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THE ORATION
EUSEBIUS PAMPHILUS
IN PRAISE OF THE EMPEROR CONSTANTINE
PRONOUNCED ON THE THIRTIETH ANNIVERSARY OF HIS REIGN
I COME not forward prepared with a fictitious narrative, nor with elegance
of language to captivate the ear, desiring to charm my hearers as it were,
with a siren's voice; nor shall I present the draught of pleasure in cups of
gold decorated with lorry flowers (I mean the graces of style) to those who
are pleased with such things. Rather would I follow the precepts of the wise,
and admonish all to avoid and turn aside from the beaten road, and keep themselves
from 2 contact with the vulgar crowd. I come, then, prepared to celebrate our
emperor's praises in a newer strain; and, though the number be infinite of
those who desire to be my companions in my present task, I am resolved to shun
the common track of men, (2) and to pursue that untrodden path which it is
unlawful to enter on with unwashed feet. Let those who admire a vulgar style,
abounding in puerile subtleties, and who court a pleasing and popular muse,
essay, since pleasure is the object they have in view, to charm the earn of
men by a narrative of merely human merits. Those, however who are initiated
into the universal science, (3) and have attained to Divine as well as human
knowledge, and account the choice of the latter as the real excellence, will
prefer those virtues of the emperor which Heaven itself approves, and his pious
actions, to his merely human accomplishments; and will leave to inferior encomiasts
the task of celebrating his lesser merits. For since our emperor is gifted
as 3 well with that sacred wisdom which has immediate reference to God, as
with the knowledge which concerns the interests of men; let those who are competent
to such a task describe his secular acquirements, great and transcendent as
they are, and fraught with advantage to mankind (for all that characterizes
the emperor is great and noble), yet still inferior to his diviner qualifies,
to those who stand without the sacred precincts. Let those, however, who 4
are within the sanctuary, and have access to its inmost and untrodden recesses,
close the doors against every profane ear, and unfold, as it were, the secret
mysteries of our emperors character to the initiated alone. And let those who
have purified their ears in the streams of piety, and raised their thoughts
on the soaring wing of the mind itself, join the company which surrounds the
Sovereign Lord of all, and learn in silence the divine mysteries. Mean- 5 while
let the sacred oracles, given, not by the spirit of divination (or rather let
me say of madness and folly), but by the inspiration of Divine truth, (4) be
our instructors in these mysteries; speaking to us of sovereignty, generally:
the heavenly array which surrounds the Lord of all; of that exemplar of imperial
power which is before us, and that counterfeit coin: and, lastly, of the consequences
which result from both. With these oracles, then, to initiate us in the knowledge
of the sacred rites, let us essay, as follows, the commencement of our divine
mysteries.
CHAPTER I.
The Oration.
1 TO-DAY
iS the festival of our great emperor: and we his children rejoice therein,
feeling the inspiration
of our sacred theme. He who presides over
our solemnity is the Great Sovereign himself; he, I mean, who is truly great;
of whom I affirm (nor will the sovereign who hears me be offended, but will
rather ap-repels the gaze of every eye from his Divine majesty. His ministers
are the heavenly hosts; his armies the supernal powers, angels, the companies
of archangels, the chorus of holy spirits, draw from and reflect his radiance
as from the fountains of everlasting light. Yea every light, and specially
those divine and incorporeal intelligences whose place is beyond the heavenly
sphere, celebrate this august Sovereign with lofty and sacred strains of praise.
The vast expanse of heaven, like an azure veil is interposed between those
without, and those who inhabit his royal mansions: while round this expanse
the sun and moon, with the rest of the heavenly luminaries (like torch-bearers
around the entrance of the imperial palace), perform, in honor of their sovereign,
their appointed courses; holding forth, at the word of his command, an ever-burning
light to those whose lot is cast in the darker regions with- 3 out the pale
of heaven. And surely when I remember that our own victorious emperor renders
praises to this Mighty Sovereign, I do well to follow him, knowing as I do
that to him alone we owe that imperial power under which we live. The pious
Caesars, instructed by their father's wisdom, acknowledge him as the source
of every blessing: the soldiery, the entire body of the people, both in the
country and in the cities of the empire, with the governors of the several
provinces, assembling together in accordance with the precept of their great
Saviour and Teacher,, worship him. In short, the whole family of mankind, of
every nation, tribe, and tongue, both collectively and severally, however diverse
their opinions on other subjects, are unanimous in this one confession; and,
in obedience to the reason implanted in them, and the spontaneous and uninstructed
impulse of their own minds, unite in calling on the One and only God. (2) Nay,
does not the 4 universal frame of earth acknowledge him her Lord, and declare,
by the vegetable and animal life which she produces her subjection to the will
of a superior Power? The rivers, flowing with abundant stream, and the perennial
fountains, springing from hidden and exhaust-less depths, ascribe to him the
cause of their marvellous source. The mighty waters of the sea, enclosed in
chambers of unfathomable ing currents of the winds, and the airy courses of
the clouds, all reveal his presence to those to whom his Person is invisible.
The 5 all-radiant sun, who holds his constant career through the lapse of ages,
owns him Lord alone, and obedient to his will, dares not depart from his appointed
path. The inferior splendor of the moon, alternatively diminished and increased
at stated periods, is subject to his Divine command. The beauteous mechanism
of the heavens, glittering with the hosts of stars, moving in harmonious order,
and preserving the measure of each several orbit, proclaims him the giver of
all light: yea, all the heavenly luminaries maintaining at his will and word
a grand and perfect unity of motion, pursue the track of their ethereal career,
and complete in the lapse of revolving ages their distant course. The alternate
recurrence of day and night, the changing seasons, the order and proportion
of the universe, all declare the manifold wisdom of [his boundless power].
To him the unseen agencies which hold their course throughout the expanse of
space, render the due tribute of praise. To him this terrestrial globe itself,
to him the heavens above, and the choirs beyond the vault of heaven, give honor
as to their mighty Sovereign: the angelic hosts greet him with ineffable songs
of Praise; and the spirits which draw their being from incorporeal light, adore
him as their Creator. The everlasting ages which were before this heaven and
earth, with other periods beside them, infinite, and antecedent to all visible
creation acknowledge him the sole and supreme 6 Sovereign and Lord. Lastly,
he who is in all, before, and after all, [3] his only begotten, pre-existent
Word, the great High Priest of the mighty God, elder than all time and every
age, devoted to his Father's glory, first and alone makes intercession with
him for the salvation of mankind. [4] Supreme and pre-eminent Ruler of the
universe, he shares the glory of his Father's kingdom: for he is that Light,
which, transcendent above the universe, encircles the Father's Person, interposing
and dividing between the eternal and uncreated Essence and all derived existence:
that Light which, streaming from on high, proceeds from that Deity who knows
not origin or end, and illumines the super-celestial regions, and all that
heaven itself contains, with the radiance of wisdom bright beyond the splendor
of the sun. This is he who holds a supreme dominion over this whole world,
[5] who is over and in all things, and pervades all things [6] visible and
invisible; the Word of God. From whom and by whom our divinely favored emperor,
receiving, as it were a transcript of the Divine sovereignty, directs, in imitation
of God himself, the administration of this world's affairs.
CHAPTER II.
1 THIS
only begotten Word of God reigns, from ages which had no beginning, to infinite
and endless
ages, the
partner of his Father's kingdom. And [our
emperor] ever beloved by him, who derives the source of imperial authority
from above, and is strong in the power of his sacred title, [1] has controlled
the empire of the world for a long period of years. Again, that Preserver of
the universe orders these heavens and earth, and the celestial kingdom, consistently
with his Father's will. Even so our emperor whom he loves, by bringing those
whom he rules on earth to the only begotten Word and Saviour renders them fit
subjects of his 3 kingdom. And as he who is the common Saviour of mankind,
by his invisible and Divine power as the good shepherd, drives far away from
his flock, like savage beasts, those apostate spirits which once flew through
the airy tracts above this earth, and fastened on the souls of men; [2] so
this his friend, graced by his heavenly favor with victory over all his foes,
subdues and chastens the open adversaries of the truth in accordance with the
usages of war. He who is the pre-existent Word, the 4 Preserver of all things,
imparts to his disciples the seeds of true wisdom and salvation, and at once
enlightens and gives them understanding in the knowledge of his Father's kingdom.
