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GREGORY OF NYSSA
ON INFANTS' EARLY DEATHS
Every
essayist and every pamphleteer will have you, most Excellent, to display
his eloquence
upon; your wondrous
qualities will be a broad race-course wherein
he may expatiate. A noble and suggestive subject in able hands has indeed a
way of making a grander style, lifting it to the height of the great reality.
We, however, like an aged horse, will remain outside this proposed race-course,
only turning the ear to listen for the contest waged in celebrating your praises,
if the sound of any literary car careering in full swing through such wonders
may reach us. But though old age may compel a horse to remain away from the
race, it may often happen that the din of the trampling racers rouses him into
excitement, that he lifts his head with eager looks, that he shows his spirit
in his breathings, and prances and paws the ground frequently, though this
eagerness is all that is left to him, and time has sapped his powers of going.
In the same way our pen remains outside the combat, and age compels it to yield
the course to the professors who flourish now; nevertheless its eagerness to
join the contest about you survives, and that it can still evince, even though
these stylists who flourish now are at the height of their powers(2). But none
of this display of my enthusiasm for you has anything to do with sounding your
own praises: no style, however nervous and well-balanced, would easily succeed
there; so that any one, who attempted to describe that embarrassing yet harmonious
mixture of opposites in your character, would inevitably be left far behind
your real worth. Nature, indeed, by throwing out the shade of the eyelashes
before the glaring rays, brings to the eyes themselves a weaker light, and
so the sunlight becomes tolerable to us, mingling as it does, in quantities
proportionate to our need, with the shadows which the lashes cast. Just so
the grandeur and the greatness of your character, tempered by your modesty
and humbleness of mind, instead of blinding the beholder's eye, makes the sight
on the contrary a pleasurable one; wherein this humbleness of mind does not
occasion the splendour of the greatness to be dimmed, and its latent force
to be overlooked; but the one is to be noticed in the other, the humility of
your character in its elevation, and the grandeur reversely in the lowliness.
Others must describe all this; and extol, besides, the many-sightedness of
your mind. Your intellectual eyes are indeed as numerous, it may perhaps be
said, as the hairs of the head; their keen unerring gaze is on everything alike;
the distant is foreseen; the near is not unnoticed; they do not wait for experience
to teach expedience; they see with Hope's insight, or else with that of Memory;
they scan the present all over; first on one thing, then on another, but without
confusing them, your mind works with the same energy and with the amount of
attention that is required. Another, too, must record his admiration of the
way in which poverty is made rich by you; if indeed any one is to be found
in this age of ours who will make that a subject of praise and wonder. Yet
surely now, if never before, the love of poverty will through you abound, and
your ingotten wealth(3) will be envied above the ingots of Croesus. For whom
has sea and land, with all the dower of their natural produce, enriched, as
thy rejection of worldly abundance has enriched thee? They wipe the stain from
steel and so make it shine like silver: so has the gleam of thy life grown
brighter, ever carefully cleansed from the rust of wealth. We leave that to
those who can enlarge upon it, and also upon your excellent knowledge of the
things in which it is more glorious to gain than to abstain from gain. Grant
me, however, leave to say, that you do not despise all acquisitions; that there
are some which, though none of your predecessors has been able to clutch, yet
you and you alone have seized with both your hands; for, instead of dresses
and slaves and money, you have and hold the very souls of men, and store them
in the treasure-house of your love. The essayists and pamphleteers, whose glory
comes from such laudations, will go into these matters. But our pen, veteran
as it now is, is to rouse itself only so far as to go at a foot's pace through
the problem which your wisdom has proposed; namely, this--what we are to think
of those who are taken prematurely, the moment of whose birth almost coincides
with that of their death. The cultured heathen Plato spoke, in the person of
one who had come to life again(4), much philosophy about the judgment courts
in that other world; but he has left this other question a mystery, as ostensibly
too great for human conjecture to be employed upon. If, then, there is anything
in these lucubrations of ours that is of a nature to clear up the obscurities
of this question, you will doubtless welcome the new account of it if otherwise,
you will at all events excuse this in old age, and accept, if nothing else,
our wish to afford you some degree of pleasure. History(5) says that Xerxes,
that great prince who had made almost every land under the sun into one vast
camp, and roused with his own designs the whole world, when he was marching
against the Greeks received with delight a poor man's gift; and that gift was
water, and that not in a jar, but carried in the hollow of the palm of his
hand. So do you, of your innate generosity, follow his example; to him the
will made the gift, and our gift may be found in itself but a poor watery thing.
