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Patrology
علم الباترولوجي
"كتابات الآباء " |
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IRENAEUS AGAINST
HERESIES -- BOOK IV (Chap. I to Chap. XX) |
BOOK IV.
PREFACE.
1. By transmitting to thee, my very dear friend, this fourth book of
the work which is [entitled] The Detection and Refuation of False
Knowledge, I shall, as I have promised, add weight, by means of the
words of the Lord, to what I have already advanced; so that thou
also, as thou hast requested, mayest obtain from me the means of
confuting all the heretics everywhere, and not permit them, beaten
back at all points, to launch out further into the deep of error,
nor to be drowned in the sea of ignorance; but that thou, turning
them into the haven of the truth, mayest cause them to attain their
salvation.
2. The man, however, who would undertake their conversion, must
possess an accurate knowledge of their systems or schemes of
doctrine. For it is impossible for any one to heal the sick, if he
has no knowledge of the disease of the patients. This was the reason
that my predecessors--much superior men to myself, too--were unable,
notwithstanding, to refute the Valentinians satisfactorily, because
they were ignorant of these men's system;(1) which I have with all
care delivered to thee in the first book in which I have also shown
that their doctrine is a recapitulation of all the heretics. For
which reason also, in the second, we have had, as in a mirror, a
sight of their entire discomfiture. For they who oppose these men
(the Valentinians) by the right method, do [thereby] oppose all who
are of an evil mind; and they who overthrow them, do in fact
overthrow every kind of heresy.
3. For their system is blasphemous above all [others], since they
represent that the Maker and Framer, who is one God, as I have
shown, was produced from a defect or apostasy. They utter blasphemy,
also, against our Lord, by cutting off and dividing Jesus from
Christ, and Christ from the Saviour, and again the Saviour from the
Word, and the Word from the Only-begotten. And since they allege
that the Creator originated from a defect or apostasy, so have they
also taught that Christ and the Holy Spirit were emitted on account
of this defect, and that the Saviour was a product of those Aeons
who were produced from a defect; so that there is nothing but
blasphemy to be found among them. In the preceding book, then, the
ideas of the apostles as to all these points have been set forth,
[to the effect] that not only did they, "who from the beginning were
eye-witnesses and ministers of the word"(2) of truth, hold no such
opinions, but that they did also preach to us to shun these
doctrines,(3) foreseeing by the Spirit those weak-minded persons who
should be led astray.(4)
4. For as the serpent beguiled Eve, by promising her what he had not
himself,(5) so also do these men, by pretending [to possess]
superior knowledge, and [to be acquainted with] ineffable mysteries;
and, by promising that admittance which they speak of as taking
place within the Pleroma, plunge those that believe them into death,
rendering them apostates from Him who made them. And at that time,
indeed, the apostate angel, having effected the disobedience of
mankind by means of the serpent, imagined that he escaped the notice
of the Lord; wherefore God assigned him the form(6) and name [of a
serpent]. But now, since the last times are [come upon us], evil is
spread abroad among men, which not only renders them apostates, but
by many machinations does [the devil] raise up blasphemers against
the Creator, namely, by means of all the heretics already mentioned.
For all these, although they issue forth from diverse regions, and
promulgate different [opinions], do nevertheless concur in the same
blasphemous design, wounding [men] unto death, by teaching blasphemy
against God our Maker and Supporter, and derogating from the
salvation of man. Now man is a mixed organization of soul and flesh,
who was formed after the likeness of God, and moulded by His hands,
that is, by the Son and Holy Spirit, to whom also He said, "Let Us
make man."(1) This, then, is the aim of him who envies our life, to
render men disbelievers in their own salvation, and blasphemous
against God the Creator. For whatsoever all the heretics may have
advanced with the utmost solemnity, they come to this at last, that
they blaspheme the Creator, and disallow the salvation of God's
workmanship, which the flesh truly is; on behalf of which I have
proved, in a variety of ways, that the Son of God accomplished the
whole dispensation [of mercy], and have shown that there is none
other called God by the Scriptures except the Father of all, and the
Son, and those who possess the adoption.
CHAP. I.--THE LORD ACKNOWLEDGED BUT ONE GOD AND FATHER.
1. Since, therefore, this is sure and stedfast, that no other God or
Lord was announced by the Spirit, except Him who, as God, rules over
all, together with His Word, and those who receive the Spirit of
adoption,(2) that is, those who believe in the one and true God, and
in Jesus Christ the Son of God; and likewise that the apostles did
Of themselves term no one else as God, or name [no other] as Lord;
and, what is much more important, [since it is true] that our Lord
[acted likewise], who did also command us to confess no one as
Father, except Him who is in the heavens, who is the one God and the
one Father;--those things are clearly shown to be false which these
deceivers and most perverse sophists advance, maintaining that the
being whom they have themselves invented is by nature both God and
Father; but that the I Demiurge is naturally neither God nor Father,
but is so termed merely by courtesy (verbo tenus), because of his
ruling the creation, these perverse mythologists state, setting
their thoughts against God; and, putting aside the doctrine of
Christ, and of themselves divining falsehoods, they dispute against
the entire dispensation of God. For they maintain that their Aeons,
and gods, and fathers, and lords, are also still further termed
heavens, together with their Mother, whom they do also call "the
Earth," and "Jerusalem," while they also style her many other names.
2. Now to whom is it not clear, that if the Lord had known many
fathers and gods, He would not have taught His disciples to know
[only] one God,(3) and to call Him alone Father? But He did the
rather distinguish those who by word merely (verbo tenus) are termed
gods, from Him who is truly God, that they should not err as to His
doctrine, nor understand one [in mistake] for another. And if He did
indeed teach us to call one Being Father and God, while He does from
time to time Himself confess other fathers and gods in the same
sense, then He will appear to enjoin a different course upon His
disciples from what He follows Himself. Such conduct, however, does
not bespeak the good teacher, but a misleading and invidious one.
The apostles, too, according to these men's showing, are proved to
be transgressors of the commandment, since they confess the Creator
as God, and Lord, and Father, as I have shown--if He is not alone
God and Father. Jesus, therefore, will be to them the author and
teacher of such transgression, inasmuch as He commanded that one
Being should be called Father,(4) thus imposing upon them the
necessity of confessing the Creator as their Father, as has been
pointed out.
CHAP.II.--PROOFS FROM THE PLAIN TESTIMONY OF MOSES, AND OF THE
OTHER PROPHETS, WHOSE WORDS ARE THE WORDS OF CHRIST, THAT THERE IS
BUT ONE GOD, THE FOUNDER OF THE WORLD, WHOM OUR LORD PREACHED, AND
WHOM HE CALLED HIS FATHER.
1. Moses, therefore, making a recapitulation of the whole law, which
he had received from the Creator (Demiurge), thus speaks in
Deuteronomy: "Give ear, O ye heavens, and I will speak; and hear, O
earth, the words of my mouth."(5) Again, David saying that his help
came from the Lord, asserts: "My help is from the LORD, who made
heaven and earth."(6) And Esaias confesses that words were uttered
by God, who made heaven and earth, and governs them. He says: "Hear,
O heavens; and give ear, O earth: for the LORD hath spoken."(7) And
again: "Thus saith the LORD God, who made the heaven, and stretched
it out; who established the earth, and the things in it; and who
giveth breath to the people upon it, and spirit to them who walk
therein."(8)
2. Again, our Lord Jesus Christ confesses this same Being as His
Father, where He says: "I confess to thee, O Father, Lord of heaven
and earth."(1) What Father will those men have us to understand [by
these words], those who are most perverse sophists of Pandora?
Whether shall it be Bythus, whom they have fabled of themselves; or
their Mother; or the Only-begotten? Or shall it be he whom the
Marcionites or the others have invented as god (whom I indeed have
amply demonstrated to be no god at all); or shall it be (what is
really the case) the Maker of heaven and earth, whom also the
prophets proclaimed,--whom Christ, too, confesses as His
Father,--whom also the law announces, saying: "Hear, O Israel; The
Lord thy God is one God?"(2)
3. But since the writings (litera) of Moses are the words of Christ,
He does Himself declare to the Jews, as John has recorded in the
Gospel: "If ye had believed Moses, ye would have believed Me: for he
wrote of Me. But if ye believe not his writings, neither will ye
believe My words."(3) He thus indicates in the cleareat manner that
the writings of Moses are His words. If, then, [this be the case
with regard] to Moses, so also, beyond a doubt, the words of the
other prophets are His [words], as I have pointed out. And again,
the Lord Himself exhibits Abraham as having said to the rich man,
with reference to all those who were still alive: "If they do not
obey Moses and the prophets, neither, if any one were to rise from
the dead and go to them, will they believe him."(4)
4. Now, He has not merely related to us a story respecting a poor
man and a rich one; but He has taught us, in the first place, that
no one should lead a luxurious life, nor, living in worldly
pleasures and perpetual feastings, should be the slave of his lusts,
and forget God. "For there was," He says, "a rich man, who was
clothed in purple and fine linen, and delighted himself with
splendid feasts."(5)
Of such persons, too, the Spirit has spoken by Esaias: "They drink
wine with [the accompaniment of] harps, and tablets, and psalteries,
and flutes; but they regard not the works of God, neither do they
consider the work of His hands."(6) Lest, therefore, we should incur
the same punishment as these men, the Lord reveals [to us] their
end; showing at the same time, that if they obeyed Moses and the
prophets, they would believe in Him whom these had preached, the Son
of God, who rose from the dead, and bestows life upon us; and He
shows that all are from one essence, that is, Abraham, and Moses,
and the prophets, and also the Lord Himself, who rose from the dead,
in whom many believe who are of the circumcision, who do also hear
Moses and the prophets announcing the coming of the Son of God. But
those who scoff [at the truth] assert that these men were from
another essence, and they do not know the first-begotten from the
dead; understanding Christ as a distinct being, who continued as if
He were impassible, and Jesus, who suffered, as being altogether
separate [from Him].
5. For they do not receive from the Father the knowledge of the Son;
neither do they learn who the Father is from the Son, who teaches
clearly and without parables Him who truly is God. He says: "Swear
not at all; neither by heaven, for it is God's throne; nor by the
earth, for it is His footstool; neither by Jerusalem, for it is the
city of the great King."(7) For these words are evidently spoken
with reference to the Creator, as also Esaias says: "Heaven is my
throne, the earth is my footstool."(8) And besides this Being there
is no other God; otherwise He would not be termed by the Lord
either" God" or" the great King;" for a Being who can be so
described admits neither of any other being compared with nor set
above Him. For he who has any superior over him, and is under the
power of another, this being never can be called either "God" or
"the great King."
6. But neither will these men be able to maintain that such words
were uttered in an ironical manner, since it is proved to them by
the words themselves that they were in earnest. For He who uttered
them was Truth, and did truly vindicate His own house, by driving
out of it the changers of money, who were buying and selling, saying
unto them: "It is written, My house shall be called the house of
prayer; but ye have made it a den of thieves."(9) And what reason
had He for thus doing and saying, and vindicating His house, if He
did preach another God? But [He did so], that He might point out the
transgressors of His Father's law; for neither did He bring any
accusation against the house, nor did He blame the law, which He had
come to fulfil; but He reproved those who were putting His house to
an improper use, and those who were transgressing the law. And
therefore the scribes and Pharisees, too, who from the times of the
law had begun to despise God, did not receive His Word, that is,
they did not believe on Christ. Of these Esaias says: "Thy princes
are rebellious, companions of thieves, loving gifts, following after
rewards, not judging the fatherless, and negligent of the cause of
the widows."(10) And Jeremiah, in like manner: "They," he says, "who
rule my people did not know me; they are senseless and imprudent
children; they are wise to do evil, but to do well they have no
knowledge."(1)
7. But as many as feared God, and were anxious about His law, these
ran to Christ, and were all saved. For He said to His disciples: "Go
ye to the sheep of the house of Israel,(2) which have perished." And
many more Samaritans, it is said, when the Lord had tarried among.
them, two days, "believed because of His words, and said to the
woman, Now we believe, not because of thy saying, for we ourselves
have heard [Him], and know that this man is truly the Saviour of the
world."(3) And Paul likewise declares, "And so all Israel shall be
saved;"(4) but he has also said, that the law was our pedagogue [to
bring us] to Christ Jesus.(5) Let them not therefore ascribe to the
law the unbelief of certain [among them]. For the law never hindered
them from believing in the Son of God; nay, but it even exhorted
them(6) so to do, saying(7) that men can be saved in no other way
from the old wound of the serpent than by believing in Him who, in
the likeness of sinful flesh, is lifted up from the earth upon the
tree of martyrdom, and draws all things to Himself,(8) and vivifies
the dead.
CHAP. III.--ANSWER TO THE CAVILS OF THE GNOS TICS. WE ARE NOT TO
SUPPOSE THAT THE TRUE GOD CAN BE CHANGED, OR COME TO AN END BECAUSE
THE HEAVENS, WHICH ARE HIS THRONE AND THE EARTH, HIS FOOTSTOOL,
SHALL PASS AWAY.
1. Again, as to their malignantly asserting that if heaven is
indeed the throne of God, and earth His footstool, and if it is
declared that the heaven and earth shall pass away, then when these
pass away the God who sitteth above must also pass away, and
therefore He cannot be the God who is over all; in the first place,
they are ignorant what the expression means, that heaven is [His]
throne and earth [His] footstool. For they do not know what God is,
but they imagine that He sits after the fashion of a man, and is
contained within bounds, but does not contain. And they are also
unacquainted with [the meaning of] the passing away of the heaven
and earth; but Paul was not ignorant of it when he declared, "For
the figure of this world passeth away."(9) In the next place, David
explains their question, for he says that when the fashion of this
world passes away, not only shall God remain, but His servants also,
expressing himself thus in the 101st Psalm: "In the beginning, Thou;
O LORD, hast founded the earth, and the heavens are the works of Thy
hands. They shall perish, but Thou shalt endure, and all shall wax
old as a garment; and as a vesture Thou shalt change them, and they
shall be changed: but Thou art the same, and Thy years shall not
fail. The children of Thy servants shall continue, and their seed
shall be established for ever;"(10))pointing out plainly what things
they are that pass away, and who it is that doth endure for ever
God, together with His servants. And in like manner Esaias says:
"Lift up your eyes to the heavens, and look upon the earth beneath;
for the heaven has been set together as smoke, and the earth shall
wax old like a garment, and they who dwell therein shall die in like
manner. But my salvation shall be for ever, and my righteousness
shall not pass away."(11)
CHAP. IV.--ANSWER TO ANOTHER OBJECTION, SHOWING THAT THE
DESTRUCTION OF JERUSALEM, WHICH WAS THE CITY OF THE GREAT KING,
DIMINISHED NOTHING FROM THE SUPREME MAJESTY' AND POWER OF GOD, FOR
THAT THIS DESTRUCTION WAS PUT IN EXECUTION BY THE MOST WISE COUNSEL
OF THE SAME GOD.
1. Further, also, concerning Jerusalem and the Lord, they venture to
assert that, if it had been "the city of the great King,"(12) it
would not have been deserted.(13) This is just as if any one should
say, that if straw were a creation of God, it would never part
company with the wheat; and that the vine twigs, if made by God,
never would be lopped away and deprived of the clusters. But as
these [vine twigs] have not been originally made for their own sake,
but for that of the fruit growing upon them, which being come to
maturity and taken away, they are left behind, and those which do
not conduce to fructification are lopped off altogether; so also
[was it with] Jerusalem, which had in herself borne the yoke of
bondage (under which man was reduced, who in former times was not
subject to God when death was reigning, and being subdued, became a
fit subject for liberty), when the fruit of liberty had come, and
reached maturity, and been reaped and stored in the barn, and when
those which had the power to produce fruit had been carried away
from her [i.e., from Jerusalem], and scattered throughout all the
world. Even as Esaias saith, "The children of Jacob shall strike
root, and Israel shall flourish, and the whole world shall be filled
with his fruit."(1) The fruit, therefore, having been sown
throughout all the world, she (Jerusalem) was deservedly forsaken,
and those things which had formerly brought forth fruit abundantly
were taken away; for from these, according to the flesh, were Christ
and the apostles enabled to bring forth fruit. But now these are no
longer useful for bringing forth fruit. For all things which have a
beginning in time must of course have an end in time also.