Our emperor, his friend, acting as interpreter to the Word of God, aims at
recalling the whole human race to the knowledge of God; proclaiming clearly
in the ears of all, and declaring with powerful voice the laws of truth and
godliness to all who dwell on the earth. Once more, the universal Saviour opens
the heavenly gates of his Father's kingdom to those whose course is thitherward
from this world. Our emperor, emulous of his Divine example, having purged
his earthly dominion from every stain of impious error, invites each holy and
pious worshiper within his imperial mansions, earnestly desiring to save with
all its crew that mighty vessel of which he is the appointed pilot. And he
alone of all who have wielded the imperial power of Rome, being honored by
the Supreme Sovereign with a reign of three decennial periods, now celebrates
this festival, not, his ancestors might have done, in honor of infernal demons,
or the apparitions of seducing spirits, or of the fraud and deceitful arts
of impious men; but as an act of thanksgiving to him by whom he has thus been
honored, and in acknowledgment of the blessings he has received at his hands.
He does not, in imitation of ancient usage, defile his imperial mansions with
blood and gore, nor propitiate the infernal deities with fire and smoke, and
sacrificial offerings; but dedicates to the universal Sovereign a pleasant
and acceptable sacrifice, even his own imperial soul, and a mind truly fitted
for the service of God. For this sacrifice alone is grateful to him: and this
sacrifice our emperor has learned, with purified mind and thoughts, to present
as an offering without the intervention of fire and blood, while his own piety,
strengthened by the truthful doctrines with which his soul is stored, he sets
forth in magnificent language the praises of God, and imitates his Divine philanthropy
by his own imperial acts. Wholly devoted to him, he dedicates himself as a
noble offering, a first-fruit of that world, the government of which is intrusted
to his charge. This first and greatest sacrifice our emperor first dedicates
to God; and then, as a faithful shepherd, he offers, not "famous hecatombs
of firstling lambs," but the souls of that flock which is the object of
his care, those rational beings whom he leads to the knowledge and pious worship
of God.
CHAPTER III.
1 AND
gladly does he accept and welcome this sacrifice, and commend the presenter
of so august and noble
an offering, by protracting his reign to a lengthened
period of years, giving larger proofs of his beneficence in proportion to the
emperor's holy services to himself. Accordingly he permits him to celebrate
each successive festival during great and general prosperity throughout the
empire, advancing one of his sons, at the recurrence of each decennial period,
to a share of his own imperial 2 power. [1] The eldest, who bears his father's
name, he received as his partner in the empire about the close of the first
decade of his reign: the second, next in point of age, at the second; and the
third in like manner at the third decennial period, the occasion of this our
present festival. And now that the fourth period has commenced, and the time
of his reign is still further prolonged, he desires to extend his imperial
authority by calling still more of his kindred to partake his power; and, by
the appointment of the Caesars, [2] fulfills the predictions of the holy prophets,
according to what they uttered ages before: "And the saints of the Most
High shall take the kingdom." [3] And thus the Almighty Sovereign himself
accords an increase both of years and of children to our most pious emperor,
and renders his sway over the nations of the world still fresh and flourishing,
as though it were even now springing up in its earliest vigor. He it is who
appoints him this present festival, in that he has made him victorious over
every enemy that disturbed his peace: he it is who displays him as an example
of 4 true godliness to the human race. And thus our emperor, like the radiant
sun, illuminates the most distant subjects of his empire through the presence
of the Caesars, as with the far piercing rays of his own brightness. To us
who occupy the eastern regions he has given a son worthy of himself; [4] a
second and a third respectively to other departments of his empire, to be,
as it were, brilliant reflectors of the light which proceeds from himself.
Once more, having harnessed, as it were, under the self-same yoke the four
most noble Caesars [5] as horses in the imperial chariot, he sits on high and
directs their course by the reins of holy harmony and concord; and, himself
every where present, and observant of every event, thus traverses every region
of the world. Lastly, invested as he 5 is with a semblance of heavenly sovereignty,
he directs his gaze above, and frames his earthly government according to the
pattern of that Divine original, feeling strength in its conformity to the
monarchy of God. And this conformity is granted by the universal Sovereign
to man alone of the creatures of this earth: for he only is the author of sovereign
power, who decrees that all should be subject to the rule of one. And surely
monarchy far transcends every 6 other constitution and form of government:
for that democratic equality of power, which is its opposite, may rather be
described as anarchy and disorder. Hence there is one God, and not two, or
three, or more: for to assert a plurality of gods is plainly to deny the being
of God at all. There is one Sovereign; and his Word and royal Law is one: a
Law not expressed in syllables and words, not written or engraved on tablets,
and therefore subject to the ravages of time; but the living and self-subsisting
Word, who himself is God, and who administers his Father's kingdom on behalf
of all who are after him and subject to his power. His attendants are 7 the
heavenly hosts; the myriads of God's angelic ministers; the super-terrestrial
armies, of unnumbered multitude; and those unseen spirits within heaven itself,
whose agency is employed in regulating the order of this world. Ruler and chief
of all these is the royal Word, acting as Regent of the Supreme Sovereign.
To him the names of Captain, and great High Priest, Prophet of the Father,
Angel of mighty counsel, Brightness of the Father's light, Only begotten Son,
with a thousand other titles, are ascribed in the oracles of the sacred writers.
And the Father, having constituted him the living Word, and Law and Wisdom
the fullness of all blessing, has presented this best and greatest gift to
all who are the subjects of his sovereignty. And he himself, who pervades 8
all things, and is every where present, unfolding his Father's bounties to
all with unsparing hand, has accorded a specimen of his sovereign power even
to his rational creatures of this earth, in that he has provided the mind of
man, who is formed after his own image, with Divine faculties, whence it is
capable of other virtues also, which flow from the same heavenly source. For
he only is wise, who is the only God: he only is essentially good: he only
is of mighty power, the Parent of justice, the Father of reason and wisdom,
the Fountain of light and life, the Dispenser of truth and virtue: in a word,
the Author of empire itself, and of all dominion and power.
CHAPTER IV.
1 BUT whence has man this knowledge, and who has ministered these truths to
mortal ears? Or whence has a tongue of flesh the power to speak of things so
utterly distinct from fleshly or material substance? Who has gazed on the invisible
King, and beheld these perfections in him? The bodily sense may comprehend
elements and their combinations, of a nature kindred to its own: but no one
yet has boasted to have scanned with corporeal eye that unseen kingdom which
governs all things nor has mortal nature yet discerned the beauty of perfect
wisdom. Who has beheld the face of righteousness through the medium of flesh?
And whence came the idea of legitimate sovereignty and imperial power to man?
Whence the thought of absolute dominion to a being composed of flesh and blood?
Who declared those ideas which are invisible and undefined, and that incorporeal
essence which has no external form, to the mortals of this earth?
2 Surely there was but one interpreter of these things; the all-pervading
Word of God. [1] For he is the author of that rational and intelligent being
which exists in man; and, being himself one with his Father's Divine nature,
he sheds upon his offspring the out-flowings of his Father's bounty. Hence
the natural and untaught powers of thought, which all men, Greeks or Barbarians,
alike possess: hence the perception of reason and wisdom, the seeds of integrity
and righteousness, the understanding of the arts of life, the knowledge of
virtue, the precious name of wisdom, and the noble love of philosophic learning.
Hence the knowledge of all that is great and good: hence apprehension of God
himself, and a life worthy of his worship: hence the royal authority of man,
and his invincible lordship over the creatures of this world. And when that
Word, who is the Parent of rational beings, had impressed a character on the
mind of man according to the image and likeness of God, [2] and had made him
a royal creature, in that he gave him alone of all earthly creatures capacity
to rule and to obey (as well as forethought and foreknowledge even here, concerning
the promised hope of his heavenly kingdom, because of which he himself came,
and, as the Parent of his children, disdained not to hold converse with mortal
men); he continued to cherish the seeds which himself had sown, and renewed
his gracious favors from above; holding forth to all the promise of sharing
his heavenly kingdom. Accordingly he called men, and exhorted them to be ready
for their heavenward journey, and to provide themselves with the garment which
became their calling. And by an indescribable power he filled the world in
every part with his doctrine, expressing by the similitude of an earthly kingdom
that heavenly one to which he earnestly invites all mankind, and presents it
to them as a worthy object of their hope.
CHAPTER V.