In the case of the wonders in the heavens, a man sees their beauty equally,
whether he is trained to watch them, or whether he gazes upwards with an unscientific
eye; but the feeling towards them is not the same in the man who comes from
philosophy to their contemplation, and in him who has only his senses of perception
to commit them to; the latter may be pleased with the sunlight, or deem the
beauty of stars worthy of his wonder, or have watched the stages of the moon's
course throughout the month; but the former, who has the soul-insight, and
whose training has enlightened him so as to comprehend the phenomena of the
heavens, leaves unnoticed all these things which delight the senses of the
more unthinking, and looks at the harmony of the whole, inspecting the concert
which results even from opposite movements in the circular revolutions; how
the inner circles of these turn the contrary way to that in which the fixed
stars are carried round(6); how those of the heavenly bodies to be observed
in these inner circles are variously grouped in their approachments and divergements,
their disappearances behind each other and their flank movements, and yet effect
always precisely in the same way that notable and never-ending harmony; of
which those are conscious who do not overlook the position of the tiniest star,
and whose minds, by training domiciled above, pay equal attention to them all.
In the same way do you, a precious life to me, watch the Divine economy; leaving
those objects which unceasingly occupy the minds of the crowd, wealth, I mean,
and luxury(7) and vainglory--things which like sunbeams flashing in their faces
dazzle the unthinking--you will not pass without inquiry the seemingly most
trivial questions in the world; for you do most carefully scrutinize the inequalities
in human lives; not only with regard to wealth and penury, and the differences
of position and descent (for you know that they are as nothing, and that they
owe their existence not to any intrinsic reality, but to the foolish estimate
of those who are struck with nonentities, as if they were actual things; and
that if one were only to abstract from somebody who glitters with glory the
blind adoration(8) of those who gaze at him, nothing would be left him after
all the inflated pride which elates him, even though the whole mass of the
world's riches were buried in his cellars), but it is one of your anxieties
to know, amongst the other intentions of each detail of the Divine government,
wherefore it is that, while the life of one is lengthened into old age, another
has only so far a portion of it as to breathe the air with one gasp, and die.
If nothing in this world happens without God, but all is linked tO the Divine
will, and if the Deity is skilful and prudential, then it follows necessarily
that there is some plan in these things bearing the mark of His wisdom, and
at the same time of His providential care. A blind unmeaning occurrence can
never be the work of God; for it is the property of God, as the Scripture says(9),
to "make all things in wisdom." What wisdom, then, can we trace in
the following? A human being enters on the scene of life, draws in the air,
beginning the process of living with a cry of pain, pays the tribute of a tear
to Nature(1), just tastes life's sorrows, before any of its sweets have been
his, before his feelings have gained any strength; still loose in all his joints,
tender, pulpy, unset; in a word, before he is even human (if the gift of reason
is man's peculiarity, and he has never had it in him), such an one, with no
advantage over the embryo in the womb except that he has seen the air, so short-lived,
dies and goes to pieces again; being either exposed or suffocated, or else
of his own accord ceasing to live from weakness. What are we to think about
him? How are we to feel about such deaths? Will a soul such as that behold
its Judge? Will it stand with the rest before the tribunal? Will it undergo
its trial for deeds done in life? Will it receive the just recompense by being
purged, according to the Gospel utterances, in fire, or refreshed with the
dew of blessing(2)? But I do not see how we can imagine that, in the case of
such a soul. The word "retribution "implies that something must have
been previously given; but he who has not lived at all has been deprived of
the material from which to give anything. There being, then, no retribution,
there is neither good nor evil left to expect. "Retribution" purports
to be the paying back of one of these two qualities; but that which is to be
found neither in the category of good nor that of bad is in no category at
all; for this antithesis between good and bad is an opposition that admits
no middle; and neither will come to him who has not made a beginning with either
of them. What therefore falls under neither of these heads may be said not
even to have existed. But if some one says that such a life does not only exist,
but exists as one of the good ones, and that God gives, though He does not
repay, what is good to such, we may ask what sort of reason he advances for
this partiality; how is justice apparent in such a view; how will he prove
his idea in concordance with the utterances in the Gospels? There (the Master)
says, the acquisition of the Kingdom comes to those who are deemed worthy of
it, as a matter of exchange. "When ye have done such and such things,
then it is fight that ye get the Kingdom as a reward." But in this case
there is no act of doing or of willing beforehand, and so what occasion is
there for saying that these will receive from God any expected recompense?
If one unreservedly accepts a statement such as that, to the effect that any
so passing into life will necessarily be classed amongst the good, it will
dawn upon him then that not partaking in life at all will be a happier state
than living, seeing that in the one case the enjoyment of good is placed beyond
a doubt even with barbarian parentage, or a conception from a union not legitimate;
but he who has lived the span ordinarily possible to Nature gets the pollution
of evil necessarily mingled more or less with his life, or, if he is to be
quite outside this contagion, it will be at the price of much painful effort.
