CLEMENT OF ALEXANDRIA - THE STROMATA, OR MISCELLANIES - BOOK II
CHAP. I.--INTRODUCTORY.
As Scripture has called the Greeks pilferers of
the Barbarian[2] philosophy, it will next have to be
considered how this may be briefly demonstrated. For
we shall not only show that they have imitated and
copied the marvels recorded in our books; but we shall
prove, besides, that they have plagiarized and falsified
(our writings being, as we have shown, older) the chief
dogmas they hold, both on faith and knowledge and science,
and hope and love, and also on repentance and temperance
and the fear of God,--a whole swarm, verily, of the
virtues of truth.
Whatever the explication necessary on the point
in hand shall demand, shall be embraced, and especially
what is occult in the barbarian philosophy, the department
of symbol and enigma; which those who have subjected
the teaching of the ancients to systematic philosophic
study have affected, as being in the highest degree
serviceable, nay, absolutely necessary to the knowledge
of truth. In addition, it will in my opinion form an
appropriate sequel to defend those tenets, on account
of which the Greeks assail us, making use of a few
Scriptures, if perchance the Jew also may listen[3]
and be able quietly to turn from what he has believed
to Him on whom he has not believed. The ingenuous among
the philosophers will then with propriety be taken
up in a friendly exposure both of their life and of
the discovery of new dogmas, not in the way of our
avenging ourselves on our detractors (for that is far
from being the case with those who have learned to
bless those who curse, even though they needlessly
discharge on us words of blasphemy), but with a view
to their conversion; if by any means these adepts in
wisdom may feel ashamed, being brought to their senses
by barbarian demonstration; so as to be able, although
late, to see clearly of what sort are the intellectual
acquisitions for which they make pilgrimages over the
seas. Those they have stolen are to be pointed out,
that we may thereby pull down their conceit; and of
those on the discovery of which through investigation
they plume themselves, the refutation will be furnished.
By consequence, also we must treat of what is called
the curriculum of study --how far it is serviceable;[4]
and of astrology, and mathematics, and magic, and sorcery.
For all the Greeks boast of these as the highest sciences.
"He who reproves boldly is a peacemaker."[5]
We lave often said already that we have neither practised
nor do we study the expressing ourselves in pure Greek;
for this suits those who seduce the multitude from
the truth. But true philosophic demonstration will
contribute to the profit not of the listeners' tongues,
but of their minds. And, in my opinion, he who is solicitous
about truth ought not to frame his language with artfulness
and care, but only to try to express his meaning as
he best can. For those who are particular about words,
and devote their time to them, miss the things.[6]
It is a feat fit for the gardener to pluck without
injury the rose that is growing among the thorns; and
for the craftsman to find out the pearl buried in the
oyster's flesh. And they say that fowls have flesh
of the most agreeable quality, when, through not being
supplied with abundance of food, they pick their sustenance
with difficulty, scraping with their feet. If any one,
then, speculating on what is
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similar, wants to arrive[1] at the truth [that is] in the numerous Greek plausibilities, like the real face beneath masks, he will hunt it out with much pains. For the power that appeared in the vision to Hermas said, "Whatever may be revealed to you, shall be revealed."[2]
CHAP. II.--THE KNOWLEDGE OF GOD CAN BE ATTAINED ONLY THROUGH FAITH.
"Be not elated on account of thy wisdom,"
say the Proverbs. "In all thy ways acknowledge
her, that she may direct thy ways, and that thy foot
may not stumble." By these remarks he means to
show that our deeds ought to be conformable to reason,
and to manifest further that we ought to select and
possess what is useful out of all culture. Now the
ways of wisdom are various that lead right to the way
of truth. Faith is the way. "Thy foot shall not
stumble" is said with reference to some who seem
to oppose the one divine administration of Providence.
Whence it is added, "Be not wise in thine own
eyes," according to the impious ideas which revolt
against the administration of God. "But fear God,"
who alone is powerful. Whence it follows as a consequence
that we are not to oppose God. The sequel especially
teaches clearly, that "the fear of God is departure
from evil;" for it is said, "and depart from
all evil." Such is the discipline of wisdom ("for
whom the Lord loveth He chastens"[3]), causing
pain in order to produce understanding, and restoring
to peace and immortality. Accordingly, the Barbarian
philosophy, which we follow, is in reality perfect
and true. And so it is said in the book of Wisdom:
"For He hath given me the unerring knowledge of
things that exist, to know the constitution of the
word," and so forth, down to "and the virtues
of roots." Among all these he comprehends natural
science, which treats of all the phenomena in the world
of sense. And in continuation, he alludes also to intellectual
objects in what he subjoins: "And what is hidden
or manifest I know; for Wisdom, the artificer of all
things, taught me."[4] You have, in brief, the
professed aim of our philosophy; and the learning of
these branches, when pursued with right course of conduct,
leads through Wisdom, the artificer of all things,
to the Ruler of all,--a Being difficult to grasp and
apprehend, ever receding and withdrawing from him who
pursues. But He who is far off has--oh ineffable marvel!--come
very near. "I am a God: that draws near,"
says the Lord. He is in essence remote; "for how
is it that what is begotten can have approached the
Unbegotten?" But He is very near in virtue of
that power which holds all things in its embrace. "Shall
one do aught in secret, and I see him not?"[5]
For the power of God is always present, in contact
with us, in the exercise of inspection, of beneficence,
of instruction. Whence Moses, persuaded that God is
not to be known by human wisdom, said, "Show me
Thy glory;"[6] and into the thick darkness where
God's voice was, pressed to enter--that is, into the
inaccessible and invisible ideas respecting Existence.
For God is not in darkness or in place, but above both
space and time, and qualities of objects. Wherefore
neither is He at any time in a part, either as containing
or as contained, either by limitation or by section.
"For what house will ye build to Me?" saith
the Lord? Nay, He has not even built one for Himself,
since He cannot be contained. And though heaven be
called His throne, not even thus is He contained, but
He rests delighted in the creation.
It is clear, then, that the truth has been hidden
from us; and if that has been already shown by one
example, we shall establish it a little after by several
more. How entirely worthy of approbation are they who
are both willing to learn, and able, according to Solomon,
"to know wisdom and instruction, and to perceive
the words of wisdom, to receive knotty words, and to
perceive true righteousness," there being another
[righteousness as well], not according to the truth,
taught by the Greek laws, and by the rest of the philosophers.
"And to direct judgments," it is said--not
those of the bench, but he means that we must preserve
sound and free of error the judicial faculty which
is within us--"That I may give subtlety to the
simple, to the young man sense and understanding."[8]
"For the wise man," who has been persuaded
to obey the commandments, "having heard these
things, will become wiser" by knowledge; and "the
intelligent man will acquire rule, and will understand
a parable and a dark word, the sayings and enigmas
of the wise."[9] For it is not spurious words
which those inspired by God and those who are gained
over by them adduce, nor is it snares in which the
most of the sophists entangle the young, spending their
time on nought true. But those who possess the Holy
Spirit "search the deep things of God,"[10]--that
is, grasp the secret that is in the prophecies. "To
impart of holy things to the dogs" is forbidden,
so long as they remain beasts. For never ought those
who are envious and perturbed, and still infidel in
conduct, shameless in barking at inves-
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tigation, to dip in the divine and clear stream of the living water. "Let not the waters of thy fountain overflow, and let thy waters spread over thine own streets."[1] For it is not many who understand such things as they fall in with; or know them even after learning them, though they think they do, according to the worthy Heraclitus. Does not even he seem to thee to censure those who believe not? "Now my just one shall live by faith,"[2] the prophet said. And another prophet also says, "Except ye believe, neither shall ye understand."[3] For how ever could the soul admit the transcendental contemplation of such themes, while unbelief respecting what was to be learned struggled within? But faith, which the Greeks disparage, deeming it futile and barbarous, is a voluntary preconception[4] the assent of piety--" the subject of things hoped for, the evidence of things not seen," according to the divine apostle. "For hereby," pre-eminently, "the elders obtained a good report. But without faith it is impossible to please God."[5] Others have defined faith to be a uniting assent to an unseen object, as certainly the proof of an unknown thing is an evident assent. If then it be choice, being desirous of something, the desire is in this instance intellectual. And since choice is the beginning of action, faith is discovered to be the beginning of action, being the foundation of rational choice in the case of any one who exhibits to himself the previous demonstration through faith. Voluntarily to follow what is useful, is the first principle of understanding. Unswerving choice, then, gives considerable momentum in the direction of knowledge. The exercise of faith directly becomes knowledge, reposing on a sure foundation. Knowledge, accordingly, is defined by the sons of the philosophers as a habit, which cannot be overthrown by reason. Is there any other true condition such as this, except piety, of which alone the Word is teacher?[6] I think not. Theophrastus says that sensation is the root of faith. For from it the rudimentary principles extend to the reason that is in us, and the understanding. He who believeth then the divine Scriptures with sure judgment, receives in the voice of God, who bestowed the Scripture, a demonstration that cannot be impugned. Faith, then, is not established by demonstration. "Blessed therefore those who, not having seen, yet have believed."[7] The Siren's songs, exhibiting a power above human, fascinated those that came near, conciliating them, almost against their will, to the reception of what was said.
CHAP. III.--FAITH NOT A PRODUCT OF NATURE.
Now the followers of Basilides regard faith as natural,
as they also refer it to choice, [representing it]
as finding ideas by intellectual comprehension without
demonstration; while the followers of Valentinus assign
faith to us, the simple, but will have it that knowledge
springs up in their own selves (who are saved by nature)
through the advantage of a germ of superior excellence,
saying that it is as far removed from faith as s the
spiritual is from the animal. Further, the followers
of Basilides say that faith as well as choice is proper
according to every interval; and that in consequence
of the supramundane selection mundane faith accompanies
all nature, and that the free gift of faith is comformable
to the hope of each. Faith, then, is no longer the
direct result of free choice, if it is a natural advantage.
Nor will he who has not believed, not being the
author [of his unbelief], meet with a due recompense;
and he that has believed is not the cause [of his belief].
And the entire peculiarity and difference of belief
and unbelief will not fall under either praise or censure,
if we reflect rightly, since there attaches to it the
antecedent natural necessity proceeding from the Almighty.
And if we are pulled like inanimate things by the puppet-strings
of natural powers, willingness[9] and unwillingness,
and impulse, which is the antecedent of both, are mere
redundancies. And for my part, I am utterly incapable
of conceiving such an animal as has its appetencies,
which are moved by external causes, under the dominion
of necessity. And what place is there any longer for
the repentance of him who was once an unbeliever, through
which comes forgiveness of sins? So that neither is
baptism rational, nor the blessed seal,[10] nor the
Son, nor the Father. But God, as I think, turns out
to be the distribution to men of natural powers, which
has not as the foundation of salvation voluntary faith.
CHAP. IV.--FAITH THE FOUNDATION OF ALL KNOWLEDGE.
But we, who have heard by the Scriptures that self-determining choice and refusal have been given by the Lord to men, rest in the infallible criterion of faith, manifesting a willing spirit, since we have chosen life and believe God through His voice. And he who has believed the Word knows the matter to be true; for the Word is
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truth. But he who has disbelieved Him that speaks, has
disbelieved God.
"By faith we understand that the worlds were
framed by the word of God, so that what is seen was
not made of things which appear," says the apostle.
"By faith Abel offered to God a fuller sacrifice
than Cain, by which he received testimony that he was
righteous, God giving testimony to him respecting his
gifts; and by it he, being dead, yet speaketh,"
and so forth, down to "than enjoy the pleasures
of sin for a season."[1] Faith having, therefore,
justified these before the law, made them heirs of
the divine promise. Why then should I review and adduce
any further testimonies of faith from the history in
our hands? "For the time would fail me were I
to tell of Gideon, Barak, Samson, Jephtha, David, and
Samuel, and the prophets," and what follows.[2]
Now, inasmuch as there are four things in which the
truth resides--Sensation, Understanding, Knowledge,
Opinion,--intellectual apprehension is first in the
order of nature; but in our case, and in relation to
ourselves, Sensation is first, and of Sensation and
Understanding the essence of Knowledge is formed; and
evidence is common to Understanding and Sensation.
Well Sensation is the ladder to Knowledge; while Faith,
advancing over the pathway of the objects of sense,
leaves Opinion behind, and speeds to things free of
deception, and reposes in the truth.
Should one say that Knowledge is founded on demonstration
by a process of reasoning, let him hear that first
principles are incapable of demonstration; for they
are known neither by art nor sagacity. For the latter
is conversant about objects that are susceptible of
change, while the former is practical solely, and not
theoretical.[3] Hence it is thought that the first
cause of the universe can be apprehended by faith alone.
For all knowledge is capable of being taught; and what
is capable of being taught is rounded on what is known
before. But the first cause of the universe was not
previously known to the Greeks; neither, accordingly,
to Thales, who came to the conclusion that water was
the first i cause; nor to the other natural philosophers
who succeeded him, since it was Anaxagoras who was
the first who assigned to Mind the supremacy over material
things. But not even he preserved the dignity suited
to the efficient cause, describing as he did certain
silly vortices, together with the inertia and even
foolishness of Mind. Wherefore also the Word says,
"Call no man master on earth."[4] For knowledge
is a state of mind that results from demonstration;
but faith is a grace which from what is indemonstrable
conducts to what is universal and simple, what is neither
with matter, nor matter, nor under matter. But those
who believe not, as to be expected, drag all down from
heaven, and the region of the invisible, to earth,
"absolutely grasping with their hands rocks and
oaks," according to Plato. For, clinging to all
such things, they asseverate that that alone exists
which can be touched and handled, defining body and
essence to be identical: disputing against themselves,
they very piously defend the existence of certain intellectual
and bodiless forms descending somewhere from above
from the invisible world, vehemently maintaining that
there is a true essence. "Lo, I make new things,"
saith the Word, "which eye hath not seen, nor
ear heard, nor hath it entered into the heart of man."[5]
With a new eye, a new ear, a new heart, whatever can
be seen and heard is to be apprehended, by the faith
and understanding of the disciples of the Lord, who
speak, hear, and act spiritually. For there is genuine
coin, and other that is spurious; which no less deceives
unprofessionals, that it does not the money-changers;
who know through having learned how to separate and
distinguish what has a false stamp from what is genuine.
So the money-changer only says to the unprofessional
man that the coin is counterfeit. But the reason why,
only the banker's apprentice, and he that is trained
to this department, learns.
Now Aristotle says that the judgment which follows
knowledge is in truth faith. Accordingly, faith is
something superior to knowledge, and is its criterion.
Conjecture, which is only a feeble supposition, counterfeits
faith; as the flatterer counterfeits a friend, and
the wolf the dog. And as the workman sees that by learning
certain things he becomes an artificer, and the helmsman
by being instructed in the art will be able to steer;
he does not regard the mere wishing to become excellent
and good enough, but he must learn it by the exercise
of obedience. But to obey the Word, whom we call Instructor,
is to believe Him, going against Him in nothing. For
how can we take up a position of hostility to God?
Knowledge, accordingly, is characterized by faith;
and faith, by a kind of divine mutual and reciprocal
correspondence, becomes characterized by knowledge.
Epicurus, too, who very greatly preferred pleasure
to truth, supposes faith to be a preconception of the
mind; and defines preconception to be a grasping at
something evident, and at the clear understanding of
the thing; and asserts that, without preconception,
no one can either inquire, or doubt, or judge, or even
argue. How
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can one, without a preconceived idea of what he is aiming after, learn about that which is the subject of his investigation? He, again, who has learned has already turned his preconception[1] into comprehension. And if he who learns, learns not without a preconceived idea which takes. in what is expressed, that man has ears to hear the truth. And happy is the man that speaks to the ears of those who hear; as happy certainly also is he who is a child of obedience. Now to hear is to understand. If, then, faith is nothing else than a preconception of the mind in regard to what is the subject of discourse, and obedience is so called, and understanding and persuasion; no one shall learn aught without faith, since no one [learns aught] without preconception. Consequently there is a more ample demonstration of the complete truth of what was spoken by the prophet, "Unless ye believe, neither will ye understand." Paraphrasing this oracle, Heraclitus of Ephesus says, "If a man hope not, he will not find that which is not hoped for, seeing it is inscrutable and inaccessible." Plato the philosopher, also, in The Laws, says, "that he who would be blessed and happy, must be straight from the beginning a partaker of the truth, so as to live true for as long a period as possible; for he is a man of faith. But the unbeliever is one to whom voluntary falsehood is agreeable; and the man to whom involuntary falsehood is agreeable is senseless;[2] neither of which is desirable. For he who is devoid of friendliness, is faithless and ignorant." And does he not enigmatically say in Euthydemus, that this is "the regal wisdom"? In The Statesman he says expressly, "So that the knowledge of the true king is kingly; and he who possesses it, whether a prince or private person, shall by all means, in consequence of this act, be rightly styled royal." Now those who have believed in Christ both are and are called Chrestoi (good),[3] as those who are cared for by the true king are kingly. For as the wise are wise by their wisdom, and those observant of law are so by the law; so also those who belong to Christ the King are kings, and those that are Christ's Christians. Then, in continuation, he adds clearly, "What is right will turn out to be lawful, law being in its nature right reason, and not found in writings or elsewhere." And the stranger of Elea pronounces the kingly and statesmanlike man "a living law." Such is he who fulfils the law, "doing the will of the Father,"[4] inscribed on a lofty pillar, and set as an example of divine virtue to all who possess the power of seeing. The Greeks are acquainted with the staves of the Ephori at Lacedaemon, inscribed with the law on wood. But my law, as was said above, is both royal and living; and it is right reason. "Law, which is king of all--of mortals and immortals," as the Boeotian Pindar sings. For Speusippus,[5] in the first book against Cleophon, seems to write like Plato on this wise: "For if royalty be a good thing, and the wise man the only king and ruler, the law, which is fight reason, is good;"[6] which is the case. The Stoics teach what is in conformity with this, assigning kinghood, priesthood, prophecy, legislation, riches, true beauty, noble birth, freedom, to the wise man alone. But that he is exceedingly difficult to find, is confessed even by them.