AND in
this hope our divinely-favored 1 emperor partakes even in this present life,
gifted as he is by God with
native virtues, and having received into
his soul the out-flowings of his favor. His reason he derives from the great
Source of all reason: he is wise, and good, and just, as having fellowship
with perfect Wisdom, Goodness, and Righteousness: virtuous, as following the
pattern of perfect virtue: valiant, as partaking of heavenly strength. And
2 truly may he deserve the imperial title, who has formed his soul to royal
virtues, according to the standard of that celestial kingdom. But he who is
a stranger to these blessings, who denies the Sovereign of the universe, and
owns no allegiance to the heavenly Father of spirits; who invests not himself
with the virtues which become , an emperor, but overlays his soul with moral
deformity and baseness; who for royal clemency substitutes the fury of a savage
beast; for a generous temper, the incurable venom of malicious wickedness;
for prudence, folly; for reason and wisdom, that recklessness which is the
most odious of all vices, for from it, as from a spring of bitterness, proceed
the most pernicious fruits; such as inveterate profligacy of life, covetousness,
murder, impiety and defiance of God; surely one abandoned to; such vices as
these, however he may be deemed powerful through despotic violence, has no
true title to the name of Emperor. For how should he whose soul 3 is impressed
with a thousand absurd images of false deities, [1] be able to exhibit a counterpart
of the true and heavenly sovereignty? Or how can he be absolute lord of others,
who has subjected himself to the dominion of a thousand cruel masters? a slave
of low delights and un-governed lust, a slave of wrongfully-extorted wealth,
of rage and passion, as well as of cowardice and terror; a slave of ruthless
demons, and soul-destroying spirits? Let then, our emperor, on the testimony
of truth itself, be declared alone worthy of the title; who is dear to the
Supreme Sovereign himself; who alone is free, nay, who is truly lord: above
the thirst of wealth, superior to sexual desire; victorious even over natural
pleasures; controlling, not controlled by, anger and passion. [2] He is indeed
an emperor, and bears a title corresponding to his deeds; a VICTOR in truth,
who has gained the victory over those passions which overmaster the rest of
men: whose character is formed after the Divine original a of the Supreme Sovereign,
and whose mind reflects, as in a mirror, the radiance of his virtues. Hence
is our emperor perfect in discretion, in goodness, in justice, in courage,
in piety, in devotion to God: he truly and only is a philosopher, since he
knows himself, and is fully aware that supplies of every blessing are showered
on him from a source quite external to himself, even from heaven itself. Declaring
the august title of supreme authority by the splendor of his vesture, he alone
worthily wears that imperial purple which so well becomes 5 him. He is indeed
an emperor, who calls on and implores in prayer the favor of his heavenly Father
night and day, and whose ardent desires are fixed on his celestial kingdom.
For he knows that present things, subject as they are to decay and death, flowing
on and disappearing like a river's stream, are not worthy to be compared with
him who is sovereign of all; therefore it is that he longs for the incorruptible
and incorporeal kingdom of God. And this kingdom he trusts he shall obtain,
elevating his mind as he does in sublimity of thought above the vault of heaven,
and filled with inexpressible longing for the glories which shine there, in
comparison with which he deems the precious things of this present world but
darkness. For he sees earthly sovereignty to be but a petty and fleeting dominion
over a mortal and temporary life, and rates it not much higher than the goatherd's,
or shepherd's, or herdsman's power: nay, as more burdensome than theirs, and
exercised over more stubborn subjects. The acclamations of the people, and
the voice of flattery, he reckons rather troublesome than pleasing, because
of the steady constancy of his character, and genuine discipline of his mind.
Again, when he beholds the mili- 6 tary service of his subjects, the vast array
of his armies, the multitudes of horse and foot, entirely devoted to his command,
he feels no astonishment, no pride at the possession of such mighty power;
but turns his thoughts inward on himself, and recognizes the same common nature
there. He smiles at his vesture, embroidered with gold and flowers, and at
the imperial purple and diadem itself, when he sees the multitude gaze in wonder,
like children at a bugbear, on the splendid spectacle. [4] Himself superior
to such feelings, he clothes his soul with the knowledge of God, that vesture,
the broidery of which is temperance, righteousness, piety, and all other virtues;
a vesture such as truly becomes a sovereign. The 7 wealth which others so much
desire, as gold, silver, or precious gems, he regards to be, as they really
are, in themselves mere stones and worthless matter, of no avail to preserve
or defend from evil. For what power have these things to free from disease,
or repel the approach of death? And knowing as he does this truth by personal
experience in the use of these things, he regards the splendid attire of his
subjects with calm indifference, and smiles at the childishness of those to
whom they prove attractive. Lastly, he abstains from all excess in food and
wine, and leaves superfluous dainties to gluttons, judging that such indulgences,
I however suitable to others, are not so to him, and deeply convinced of their
pernicious tendency, and their effect in darkening the intellectual powers
of the soul. For all these reasons, 8 our divinely taught and noble-minded
emperor, aspiring to higher objects than this life affords, calls upon his
heavenly Father as one who longs for his kingdom; exhibits a pious spirit in
each action of his life; and finally, as a wise and good instructor, imparts
to his subjects the knowledge of him who is the Sovereign Lord of all.
CHAPTER VI.
1 AND
God himself, as an earnest of future reward, assigns to him now as it were
tricennial crowns
[1] composed
of prosperous periods of time; and now,
after the revolution of three circles of ten years, he grants permission to
all mankind to celebrate this general, nay rather, this universal festival.
And while those on earth thus rejoice, crowned as it were with the flowers
of divine knowledge, surely, we may not unduly suppose that the heavenly choirs,
attracted by a natural sympathy, unite their joy with the joy of those on earth:
nay, that the Supreme Sovereign himself, as a gracious father, delights in
the worship of duteous children, and for this reason is pleased to honor the
author and cause of their obedience through a lengthened period of time; and,
far from limiting his reign to three decennial circles of years, he extends
it to the remotest period, even to far distant eternity. Now eternity [2] in
its whole extent is beyond the power of decline or death: its beginning and
extent alike incapable of being scanned by mortal thoughts. Nor will it suffer
its central point to be perceived, nor that which is termed its present duration
to be grasped by the inquiring mind. Far less, then, the future, or the past:
for the one is not, but is already gone; while the future has not yet arrived,
and therefore is not. As regards what is termed the present time, it vanishes
even as we think or speak, more swiftly than the word itself is uttered. Nor
is it possible in any sense to apprehend this time as present; for we must
either expect the future, or contemplate the past; the present slips from us,
and is gone, even in the act of thought. Eternity, then, in its whole extent,
resists and refuses subjection to mortal rea- 4 son. But it does not refuse
to acknowledge its own Sovereign and Lord, [3] and bears him as it were mounted
on itself, rejoicing in the fair trappings which he bestows. [4] And he himself,
not binding it, as the poet imagined, with a golden chain, [5] but as it were
controlling its movements by the reins of ineffable wisdom, has adjusted its
months and seasons, its times and years, and the alterations of day and night,
with perfect harmony, and has thus attached to it limits and measures of various
kinds. For eternity, being in its nature direct, and stretching onward into
infinity, and receiving its name, eternity, as having an everlasting existence,
[6] and being similar in all its parts, or rather having no division or distance,
progresses only in a line of direct extension. But God, who has distributed
it by intermediate sections, and has divided it, like a far extended line,
in many points, has included in it a vast number of portions; and though it
is in its nature one, and resembles unity itself, he has attached to it a multiplicity
of numbers, and has given it, though formless in itself, an endless variety
of forms. For first of all he framed in it formless matter 5, as a substance
capable of receiving all forms. He next, by the power of the number two, imparted
quality to matter, and gave beauty to that which before was void of all grace.
Again, by means of the number three, he framed a body compounded of matter
and form, and presenting the three dimensions of breadth, and length, and depth.
Then, from the doubling of the number two, he devised the quaternion of the
elements, earth, water, air, and fire, and ordained them to be everlasting
sources for the supply of this universe. Again, the number four produces the
number ten. For the aggregate of one, and two, and three, and four, is ten.