For virtue is achieved by its seekers not without a struggle; nor is abstinence
from the paths of pleasure a painless process to human nature. So that one
of two probations must be the inevitable fate of him who has had the longer
lease of life; either to combat here on Virtue's toilsome field, or to suffer
there the painful recompense of a life of evil. But in the case of infants
prematurely dying there is nothing of that sort; but they pass to the blessed
lot at once, if those who take this view of the matter speak true. It follows
also necessarily from this that a state of unreason is preferable to having
reason, and virtue will thereby be revealed as of no value: if he who has never
possessed it suffers no loss, so, as regards the enjoyment of blessedness,
the labour to acquire it will be useless folly; the unthinking condition will
be the one that comes out best from God's judgment. For these and such-like
reasons you bid me sift the matter, with a view to our getting, by dint of
a closely-reasoned inquiry, some firm ground on which to rest our thoughts
about it.
For my
part, in view of the difficulties of the subject proposed, I think the exclamation
of the
Apostle very suitable
to the present case, just as he
uttered it over unfathomable questions: "O the depth of the riches both
of the wisdom and knowledge of God! how unsearchable are His judgments, and
His ways past finding out! For who hath known the mind of the Lord(3)?" But
seeing on the other hand that that Apostle declares it to be a peculiarity
of him that is spiritual to "judge all things(4)," and commends those
who have been "enriched(5)" by the Divine grace "in all utterance
and in all knowledge," I venture to assert that it is not right to omit
the examination which is within the range of our ability, nor to leave the
question here raised without making any inquiries, or having any ideas about
it; lest, like the actual subject of our proposed discussion, this essay should
have an ineffectual ending, spoilt before its maturity by the fatal indolence
of those who will not nerve themselves to search out the truth, like a new-born
infant ere it sees the light and acquires any strength. I assert, too, that
it is not well at once to confront and meet objections, as if we were pleading
in court, but to introduce a certain order into the discussion and to lead
the view on from one point to another. What, then, should this order be? First,
we want to know the whence of human nature, and the wherefore of its ever having
come into existence. If we hit the answer to these questions, we shall not
fail in getting the required explanation. Now, that everything that exists,
after God, in the intellectual or sensible world of beings owes that existence
to Him, is a proposition which it is superfluous to prove; no one, with however
little insight into the truth of things, would gainsay it. For every one agrees
that the Universe is linked to one First Cause; that nothing in it owes its
existence to itself, so as to be its own origin and cause; but that there is
on the other hand a single uncreate eternal Essence, the same for ever, which
transcends all our ideas of distance, conceived of as without increase or decrease,
and beyond the scope of any definition; and that time and space with all their
consequences, and anything previous to these that thought can grasp in the
intelligible supramundane world, are all the productions of this Essence. Well,
then, we affirm that human nature is one of these productions; and a word of
the inspired Teaching helps us in this, which declares that when God had brought
all things else upon the scene of life, man was exhibited upon the earth, a
mixture from Divine sources, the godlike intellectual essence being in him
united with the several portions of earthly elements contributed towards his
formation, and that he was fashioned by his Maker to be the incarnate likeness
of Divine transcendent Power. It would be better however to quote the very
words: "And God created man, in the image of God created He him(6)." Now
the reason of the making of this animate being has been given by certain writers
previous to us as follows. The whole creation is divided into two parts; that "which
is seen," and that "which is not seen," to use the Apostle's
words (the second meaning the intelligible and immaterial, the first, the sensible
and material); and being thus divided, the angelic and spiritual natures, which
are among "the things not seen," reside in places above the world,
and above the heavens, because such a residence is in correspondence with their
constitution; for an intellectual nature is a fine, clear, unencumbered, agile
kind of thing, and a heavenly body is fine and light, and perpetually moving,
and the earth on the contrary, which stands last in the list of things sensible,
can never be an adequate and congenial spot for creatures intellectual to sojourn
in. For what correspondence can there possibly be between that which is light
and buoyant, on the one hand, and that which is heavy and gravitating on the
other? Well, in order that the earth may not be completely devoid of the local
indwelling of the intellectual and the immaterial, man (these writers tell
us) was fashioned by the Supreme forethought, and his earthy parts moulded
over the intellectual and godlike essence of his soul; and so this amalgamation
with that which has material weight enables the soul to live on this element
of earth, which possesses a certain bond of kindred with the substance of the
flesh. The design of all that is being born(7), then, is that the Power which
is above both the heavenly and the earthly universe may in all parts of the
creation be glorified by means of intellectual natures, conspiring to the same
end by virtue of the same faculty in operation in all, I mean that of looking
upon God. But this operation of looking upon God is nothing less than the life-nourishment
appropriate, as like to like, to an intellectual nature. For just as these
bodies, earthy as they are, are preserved by nourishment that is earthy, and
we detect in them all alike, whether brute or reasoning, the operations of
a material kind of vitality, so it is right to assume that there is an intellectual
life-nourishment as well, by which such natures(8) are maintained in existence.
