may suddenly be destroyed. But, you
will ask, what is the reason that I make this confession to you of my own accord?
I was vehemently rebuked by an angel of God this night, and most severely scourged,
because I was his enemy. I therefore entreat you, that if from this hour even
I myself shall ever open my mouth against him, you will drive me from your
sight; for that foul demon, who is an enemy to the salvation of men, speaks
against him through my mouth, that you may not attain to life by his means.
For what miracle could the magic art show you through me? I made brazen dogs
bark, and statues move, men change their appearances, and suddenly vanish from
men's sight; and for these things you ought to have cursed the magic art, which
bound your souls with devilish fetters, that I might show you a vain miracle,
that you might not believe Peter, who cures the sick in the name of Him by
whom he is sent, and expels demons, and gives sight to the blind, and restores
health to the palsied, and raises the dead."
CHAP. LXVII.--FAUSTINIANUS IS HIMSELF AGAIN.
Whilst he made these and similar statements, the people began to curse him,
and to weep and lament because they had sinned against Peter, believing him
to be a magician or wicked man. But the same day, at evening, Faustinianus
had his own face restored to him, and the appearance of Simon Magus left him.
Now Simon, hearing that his face on Faustinianus had contributed to the glory
of Peter, came in haste to anticipate Peter, and intending to cause by his
art that his likeness should be taken from Faustinianus, when Christ had already
accomplished this according to the word of His apostle. But Niceta and Aquila,
seeing their father's face restored after the necessary proclamation, gave
thanks to God, and would not suffer him to address the people any more.
CHAP. LXVIII.--PETER'S ENTRY INTO ANTIOCH.
But Simon
began, though secretly, to go amongst his friends and acquaintances, and
to malign Peter
more than
before. Then all spat in his face, and drove
him from the city, saying: "You will be chargeable with your own death,
if you think of coming hither again, speaking against Peter." These things
being known at Laodicea, Peter ordered the people to meet on the following
day; and having ordained one of those who followed him as bishop over them,
and others as presbyters, and having baptized multitudes, and restored to health
all who were troubled with sicknesses or demons, he stayed there three days
longer; and all things being properly arranged, he bade them farewell, and
set out from Laodicea, being much longed for by the people of Antioch.(1) And
the whole city began to hear, through Niceta and Aquila, that Peter was coming.
Then all the people of the city of Antioch, hearing of Peter's arrival, went
to meet him, and almost all the old men and the nobles came with ashes sprinkled
on their heads, in this way testifying their repentance, because they had listened
to the magician Simon, in opposition to his preaching.
CHAP. LXIX.--PETER'S THANKSGIVING.
Stating
these and such like things, they bring to him those distressed with sicknesses,
and tormented
with demons,
paralytics also, and those suffering
diverse perils; and there was an infinite number of sick people collected.
And when Peter saw that they not only repented of the evil thoughts they had
entertained of him through means of Simon, but also that they showed so entire
faith in God, that they believed that all who suffered from every sort of ailment
could be healed by him, he spread out his hands towards heaven, pouring out
prayers with tears, and gave thanks to God, saying: "I bless thee, O Father,
worthy of all praise, who hast deigned to fulfil every word and promise of
Thy Son, that every creature may know that Thou alone art God in heaven and
in earth."
CHAP. LXX.--MIRACLES.
With such
sayings, he went up on a height, and ordered all the multitude of sick people
to be ranged
before
him, and addressed them all in these words: "As
you see me to be a man like to yourselves, do not suppose that you can recover
your health from me, but through Him who, coming down from heaven, has shown
to those who believe in Him a perfect medicine for body and soul. Hence let
all this people be witnesses to your declaration, that with your whole heart
you believe in the Lord Jesus Christ, that they may know that themselves also
may be saved by Him." And when all the multitude of the sick with one
voice cried out that He is the true God whom Peter preaches, suddenly an overpowering
light of the grace of God appeared in the midst of the people; and the paralytics
being cured, began to run to Peter's feet, the blind to shout on the recovery
of their sight, the lame to give thanks on regaining the power of walking,
the sick to rejoice in restored health; some even who were barely alive, being
already without consciousness or the power of speech, were raised up; and all
the lunatics, and those possessed of demons, were set free.
CHAP. LXXI.--SUCCESS.
So great grace of His power did the Holy Spirit show on that day, that all,
from the least to the greatest, with one voice confessed the Lord; and not
to delay you with many words, within seven days, more than ten thousand men,
believing in God, were baptized and consecrated by sanctification: so that
Theophilus,(2) who was more exalted than all the men of power in that city,
with all eagerness of desire consecrated the great palace of his house under
the name of a church, and a chair was placed in it for the Apostle Peter by
all the people; and the whole multitude assembling daily to hear the word,
believed in the healthful doctrine which was avouched by the efficacy of cures.
CHAP. LXXII.--HAPPY ENDING.
Then I
Clement, with my brothers and our mother, spoke to our father, asking him
whether any remnants
of unbelief
remained in him. And he said: "Come,
and you shall see, in the presence of Peter, what an increase of faith has
grown in me." Then Faustinianus approached, and fell down at Peter's feet,
saying: "The seeds of your word, which the field of my mind has received,
are now sprung up, and have so advanced to fruitful maturity, that nothing
is wanting but that you separate me from the chaff by that spiritual reaping-hook
of yours, and place me in the garner of the Lord, making me partaker of the
divine table." Then Peter, with all alacrity grasping his hand, presented
him to me Clement, and my brothers, saying: "As God has restored your
sons to you, their father, so also your sons restore their father to God." And
he proclaimed a fast to all the people, and on the next Lord's day he baptized
him; and in the midst of the people, taking occasion from his conversion, he
related all his fortunes, so that the whole city received him as an angel,
and paid him no less honour than they did to the apostle.(3) And these things
being known, Peter ordered the people to meet an the following day; and having
ordained one of his followers as bishop, and others as presbyters, he baptized
also a great number of people, and restored to health all who had been distressed
with sicknesses.(1)
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