2. Since, then, the law originated with Moses, it terminated with
John as a necessary consequence. Christ had come to fulfil it:
wherefore "the law and the prophets were" with them "until John."(2)
And therefore Jerusalem, taking its commencement from David,(3) and
fulfilling its own times, must have an end of legislation(4) when
the new covenant was revealed. For God does all things by measure
and in order; nothing is unmeasured with Him, because nothing is out
of order. Well spake he, who said that the unmeasurable Father was
Himself subjected to measure in the Son; for the Son is the measure
of the Father, since He also comprehends Him. But that the
administration of them (the Jews) was temporary, Esaias says: "And
the daughter of Zion shall be left as a cottage in a vineyard, and
as a lodge in a garden of cucumbers."(5) And when shall these things
be left behind? Is it not when the fruit shall be taken away, and
the leaves alone shall be left, which now have no power of producing
fruit?
3. But why do we speak of Jerusalem, since, indeed, the fashion of
the whole world must also pass away, when the time of its
disappearance has come, in order that the fruit indeed may be
gathered into the garner, but the chaff, left behind, may be
consumed by fire? "For the day of the Lord cometh as a burning
furnace, and all sinners shall be stubble, they who do evil things,
and the day shall burn them up."(6) Now, who this Lord is that
brings such a day about, John the Baptist points out, when he says
of Christ, "He shall baptize you with the Holy Ghost and with fire,
having His fan in His hand to cleanse His floor; and He will gather
His fruit into the garner, but the chaff He will burn up with
unquenchable fire."(7) For He who makes the chaff and He who makes
the wheat are not different persons, but one and the same, who
judges them, that is, separates them. But the wheat and the chaff,
being inanimate and irrational, have been made such by nature. But
man, being endowed with reason, and in this respect like to God,
having been made free in his will, and with power over himself, is
himself the cause to himself, that sometimes he becomes wheat, and
sometimes chaff. Wherefore also he shall be justly condemned,
because, having been created a rational being, he lost the true
rationality, and living irrationally, opposed the righteousness of
God, giving himself over to every earthly spirit, and serving all
lusts; as says the prophet, "Man, being in honour, did not
understand: he was assimilated to senseless beasts, and made like to
them."(8)
CHAP. V.--THE AUTHOR RETURNS TO HIS FORMER ARGUMENT, AND SHOWS
THAT THERE WAS BUT ONE GOD ANNOUNCED BY THE LAW AND PROPHETS, WHOM
CHRIST CONFESSES AS HIS FATHER, AND WHO, THROUGH HIS WORD, ONE
LIVING GOD WITH HIM, MADE HIMSELF KNOWN TO MEN IN BOTH COVENANTS.
1. God, therefore, is one and the same, who rolls up the heaven as a
book, and renews the face of the earth; who made the things of time.
for man, so that coming to maturity in them, he may produce the
fruit of immortality; and who, through His kindness, also bestows
[upon him] eternal things, "that in the ages to come He may show the
exceeding riches of His grace;"(9) who was announced by the law and
the prophets, whom Christ confessed as His Father. Now He is the
Creator, and He it is who is God over all, as Esaias says, "I am
witness, saith the LORD God, and my servant whom I have chosen, that
ye may know, and believe, and understand that I AM. Before me there
was no other God, neither shall be after me. I am God, and besides
me there is no Saviour. I have proclaimed, and I have saved."(10)
And again: "I myself am the first God, and I am above things to
come."(11) For neither in an ambiguous, nor arrogant, nor boastful
manner, does He say these things; but since it was impossible,
without God, to come to a knowledge of God, He teaches men, through
His Word, to know God. To those, therefore, who are ignorant of
these matters, and on this account imagine that they have discovered
another Father, justly does one say, "Ye do err, not knowing the
Scriptures, nor the power of God."(12)
2. For our Lord and Master, in the answer which He gave to the
Sadducees, who say that there is no resurrection, and who do
therefore dishonour God, and lower the credit of the law, did both
indicate a resurrection, and reveal God, saying to them, "Ye do err,
not knowing the Scriptures, nor the power of God." "For, touching
the resurrection of the dead," He says, "have ye not read that which
was spoken by God, saying, I am the God of Abraham, the God of
Isaac, and the God of Jacob?(1) And He added, "He is not the God of
the dead, but of the living; for all live to Him." By these
arguments He unquestionably made it clear, that He who spake to
Moses out of the bush, and declared Himself to be the God of the
fathers, He is the God of the living. For who is the God of the
living unless He who is God, and above whom there is no other God?
Whom also Daniel the prophet, when Cyrus king of the Persians said
to him, "Why dost thou not worship Bel?"(2) did proclaim, saying,
"Because I do not worship idols made with hands, but the living God,
who established the heaven and the earth and has dominion over all
flesh." Again did he say, "I will adore the Lord my God, because He
is the living God." He, then, who was adored by the prophets as the
living God, He is the God of the living; and His Word is He who also
spake to Moses, who also put the Sadducees to silence, who also
bestowed the gift of resurrection, thus revealing [both] truths to
those who are blind, that is, the resurrection and God [in His true
character]. For if He be not the God of the dead, but of the living,
yet was called the God of the fathers who were sleeping, they do
indubitably live to God, and have not passed out of existence, since
they are children of the resurrection. But our Lord is Himself the
resurrection, as He does Himself declare, "I am the resurrection and
the life."(3) But the fathers are His children; for it is said by
the prophet: "Instead of thy fathers, thy children have been made to
thee."(4) Christ Hi'mself, therefore, together with the Father, is
the God of the living, who spake to Moses, and who was also
manifested to the fathers.
3. And teaching this very thing, He said to the Jews: "Your father
Abraham rejoiced that he should see my day; and he saw it, and was
glad"(5) What is intended? "Abraham believed God, and it was imputed
unto him for righteousness."(6) In the first place, [he believed]
that He was the maker of heaven and earth, the only God; and in the
next place, that He would make his seed as the stars of heaven. This
is what is meant by Paul, [when he says,] "as lights in the
world."(7) Righteously, therefore, having left his earthly kindred,
he followed the Word of God, walking as a pilgrim with the Word,
that he might [afterwards] have his abode with the Word.
4. Righteously also the apostles, being of the race of Abraham, left
the ship and their father, and followed the Word. Righteously also
do we, possessing the same faith as Abraham, and taking up the cross
as Isaac did the wood? follow Him. For in Abraham man had learned
beforehand, and had been accustomed to follow the Word of God. For
Abraham, according to his faith, followed the command of the Word of
God, and with a ready mind delivered up, as a sacrifice to God, his
only-begotten and beloved son, in order that God also might be
pleased to offer up for all his seed His own beloved and
only-begotten Son, as a sacrifice for our redemption.
5. Since, therefore, Abraham was a prophet and saw in the Spirit the
day of the Lord's coming, and the dispensation of His suffering,
through whom both he himself and all who, following the example of
his faith, trust in God, should be saved, he rejoiced exceedingly.
The Lord, therefore, was not unknown to Abraham, whose day he
desired to see;(9) nor, again, was the Lord's Father, for he had
learned from the Word of the Lord, and believed Him; wherefore it
was accounted to him by the Lord for righteousness. For faith
towards God justifies a man; and therefore he said, "I will stretch
forth my hand to the most high God, who made the heaven and the
earth."(10) All these truths, however, do those holding perverse
opinions endeavour to overthrow, because of one passage, which they
certainly do not understand correctly.
CHAP. VI.--EXPLANATION OF THE WORDS OF CHRIST, "NO MAN KNOWETH
THE FATHER, BUT THE SON," ETC.; WHICH WORDS THE HERETICS
MISINTERPRET. pROOF THAT, BY THE FATHER REVEALING THE SON, AND BY
THE SON BEING REVEALED, THE FATHER WAS NEVER UNKNOWN.
1. For the Lord, revealing Himself to His disciples, that He Himself
is the Word, who imparts knowledge of the Father, and reproving the
Jews, who imagined that they, had [the knowledge of] God, while they
nevertheless rejected His Word, through whom God is made known,
declared, "No man knoweth the Son, but the Father; neither knoweth
any man the Father, save the Son, and he to whom the Son has willed
to reveal [Him]."(11) Thus hath Matthew set it down, and Luke in
like manner, and Mark(1) the very same; for John omits this passage.
They, however, who would be wiser than the apostles, write [the
verse] in the following manner: "No man knew the Father, but the
Son; nor the Son, but the Father, and he to whom the Son has willed
to reveal [Him];" and they explain it as if the true God were known
to none prior to our Lord's advent; and that God who was announced
by the prophets, they allege not to be the Father of Christ.
But if Christ did then [only] begin to have existence when He came
[into the world] as man, and [if] the Father did remember [only] in
the times of Tiberius Caesar to provide for [the wants of] men, and
His Word was shown to have not always coexisted with His creatures;
[it may be remarked that] neither then was it necessary that another
God should be proclaimed, but [rather] that the reasons for so great
carelessness and neglect on His part should be made the subject of
investigation. For it is fitting that no such question should arise,
and gather such strength, that it would indeed both change God, and
destroy our faith in that Creator who supports us by means of His
creation. For as we do direct our faith towards the Son, so also
should we possess a firm and immoveable love towards the Father. In
his book against Marcion, Justin(2) does well say: "I would not have
believed the Lord Himself, if He had announced any other than He who
is our framer, maker, and nourisher. But because the only-begotten
Son came to us from the one God, who both made this world and formed
us, and contains and administers all things, summing up His own
handiwork in Himself, my faith towards Him is steadfast, and my love
to the Father immoveable, God bestowing both upon us."
3. For no one can know the Father, unless through the Word of God,
that is, unless by the Son revealing [Him]; neither can he have
knowledge of the Son, unless through the good pleasure of the
Father. But the Son performs the good pleasure of the Father; for
the Father sends, and the Son is sent, and comes. And His Word knows
that His Father is, as far as regards us, invisible and infinite;
and since He cannot be declared [by any one else], He does Himself
declare Him to us; and, on the other hand, it is the Father alone
who knows His own Word. And both these truths has our Lord declared.
Wherefore the Son reveals the knowledge of the Father through His
own manifestation. For the manifestation of the Son is the knowledge
of the Father; for all things are manifested through the Word. In
order, therefore, that we might know that the Son who came is He who
imparts to those believing on Him a knowledge of the Father, He said
to His disciples:(3) "No man knoweth the Son but the Father, nor the
Father but the Son, and those to whomsoever the Son shall reveal
Him;" thus setting Himself forth and the Father as He [really] is,
that we may not receive any other Father, except Him who is revealed
by the Son.
4. But this [Father] is the Maker of heaven and earth, as is shown
from His words; and not he, the false father, who has been invented
by Marcion, or by Valentinus, or by Basilides, or by Carpocrates, or
by Simon, or by the rest of the "Gnostics," falsely so called. For
none of these was the Son of God; but Christ Jesus our Lord [was],
against whom they set their teaching in opposition, and have the
daring to preach an unknown God. But they ought to hear [this]
against themselves: How is it that He is unknown, who is known by
them? for, whatever is known even by a few, is not unknown. But the
Lord did not say that both the Father and the Son could not be known
at all (in tatum), for in that case His advent would have been
superfluous. For why did He come hither? Was it that He should say
to us, "Never mind seeking after God; for He is unknown, and ye
shall not find Him;" as also the disciples of Valentinus falsely
declare that Christ said to their AEons? But this is indeed vain.
For the Lord taught us that no man is capable of knowing God, unless
he be taught of God; that is, that God cannot be known without God:
but that this is the express will of the Father, that God should be
known. For they shall know(4) Him to whomsoever the Son has revealed
Him.
5. And for this purpose did the Father reveal the Son, that through
His instrumentality He might be manifested to all, and might receive
those righteous ones who believe in Him into incorruption and
everlasting enjoyment (now, to believe in Him is to do His will);
but He shall righteously shut out into the darkness which they have
chosen for themselves, those who do not believe, and who do
consequently avoid His light. The Father therefore has revealed
Himself to all, by making His Word visible to all; and, conversely,
the Word has declared to all the Father and the Son, since He has
become visible to all. And therefore the righteous judgment of God
[shall fall] upon all who, like others, have seen, but have not,
like others, believed.
6. For by means of the creation itself, the Word reveals God the
Creator; and by means of the world [does He declare] the Lord the
Maker of the world; and by means of the formation [of man] the
Artificer who formed him; and by the Son that Father who begat the
Son: and these things do indeed address all men in the same manner,
but all do not in the same way believe them. But by the law and the
prophets did the Word preach both Himself and the Father alike [to
all]; and all the people heard Him alike, but all did not alike
believe. And through the Word Himself who had been made visible and
palpable, was the Father shown forth, although all did not equally
believe in Him; but all saw the Father in the Son: for the Father is
the invisible of the Son, but the Son the visible of the Father. And
for this reason all spake with Christ when He was present [upon
earth], and they named Him God. Yea, even the demons exclaimed, on
beholding the Son: "We know Thee who Thou art, the Holy One of
God."' And the devil looking at Him, and tempting Him, said: "If
Thou art the Son of God;"(2)--all thus indeed seeing and speaking of
the Son and the Father, but all not believing [in them].
7. For it was fitting that the truth should receive testimony from
all, and should become [a means of] judgment for the salvation
indeed of those who believe, but for the condemnation of those who
believe not; that all should be fairly judged, and that the faith in
the Father and Son should be approved by all, that is, that it
should be established by all [as the one means of salvation],
receiving testimony from all, both from those belonging to it, since
they are its friends, and by those having no connection with it,
though they are its enemies. For that evidence is true, and cannot
be gainsaid, which elicits even from its adversaries striking a
testimonies in its behalf; they being convinced with respect to the
matter in hand by their own plain contemplation of it, and bearing
testimony to it, as well as declaring it.(4) But after a while they
break forth into enmity, and become accusers [of what they had
approved], and are desirous that their own testimony should not be
[regarded as] true. He, therefore, who was known, was not a
different being from Him who declared "No man knoweth the Father,"
but one and the same, the Father making all things subject to Him;
while He received testimony from all that He was very man, and that
He was very God, from the Father, from the Spirit, from angels, from
the creation itself, from men, from apostate spirits and demons,
from the enemy, and last of all, from death itself. But the Son,
administering all things for the Father, works from the beginning
even to the end, and without Him no man can attain the knowledge of
God. For the Son is the knowledge of the Father; but the knowledge
of the Son is in the Father, and has been revealed through the Son;
and this was the reason why the Lord declared: "No man knoweth the
Son, but the Father; nor the Father, save the Son, and those to
whomsoever the Son shall reveal [Him]."(5) For "shall reveal" was
said not with reference to the future alone, as if then [only] the
Word had begun to manifest the Father when He was born of Mary, but
it applies indifferently throughout all time. For the Son, being
present with His own handiwork from the beginning, reveals the
Father to all; to whom He wills, and when He wills, and as the
Father wills. Wherefore, then, in all things, and through all
things, there is one God, the Father, and one Word, and one Son, and
one Spirit, and one salvation to all who believe in Him.
CHAP. VII.--RECAPITULATION OF THE FOREGOING ARGUMENT, SHOWING
THAT ABRAHAM, THROUGH THE REVELATION OF THE WORD, KNEW THE FATHER,
AND THE COMING OF THE SON OF GOD. FOR THIS CAUSE, HE REJOICED TO SEE
THE DAY OF CHRIST, WHEN THE PROMISES MADE TO HIM SHOULD BE
FULFILLED. THE FRUIT OF THIS REJOICING HAS FLOWED TO POSTERITY,
VIZ., TO THOSE WHO ARE PARTAKERS IN THE FAITH OF ABRAHAM, BUT NOT TO
THE JEWS WHO REJECT THE WORD OF GOD.