But if bodily food, coming and going as it does in circulation, nevertheless
imparts a certain amount of vital energy to those who get it, how much more
does the partaking of the real thing, always remaining and always the same,
preserve the eater in existence? If, then, this is the life-nourishment of
an intellectual nature, namely, to have a part in God, this part will not be
gained by that which is of an opposite quality; the would-be partaker must
m some degree be akin to that which is to be partaken of. The eye enjoys the
light by virtue of having light within itself to seize its kindred light, and
the finger or any other limb cannot effect the act of vision because none of
this natural light is organized in any of them. The same necessity requires
that in our partaking of God there should be some kinship in the constitution
of the partaker with that which is partaken of. Therefore, as the Scripture
says, man was made in the image of God; that like, I take it, might be able
to see like; and to see God is, as was said above, the life of the soul. But
seeing that ignorance of the true good is like a mist that obscures the visual
keenness of the soul, and that when that mist grows denser a cloud is formed
so thick that Truth's ray cannot pierce through these depths of ignorance,
it follows further that with the total deprivation of the light the soul's
life ceases altogether; for we have said that the real life of the soul is
acted out in partaking of the Good; but when ignorance hinders this apprehension
of God, the soul which thus ceases to partake of God, ceases also to live.
But no one can force us to give the family history(9) of this ignorance, asking
whence and from what father it is; let him be given to understand from the
word itself that "ignorance" and "knowledge" indicate one
of the relations of the soul;(1) but no relation, whether expressed or not,
conveys the idea of substance; a relation and a substance are quite of different
descriptions. If, then, knowledge is not a substance, but a perfected(2) operation
of the soul, it must be conceded that ignorance must be much farther removed
still from anything in the way of substance; but that which is not in that
way does not exist at all; and so it would be useless to trouble ourselves
about where it comes from. Now seeing that the Word(3) declares that the living
in God is the life of the soul, and seeing that this living is knowledge according
to each man's ability, and that ignorance does not imply the reality of anything,
but is only the negation of the operation of knowing, and seeing that upon
this partaking in God being no longer effected there follows at once the cancelling
of the soul's life, which is the worst of evils,--because of all this the Producer
of all Good would work in us the cure of such an evil. A cure is a good thing,
but one who does not look to the evangelic mystery would still be ignorant
of the manner of the cure. We have shown that alienation from God, Who is the
Life, is an evil; the cure, then, of this infirmity is, again to be made friends
with God, and so to be in life once more. When such a life, then, is always
held up in hope before humanity, it cannot be said that the winning of this
life is absolutely a reward of a good life, and that the contrary is a punishment
(of a bad one); but what we insist on resembles the case of the eyes. We do
not say that one who has clear eyesight is rewarded as with a prize by being
able to perceive the objects of sight; nor on the other hand that he who has
diseased eyes experiences a failure of optic activity as the result of some
penal sentence. With the eye in a natural state sight follows necessarily;
with it vitiated by disease failure of sight as necessarily follows. In the
same way the life of blessedness is as a familiar second nature to those who
have kept clear the senses of the soul; but when the blinding stream of ignorance
prevents our partaking in the real light, then it necessarily follows that
we miss that, the enjoyment of which we declare to be the life of the partaker.