[7] And three multiplied with ten discovers the period of a month: and twelve
successive months complete the course of the sun. Hence the revolutions of
years, and changes of the seasons, which give grace, like variety of color
in painting, to that eternity which before was formless and devoid of beauty,
for the refreshment and delight of those whose lot it is to traverse therein
the course of life. For as the ground 6 is defined by stated distances for
those who run in hope of obtaining the prize; and as the road of those who
travel on a distant journey is marked by resting-places and measured intervals,
that the traveler's courage may not fail at the interminable prospect; even
so the Sovereign of the universe, controlling eternity itself within the restraining
power of his own wisdom, directs and turns its course as he judges best. The
same God, I say, who thus clothes the once undefined eternity as with fair
colors and blooming flowers, gladdens the day with the solar rays; and, while
he overspreads the night with a covering of darkness, yet causes the glittering
stars, as golden spangles, to shine therein. It is he who lights up the brilliancy
of the morning stab the changing splendor of the moon, and the glorious companies
of the starry host, and has arrayed the expanse of heaven, like some vast mantle,
in colors of varied beauty. Again, having created the lofty and profound expanse
of air, and caused the world in its length and breadth to feel its cooling
influence, he decreed that the air itself should be graced with birds of every
kind, and left open this vast ocean of space to be traversed by every creature,
visible or invisible, whose course is through the tracts of heaven. In the
midst of this atmosphere he poised the earth, as it were its center, and encompassed
it with the ocean as with a beautiful 7 azure vesture. Having ordained this
earth to be at once the home, the nurse, and the mother of all the creatures
it contains, and watered it both with rain and water-springs, he caused it
to abound in plants and flowers of every species, for the enjoyment of life.
And when he had formed man in his own likeness, the noblest of earthly creatures,
and dearest to himself, a creature gifted with intellect and knowledge, the
child of reason and wisdom, he gave him dominion over all other animals which
move and live upon the earth. For man was in truth of all earthly creatures
the dearest to God: man, I say, to whom, as an indulgent Father, he has subjected
the brute creation; for whom he has made the ocean navigable, and crowned the
earth with a profusion of plants of every kind; to whom he has granted reasoning
faculties for acquiring all science; under whose control he has placed even
the creatures of the deep, and the winged inhabitants of the air; to whom he
has permitted the contemplation of celestial objects, and revealed the course
and changes of the sun and moon, and the periods of the planets and fixed stars.
In short, to man alone of earthly beings has he given commandment to acknowledge
him as his heavenly Father, and to celebrate his praises as the Supreme 8 Sovereign
of eternity itself. But the unchangeable course of eternity the Creator has
limited by the four seasons of the year, terminating the winter by the approach
of spring, and regulating as with an equal balance that season which commences
the annual period. Having thus graced the eternal course of time with the varied
productions of spring, he added the summer's heat; and then granted as it were
a relief of toil by the interval of autumn: and lastly, refreshing and cleansing
the season by the showers of winter, he brings it, rendered sleek land glossy,
like a noble steed, by these abundant rains, once more to the gates of spring.
As soon, then, as the Supreme Sovereign 9 had thus connected his own eternity
by these cords of wisdom with the annual circle, he committed it to the guidance
of a mighty Governor, even his only begotten Word, to whom, as the Preserver
of all creation, he yielded the reins of universal power. And he, receiving
this inheritance as from a beneficent Father, and uniting all things both above
and beneath the circumference of heaven in one harmonious whole, directs their
uniform course; providing with perfect justice whatever is expedient for his
rational creatures on the earth, appointing its allotted limits to human life,
and granting to all alike permission to anticipate even here the commencement
of a future existence. For he has taught them that beyond this present world
there is a divine and blessed state of being, reserved for those who have been
supported here by the hope of heavenly blessings; and that those who have lived
a virtuous and godly life will remove hence to a far better habitation; while
he adjudges to those who have been guilty and wicked here a place of punishment
according to their crimes. Again, as in the 10 distribution of prizes at the
public games, he proclaims various crowns to the victors, and invests each
with the rewards of different virtues: but for our good emperor, who is clothed
in the very robe of piety, he declares that a higher recompense of his toils
is prepared; and, as a prelude to this recompense, permits us now to assemble
at this festival, which is composed_ of perfect numbers, of decades thrice,
and triads ten times repeated. The first of 11 these, the triad, is the offspring
of the unit, while the unit is the mother of number itself, and presides over
all months, and seasons, and years, and every period of time. It may, indeed,
be justly termed the origin, foundation, and principle of all number, and derives
its name from its abiding character. [8] For, while every other number is diminished
or increased according to the subtraction or addition of others, the unit alone
continues fixed and steadfast, abstracted from all multitude and the numbers
which are formed from it, and resembling that indivisible essence which is
distinct from all things beside, but by virtue of participation in which the
nature of all things else subsists. For the unit is 12 the originator of every
number, since all multitude is made up by the composition and addition of units;
nor is it possible without the unit to conceive the existence of number at
all. But the unit itself is independent of multitude, apart from and superior
to all number; forming, indeed, and making all, but receiving 13 no increase
from any. Kindred to this is the triad; equally indivisible and perfect, the
first of those sums which are formed of even and uneven numbers. For the perfect
number two, receiving the addition of the unit, forms the triad, the first
perfect compound number. And the triad, by explaining what equality is, first
taught men justice, having itself an equal beginning, and middle, and end.
And it is also an image of the mysterious, most holy, and royal Trinity, which,
though itself without beginning or origin, yet contains the germs, the reasons,
and causes of the existence of all created 14 things. Thus the power of the
triad may justly be regarded as the first cause of all things. Again, the number
ten, which contains the end of all numbers, and terminates them in itself,
may truly be called a full and perfect number, as comprehending every species
and every measure of numbers, proportions, concords, and harmonies. For example,
the units by addition form and are terminated by the number ten; and, having
this number as their parent, and as it were the limit of their course they
round this as the goal of their career.
15 Then they perform a second circuit, and again a third, and a fourth, until
the tenth and thus by ten decades they complete the hundredth number. Returning
thence to the first starting point, they again proceed to the number ten, and
having ten times completed the hundredth number, again they recede, and perform
round the same barriers their protracted course, proceeding from themselves
back to themselves again, with revolving motion. For the unit is the tenth
of ten, and ten units make up a decade, which is itself the limit, the settled
goal and boundary of units: it is that which terminates the infinity of number;
the term and end of units. Again, the triad combined with the decade, and performing
a threefold circuit of tens, produces that most natural number, thirty. For
as the triad is in respect to units, so is the number thirty in 17 respect
to tens. It is also the constant limit to the course of that luminary which
is second to the sun in brightness. For the course of the moon from one conjunction
with the sun to the next, completes the period of a month; after which, receiving
as it were a second birth, it recommences a new light, and other days, being
adorned and honored with thirty 18 units, three decades, and ten triads. In
the same manner is the universal reign of our victorious emperor distinguished
by the giver of all good, and now enters on a new sphere of blessing, accomplishing,
at present, this tricennalian festival, but reaching forward beyond this to
far more distant intervals of time, and cherishing the hope of future blessings
in the celestial kingdom; where, not a single sun, but infinite hosts of light
surround the Almighty Sovereign, each surpassing the splendor of the sun, glorious
and resplendent with rays derived from the everlasting source of light. There
the soul enjoys its existence, surrounded by fair and unfading blessings; there
is a life beyond the reach of sorrow; there the enjoyment of pure and holy
pleasures, and a time of un-measured and endless duration, extending into illimitable
space; not defined by intervals of days and months, the revolutions of years,
or the recurrence of times and seasons, but commensurate with a life which
knows no end. And this life needs not the light of the sun, nor the lustre
of the moon or the starry host, since it has the great Luminary himself, even
God the Word, the only begotten Son of the Almighty Sovereign. Hence it is
that the mystic and sacred oracles reveal him to be the Sun of righteousness,
and the Light which far transcends all light. We believe that he illumines
also the thrice-blessed powers of heaven with the rays of righteousness, and
the brightness of wisdom, and that he receives truly pious souls, not within
the sphere of heaven alone, but into his own bosom, and confirms indeed the
assurances which he himself has given. No mortal eye has seen, nor ear heard,
nor can the mind in its vesture of flesh understand what things are prepared
for those who have been here adorned with the graces of godliness; blessings
which await thee too, most pious emperor, to whom alone since the world began
has the Almighty Sovereign of the universe granted power to purify the course
of human life: to whom also he has revealed his own symbol of salvation, whereby
he overcame the power of death, and triumphed over every enemy. And this victorious
trophy, the scourge of evil spirits, thou hast arrayed against the errors of
idol worship, and hast obtained the victory not only over all thy impious and
savage foes, but over equally barbarous adversaries, the evil spirits themselves.