1. Therefore Abraham also, knowing the. Father through the Word, who
made heaven and earth, confessed Him to be God; and having learned,
by an announcement [made to him], that the Son of God would be a man
among men, by whose advent his seed should be as the stars of
heaven, he desired to see that day, so that he might himself also
embrace Christ; and, seeing it through the spirit of prophecy, he
rejoiced.(6) Wherefore Simeon also, one of his descendants, carried
fully out the rejoicing of the patriarch, and said: "Lord, now
lettest Thou Thy servant depart in peace. For mine eyes have seen
Thy salvation, which Thou hast prepared before the face of all
people: a light for the revelation of the Gentiles,(1) and the glory
of the people Israel."(2) And the angels, in like manner, announced
tidings of great joy to the shepherds who were keeping watch by
night.(3) Moreover, Mary said, "My soul doth magnify the Lord, and
my spirit hath rejoiced in God my salvation;"(4)--the rejoicing of
Abraham descending upon those who sprang from him,--those, namely,
who were watching, and who beheld Christ, and believed in Him;
while, on the other hand, there was a reciprocal rejoicing which
passed backwards from the children to Abraham, who did also desire
to see the day of Christ's coming. Rightly, then, did our Lord bear
witness to him, saying, "Your father Abraham rejoiced to see my day;
and he saw it, and was glad."
2. For not alone upon Abraham's account did He say these things, but
also that He might point out how all who have known God from the
beginning, and have foretold the advent of Christ, have received the
revelation from the Son Himself; who also in the last times was made
visible and passable, and spake with the human race, that He might
from the stones raise up children unto Abraham, and fulfil the
promise which God had given him, and that He might make his seed as
the stars of heaven,(5) as John the Baptist says: "For God is able
from these stones to raise up children unto Abraham."(6) Now, this
Jesus did by drawing us off from the religion of stones, and
bringing us over from hard and fruitless cogitations, and
establishing in us a faith like to Abraham. As Paul does also
testify, saying that we are children of Abraham because of the
similarity of our faith, and the promise of inheritance.(7)
3. He is therefore one and the same God, who called Abraham and gave
him the promise. But He is the Creator, who does also through Christ
prepare lights in the world, [namely] those who believe from among
the Gentiles. And He says, "Ye are the light of the world;"(8) that
is, as the stars of heaven. Him, therefore, I have rightly shown to
be known by no man, unless by the Son, and to whomsoever the Son
shall reveal Him. But the Son reveals the Father to all to whom He
wills that He should be known; and neither without the goodwill of
the Father nor without the agency of the Son, can any man know God.
Wherefore did the Lord say to His disciples, "I am the way, the
truth, and the life and no man cometh unto the Father but by Me. If
ye had known Me, ye would have known My Father also: and from
henceforth ye have both known Him, and have seen Him."(9) From these
words it is evident, that He is known by the Son, that is, by the
Word.
4. Therefore have the Jews departed from God, in not receiving His
Word, but imagining that they could know the Father [apart] by
Himself, without the Word, that is, without the Son; they being
ignorant of that God who spake in human shape to Abraham,(10) and
again to Moses, saying, "I have surely seen the affliction of My
people in Egypt, and I have come down to deliver them."(11) For the
Son, who is the Word of God, arranged these things beforehand from
the beginning, the Father being in no want of angels, in order that
He might call the creation into being, and form man, for whom also
the creation was made; nor, again, standing in need of any
instrumentality for the framing of created things, or for the
ordering of those things which had reference to man; while, [at the
same time,] He has a vast and unspeakable number of servants. For
His offspring and His similitude(12) do minister to Him in every
respect; that is, the Son and the Holy Spirit, the Word and Wisdom;
whom all the angels serve, and to whom they are subject. Vain,
therefore, ark those who, because of that declaration, "No man
knoweth the Father, but the Son,"(13) do introduce another unknown
Father.
CHAP. VIII.--VAIN AttEMPTS OF MARCION AND HIS FOLLOWERS, WHO
EXCLUDE ABRAHAM FROM THE SALVATION BESTOWED BY CHRIST, WHO LIBERATED
NOT ONLY ABRAHAM, BUT THE SEED OF ABRAHAM, BY FULFILLING AND NOT
DESTROYING THE LAW WHEN HE HEALED ON THE SABBATH-DAY.
1. Vain, too, is [the effort of] Marcion and his followers when they
[seek to] exclude Abraham from the inheritance, to whom the Spirit
through many men, and now by Paul, bears witness, that "he believed
God, and it was imputed unto him for righteousness."(14) And the
Lord [also bears witness to him,] in the first place, indeed, by
raising up children to him from the stones, and making his seed as
the stars of heaven, saying, "They shall come from the east and from
the west, from the north and from the south, and shall recline with
Abraham, and Isaac, and Jacob in the kingdom of heaven;"(15) and
then again by saying to the Jews, "When ye shall see Abraham, and
Isaac, and Jacob, and all the prophets in the kingdom of heaven, but
you yourselves cast out."(1) This, then, is a clear point, that
those who disallow his salvation, and frame the idea of another God
besides Him who made the promise to Abraham, are outside the kingdom
of God, and are disinherited from [the gift of] incorruption,
setting at naught and blaspheming God, who introduces, through Jesus
Christ, Abraham to the kingdom of heaven, and his seed, that is, the
Church, upon which also is conferred the adoption and the
inheritance promised to Abraham.
2. For the Lord vindicated Abraham's posterity by loosing them from
bondage and calling them to salvation, as He did in the case of the
woman whom He healed, saying openly to those who had not faith like
Abraham, "Ye hypocrites,(2) doth not each one of you on the
Sabbath-days loose his ox or his ass, and lead him away to watering?
And ought not this woman, being a daughter of Abraham, whom Satan
hath bound these eighteen years, be loosed from this bond on the
Sabbath-days?"(3) It is clear therefore, that He loosed and vivified
those who believe in Him as Abraham did, doing nothing contrary to
the law when He healed upon the Sabbath-day. For the law did not
prohibit men from being healed upon the Sabbaths; [on the contrary,]
it even circumcised them upon that day, and gave command that the
offices should be performed by the priests for the people; yea, it
did not disallow the healing even of dumb animals. Both at Siloam
and on frequent subsequent(4) occasions, did He perform cures upon
the Sabbath; and for this reason many used to resort to Him on the
Sabbath-days. For the law commanded them to abstain from every
servile work, that is, from all grasping after wealth which is
procured by trading and by other worldly business; but it exhorted
them to attend to the exercises of the soul, which consist in
reflection, and to addresses of a beneficial kind for their
neighbours' benefit. And therefore the Lord reproved those who
unjustly blamed Him for having healed upon the Sabbath-days. For He
did not make void, but fulfilled the law, by performing the offices
of the high priest, propitiating God for men, and cleansing the
lepers, healing the sick, and Himself suffering death, that exiled
man might go forth from condemnation, and might return without fear
to his own inheritance.
3. And again, the law did not forbid those who were hungry on the
Sabbath-days to take food lying ready at hand: it did, however,
forbid them to reap and to gather into the barn. And therefore did
the Lord say to those who were blaming His disciples because they
plucked and ate the ears of corn, rubbing them in their hands, "Have
ye not read this, what David did, when himself was an hungered; how
he went into the house of God, and ate the shew-bread, and gave to
those who were with him; which it is not lawful to eat, but for the
priests alone?"(5) justifying His disciples by the words of the law,
and pointing out that it was lawful for the priests to act freely.
For David had been appointed a priest by God, although Saul
persecuted him. For all the righteous possess the sacerdotal
rank.(6) And all the apostles of the Lord are priests, who do
inherit here neither lands nor houses, but serve God and the altar
continually. Of whom Moses also says in Deuteronomy, when blessing
Levi, "Who said unto his father and to his mother, I have not known
thee; neither did he acknowledge his brethren, and he disinherited
his own sons: he kept Thy commandments, and observed Thy
covenant."(7) But who are they that have left father and mother, and
have said adieu to all their neighbours, on account of the word of
God and His covenant, unless the disciples of the Lord? Of whom
again Moses says, "They shall have no inheritance, for the Lord
Himself is their inheritance."(8) And again, "The priests the
Levites shall have no part in the whole tribe of Levi, nor substance
with Israel; their substance is the offerings (fructifications) of
the Lord: these shall they eat."(9) Wherefore also Paul says, "I do
not seek after a gift, but I seek after fruit."(10) To His disciples
He said, who had a priesthood of the Lord,(11) to whom it was lawful
when hungry to eat the ears of corn,(12) "For the workman is worthy
of his meat."(13) And the priests in the temple profaned the
Sabbath, and were blameless. Wherefore, then, were they blameless?
Because when in the temple they were not engaged in secular affairs,
but in the service of the Lord, fulfilling the law, but not going
beyond it, as that man did, who of his own accord carded dry wood
into the camp of God, and was justly stoned to death.(14) "For every
tree that bringeth not forth good fruit shall be hewn down, and cast
into the fire;"(15) and "whosoever shall defile the temple of God,
him shall God defile."(16)
CHAP. IX.--THERE IS BUT ONE AUTHOR, AND ONE END TO BOTH
COVENANTS.
1. All things therefore are of one and the same substance, that is,
from one and the same God; as also the Lord says to the disciples
"Therefore every scribe, which is instructed unto the kingdom of
heaven, is like unto a man that is an householder, which bringeth
forth out of his treasure things new and old."(1) He did not teach
that he who brought forth the old was one, and he that brought forth
the new, another; but that they were one and the same. For the Lord
is the good man of the house, who rules the tire house of His
Father; and who delivers a law suited both for slaves and those who
are as yet undisciplined; and gives fitting precepts to those that
are free, and have been justified by faith, as well as throws His
own inheritance open to those that are sons. And He called His
disciples "scribes" and "teachers of the kingdom of heaven;" of whom
also He elsewhere says to the Jews: "Behold, I send unto you wise
men, and scribes, and teachers; and some of them ye shall kill, and
persecute from city to city."(2) Now, without contradiction, He
means by those things which are brought forth from the treasure new
and old, the two covenants; the old, that giving of the law which
took place formerly; and He points out as the new, that manner of
life required by the Gospel, of which David says, "Sing unto the
LORD a new song;"(3) and Esaias, "Sing unto the LORD a new hymn. His
beginning (initium), His name is glorified from the height of the
earth: they declare His powers in the isles."(4) And Jeremiah says:
"Behold, I will make a new covenant, not as I made with your
fathers"(5) in Mount Horeb. But one and the same householder
produced both covenants, the Word of God, our Lord Jesus Christ, who
spake with both Abraham and Moses, and who has restored us anew to
liberty, and has multiplied that grace which is from Himself.
2. He declares: "For in this place is One greater than the
temple."(6) But [the words] greater and less are not applied to
those things which have nothing in common between themselves, and
are of an opposite nature, and mutually repugnant; but are used in
the case of those of the same substance, and which possess
properties in common, but merely differ in number and size; such as
water from water, and light from light, and grace from grace.
Greater, therefore, is that legislation which has been given in
order liberty than that given in order to bondage; and therefore it
has also been diffused, not throughout one nation [only], but over
the whole world. For one and the same Lord, who is greater than the
temple, greater than Solomon, and greater than Jonah, confers gifts
upon men, that is, His own presence, and the resurrection from the
dead; but He does not change God, nor proclaim another Father, but
that very same one, who always has more to measure out to those of
His household. And as their love towards God increases, He bestows
more and greater [gifts]; as also the Lord said to His disciples:
"Ye shall see greater things than these."(7) And Paul declares: "Not
that I have already attained, or that I am justified, or already
have been made perfect. For we know in part, and we prophesy in
part; but when that which is perfect has come, the things which are
in part shall be done away."(8) As, therefore, when that which is
perfect is come, we shall not see another Father, but Him whom we
now desire to see (for "blessed are the pure in heart: for they
shall see God"(9)); neither shall we look for another Christ and Son
of God, but Him who [was born] of the Virgin Mary, who also
suffered, in whom too we trust, and whom we love; as Esaias says:
"And they shall say in that day, Behold our LORD God, in whom we
have trusted, and we have rejoiced in our salvation;"(10) and Peter
says in his Epistle: "Whom, not seeing, ye love; in whom, though now
ye see Him not, ye have believed, ye shall rejoice with joy
unspeakable;"(11) neither do we receive another Holy Spirit, besides
Him who is with us, and who cries, "Abba, Father;"(12) and we shall
make increase in the very same things [as now], and shall make
progress, so that no longer through a glass, or by means of enigmas,
but face to face, we shall enjoy the gifts of God;--so also now,
receiving more than the temple, and more than Solomon, that is, the
advent of the Son of God, we have not been taught another God
besides the Framer and the Maker of all, who has been pointed out to
us from the beginning; nor another Christ, the Son of God, besides
Him who was foretold by the prophets.
3. For the new covenant having been known and preached by the
prophets, He who was to carry it out according to the good pleasure
of the Father was also preached; having been revealed to men as God
pleased; that they might always make progress through believing in
Him, and by means of the [successive] covenants, should gradually
attain to perfect salvation.(1) For there is one salvation and one
God; but the precepts which form the man are numerous, and the steps
which lead man to God are not a few. It is allowable for an earthly
and temporal king, though he is [but] a man, to grant to his
subjects greater advantages at times: shall not this then be lawful
for God, since He is [ever] the same, and is always willing to
confer a greater [degree of] grace upon the human race, and to
honour continually with many gifts those who please Him? But if this
be to make progress, [namely,] to find out another Father besides
Him who was preached from the beginning; and again, besides him who
is imagined to have been discovered in the second place, to find out
a third other,--then the progress of this man will consist in his
also proceeding from a third to a fourth; and from this, again, to
another and another: and thus he who thinks that he is always making
progress of such a kind, will never rest in one God. For, being
driven away from Him who truly is [God], and being turned backwards,
he shall be for ever seeking, yet shall never find out God;(2) but
shall continually swim in an abyss without limits, unless, being
converted by repentance, he return to the place from which he had
been cast out, confessing one God, the Father, the Creator, and
believing [in Him] who was declared by the law and the prophets, who
was borne witness to by Christ, as He did Himself declare to those
who were accusing His disciples of not observing the tradition of
the elders: "Why do ye make void the law of God by reason of your
tradition? For God said, Honour thy father and mother; and,
Whosoever curseth father or mother, let him die the death."(3) And
again, He says to them a second time: "And ye have made void the
word of God(4) by reason of your tradition;" Christ confessing in
the plainest manner Him to be Father and God, who said in the law,
"Honour thy father and mother; that it may be well with thee."(5)
For the true God did confess the commandment of the law as the word
of God, and called no one else God besides His own Father.
CHAP. X. -- THE OLD TESTAMENT SCRIPTURES, AND THOSE WRITTEN BY
MOSES IN PARTICULAR, DO EVERYWHERE MAKE MENTION OF THE SON OF GOD,
AND FORETELL HIS ADVENT AND PASSION. FROM THIS FACT IT FOLLOWS THAT
THEY WERE INSPIRED BY ONE AND THE SAME GOD.