Now that
we have laid down these premisses, it is time to examine in the light of
them the question
proposed
to us. It was somewhat of this kind. "If
the recompense of blessedness is assigned according to the principles of justice,
in what class shall he be placed who has died in infancy without having laid
in this life any foundation, good or bad, whereby any return according to his
deserts may be given him?" To this we shall make answer, with our eye
fixed upon the consequences of that which we have already laid down, that this
happiness in the future, while it is in its essence a heritage of humanity,
may at the same time be called in one sense a recompense; and we will make
clear our meaning by the same instance as before. Let us suppose two persons
suffering from an affection of the eyes; and that the one surrenders himself
most diligently to the process of being cured, and undergoes all that Medicine
can apply to him, however painful it may be; and that the other indulges without
restraint in baths(4) and wine-drinking, and listens to no advice whatever
of his doctor as to the healing of his eyes. Well, when we look to the end
of each of these we say that each duly receives in requital the fruits Of his
choice, the one in deprivation of the light, the other in its enjoyment; by
a misuse of the word we do actually call trial which necessarily follows, a
recompense. We may speak, then, in this way also as regards this question of
the infants: we may say that the enjoyment of that future life does indeed
belong of right to the human being, but that, seeing the plague of ignorance
has seized almost all now living in the flesh, he who has purged himself of
it by means of the necessary courses of treatment receives the due reward of
his diligence, when he enters on the life that is truly natural; while he who
refuses Virtue's purgatives and renders that plague of ignorance, through the
pleasures he has been entrapped by, difficult in his case to cure, gets himself
into an unnatural state, and so is estranged from the truly natural life, and
has no share in the existence which of right belongs to us and is congenial
to us. Whereas the innocent babe has no such plague before its soul's eyes
obscuring(5) its measure of light, and so it continues to exist in that natural
life; it does not need the soundness which comes from purgation, because it
never admitted the plague into its soul at all. Further, the present life appears
to me to offer a sort of analogy to the future life we hope for, and to be
intimately connected with it, thus; the tenderest infancy is suckled and reared
with milk from the breast; then another sort of food appropriate to the subject
of this fostering, and intimately adapted to his needs, succeeds, until at
last he arrives at full growth. And so I think, in quantities continually adapted
to it, in a sort of regular progress, the soul partakes of that truly natural
life; according to its capacity and its power it receives a measure of the
delights of the Blessed state; indeed we learn as much from Paul, who had a
different sort of food for him who was already grown in virtue and for the
imperfect "babe." For to the last he says, "I have fed you with
milk, and not with meat: for hitherto ye were not able to bear it(6).'' But
to those who have grown to the full measure of intellectual maturity he says, "But
strong meat belongeth to those that are of full age, even those who by reason
of use have their senses exercised....(7)" Now it is not right to say
that the man and the infant are in a similar state however free both may be
from any contact of disease (for how can those who do not partake of exactly
the same things be in an equal state of enjoyment?); on the contrary, though
the absence of any affliction from disease may be predicated of both alike
as long as both are out of the reach of its influence, yet, when we come to
the matter of delights, there is no likeness in the enjoyment, though the percipients
are in the same condition. For the man there is a natural delight in discussions,
and in the management of affairs, and in the honourable discharge of the duties
of an office, and in being distinguished for acts of help to the needy; in
living, it may be, with a wife whom he loves, and ruling his household; and
in all those amusements to be found in this life in the way of pastime, in
musical pieces and theatrical spectacles, in the chase, in bathing, in gymnastics,
in the mirth of banquets, and anything else of that sort. For the infant, on
the contrary, there is a natural delight in its milk, and in its nurse's arms,
and in gentle rocking that induces and then sweetens its slumber. Any happiness
beyond this the tenderness of its years naturally prevents it from feeling.
In the same manner those who in their life here have nourished the forces of
their souls by a course of virtue, and have, to use the Apostle's words, had
the "senses" of their minds "exercised," will, if they
are translated to that life beyond, which is out of the body, proportionately
to the condition and the powers they have attained participate in that divine
delight; they will have more or they will have less of its riches according
to the capacity acquired. But the soul that has never felt the taste of virtue,
while it may indeed remain perfectly free from the sufferings which flow from
wickedness having never caught the disease of evil at all, does nevertheless
in the first instance s partake only so far in that life beyond (which consists,
according to our previous definition, in the knowing and being in God) as this
nursling can receive; until the time comes that it has thriven on the contemplation
of the truly Existent as on a congenial diet, and, becoming capable of receiving
more, takes at will more from that abundant supply of the truly Existent which
is offered.