CHAP. V.--HE PROVES BY SEVERAL EXAMPLES THAT THE GREEKS DREW FROM THE SACRED WRITERS.
Accordingly all those above-mentioned dogmas appear
to have been transmitted from Moses the great to the
Greeks. That all things belong to the wise man, is
taught in these words: "And because God hath showed
me mercy, I have all things."[7] And that he is
beloved of God, God intimates when He says, "The
God of Abraham, the God of Isaac, the God of Jacob."[8]
For the first is found to have been expressly called
"friend;"[9] and the second is shown to have
received a new name, signifying "he that sees
God ;"[10] while Isaac, God in a figure selected
for Himself as a consecrated sacrifice, to be a type
to us of the economy of salvation.
Now among the Greeks, Minos the king of nine years'
reign, and familiar friend of Zeus, is celebrated in
song; they having heard how once God conversed with
Moses, "as one speaking with his friend."[11]
Moses, then, was a sage, king, legislator. But our
Saviour surpasses all human nature." He is so
lovely, as to be alone loved by us, whose hearts are
set on the true beauty, for "He was the true light."[13]
He is shown to be a King, as such hailed by unsophisticated
children and by the unbelieving and ignorant Jews,
and heralded by the prophets. So rich is He, that He
despised the whole earth, and the gold above and beneath
it, with all glory, when given to Him by the adversary.
What need is there to say that He is the only High
Priest, who alone possesses
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the knowledge of the worship of God?[1] He is Melchizedek,
"King of peace,"[2] the most fit of all to
head the race of men. A legislator too, inasmuch as
He gave the law by the mouth of the prophets, enjoining
and teaching most distinctly what things are to be
done, and what not. Who of nobler lineage than He whose
only Father is God? Come, then, let us produce Plato
assenting to those very dogmas. The wise man he calls
rich in the Phoedrus, when he says, "O dear Pan,
and whatever other gods are here, grant me to become
fair within; and whatever external things I have, let
them be agreeable to what is within. I would reckon
the wise man rich."[3] And the Athenian stranger,[4]
finding fault with those who think that those who have
many possessions are rich, speaks thus: "For the
very rich to be also good is impossible--those, I mean,
whom the multitude count rich. Those they call rich,
who, among a few men, are owners of the possessions
worth most money; which any bad man may possess."
"The whole world of wealth belongs to the believer,"[5]
Solomon says, "but not a penny to the unbeliever."
Much more, then, is the Scripture to be believed which
says, "It is easier for a camel to go through
the eye of a needle, than for a rich man "[6]
to lead a philosophic life. But, on the other hand,
it blesses "the poor;"[7] as Plato understood
when he said, "It is not the diminishing of one's
resources, but the augmenting of insatiableness, that
is to be considered poverty; for it is not slender
means that ever constitutes poverty, but insatiableness,
from which the good man being free, will also be rich."
And in Alcibiades he calls vice a servile thing, and
virtue the attribute of freemen. "Take away from
you the heavy yoke, and take up the easy one,"[8]
says the Scripture; as also the poets call [vice] a
slavish yoke. And the expression, "Ye have sold
yourselves to your sins," agrees with what is
said above: "Every one, then, who committeth sin
is a slave; and the slave abideth not in the house
for ever. But if the Son shall make you free, then
shall ye be free, and the truth shall make you free."[9]
And again, that the wise man is beautiful, the Athenian
stranger asserts, in the same way as if one were to
affirm that certain persons were just, even should
they happen to be ugly in their persons. And in speaking
thus with respect to eminent rectitude of character,
no one who should assert them to be on this account
beautiful would be thought to speak extravagantly.
And "His appearance was inferior to all the Sons
of men,"[10] prophecy predicted.
Plato, moreover, has called the wise man a king,
in The Statesman. The remark is quoted above.
These points being demonstrated, let us recur again
to our discourse on faith. Well, with the fullest demonstration,
Plato proves, that there is need of faith everywhere,
celebrating peace at the same time: "For no man
will ever be trusty and sound in seditions without
entire virtue. There are numbers of mercenaries full
of fight, and willing to die in war; but, with a very
few exceptions, the most of them are desperadoes and
villains, insolent and senseless." If these observations
are right, "every legislator who is even of slight
use, will, in making his laws, have an eye to the greatest
virtue. Such is fidelity, which we need at all times,
both in peace and in war, and in all the rest of our
life, for it appears to embrace the other virtues.
"But the best thing is neither war nor sedition,
for the necessity of these is to be deprecated. But
peace with one another and kindly feeling are what
is best." From these remarks the greatest prayer
evidently is to have peace, according to Plato. And
faith is the greatest mother of the I virtues. Accordingly
it is rightly said in Solomon, "Wisdom is in the
mouth of the faithful." Since also Xenocrates,
in his book on "Intelligence," says "that
wisdom is the knowledge of first causes and of intellectual
essence." He considers intelligence as twofold,
practical and theoretical, which latter is human wisdom.
Consequently wisdom is intelligence, but all intelligence
is not wisdom. And it has been shown, that the knowledge
of the first cause of the universe is of faith, but
is not demonstration. For it were strange that the
followers of the Samian Pythagoras, rejecting demonstrations
of subjects of question, should regard the bare ipse
dixit[13] as ground of belief; and that this expression
alone sufficed for the confirmation of what they heard,
while those devoted to the contemplation of the truth,
presuming to disbelieve the trustworthy Teacher, God
the only Saviour, should demand of Him tests of His
utterances. But He says, "He that hath ears to
hear, let him hear." And who is he? Let Epicharmus
say:--
"Mind sees, mind hears; all besides is deaf and blind."[14]
Rating some as unbelievers, Heraclitus says,
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"Not knowing how to hear or to speak;" aided doubtless by Solomon, who says, "If thou lovest to hear, thou shalt comprehend; and if thou incline thine ear, thou shalt be wise.[1]
CHAP. VI.--THE EXCELLENCE AND UTILITY OF FAITH.
"Lord, who hath believed our report?"[2]
Isaiah says. For "faith cometh by hearing, and
hearing by the word of God," saith the apostle.
"How then shall they call on Him in whom they
have not believed? And how shall they believe on Him
whom they have not heard? And how shall they hear without
a preacher? And how shall they preach except they be
sent? As it is written, How beautiful are the feet
of those that publish glad tidings of good things
! "3 You see how he brings faith by hearing,
and the preaching of the apostles, up to the word of
the Lord, and to the Son of God. We do not yet understand
the word of the Lord to be demonstration.
As, then, playing at ball not only depends on one
throwing the ball skilfully, but it requires besides
one to catch it dexterously, that the game may be gone
through according to the rules for ball; so also is
it the case that teaching is reliable when faith on
the part of those who hear, being, so to speak, a sort
of natural art, contributes to the process of learning.
So also the earth co-operates, through its productive
power, being fit for the sowing of the seed. For there
is no good of the very best instruction without the
exercise of the receptive faculty on the part of the
learner, not even of prophecy, when there is the absence
of docility on the part of those who hear. For dry
twigs, being ready to receive the power of fire, are
kindled with great ease; and the far-famed stone[4]
attracts steel through affinity, as the amber tear-drop
drags to itself twigs, and the lump sets chaff in motion.
And the substances attracted obey them, influenced
by a subtle spirit, not as a cause, but as a concurring
cause.
There being then a twofold species of vice--that
characterized by craft and stealth, and that which
leads and drives with violence--the divine Word cries,
calling all together; knowing perfectly well those
that will not obey; notwithstanding then since to obey
or not is in our own power, provided we have not the
excuse of ignorance to adduce. He makes a just call,
and demands of each according to his strength. For
some are able as well as willing, having reached this
point through practice and being purified; while others,
if they are not yet able, already have the will. Now
to will is the act of the soul, but to do is not without
the body. Nor are actions estimated by their issue
alone; but they are judged also according to the element
of free choice in each,--if he chose easily, if he
repented of his sins, if he reflected on his failures
and repented (<greek>metegnw</greek>),
which is (<greek>meta</greek> <greek>tauta</greek>
<greek>egnw</greek> ) "afterwards
knew." For repentance is a tardy knowledge, and
primitive innocence is knowledge. Repentance, then,
is an effect of faith. For unless a man believe that
to which he was addicted to be sin, he will not abandon
it; and if he do not believe punishment to be impending
over the transgressor, and salvation to be the portion
of him who lives according to the commandments, he
will not reform.
Hope, too, is based on faith. Accordingly the followers
of Basilides define faith to be, the assent of the
soul to any of those things, that do not affect the
senses through not being present. And hope is the expectation
of the possession of good. Necessarily, then, is expectation
founded on faith. Now he is faithful who keeps inviolably
what is entrusted to him; and we are entrusted with
the utterances respecting God and the divine words,
the commands along with the execution of the injunctions.
This is the faithful servant, who is praised by the
Lord. And when it is said, "God is faithful,"
it is intimated that He is worthy to be believed when
declaring aught. Now His Word declares; and "God"
Himself is "faithful."[5] How, then, if to
believe is to suppose, do the philosophers think that
what proceeds from themselves is sure? For the voluntary
assent to a preceding demonstration is not supposition,
but it is assent to something sure. Who is more powerful
than God? Now unbelief is the feeble negative supposition
of one opposed to Him: as incredulity is a condition
which admits faith with difficulty. Faith is the voluntary
supposition and anticipation of pre-comprehension.
Expectation is an opinion about the future, and expectation
about other things is opinion about uncertainty. Confidence
is a strong judgment about a thing. Wherefore we believe
Him in whom we have confidence unto divine glory and
salvation. And we confide in Him, who is God alone,
whom we know, that those things nobly [promised to
us, and for this end benevolently created and bestowed
by Him on us, will not fail.
Benevolence is the wishing of good things to another
for his sake. For He needs nothing; and the beneficence
and benignity which flow from the Lord terminate in
us, being divine benevolence, and benevolence resulting
in beneficence. And if to Abraham on his believing
it
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was counted for righteousness; and if we are the seed of Abraham, then we must also believe through heating. For we are Israelites, who are convinced not by signs, but by hearing. Wherefore it is said, "Rejoice, O barren, that barest not; break forth and cry, thou that didst not travail with child: for more are the children of the desolate than of her who hath an husband."[1] "Thou hast lived for the fence of the people, thy children were blessed in the tents of their fathers."[2] And if the same mansions are promised by prophecy to us and to the patriarchs, the God of both the covenants is shown to be one. Accordingly it is added more clearly, "Thou hast inherited the covenant of Israel,"[3] speaking to those called from among the nations that were once barren, being formerly destitute of this husband, who is the Word,--desolate formerly,--of the bridegroom. "Now the just shall live by faith,"[4] which is according to the covenant and the commandments; since these, which are two in name and time, given in accordance with the [divine] economy--being in power one--the old and the new, are dispensed through the Son by one God. As the apostle also says in the Epistle to the Romans, "For therein is the righteousness of God revealed from faith to faith," teaching the one salvation which from prophecy to the Gospel is perfected by one and the same Lord. "This charge," he says, "I commit to thee, son Timothy, according to the prophecies which went before on thee, that thou by them mightest war the good warfare; holding faith, and a good conscience; which some having put away concerning faith have made shipwreck,"[5] because they defiled by unbelief the conscience that comes from God. Accordingly, faith may not, any more, with reason, be disparaged in an offhand way, as simple and vulgar, appertaining to anybody. For, if it were a mere human habit, as the Greeks supposed, it would have been extinguished. But if it grow, and there be no place where it is not; then I affirm, that faith, whether founded in love, or in fear, as its disparagers assert, is something divine; which is neither rent asunder by other mundane friendship, nor dissolved by the presence of fear. For love, on account of its friendly alliance with faith, makes men believers; and faith, which is the foundation of love, in its turn introduces the doing of good; since also fear, the paedagogue of the law, is believed to be fear by those, by whom it is believed. For, if its existence is shown in its working, it is yet believed when about to do and threatening, and when not working and present; and being believed to exist, it does not itself generate faith, but is by faith tested and proved trustworthy. Such a change, then, from unbelief to faith--and to trust in hope and fear, is divine. And, in truth, faith is discovered, by us, to be the first movement towards salvation; after which fear, and hope, and repentance, advancing in company with temperance and patience, lead us to love and knowledge. Rightly, therefore, the Apostle Barnabas says, "From the portion I have received I have done my diligence to send by little and little to you; that along with your faith you may also have perfect knowledge.[6] Fear and patience are then helpers of your faith; and our allies are long-suffering and temperance. These, then," he says, "in what respects the Lord, continuing in purity, there rejoice along with them, wisdom, understanding, intelligence, knowledge." The fore-mentioned virtues being, then, the elements of knowledge; the result is that faith is more elementary, being as necessary to the Gnostic,[7] as respiration to him that lives in this world is to life. And as without the four elements it is not possible to live, so neither can knowledge be attained without faith. It is then the support of truth.
CHAP. VII.--THE UTILITY OF FEAR. OBJECTIONS ANSWERED.
Those, who denounce fear, assail the law; and if
the law, plainly also God, who gave the law. For these
three elements are of necessity presented in the subject
on hand: the ruler, his administration, and the ruled.
If, then, according to hypothesis, they abolish the
law; then, by necessary consequence, each one who is
led by lust, courting pleasure, must neglect what is
right and despise the Deity, and fearlessly indulge
in impiety and injustice together, having dashed away
from the truth.
Yea, say they, fear is an irrational aberration[8]
and perturbation of mind. What sayest thou? And how
can this definition be any longer maintained, seeing
the commandment is given me by the Word? But the commandment
forbids, hanging fear over the head of those who have
incurred[9] admonition for their discipline.
Fear is not then irrational. It is therefore rational.
How could it be otherwise, exhorting as it does, Thou
shalt not kill, Thou shalt not commit adultery, Thou
shalt not steal, Than shalt not bear false witness?
But if they will quibble about the names, let the
philosophers term the fear of the law, cautious fear,
(<greek>eulabeia</greek>)
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which is a shunning (<greek>ekklisis</greek>)
agreeable to reason. Such Critolaus of Phasela not
inaptly called fighters about names (<greek>onomatomakoi</greek>).
The commandment, then, has already appeared fair and
lovely even in the highest degree, when conceived under
a change of name. Cautious fear (<greek>eulabeia</greek>)
is therefore shown to be reasonable being the shunning
of what hurts; from which arises repentance for previous
sins. "For the fear of the LORD is the beginning
of wisdom; good understanding is to all that do it."[1]
He calls wisdom a doing, which is the fear of the Lord
paving the way for wisdom. But if the law produces
fear, the knowledge of the law is the beginning of
wisdom; and a man is not wise without law. Therefore
those who reject the law are unwise; and in consequence
they are reckoned godless (<greek>aqeoi</greek>).
Now instruction is the beginning of wisdom. "But
the ungodly despise wisdom and instruction,"[2]
saith the Scripture.
Let us see what terrors the law announces. If it
is the things which hold an intermediate place between
virtue and vice, such as poverty, disease, obscurity,
and humble birth, and the like, these things civil
laws hold forth, and are: praised for so doing. And
those of the Peripatetic school, who introduce three
kinds of good things, and think that their opposites
are evil, this opinion suits. But the law given to
us enjoins us to shun what are in reality bad things--adultery,
uncleanness, paederasty, ignorance, wickedness, soul-disease,
death (not that which severs the soul from the body,
but that which severs the soul from truth). For these
are vices in reality, and the workings that proceed
from them are dreadful and terrible. "For not
unjustly," say the divine oracles, "are the
nets spread for birds; for they who are accomplices
in blood treasure up evils to themselves."[3]
How, then, is the law still said to be not good by
certain heresies that clamorously appeal to the apostle,
who says, "For by the law is the knowledge of
sin?"[4] To whom we say, The law did not cause,
but showed sin. For, enjoining what is to be done,
it reprehended what ought not to be done. And it is
the part of the good to teach what is salutary, and
to point out what is deleterious; and to counsel the
practice of the one, and to command to shun the other.
Now the apostle, whom they do not comprehend, said
that by the law the knowledge of sin was manifested,
not that from it it derived its existence. And how
can the law be not good, which trains, which is given
as the instructor (<greek>paidagwgos</greek>)
to Christ, s that being corrected by fear, in the way
of discipline, in order to the attainment of the perfection
which is by Christ? "I will not," it is
said, "the death of the sinner, as his repentance."[6]
Now the commandment works repentance; inasmuch as it
deters[7] from what ought not to be done, and enjoins
good deeds. By ignorance he means, in my opinion, death.