1. Wherefore also John does appropriately relate that the Lord said
to the Jews: "Ye search the Scriptures, in which ye think ye have
eternal life; these are they which testify of me. And ye are not
willing to come unto Me, that ye may have life."(6) How therefore
did the Scriptures testify of Him, unless they were from one and the
same Father, instructing men beforehand as to the advent of His Son,
and foretelling the salvation brought in by Him? "For if ye had
believed Moses, ye would also have believed Me; for he wrote of
Me;"(7) [saying this,] no doubt, because the Son of God is implanted
everywhere throughout his writings: at one time, indeed, speaking
with Abraham, when about to eat with him; at another time with Noah,
giving to him the dimensions [of the ark]; at another; inquiring
after Adam; at another, bringing down judgment upon the Sodomites;
and again, when He becomes visible,(8) and directs Jacob on his
journey, and speaks with Moses from the bush.(9) And it would be
endless to recount [the occasions] upon which the Son of God is
shown forth by Moses. Of the day of His passion, too, he was not
ignorant; but foretold Him, after a figurative manner, by the name
given to the passover;(10) and at that very festival, which had been
proclaimed such a long time previously by Moses, did our Lord
suffer, thus fulfilling the passover. And he did not describe the
day only, but the place also, and the time of day at which the
sufferings ceased,(11) and the sign of the setting of the sun,
saying: "Thou mayest not sacrifice the passover within any other of
thy cities which the LORD God gives thee; but in the place which the
LORD thy God shall choose that His name be called on there, thou
shalt sacrifice the passover at even, towards the setting of the
sun."(12)
2. And already he had also declared His advent, saying, "There shall
not fail a chief in Judah, nor a leader from his loins, until He
come for whom it is laid up, and He is the hope of the nations;
binding His foal to the vine, and His ass's colt to the creeping
ivy. He shall wash His stole in wine, and His upper garment in the
blood of the grape; His eyes shall be more joyous than wine,(1) and
His teeth whiter than milk."(2) For, let those who have the
reputation of investigating everything, inquire at what time a
prince and leader failed out of Judah, and who is the hope of the
nations, who also is the vine, what was the ass's colt [referred to
as] His, what the clothing, and what the eyes, what the teeth, and
what the wine, and thus let them investigate every one of the points
mentioned; and they shall find that there was none other announced
than our Lord, Christ Jesus. Wherefore Moses, when chiding the
ingratitude of the people, said, "Ye infatuated people, and unwise,
do ye thus requite the LORD?"(3) And again, he indicates that He who
from the beginning founded and created them, the Word, who also
redeems and vivifies us in the last times, is shown as hanging on
the tree, and they will not believe on Him. For he says, "And thy
life shall be hanging before thine eyes, and thou wilt not believe
thy life."(4) And again, "Has not this same one thy Father owned
thee, and made thee, and created thee?"(5)
CHAP. XI. --THE OLD PROPHETS AND RIGHTEOUS MEN KNEW BEFOREHAND OF
THE ADVENT OF CHRIST, AND EARNESTLY DESIRED TO SEE AND HEAR HIM, HE
REVEALING HIMSELF IN THE SCRIPTURES BY THE HOLY GHOST, AND WITHOUT
ANY CHANGE IN HIMSELF, ENRICHING MEN DAY BY DAY WITH BENEFITS, BUT
CONFERRING THEM IN GREATER ABUNDANCE ON LATER THAN ON FORMER
GENERATIONS.
1. But that it was not only the prophets and many righteous men,
who, foreseeing through the Holy Spirit His advent, prayed that they
might attain to that period in which they should see their Lord face
to face, and hear His words, the Lord has made manifest, when He
says to His disciples, "Many prophets and righteous men have desired
to see those things which ye see, and have not seen them; and to
hear those things which ye hear, and have not heard them."(6) In
what way, then, did they desire both to hear and to see, unless they
had foreknowledge of His future advent? But how could they have
foreknown it, unless they had previously received foreknowledge from
Himself? And how do the Scriptures testify of Him, unless all things
had ever been revealed and shown to believers by one and the same
God through the Word; He at one time conferring with His creature,
and at another pro-pounding His law; at one time, again, reproving,
at another exhorting, and then setting free His servant, and
adopting him as a son (in filium); and, at the proper time,
bestowing an incorruptible inheritance, for the purpose of bringing
man to perfection? For He formed him for growth and increase, as the
Scripture says: "Increase and multiply."(7)
2. And in this respect God differs from man, that God indeed makes,
but man is made; and truly, He who makes is always the same; but
that which is made must receive both beginning, and middle, and
addition, and increase. And God does indeed create after a skilful
manner, while, [as regards] man, he is created skilfully. God also
is truly perfect in all things, Himself equal and similar to
Himself, as He is all light, and all mind, and all substance, and
the fount of all good; but man receives advancement and increase
towards God. For as God is always the same, so also man, when found
in God, shall always go on towards God. For neither does God at any
time cease to confer benefits upon, or to enrich man; nor does man
ever cease from receiving the benefits, and being enriched by God.
For the receptacle of His goodness, and the instrument of His
glorification, is the man who is grateful to Him that made him; and
again, the receptacle of His just judgment is the ungrateful man,
who both despises his Maker and is not subject to His Word; who has
promised that He will give very much to those always bringing forth
fruit, and more [and more] to those who have the Lord's money. "Well
done," He says, "good and faithful servant: because thou hast been
faithful in little, I will appoint thee over many things; enter thou
into the joy of thy Lord."(8) The Lord Himself thus promises very
much.
3. As, therefore, He has promised to give very much to those who do
now bring forth fruit, according to the gift of His grace, but not
according to the changeableness of "knowledge;" for the Lord remains
the same, and the same Father is revealed; thus, therefore, has the
one and the same Lord granted, by means of His advent, a greater
gift of grace to those of a later period, than what He had granted
to those under the Old Testament dispensation. For they indeed used
to hear, by means of [His] servants, that the King would come, and
they rejoiced to a certain extent, inasmuch as they hoped for His
coming; but those who have beheld Him actually present, and have
obtained liberty, and been made partakers of His gifts, do possess a
greater amount of grace, and a higher degree of exultation,
rejoicing because of the King's arrival: as also David says, "My
soul shall rejoice in the LORD; it shall be glad in His
salvation."(1) And for this cause, upon His entrance into Jerusalem,
all those who were in the way(2) recognised David their king in His
sorrow of soul, and spread their garments for Him, and ornamented
the way with green boughs, crying out with great joy and gladness,
"Hosanna to the Son of David; blessed is He that cometh in the name
of the Lord: hosanna in the highest."(3) But to the envious wicked
stewards, who circumvented those under them, and ruled over those
that had no great intelligence,(4) and for this reason were
unwilling that the king should come, and who said to Him, "Hearest
thou what these say?" did the Lord reply, "Have ye never read, Out
of the mouths of babes and sucklings hast Thou perfected
praise?"(5)--thus pointing out that what had been declared by David
concerning the Son of God, was accomplished in His own person; and
indicating that they were indeed ignorant of the meaning of the
Scripture and the dispensation of God; but declaring that it was
Himself who was announced by the prophets as Christ, whose name is
praised in all the earth, and who perfects praise to His Father from
the mouth of babes and sucklings; wherefore also His glory has been
raised above the heavens.
4. If, therefore, the self-same person is present who was announced
by the prophets, our Lord Jesus Christ, and if His advent has
brought in a fuller [measure of] grace and greater gifts to those
who have received Him, it is plain that the Father also is Himself
the same who was proclaimed by the prophets, and that the Son, on
His coming, did not spread the knowledge of another Father, but of
the same who was preached from the beginning; from whom also He has
brought down liberty to those who, in a lawful manner, and with a
willing mind, and with all the heart, do Him service; whereas to
scoffers, and to those not subject to God, but who follow outward
purifications for the praise of men (which observances had been
given as a type of future things, -- the law typifying, as it were,
certain things in a shadow, and delineating eternal things by
temporal, celestial by terrestrial), and to those who pretend that
they do themselves observe more than what has been prescribed, as if
preferring their own zeal to God Himself, while within they are full
of hypocrisy, and covetousness, and all wickedness, -- [to such] has
He assigned everlasting perdition by cutting them off from life.
CHAP.XII.--IT CLEARLY APPEARS THAT THERE WAS BUT ONE AUTHOR OF
BOTH THE OLD AND THE NEW LAW, FROM THE FACT THAT CHRIST CONDEMNED
TRADITIONS AND CUSTOMS REPUGNANT TO THE FORMER, WHILE HE CONFIRMED
ITS MOST IMPORTANT PRECEPTS, AND TAUGHT THAT HE WAS HIMSELF THE END
OF THE MOSAIC LAW.
1. For the tradition of the elders themselves, which they pretended
to observe from the law, was contrary to the law given by Moses.
Wherefore also Esaias declares: "Thy dealers mix the wine with
water,"(6) showing that the elders were in the habit of mingling a
watered tradition with the simple command of God; that is, they set
up a spurious law, and one contrary to the[true] law; as also the
Lord made plain, when He said to them, "Why do ye transgress the
commandment of God, for the sake of your tradition?"(7) For not only
by actual transgression did they set the law of God at nought,
mingling the wine with water; but they also set up their own law in
opposition to it, which is termed, even to the present day, the
pharisaical. In this [law] they suppress certain things, add others,
and interpret others, again, as they think proper, which their
teachers use, each one in particular; and desiring to uphold these
traditions, they were unwilling to be subject to the law of God,
which prepares them for the coming of Christ. But they did even
blame the Lord for healing on the Sabbath-days, which, as I have
already observed, the law did not prohibit. For they did themselves,
in one sense, perform acts of healing upon the Sabbath-day, when
they circumcised a man [on that day]; but they did not blame
themselves for transgressing the command of God through tradition
and the aforesaid pharisaical law, and for not keeping the
commandment of the law, which is the love of God.
2. But that this is the first and greatest commandment, and that the
next [has respect to love] towards our neighbour, the Lord has
taught, when He says that the entire law and the prophets hang upon
these two commandments. Moreover, He did not Himself bring down
[from heaven] any other commandment greater than this one, but
renewed this very same one to His disciples, when He enjoined them
to love God with all their heart, and others as themselves. But if
He had descended from another Father, He never would have made use
of the first and greatest commandment of the law; but He would
undoubtedly have endeavoured by all means to bring down a greater
one than this from the perfect Father, so as not to make use of that
which had been given by the God of the law. And Paul in like manner
declares, "Love is the fulfilling of the law:"(1) and [he declares]
that when all other things have been destroyed, there shall remain
"faith, hope, and love; but the greatest of all is love;"(2) and
that apart from the love of God, neither knowledge avails
anything,(3) nor the understanding of mysteries, nor faith, nor
prophecy, but that without love all are hollow and vain; moreover,
that love makes man perfect; and that he who loves God is perfect,
both in this world and in that which is to come. For we do never
cease from loving God; but in proportion as we continue to
contemplate Him, so much the more do we love Him.
3. As in the law, therefore, and in the Gospel [likewise], the first
and greatest commandment is, to love the Lord God with the whole
heart, and then there follows a commandment like to it, to love
one's neighbour as one's self; the author of the law and the Gospel
is shown to be one and the same. For the precepts of an absolutely
perfect life, since they are the same in each Testament, have
pointed out [to us] the same God, who certainly has promulgated
particular laws adapted for each; but the more prominent and the
greatest [commandments], without which salvation cannot [be
attained], He has exhorted [us to observe] the same in both.
4. The Lord, too, does not do away with this [God], when He shows
that the law was not derived from another God, expressing Himself as
follows to those who were being instructed by Him, to the multitude
and to His disciples: "The scribes and Pharisees sit in Moses' seat.
All, therefore, whatsoever they bid you observe, that observe and
do; but do not ye after their works: for they say, and do not. For
they bind heavy burdens, and lay them upon men's shoulders; but they
themselves will not so much as move them with a finger."(4) He
therefore did not throw blame upon that law which was given by
Moses, when He exhorted it to be observed, Jerusalem being as yet in
safety; but He did throw blame upon those persons, because they
repeated indeed the words of the law, yet were without love. And for
this reason were they held as being unrighteous as respects God, and
as respects their neighbours. As also Isaiah says: "This people
honoureth Me with their lips, but their heart is far from Me:
howbeit in vain do they worship Me, teaching the doctrines and the
commandments of men."(5) He does not call the law given by Moses
commandments of men, but the traditions of the eiders themselves
which they had invented, and in upholding which they made the law of
God of none effect, and were on this account also not subject to His
Word. For this is what Paul says concerning these men: "For they,
being ignorant of God's righteousness, and going about to establish
their own righteousness, have not submitted themselves to the
righteousness of God. For Christ is the end of the law for
righteousness to every one that believeth."(6) And how is Christ the
end of the law, if He be not also the final Cause of it? For He who
has brought in the end has Himself also wrought the beginning; and
it is He who does Himself say to Moses, "I have surely seen the
affliction of my people which is in Egypt, and I have come down to
deliver them;"(7) it being customary from the beginning with the
Word of God to ascend and descend for the purpose of saving those
who were in affliction.
5. Now, that the law did beforehand teach mankind the necessity of
following Christ, He does Himself make manifest, when He replied as
follows to him who asked Him what he should do that he might inherit
eternal life: "If thou wilt enter into life, keep the
commandments."(8) But upon the other asking "Which?"" again the Lord
replies: "Do not commit adultery, do not kill, do not steal, do not
bear false witness, hon-our father and mother, and thou shalt love
thy neighbour as thyself,"--setting as an ascending series (velut
gradus) before those who wished to follow Him, the precepts of the
law, as the entrance into life; and What He then said to one He said
to all. But when the former said, "All these have I done" (and most
likely he had not kept them, for in that case the Lord would not
have said to him, "Keep the commandments"), the Lord, exposing his
covetousness, said to him, "If thou wilt be perfect, go, sell all
that thou hast, and distribute to the poor; and come, follow me;"
promising to those who would act thus, the portion belonging to the
apostles (apostolorum partem). And He did not preach to His
followers another God the Father, besides Him who was proclaimed by
the law from the beginning; nor another Son; nor the Mother, the
enthymesis of the AEon, who existed in suffering and apostasy; nor
the Pleroma of the thirty AEons, which has been proved vain, and
incapable of being believed in; nor that fable invented by the other
heretics. But He taught that they should obey the commandments which
God enjoined from the beginning, and do away with their former
covetousness by good works,(9) and follow after Christ. But that
possessions distributed to the poor do annul former covetousness,
Zaccheus made evident, when he said, "Behold, the half of my goods I
give to the poor; and if I have defrauded any one, I restore
fourfold."(1)
CHAP. XIII.--CHRIST DID NOT ABROGATE THE NATURAL PRECEPTS OF THE
LAW, BUT RATHER FULFILLED AND EXTENDED THEM. HE REMOVED THE YOKE AND
BONDAGE OF THE OLD LAW, SO THAT MANKIND, BEING NOW SET FREE, MIGHT
SERVE GOD WITH THAT TRUSTFUL PIETY WHICH BECOMETH SONS.
1. And that the Lord did not abrogate the natural [precepts] of the
law, by which man(2) is justified, which also those who were
justified by faith, and who pleased God, did observe previous to the
giving of the law, but that He extended and fulfilled them, is shown
from His words. "For," He remarks, "it has been said to them of old
time, Do not commit adultery. But I say unto you, That every one who
hath looked upon a woman to lust after her, hath committed adultery
with her already in his heart."(3) And again: "It has been said,
Thou shalt not kill. But I say unto you, Every one who is angry with
his brother without a cause, shall be in danger of the judgment."(4)
And, "It hath been said, Thou shalt not forswear thyself. But I say
unto you, Swear not at all; but let your conversation be, Yea, yea,
and Nay, nay."(5) And other statements of a like nature. For all
these do not contain or imply an opposition to and an overturning of
the [precepts] of the past, as Marcion's followers do strenuously
maintain; but [they exhibit] a fulfilling and an extension of them,
as He does Himself declare: "Unless your righteousness shall exceed
that of the scribes and Pharisees, ye shall not enter into the
kingdom of heaven."(6) For what meant the excess referred to? In the
first place, [we must] believe not only in the Father, but also in
His Son now revealed; for He it is who leads man into fellowship and
unity with God. In the next place, [we must] not only say, but we
must do; for they said, but did not. And [we must] not only abstain
from evil deeds, but even from the desires after them. Now He did
not teach us these things as being opposed to the law, but as
fulfilling the law, and implanting in us the varied righteousness of
the law. That would have been contrary to the law, if He had
commanded His disciples to do anything which the law had prohibited.