Having,
then, all these considerations in our view, we hold that the soul of him
who has reached
every virtue in
his course, and the soul of him whose
portion of life has been simply nothing, are equally out of the reach of those
sufferings which flow from wickedness. Nevertheless we do not conceive of the
employment of their lives as on the same level at all. The one has heard those
heavenly announcements, by which, in the words of the Prophet, "the glory
of God is declared(9)," and, travelling through creation, has been led
to the apprehension of a Master of the creation; he has taken the true Wisdom
for his teacher, that Wisdom which the spectacle of the Universe suggests;
and when he observed the beauty of this material sunlight he had grasped by
analogy the beauty of the real sunlight(1); he saw in the solid firmness of
this earth the unchangeableness of its Creator; when he perceived the immensity
of the heavens he was led on the road towards the vast Infinity of that Power
which encompasses the Universe; when he saw the rays of the sun reaching from
such sublimities even to ourselves he began to believe, by the means of such
phenomena, that the activities of the Divine Intelligence did not fail to descend
from the heights of Deity even to each one of us; for if a single luminary
can occupy everything alike that lies beneath it with the force of light, and,
more than that, can, while lending itself to all who can use it, still remain
self-centred and undissipated, how much more shall the Creator of that luminary
become "all in all," as the Apostle speaks, and come into each with
such a measure of Himself as each subject of His influence can receive! Nay,
look only at an ear of corn, at the germinating of some plant, at a ripe bunch
of grapes, at the beauty of early autumn, whether in fruit or flower, at the
grass springing unbidden, at the mountain reaching up with its summit to the
height of the ether, at the springs on its slopes bursting from those swelling
breasts, and running in rivers through the glens, at the sea receiving those
streams from every direction and yet remaining within its limits, with waves
edged by the stretches of beach and never stepping beyond those fixed boundaries
of continent: look at these and such-like sights, and how can the eye of reason
fail to find in them all that our education for Realities requires? Has a man
who looks at such spectacles procured for himself only a slight power for the
enjoyment of those delights beyond? Not to speak of the studies which sharpen
the mind towards moral excellence geometry, I mean, and astronomy, and the
knowledge of the truth that the science of numbers gives, and every method
that furnishes a proof of the unknown and a conviction of the known, and, before
all these, the philosophy contained in the inspired Writings, which affords
a complete purification to those who educate themselves thereby in the mysteries
of God. But the man who has acquired the knowledge of none of these things
and has not even been conducted by the material cosmos to the perception of
the beauties above it, and passes through life with his mind in a kind of tender,
unformed, and untrained state, he is not the man that is likely to be placed
amongst the same surroundings as our argument has indicated that other man,
before spoken of, to be placed; so that, in this view, it can no longer be
maintained that, in the two supposed and completely opposite cases, the one
who has taken no part in life is more blessed than the one who has taken a
noble part in it. Certainly, in comparison with one who has lived all his life
in sin, not only the innocent babe but even one who has never come into the
world at all will be blessed. We learn as much too in the case of Judas, from
the sentence pronounced upon him in the Gospels(2); namely, that when we think
of such men, that which never existed is to be preferred to that which has
existed in such sin. For, as to the latter, on account of the depth of the
ingrained evil, the chastisement in the way of purgation will be extended into
infinity(3); but as for what has never existed, how can any torment touch it?--However,
notwithstanding that, the man who institutes a comparison between the infantine
immature life and that of perfect virtue, must himself be pronounced immature
for so judging of realities. Do you, then, in consequence of this, ask the
reason why so and so, quite tender in age, is quietly taken away from amongst
the living? Do you ask what the Divine wisdom contemplates in this? Well, if
you are thinking of all those infants who are proofs of illicit connections,
and so are made away with by their parents, you are not justified in calling
to account, for such wickedness, that God Who will surely bring to judgment
the unholy deeds done in this way. In the case, on the other hand, of any infant
who, though his parents have nurtured him, and have with nursing and supplication
spent earnest care upon him, nevertheless does not continue in this world,
but succumbs to a sickness even unto death, which is unmistakably the sole
cause of it, we venture upon the following considerations. It is a sign of
the perfection of God's providence, that He not only heals maladies(4) that
have come into existence, but also provides that some should be never mixed
up at all in the things which He has forbidden; it is reasonable, that is,
to expect that He Who knows the future equally with the past should check the
advance of an infant to complete maturity, in order that the evil may not be
developed which His foreknowledge has detected in his future life, and in order
that a lifetime granted to one whose evil dispositions will be lifelong may
not become the actual material for his vice. We shall better explain what we
are thinking of by an illustration. Suppose a banquet of very varied abundance,
prepared for a certain number of guests, and let the chair be taken by one
of their number who is gifted to know accurately the peculiarities of constitution
in each of them, and what food is best adapted to each temperament, what is
harmful and unsuitable; in addition to this let him be entrusted with a sort
of absolute authority over them, whether to allow as he pleases so and so to
remain at the board or to expel so and so, and to take every precaution that
each should address himself to the viands most suited to his constitution,
so that the invalid should not kill himself by adding the fuel of what he was
eating to his ailment, while the guest in robuster health should not make himself
ill with things not good for him s and fall into discomfort from over-feeding(6).
Suppose, amongst these, one of those inclined to drink is conducted out in
the middle of the banquet or even at the very beginning of it; or let him remain
to the very end, it all depending on the way that the president can secure
that perfect order shall prevail, if possible, at the board throughout, and
that the evil sights of surfeiting, tippling, and tipsiness shall be absent.
It is just so, then, as when that individual is not very pleased at being torn
away from all the savoury dainties and deprived of his favourite liquors, but
is inclined to charge the president with want of justice and judgment, as having
turned him away from the feast for envy, and not for any forethought for him;
but if he were to catch a sight of those who were already beginning to misbehave
themselves, from the long continuance of their drinking, in the way of vomitings
and putting their heads on the table and unseemly talk, he would perhaps feel
grateful to him for having removed him, before he got into such a condition,
from a deep debauch. If our illustration(7) is understood, we can easily apply
the rule which it contains to the question before us. What, then, was that
question? Why does God, when fathers endeavour their utmost to preserve a successor
to their line, often let the son and heir be snatched away in earliest infancy(8)?