"And he that is near the Lord is full of stripes."[8]
Plainly, he, that draws near to knowledge, has the
benefit Of perils, fears, troubles, afflictions, by
reason of his desire for the truth. "For the son
who is instructed turns out wise, and an intelligent
son is saved from burning. And an intelligent son will
receive the commandments."[9] And Barnabas the
apostle having said, "Woe to those who are wise
in their own conceits, clever in their own eyes,"[10]
added, "Let us become spiritual, a perfect temple
to God; let us, as far as in us lies, practise the
fear of God, and strive to keep His commands, that
we may rejoice in His judgments."[11] Whence "the
fear of God" is divinely said to be the beginning
of wisdom.[12]
CHAP. VIII.--THE VAGARIES OF BASILIDES AND VALENTINUS AS TO FEAR BEING THE CAUSE OF THINGS,
Here the followers of Basilides, interpreting this
expression, say, "that the Prince,[13] having
heard the speech of the Spirit, who was being ministered
to, was struck with amazement both with the voice and
the vision, having had glad tidings beyond his hopes
announced to him; and that his amazement was called
fear, which became the origin of wisdom, which distinguishes
classes, and discriminates, and perfects, and restores.
For not the world alone, but also the election, He
that is over all has set apart and sent forth."
And Valentinus appears also in an epistle to have
adopted such views. For he writes in these very words:
"And as[14] terror fell on the angels at this
creature, because he uttered things greater than proceeded
from his formation, by reason of the being in him who
had invisibly communicated a germ of the supernal essence,
and who spoke with free utterance; so also among the
tribes of men in the world, the works of men became
terrors to those who made them,--as, for example, images
and statues. And the hands of all fashion things to
bear the name of God:
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for Adam formed into the name of man inspired the dread
attaching to the pre-existent man, as having his being
in him; and they were terror-stricken, and speedily
marred the work."
But there being but one First Cause, as will be
shown afterwards, these men will be shown to be inventors
of chatterings and chirpings. But since God deemed
it advantageous, that from the law and the prophets,
men should receive a preparatory discipline by the
Lord, the fear of the Lord was called the beginning
of wisdom, being given by the Lord, through Moses,
to the disobedient and hard of heart. For those whom
reason convinces not, fear tames; which also the Instructing
Word, foreseeing from the first, and purifying by each
of these methods, adapted the instrument suitably for
piety. Consternation is, then, fear at a strange apparition,
or at an unlooked-for representation--such as, for
example, a message; while fear is an excessive wonderment
on account of something which arises or is. They do
not then perceive that they represent by means of amazement
the God who is highest and is extolled by them, as
subject to perturbation and antecedent to amazement
as having been in ignorance. If indeed ignorance preceded
amazement; and if this amazement and fear, which is
the beginning of wisdom, is the fear of God, then in
all likelihood ignorance as cause preceded both the
wisdom of God and all creative work, and not only these,
but restoration and even election itself. Whether,
then, was it ignorance of what was good or what was
evil?
Well, if of good, why does it cease through amazement?
And minister and preaching and baptism are [in that
case] superfluous to them. And if of evil, how can
what is bad be the cause of what is best? For had not
ignorance preceded, the minister would not have come
down, nor would have amazement seized on "the
Prince," as they say; nor would he have attained
to a beginning of wisdom from fear, in order to discrimination
between the elect and those that are mundane. And if
the fear of the pre-existent man made the angels conspire
against their own handiwork, under the idea that an
invisible germ of the supernal essence was lodged within
that creation, or through unfounded suspicion excited
envy, which is incredible, the angels became murderers
of the creature which had been entrusted to them, as
a child might be, they being thus convicted of the
grossest ignorance. Or suppose they were influenced
by being involved in foreknowledge. But they would
not have conspired against what they foreknew in the
assault they made; nor would they have been terror-struck
at their own work, in consequence of foreknowledge,
on their perceiving the supernal germ. Or, finally,
suppose, trusting to their knowledge, they dared (but
this also were impossible for them), on learning the
excellence that is in the Pleroma, to conspire against
man. Furthermore also they laid hands on that which
was according to the image, in which also is the archetype,
and which, along with the knowledge that remains, is
indestructible.
To these, then, and certain others, especially the
Marcionites, the Scripture cries, though they listen
not, "He that heareth Me shall rest with confidence
in peace, and shall be tranquil, fearless of all evil."[1]
What, then, will they have the law to be? They
will not call it evil, but just; distinguishing what
is good from what is just. But the Lord, when He enjoins
us to dread evil, does not exchange one evil for another,
but abolishes what is opposite by its opposite. Now
evil is the opposite of good, as what is just is of
what is unjust. If, then, that absence of fear, which
the fear of the Lord produces, is called the beginning
of what is good,[2] fear is a good thing. And the fear
which proceeds from the law is not only just, but good,
as it takes away evil. But introducing absence of fear
by means of fear, it does not produce apathy by means
of mental perturbation, but moderation of feeling by
discipline. When, then, we hear, "Honour the Lord,
and be strong: but fear not another besides Him,"[3]
we understand it to be meant fearing to sin, and following
the commandments given by God, which is the honour
that cometh from God. For the fear of God is <greek>Deos</greek>
[in Greek]. But if fear is perturbation of mind, as
some will have it that fear is perturbation of mind,
yet all fear is not perturbation. Superstition is indeed
perturbation of mind; being the fear of demons, that
produce and are subject to the excitement of passion.
On the other hand, consequently, the fear of God, who
is not subject to perturbation, is free of perturbation.
For it is not God, but failing away from God, that
the man is terrified for. And he who fears this--that
is, falling into evils--fears and dreads those evils.
And he who fears a fall, wishes himself to be free
of corruption and perturbation. "The wise man,
fearing, avoids evil: but the foolish, trusting, mixes
himself with it," says the Scripture; and again
it says, "In the fear of the LORD is the hope
of strength."[4]
CHAP. IX.--THE CONNECTION OF THE CHRISTIAN VIRTUES.
Such a fear, accordingly, leads to repentance and hope. Now hope is the expectation of good things, or an expectation sanguine of ab-
357
sent good; and favourable circumstances are assumed
in order to good hope, which we have learned leads
on to love. Now love turns out to be consent in what
pertains to reason, life, and manners, or in brief,
fellowship in life, or it is the intensity of friendship
and of affection, with fight reason, in the enjoyment
of associates. And an associate (<greek>etairos</greek>)
is another self;[1] just as we call those, brethren,
who are regenerated by the same word. And akin to love
is hospitality, being a congenial an devoted to the
treatment of strangers. And those are strangers, to
whom the things of the world are strange. For we regard
as worldly those, who hope in the earth and carnal
lusts. "Be not conformed," says the apostle,
"to this world: but be ye transformed in the renewal
of the mind, that ye may prove what is that good, and
acceptable, and perfect, will of God."[2]
Hospitality, therefore, is occupied in what is useful
for strangers; and guests (<greek>epixenoi</greek>)
are strangers (<greek>xenoi</greek>); and
friends are guests; and brethren are friends. "Dear
brother,"[3] says Homer.
Philanthropy, in order to which also, is natural
affection, being a loving treatment of men, and natural
affection, which is a congenial habit exercised in
the love of friends or domestics, follow in the train
of love. And if the real man within us is the spiritual,
philanthropy is brotherly love to those who participate,
in the same spirit. Natural affection, on the other
hand, the preservation of good-will, or of affection;
and affection is its perfect demonstration;[4] and
to be beloved is to please in behaviour, by drawing
and attracting. And persons are brought to sameness
by consent, which is the knowledge of the good things
that are enjoyed in common. For community of sentiment
(<greek>omognwmosunh</greek>) is harmony
of opinions (<greek>sumfwnia</greek> <greek>gnwmpn</greek>).
"Let your love be without dissimulation,"
it is said; "and abhorring what is evil, let us
become attached to what is good, to brotherly love,"
and so on, down to "If it be possible, as much
as lieth in you, living peaceably with all men."
Then "be not overcome of evil," it is said,
"but overcome evil with good."[5] And the
same apostle owns that he bears witness to the Jews,
"that they have a zeal of God, but not according
to knowledge. For, being ignorant of God's righteousness,
and seeking to establish their own, they have not submitted
themselves to the righteousness of God."[6] For
they did not know and do the will of the law; but what
they supposed, that they thought the law wished. And
they did not believe the law as prophesying, but the
bare word; and they followed through fear, not through
disposition and faith. "For Christ is the end
of the law for righteousness,"[7] who was prophesied
by the law to every one that believeth. Whence it was
said to them by Moses, "I will provoke you to
jealousy by them that are not a people; and I will
anger you by a foolish nation, that is, by one that
has become disposed to obedience."[8] And by Isaiah
it is said, "I was found of them that sought Me
not; I was made manifest to them that inquired not
after Me,"[9]--manifestly previous to the coming
of the Lord; after which to lsrael, the things prophesied,
are now appropriately spoken: "I have stretched
out My hands all the day long to a disobedient and
gainsaying people." Do you see the cause of the
calling from among the nations, clearly declared, by
the prophet, to be the disobedience and gainsaying
of the people? Then the goodness of God is shown also
in their case. For the apostle says, "But through
their transgression salvation is come to the Gentiles,
to provoke them to jealousy,"[10] and to willingness
to repent. And the Shepherd, speaking plainly of those
who had fallen asleep, recognises certain righteous
among Gentiles and Jews, not only before the appearance
of Christ, but before the law, in virtue of acceptance
before God,--as Abel, as Noah, as any other righteous
man. He says accordingly, "that the apostles and
teachers, who had preached the name of the Son of God,
and had fallen asleep, in power and by faith, preached
to those that had fallen asleep before." Then
he subjoins: "And they gave them the seal of preaching.
They descended, therefore, with them into the water,
and again ascended. But these descended alive, and
again ascended alive. But those, who had fallen asleep
before, descended dead, but ascended alive. By these,
therefore, they were made alive, and knew the name
of the Son of God. Wherefore also they ascended with
them, and fitted into the structure of the tower, and
unhewn were built up together; they fell asleep in
righteousness and in great purity, but wanted only
this seal."[11] "For when the Gentiles, which
have not the law, do by nature the things of the law,
these, having not the law, are a law unto themselves,"[12]
according to the apostle.
As, then, the virtues follow one another, why need
I say what has been demonstrated already, that faith
hopes through repentance, and fear through faith; and
patience and practice in these along with learning
terminate in love,
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which is perfected by knowledge? But that is necessarily to be noticed, that the Divine alone is to be regarded as naturally wise. Therefore also wisdom, which has taught the truth, is the power of God; and in it the perfection of knowledge is embraced. The philosopher loves and likes the truth, being now considered as a friend, on account of his love, from his being a true servant. The beginning of knowledge is wondering at objects, as Plato says is in his Theoetetus; and Matthew exhorting in the Traditions, says, "Wonder at what is before you;" laying this down first as the foundation of further knowledge. So also in the Gospel to the Hebrews it is written, "He that wonders shall reign, and he that has reigned shall rest. It is impossible, therefore, for an ignorant man, while he remains ignorant, to philosophize, not having apprehended the idea of wisdom; since philosophy is an effort to grasp that which truly is, and the studies that conduce thereto. And it is not the rendering of one[1] accomplished in good habits of conduct, but the knowing how we are to use and act and labour, according as one is assimilated to God. I mean God the Saviour, by serving the God of the universe through the High Priest, the Word, by whom what is in truth good and right is beheld. Piety is conduct suitable and corresponding to God.
CHAP. X.--TO WHAT THE PHILOSOPHER APPLIES HIMSELF.
These three things, therefore, our philosopher attaches himself to: first, speculation; second, the performance of the precepts; third, the forming of good men;--which, concurring, form the Gnostic. Whichever of these is wanting, the elements of knowledge limp. Whence the Scripture divinely says, "And the Lord spake to Moses, saying, Speak to the children of Israel, and thou shalt say to them, I am the LORD your God. According to the customs of the land of Egypt, in which ye have dwelt, ye shall not do; and according to the customs of Canaan, into which I bring you, ye shall not do; and in their usages ye shall not walk. Ye shall perform My judgments, and keep My precepts, and walk in them: I am the LORD your God. And ye shall keep all My commandments, and do them. He that doeth them shall live in them. I am the LORD your God."[2] Whether, then, Egypt and the land of Canaan be the symbol of the world and of deceit, or of sufferings and afflictions; the oracle shows us what must be abstained from, and what, being divine and not worldly, must be observed. And when it is said, "The man that doeth them shall live in them,"[3] it declares both the correction of the Hebrews themselves, and the training and advancement of us who are nigh:[4] it declares at once their life and ours. For "those who were dead in sins are quickened together with Christ,"[5] by our covenant. For Scripture, by the frequent reiteration of the expression, "I am the LORD your God," shames in such a way as most powerfully to dissuade, by teaching us to follow God who gave the commandments, and gently admonishes us to seek God and endeavour to know Him as far as possible; which is the highest speculation, that which scans the greatest mysteries, the real knowledge, that which becomes irrefragable by reason. This alone is the knowledge of wisdom, from which rectitude of conduct is never disjoined.
CHAP. XI.--THE KNOWLEDGE WHICH COMES THROUGH FAITH THE SUREST OF ALL.
But the knowledge of those who think themselves wise, whether the barbarian sects or the philosophers among the Greeks, according to the apostle, " puffeth up."[6] But that knowledge, which is the scientific demonstration of what is delivered according to the true philosophy, is rounded on faith. Now, we may say that it is that process of reason which, from what is admitted, procures faith in what is disputed. Now, faith being twofold--the faith of knowledge and that of opinion--nothing prevents us from calling demonstration twofold, the one resting on knowledge, the other on opinion; since also knowledge and foreknowledge are designated as twofold, that which is essentially accurate, that which is defective. And is not the demonstration, which we possess, that alone which is true, as being supplied out of the divine Scriptures, the sacred writings, and out of the "God-taught wisdom," according to the apostle? Learning, then, is also obedience to the commandments, which is faith in God. And faith is a power of God, being the strength of the truth. For example, it is said, "If ye have faith as a grain of mustard, ye shall remove the mountain."[7] And again, "According to thy faith let it be to thee."[8] And one is cured, receiving healing by faith; and the dead is raised up in consequence of the power of one believing that he would be raised. The demonstration, however, which rests on opinion is human, and is the result of rhetorical arguments or dialectic syllogisms. For the highest demonstration, to which we have alluded, produces intelligent faith by the adducing and opening up of the Scrip-
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tures to the souls of those who desire to learn; the
result of which is knowledge (gnosis). For if what
is adduced in order to prove the point at issue is
assumed to be true, as being divine and prophetic,
manifestly the conclusion arrived at by inference from
it will consequently he inferred truly; and the legitimate
result of the demonstration will be knowledge. When,
then, the memorial of the celestial and divine food
was commanded to be consecrated in the golden pot,
it was said, "The omer was the tenth of the three
measures."[1] For in ourselves, by the three measures
are indicated three criteria; sensation of objects
of sense, speech,--of spoken names and words, and the
mind,--of intellectual objects. The Gnostic, therefore,
will abstain from errors in speech, and thought, and
sensation, and action, having heard "that he that
looks so as to lust hath committed adultery;"[2]
and reflecting that "blessed are the pure in heart,
for they shall see God;"[3] and knowing this,
"that not what enters into the mouth defileth,
but that it is what cometh forth by the mouth that
defileth the man. For out of the heart proceed thoughts."[4]
This, as I think, is the true and just measure according
to God, by which things capable of measurement are
measured, the decad which is comprehensive of man;
which summarily the three above-mentioned measures
pointed out. There are body and soul, the five senses,
speech, the power of reproduction--the intellectual
or the spiritual faculty, or whatever you choose to
call it. And we must, in a word, ascending above all
the others, stop at the mind; as also certainly in
the universe overleaping the nine divisions, the first
consisting of the four elements put in one place for
equal interchange: and then the seven wandering stars
and the one that wanders not, the ninth, to the perfect
number, which is above the nine,[5] and the tenth division,
we must reach to the knowledge of God, to speak briefly,
desiring the Maker after the creation. Wherefore the
tithes both of the ephah and of the sacrifices were
presented to God; and the paschal feast began with
the tenth day, being the transition from all trouble,
and from all objects of sense.
The Gnostic is therefore fixed by faith; but the
man who thinks himself wise touches not what pertains
to the truth, moved as he is by unstable and wavering
impulses. It is therefore reasonably written, "Cain
went forth from the face of God, and dwelt in the land
of Naid, over against Eden." Now Naid is interpreted
commotion, and Eden delight; and Faith, and Knowledge,
and Peace are delight, from which he that has disobeyed
is cast out. But he that is wise in his own eyes will
not so much as listen to the beginning of the divine
commandments; but, as if his own teacher, throwing
off the reins, plunges voluntarily into a billowy commotion,
sinking down to mortal and created things from the
uncreated knowledge, holding various opinions at various
times. "Those who have no guidance fall like leaves."[6]
Reason, the governing principle, remaining unmoved
and guiding the soul, is called its pilot. For access
to the Immutable is obtained by a truly immutable means.