But this which He did command--namely, not only to abstain from
things forbidden by the law, but even from longing after them--is
not contrary to [the law], as I have remarked, neither is it the
utterance of one destroying the law, but of one fulfilling,
extending, and affording greater scope to it.
2. For the law, since it was laid down for those in bondage, used to
instruct the soul by means of those corporeal objects which were of
an external nature, drawing it, as by a bond, to obey its
commandments, that man might learn to serve God. But the Word set
free the soul, and taught that through it the body should be
willingly purified. Which having been accomplished, it followed as
of course, that the bonds of slavery should be removed, to which man
had now become accustomed, and that he should follow God without
fetters: moreover, that the laws of liberty should be extended, and
subjection to the king increased, so that no one who is convened
should appear unworthy to Him who set him free, but that the piety
and obedience due to the Master of the household should be equally
rendered both by servants and children; while the children possess
greater confidence [than the servants], inasmuch as the working of
liberty is greater and more glorious than that obedience which is
rendered in [a state of] slavery.
3. And for this reason did the Lord, instead of that [commandment],
"Thou shalt not commit adultery," forbid even concupiscence; and
instead of that which runs thus, "Thou shalt not kill," He
prohibited anger; and instead of the law enjoining the giving of
tithes, [He told us] to share(7) all our possessions with the poor;
and not to love our neighbours only, but even our enemies; and not
merely to be liberal givers and bestowers, but even that we should
present a gratuitous gift to those who take away our goods. For "to
him that taketh away thy coat," He says, "give to him thy cloak
also; and from him that taketh away thy goods, ask them not again;
and as ye would that men should do unto you, do ye unto them:"(8) so
that we may not grieve as those who are unwilling to be defrauded,
but may rejoice as those who have given willingly, and as rather
conferring a favour upon our neighbours than yielding to necessity.
"And if any one," He says, "shall compel thee [to go] a mile, go
with him twain;"(9) so that thou mayest not follow him as a slave,
but may as a free man go before him, showing thyself in all things
kindly disposed and useful to thy neighbour, not regarding their
evil intentions, but performing thy kind offices, assimilating
thyself to the Father, "who maketh His sun to rise upon the evil and
the good, and sendeth rain upon the just and unjust."(1) Now all
these [precepts], as I have already observed, were not the
injunctions] of one doing away with the law, but of one fulfilling,
extending, and widening it among us; just as if one should say, that
the more extensive operation of liberty implies that a more complete
subjection and affection towards our Liberator had been implanted
within us. For He did not set us free for this purpose, that we
should depart from Him (no one, indeed, while placed out of reach of
the Lord's benefits, has power to procure for himself the means of
salvation), but that the more we receive His grace, the more we
should love Him. Now the more we have loved Him, the more glory
shall we receive from Him, when we are continually in the presence
of the Father.
4. Inasmuch, then, as all natural precepts are common to us and to
them (the Jews), they had in them indeed the beginning and origin;
but in us they have received growth and completion. For to yield
assent to God, and to follow His Word, and to love Him above all,
and one's neighbour as one's self (now man is neighbour to man), and
to abstain from every evil deed, and all other things of a like
nature which are common to both [covenants], do reveal one and the
same God. But this is our Lord, the Word of God, who in the first
instance certainly drew slaves to God, but afterwards He set those
free who were subject to Him, as He does Himself declare to His
disciples: "I will not now call you servants, for the servant
knoweth not what his lord doeth; but I have called you friends, for
all things which I have heard from My Father I have made known."(2)
For in that which He says, "I will not now call you servants," He
indicates in the most marked manner that it was Himself who did
originally appoint for men that bondage with respect to God through
the law, and then afterwards conferred upon them freedom. And in
that He says, "For the servant knoweth not what his lord doeth," He
points out, by means of His own advent, the ignorance of a people in
a servile condition. But when He terms His disciples "the friends of
God," He plainly declares Himself to be the Word of God, whom
Abraham also followed voluntarily and under no compulsion (sine
vinculis), because of the noble nature of his faith, and so became
"the friend of God."(3) But the Word of God did not accept of the
friendship of Abraham, as though He stood in need of it, for He was
perfect from the beginning ("Before Abraham was," He says, "I
am"(4)), but that He in His goodness might bestow eternal life upon
Abraham himself, inasmuch as the friendship of God imparts
immortality to those who embrace it.
CHAP. XIV.--IF GOD DEMANDS OBEDIENCE FROM MAN, IF HE FORMED MAN,
CALLED HIM AND PLACED HIM UNDER LAWS, IT WAS MERELY FOR MAN'S
WELFARE; NOT THAT GOD STOOD IN NEED OF MAN, BUT THAT HE GRACIOUSLY
CONFERRED UPON MAN HIS FAVOURS IN EVERY POSSIBLE MANNER.
1. In the beginning, therefore, did God form Adam, not as if He
stood in need of man, but that He might have [some one] upon whom to
confer His benefits. For not alone antecedently to Adam, but also
before all creation, the Word glorified His Father, remaining in
Him; and was Himself glorified by the Father, as He did Himself
declare, "Father, glorify Thou Me with the glory which I had with
Thee before the world was."(5) Nor did He stand in need of our
service when He ordered us to follow Him; but He thus bestowed
salvation upon ourselves. For to follow the Saviour is to be a
partaker of salvation, and to follow light is to receive light. But
those who are in light do not themselves illumine the light, but are
illumined and revealed by it: they do certainly contribute nothing
to it, but, receiving the benefit, they are illumined by the light.
Thus, also, service [rendered] to God does indeed profit God
nothing, nor has God need of human obedience; but He grants to those
who follow and serve Him life and in-corruption and eternal glory,
bestowing benefit upon those who serve [Him], because they do serve
Him, and on His followers, because they do follow Him; but does not
receive any benefit from them: for He is rich, perfect, and in need
of nothing. But for this reason does God demand service from men, in
order that, since He is good and merciful, He may benefit those who
continue in His service. For, as much as God is in want of nothing,
so much does man stand in need of fellowship with God. For this is
the glory of man, to continue and remain permanently in God's
service. Wherefore also did the Lord say to His disciples, "Ye have
not chosen Me, but I have chosen you;"(6) indicating that they did
not glorify Him when they followed Him; but that, in following the
Son of God, they were glorified by Him. And again, "I will, that
where I am, there they also may be, that they may behold My
glory;"(7) not vainly boasting because of this, but desiring that
His disciples should share in His glory: of whom Esaias also says,
"I will bring thy seed from the east, and will gather thee from the
west; and I will say to the north, Give up; and to the south, Keep
not back: bring My sons from far, and My daughters from the ends of
the earth; all, as many as have been called in My name: for in My
glory I have prepared, and formed, and made him."(1) Inasmuch as
then, "wheresoever the carcase is, there shall also the eagles be
gathered together,"(2) we do participate in the glory of the Lord,
who has both formed us, and prepared us for this, that, when we are
with Him, we may partake of His glory.
2. Thus it was, too, that God formed man at the first, because of
His munificence; but chose the patriarchs for the sake of their
salvation; and prepared a people beforehand, teaching the headstrong
to follow God; and raised up prophets upon earth, accustoming man to
bear His Spirit [within him], and to hold communion with God: He
Himself, indeed, having need of nothing, but granting communion with
Himself to those who stood in need of it, and sketching out, like an
architect, the plan of salvation to those that pleased Him. And He
did Himself furnish guidance to those who beheld Him not in Egypt,
while to those who became unruly in the desert He promulgated a law
very suitable [to their condition]. Then, on the people who entered
into the good land He bestowed a noble inheritance; and He killed
the fatted calf for those converted to the Father, and presented
them with the finest robe.(3) Thus, in a variety of ways, He
adjusted the human race to an agreement with salvation. On this
account also does John declare in the Apocalypse, "And His voice as
the sound of many waters."(4) For the Spirit [of God] is truly
[like] many waters, since the Father is both rich and great. And the
Word, passing through all those [men], did liberally confer benefits
upon His subjects, by drawing up in writing a law adapted and
applicable to every class [among them].
3. Thus, too, He imposed upon the [Jewish] people the construction
of the tabernacle, the building of the temple, the election of the
Levites, sacrifices also, and oblations, legal monitions, and all
the other service of the law. He does Himself truly want none of
these things, for He is always full of all good, and had in Himself
all the odour of kindness, and every perfume of sweet-smelling
savours, even before Moses existed. Moreover, He instructed the
people, who were prone to turn to idols, instructing them by
repeated appeals to persevere and to serve God, calling them to the
things of primary importance by means of those which were secondary;
that is, to things that are real, by means of those that are
typical; and by things temporal, to eternal; and by the carnal to
the spiritual; and by the earthly to the heavenly; as was also said
to Moses, "Thou shalt make all things after the pattern of those
things which thou sawest in the mount."(5) For during forty days He
was learning to keep [in his memory] the words of God, and the
celestial patterns, and the spiritual images, and the types of
things to come; as also Paul says: "For they drank of the rock which
followed them: and the rock was Christ."(6) And again, having first
mentioned what are contained in the law, he goes on to say: "Now all
these things happened to them in a figure; but they were written for
our admonition, upon whom the end of the ages is come." For by means
of types they learned to fear God, and to continue devoted to His
service.
CHAP.XV.--AT FIRST GOD DEEMED IT SUFFICIENT TO INSCRIBE THE
NATURAL LAW, OR THE DECALOGUE, UPON THE HEARTS OF MEN; BUT
AFTERWARDS HE FOUND IT NECESSARY TO BRIDLE, WITH THE YOKE OF THE
MOSAIC LAW, THE DESIRES OF THE JEWS, WHO WERE ABUSING THEIR LIBERTY;
AND EVEN TO ADD SOME SPECIAL COMMANDS, BECAUSE OF THE HARDNESS OF
THEIR HEARTS.
1. They (the Jews) had therefore a law, a course of discipline, and
a prophecy of future things. For God at the first, indeed, warning
them by means of natural precepts, which from the beginning He had
implanted in mankind, that is, by means of the Decalogue (which, if
any one does not observe, he has no salvation), did then demand
nothing more of them. As Moses says in Deuteronomy, "These are all
the words which the Lord spake to the whole assembly of the sons of
Israel on the mount, and He added no more; and He wrote them on two
tables of stone, and gave them to me."(7) For this reason [He did
so], that they who are willing to follow Him might keep these
commandments. But when they turned themselves to make a calf, and
had gone back in their minds to Egypt, desiring to be slaves instead
of free-men, they were placed for the future in a state of servitude
suited to their wish,--[a slavery] which did not indeed cut them off
from God, but subjected them to the yoke of bondage; as Ezekiel the
prophet, when stating the reasons for the giving of such a law,
declares: "And their eyes were after the desire of their heart; and
I gave them statutes that were not good, and judgments in which they
shall not live."(8) Luke also has recorded that Stephen, who was the
first elected into the diaconate by the apostles,(1) and who was the
first slain for the testimony of Christ, spoke regarding Moses as
follows: "This man did indeed receive the commandments of the living
God to give to us, whom your fathers would not obey, but thrust [Him
from them], and in their hearts turned back again into Egypt, saying
unto Aaron, Make us gods to go before us; for we do not know what
has happened to [this] Moses, who led us from the land of Egypt. And
they made a calf in those days, and offered sacrifices to the idol,
and were rejoicing in the works of their own hands. But God turned,
and gave them up to worship the hosts of heaven; as it is written in
the book of the prophets:(2) O ye house of Israel, have ye offered
to Me sacrifices and oblations for forty years in the wilderness?
And ye took up the tabernacle of Moloch, and the star of the god
Remphan,(3) figures which ye made to worship them;"(4) pointing out
plainly, that the law being such, was not given to them by another
God, but that, adapted to their condition of servitude, [it
originated] from the very same [God as we worship]. Wherefore also
He says to Moses in Exodus: "I will send forth My angel before thee;
for I will not go up with thee, because thou art a stiff-necked
people."(5)
2. And not only so, but the Lord also showed that certain precepts
were enacted for them by Moses, on account of their hardness [of
heart], and because of their unwillingness to be obedient, when, on
their saying to Him, "Why then did Moses command to give a writing
of divorcement, and to send away a wife?" He said to them, "Because
of the hardness of your hearts he permitted these things to you; but
from the beginning it was not so;"(6) thus exculpating Moses as a
faithful servant, but acknowledging one God, who from the beginning
made male and female, and reproving them as hard-hearted and
disobedient. And therefore it was that they received from Moses this
law of divorcement, adapted to their hard nature. But why say I
these things concerning the Old Testament? For in the New also are
the apostles found doing this very thing, on the ground which has
been mentioned, Paul plainly declaring, But these things I say, not
the Lord."(7) And again: "But this I speak by permission, not by
commandment."(8) And again: "Now, as concerning virgins, I have no
commandment from the Lord; yet I give my judgment, as one that hath
obtained mercy of the Lord to be faithful."(9) But further, in
another place he says: "That Satan tempt you not for your
incontinence."(10) If, therefore, even in the New Testament, the
apostles are found granting certain precepts in consideration of
human infirmity, because of the incontinence of some, lest such
persons, having grown obdurate, and despairing altogether of their
salvation, should become apostates from God,--it ought not to be
wondered at, if also in the Old Testament the same God permitted
similar indulgences for the benefit of His people, drawing them on
by means of the ordinances already mentioned, so that they might
obtain the gift of salvation through them, while they obeyed the
Decalogue, and being restrained by Him, should not revert to
idolatry, nor apostatize from God, but learn to love Him with the
whole heart. And if certain persons, because of the disobedient and
ruined Israelites, do assert that the giver (doctor) of the law was
limited in power, they will find in our dispensation, that "many are
called, but few chosen;"(11) and that there are those who inwardly
are wolves, yet wear sheep's clothing in the eyes of the world
(foris); and that God has always preserved freedom, and the power of
self-government in man,(12) while at the same time He issued His own
exhortations, in order that those who do not obey Him should be
righteously judged (condemned) because they have not obeyed Him; and
that those who have obeyed and believed on Him should be honoured
with immortality.
CHAP. XVI.--PERFECT RIGHTEOUSNESS WAS CONFERRED NEITHER BY
CIRCUMCISION NOR BY ANY OTHER LEGAL CEREMONIES. THE DECALOGUE,
HOWEVER, WAS NOT CANCELLED BY CHRIST, BUT IS ALWAYS IN FORCE: MEN
WERE NEVER RELEASED FROM ITS COMMANDMENTS.
1. Moreover, we learn from the Scripture itself, that God gave
circumcision, not as the completer of righteousness, but as a sign,
that the race of Abraham might continue recognisable. For it
declares: "God said unto Abraham, Every male among you shall be
circumcised; and ye shall circumcise the flesh of your foreskins, as
a token of the covenant between Me and you."(13) This same does
Ezekiel the prophet say with regard to the Sabbaths: "Also I gave
them My Sabbaths, to be a sign between Me and them, that they might
know that I am the Lord, that sanctify them."(14) And in Exodus, God
says to Moses: "And ye shall observe My Sabbaths; for it shall be a
sign between Me and you for your generations."(1) These things,
then, were given for a sign; but the signs were not unsymbolical,
that is, neither unmeaning nor to no purpose, inasmuch as they were
given by a wise Artist; but the circumcision after the flesh
typified that after the Spirit. For "we," says the apostle, "have
been circumcised with the circumcision made without hands."(2) And
the prophet declares, "Circumcise the hardness of your heart."(3)
But the Sabbaths taught that we should continue day by day in God's
service.(4) "For we have been counted," says the Apostle Paul, "all
the day long as sheep for the slaughter;"(5) that is, consecrated
[to God], and ministering continually to our faith, and persevering
in it, and abstaining from all avarice, and not acquiring or
possessing treasures upon earth.(6) Moreover, the Sabbath of God
(requietio Dei), that is, the kingdom, was, as it were, indicated by
created things; in which [kingdom], the man who shall have
persevered in serving God (Deo assistere) shall, in a state of rest,
partake of God's table.