CHAPTER VII.
FOR whereas
we are composed of two distinct natures, I mean of body and spirit, of which
the one is visible
to all, the other i invisible, against both these
natures two kinds of barbarous and savage enemies, the one invisibly, the other
openly, are constantly arrayed. The one oppose our bodies with bodily force
the other with incorporeal assaults besiege the naked soul itself. Again, the
visible barbarians, like the wild nomad tribes, no better than savage beasts,
assail the nations of civilized men, ravage their country, and enslave their
cities, rushing on those who inhabit them like ruthless wolves of the desert,
and destroying all who fall under their power. But those unseen foes, more
cruel far than barbarians, I mean the soul-destroying demons whose course is
through the regions of the air, had succeeded, through the snares of vile polytheism,
in enslaving the entire human race, insomuch that they no longer recognized
the true God, but wandered in the mazes of atheistic error. For they procured,
I know not whence, gods who never anywhere existed, and set him aside who is
the only and the true God, as though he were not. Accordingly the generation
of bodies was esteemed by them a deity, and so the opposite principle to this,
their dissolution and destruction, was also deified. The first, as the author
of generative power, was honored with rites under the name of Venus: [1] the
second, as rich, and mighty in dominion over the human race, received the names
of Pluto, and Death. For men in those ages, knowing no other than naturally
generated life, declared the cause and origin of that life to be divine: and
again, believing in no existence after death, they proclaimed Death himself
a universal conqueror and a mighty god. Hence, unconscious of responsibility,
as destined to be annihilated by death, they lived a life unworthy of the name,
in the practice of actions deserving a thousand deaths. No thought of God could
enter their minds, no expectation of Divine judgment, no recollection of, no
reflection on, their spiritual existence: acknowledging one dread superior,
Death, and persuaded that the dissolution of their bodies by his power was
final annihilation, they bestowed on Death the title of a mighty, a wealthy
god, and hence the name of Pluto. [2] Thus, then, Death became to them a god;
nor only so, but whatever else they accounted precious in comparison with death,
whatever contributed to 4 the luxuries of life. Hence animal pleasure became
to them a god; nutrition, and its production, a god; the fruit of trees, a
god; drunken riot, a god; carnal desire and pleasure, a god. Hence the mysteries
of Ceres and Proserpine, the rape of the latter, and her subsequent restoration,
by Pluto: hence the orgies of Bacchus, and Hercules overcome by drunkenness
as by a mightier god: hence the adulterous rites of Cupid and of Venus: hence
Jupiter himself infatuated with the love of women, and of Ganymede: [8] hence
the licentious legends of deities abandoned to effeminacy and pleasure. Such
were the weapons of superstition 5 whereby these cruel barbarians and enemies
of the Supreme God afflicted, and indeed entirely subdued, the human race;
erecting everywhere the monuments of impiety, and rearing in every corner the
shrines and temples of their false religion. Nay, so far were the 6 ruling
powers of those times enslaved by the force of error, as to appease their gods
with the blood of their own countrymen and kindred; to whet their swords against
those who stood forward to defend the truth; to maintain a ruthless war and
raise unholy hands, not against foreign or barbarian foes, but against men
l bound to them by the ties of family and affection, against brethren, and
kinsmen, and dearest friends, who had resolved, in the practice of virtue and
true piety, to honor and worship God. Such was the spirit of madness with 7
which these princes sacrificed to their demon deities men consecrated to the
service of the King of kings. On the other hand their victims, as noble martyrs
in the cause of true godliness, resolved to welcome a glorious death in preference
to life itself, and utterly despised these cruelties. Strengthened, as soldiers
of God, with patient fortitude, they mocked at death in all its forms; at fire,
and sword, and the torment of crucifixion; at exposure to savage beasts, and
drowning in the depths of the sea; at the cutting off and searing of limbs,
the digging out of eyes, the mutilation of the whole body; lastly, at famine,
the labor of the mines, and captivity: nay, all these sufferings they counted
better than any earthly good or pleasure, for the love they bore their heavenly
King. In like manner women also evinced a spirit of constancy and courage not
inferior to that of men. Some endured the same conflicts 8 with them, and obtained
a like reward of their virtue: others, forcibly carried off to be the victims
of violence and pollution, welcomed death rather than dishonor; while many,
very many more, endured not even to hear the same threats wherewith they were
assailed by the provincial governors, but boldly sustained every variety of
torture, and sentence of death in every form? Thus did these valiant soldiers
of the Almighty Sovereign maintain the conflict with steadfast fortitude of
soul against the hostile forces of polytheism: and thus did these enemies of
God and adversaries of man's salvation, more cruel far than the ferocious savage,
delight in libations of human blood: thus did their ministers drain as it were
the cup of un-righteous slaughter in honor of the demons whom they served,
and prepare for them this dread and impious banquet, to the ruin of 9 the human
race. In these sad circumstances, what course should the God and King of these
afflicted ones pursue? Could he be careless of the safety of his dearest friends
or abandon his servants in this great extremity? Surely none could deem him
a wary pilot, who, without an effort to save his fellow-mariners should suffer
his vessel to sink with all her crew: surely no general could be found so reckless
as to yield his own allies, without resistance, to the mercy of the foe: nor
can a faithful shepherd regard with unconcern the straying of a single sheep
from his flock, but will rather leave the rest in safety, and dare all things
for the wanderer's sake, even, if need be, to contend 10 with savage beasts.
The zeal, however, of the great Sovereign of all was for no unconscious [5]
sheep: his care was exercised for his own faithful host, for those who sustained
the battle for his sake: whose conflicts in the cause of godliness he himself
approved, and honored those who had returned to his presence with the prize
of victory which he only can bestow, uniting them to the angelic choirs. Others
he still preserved on earth, to communicate the living seeds of piety to future
generations; to be at once eye-witnesses of his vengeance on the ungodly, and
narrators 11 of the events. After this he outstretched his arm in judgment
on the adversaries, and utterly destroyed them with the stroke of Divine wrath,
compelling them, how reluctant soever to confess with their own lips and recant
their wickedness, but raising from the ground and exalting gloriously those
who had long been 12 oppressed and disclaimed by all. Such were the dealings
of the Supreme Sovereign, who ordained an invincible champion to be the minister
of his heaven-sent vengeance (for our emperor's surpassing piety delights in
the title of Servant of God), and him he has, proved victorious over all that
opposed him, having raised him up, an individual against many foes. For they
were indeed numberless, being the friends of many evil spirits (though in reality
they were nothing, and hence are now no more); but our emperor is one, appointed
by, and the representative of, the one Almighty Sovereign. And they, in the
very spirit of impiety, destroyed the righteous with cruel slaughter: but he,
in imitation of his Saviour, and knowing only how to save men's lives, has
spared and instructed in godliness the impious 13 themselves. And so, as truly
worthy the name of VICTOR, he has subdued the twofold race of barbarians; soothing
the savage tribes of men by prudent embassies, compelling them to know and
acknowledge their superiors, and reclaiming them from a lawless and brutal
life to the governance of reason and humanity; at the same time that he proved
by the facts themselves that the fierce and ruthless race of unseen spirits
had long ago been vanquished by a higher power. For he who is the preserver
of the universe had punished these invisible spirits by an invisible judgment:
and our emperor, as the delegate of the Supreme Sovereign, has followed up
the victory, bearing away the spoils of those who have long since died and
mouldered into dust, and distributing the plunder with lavish hand among the
soldiers of his victorious Lord. [6]
CHAPTER VIII.
FOR as soon as he understood that the 1 ignorant multitudes were inspired
with a vain and childish dread of these bugbears of error, wrought in gold
and silver, he judged it right to remove these also, like stumbling-stones
thrown in the path of men walking m the dark, and henceforward to open a royal
road, plain and unobstructed, to all. Having 2 formed this resolution, he considered
that no soldiers or military force of any sort was needed for the repression
of the evil: a few of his own friends sufficed for this service, and these
he sent by a simple expression of his will to visit each several province.
Accordingly 3, sustained by confidence in the emperor's piety and their own
personal devotion to God, they passed through the midst of numberless tribes
and nations, abolishing this ancient system of error in every city and country.