Thus Abraham was stationed before the Lord, and approaching
spoke.[7] And to Moses it is said, "But do thou
stand there with Me."[8] And the followers of
Simon wish be assimilated in manners to the standing
form which they adore. Faith, therefore, and the knowledge
of the truth, render the soul, which makes them its
choice, always uniform and equable. For congenial to
the man of falsehood is shifting, and change, and turning
away, as to the Gnostic are calmness, and rest, and
peace. As, then, philosophy has been brought into evil
repute by pride and self-conceit, so also ghosts by
false ghosts called by the same name; of which the
apostle writing says, "O Timothy, keep that which
is committed to thy trust, avoiding the profane and
vain babblings and oppositions of science (gnosis)
falsely so called; which some professing, have erred
concerning the faith."[9]
Convicted by this utterance, the heretics reject
the Epistles. to Timothy.[10] Well, then, if the Lord
is the truth, and wisdom, and power of God, as in truth
He is, it is shown that the real Gnostic is he that
knows Him, and His Father by Him. For his sentiments
are the same with him who said, "The lips of the
righteous know high things."[11]
CHAP. XII.--TWOFOLD FAITH.
Faith as also Time being double, we shall find virtues in pairs both dwelling together. For memory is related to past time, hope to future. We believe that what is past did, and that what is future will take place. And, on the other I hand, we love, persuaded by faith that the past was as it was, and by hope expecting the future. For in everything love attends the Gnostic, who knows one God. "And, behold, all things which He created were very good."[12] He both knows and admires. Godliness adds length of
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life; and the fear of the Lord adds days. As, then,
the days are a portion of life in its progress, so
also fear is the beginning of love, becoming by development
faith, then love. But it is not as I fear and hate
a wild beast (since fear is twofold) that I fear the
father, whom I fear and love at once. Again, fearing
lest I be punished, I love myself in assuming fear.
He who fears to offend his father, loves himself. Blessed
then is he who is found possessed of faith, being,
as he is, composed of love and fear. And faith is power
in order to salvation, and strength to eternal life.
Again, prophecy is foreknowledge; and knowledge the
understanding of prophecy; being the knowledge of those
things known before by the Lord who reveals all things.
The knowledge, then, of those things which have
been predicted shows a threefold result--either one
that has happened long ago, or exists now, or about
to be. Then the extremes[1] either of what is accomplished
or of what is hoped for fall under faith; and the present
action furnishes persuasive arguments of the confirmation
of both the extremes. For if, prophecy being one, one
part is accomplishing and another is fulfilled; hence
the truth, both what is hoped for and what is passed
is confirmed. For it was first present; then it became
past to us; so that the belief of what is past is the
apprehension of a past event, and a hope which is future
the apprehension of a future event.
And not only the Platonists, but the Stoics, say
that assent is in our own power. All opinion then,
and judgment, and supposition, and knowledge, by which
we live and have perpetual intercourse with the human
race, is an assent; which is nothing else than faith.
And unbelief being defection from faith, shows both
assent and faith to be possessed of power; for non-existence
cannot be called privation. And if you consider the
truth, you will find man naturally misled so as to
give assent to what is false, though possessing the
resources necessary for belief in the truth. "The
virtue, then, that encloses the Church in its grasp,"
as the Shepherd says,[2] "is Faith, by which the
elect of God are saved; and that which acts the man
is Self-restraint. And these are followed by Simplicity,
Knowledge, Innocence, Decorum, Love," and all
these are the daughters of Faith. And again, "Faith
leads the way, fear upbuilds, and love perfects."
Accordingly he[3] says, the Lord is to be feared in
order to edification, but not the devil to destruction.
And again, the works of the Lord--that is, His commandments--are
to be loved and done; but the works of the devil are
to be dreaded and not done. For the fear of God trains
and restores to love; but the fear of the works of
the devil has hatred dwelling along with it. The same
also says" that repentance is high intelligence.
For he that repents of what he did, no longer does
or says as he did. But by torturing himself for his
sins, he benefits his soul. Forgiveness of sins is
therefore different from repentance; but both show
what is in our power."
CHAP. XIII.--ON FIRST AND SECOND REPENTANCE.
He, then, who has received the forgiveness of sins ought to sin no more. For, in addition to the first and only repentance from sins (this is from the previous sins in the first and heathen life--I mean that in ignorance), there is forthwith proposed to those who have been called, the repentance which cleanses the seat of the soul from transgressions, that faith may be established. And the Lord, knowing the heart, and foreknowing the future, foresaw both the fickleness of man and the craft and subtlety of the devil from the first, from the beginning; how that, envying man for the forgiveness of sins, he would present to the servants of God certain causes of sins; skilfully working mischief, that they might fall together with himself. Accordingly, being very merciful, He has vouch-safed, in the case of those who, though in faith, fall into any transgression, a second repentance; so that should any one be tempted after his calling, overcome by force and fraud, he may receive still a repentance not to be repented of. "For if we sin wilfully after that we have received the knowledge of the truth, there remaineth no more sacrifice for sins, but a certain fearful looking for of judgment and fiery indignation, which shah devour the adversaries."[4] But continual and successive repentings for sins differ nothing from the case of those who have not believed at all, except only in their consciousness that they do sin. And I know not which of the two is worst, whether the case of a man who sins knowingly, or of one who, after having repented of his sins, transgresses again. For in the process of proof sin appears on each side,--the sin which in its commission is condemned by the worker of the iniquity, and that of the man who, foreseeing what is about to be done, yet puts his hand to it as a wickedness. And he who perchance gratifies himself in anger and pleasure, gratifies himself in he knows what; and he who, repenting of that in which he gratified himself, by rushing again into pleasure, is near neighbour to him who has sinned wilfully at first. For one, who does again that of which he has repented,
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and condemning what he does, performs it willingly.
He, then, who from among the Gentiles and from that
old life has betaken himself to faith, has obtained
forgiveness of sins once. But he who has sinned after
this, on his repentance, though he obtain pardon, ought
to fear, as one no longer washed to the forgiveness
of sins. For not only must the idols which he formerly
held as gods, but the works also of his former life,
be abandoned by him who has been "born again,
not of blood, nor of the will of the flesh,"[1]
but in the Spirit; which consists in repenting by not
giving way to the same fault. For frequent repentance
and readiness to change easily from want of training,
is the practice of sin again.[2] The frequent asking
of forgiveness, then, for those things in which we
often transgress, is the semblance of repentance, not
repentance itself. "But the righteousness of the
blameless cuts straight paths,"[3] says the Scripture.
And again, "The righteousness of the innocent
will make his way right."[4] Nay, "as a father
pitieth his children, so the LORD pitieth them that
fear Him."[5] David writes, "They who sow,"
then, "in tears, shall reap in joy; "[6]
those, namely, who confess in penitence. "For
blessed are all those that fear the LORD."[7]
You see the corresponding blessing in the Gospel. "Fear
not," it is said, "when a man is enriched,
and when the glory of his house is increased: because
when he dieth he shall leave all, and his glory shall
not descend after him."[8] "But I in Thy
I mercy will enter into Thy house. I will worship I
toward Thy holy temple, in Thy fear: LORD, lead me
in Thy righteousness."[9] Appetite is then the
movement of the mind to or from something.[10] Passion
is an excessive appetite exceeding the measures of
reason, or appetite unbridled and disobedient to the
word. Passions, then, are a perturbation of the soul
contrary to nature, in disobedience to reason. But
revolt and distraction and disobedience are in our
own power, as obedience is in our power. Wherefore
voluntary actions are judged. But should one examine
each one of the passions, he will find them irrational
impulses.
CHAP. XIV.--HOW A THING MAY BE INVOLUNTARY.
What is involuntary is not matter for judgment. But this is twofold,--what is done in ignorance, and what is done through necessity. For how will you judge concerning those who are said to sin in involuntary modes? For either one knew not himself, as Cleomenes and Athamas, who were mad; or the thing which he does, as Aeschylus, who divulged the mysteries on the stage, who, being tried in the Areopagus, was absolved on his showing that he had not been initiated. Or one knows not what is done, as he who has let off his antagonist, and slain his domestic instead of his enemy; or that by which it is done, as he who, in exercising with spears having buttons on them, has killed some one in consequence of the spear throwing off the button; or knows not the manner how, as he who has killed his antagonist in the stadium, for it was not for his death but for victory that he contended; or knows not the reason why it is done, as the physician gave a salutary antidote and killed, for it was not for this purpose that he gave it, but to save. The law at that time punished him who had killed involuntarily, as e.g., him who was subject involuntarily to gonorrhoea, but not equally with him who did so voluntarily. Although he also shall be punished as for a voluntary action, if one transfer the affection to the truth. For, in reality, he that cannot contain the generative word is to be punished; for this is an irrational passion of the soul approaching garrulity. "The faithful man chooses to conceal things in his spirit."[11] Things, then, that depend on choice are subjects for judgment. "For the Lord searcheth the hearts and reins."[12] "And he that looketh so as to lust"[13] is judged. Wherefore it is said, "Thou shalt not lust."[14] And "this people honoureth Me with their lips," it is said, "but their heart is far from Me."[15] For God has respect to the very thought, since Lot's wife, who had merely voluntarily turned towards worldly wickedness, He left a senseless mass, rendering her a pillar of salt, and fixed her so that she advanced no further, not as a stupid and useless image, but to season and salt him who has the power of spiritual perception.
CHAP. XV.--ON THE DIFFERENT KINDS OF VOLUNTARY ACTIONS, AND THE SINS THENCE PROCEEDING.
What is voluntary is either what is by desire, or what is by choice, or what is of intention. Closely allied to each other are these things--sin, mistake, crime. It is sin, for example, to live luxuriously and licentiously; a misfortune, to wound one's friend in ignorance, taking him for an enemy; and crime, to violate graves or
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commit sacrilege. Sinning arises from being unable to determine what ought to be done, or being unable to do it; as doubtless one falls into a ditch either through not knowing, or through inability to leap across through feebleness of body. But application to the training of ourselves, and subjection to the commandments, is in our own power; with which if we will have nothing to do, by abandoning ourselves wholly to lust, we shall sin, nay rather, wrong our own soul. For the noted Laius says in the tragedy:--
"None of these things of which you admonish me
have
escaped me;
But notwithstanding that I am in my senses, Nature
compels me;"
i.e., his abandoning himself to passion. Medea, too, herself cries on the stage:--
"And I am aware what evils I am to perpetrate,
But passion is stronger than my resolutions."[1]
Further, not even Ajax is silent; but, when about to
kill himself, cries: --
"No pain gnaws the soul of a free man like dishonour.
Thus do I suffer; and the deep stain of calamity
Ever stirs me from the depths, agitated
By the bitter stings of rage."[2]
Anger made these the subjects of tragedy, and lust made ten thousand others--Phaedra, Anthia, Eriphyle,--
"Who took the precious gold for her dear husband."
For another play represents Thrasonides of the comic
drama as saying:--
"A worthless wench made me her slave."
Mistake is a sin contrary to calculation; and voluntary
sin is crime (<greek>adikia</greek>); and
crime is voluntary wickedness. Sin, then, is on my
part voluntary. Wherefore says the apostle, "Sin
shall not have dominion over you; for ye are not under
the law, but under grace."[3] Addressing those
who have believed, he says, "For by His stripes
we were healed."[4] Mistake is the involuntary
action of another towards me, while a crime (<greek>adikia</greek>)
alone is voluntary, whether my act or another's. These
differences of sins are alluded to by the Psalmist,
when he calls those blessed whose iniquities (<greek>anomias</greek>)
God hath blotted out, and whose sins (<greek>amartias</greek>)
He hath covered. Others He does not impute, and the
rest He forgives. For it is written, "Blessed
are they whose iniquities are forgiven, whose sins
are covered. Blessed is the man to whom the LORD will
not impute sin, and in whose mouth there is no fraud."[5]
This blessedness came on those who had been chosen
by Cod through Jesus Christ our Lord. For "love
hides the multitude of sins."[6] And they are
blotted out by Him "who desireth the repentance
rather than the death of a sinner."[7] And those
are not reckoned that are not the effect of choice;
"for he who has lusted has already committed adultery,"[8]
it is said. And the illuminating Word forgives sins:
"And in that time, saith the LORD, they shall
seek for the iniquity of Israel, and it shall not exist;
and the sins of Judah, and they shall not be found."[9]
"For who is like Me? and who shall stand before
My face?[10] You see the one God declared good, rendering
according to desert, and forgiving sins. John, too,
manifestly teaches the differences of sins, in his
larger Epistle, in these words: "If any man see
his brother sin a sin that is not unto death, he shall
ask, and he shall give him life: for these that sin
not unto death," he says. For "there is a
sin unto death: I do not say that one is to pray for
it. All unrighteousness is sin; and there is a sin
not unto death."[11]
David, too, and Moses before David, show the knowledge
of the three precepts in the following words: "Blessed
is the man who walks not in the counsel of the ungodly;"
as the fishes go down to the depths in darkness; for
those which have not scales, which Moses prohibits
touching, feed at the bottom of the sea. "Nor
standeth in the way of sinners," as those who,
while appearing to fear the Lord, commit sin, like
the sow, for when hungry it cries, and when full knows
not its owner. "Nor sitteth in the chair of pestilences,"
as birds ready for prey. And Moses enjoined not to
eat the sow, nor the eagle, nor the hawk, nor the raven,
nor any fish without scales. So far Barnabas.[12] And
I heard one skilled in such matters say that "the
counsel of the ungodly" was the heathen, and "the
way of sinners" the Jewish persuasion, and explain
"the chair of pestilence" of heresies. And
another said, with more propriety, that the first blessing
was assigned to those who had not followed wicked sentiments
which revolt from God; the second to those who do not
remain in the wide and broad road, whether they be
those who have been brought up in the law, or Gentiles
who have repented. And "the chair of pestilences"
will be the theatres and tribunals, or rather the compliance
with wicked and deadly powers, and complicity with
their deeds. "But his delight is in the law of
the LORD."[13] Peter in his Preach-
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ing called the Lord, Law and Logos. The legislator seems
to teach differently the interpretation of the three
forms of sin--understanding by the mute fishes sins
of word, for there are times in which silence is better
than speech, far silence has a safe recompense; sins
of deed, by the rapacious and carnivorous birds. The
sow delights in dirt and dung; and we ought not to
have "a conscience" that is "defiled."[1]
Justly, therefore, the prophet says, "The ungodly
are not so: but as the chaff which the wind driveth
away from the face of the earth. Wherefore the ungodly
shall not stand in the judgment"[2] (being already
condemned, for "he that believeth not is condemned
already"[3]), "nor sinners in the counsel
of the righteous," inasmuch as they are already
condemned, so as not to be united to those that have
lived without stumbling. "For the LORD knoweth
the way of the righteous; and the way of the ungodly
shall perish."[4]
Again, the Lord clearly shows sins and transgressions
to be in our own power, by prescribing modes of cure
corresponding to the maladies; showing His wish that
we should be Corrected by the shepherds, in Ezekiel;
blaming, I am of opinion, some of them for not keeping
the commandments. "That which was enfeebled ye
have not strengthened," and so forth, down to,
"and there was none to search out or turn away."[5]
For "great is the joy before the Father when
one sinner is saved,"[6] saith the Lord. So Abraham
was much to be praised, because "he walked as
the Lord spake to him." Drawing from this instance,
one of the wise men among the Greeks uttered the maxim,
"Follow God."[7] "The godly," says
Esaias, "framed wise counsels."[8] Now counsel
is seeking for the right way of acting in present circumstances,
and good counsel is wisdom in our counsels. And what?
Does not God, after the pardon bestowed on Cain, suitably
not long after introduce Enoch, who had repented?[9]
showing that it is the nature of repentance to produce
pardon; but pardon does not consist in remission, but
in remedy. An instance of the same is the making of
the calf by the people before Aaron. Thence one of
the wise men among the Greeks uttered the maxim, "Pardon
is better than punishment;" as also, "Become
surety, and mischief is at hand," is derived from
the utterance of Solomon which says, "My son,
if thou become surety for thy friend, thou wilt give
thine hand to thy enemy; for a man's own lips are a
strong snare to him, and he is taken in the words of
his own mouth."[10] And the saying, "Know
thyself," has been taken rather more mystically
from this, "Thou hast seen thy brother, thou hast
seen thy God."[11] Thus also, "Thou shalt
love the Load thy God with all thy heart, and thy neighbour
as thyself;" for it is said, "On these commandments
the law and the prophets hang and are suspended."[12]
With these also agree the following: "These things
have I spoken to you, that My joy might be fulfilled:
and this is My commandment, That ye love one another,
as I have loved you."[13] "For the LORD is
merciful and pitiful; and gracious[14] is the LORD
to all."[15] "Know thyself" is more
clearly and often expressed by Moses, when he enjoins,
"Take heed to thyself."[16] "By alms
then, and acts of faith, sins are purged."[17]
"And by the fear of the LORD each one departs
from evil."[18] "And the fear of the Lord
is instruction and wisdom."[19]
CHAP. XVI.--HOW WE ARE TO EXPLAIN THE PASSAGES OF SCRIPTURE WHICH ASCRIBE TO GOD HUMAN AFFECTIONS.