2. And that man was not justified by these things, but that they
were given as a sign to the people, this fact shows,--that Abraham
himself, without circumcision and without observance of Sabbaths,
"believed God, and it was imputed unto him for righteousness; and he
was called the friend of God."(7) Then, again, Lot, without
circumcision, was brought out from Sodom, receiving salvation from
God. So also did Noah, pleasing God, although he was uncircumcised,
receive the dimensions [of the ark], of the world of the second race
[of men]. Enoch, too, pleasing God, without circumcision, discharged
the office of God's legate to the angels although he was a man, and
was translated, and is preserved until now as a witness of the just
judgment of God, because the angels when they had transgressed fell
to the earth for judgment, but the man who pleased [God] was
translated for salvation.(8) Moreover, all the rest of the multitude
of those righteous men who lived before Abraham, and of those
patriarchs who preceded Moses, were justified independently of the
things above mentioned, and without the law of Moses. As also Moses
himself says to the people in Deuteronomy: "The LORD thy God formed
a covenant in Horeb. The LORD formed not this covenant with your
fathers, but for you."(9)
3. Why, then, did the Lord not form the covenant for the fathers?
Because "the law was not established for righteous men."(10) But the
righteous fathers had the meaning of the Decalogue written in their
hearts and souls,(11) that is, they loved the God who made them, and
did no injury to their neighbour. There was therefore no occasion
that they should be cautioned by prohibitory mandates (correptoriis
literis),(12) because they had the righteousness of the law in
themselves. But when this righteousness and love to God had passed
into oblivion, and became extinct in Egypt, God did necessarily,
because of His great goodwill to men, reveal Himself by a voice, and
led the people with power out of Egypt, in order that man might
again become the disciple and follower of God; and He afflicted
those who were disobedient, that they should not contemn their
Creator; and He fed them with manna, that they might receive food
for their souls (uti rationalem acciperent escam); as also Moses
says in Deuteronomy: "And fed thee with manna, which thy fathers did
not know, that thou mightest know that man cloth not live by bread
alone; but by every word of God proceeding out of His mouth doth man
live."(13) And it enjoined love to God, and taught just dealing
towards our neighhour, that we should neither be unjust nor unworthy
of God, who prepares man for His friendship through the medium of
the Decalogue, and likewise for agreement with his
neigbbour,--matters which did certainly profit man himself; God,
however, standing in no need of anything from man.
4. And therefore does the Scripture say, "These words the Lord spake
to all the assembly of the children of Israel in the mount, and He
added no more;"(14) for, as I have already observed, He stood in
need of nothing from them. And again Moses says: "And now Israel,
what cloth the LORD thy God require of thee, but to fear the LORD
thy God, to walk in all His ways, and to love Him, and to serve the
LORD thy God with all thy heart, and with all thy soul?"(15) Now
these things did indeed make man glorious, by supplying what was
wanting to him, namely, the friendship of God; but they profited God
nothing, for God did not at all stand in need of man's love. For the
glory of God was wanting to man, which he could obtain in no other
way than by serving God. And therefore Moses says to them again:
"Choose life, that thou mayest live, and thy seed, to love the LORD
thy God, to hear His voice, to cleave unto Him; for this is thy
life, and the length of thy days."(1) Preparing man for this life,
the Lord Himself did speak in His own person to all alike the words
of the Decalogue; and therefore, in like manner, do they remain
permanently with us,(2) receiving by means of His advent in the
flesh, extension and increase, but not abrogation.
5. The laws of bondage, however, were one by one promulgated to the
people by Moses, suited for their instruction or for their
punishment, as Moses himself declared: "And the LORD commanded me at
that time to teach you statutes and judgments."(3) These things,
therefore, which were given for bondage, and for a sign to them, He
cancelled by the new covenant of liberty. But He has increased and
widened those laws which are natural, and noble, and common to all,
granting to men largely and without grudging, by means of adoption,
to know God the Father, and to love Him with the whole heart, and to
follow His word unswervingly, while they abstain not only from evil
deeds, but even from the desire after them. But He has also
increased the feeling of reverence; for sons should have more
veneration than slaves, and greater love for their father. And
therefore the Lord says, "As to every idle word that men have
spoken, they shall render an account for it in the day of
judgment."(4) And, "he who has looked upon a woman to lust after
her, hath committed adultery with her already in his heart;"(5) and,
"he that is angry with his brother without a cause, shall be in
danger of the judgment."(6) [All this is declared,] that we may know
that we shall give account to God not of deeds only, as slaves, but
even of words and thoughts, as those who have truly received the
power of liberty, in which [condition] a man is more severely
tested, whether he will reverence, and fear, and love the Lord. And
for this reason Peter says "that we have not liberty as a cloak of
maliciousness,"(7) but as the means of testing and evidencing faith.
CHAP. XVII.--PROOF THAT GOD DID NOT APPOINT THE LEVITICAL
DISPENSATION FOR HIS OWN SAKE, OR AS REQUIRING SUCH SERVICE; FOR HE
DOES, IN FACT, NEED NOTHING FROM MEN.
1. Moreover, the prophets indicate in the fullest manner that God
stood in no need of their slavish obedience, but that it was upon
their own account that He enjoined certain observances in the law.
And again, that God needed not their oblation, but [merely demanded
it], on account of man himself who offers it, the Lord taught
distinctly, as I have pointed out. For when He perceived them
neglecting righteousness, and abstaining from the love of God, and
imagining that God was to be propitiated by sacrifices and the other
typical observances, Samuel did even thus speak to them: "God does
not desire whole burnt-offerings and sacrifices, but He will have
His voice to be hearkened to. Behold, a ready obedience is better
than sacrifice, and to hearken than the fat of rams."(8) David also
says: "Sacrifice and oblation Thou didst not desire, but mine ears
hast Thou perfected;(9) burnt-offerings also for sin Thou hast not
required."(10) He thus teaches them that God desires obedience,
which renders them secure, rather than sacrifices and holocausts,
which avail them nothing towards righteousness; and [by this
declaration] he prophesies the new covenant at the same time. Still
clearer, too, does he speak of these things in the fiftieth Psalm:
"For if Thou hadst desired sacrifice, then would I have given it:
Thou wilt not delight in burnt-offerings. The .sacrifice of God is a
broken spirit; a broken and contrite heart the Lord will not
despise."(11) Because, therefore, God stands in need of nothing, He
declares in the preceding Psalm: "I will take no calves out of thine
house, nor he-goats out of thy fold. For Mine are all the beasts of
the earth, the herds and the oxen on the mountains: I know all the
fowls of heaven, and the various tribes(12) of the field are Mine.
If I were hungry, I would not tell thee: for the world is Mine, and
the fulness thereof. Shall I eat the flesh of bulls, or drink the
blood of goats?"(13) Then, lest it might be supposed that He refused
these things in His anger, He continues, giving him (man) counsel:
"Offer unto God the sacrifice of praise, and pay thy vows to the
Most High; and call upon Me in the day of thy trouble, and I will
deliver thee, and thou shalt glorify Me;"(14) rejecting, indeed,
those things by which sinners imagined they could propitiate God,
and showing that He does Himself stand in need of nothing; but He
exhorts and advises them to those. things by which man is justified
and draws nigh to God. This same declaration does Esaias make: "To
what purpose is the multitude of your sacrifices unto Me? saith the
Lord. I am full."(1) And when He had repudiated holocausts, and
sacrifices, and oblations, as likewise the new moons, and the
sabbaths, and the festivals, and all the rest of the services
accompanying these, He continues, exhorting them to what pertained
to salvation: "Wash you, make you clean, take away wickedness from
your hearts from before mine eyes: cease from your evil ways, learn
to do well, seek judgment, relieve the oppressed, judge the
fatherless, plead for the widow; and come, let us reason together,
saith the LORD."
2. For it was not because He was angry, like a man, as many venture
to say, that He rejected their sacrifices; but out of compassion to
their blindness, and with the view of suggesting to them the true
sacrifice, by offering which they shall appease God, that they may
receive life from Him. As He elsewhere declares: "The sacrifice to
God is an afflicted heart: a sweet savour to God is a heart
glorifying Him who formed it."(2) For if, when angry, He had
repudiated these sacrifices of theirs, as if they were persons
unworthy to obtain His compassion, He would not certainly have urged
these same things upon them as those by which they might be saved.
But inasmuch as God is merciful, He did not cut them off from good
counsel. For after He had said by Jeremiah, "To what purpose bring
ye Me incense from Saba, and cinnamon from a far country? Your whole
burnt-offerings and sacrifices are not acceptable to Me;"(3) He
proceeds: "Hear the word of the Lord, all Judah. These things saith
the LORD, the God of Israel, Make straight your ways and your
doings, and I will establish you in this place. Put not your trust
in lying words, for they will not at all profit you, saying, The
temple of the LORD, The temple of the LORD, it is [here]."(4)
3. And again, when He points out that it was not for this that He
led them out of Egypt, that they might offer sacrifice to Him, but
that, forgetting the idolatry of the Egyptians, they should be able
to hear the voice of the Lord, which was to them salvation and
glory, He declares by this same Jeremiah: "Thus saith the LORD;
Collect together your burnt-offerings with your sacrifices and eat
flesh. For I spake not unto your fathers nor commanded them in the
day that I brought them out of Egypt, concerning burnt-offerings or
sacrifices: but this word I commanded them, saying, Hear My voice,
and I will be your God, and ye shall be My people; and walk in all
My ways whatsoever I have commanded you, that it may be well with
you. But they obeyed not, nor hearkened; but walked in the
imaginations of their own evil heart, and went backwards, and not
forwards."(5) And again, when He declares by the same man, "But let
him that glorieth, glory in this, to understand and know that I am
the LORD, who doth exercise loving-kindness, and righteousness, and
judgment in the earth;"(6) He adds, "For in these things I delight,
says the LORD," but not in sacrifices, nor in holocausts, nor in
oblations. For the people did not receive these precepts as of
primary importance (principaliter), but as secondary, and for the
reason already alleged, as Isaiah again says: "Thou hast not
[brought to] Me the sheep of thy holocaust, nor in thy sacrifices
hast thou glorified Me: thou hast not served Me in sacrifices, nor
in [the matter of] frankincense hast thou done anything laboriously;
neither hast thou bought for Me incense with money, nor have I
desired the fat of thy sacrifices; but thou hast stood before Me in
thy sins and in thine iniquities."(7) He says, therefore, "Upon this
man will I look, even upon him that is humble, and meek, and who
trembles at My words."(8) "For the fat and the fat flesh shall not
take away from thee thine unrighteousness."(9) "This is the fast
which I have chosen, saith the LORD. Loose every band of wickedness,
dissolve the connections of violent agreements, give rest to those
that are shaken, and cancel every unjust document. Deal thy bread to
the hungry willingly, and lead into thy house the roofless stranger.
If thou hast seen the naked, cover him, and thou shalt not despise
those of thine own flesh and blood (domesticos seminis tui). Then
shall thy morning light break forth, and thy health shall spring
forth more speedily; and righteousness shall go before thee, and the
glory of the LoRD shall surround thee: and whilst thou an yet
speaking, I will say, Behold, here I am."(10) And Zechariah also,
among the twelve prophets, pointing out to the people the will of
God, says: "These things does the LORD Omnipotent declare: Execute
true judgment, and show mercy and compassion each one to his
brother. And oppress not the widow, and the orphan, and the
proselyte, and the poor; and let none imagine evil against your
brother in his heart."(11) And again, he says: "These are the words
which ye shall utter. Speak ye the truth every man to his neighbour,
and execute peaceful judgment in your gates, and let none of you
imagine evil in his heart against his brother, and ye shall not love
false swearing: for all these things I hate, saith the LORD
Almighty."(1) Moreover, David also says in like manner: "What man is
there who desireth life, and would fain see good days? Keep thy
tongue from evil, and thy lips that they speak no guile. Shun evil,
and do good: seek peace, and pursue it."(2)
4. From all these it is evident that God did not seek sacrifices and
holocausts from them, but faith, and obedience, and righteousness,
because of their salvation. As God, when teaching them His will in
Hosea the prophet, said, "I desire mercy rather than sacrifice, and
the knowledge of God more than burnt-offerings."(3) Besides, our
Lord also exhorted them to the same effect, when He said, "But if ye
had known what [this] meaneth, I will have mercy, and not sacrifice,
ye would not have condemned the guiltless."(4) Thus does He bear
witness to the prophets, that they preached the truth; but accuses
these men (His hearers) of being foolish through their own fault.
5. Again, giving directions to His disciples to offer to God the
first-fruits(5) of His own, created things--not as if He stood in
need of them, but that they might be themselves neither unfruitful
nor ungrateful--He took that created thing, bread, and gave thanks,
and said, "This is My body."(6) And the cup likewise, which is part
of that creation to which we belong, He confessed to be His blood,
and taught the new oblation of the new covenant; which the Church
receiving from the apostles, offers to God throughout all the world,
to Him who gives us as the means of subsistence the first-fruits of
His own gifts in the New Testament, concerning which Malachi, among
the twelve prophets, thus spoke beforehand: "I have no pleasure in
you, saith the LORD Omnipotent, and I will not accept sacrifice at
your hands. For from the rising of the sun, unto the going down [of
the same], My name is glorified among the Gentiles, and in every
place incense is offered to My name, and a pure sacrifice; for great
is My name among the Gentiles, saith the LORD
Omnipotent;"(7)--indicating in the plainest manner, by these words,
that the former people [the Jews] shall indeed cease to make
offerings to God, but that in every place sacrifice shall be offered
to Him, and that a pure one; and His name is glorified among the
Gentiles.(8)
6. But what other name is there which is glorified among the
Gentiles than that of our Lord, by whom the Father is glorified, and
man also? And because it is [the name] of His own Son, who was made
man by Him, He calls it His own. Just as a king, if he himself
paints a likeness of his son, is right in calling this likeness his
own, for both these reasons, because it is [the likeness] of his
son, and because it is his own production; so also does the Father
confess the name of Jesus Christ, which is throughout all the world
glorified in the Church, to be His own, both because it is that of
His Son, and because He who thus describes it gave Him for the
salvation of men. Since, therefore, the name of the Son belongs to
the Father, and since in the omnipotent God the Church makes
offerings through Jesus Christ, He says well on both these grounds,
"And in every place incense is offered to My name, and a pure
sacrifice." Now John, in the Apocalypse, declares that the "incense"
is "the prayers of the saints."(9)
CHAP. XVIII.--CONCERNING SACRIFICES AND OBLATIONS, AND THOSE WHO
TRULY OFFER THEM.
1. The oblation of the Church, therefore, which the Lord gave
instructions to be offered throughout all the world, is accounted
with God a pure sacrifice, and is acceptable to Him; not that He
stands in need of a sacrifice from us, but that he who offers is
himself glorified in what he does offer, if his gift be accepted.