They ordered the priests themselves, in the midst of general laughter and scorn,
to bring their gods from their dark recesses to the light of day. They then
stripped them of their ornaments, and exhibited to the gaze of all the unsightly
reality which had been hidden beneath a painted exterior: and lastly, whatever
part of the material appeared to be of value they scraped off and melted in
the fire to prove its worth, after which they secured and set apart whatever
they judged needful for their purposes, leaving to the superstitious worshipers
what was altogether useless, as a memorial of their shame. Meanwhile our admirable
prince 4 was himself engaged in a work similar to that we have described. For
at the same time that these costly images of the dead were stripped, as we
have said, of their precious materials, he also attacked those composed of
brass; causing those to be dragged from their places with ropes, and, as it
were, carried away captive, whom the dotage of mythology had esteemed as gods.
The next care of our august emperor was to kindle, as it were, a brilliant
torch, by the light of which he directed his imperial gaze around, to see if
any hidden 5 vestiges of error might yet exist. And as the keen-sighted eagle
in its heavenward flight is able to descry from its lofty height the most distant
objects on the earth: so did he whilst residing in the imperial palace of his
own fair city, discover, as from a watch-tower, a hidden and fatal snare of
souls in the province of Phoenicia. This was a grove and temple, not situated
in the midst of any city, or in any public place, as for splendor of effect
is generally 6 the case, but apart from the beaten and frequented road, on
part of the summit of Mount Lebanon, and dedicated to the foul demon known
by the name of Venus. It was a school of wickedness for all the abandoned rotaries
of impurity and such as destroyed their bodies with effeminacy. Here men undeserving
the name forgot the dignity of their sex, and propitiated the demon by their
effeminate conduct: here too unlawful commerce of women, and adulterous intercourse,
with other horrible and infamous practices, were perpetrated in this temple
as in a place beyond the scope and restraint of law.
Meantime these evils remained unchecked by the presence of any observer, since
no one of fair character ventured to visit such scenes.
7 These proceedings, however, could not escape the vigilance of our august
emperor, who, having himself inspected them with characteristic forethought,
and judging that such a temple was unfit for the light of heaven, gave orders
that the building with its offerings should be utterly destroyed. Accordingly,
in obedience to the imperial edict, these engines of an impure superstition
were immediately abolished, and the hand of military force was made instrumental
in purging the place. And now those who had heretofore lived without restraint,
learned, through the imperial threat of punishment, 8 to practice self-control.
Thus did our emperor tear the mask from this system of delusive wickedness,
and expose it to the public gaze, at the same time proclaiming openly his Saviour's
name to all. No advocate appeared; neither god nor demon, prophet nor diviner,
could lend his aid to the detected authors of the imposture. For the souls
of men were no longer enveloped in thick darkness: but enlightened by the rays
of true godliness, they deplored the ignorance and pitied the blindness of
their forefathers, rejoicing at the same time in their own deliverance from
such fatal error. [1] Thus speedily, according to the counsel 9 of the mighty
God, and through our emperor's agency, was every enemy, whether visible or
unseen, utterly removed: and henceforward peace, the happy nurse of youth,
extended her reign throughout the world. Wars were no more, for the gods were
not: no more did warfare in country or town, no more did the effusion of human
blood, distress mankind, as heretofore, when demon-worship and the madness
of idolatry prevailed.
CHAPTER IX.
AND now we may well compare the present 1 with former things, and review these
happy changes in contrast with the evils that are past, and mark the elaborate
care with which in ancient times porches and sacred precincts, groves and temples,
were prepared in every city for these false deities, and how their shrines
were enriched with abundant offerings. The 2 sovereign rulers of those days
had indeed a high regard for the worship of the gods. The nations also and
people subject to their power honored them with images both in the country
and in every city, nay, even in their houses and secret chambers, according
to the religious practice of their fathers. The fruit, however, of this devotion,
far different from the peaceful concord which now meets our view, appeared
in war, in battles, and seditions, which harassed them throughout their lives,
and deluged their countries with blood and civil slaughter. Again, the objects
of their worship could 8 hold out to these sovereigns with artful flattery
the promise of prophecies, and oracles, and the knowledge of futurity: yet
could they not predict their own destruction, nor forewarn themselves of the
coming ruin: and surely this was the greatest and most convincing proof of
their imposture. Not one of those whose 4 words once were heard with awe and
wonder, had announced the glorious advent of the Saviour of mankind, [1] or
that new revelation of divine knowledge which he came to give. Not Pythius
himself, nor any of those mighty gods, could apprehend the prospect of their
approaching desolation; nor could their oracles point at him who was to be
their conqueror and destroyer. What prophet or diviner could 15 foretell that
their rites would vanish at the presence of a new Deity in the world, and that
the knowledge and worship of the Almighty Sovereign should be freely given
to all mankind? Which of them foreknew the august and pious reign of our victorious
emperor, or his triumphant conquests everywhere over the false demons, or the
overthrow of their high places?
6 Which of the heroes has announced the melting down and conversion of the
lifeless statues from their useless forms to the necessary uses of men? Which
of the gods have yet had power to speak of their own images thus melted and
contemptuously reduced to fragments?
7 Where were the protecting powers, that they should not interpose to save
their sacred memorials, thus destroyed by man? Where, I ask, are those who
once maintained the strife of war, yet now behold their conquerors abiding
securely in the profoundest peace? And where are they who upheld themselves
in a blind and foolish confidence, and trusted in these vanities as gods; but
who, in the very height of their superstitious error, and while maintaining
an implacable war with the champions of the truth, perished by a fate proportioned
to their 8 crimes? Where is the giant race whose arms were turned against heaven
itself; the hissings of those serpents whose tongues were pointed with impious
words against the Almighty King? These adversaries of the Lord of all, confident
in the aid of a multitude of gods, advanced to the attack with a powerful array
of military force, preceded by certain images of the dead, and lifeless statues,
as their defense. On the other, side our emperor, secure in the armor of godliness,
opposed to the numbers of the enemy the salutary and life-giving Sign, as at
the same time a terror to the foe, and a protection against every harm; and
returned victorious at once over the enemy and the demons whom they served?
And then, with thanksgiving and praise, the tokens of a grateful spirit, to
the Author of his victory, he proclaimed this triumphant Sign, by monuments
as well as words, to all mankind, erecting it as a mighty trophy against every
enemy in the midst of the imperial city, and expressly enjoining on all to
acknowledge this imperishable symbol of salvation as the safeguard of the power
of Rome and of the 9 empire of the world. Such were the instructions which
he gave to his subjects generally; but especially to his soldiers, whom he
admonished to repose their confidence, not in their weapons, or armor, or bodily
strength, but to acknowledge the Supreme God as the giver of every good, and
of victory itself.
10 Thus
did the emperor himself, strange and incredible as the fact may seem, become
the instructor
of his
army in their religious exercises, and teach them
to offer pious prayers in accordance with the divine ordinances, uplifting
their hands towards heaven, and raising their mental vision higher still to
the King of heaven, on whom they should call as the Author of victory, their
preserver, guardian, and helper. He commanded too, that one day should be regarded
as a special occasion for religious worship; I mean that which is truly the
first and chief of all, the day of our Lord and Saviour; that day the name
of which is connected with light, and life, and immortality, and every good.
Prescribing the same pious conduct to himself, he honored his Saviour in the
chambers of his palace, performing his devotions according to the Divine commands,
and storing his mind with instruction through the hearing of the sacred word.
The entire care of his household was intrusted to ministers devoted to the
service of God, and distinguished by gravity of life and every other virtue;
while his trusty body-guards, strong in affection and fidelity to his person,
found in their emperor an instructor in the practice of a godly life. Again,
the honor with which he regards the victorious Sign is founded on his actual
experience of its divine efficacy. Before this the hosts of his enemies have
disappeared: by this the powers of the unseen spirits have been turned to flight:
through this the proud boastings of God's adversaries have come to nought,
and the tongues of the profane and blasphemous been put to silence. By this
Sign the Barbarian tribes were vanquished: through his the rites of superstitious
fraud received a just rebuke: by this our emperor, discharging as it were a
sacred debt, has performed the crowning good of all, by erecting triumphant
memorials of its value in all parts of the world, raising temples and churches
on a scale of royal costliness, and commanding all to unite in constructing
the sacred houses of prayer. Accordingly these signal proofs of our emperor's
13 magnificence forthwith appeared in the provinces and cities of the empire,
and soon shone conspicuously in every country; convincing memorials of the
rebuke and overthrow of those impious tyrants who but a little while before
had madly dared to fight against God, and, raging like savage dogs, had vented
on unconscious buildings that fury which they were unable to level against
him; had thrown to the ground and Upturned the very foundations of the houses
of prayer, causing them to present the appearance of a city captured and abandoned
to the enemy. Such was the exhibition of that wicked spirit whereby they sought
as it were to assail God himself, but soon experienced the result of their
own madness and folly. But a little time elapsed, when a single blast of the
storm of Heaven's displeasure swept them utterly away, leaving neither kindred,
nor offspring, nor memorial of their existence among men: for all, numerous
as they were, disappeared as in a moment beneath the stroke 14 of Divine vengeance.