To those who ask this, we shall reply with the illustration of the banquet;
namely, that Life's board is as it were crowded with a vast abundance and variety
of dainties; and it must, please, be noticed that, true to the practice of
gastronomy, all its dishes are not sweetened with the honey of enjoyment, but
in some cases an existence has a taste of some especially harsh mischances(9)
given to it: just as experts in the arts of catering desire how they may excite
the appetites of the guests with sharp, or briny, or astringent dishes. Life,
I say, is not in all its circumstances as sweet as honey; there are circumstances
in it in which mere brine is the only relish, or into which an astringent,
or vinegary, or sharp pungent flavour has so insinuated itself, that the rich
sauce becomes very difficult to taste: the cups of Temptation, too, are filled
with all sorts of beverages; some by the error of pride(1) produce the vice
of inflated vanity; others lure on those who drain them to some deed of rashness;
whilst in other cases they excite a vomiting in which all the ill-gotten acquisitions
of years are with shame surrendered(2). Therefore, to prevent one who has indulged
in the carousals to an improper extent from lingering over so profusely furnished
a table, he is early taken from the number of the banqueters, and thereby secures
an escape out of those evils which unmeasured indulgence procures for gluttons.
This is that achievement of a perfect Providence which I spoke of; namely,
not only to heal evils that have been committed, but also to forestall them
before they have been committed; and this, we suspect, is the cause of the
deaths of new-born infants. He Who does all things upon a Plan withdraws the
materials for evil in His love to the individual, and, to a character whose
marks His Foreknowledge has read, grants no time to display by a pre-eminence
in actual vice what it is when its propensity to evil gets free play. Often,
too, the Arranger of this Feast of Life exposes by such-like dispensations
the cunning device of the "constraining cause" of money-loving(3),
so that this vice comes to the light bared of all specious pretexts, and no
longer obscured by any misleading screen(4). For most declare that they give
play s to their cravings for more, in order that they may make their offspring
all the richer; but that their vice belongs to their nature, and is not caused
by any external necessity, is proved by that inexcusable avarice which is observed
in childless persons. Many who have no heir, nor any hope of one, for the great
wealth which they have laboriously gained, rear a countless brood within themselves
of wants instead of children, and they are left without a channel into which
to convey this incurable disease, though they cannot find an excuse in any
necessity for this failing(6). But take the case of some who, during their
sojourn in life, have been fierce and domineering in disposition, slaves to
every kind of lust, passionate to madness, refraining from no act even of the
most desperate wickedness, robbers and murderers, traitors to their country,
and, more execrable still, patricides, mother-killers, child-murderers, mad
after unnatural intercourse; suppose such characters grow old in this wickedness;
how, some one may ask, does this harmonize with the result of our previous
investigations? If that which is taken away before its time in order that it
may not continuously glut itself, according to our illustration of the banquet,
with Life's indulgences, is providentially removed from that carouse, what
is the special design in so and so, who is of that disposition, being allowed
to continue his revels(7) to old age, steeping both himself and his boon companions
in the noxious fumes of his debauchery? In fine, you will ask, wherefore does
God in His Providence withdraw one from life before his character can be perfected
in evil, and leave another to grow to be such a monster that it had been better
for him if he had never been born? In answer to this we will give, to those
who are inclined to receive it favourably, a reason such as follows: viz. that
oftentimes the existence of those whose life has been a good one operates to
the advantage of their offspring; and there are hundreds of passages testifying
to this in the inspired Writings, which clearly teach us that the tender care
shown by God to those who have deserved it is shared in by their successors,
and that even to have been an obstruction, in the path to wickedness, to any
one who is sure to live wickedly, is a good result(8). But seeing that our
Reason in this matter has to grope in the dark, clearly no one can complain
if its conjecturing leads our mind to a variety of conclusions. Well, then,
not only one might pronounce that God, in kindness to the Founders of some
Family, withdraws a member of it who is going to live a bad life from that
bad life, but, even if there is no antecedent such as this in the case of some
early deaths, it is not unreasonable to conjecture that they would have plunged
into a vicious life with a more desperate vehemence than any of those who have
actually become notorious for their wickedness. That nothing happens without
God we know from many sources; and, reversely, that God's dispensations have
no element of chance and confusion in them every one will allow, who realizes
that God is Reason, and Wisdom, and Perfect Goodness, and Truth, and could
not admit of that which is not good and not consistent with His Truth(9). Whether,
then, the early deaths of infants are to be attributed to the aforesaid causes,
or whether there is some further cause of them beyond these, it befits us to
acknowledge that these things happen for the best. I have another reason also