Here again arise the cavaliers, who say that joy and pain are passions of the soul: for they define joy as a rational elevation and exultation, as rejoicing on account of what is good; and pity as pain for one who suffers undeservedly; and that such affections are moods and passions of the soul. But we, as would appear, do not cease in such matters to understand the Scriptures carnally; and starting from our own affections, interpret the will of the impassible Deity similarly to our perturbations; and as we are capable of hearing; so, supposing the same to be the case with the Omnipotent, err impiously. For the Divine Being cannot be declared as it exists: but as we who are lettered in the flesh were able to listen, so the prophets spake to us; the Lord savingly accommodating Himself to the weakness of men.[20] Since, then, it is the will of God that he, who is obedient to the commands and repents of his sins should be saved, and we rejoice on account of our salvation, the Lord, speaking by the prophets, appropriated our joy to Himself;
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as speaking lovingly in the Gospel He says, "I was hungry, and ye gave Me to eat: I was thirsty, and ye gave Me to drink. For inasmuch as ye did it to one of the least of these, ye did it to Me."[1] As, then, He is nourished, though not personally, by the nourishing of one whom He wishes nourished; so He rejoices, without suffering change, by reason of him who has repented being in joy, as He wished. And since God pities richly, being good, and giving commands by the law and the prophets, and more nearly still by the appearance of his Son, saving and pitying, as was said, those who have found mercy; and properly the greater pities the less; and a man cannot be greater than man, being by nature man; but God in everything is greater than man; if, then, the greater pities the less, it is God alone that will pity us. For a man is made to communicate by righteousness, and bestows what he received from God, in consequence of his natural benevolence and relation, and the commands which he obeys. But God has no natural relation to us, as the authors of the heresies will have it; neither on the supposition of His having made us of nothing, nor on that of having formed us from matter; since the former did not exist at all, and the latter is totally distinct from God unless we shall dare to say that we are a part of Him, and of the same essence as God. And I know not how one, who knows God, can bear to hear this when he looks to our life, and sees in what evils we are involved. For thus it would turn out, which it were impiety to utter, that God sinned in [certain] portions, if the portions are parts of the whole and complementary of the whole; and if not complementary, neither can they be parts. But God being by nature rich in pity, in consequence of His own goodness, cares for us, though neither portions of Himself, nor by nature His children. And this is the greatest proof of the goodness of God: that such being our relation to Him, and being by nature wholly estranged, He nevertheless cares for us. For the affection in animals to their progeny is natural, and the friendship of kindred minds is the result of intimacy. But the mercy of God is rich toward us, who are in no respect related to Him; I say either in our essence or nature, or in the peculiar energy of our essence, but only in our being the work of His will. And him who willingly, with discipline and teaching, accepts the knowledge of the truth, He calls to adoption, which is the greatest advancement of all. "Transgressions catch a man; and in the cords of his own sins each one is bound."[2] And God is without blame. And in reality, "blessed is the man who feareth alway through piety."[3]
CHAP. XVII.--ON THE VARIOUS KINDS OF KNOWLEDGE.
As, then, Knowledge (<greek>episthmh</greek>)
is an intellectual state, from which results the act
of knowing, and becomes apprehension irrefragable by
reason; so also ignorance is a receding impression,
which can be dislodged by reason. And that which is
overthrown as well as that which is elaborated by reason,
is in our power. Akin to Knowledge is experience, cognition
(<greek>eidhsis</greek>), Comprehension
(<greek>sunesis</greek>), perception, and
Science. Cognition (<greek>eidhsis</greek>)
is the knowledge of universals by species; and Experience
is comprehensive knowledge, which investigates the
nature of each thing. Perception (<greek>nohsis</greek>)
is the knowledge of intellectual objects; and Comprehension
(<greek>sunesis</greek>) is the knolwedge
of what is compared, or a comparison that cannot be
annulled, or the faculty of comparing the objects with
which Judgment and Knowledge are occupied, both of
one and each and all that goes to make up one reason.
And Science (<greek>gnwsis</greek>) is
the knowledge of the thing in itself, or the knowledge
which harmonizes with what takes place. Truth is the
knowledge of the true; and the mental habit of truth
is the knowledge of the things which are true. Now
knowledge is constituted by the reason, and cannot
be overthrown by another reason.[4] What we do not,
we do not either from not being able, or not being
willing--or both. Accordingly we don't fly, since we
neither can nor wish; we do not swim at present, for
example, since we can indeed, but do not choose; and
we are not as the Lord, since we wish, but cannot be:
"for no disciple is above his master, and it is
sufficient if we be as the master:"[5] not m essence
(for it is impossible for that, which is by adoption,
to be equal in substance to that, which is by nature);
but [we are as Him] only in our[6] having been made
immortal, and our being conversant with the contemplation
of realities, and beholding the Father through what
belongs to Him.
Therefore volition takes the precedence of all;
for the intellectual powers are ministers of the Will.
"Will," it is said, "and thou shalt
be able."[7] And in the Gnostic, Will, Judgment,
and Exertion are identical. For if the determinations
are the same, the opinions and judgments will be the
same too; so that both his words, and life, and conduct,
are conformable to rule. "And a right heart seeketh
knowl-
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edge, and heareth it." "God taught me wisdom, and I knew the knowledge of the holy."[1]
CHAP. XVIII.--THE MOSAIC LAW THE FOUNTAIN OF ALL ETHICS, AND THE SOURCE FROM WHICH THE GREEKS DREW THEIRS.[2]
It is then clear also that all the other virtues,
delineated in Moses, supplied the Greeks with the rudiments
of the whole department of morals. I mean valour, and
temperance, and wisdom, and justice, and endurance,
and patience, and decorum, and self-restraint; and
in addition to these, piety.
But it is clear to every one that piety, which teaches
to worship and honour, is the highest and oldest cause;
and the law itself exhibits justice, and teaches wisdom,
by abstinence from sensible images, and by inviting
to the Maker and Father of the universe. And from this
sentiment, as from a fountain, all intelligence increases.
"For the sacrifices of the wicked are abomination
to the LORD; but the prayers of the upright are acceptable
before Him,"[3] since "righteousness is more
acceptable before God than sacrifice." Such also
as the following we find in Isaiah: "To what purpose
to me is the multitude of your sacrifices? saith the
LORD;" and the whole section.[4] "Break every
bond of wickedness; for this is the sacrifice that
is acceptable to the Lord, a contrite heart that seeks
its Maker."[5] "Deceitful balances are abomination
before God; but a just balance is acceptable to Him."[6]
Thence Pythagoras exhorts "not to step over the
balance;" and the profession of heresies is called
deceitful righteousness; and "the tongue of the
unjust shall be destroyed, but the mouth of the righteous
droppeth wisdom."[7] "For they call the wise
and prudent worthless."[8] But it were tedious
to adduce testimonies respecting these virtues, since
the whole Scripture celebrates them. Since, then, they
define manliness to be knowledge[9] of things formidable,
and not formidable, and what is intermediate; and temperance
to be a state of mind which by choosing and avoiding
preserves the judgments of wisdom; and conjoined with
manliness is patience, which is called endurance, the
knowledge of what is bearable and what is unbearable;
and magnanimity is the knowledge which rises superior
to circumstances. With temperance also is conjoined
caution, which is avoidance in accordance with reason.
And observance of the commandments, which is the innoxious
keeping of them, is the attainment of a secure life.
And there is no endurance without manliness, nor the
exercise of self-restraint without temperance. And
these virtues follow one another; and with whom are
the sequences of the virtues, with him is also salvation,
which is the keeping of the state of well-being. Rightly,
therefore, in treating of these virtues, we shall inquire
into them all; for he that has one virtue gnostically,
by reason of their accompanying each other, has them
all. Self-restraint is that quality which does not
overstep what appears in accordance with right reason.
He exercises self-restraint, who curbs the impulses
that are contrary to right reason, or curbs himself
so as not to indulge in desires contrary to right reason.
Temperance, too, is not without manliness; since from
the commandments spring both wisdom, which follows
God who enjoins, and that which imitates the divine
character, namely righteousness; in virtue of which,
in the exercise of self-restraint, we address ourselves
in purity to piety and the course of conduct thence
resulting, in conformity with God; being assimilated
to the Lord as far as is possible for us beings mortal
in nature. And this is being just and holy with wisdom;
for the Divinity needs nothing and suffers nothing;
whence it is not, strictly speaking, capable of self-restraint,
for it is never subjected to perturbation, over which
to exercise control; while our nature, being capable
of perturbation, needs self-constraint, by which disciplining
itself to the need of little, it endeavours to approximate
in character to the divine nature. For the good man,
standing as the boundary between an immortal and a
mortal nature, has few needs; having wants in consequence
of his body, and his birth itself, but taught by rational
self-control to want few things.
What reason is there in the law's prohibiting a
man from "wearing woman's clothing "?[10]
Is it not that it would have us to be manly, and not
to be effeminate neither in person and actions, nor
in thought and word? For it would have the man, that
devotes himself to the truth, to be masculine both
in acts of endurance and patience, in life, conduct,
word, and discipline by night and by day; even if the
necessity were to occur, of witnessing by the shedding
of his blood. Again, it is said, "If any one who
has newly built a house, and has not previously inhabited
it; or cultivated a newly-planted vine, and not yet
partaken of the fruit; or betrothed a virgin, and not
yet married her;"[11]--such the humane law orders
to be relieved from military service: from military
reasons in the first place, lest, bent on
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their desires, they turn out sluggish in war; for it
is those who are untrammelled by passion that boldly
encounter perils; and from motives of humanity, since,
in view of the uncertainties of war, the law reckoned
it not right that one should not enjoy his own labours,
and another should without bestowing pains, receive
what belonged to those who had laboured. The law seems
also to point out manliness of soul, by enacting that
he who had planted should reap the fruit, and he that
built should inhabit, and he that had betrothed should
marry: for it is not vain hopes which it provides for
those who labour; according to the gnostic word: "For
the hope of a good man dead or living does not perish,"[1]
says Wisdom; "I love them that love me; and they
who seek me shall find peace,"[2] and so forth.
What then? Did not the women of the Midianites, by
their beauty, seduce from wisdom into impiety, through
licentiousness, the Hebrews when making war against
them? For, having seduced them from a grave mode of
life, and by their beauty ensnared them in wanton delights,
they made them insane upon idol sacrifices and strange
women; and overcome by women and by pleasure at once,
they revolted from God, and revolted from the law.
And the whole people was within a little of falling
under the power of the enemy through female stratagem,
until, when they were in peril, fear by its admonitions
pulled them back. Then the survivors, valiantly undertaking
the struggle for piety, got the upper hand of their
foes. "The beginning, then, of wisdom is piety,
and the knowledge of holy things is understanding;
and to know the law is the characteristic of a good
understanding."[3] Those, then, who suppose the
law to be productive of agitating fear, are neither
good at understanding the law, nor have they in reality
comprehended it; for "the fear of the LORD causes
life, but he who errs shall be afflicted with pangs
which knowledge views not."[4] Accordingly, Barnabas
says mystically, "May God who rules the universe
vouchsafe also to you wisdom, and understanding, and
science, and knowledge of His statutes, and patience.
Be therefore God-taught, seeking what the Lord seeks
from you, that He may find you in the day of judgment
lying in wait for these things." "Children
of love and peace," he called them gnostically.[5]
Respecting imparting and communicating, though much
might be said, let it suffice to remark that the law
prohibits a brother from taking usury: designating
as a brother not only him who is born of the same parents,
but also one of the same race and sentiments, and a
participator in the same word; deeming it right not
to take usury for money, but with open hands and heart
to bestow on those who need. For God, the author and
the dispenser of such grace, takes as suitable usury
the most precious things to be found among men--mildness,
gentleness, magnanimity, reputation, renown. Do you
not regard this command as marked by philanthropy?
As also the following, "To pay the wages of the
poor daily," teaches to discharge without delay
the wages due for service; for, as I think, the alacrity
of the poor with reference to the future is paralyzed
when he has suffered want. Further, it is said, "Let
not the creditor enter the debtor's house to take the
pledge with violence." But let the former ask
it to be brought out, and let not the latter, if he
have it, hesitate.[6] And in the harvest the owners
are prohibited from appropriating what falls from the
handfuls; as also in reaping [the law] enjoins a part
to be left unreaped; signally thereby training those
who possess to sharing and to large-heartedness, by
foregoing of their own to those who are in want, and
thus providing means of subsistence for the poor? You
see how the law proclaims at once the righteousness
and goodness of God, who dispenses food to all ungrudgingly.
And in the vintage it prohibited the grape-gatherers
from going back again on what had been left, and from
gathering the fallen grapes; and the same injunctions
are given to the olive-gatherers.[8] Besides, the tithes
of the fruits and of the flocks taught both piety towards
the Deity, and not covetously to grasp everything,
but to communicate gifts of kindness to one's neighbours.
For it was from these, I reckon, and from the first-fruits
that the priests were maintained. We now therefore
understand that we are instructed in piety, and in
liberality, and in justice, and in humanity by the
law. For does it not command the land to be left fallow
in the seventh year, and bids the poor fearlessly use
the fruits that grow by divine agency, nature cultivating
the ground for behoof of all and sundry?[9] How, then,
can it be maintained that the law is not humane, and
the teacher of righteousness? Again, in the fiftieth
year, it ordered the same things to be performed as
in the seventh; besides restoring to each one his own
land, if from any circumstance he had parted with it
in the meantime; setting bounds to the desires of those
who covet possession, by measuring the period of enjoyment,
and choosing that those who have paid the penalty of
protracted penury should not suffer a life-long punishment.
"But alms and acts of faith are royal guards,
and blessing is on
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the head of him who bestows; and he who pities the poor
shall be blessed."[1] For he shows love to one
like himself, because of his love to the Creator of
the human race. The above-mentioned particulars have
other explanations more natural, both respecting rest
and the recovery of the inheritance; but they are not
discussed at present.
Now love is conceived in many ways, in the form
of meekness, of mildness, of patience, of liberality,
of freedom from envy, of absence of hatred, of forgetfulness
of injuries. In all it is incapable of being divided
or distinguished: its nature is to communicate. Again,
it is said, "If you See the beast of your relatives,
or friends, or, in general, of anybody you know, wandering
in the wilderness, take it back and restore it;[2]
and if the owner be far away, keep it among your own
till he return, and restore it." It teaches a
natural communication, that what is found is to be
regarded as a deposit, and that we are not to bear
malice to an enemy. "The command of the Lord being
a fountain of life" truly, "causeth to turn
away from the snare of death."[3] And what? Does
it not command us "to love strangers not only
as friends and relatives, but as ourselves, both in
body and soul?"[4] Nay more, it honoured the nations,
and bears no grudge[5] against those who have done
ill. Accordingly it is expressly said, "Thou shalt
not abhor an Egyptian, for thou wast a sojourner in
Egypt;"[6] designating by the term Egyptian either
one of that race, or any one in the world. And enemies,
although drawn up before the walls attempting to take
the city, are not to be regarded as enemies till they
are by the voice of the herald summoned to peace.[7]
Further, it forbids intercourse with a female captive
so as to dishonour her. "But allow her,"
it says, "thirty days to mourn according to her
wish, and changing her clothes, associate with her
as your lawful wife." s For it regards it not
right that this should take place either in wantonness
or for hire like harlots, but only for the birth of
children. Do you see humanity combined with continence?
The master who has fallen in love with his captive
maid it does not allow to gratify his pleasure, but
puts a check on his lust by specifying an interval
of time; and further, it cuts off the captive's hair,
in order to shame disgraceful love: for if it is reason
that induces him to marry, he will cleave to her even
after she has become disfigured. Then if one, after
his lust, does not care to consort any longer with
the captive, it ordains that it shall not be lawful
to sell her, or to have her any longer as a servant,
but desires her to be freed and released from service,
lest on the introduction of another wife she bear any
of the intolerable miseries caused through jealousy.
What more? The Lord enjoins to ease and raise up
the beasts of enemies when labouring beneath their
burdens; remotely teaching us not to indulge in joy
at our neighbour's ills, or exult over our enemies;
in order to teach those who are trained in these things
to pray for their enemies. For He does not allow us
either to grieve at our neighbour's good, or to reap
joy at our neighbour's ill. And if you find any enemy's
beast straying, you are to pass over the incentives
of difference, and take it back and restore it. For
oblivion of injuries is followed by goodness, and the
latter by dissolution of enmity. From this we are fitted
for agreement, and this conducts to felicity. And should
you suppose one habitually hostile, and discover him
to be unreasonably mistaken either through lust or
anger, turn him to goodness. Does the law then which
conducts to Christ appear humane and mild? And does
not the same God, good, while characterized by righteousness
from the beginning to the end, employ each kind suitably
in order to salvation? "Be merciful," says
the Lord, "that you may receive mercy; forgive,
that you may be forgiven. As ye do, so shall it be
done to you; as ye give, so shall it be given to you;
as ye judge, so shall ye be judged; as ye show kindness,
so shall kindness be shown to you: with what measure
ye mete, it shall be measured to you again."[9]
Furthermore, [the law] prohibits those, who are in
servitude for their subsistence, to be branded with
disgrace; and to those, who have been reduced to slavery
through money borrowed, it gives a complete release
in the seventh year. Further, it prohibits suppliants
from being given up to punishment. True above all,
then, is that oracle. "As gold and silver are
tried in the furnace, so the Lord chooseth men's hearts.