For by the gift both honour and affection are shown forth towards
the King; and the Lord, wishing us to offer it in all simplicity and
innocence, did express Himself thus: "Therefore, when thou offerest
thy gift upon the altar, and shalt remember that thy brother hath
ought against thee, leave thy gift before the altar, and go thy way;
first be reconciled to thy brother, and then return and offer thy
gift."(10) We are bound, therefore, to offer to God the first-fruits
of His creation, as Moses also says, "Thou shalt not appear in the
presence of the Lord thy God empty;"(11) so that man, being
accounted as grateful, by those things in which he has shown his
gratitude, may receive that honour which flows from Him.(12)
2. And the class of oblations in general has not been set aside; for
there were both oblations there [among the Jews], and there are
oblations here [among the Christians]. Sacrifices there were among
the people; sacrifices there are, too, in the Church: but the
species alone has been changed, inasmuch as the offering is now
made, not by slaves, but by freemen. For the Lord is [ever] one and
the same; but the character of a servile oblation is peculiar [to
itself], as is also that of freemen, in order that, by the very
oblations, the indication of liberty may be set forth. For with Him
there is nothing purposeless, nor without signification, nor without
design. And for this reason they (the Jews) had indeed the tithes of
their goods consecrated to Him, but those who have received liberty
set aside all their possessions for the Lord's purposes, bestowing
joyfully and freely not the less valuable portions of their
property, since they have the hope of better things [hereafter]; as
that poor widow acted who cast all her living into the treasury of
God.(1)
3. For at the beginning God had respect to the gifts of Abel,
because he offered with single-mindedness and righteousness; but He
had no respect unto the offering of Cain, because his heart was
divided with envy and malice, which he cherished against his
brother, as God says when reproving his hidden [thoughts], "Though
thou offerest rightly, yet, if thou dost not divide rightly, hast
thou not sinned? Be at rest;"(2) since God is not appeased by
sacrifice. For if any one shall endeavour to offer a sacrifice
merely to outward appearance, unexceptionably, in due order, and
according to appointment, while in his soul he does not assign to
his neighbour that fellowship with him which is right and proper,
nor is under the fear of God;--he who thus cherishes secret sin does
not deceive God by that sacrifice which is offered correctly as to
outward appearance; nor will such an oblation profit him anything,
but [only] the giving up of that evil which has been conceived
within him, so that sin may not the more, by means of the
hypocritical action, render him the destroyer of himself.(3)
Wherefore did the Lord also declare: "Woe unto you, scribes and
Pharisees, hypocrites, for ye are like whited sepulchres. For the
sepulchre appears beautiful outside, but within it is full of dead
men's bones, and all uncleanness; even so ye also outwardly appear
righteous unto men, but within ye are full of wickedness and
hypocrisy."(4) For while they were thought to offer correctly so far
as outward appearance went, they had in themselves jealousy like to
Cain; therefore they slew the Just One, slighting the counsel of the
Word, as did also Cain. For [God] said to him, "Be at rest;" but he
did not assent. Now what else is it to "be at rest" than to forego
purposed violence? And saying similar things to these men, He
declares: "Thou blind Pharisee, cleanse that which is within the
cup, that the outside may be clean also."(5) And they did not listen
to Him. For Jeremiah says, "Behold, neither thine eyes nor thy heart
are good; but [they are turned] to thy covetousness, and to shed
innocent blood, and for injustice, and for man-slaying, that thou
mayest do it."(6) And again Isaiah saith, "Ye have taken counsel,
but not of Me; and made covenants, [but] not by My Spirit."(7) In
order, therefore, that their inner wish and thought, being brought
to light, may show that God is without blame, and worketh no
evil--that God who reveals what is hidden [in the heart], but who
worketh not evil--when Cain was by no means at rest, He saith to
him: "To thee shall be his desire, and thou shalt rule over him."(8)
Thus did He in like manner speak to Pilate: "Thou shouldest have no
power at all against Me, unless it were given thee from above;"(9)
God always giving up the righteous one [in this life to suffering],
that he, having been tested by what he suffered and endured, may [at
last] be accepted; but that the evildoer, being judged by the
actions he has performed, may be rejected. Sacrifices, therefore, do
not sanctify a man, for God stands in no need of sacrifice; but it
is the conscience of the offerer that sanctifies the sacrifice when
it is pure, and thus moves God to accept [the offering] as from a
friend. "But the sinner," says He, "who kills a calf [in sacrifice]
to Me, is as if he slew a dog."(10)
4. Inasmuch, then, as the Church offers with single-mindedness, her
gift is justly reckoned a pure sacrifice with God. As Paul also says
to the Philippians, "I am full, having received from Epaphroditus
the things that were sent from you, the odour of a sweet smell, a
sacrifice acceptable, pleasing to God."(11) For it behoves us to
make an oblation to God, and in all things to be found grateful to
God our Maker, in a pure mind, and in faith without hypocrisy, in
well-grounded hope, in fervent love, offering the first-fruits of
His own created things. And the Church alone offers this pure
oblation to the Creator, offering to Him, with giving of thanks,
[the things taken] from His creation. But the Jews do not offer
thus: for their hands are full of blood; for they have not received
the Word, through whom it is offered to God.(1) Nor, again, do any
of the conventicles (synagogoe) of the heretics [offer this]. For
some, by maintaining that the Father is different from the Creator,
do, when they offer to Him what belongs to this creation of ours,
set Him forth as being covetous of another's property, and desirous
of what is not His own. Those, again, who maintain that the things
around us originated from apostasy, ignorance, and passion, do,
while offering unto Him the fruits of ignorance, passion, and
apostasy, sin against their Father, rather subjecting Him to insult
than giving Him thanks. But how can they be consistent with
themselves, [when they say] that the bread over which thanks have
been given is the body of their Lord,(2) and the cup His blood, if
they do not call Himself the Son of the Creator of the world, that
is, His Word, through whom the wood fructifies, and the fountains
gush forth, and the earth gives "first the blade, then the ear, then
the full corn in the ear."(3)
5. Then, again, how can they say that the flesh, which is nourished
with the body of the Lord and with His blood, goes to corruption,
and does not partake of life? Let them, therefore, either alter
their opinion, or cease from offering the things just mentioned.(4)
But our opinion is in accordance with the Eucharist, and the
Eucharist in turn establishes our opinion. For we offer to Him His
own, announcing consistently the fellowship and union of the flesh
and Spirit.(5) For as the bread, which is produced from the earth,
when it receives the invocation of God, is no longer common
bread,(6) but the Eucharist, consisting of two realities, earthly
and heavenly; so also our bodies, when they receive the Eucharist,
are no longer corruptible, having the hope of the resurrection to
eternity.
6. Now we make offering to Him, not as though He stood in need of
it, but rendering thanks for His gift,(7) and thus sanctifying what
has been created. For even as God does not need our possessions, so
do we need to offer something to God; as Solomon says: "He that hath
pity upon the poor, lendeth unto the Lord."(8) For God, who stands
in need of nothing, takes our good works to Himself for this
purpose, that He may grant us a recompense of His own good things,
as our Lord says: "Come, ye blessed of My Father, receive the
kingdom prepared for you. For I was an hungered, and ye gave Me to
eat: I was thirsty, and ye gave Me drink: I was a stranger, and ye
took Me in: naked, and ye clothed Me; sick, and ye visited Me; in
prison, and ye came to Me."(9) As, therefore, He does not stand in
need of these [services], yet does desire that we should render them
for our own benefit, lest we be unfruitful; so did the Word give to
the people that very precept as to the making of oblations, although
He stood in no need of them, that they might learn to serve God:
thus is it, therefore, also His will that we, too, should offer a
gift at the altar, frequently and without intermission. The altar,
then, is in heaven(10) (for towards that place are our prayers and
oblations directed); the temple likewise [is there], as John says in
the Apocalypse, "And the temple of God was opened:"(11) the
tabernacle also: "For, behold," He says, "the tabernacle of God, in
which He will dwell with men."
CHAP.XIX.--EARTHLY THINGS MAY BE THE TYPE OF HEAVENLY, BUT THE
LATTER CANNOT BE THE TYPES OF OTHERS STILL SUPERIOR AND UNKNOWN; NOR
CAN WE, WITHOUT ABSOLUTE MADNESS, MAINTAIN THAT GOD IS KNOWN TO US
ONLY AS THE TYPE OF A STILL UNKNOWN AND SUPERIOR BEING.
1. Now the gifts, oblations, and all the sacrifices, did the people
receive in a figure, as was shown to Moses in the mount, from one
and the same God, whose name is now glorified in the Church among
all nations. But it is congruous that those earthly things, indeed,
which are spread all around us, should be types of the celestial,
being [both], however, created by the same God. For in no other way
could He assimilate an image of spiritual things [to suit our
comprehension]. But to allege that those things which are
super-celestial and spiritual, and, as far as we are concerned,
invisible and ineffable, are in their turn the types of celestial
things and of another Pleroma, and [to say] that God is the image of
another Father, is to play the part both of wanderers from the
truth, and of absolutely foolish and stupid persons. For, as I have
repeatedly shown, such persons will find it necessary to be
continually finding out types of types, and images of images, and
will never [be able to] fix their minds on one and the true God. For
their imaginations range beyond God, they having in their hearts
surpassed the Master Himself, being indeed in idea elated and
exalted above [Him], but in reality turning away from the true God.
2. To these persons one may with justice say (as Scripture itself
suggests), To what distance above God do ye lift up your
imaginations, O ye rashly elated men? Ye have heard "that the
heavens are meted out in the palm of [His] hand:"(1) tell me the
measure, and recount the endless multitude of cubits, explain to me
the fulness, the breadth, the length, the height, the beginning and
end of the measurement,--things which the heart of man understands
not, neither does it comprehend them. For the heavenly treasuries
are indeed great: God cannot be measured in the heart, and
incomprehensible is He in the mind; He who holds the earth in the
hollow of His hand. Who perceives the measure of His right hand? Who
knoweth His finger? Or who doth understand His hand,--that hand
which measures immensity; that hand which, by its own measure,
spreads out the measure of the heavens, and which comprises in its
hollow the earth with the abysses; which contains in itself the
breadth, and length, and the deep below, and the height above of the
whole creation; which is seen, which is heard and understood, and
which is invisible? And for this reason God is "above all
principality, and power, and dominion, and every name that is
named,"(2) of all things which have been created and established. He
it is who fills the heavens, and views the abysses, who is also
present with every one of us. For he says, "Am I a God at hand, and
not a God afar off? If any man is hid in secret places, shall I not
see him?"(3) For His hand lays hold of all things, and that it is
which illumines the heavens, and lightens also the things which are
under the heavens, and trieth the reins and the hearts, is also
present in hidden things, and in our secret [thoughts], and does
openly nourish and preserve us.
3. But if man comprehends not the fulness and the greatness of His
hand, how shall any one be able to understand or know in his heart
so great a God? Yet, as if they had now measured and thoroughly
investigated Him, and explored Him on every side? they feign that
beyond Him there exists another Pleroma of AEons, and another
Father; certainly not looking up to celestial things, but truly
descending into a profound abyss (Bythus) of madness; maintaining
that their Father extends only to the border of those things which
are beyond the Pleroma, but that, on the other hand, the Demiurge
does not reach so far as the Pleroma; and thus they represent
neither of them as being perfect and comprehending all things. For
the former will be defective in regard to the whole world formed
outside of the Pleroma, and the latter in respect of that [ideal]
world which was formed within the Pleroma; and [therefore] neither
of these can be the God of all. But that no one can fully declare
the goodness of God from the things made by Him, is a point evident
to all. And that His greatness is not defective, but contains all
things, and extends even to us, and is with us, every one will
confess who entertains worthy conceptions of God.
CHAP. XX.--THAT ONE GOD FORMED ALL THINGS IN THE WORLD, BY MEANS
OF THE WORD AND THE HOLY SPIRIT: AND THAT ALTHOUGH HE IS TO US IN
THIS LIFE INVISIBLE AND INCOMPREHENSIBLE, NEVERTHELESS HE IS NOT
UNKNOWN; INASMUCH AS HIS WORKS DO DECLARE HIM, AND HIS WORD HAS
SHOWN THAT IN MANY MODES HE MAY BE SEEN AND KNOWN.
1. As regards His greatness, therefore, it is not possible to know
God, for it is impossible that the Father can be measured; but as
regards His love (for this it is which leads us to God by His Word),
when we obey Him, we do always learn that there is so great a God,
and that it is He who by Himself has established, and selected, and
adorned, and contains all things; and among the all things, both
ourselves and this our world. We also then were made, along with
those things which are contained by Him. And this is He of whom the
Scripture says, "And God formed man, taking clay of the earth, and
breathed into his face the breath of life."(5) It was not angels,
therefore, who made us, nor who formed us, neither had angels power
to make an image of God, nor any one else, except the Word of the
Lord, nor any Power remotely distant from the Father of all things.
For God did not stand in need of these [beings], in order to the
accomplishing of what He had Himself determined with Himself
beforehand should be done, as if He did not possess His own hands.
For with Him were always present the Word and Wisdom, the Son and
the Spirit, by whom and in whom, freely and spontaneously, He made
all things, to whom also He speaks, saying, "Let Us make man after
Our image and likeness;"(1) He taking from Himself the substance of
the creatures [formed], and the pattern of things made, and the type
of all the adornments in the world.
2. Truly, then, the Scripture declared, which says, "First(2) of all
believe that there is one God, who has established all things, and
completed them, and having caused that from what had no being, all
things should come into existence:" He who contains all things, and
is Himself contained by no one. Rightly also has Malachi said among
the prophets: "Is it not one God who hath established us? Have we
not all one Father?"(3) In accordance with this, too, does the
apostle say, "There is one God, the Father, who is above all, and in
us all."(4) Likewise does the Lord also say: "All things are
delivered to Me by My Father;"(5) manifestly by Him who made all
things; for He did not deliver to Him the things of another, but His
own. But in all things [it is implied that] nothing has been kept
back [from Him], and for this reason the same person is the Judge of
the living and the dead; "having the key of David: He shall Open,
and no man shall shut: He shall shut, and no man shall open."(6) For
no one was able, either in heaven or in earth, or under the earth,
to open the book of the Father, or to behold Him, with the exception
of the Lamb who was slain, and who redeemed us with His own blood,
receiving power over all things from the same God who made all
things by the Word, and adorned them by [His] Wisdom, when "the Word
was made flesh;" that even as the Word of God had the sovereignty in
the heavens, so also might He have the sovereignty in earth,
inasmuch as [He was] a righteous man, "who did no sin, neither was
there found guile in His mouth;"(7) and that He might have the
pre-eminence over those things which are under the earth, He Himself
being made "the first-begotten of the dead;"(8) and that all things,
as I have already said, might behold their King; and that the
paternal light might meet with and rest upon the flesh of our Lord,
and come to us from His resplendent flesh, and that thus man might
attain to immortality, having been invested with the paternal light.
3. I have also largely demonstrated, that the Word, namely the Son,
was always with the Father; and that Wisdom also, which is the
Spirit, was present with Him, anterior to all creation, He declares
by Solomon: "God by Wisdom founded the earth, and by understanding
hath He established the heaven. By His knowledge the depths burst
forth, and the clouds dropped down the dew."(9) And again: "The Lord
created me the beginning of His ways in His work: He set me up from
everlasting, in the beginning, before He made the earth, before He
established the depths, and before the fountains of waters gushed
forth; before the mountains were made strong, and before all the
hills, He brought me forth."(10) And again: "When He prepared the
heaven, I was with Him, and when He established the fountains of the
deep; when He made the foundations of the earth strong, I was with
Him preparing [them]. I was He in whom He rejoiced, and throughout
all time I was daily glad before His face, when He rejoiced at the
completion of the world, and was delighted in the sons of men."(11)
4. There is therefore one God, who by the Word and Wisdom created
and arranged all things; but this is the Creator (Demiurge) who has
granted this world to the human race, and who, as regards His
greatness, is indeed unknown to all who have been made by Him (for
no man has searched out His height, either among the ancients who
have gone to their rest, or any of those who are now alive); but as
regards His love, He is always known through Him by whose means He
ordained all things. Now this is His Word, our Lord Jesus Christ,
who in the last times was made a man among men, that He might join
the end to the beginning, that is, man to God. Wherefore the
prophets, receiving the prophetic gift from the same Word, announced
His advent according to the flesh, by which the blending and
communion of God and man took place according to the good pleasure
of the Father, the Word of God foretelling from the beginning that
God should be seen by men, and hold converse with them upon earth,
should confer with them, and should be present with His own
creation, saving it, and becoming capable of being perceived by it,
and freeing us from the hands of all that hate us, that is, from
every spirit of wickedness; and causing us to serve Him in holiness
and righteousness all our days,(12) in order that man, having
embraced the Spirit of God, might pass into the glory of the Father.