Such, then, was the fate which awaited these furious adversaries of God: but
he who, armed with the salutary Trophy, had alone opposed them (nay rather,
not alone, but aided by the presence and the power of him who is the only Sovereign),
has replaced the ruined edifices on a greater scale, and made the second far
superior to the first. For example, besides erecting various churches to the
honor of God in the city which bears his name, and adorning the Bithynian capital
with another on the greatest and most splendid scale, he has distinguished
the principal cities of the other provinces by structures of a similar 15 kind.
Above all, he has selected two places in the eastern division of the empire,
the one in Palestine (since from thence the life-giving stream has flowed as
from a fountain for the blessing of all nations), the other in that metropolis
of the East which derives its name from that of Antiochus; in which, as the
head of that portion of the empire, he has consecrated to the service of God
a church of unparalleled size and beauty. The entire building is encompassed
by an enclosure of great extent, within which the church itself rises to a
vast elevation, of an octagonal form, surrounded by many chambers and courts
on every side, and decorated with ornaments of the richest kind. [3]
16 Such was his work here. Again, in the province of Palestine, in that city
which was once the seat of Hebrew sovereignty, on the very site of the Lord's
sepulchre, he has raised a church of noble dimensions, and adorned a temple
sacred to the salutary Cross with rich and lavish magnificence, honoring that
everlasting monument, and the trophies of the Saviour's victory over the power
of death, with a splendor which no language can describe.
17 In the same country he discovered three places venerable as the localities
of three sacred caves: and these also he adorned with costly structures, paying
a fitting tribute of reverence to the scene of the first manifestation of the
Saviour's presence; while at the second cavern he hallowed the remembrance
of his final ascension from the mountain top; and celebrated his mighty conflict,
and the victory which crowned it, at the third. [4] All these places our emperor
thus adorned in the hope of proclaiming the symbol of redemption to all mankind;
that Cross which has in- 18 deed repaid his pious zeal; through which his house
and throne alike have prospered, his reign has been confirmed for a lengthened
series of years, and the rewards of virtue bestowed on his noble sons, his
kindred, and their descendants. And surely it is a mighty evidence of the power
of that God whom he serves, that he has held the balances of justice with an
equal hand, and has apportioned to each party their due reward. With regard
to the destroyers of the houses of prayer, the penalty of their impious conduct
followed hard upon them: forthwith were they swept away, and left neither race,
nor house, nor family behind. On the other hand, he whose pious devotion to
his Lord is conspicuous in his every act, who raises royal temples to his honor,
and proclaims his name to his subjects by sacred offerings throughout the world,
he, I say, has deservedly experienced him to be the preserver and defender
of his imperial house and race. Thus clearly have the dealings of God been
manifested, and this through the sacred efficacy of the salutary Sign.
CHAPTER X.
MUCH might indeed be said of this salutary 1 Sign, by those who are skilled
in the mysteries of our Divine religion. For it is in very truth the symbol
of salvation, wondrous to speak of, more wondrous still to conceive; the appearance
of which on earth has thrown the fictions of all false religion from the beginning
into the deepest shade, has buried superstitious error in darkness and oblivion,
and has revealed to all that spiritual light which enlightens the souls of
men, even the knowledge of the only true God. Hence the universal change 2
for the better, which leads men to spurn their lifeless idols, to trample under
foot the lawless rites of their demon deities, and laugh to scorn the time-honored
follies of their fathers. Hence, too, the establishment in every place of those
schools of sacred learning, wherein men are taught the precepts of saving truth,
and dread no more those objects of creation which are seen by the natural eye,
nor direct a gaze of wonder at the sun, the moon, or stars; but acknowledge
him who is above all these, that invisible Being who is the Creator of them
all, and learn to worship him alone. Such 3 are the blessings resulting to
mankind from this great and wondrous Sign, by virtue of which the evils which
once existed are now no more, and virtues heretofore unknown shine everywhere
resplendent with the light of true godliness. Discourses, and precepts, and
4 exhortations to a virtuous and holy life, are proclaimed in the ears of all
nations. Nay, the emperor himself proclaims them: and it is indeed a marvel
that this mighty prince, raising his voice in the hearing of all the world,
like an interpreter of the Almighty Sovereign's will, invites his subjects
in every country to the 5 knowledge of the true God. No more, as in former
times, is the babbling of impious men heard in the imperial palace; but priests
and pious worshipers of God together celebrate his majesty with royal hymns
of praise. The name of the one Supreme Ruler of the universe is proclaimed
to all: the gospel of glad tidings connects the human race with its Almighty
King, declaring the grace and love of the heavenly Father to his children on
the earth. His praise is everywhere sung in triumphant strains: the voice of
mortal man is blended with the harmony 6 of the angelic choirs in heaven; and
the reasoning soul employs the body which invests it as an instrument for sounding
forth a fitting tribute of praise and adoration to his name. The nations of
the East and the West are instructed at the same moment in his precepts: the
people of the Northern and Southern regions unite with one accord, under the
influence of the same principles and laws, in the pursuit of a godly life,
in praising the one Supreme God, in acknowledging his only begotten Son their
Saviour as the source of every blessing, and our emperor as the one ruler on
the earth, together with his pious sons. He himself, as a skillful pilot, sits
on high at the helm of state, and directs the vessel with unerring course,
conducting his people as it were with favoring breeze to a secure and tranquil
haven. Meanwhile God himself, the great Sovereign, extends the right hand of
his power from above for his protection, giving him victory over every foe,
and establishing his empire by a lengthened period of years: and he will bestow
on him yet higher blessings, and confirm in every deed the truth of his own
promises. But on these we may not at present dwell; but must await the change
to a better world: for it is not given to mortal eyes or ears of flesh, fully
to apprehend the things of God. [1]
CHAPTER XI.
1 AND
now, victorious and mighty Constantine, in this discourse, whose noble argument
is the glory
of the
Almighty King, let me lay before thee some of
the mysteries of his sacred truth: not as presuming to instruct thee, who art
thyself taught of God; nor to disclose to thee those secret wonders which he
himself, not through the agency of man, but through our common Saviour, and
the frequent light of his Divine presence has long since revealed and unfolded
to thy view: but in the hope of leading the unlearned to the light, and displaying
before those who know them not the causes and motives of thy pious deeds. True
it is that thy noble efforts for the daily worship and honor of the Supreme
God throughout the habitable world, are the theme of universal praise. But
those records of gratitude to thy Saviour and Preserver which thou hast dedicated
in our own province of Palestine, and in that city from which as from a fountain-head
the Saviour Word [1] has issued forth to all mankind; and again, the hallowed
edifices and consecrated temples which thou hast raised as trophies of his
victory over death; and those lofty and noble structures, imperial monuments
of an imperial spirit, which thou hast erected in honor of the everlasting
memory of the Saviour's tomb the cause, I say, of these things is not equally
obvious to all. Those, indeed, who are enlightened in heavenly knowledge by
the power of the Divine Spirit, well understand the cause, and justly admire
and bless thee for that counsel and resolution which Heaven itself inspired.
On the other hand the ignorant and spiritually blind regard these designs with
open mockery and scorn, and deem it a strange and unworthy thing indeed that
so mighty a prince should waste his zeal on the graves and monuments of the
dead. "Were it not 4 better," such a one might say, "to cherish
those rites which are hallowed by ancient usage to seek the favor of those
gods and heroes whose worship is observed in every province; instead of rejecting
and disclaiming them, because subject to the calamities incident to man? Surely
they may claim equal honors with him who himself has suffered: or, if they
are to be rejected, as not exempt from the sorrows of humanity, the same award
would justly be pronounced respecting him." Thus, with important and contracted
brow, might he give utterance in pompous language to his self-imagined wisdom.