The merciful man is long-suffering; and in every one
who shows solicitude there is wisdom. For on a wise
man solicitude will fall; and exercising thought, he
will seek life; and he who seeketh God shall find knowledge
with righteousness. And they who have sought Him rightly
have found peace."[10] And Pythagoras seems to
me, to have derived his mildness towards irrational
creatures from the law. For instance, he interdicted
the immediate use of the young in the flocks of sheep,
and goats, and herds of cattle, on the instant of their
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birth; not even on the pretext of sacrifice allowing
it, both on account of the young ones and of the mothers;
training man to gentleness by what is beneath him,
by means of the irrational creatures. "Resign
accordingly," he says, "the young one to
its dam for even the first seven days." For if
nothing takes place without a cause, and milk comes
in a shower to animals in parturition for the sustenance
of the progeny, he that tears that, which has been
brought forth, away from the supply of the milk, dishonours
nature. Let the Greeks, then, feel ashamed, and whoever
else inveighs against the law; since it shows mildness
in the case of the irrational creatures, while they
expose the offspring of men though long ago and prophetically,
the law, in the above-mentioned commandment, threw
a check in the way of their cruelty. For if it prohibits
the progeny of the irrational creatures to be separated
from the dam before sucking, much more in the case
of men does it provide beforehand a cure for cruelty
and savageness of disposition; so that even if they
despise nature, they may not despise teaching. For
they are permitted to satiate themselves with kids
and lambs, and perhaps there might be some excuse for
separating the progeny from its dam. But what cause
is there for the exposure of a child? For the man
who did not desire to beget children had no right to
marry at first; certainly not to have become, through
licentious indulgence, the murderer of his children.
Again, the humane law forbids slaying the offspring
and the dam together on the same day. Thence also the
Romans, in the case of a pregnant woman being condemned
to death, do not allow her to undergo punishment till
she is delivered. The law too, expressly prohibits
the slaying of such animals as are pregnant till they
have brought forth, remotely restraining the proneness
of man to do wrong to man. Thus also it has extended
its clemency to the irrational creatures; that from
the exercise of humanity in the case of creatures of
different species, we might practise among those of
the same species a large abundance of it. Those, too,
that kick the bellies of certain animals before parturition,
in order to feast on flesh mixed with milk, make the
womb created for the birth of the foetus its grave,
though the law expressly commands, "But neither
shalt thou seethe a lamb in its mother's milk."[1]
For the nourishment of the living animal, it is meant,
may not become sauce for that which has been deprived
of life; and that, which is the cause of life, may
not co-operate in the consumption of the body. And
the same law commands "not to muzzle the ox which
treadeth out the corn: for the labourer must be reckoned
worthy of his food."[2]
And it prohibits an ox and ass to be yoked in the
plough together;[3] pointing perhaps to the want of
agreement in the case of the animals; and at the same
time teaching not to wrong any one belonging to another
race, and bring him under the yoke, when there is no
other cause to allege than difference of race, which
is no cause at all, being neither wickedness nor the
effect of wickedness. To me the allegory also seems
to signify that the husbandry of the Word is not to
be assigned equally to the clean and the unclean, the
believer and the unbeliever; for the ox is clean, but
the ass has been reckoned among the unclean animals.
But the benignant Word, abounding in humanity, teaches
that neither is it right to cut down cultivated trees,
or to cut down the grain before the harvest, for mischiefs
sake; nor that cultivated fruit is to be destroyed
at all--either the fruit of the soil or that of the
soul: for it does not permit the enemy's country to
be laid waste.
Further, husbandmen derived advantage from the law
in such things. For it orders newly planted trees to
be nourished three years in succession, and the superfluous
growths to be cut off, to prevent them being loaded
and pressed down; and to prevent their strength being
exhausted from want, by the nutriment being frittered
away, enjoins tilling and digging round them, so that
[the tree] may not, by sending out suckers, hinder
its growth. And it does not allow imperfect fruit to
be plucked from immature trees, but after three years,
in the fourth year; dedicating the first-fruits to
God after the tree has attained maturity.
This type of husbandry may serve as a mode of instruction,
teaching that we must cut the growths of sins, and
the useless weeds of the mind that spring up round
the vital fruit, till the shoot of faith is perfected
and becomes strong.[4] For in the fourth year, since
there is need of time to him that is being solidly
catechized, the four virtues are consecrated to God,
the third alone being already joined to the fourth,[5]
the person of the Lord. And a sacrifice of praise is
above holocausts: "for He," it is said, "giveth
strength to get power."[6] And if your affairs
are in the sunshine of prosperity, get and keep strength,
and acquire power in knowledge. For by these instances
it is shown that both good things and gifts are supplied
by God; and that we, becoming ministers of the divine
grace, ought to sow the benefits of God, and make those
who approach us noble and
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good; so that, as far as possible, the temperate man may make others continent, he that is manly may make them noble, he that is wise may make them intelligent, and the just may make them just.
CHAP. XIX.--THE TRUE GNOSTIC IS AN IMITATOR OF GOD, ESPECIALLY IN BENEFICENCE.
He is the Gnostic, who is after the image and likeness
of God, who imitates God as far as possible, deficient
in none of the things which contribute to the likeness
as far as compatible, practising self-restraint and
endurance, living righteously, reigning over the passions,
bestowing of what he has as far as possible, and doing
good both by word and deed. "He is the greatest,"
it is said, "in the kingdom who shall do and teach;"[1]
imitating God in conferring like benefits. For God's
gifts are for the common good. "Whoever shall
attempt to do aught with presumption, provokes God,"[2]
it is said. For haughtiness is a vice of the soul,
of which, as of other sins, He commands us to repent;
by adjusting our lives from their state of derangement
to the change for the better in these three things--mouth,
heart, hands. These are signs--the hands of action,
the heart of volition, the mouth of speech. Beautifully,
therefore, has this oracle been spoken with respect
to penitents: "Thou hast chosen God this day to
be thy God; and God hath chosen thee this day to be
His people."[3] For him who hastes to serve the
self-existent One, being a suppliant,[4] God adopts
to Himself; and though he be only one in number, he
is honoured equally with the people. For being a part
of the people, he becomes complementary of it, being
restored from what he was; and the whole is named from
a part.
But nobility is itself exhibited in choosing and
practising what is best. For what benefit to Adam was
such a nobility as he had? No mortal was his father;
for he himself was father of men that are born. What
is base he readily chose, following his wife, and neglected
what is true and good; on which account he exchanged
his immortal life for a mortal life, but not for ever.
And Noah, whose origin was not the same as Adam's,
was saved by divine care, For he took and consecrated
himself to God. And Abraham, who had children by three
wives, not for the indulgence of pleasure, but in the
hope, as I think, of multiplying the race at the first,
was succeeded by one alone, who was heir of his father's
blessings, while the rest were separated from the family;
and of the twins who sprang from him, the younger having
won his father's favour and received his prayers, became
heir, and the eider served him. For it is the greatest
boon to a bad man not to be master of himself.[5]
And this arrangement was prophetical and typical.
And that all things belong to the wise, Scripture clearly
indicates when it is said, "Because God hath had
mercy on me, I have all things."[6] For it teaches
that we are to desire one thing, by which are all things,
and what is promised is assigned to the worthy. Accordingly,
the good man who has become heir of the kingdom, it
registers also as fellow-citizen, through divine wisdom,
with the righteous of the olden time, who under the
law and before the law lived according to law, whose
deeds have become laws to us; and again, teaching that
the wise man is king, introduces people of a different
race, saying to him, "Thou art a king before God
among us;"[7] those who were governed obeying
the good man of their own accord, from admiration of
his virtue.
Now Plato the philosopher, defining the end of happiness,
says that it is likeness to God as far as possible;
whether concurring with the precept of the law (for
great natures that are free of passions somehow hit
the mark respecting the truth, as the Pythagorean Philo
says in relating the history of Moses), or whether
instructed by certain oracles of the time, thirsting
as he always was for instruction. For the law says,
"Walk after the Lord your God, and keep my commandments."[8]
For the law calls assimilation following; and such
a following to the utmost of its power assimilates.
"Be," says the Lord, "merciful and pitiful,
as your heavenly Father is pitiful."[9] Thence
also the Stoics have laid down the doctrine, that living
agreeably to nature is the end, fitly altering the
name of God into nature; since also nature extends
to plants, to seeds, to trees, and to stones. It is
therefore plainly said, "Bad men do not understand
the law; but they who love the law fortify themselves
with a wall."[10] "For the wisdom of the
clever knows its ways; but the folly of the foolish
is in error."[11] "For on whom will I look,
but on him who is mild and gentle, and trembleth at
my words?" says the prophecy.
We are taught that there are three kinds of friendship:
and that of these the first and the best is that which
results from virtue, for the love that is founded on
reason is firm; that the second and intermediate is
by way of recompense, and is social, liberal, and useful
for life; for the friendship which is the result of
favour is mutual.
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And the third and last we assert to be that which is founded on intimacy; others, again, that it is that variable and changeable form which rests on pleasure. And Hipppodamus the Pythagorean seems to me to describe friendships most admirably: "That founded on knowledge of the gods, that founded on the gifts of men, and that on the pleasures of animals." There is the friendship of a philosopher,--that of a man and that of an animal. For the image of God is really the man who does good, in which also he gets good: as the pilot at once saves, and is saved. Wherefore, when one obtains his request, he does not say to the giver, Thou hast given well, but, Thou hast received well. So he receives who gives, and he gives who receives. "But the righteous pity and show mercy."[1] "But the mild shall be inhabitants of the earth, and the innocent shall be left in it. But the transgressors shall be extirpated from it."[2] And Homer seems to me to have said prophetically of the faithful, "Give to thy friend." And an enemy must be aided, that he may not continue an enemy. For by help good feeling is compacted, and enmity dissolved. "But if there be present readiness of mind, according to what a man hath it is acceptable, and not according to what he hath not: for it is not that there be ease to others, but tribulation to you, but of equality at the present time," and so forth.[3] "He hath dispersed, he hath given to the poor; his righteousness endureth for ever," the Scripture says.[4] For conformity with the image and likeness is not meant of the body (for it were wrong for what is mortal to be made like what is immortal), but in mind and reason, on which fitly the Lord impresses the seal of likeness, both in respect of doing good and of exercising rule. For governments are directed not by corporeal qualities, but by judgments of the mind. For by the counsels of holy men states are managed well, and the household also.
CHAP. XX.--THE TRUE GNOSTIC EXERCISES PATIENCE AND SELF-RESTRAINT.
Endurance also itself forces its way to the divine
likeness, reaping as its fruit impassibility. through
patience, if what is related of Ananias be kept in
mind; who belonged to a number, of whom Daniel the
prophet, filled with divine faith, was one. Daniel
dwelt at Babylon, as Lot at Sodom, and Abraham, who
a little after became the friend of God, in the land
of Chaldea. The king of the Babylonians let Daniel
down into a pit full of wild beasts; the King of all,
the faithful Lord, took him up unharmed. Such patience
will the Gnostic, as a Gnostic, possess. He will bless
when under trial, like the noble Job; like Jonas, when
swallowed up by the whale, he will pray, and faith
will restore him to prophesy to the Ninevites; and
though shut up with lions, he will tame the wild beasts;
though cast into the fire, he will be besprinkled with
dew, but not consumed. He will give his testimony by
night; he will testify by day; by word, by life, by
conduct, he will testify. Dwelling with the Lord? he
will continue his familiar friend, sharing the same
hearth according to the Spirit; pure in the flesh,
pure in heart, sanctified in word. "The world,"
it is said, "is crucified to him, and he to the
world."[6] He, bearing about the cross of the
Saviour, will follow the Lord's footsteps, as God,
having become holy of holies.
The divine law, then, while keeping in mind all
virtue, trains man especially to self-restraint, laying
this as the foundation of the virtues; and disciplines
us beforehand to the attainment of self-restraint by
forbidding us to partake of such things as are by nature
fat, as the breed of swine, which is full-fleshed.
For such a use is assigned to epicures. It is accordingly
said that one of the philosophers, giving the etymology
of <greek>us</greek> (sow), said that it
was <greek>qus</greek>, as being fit only
for slaughter (<greek>qusin</greek>) and
killing; for life was given to this animal for no other
purpose than that it might swell in flesh. Similarly,
repressing our desires, it forbade partaking of fishes
which have neither fins nor scales; for these surpass
other fishes in fleshiness and fatness. From-this it
was, in my opinion, that the mysteries not only prohibited
touching certain animals, but also withdrew certain
parts of those slain in sacrifice, for reasons which
are known to the initiated. If, then, we are to exercise
control over the belly, and what is below the belly,
it is clear that we have of old heard from the Lord
that we are to check lust by the law.
And this will be completely effected, if we unfeignedly
condemn what is the fuel of lust: I mean pleasure.
Now they say that the idea of it is a gentle and bland
excitement, accompanied with some sensation. Enthralled
by this, Menelaus, they say, after the capture of Troy,
having rushed to put Helen to death, as having been
the cause of such calamities, was nevertheless not
able to effect it, being subdued by her beauty, which
made him think of pleasure. Whence the tragedians,
jeering, exclaimed insultingly against him:--
"But thou, when on her breast thou lookedst, thy
sword
Didst cast away, and with a kiss the traitress,
Ever-beauteous wretch,[7] thou didst embrace."
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And again:--
Was the sword then by beauty blunted?"
And I agree with Antisthenes when he says, "Could I catch Aphrodite, I would shoot her; for she has destroyed many of our beautiful and good women." And he says that "Love[1] is a vice of nature, and the wretches who fall under its power call the disease a deity." For in these words it is shown that stupid people are overcome from ignorance of pleasure, to which we ought to give no admittance, even though it be called a god, that is, though it be given by God for the necessity of procreation. And Xenophon, expressly calling pleasure a vice, says: "Wretch, what good dost thou know, or what honourable aim hast thou? which does not even wait for the appetite for sweet things, eating before being hungry, drinking before being thirsty; and that thou mayest eat pleasantly, seeking out fine cooks; and that thou mayest drink pleasantly, procuring costly wines; and in summer runnest about seeking snow; and that thou mayest sleep pleasantly, not only providest soft beds, but also supports[2] to the couches." Whence, as Aristo said, "against the whole tetrachord of pleasure, pain, fear, and lust, there is need of much exercise and struggle."
"For it is these, it is these that go through our
bowels,
And throw into disorder men's hearts."
"For the minds of those even who are deemed grave,
pleasure makes waxen," according to Plato; since
"each pleasure and pain nails to the body the
soul" of the man, that does not sever and crucify
himself from the passions. "He that loses his
life," says the Lord, "shall save it;"
either giving it up by exposing it to danger for the
Lord's sake, as He did for us, or loosing it from fellowship
with its habitual life. For if you would loose, and
withdraw, and separate (for this is what the cross
means) your soul from the delight and pleasure that
is in this life, you will possess it, found and resting
in the looked-for hope. And this would be the exercise
of death, if we would be content with those desires
which are measured according to nature alone, which
do not pass the limit of those which are in accordance
with nature--by going to excess, or going against nature--in
which the possibility of sinning arises. "We must
therefore put on the panoply of God, that we may be
able to stand against the wiles of the devil; since
the weapons of our war fire are not carnal, but mighty
through God to the pulling down of strongholds, casting
down reasonings, and every lofty thing which exalteth
itself against the knowledge of God, and bringing every
thought into captivity unto the obedience of Christ,"[3]
says the divine apostle. There is need of a man who
shall use in a praiseworthy and discriminating manner
the things from which passions take their rise, as
riches and poverty, honour and dishonour, health and
sickness, life and death, toil and pleasure. For, in
order that we may treat things, that are different,
indifferently, there is need of a great difference
in us, as having been previously afflicted with much
feebleness, and in the distortion of a bad training
and nurture ignorantly indulged ourselves. The simple
word, then, of our philosophy declares the passions
to be impressions on the soul that is soft and yielding,
and, as it were, the signatures of the spiritual powers
with whom we have to straggle. For it is the business,
in my opinion, of the malificent powers to endeavour
to produce somewhat of their own constitution in everything,
so as to overcome and make their own those who have
renounced them. And it follows, as might be expected,
that some are worsted; but in the case of those who
engage in the contest with more athletic energy, the
powers mentioned above, after carrying on the conflict
in all forms, and advancing even as far as the crown
wading in gore, decline the battle, and admire the
victors.
For of objects that are moved, some are moved by
impulse and appearance, as animals; and some by transposition,
as inanimate objects. And of things without life, plants,
they say, are moved by transposition in order to growth,
if we will concede to them that plants are without
life. To stones, then, belongs a permanent state. Plants
have a nature; and the irrational animals possess impulse
and perception, and likewise the two characteristics
already specified.[4] But the reasoning faculty, being
peculiar to the human soul, ought not to be impelled
similarly with the irrational animals, but ought to
discriminate appearances, and not to be carried away
by them. The powers, then, of which we have spoken
hold out beautiful sights, and honours, and adulteries,
and pleasures, and such like alluring phantasies before
facile spirits; as those who drive away cattle hold,
out branches to them. Then, having beguiled those incapable
of distinguishing the true from the false pleasure,
and the fading and meretricious from the holy beauty,
they lead them into slavery. And each deceit, by pressing
constantly on the spirit, impresses its image on it;
and the soul unwittingly carries about the image of
the passion, which takes its rise from the bait and
our consent.