5. These things did the prophets set forth in a prophetical manner;
but they did not, as some allege, [proclaim] that He who was seen by
the prophets was a different [God], the Father of all being
invisible. Yet this is what those [heretics] declare, who are
altogether ignorant of the nature of prophecy. For prophecy is a
prediction of things future, that is, a setting forth beforehand of
those things which shall be afterwards. The prophets, then,
indicated beforehand that God should be seen by men; as the Lord
also says, "Blessed are the pure in heart, for they shall see
God."(1) But in respect to His greatness, and His wonderful glory,
"no man shall see God and live,"(2) for the Father is
incomprehensible; but in regard to His love, and kindness, and as to
His infinite power, even this He grants to those who love Him, that
is, to see God, which thing the prophets did also predict. "For
those things that are impossible with men, are possible with
God."(3) For man does not see God by his own powers; but when He
pleases He is seen by men, by whom He wills, and when He wills, and
as He wills. For God is powerful in all things, having been seen at
that time indeed, prophetically through the Spirit, and seen, too,
adoptively through the Son; and He shall also be seen paternally in
the kingdom of heaven, the Spirit truly preparing man in the Son(4)
of God, and the Son leading him to the Father, while the Father,
too, confers [upon him] incorruption for eternal life, which comes
to every one from the fact of his seeing God. For as those who see
the light are within the light, and partake of its brilliancy; even
so, those who see God are in God, and receive of His splendour. But
[His] splendour vivifies them; those, therefore, who see God, do
receive life. And for this reason, He, [although] beyond
comprehension, and boundless and invisible, rendered Himself
visible, and comprehensible, and within the capacity of those who
believe, that He might vivify those who receive and behold Him
through faith.(5) For as His greatness is past finding out, so also
His goodness is beyond expression; by which having been seen, He
bestows life upon those who see Him. It is not possible to live
apart from life, and the means of life is found in fellowship with
God; but fellowship with God is to know God, and to enjoy His
goodness.
6. Men therefore shall see God, that they may live, being made
immortal by that sight, and attaining even unto God; which, as I
have already said, was declared figuratively by the prophets, that
God should be seen by men who bear His Spirit [in them], and do
always wait patiently for His coming. As also Moses says in
Deuteronomy, "We shall see in that day that God will talk to man,
and he shall live."(6) For certain of these men used to see the
prophetic Spirit and His active influences poured forth for all
kinds of gifts; others, again, [beheld] the advent of the Lord, and
that dispensation which obtained from the beginning, by which He
accomplished the will of the Father with regard to things both
celestial and terrestrial; and others [beheld] paternal glories
adapted to the times, and to those who saw and who heard them then,
and to all who were subsequently to hear them. Thus, therefore, was
God revealed; for God the Father is shown forth through all these
[operations], the Spirit indeed working, and the Son ministering,
while the Father was approving, and man's salvation being
accomplished. As He also declares through Hosea the prophet: "I," He
says, "have multiplied visions, and have used similitudes by the
ministry (in manibus) of the prophets."(7) But the apostle expounded
this very passage, when he said, "Now there are diversities of
gifts, but the same Spirit; and there are differences of
ministrations, but the same Lord; and there are diversities of
operations, but it is the same God which worketh all in all. But the
manifestation of the Spirit is given to every man to profit
withal."(8) But as He who worketh all things in all is God, [as to
the points] of what nature and how great He is, [God] is invisible
and indescribable to all things which have been made by Him, but He
is by no means unknown: for all things learn through His Word that
there is one God the Father, who contains all things, and who grants
existence to all, as is written in the Gospel: "No man hath seen God
at any time, except the only-begotten Son, who is in the bosom of
the Father; He has declared [Him.]"(9)
7. Therefore the Son of the Father declares [Him] from the
beginning, inasmuch as He was with the Father from the beginning,
who did also show to the human race prophetic visions, and
diversities of gifts, and His own ministrations, and the glory of
the Father, in regular order and connection, at the fitting time for
the benefit [of mankind]. For where there is a regular succession,
there is also fixedness; and where fixedness, there suitability to
the period; and where suitability, there also utility. And for this
reason did the Word become the dispenser of the paternal grace for
the benefit of men, for whom He made such great dispensations,
revealing God indeed to men, but presenting man to God, and
preserving at the same time the invisibility of the Father, lest man
should at any time become a despiser of God, and that he should
always possess something towards which he might advance; but, on the
other hand, revealing God to men through many dispensations, lest
man, failing away from God altogether, should cease to exist. For
the glory of God is a living man; and the life of man consists in
beholding God. For if the manifestation of God which is made by
means of the creation, affords life to all living in the earth, much
more does that revelation of the Father which comes through the
Word, give life to those who see God.
8. Inasmuch, then, as the Spirit of God pointed out by the prophets
things to come, forming and adapting us beforehand for the purpose
of our being made subject to God, but it was still a future thing
that man, through the good pleasure of the Holy Spirit, should see
[God], it necessarily behoved those through whose instrumentality
future things were announced, to see God, whom they intimated as to
be seen by men; in order that God, and the Son of God, and the Son,
and the Father, should not only be prophetically announced, but that
He should also be seen by all His members who are sanctified and
instructed in the things of God, that man might be disciplined
beforehand and previously exercised for a reception into that glory
which shall afterwards be revealed in those who love God. For the
prophets used not to prophesy in word alone, but in visions also,
and in their mode of life, and in the actions which they performed,
according to the suggestions of the Spirit. After this invisible
manner, therefore, did they see God, as also Esaias says, "I have
seen with mine eyes the King, the LORD Of hosts,"(1) pointing out
that man should behold God with his eyes, and hear His voice. In
this manner, therefore, did they also see the Son of God as a man
conversant with men, while they prophesied what was to happen,
saying that He who was not come as yet was present proclaiming also
the impassible as subject to suffering, and declaring that He who
was then in heaven had descended into the dust of death.(2)
Moreover, [with regard to] the other arrangements concerning the
summing up that He should make, some of these they beheld through
visions, others they proclaimed by word, while others they indicated
typically by means of [outward] action, seeing visibly those things
which were to be seen; heralding by word of mouth those which should
be heard; and performing by actual operation what should take place
by action; but [at the same time] announcing all prophetically.
Wherefore also Moses declared that God was indeed a consuming
fire(3) (igneum) to the people that transgressed the law, and
threatened that God would bring upon them a day of fire; but to
those who had the fear of God he said, "The LORD God is merciful and
gracious, and long-suffering, and of great commiseration, and true,
and keeps justice and mercy for thousands, forgiving
unrighteousness, and transgressions, and sins."(4)
9. And the Word spake to Moses, appearing before him, "just as any
one might speak to his friend."(5) But Moses desired to see Him
openly who was speaking with him, and was thus addressed: "Stand in
the deep place of the rock, and with My hand I will cover thee. But
when My splendour shall pass by, then thou shalt see My back pans,
but My face thou shalt not see: for no man sees My face, and shall
live."(6) Two facts are thus signified: that it is impossible for
man to see God; and that, through the wisdom of God, man shall see
Him in the last times, in the depth of a rock, that is, in His
coming as a man. And for this reason did He [the Lord] confer with
him face to face on the top of a mountain, Elias being also present,
as the Gospel relates,(7) He thus making good in the end the ancient
promise.
10. The prophets, therefore, did not openly behold the actual face
of God, but [they saw] the dispensations and the mysteries through
which man should afterwards see God. As was also said to Elias:
"Thou shalt go forth tomorrow, and stand in the presence of the
LORD; and, behold, a wind great and strong, which shall rend the
mountains, and break the rocks in pieces before the LORD. And the
LORD [was] not in the wind; and after the wind an earthquake, but
the LORD [was] not in the earthquake; and after the earthquake a
fire, but the Lord [was] not in the fire; and after the fire a
scarcely audible voice" (vox aurae tenuis).(8) For by such means was
the prophet--very indignant, because of the transgression of the
people and the slaughter of the prophets--both taught to act in a
more gentle manner; and the Lord's advent as a man was pointed out,
that it should be subsequent to that law which was given by Moses,
mild and tranquil, in which He would neither break the bruised reed,
nor quench the smoking flax.(9) The mild and peaceful repose of His
kingdom was indicated likewise. For, after the wind which rends the
mountains, and after the earthquake, and after the fire, come the
tranquil and peaceful times of His kingdom, in which the spirit of
God does, in the most gentle manner, vivify and increase mankind.
This, too, was made still clearer by Ezekiel, that the prophets saw
the dispensations of God in part, but not actually God Himself. For
when this man had seen the vision(1) of God, and the cherubim, and
their wheels, and when he had recounted the mystery of the whole of
that progression, and had beheld the likeness of a throne above
them, and upon the throne a likeness as of the figure of a man, and
the things which were upon his loins as the figure of amber, and
what was below like the sight of fire, and when he set forth all the
rest of the vision of the thrones, lest any one might happen to
think that in those [visions] he had actually seen God, he added:
"This was the appearance of the likeness of the glory of God."(2)
11. If, then, neither Moses, nor Elias, nor Ezekiel, who had all
many celestial visions, did see God; but if what they did see were
similitudes of the splendour of the Lord, And prophecies of things
to come; it is manifest that the Father is indeed invisible, of whom
also the Lord said, "No man hath seen God at any time."(3) But His
Word, as He Himself willed it, and for the benefit of those who
beheld, did show the Father's brightness, and explained His purposes
(as also the Lord said: "The only-begotten God,(4) which is in the
bosom of the Father, He hath declared [Him];" and He does Himself
also interpret the Word of the Father as being rich and great); not
in one figure, nor in one character, did He appear to those seeing
Him, but according to the reasons and effects aimed at in His
dispensations, as it is written in Daniel. For at one time He was
seen with those who were around Ananias, Azarias, Misael, as present
with them in the furnace of fire, in the burning, and preserving
them from [the effects of] fire: "And the appearance of the fourth,"
it is said, "was like to the Son of God."(5) At another time [He is
represented as] "a stone cut out of the mountain without hands,"(6)
and as smiting all temporal kingdoms, and as blowing them away
(ventilans ea), and as Himself filling all the earth. Then, too, is
this same individual beheld as the Son of man coming in the clouds
of heaven, and drawing near to the Ancient of Days, and receiving
from Him all power and glory, and a kingdom. "His dominion," it is
said, "is an everlasting dominion, and His kingdom shall not
perish."(7) John also, the Lord's disciple, when beholding the
sacerdotal and glorious advent of His kingdom, says in the
Apocalypse: "I turned to see the voice that spake with me. And,
being turned, I saw seven golden candlesticks; and in the midst of
the candlesticks One like unto the Son of man, clothed with a
garment reaching to the feet, and girt about the paps with a golden
girdle; and His head and His hairs were white, as white as wool, and
as snow; and His eyes were as a flame of fire; and His feet like
unto fine brass, as if He burned in a furnace. And His voice [was]
as the voice of waters; and He had in His right hand seven stars;
and out of His mouth went a sharp two-edged sword; and His
countenance was as the sun shining in his strength."(8) For in these
words He sets forth something of the glory [which He has received]
from His Father, as [where He makes mention of] the head; something
in reference to the priestly office also, as in the case of the long
garment reaching to the feet. And this was the reason why Moses
vested the high priest after this fashion. Something also alludes to
the end [of all things], as [where He speaks of] the fine brass
burning in the fire, which denotes the power of faith, and the
continuing instant in prayer, because of the consuming fire which is
to come at the end of time. But when John could not endure the sight
(for he says, "I fell at his feet as dead;"(9) that what was written
might come to pass: "No man sees God, and shall live"(10)), and the
Word reviving him, and reminding him that it was He upon whose bosom
he had leaned at supper, when he put the question as to who should
betray Him, declared: "I am the first and the last, and He who
liveth, and was dead, and behold I am alive for evermore, and have
the keys of death and of hell." And after these things, seeing the
same Lord in a second vision, he says: "For I saw in the midst of
the throne, and of the four living creatures, and in the midst of
the elders, a Lamb standing as it had been slain, having seven
horns, and seven eyes, which are the seven spirits of God, sent
forth into all the earth."(11) And again, he says, speaking of this
very same Lamb: "And behold a white horse; and He that sat upon him
was called Faithful and True; and in righteousness doth He judge and
make war. And His eyes were as a flame of fire, and on His head were
many crowns; having a name written, that no man knoweth but Himself:
and He was girded around with a vesture sprinkled with blood: and
His name is called The Word of God. And the armies of heaven
followed Him upon white horses, clothed in pure white linen. And out
of His mouth goeth a sharp sword, that with it He may smite the
nations; and He shall rule (pascet) them with a rod of iron: and He
treadeth the wine-press of the fierceness of the wrath of God
Almighty. And He hath upon His vesture and upon His thigh a name
written, KING OF KINGS AND LORD OF LORDS."(1) Thus does the Word of
God always preserve the outlines, as it were, of things to come, and
points out to men the various forms (species), as it were, of the
dispensations of the Father, teaching us the things pertaining to
God.
12. However, it was not by means of visions alone which were seen,
and words which were proclaimed, but also in actual works, that He
was beheld by the prophets, in order that through them He might
prefigure and show forth future events beforehand. For this reason
did Hosea the prophet take "a wife of whoredoms," prophesying by
means of the action, "that in committing fornication the earth
should fornicate from the LORD,"(2) that is, the men who are upon
the earth; and from men of this stamp it will be God's good pleasure
to take out(3) a Church which shall be sanctified by fellowship with
His Son, just as that woman was sanctified by intercourse with the
prophet. And for this reason, Paul declares that the "unbelieving
wife is sanctified by the believing husband."(4) Then again, the
prophet names his children, "Not having obtained mercy," and "Not a
people,"(5) in order that, as says the apostle, "what was not a
people may become a people; and she who did not obtain mercy may
obtain mercy. And it shall come to pass, that in the place where it
was said, This is not a people, there shall they be called the
children of the living God."(6) That which had been done typically
through his actions by the prophet, the apostle proves to have been
done truly by Christ in the Church. Thus, too, did Moses also take
to wife an Ethiopian woman, whom he thus made an Israelitish one,
showing by anticipation that the wild olive tree is grafted into the
cultivated olive, and made to partake of its fatness. For as He who
was born Christ according to the flesh, had indeed to be sought
after by the people in order to be slain, but was to be set free in
Egypt, that is, among the Gentiles, to sanctify those who were there
in a state of infancy, from whom also He perfected His Church in
that place (for Egypt was Gentile from the beginning, as was
Ethiopia also); for this reason, by means of the marriage of Moses,
was shown forth the marriage of the Word;(7) and by means of the
Ethiopian bride, the Church taken from among the Gentiles was made
manifest; and those who do detract from, accuse, and deride it,
shall not be pure. For they shall be full of leprosy, and expelled
from the camp of the righteous. Thus also did Rahab the harlot,
while condemning herself, inasmuch as she was a Gentile, guilty of
all sins, nevertheless receive the three spies,(8) who were spying
out all the land, and hid them at her home; [which three were]
doubtless [a type of] the Father and the Son, together with the Holy
Spirit. And when the entire city in which she lived fell to ruins at
the sounding of the seven trumpets, Rahab the harlot was preserved,
when all was over [in ultimis], together with all her house, through
faith of the scarlet sign; as the Lord also declared to those who
did not receive His advent,--the Pharisees, no doubt, nullify the
sign of the scarlet thread, which meant the passover, and the
redemption and exodus of the people from Egypt,-- when He said, "The
publicans and the harlots go into the kingdom of heaven before
you."(9)
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