Filled with compassion for this ignorance, the gracious Word of our most beneficent
Father freely invites, not such a one alone, but all who are in the path of
error, to receive instruction in Divine knowledge; and has ordained the means
of such instruction throughout the world, in every country and village, in
cultivated and desert lands alike, and in every city: and, as a gracious Saviour
and Physician of the soul, calls on the Greek and the Barbarian, the wise and
the unlearned, the rich and the poor, the servant and his master, the subject
and his lord, the ungodly, the profane, the ignorant, the evil-doer, the blasphemer,
alike to draw near, and hasten to receive his heavenly cure. And thus in time
past had he clearly announced to all the pardon of former transgressions, saying, "Come
unto me, all ye that labor and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest." [2]
And again, "I am not come to call the righteous, but sinners, to repentance." [3]
And he adds the reason, saying, "For they that are whole need not a physician,
but they that are sick." [4] And again, "I desire not the death of
a sinner, but rather that he 6 should repent." [5] Hence it is only for
those who are themselves instructed in Divine things and understand the motives
of that zeal of which these works are the result, to appreciate the more than
human impulse by which our emperor was guided, to admire his piety toward God,
and to believe his care for the memorial of our Saviour's resurrection to be
a desire imparted from above, and truly inspired by that Sovereign, to be whose
faithful servant and minister for good is his proudest boast. In full persuasion,
then, of thy approval, most mighty emperor, I desire at this present time to
proclaim to all the reasons and motives of thy pious works. I desire to stand
as the interpreter of thy designs, to explain the counsels of a soul devoted
to the love of God. I propose to teach all men, what all should know who care
to understand the principles on which our Saviour God employs his power, the
reasons for which he who was the pre-existent Controller of all things at length
descended to us from heaven: the reasons for which he assumed our nature, and
submitted even to the power of death. I shall declare the causes of that immortal
life which followed, and of his resurrection from the dead. Once more, I shall
adduce convincing proofs and arguments, for the sake of those who yet need
such 8 testimony: and now let me commence my appointed task. Those who transfer
the worship due to that God who formed and rules the world to the works of
his hand; who hold the sun and moon, or other parts of this material system,
nay, the elements themselves, earth, water, air, and fire, in equal honor with
the Creator of them all; who give the name of gods to things which never would
have had existence, or even name, except as obedient to that Word of God who
made the world: such persons in my judgment resemble those who overlook the
master hand which gives its magnificence to a royal palace; and, while lost
in wonder at its roofs and walls, the paintings of varied beauty and coloring
which adorn them, and its gilded ceilings and sculptures, ascribe to them the
praise of that skill which belongs to the artist whose work they are: whereas
they should assign the cause of their wonder, not to these visible objects,
but to the architect himself, and confess that the proofs of skill are indeed
manifest, but that he alone is the possessor of that skill who has made them
what they are. Again, well might we liken those to children, who should admire
the seven-stringed lyre, and disregard him who invented or has power to use
it: or those who forget the valiant warrior, and adorn his spear and shield
with the chaplet of victory: or, lastly, those who hold the squares and streets,
the public buildings, temples, and gymnasia of a great and royal city in equal
honor with its founder; forgetting that their admiration is due, not to lifeless
stones, but to him whose wisdom planned and executed these mighty works. Not
less absurd is it for 10 those who regard this universe with the natural eye
to ascribe its origin to the sun, or moon, or any other heavenly body. Rather
let them confess that these are themselves the works of a higher wisdom, remember
the Maker and Framer of them all, and render to him the praise and honor above
all created objects. Nay rather, inspired by the sight of these very objects,
let them address themselves with full purpose of heart to glorify and worship
him who is now invisible to mortal eye, but perceived by the clear and unclouded
vision of the soul, the supremely sovereign Word of God. To take the instance
of the human body: no one has yet conferred the attribute of wisdom on the
eyes, or head, the hands, or feet, or other members, far less on the outward
clothing, of a wise and learned man: no one terms the philosopher's household
furniture and utensils, wise: but every rational person admires that invisible
and secret power, the mind of the man himself. How much more, then, is our
admiration 11 due, not to the visible mechanism of the universe, material as
it is, and formed of the selfsame elements; but to that invisible Word who
has moulded and arranged it all, who is the only-begotten Son of God, and whom
the Maker of all things, who far transcends all being, has begotten of himself,
and appointed Lord and Governor of this universe? For since it was impossible
that perishable bodies, or the rational spirits which he had created, should
approach the Supreme God, by reason of their immeasurable distance from his
perfections, for he is unbegotten, above and beyond all creation, ineffable,
inaccessible, unapproachable, dwelling, as his holy word assures us, [6] in
the light which none can enter; but they were created from nothing, and are
infinitely far removed from his unbegotten Essence; well has the all-gracious
and Almighty God interposed as it were an intermediate Power [7] between himself
and them, even the Divine omnipotence of his only-begotten Word. And this Power,
which is in perfect nearness and intimacy of union, with the Father which abides
in him, and shares his secret counsels, has yet condescended, in fullness of
grace, as it were to conform itself to those who are so far removed from the
supreme majesty of God. How else, consistently with his own holiness could
he who is far above and beyond all things unite himself to corruptible and
corporeal matter? Accordingly the Divine Word, thus connecting himself with
this universe, and receiving into his hands the reins, as it were, of the world,
turns and directs it as a skillful charioteer ac- 13 cording to his own will
and pleasure, The proof of these assertions is evident. For supposing that
those component parts of the world which we call elements, as earth, water,
air, and fire, the nature of which is manifestly without intelligence, are
self-existent; and if they have one common essence, which they who are skilled
in natural science call the great receptacle, mother, and nurse of all things;
and if this itself be utterly devoid of shape and figure, of soul and reason;
whence shall we say it has obtained its present form and beauty? To what shall
we ascribe the distinction of the elements, or the union of things contrary
in their very nature? Who has commanded the liquid water to sustain the heavy
element of earth? Who has turned back the waters from their downward course,
and carried them aloft in clouds? Who has bound the force of fire, and caused
it to lie latent in wood, and to combine with substances most contrary to itself?
Who has mingled the cold air with heat, and thus reconciled the enmity of opposing
principles? Who has devised the continuous succession of the human race, and
given it as it were an endless term of duration? Who has moulded the male and
female form, adapted their mutual relations with perfect harmony, and given
one common principle of production to every living creature? Who changes the
character of the fluid and corruptible seed, which in itself is void of reason,
and gives it its prolific power? Who is at this moment working these and ten
thousand effects more wonderful than these, nay, surpassing all wonder, and
with invisible influence is daily and hourly perpetuating the production of
them all? Surely 14 the wonder-working and truly omnipotent Word of God may
well be deemed the efficient cause of all these things: that Word who, diffusing
himself through all creation, pervading height and depth with incorporeal energy,
and embracing the length and breadth of the universe within his mighty grasp,
has compacted and reduced to order this entire system, from whose unreasoned
and formless matter he has framed for himself an instrument of perfect harmony,
the nicely balanced chords and notes of which he touches with all-wise and
unerring skill. He it is who governs the sun, and moon, and the other luminaries
of heaven by inexplicable laws, and directs their motions for the service of
the universal whole. It 15 is this Word of God who has stooped to the earth
on which we live, and created the manifold species of animals, and the fair
varieties of the vegetable world. It is this same Word who has penetrated the
recesses of the deep, has given their being to the finny race, and produced
the countless forms of life which there exist. It is he who fashions the burden
of the womb, and informs it in nature's laboratory with the principle of life.
By him the fluid and heavy moisture is raised on high, and then, sweetened
by a purifying change, descends in measured quantities to the earth, and at
stated seasons in more profuse supply. Like a skillful husbandman, he fully
irrigates the land, tempers the moist and dry in just proportion, diversifying
the whole with brilliant flowers, with aspects of varied beauty, with pleasant
fragrance, with alternating varieties of fruits, and countless gratifications
for the taste of men. But why do I dare essay a hopeless task, to recount the
mighty works of the Word of God, and describe an energy which surpasses mortal
thought? By some, indeed, he has been termed the Nature of the universe, by
others, the World-Soul, by others, Fate. Others again have declared him to
be the most High God himself, strangely confounding things most widely different;
bringing down to this earth, uniting to a corruptible and material body, and
assigning to that supreme and unbegotten Power who is Lord of all an intermediate
place between irrational animals and rational mortals on the one hand, and
immortal beings on the other. [8]
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