The adherents of Basilides are in the habit of
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calling the passions appendages: saying that these are
in essence certain spirits attached to the rational
soul, through some original perturbation and confusion;
and that, again, other bastard and heterogeneous natures
of spirits grow on to them, like that of the wolf,
the ape, the lion, the goat, whose properties showing
themselves around the soul, they say, assimilate the
lusts of the soul to the likeness of the animals. For
they imitate the actions of those whose properties
they bear. And not only are they associated with the
impulses and perceptions of the irrational animals,
but they affect[1] the motions and the beauties of
plants, on account of their bearing also the properties
of plants attached to them. They have also the properties
of a particular state, as the hardness of steel. But
against this dogma we shall argue subsequently, when
we treat of the soul. At present this only needs to
be pointed out, that man, according to Basilides, preserves
the appearance of a wooden horse, according to the
poetic myth, embracing as he does in one body a host
of such different spirits. Accordingly, Basilides'
son himself, Isidorus, in his book, About the Soul
attached to us, while agreeing in the dogma, as if
condemning himself, writes in these words: "For
if I persuade any one that the soul is undivided, and
that the passions of the wicked are occasioned by the
violence of the appendages, the worthless among men
will have no slight pretence for saying,' I was compelled,
I was carried away, I did it against my will, I acted
unwillingly;' though he himself led the desire of evil
things, and did not fight against the assaults of the
appendages. But we must, by acquiring superiority in
the rational part, show ourselves masters of the inferior
creation in us." For he too lays down the hypothesis
of two souls in us, like the Pythagoreans, at whom
we shall glance afterwards.
Valentinus too, in a letter to certain people, writes
in these very words respecting the appendages: "There
is one good, by whose presence[2] is the manifestation,
which is by the Son, and by Him alone can the heart
become pure, by the expulsion of every evil spirit
from the heart: for the multitude of spirits dwelling
in it do not suffer it to be pure; but each of them
performs his own deeds, insulting it oft with unseemly
lusts. And the heart seems to be treated somewhat like
a caravanserai. For the latter has holes and ruts made
in it, and is often filled with dung; men living filthily
in it, and taking no care for the place as belonging
to others. So fares it with the heart as long as there
is no thought taken for it, being unclean, and the
abode of many demons. But when the only good Father
visits it, it is sanctified, and gleams with light.
And he who possesses such a heart is so blessed, that
"he shall see God."[3]
What, then, let them tell us, is the cause of such
a soul not being cared for from the beginning? Either
that it is not worthy (and somehow a care for it comes
to it as from repentance), or it is a saved nature,
as he would have it; and this, of necessity, from the
beginning, being cared for by reason of its affinity,
afforded no entrance to the impure spirits, unless
by being forced and found feeble. For were he to grant
that on repentance it preferred what was better, he
will say this unwillingly, being what the truth we
hold teaches; namely, that salvation is from a change
due to obedience, but not from nature. For as the exhalations
which arise from the earth, and from marshes, gather
into mists and cloudy masses; so the vapours of fleshly
lusts bring on the soul an evil condition, scattering
about the idols of pleasure before the soul. Accordingly
they spread darkness over the light of intelligence,
the spirit attracting the exhalations that arise from
lust, and thickening the masses of the passions by
persistency in pleasures. Gold is not taken from the
earth in the lump, but is purified by smelting; then,
when made pure. it is called gold, the earth being
purified. For "Ask, and it shall be given you,"[4]
it is said to those who are able of themselves to choose
what is best. And how we say that the powers of the
devil, and the unclean spirits, sow into the sinner's
soul, requires no more words from me, on adducing as
a witness the apostolic Barnabas (and he was one of
the seventy? and a fellow-worker of Paul), who speaks
in these words: "Before we believed in God, the
dwelling-place of our heart was unstable, truly a temple
built with hands. For it was full of idolatry, and
was a house of demons, through doing what was opposed
to God."[6]
He says, then, that sinners exercise activities
appropriate to demons; but he does not say that the
spirits themselves dwell in the soul of the unbeliever.
Wherefore he also adds, "See that the temple of
the Lord be gloriously built. Learn, having received
remission of sins; and having set our hope on the Name,
let us become new, created again from the beginning."
For what he says is not that demons are driven out
of us, but that the sins which like them we commit
before believing are remitted. Rightly thus he puts
in opposition what follows: "Wherefore God truly
dwells in our home. He dwells in us. How? The word
of His faith, the calling of His promise, the wisdom
of His statutes, the
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commandments of His communication, [dwell in us]."
"I know that I have come upon a heresy; and
its chief was wont to say that he fought with pleasure
by pleasure, this worthy Gnostic advancing on pleasure
in reigned combat, for he said he was a Gnostic; since
he said it was no great thing for a man that had not
tried pleasure to abstain from it, but for one who
had mixed in it not to be overcome [was something];
and that therefore by means of it he trained himself
in it. The wretched man knew not that he was deceiving
himself by the artfulness of voluptuousness. To this
opinion, then, manifestly Aristippus the Cyrenian adhered--that
of the sophist who boasted of the truth. Accordingly,
when reproached for continually cohabiting with the
Corinthian courtezan, he said, "I possess Lais,
and am not possessed by her."
Such also are those (who say that they follow Nicolaus,
quoting an adage of the man, which they pervert,[1]
"that the flesh must be abused." But the
worthy man showed that it was necessary to check pleasures
and lusts, and by such training to waste away the impulses
and propensities of the flesh. But they, abandoning
themselves to pleasure like goats, as if insulting
the body, lead a life of self-indulgence; not knowing
that the body is wasted, being by nature subject to
dissolution; while their soul is buffed in the mire
of vice; following as they do the teaching of pleasure
itself, not of the apostolic man. For in what do they
differ from Sardanapalus, whose life is shown in the
epigram:--
"I have what I ate--what I enjoyed wantonly;
And the pleasures I felt in love. But those
Many objects of happiness are left,
For I too am dust, who ruled great Ninus."
For the feeling of pleasure is not at all a necessity, but the accompaniment of certain natural needs--hunger, thirst, cold, marriage. If, then, it were possible to drink without it, or take food, or beget children, no other need of it could be shown. For pleasure is neither a function, nor a state, nor any part of us; but has been introduced into life as an auxiliary, as they say salt was to season food. But when it casts off restraint and rules the house, it generates first concupiscence, which is an irrational propension and impulse towards that which gratifies it; and it induced Epicurus to lay down pleasure as the aim of the philosopher. Accordingly he deifies a sound condition of body, and the certain hope respecting it. For what else is luxury than the voluptuous gluttony and the superfluous abundance of those who are abandoned to self-indulgence? Diogenes writes significantly in a tragedy:--
"Who to the pleasures of effeminate
And filthy luxury attached in heart,
Wish not to undergo the slightest toil."
And what follows, expressed indeed in foul language,
but in a manner worthy of the voluptuaries.
Wherefore the divine law appears to me necessarily
to menace with fear, that, by caution and attention,
the philosopher may acquire and retain absence of anxiety,
continuing without fall and without sin in all things.
For peace and freedom are not otherwise won, than by
ceaseless and unyielding struggles with our lusts.
For these stout and Olympic antagonists are keener
than wasps, so to speak; and Pleasure especially, not
by day only, but by night, is in dreams with witchcraft
ensnaringly plotting and biting. How, then, can the
Greeks any more be right in running down the law, when
they themselves teach that Pleasure is the slave of
fear? Socrates accordingly bids "people guard
against enticements to eat when they are not hungry,
and to drink when not thirsty, and the glances and
kisses of the fair, as fitted to inject a deadlier
poison than that of scorpions and spiders." And
Antisthenes chose rather "to be demented than
delighted." And the Theban Crates says:--
"Master these, exulting in the disposition of the
soul,
Vanquished neither by gold nor by languishing love,
Nor are they any longer attendants to the wanton."
And at length infers:--
"Those, unenslaved and unbended by servile Pleasure,
Love the immortal kingdom and freedom."
He writes expressly, in other words, "that the
stop[2] to the unbridled propensity to amorousness
is hunger or a halter."
And the comic poets attest, while they depreciate
the teaching of Zeno the Stoic, to be to the following
effect:--
"For he philosophizes a vain philosophy:
He teaches to want food, and gets pupils
One loaf, and for seasoning a dry fig, and to drink
water."
All these, then, are not ashamed clearly to confess the advantage which accrues from caution. And the wisdom which is trite and not contrary to reason, trusting not in mere words and oracular utterances, but in invulnerable armour of defence and energetic mysteries, and devoting itself to divine commands, and exercise, and practice, receives a divine power according to its inspiration from the Word.
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Already, then, the aegis of the poetic Jove is described as
"Dreadful, crowned all around by Terror,
And on it Strife and Prowess, and chilling Rout;
On it, too, the Gorgon's head, dread monster,
Terrible, dire, the sign of AEgis-bearing Jove."[1]
But to those, who are able rightly to understand salvation, I know not what will appear dearer than the gravity of the Law, and Reverence, which is its daughter. For when one is said to pitch too high, as also the Lord says, with reference to certain; so that some of those whose desires are towards Him may not sing out of pitch and tune, I do not understand it as pitching too high in reality, but only as spoken with reference to such as will not take up the divine yoke. For to those, who are unstrung and feeble, what is medium seems too high; and to those, who are unrighteous, what befalls them seems severe justice. For those, who, on account of the favour they entertain for sins, are prone to pardon, suppose truth to be harshness, and severity to be savageness, and him who does not sin with them, and is not dragged with them, to be pitiless. Tragedy writes therefore well of Pluto:--
"And to what sort of a deity wilt thou come,[2]
dost thou
ask,
Who knows neither clemency nor
favour,
But loves bare justice alone."
For although you are not yet able to do the things
enjoined by the Law, yet, considering that the noblest
examples are set before us in it, we are able to nourish
and increase the love of liberty; and so we shall profit
more eagerly as far as we can, inviting some things,
imitating some things, and fearing others. For thus
the righteous of the olden time, who lived according
to the law, "were not from a storied oak, or from
a rock;" because they wish to philosophize truly,
took and devoted themselves entirely to God, and were
classified under faith. Zeno said well of the Indians,
that he would rather have seen one Indian roasted,
than have learned the whole of the arguments about
bearing pain. But we have exhibited before our eyes
every day abundant sources of martyrs that are burnt,
impaled, beheaded. All these the fear inspired by the
law,--leading as a paedagogue to Christ, trained so
as to manifest their piety by their blood. "God
stood in the congregation of the gods; He judgeth in
the midst of the gods."[3] Who are they? Those
that are superior to Pleasure, who rise above the passions,
who know what they do--the Gnostics, who are greater
than the world. "I said, Ye are Gods; and all
sons of the Highest." To whom speaks the Lord?
To those who reject as far as possible all that is
of man. And the apostle says, "For ye are not
any longer in the flesh, but in the Spirit."[5]
And again he says, "Though in the flesh, we do
not war after the flesh."[6] "For flesh and
blood cannot inherit the kingdom of God, neither doth
corruption inherit incorruption."[7] "Lo,
ye shall die like men," the Spirit has said, confuting
us.
We must then exercise ourselves in taking care about
those things which fall under the power of the passions,
fleeing like those who are truly philosophers such
articles of food as excite lust, and dissolute licentiousness
in chambering and luxury; and the sensations that tend
to luxury, which are a solid reward to others, must
no longer be so to us. For God's greatest gift is self-restraint.
For He Himself has said, "I will neyer leave thee,
nor forsake thee,"[8] as having judged thee worthy
according to the true election. Thus, then, while we
attempt piously to advance, we shall have put on us
the mild yoke of the Lord from faith to faith, one
charioteer driving each of us onward to salvation,
that the meet fruit of beatitude may be won. "Exercise
is" according to Hippocrates of Cos, "not
only the health of the body, but of the soul--fearlessness
of labours--a ravenous appetite for food."
CHAP. XXI.--OPINIONS OF VARIOUS PHILOSOPHERS ON THE CHIEF GOOD.
Epicurus, in placing happiness in not being hungry, or thirsty, or cold, uttered that godlike word, saying impiously that he would tight in these points even with Father Jove; teaching, as if it were the case of pigs that live in filth and not that of rational philosophers, that happiness was victory. For of those that are ruled by pleasure are the Cyrenaics and Epicurus; for these expressly said that to live pleasantly was the chief end, and that pleasure was the only perfect good. Epicurus also says that the removal of pain is pleasure; and says that that is to be preferred, which first attracts from itself to itself, being, that is, wholly in motion. Dinomachus and Callipho said that the chief end was for one to do what he could for the attainment and enjoyment of pleasure; and Hieronymus the Peripatetic said the great end was to live unmolested, and that the only final good was happiness; and Diodorus likewise, who belonged to the same sect, pronounces the end to be to live undisturbed and well. Epicurus indeed, and the Cyrenaics, say that pleasure is the first duty; for it is for the sake of pleasure, they say,
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that virtue was introduced, and produced pleasure. According
to the followers of Calliphon, virtue was introduced
for the sake of pleasure, but that subsequently, on
seeing its own beauty, it made itself equally prized
with the first principle, that is, pleasure.
But the Aristotelians lay it down, that to live
in accordance with virtue is the end, but that neither
happiness nor the end is reached by every one who has
virtue. For the wise man, vexed and involved in involuntary
mischances, and wishing gladly on these accounts to
flee from life, is neither fortunate nor happy. For
virtue needs time; for that is not acquired in one
day which exists [only] in the perfect man since, as
they say, a child is never happy. But human life is
a perfect time, and therefore happiness is completed
by the three kinds of good things. Neither, then, the
poor, nor the mean nor even the diseased, nor the slave,
can be one of them.
Again, on the other hand, Zeno the Stoic thinks
the end to be living according to virtue; and, Cleanthes,
living agreeably to nature in the fight exercise of
reason, which he held to consist of the selection of
things according to nature. And Antipatrus, his friend,
supposes the end to consist in choosing continually
and unswervingly the things which are according to
nature, and rejecting those contrary to nature. Archedamus,
on the other hand, explained the end to be such, that
in selecting the greatest and chief things according
to nature, it was impossible to overstep it. In addition
to these, Panictius pronounced the end to be, to live
according to the means given to us by nature. And finally,
Posidonius said that it was to live engaged in contemplating
the truth and order of the universe, and forming himself
as he best can, in nothing influenced by the irrational
part of his soul. And some of the later Stoics defined
the great end to consist in living agreeably to the
constitution of man. Why should I mention Aristo?
He said that the end was indifference; but what is
indifferent simply abandons the indifferent. Shall
I bring forward the opinions of Herillus? Herillus
states the end to be to live according to science.
For some think that the more recent disciples of the
Academy define the end to be, the steady abstraction
of the mind to its own impressions. Further, Lycus
the Peripatetic used to say that the final end was
the true joy of the soul; as Leucimus, that it was
the joy it had in what was good. Critolaus, also a
Peripatetic, said that it was the perfection of a life
flowing rightly according to nature, referring to the
perfection accomplished by the three kinds according
to tradition.
We must, however, not rest satisfied with these,
but endeavour as we best can to adduce the doctrines
laid down on the point by the naturalist; for they
say that Anaxagoras of Clazomenae affirmed contemplation
and the freedom. flowing from it to be the end of life;
Heraclitus the Ephesian, complacency. The Pontic Heraclides
relates, that Pythagoras taught that the knowledge
of the perfection of the numbers[1] I was happiness
of the soul. The Abderites also teach the existence
of an end. Democritus, in his work On the Chief End,
said it was cheerfulness, which he also called well-being,
and often exclaims, "For delight and its absence
are the boundary of those who have reached full age;"
Hecataeus, that it was sufficiency to one's self; Apollodotus
of Cyzicum, that it was delectation as Nausiphanes,
that it was undauntedness,[2] for he said that it was
this that was called by Democritus imperturbability.
In addition to these still, Diotimus declared the end
to be perfection of what is good, which he said was
termed well-being. Again, Antisthenes, that it was
humility. And those called Annicereans, of the Cyrenaic
succession, laid down no definite end for the whole
of life; but said that to each action belonged, as
its proper end, the pleasure accruing from the action.
These Cyrenaics reject Epicurus' definition of pleasure,
that is the removal of pain, calling that the condition
of a dead man; because we rejoice not only on account
of pleasures, but companionships and distinctions;
while Epicurns thinks that all joy of the soul arises
from previous sensations of the flesh. Metrodorus,
in his book On the Source of Happiness in Ourselves
being greater than that which arises from Objects,
says: What else is the good of the soul but the sound
state of the flesh, and the sure hope of its continuance?
CHAP. XXII.--PLATO'S OPINION, THAT THE CHIEF GOOD CONSISTS IN ASSIMILATION TO GOD, AND ITS AGREEMENT WITH SCRIPTURE.