to give which I have learnt from the wisdom of an Apostle; a reason, that is,
why some of those who have been distinguished for their wickedness have been
suffered to live on in their self-chosen course. Having expanded a thought
of this kind at some length in his argument to the Romans(1), and having retorted
upon himself with the counter-conclusion, which thence necessarily follows,
that the sinner could no longer be justly blamed, if his sinning is a dispensation
of God, and that he would not have existed at all, if it had been contrary
to the wishes of Him Who has the world in His power, the Apostle meets this
conclusion and solves this counter-plea by means of a still deeper view of
things. He tells us that God, in rendering to every one his due, sometimes
even grants a scope to wickedness for good in the end. Therefore He allowed
the King of Egypt, for example, to be born and to grow up such as he was; the
intention was that Israel, that great nation exceeding all calculation by numbers,
might be instructed by his disaster. God's omnipotence is to be recognized
in every direction; it has strength to bless the deserving; it is not inadequate
to the punishment of wickedness(2); and so, as the complete removal of that
peculiar people out of Egypt was necessary in order to prevent their receiving
any infection from the sins of Egypt in a misguided way of living, therefore
that God-defying and infamous Pharaoh rose and reached his maturity in the
lifetime of the very people who were to be benefited, so that Israel might
acquire a just knowledge of the two-fold energy of God, working as it did in
either direction; the more beneficent they learnt in their own persons, the
sterner by seeing it exercised upon those who were being scourged for their
wickedness; for in His consummate wisdom God can mould even evil into co-operation
with good. The artisan (if the Apostle's argument may be confirmed by any words
of ours)--the artisan who by his skill has to fashion iron to some instrument
for daily use, has need not only of that which owing to its natural ductility
lends itself to his art, but, be the iron never so hard, be it never so difficult
to soften it in the fire, be it even impossible owing to its adamantine resistance
to mould it into any useful implement, his art requires the co-operation even
of this; he will use it for an anvil, upon which the soft workable iron may
be beaten and formed into something useful. But some one will say, "It
is not all who thus reap in this life the fruits of their wickedness, any more
than all those whose lives have been virtuous profit while living by their
virtuous endeavours; what then, I ask, is the advantage of their existence
in the case of these who live to the end unpunished?" I will bring forward
to meet this question of yours a reason which transcends all human arguments.
Somewhere in his utterances the great David declares that some portion of the
blessedness of the virtuous will consist in this; in contemplating side by
side with their own felicity the perdition of the reprobate. He says, "The
righteous shall rejoice when he seeth the vengeance; he shall wash his hands
in the blood of the ungodly(3)"; not indeed as rejoicing over the torments
of those sufferers, but as then most completely realizing the extent of the
well-earned rewards of virtue. He signifies by those words that it will be
an addition to the felicity of the virtuous and an intensification of it, to
have its contrary set against it. In saying that "he washes his hands
in the blood of the ungodly" he would convey the thought that "the
cleanness of his own acting in life is plainly declared in the perdition of
the ungodly." For the expression "wash" represents the idea
of cleanness; but no one is washed, but is rather defiled, in blood; whereby
it is clear that it is a comparison with the harsher forms of punishment that
puts in a clearer light the blessedness of virtue. We must now summarize our
argument, in order that the thoughts which we have expanded may be more easily
retained in the memory. The premature deaths of infants have nothing in them
to suggest the thought that one who so terminates his life is subject to some
grievous misfortune, any more than they are to be put on a level with the deaths
of those who have purified themselves in this life by every kind of virtue;
the more far-seeing Providence of God curtails the immensity of sins in the
case of those whose lives are going to be so evil. That some of the wicked
have lived on(4) does not upset this reason which we have rendered; for the
evil was in their case hindered in kindness to their parents; whereas, in the
case of those whose parents have never imparted to them any power of calling
upon God, such a form of the Divine kindness(5), which accompanies such a power,
is not transmitted to their own children; otherwise the infant now prevented
by death from growing up wicked would have exhibited a far more desperate wickedness
than the most notorious sinners, seeing that it would have been unhindered.
Even granting that some have climbed to the topmost pinnacle of crime, the
Apostolic view supplies a comforting answer to the question; for He Who does
everything with Wisdom knows how to effect by means of evil some good. Still
further, if some occupy a pre-eminence in crime, and yet for all that have
never been a metal, to use our former illustration, that God's skill has used
for any good, this is a case which constitutes an addition to the happiness
of the good, as the Prophet's words suggest; it may be reckoned as not a slight
element in that happiness, nor, on the other hand, as one unworthy of God's
providing.
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