Further, Plato the philosopher says that the end is twofold: that which is communicable, and exists first in the ideal forms themselves, which he also calls "the good;" and that which partakes of it, and receives its likeness from it, as is the case in the men who appropriate virtue and true philosophy. Wherefore also Cleanthes, in the second book, On Pleasure, says that Socrates everywhere teaches that the just man and the happy are one and the same, and execrated the first man who separated the just from the useful, as having done an impious thing. For those are in truth impious who separate the useful from that which is tight according to the law. Plato himself says that happiness(<greek>eudai</greek>-
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<greek>monia</greek>) is to possess rightly the daemon, and that the ruling faculty of the soul is called the daemon; and he terms happiness (<greek>eudaimonia</greek>) the most perfect and complete good. Sometimes he calls it a consistent and harmonious life, sometimes the highest perfection in accordance with virtue; and this he places in the knowledge of the Good, and in likeness to God, demonstrating likeness to be justice and holiness with wisdom. For is it not thus that some of our writers have understood that man straightway on his creation received what is "according to the image," but that what is according "to the likeness" he will receive afterwards on his perfection? Now Plato, teaching that the virtuous man shall have this likeness accompanied with humility, explains the following: "He that humbleth himself shall be exalted."[1] He says, accordingly, in The Laws: "God indeed, as the ancient saying has it, occupying the beginning, the middle, and the end of all things, goes straight through while He goes round the circumference. And He is always attended by Justice, the avenger of those who revolt from the divine law." You see how he connects fear with the divine law. He adds, therefore: "To which he, who would be happy, cleaving, will follow lowly and beautified." Then, connecting what follows these words, and admonishing by fear, he adds: "What conduct, then, is dear and conformable to God? That which is characterized by one word of old date: Like will be dear to like, as to what is in proportion; but things out of proportion are neither dear to one another, nor to those which are in proportion. And that therefore he that would be dear to God, must, to the best of his power, become such as He is And in virtue of the same reason, our self-controlling man is dear to God. But he that has no self-control is unlike and diverse." In saying that it was an ancient dogma, he indicates the teaching which had come to him from the law. And having in the Theaoetus admitted that evils make the circuit of mortal nature and of this spot, he adds: "Wherefore we must try to flee hence as soon as possible. For flight is likeness to God as far as possible. And likeness is to become holy and just with wisdom." Speusippus, the nephew of Plato, says that happiness is a perfect state in those who conduct themselves in accordance with nature, or the state of the good: for which condition all men have a desire, but the good only attained to quietude; consequently the virtues are the authors of happiness. And Xenocrates the Chalcedonian defines happiness to be the possession of virtue, strictly so called, and of the power subservient to it. Then he clearly says, that the seat in which it resides is the soul; that by which it is effected, the virtues; and that of these as parts are formed praiseworthy actions, good habits and dispositions, and motions, and relations; and that corporeal and external objects are not without these. For Polemo, the disciple of Xenocrates, seems of the opinion that happiness is sufficiency of all good things, or of the most and greatest. He lays down the doctrine, then, that happiness never exists without virtue; and that virtue, apart from corporeal and external objects, is sufficient for happiness. Let these things be so. The contradictions to the opinions specified shall be adduced in due time. But on us it is incumbent to reach the unaccomplished end, obeying the commands--that is, God--and living according to them, irreproachably and intelligently, through knowledge of the divine will; and assimilation as far as possible in accordance with right reason is the end, and restoration to perfect adoption by the Son, which ever glorifies the Father by the great High Priest who has deigned to call us brethren and fellow-heirs. And the apostle, succinctly describing the end, writes in the Epistle to the Romans: "But now, being made free from sin, and become servants to God, ye have your fruit unto holiness, and the end everlasting life."[2] And viewing the hope as twofold--that which is expected, and that which has been received --he now teaches the end to be the restitution of the hope. "For patience," he says, "worketh experience, and experience hope: and hope maketh not ashamed; because the love of God is shed abroad in our hearts by the Holy Spirit that is given to us."[3] On account of which love and the restoration to hope, he says, in another place, "which rest is laid up for us."[4] You will find in Ezekiel the like, as follows: "The soul that sinneth, it shall die. And the man who shall be righteous, and shall do judgment and justice, who has not eaten on the mountains, nor lifted his eyes to the idols of the house of Israel, and hath not defiled his neighbour's wife, and hath not approached to a woman in the time of her uncleanness (for he does not wish the seed of man to be dishonoured), and will not injure a man; will restore the debtor's pledge, and will not take usury; will turn away his hand from wrong; will do true judgment between a man and his neighbour; will walk in my ordinances, and keep my commandments, so as to do the truth; he is righteous, he shall surely live, saith Adonai the Lord."[5] Isaiah too, in exhorting him that hath not believed to gravity of life, and the Gnostic to attention, proving that man's virtue and God's are not the same, speaks thus: "Seek the Lord, and on finding Him call on Him. And when
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He shall draw near to you, let the wicked forsake his ways, and the unrighteous man his ways; and let him return to the Lord, and he shall obtain mercy," down to "and your thoughts from my thoughts."' "We," then, according to the noble apostle, "wait for the hope of righteousness by faith. For in Christ neither circumcision availeth anything, nor uncircumcision, but faith which worketh by love."[2] And we desire that every one of you show the same diligence to the full assurance of hope," down to "made an high priest for ever, after the order of Melchizedek."[3] Similarly with Paul "the All-virtuous Wisdom" says, "He, that heareth me shall dwell trusting in hope."[4] For the restoration of hope is called by the same term "hope." To the expression "will dwell" it has most beautifully added" trusting," showing that such an one has obtained rest, having received the hope for which he hoped. Wherefore also it is added, "and shall be quiet, without fear of any evil." And openly and expressly the apostle, in the first Epistle to the Corinthians says, "Be ye followers of me, as also I am of Christ," s in order that that may take place. If ye are of me, and I am of Christ, then ye are imitators of Christ, and Christ of God. Assimilation to God, then, so that as far as possible a man becomes righteous and holy with wisdom he lays down as the aim of faith, and the end to be that restitution of the promise which is effected by faith. From these doctrines gush the fountains, which we specified above, of those who have dogmatized about "the end." But of these enough.
CHAP. XXIII.--ON MARRIAGE.
Since pleasure and lust seem to fall under marriage,
it must also be treated of. Marriage is the first conjunction
of man and woman for the procreation of legitimate
children.[6] Accordingly Menander the comic poet says:--
"For the begetting of legitimate children,
I give thee my daughter."
We ask if we ought to marry; which is one of the points, which are said to be relative. For some must marry, and a man must be in some condition, and he must marry some one in some condition. For every one is not to marry, nor always. But there is a time in which it is suitable, and a person for whom it is suitable, and an age up to which it is suitable. Neither ought every one to take a wife, nor is it every woman one is to take, nor always, nor in every
way, nor inconsiderately. But only he who is in certain
circumstances, and such an one and at such time as
is requisite, and for the sake of children, and one
who is in every respect similar, and who does not by
force or compulsion love the husband who loves her.
Hence Abraham, regarding his wife as a sister, says,
"She is my sister by my father, but not by my
mother; and she became my wife,"[7] teaching us
that children of the same mothers ought not to enter
into matrimony. Let us briefly follow the history.
Plato ranks marriage among outward good things, providing
for the perpetuity of our race, and handing down as
a torch a certain perpetuity to children's children.
Democritus repudiates marriage and the procreation
of children, on account of the many annoyances thence
arising, and abstractions from more necessary things.
Epicurus agrees, and those who place good in pleasure,
and in the absence of trouble and pain. According to
the opinion of the Stoics, marriage and the rearing
of children are a thing indifferent; and according
to the Peripatetics, a good. In a word, these, following
out their dogmas in words, became enslaved to pleasures;
some using concubines, some mistresses, and the most
youths. And that wise quaternion in the garden with
a mistress, honoured pleasure by their acts. Those,
then, will not escape the curse of yoking an ass with
an ox, who, judging certain things not to suit them,
command others to do them, or the reverse. This Scripture
has briefly showed, when it says, "What thou hatest,
thou shalt not do to another."[8]
But they who approve of marriage say, Nature has
adapted us for marriage, as is evident from the structure
of our bodies, which are male and female. And they
constantly proclaim that command, "Increase and
replenish."[9] And though this is the case, yet
it seems to them shameful that man, created by God,
should be more licentious than the irrational creatures,
which do not mix with many licentiously, but with one
of the same species, such as pigeons and ringdoves,[10]
and creatures like them. Furthermore, they say, "The
childless man fails in the perfection which is according
to nature, not having substituted his proper successor
in his place. For he is perfect that has produced from
himself his like, or rather, when he sees that he has
produced the same; that is, when that which is begotten
attains to the same nature with him who begat."
Therefore we must by all means marry, both for our
country's sake,
378
for the succession of children, and as far as we are concerned, the perfection of the world; since the poets also pity a marriage half-perfect and childless, but pronounce the fruitful one happy. But it is the diseases of the body that principally show marriage to be necessary. For a wife's care and the assiduity of her constancy appear to exceed the endurance of all other relations and friends, as much as to excel them in sympathy; and most of all, she takes kindly to patient watching. And in truth, according to Scripture, she is a needful help.[1] The comic poet then, Menander, while running down marriage, and yet alleging on the other side its advantages, replies to one who had said:--
"I am averse to the thing,
For you take it awkwardly."
Then. he adds:--
"You see the hardships and the things which annoy
you in it.
But you do not look on the advantages."
And so forth.
Now marriage is a help in the case of those advanced
in years, by furnishing a spouse to take care of one,
and by rearing children of her to nourish one's old
age.
"For to a man after death his children bring renown,
Just as corks bear the net,
Saving the fishing-line from the deep."[2]
according to the tragic poet Sophocles.
Legislators, moreover, do not allow those who are
unmarried to discharge the highest magisterial offices.
For instance, the legislator of the Spartans imposed
a fine not on bachelorhood only, but on monogamy? and
late marriage, and single life. And the renowned Plato
orders the man who has not married to pay a wife's
maintenance into the public treasury, and to give to
the magistrates a suitable sum of money as expenses.
For if they shall not beget children, not having married,
they produce, as far as in them lies, a scarcity of
men, and dissolve states and the world that is composed
of them, impiously doing away with divine generation.
It is also unmanly and weak to shun living with a wife
and children. For of that of which the loss is an evil,
the possession is by all means a good; and this is
the case with the rest of things. But the loss of children
is, they say, among the chiefest evils: the possession
of children is consequently a good thing; and if it
be so, so also is marriage. It is said:--
"Without a father there never could be a child,
And without a mother conception of a child could not
be.
Marriage makes a father, as a husband a mother."[4]
Accordingly Homer makes a thing to be earnestly prayed for:--
"A husband and a house;"
yet not simply, but along with good agreement. For the
marriage of other people is an agreement for indulgence;
but that of philosophers leads to that agreement which
is in accordance with reason, bidding wives adorn themselves
not in outward appearance, but in character; and enjoining
husbands not to treat their wedded wives as mistresses,
making corporeal wantonness their aim; but to take
advantage of marriage for help in the whole of life,
and for the best self-restraint.
Far more excellent, in my opinion, than the seeds
of wheat and barley that are sown at appropriate seasons,
is man that is sown, for whom all things grow; and
those seeds temperate husbandmen ever sow. Every foul
and polluting practice must therefore be purged away
from marriage; that the intercourse of the irrational
animals may not be cast in our teeth, as more accordant
with nature than human conjunction in procreation.
Some of these, it must be granted, desist at the time
in which they are directed, leaving creation to the
working of Providence.
By the tragedians, Polyxena, though being murdered,
is described nevertheless as having, when dying, taken
great care to fall decently,--
"Concealing what ought to be hid from the eyes
of men."
Marriage to her was a calamity. To be subjected, then, to the passions, and to yield to them, is the extremest slavery; as to keep them in subjection is the only liberty. The divine Scripture accordingly says, that those who have transgressed the commandments are sold to strangers, that is, to sins alien to nature, till they return and repent. Marriage, then, as a sacred image, must be kept pure from those things which defile it.[5] We are to rise from our slumbers with the Lord, and retire to sleep with thanksgiving and prayer,--
"Both when you sleep, and when the holy light comes,"
confessing the Lord in our whole life; possessing piety in the soul, and extending self-control to the body. For it is pleasing to God to lead decorum from the tongue to our actions. Filthy speech is the way to effrontery; and the end of both is filthy conduct.
379
Now that the Scripture counsels marriage, and allows
no release from the union, is expressly contained in
the law, "Thou shalt not put away thy wife, except
for the cause of fornication;" and it regards
as fornication, the marriage of those separated while
the other is alive. Not to deck and adorn herself beyond
what is becoming, renders a wife free of calumnious
suspicion. while she devotes herself assiduously to
prayers and supplications; avoiding frequent departures
from the house, and shutting herself up as far as possible
from the view of all not related to her, and deeming
housekeeping of more consequence than impertinent trifling.
"He that taketh a woman that has been put away,"
it is said, "committeth adultery; and if one puts
away his wife, he makes her an adulteress,"[1]
that is, compels her to commit adultery. And not only
is he who puts her away guilty of this, but he who
takes her, by giving to the woman the opportunity of
sinning; for did he not take her, she would return
to her husband. What, then, is the law?[2] In order
to check the impetuosity of the passions, it commands
the adulteress to be put to death, on being convicted
of this; and if of priestly family, to be committed
to the flames.[3] And the adulterer also is stoned
to death, but not in the same place, that not even
their death may be in common. And the law is not at
variance with the Gospel, but agrees with it. How should
it be otherwise, one Lord being the author of both?
She who has committed fornication liveth in sin, and
is dead to the commandments; but she who has repented,
being as it were born again by the change in her life,
has a regeneration of life; the old harlot being dead,
and she who has been regenerated by repentance having
come back again to life. The Spirit testifies to what
has been said by Ezekiel, declaring, "I desire
not the death of the sinner, but that he should turn."[4]
Now they are stoned to death; as through hardness of
heart dead to the law which they believed not. But
in the case of a priestess the punishment is increased,
because "to whom much is given, from him shall
more be required."[5]
Let us conclude this second book of the Stromata
at this point, on account of the length and number
of the chapters.
ELUCIDATIONS.
I.
(On the Greeks, cap. i. note 3, p. 347.)
THE admirable comments of Stier on the Greeks, who said to Philip, "We would see Jesus,"[6] seem to me vindicated by the history of the Gospel, and by the part which the Greeks were called to take in its propagation. Clement seems to me the man of Providence, who gives rich significance to "the corn of wheat," and its multiplication in Gentile discipleship. And in this I am a convert to Stier's view, against my preconceptions. That the Greeks who were at Jerusalem at the Passover were other than Hellenistic Jews, or Greek proselytes, always seemed to me improbable; but, more and more, I discover a design in this narrative, which seems to me thoroughly sustained by the history of the Gentile churches, which were Greek everywhere originally, and for the use of which the Septuagint had been prepared in the providence of God. To say nothing of the New-Testament Scriptures, the whole symbolic and liturgic system of the early Christians and all the Catholic councils which were Greek in their topography, language, and legislation, confirm the sublime thought which Stier has elucidated. "The Pharisees said, The world is gone after him; and there were certain Greeks," etc. So the story is introduced. Jesus is told of their desire to see him; and he answers, "The hour is come that the Son of man should be glorified;" and he goes on to speak of his death as giving life to the world. I feel Fateful to Slier for his bold originality in
380
treating the subject; and I trust others will find that it invests the study of the ante-Nicene Fathers with a fresh interest, and throws back from their writings a peculiar reflex light on the New-Testament Scriptures themselves.
II.
(See p. 352, note 9.)
M<greek>onos</greek> <greek>o</greek> <greek>soFos</greek> <greek>eleuferos</greek>. Stier, in his comments[1] on St. John (viii. 32-36), may well be compared with this chapter of Clement's. The eighteenth chapter of this book must also be kept in view if we would do full justice to the true position of Clement, who recognises nothing in heathen philosophy as true wisdom, save as it flows from God, in Moses, and through the Hebrew Church. That Greek philosophy, so viewed, did lead to Christ, and that this great principle is recognised in the apostolic teachings, seems to me indisputable. This illustrates what has been noted above in Elucidation I.
III.
(See p. 359.)
Clement notes that the false Gnostics rejected the
Epistles to Timothy,[2] chiefly because of 1 Tim. vi.
20. Beausobre (Histoire du Manicheisme, tom. ii. p.
v.) doubts as to Basilides, whether he is open to this
charge; but Jerome accuses him expressly of rejecting
the pastoral epistles, and that to the Hebrews. For
this, and Neander's qualifying comment, see Kaye, p.
263. Clement is far from charging Basilides, personally,
with an immoral life, or from lending his sanction
to impurity; but a study of the Gnostic sects, with
whom our Alexandrian doctor was forced to contend,
will show that they were introducing, under the pretence
of Christianity, such abominations as made their defeat
and absolute overthrow a matter of life and death for
the Church. To let such teachers be confounded with
Christians, was to neutralize the very purpose for
which the Church existed. Now, it was in the deadly
grapple with such loathsome errorists, that the idea
of "Catholic orthodoxy" became so precious
to the primitive faithful. They were forced to make
even the heathen comprehend the existence of that word-wide
confederation of churches already explained,[3] and
to exhibit their Scriptural creed and purity of discipline,
in the strongest contrast with these pestilent "armies
of the aliens," who were neither Gnostics nor
Christians indeed, much less Catholic or Orthodox teachers
and believers.
Now, if in dealing with counterfeits Clement was
obliged to meet them on their own grounds, and defeat
them on a plan, at once intelligible to the heathen,
and enabling all believers to "fight the good
fight of faith" successfully, we must concede
that he knew better than we can, what was suited to
the Alexandrian schools, their intellect, and their
false mysticism. His works were a great safeguard to
those who came after him; though they led to the false
system of exposition by which Origen so greatly impaired
his services to the Church, and perhaps to other evils,
which, in the issue, shook the great patriarchate of
Alexandria to its foundations. It is curious to trace
the influence of Clement, through Tertullian and St.
Augustine, upon the systems of the schoolmen, and again,
through them, on the Teutonic reformers. The mysticism
of Fenelon as well, may be traced, more than is generally
credited, to the old Alexandrian school, which was
itself the product of some of the most subtle elements
of our nature, sanctified, but not wholly controlled,
by the wisdom that is from above. Compare the interminable
controversies of the period, in the writings of Fenelon
and Bossuet; and, for a succinct history, see L'Histoire
de l'eglise de France, par l'Abbe Guettee, tom. xi.
p. 156 et seqq.
381
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