CLEMENT OF ALEXANDRIA - THE STROMATA, OR MISCELLANIES - BOOK VI
CHAP. I. PLAN.
THE sixth and also the seventh Miscellany of Gnostic
notes, in accordance with the true philosophy, having
delineated as well as possible the ethical argument
conveyed in them, and having exhibited what the Gnostic
is in his life, proceed to show the philosophers that
he is by no means impious, as they suppose, but that
he alone is truly pious, by a compendious exhibition
of the Gnostic's form of religion, as far as it is
possible, without danger, to commit it to writing in
a book of reference. For the Lord enjoined "to
labour for the meat which endureth to eternity."[2]
And the prophet says," Blessed is he that soweth
into all waters, whose ox and ass tread,"[3] [that
is,] the people, from the Law and from the Gentiles,
gathered into one faith.
"Now the weak eateth herbs," according
to the noble apostle.[4] The Instructor, divided by
us into three books, has already exhibited the training
and nurture up from the state of childhood, that is,
the course of life which from elementary instruction
grows by faith; and in the case of those enrolled in
the number of men, prepares beforehand the soul, endued
with virtue, for the reception of gnostic knowledge.
The Greeks, then, clearly learning, from what shall
be said by us in these pages, that in profanely persecuting
the Godloving man, they themselves act impiously; then,
as the notes advance, in accordance with the style
of the Miscellanies, we must solve the difficulties
raised both by Greeks and Barbarians with respect to
the coming of the Lord.
In a meadow the flowers blooming variously, and
in a park the plantations of fruit trees, are not separated
according to their species from those of other kinds.
If some, culling varieties, have composed learned collections,
Meadows, and Helicons, and Honeycombs, and Robes; then,
with the things which come to recollection by haphazard,
and are expurgated neither in order nor expression,
but purposely scattered, the form of the Miscellanies
is promiscuously variegated like a meadow. And such
being the case, my notes shall serve as kindling sparks;
and in the case of him, who is fit for knowledge, if
he chance to fall in with them, research made with
exertion will turn out to his benefit and advantage.
For it is fight that labour should precede not only
food but also, much more knowledge, in the case of
those that are advancing to the eternal and blessed
salvation by the "strait and narrow way,"
which is truly the Lord's.
Our knowledge, and our spiritual garden, is the
Saviour Himself; into whom we are planted, being transferred
and transplanted, from our old life, into the good
land. And transplanting contributes to fruitfulness.
The Lord, then, into whom we have been transplanted,
is the Light i and the true Knowledge.
Now knowledge is otherwise spoken of in a twofold
sense: that, commonly so called, which appears in all
men (similarly also comprehension and apprehension),
universally, in the knowledge of individual objects;
in which not only the rational powers, but equally
the irrational, share, which I would never term knowledge,
inasmuch as the apprehension of things through the
senses comes naturally. But that which par excellence
is termed knowledge, bears the impress of judgment
and reason, in the exercise of which there will be
rational cognitions alone, applying purely to objects
of thought, and resulting from the bare energy of the
soul. "He is a good man," says David,[5]
"who pities" (those ruined through error),
"and lends" (from the communication of the
word of truth) not at haphazard, for "he will
dispense his words in judgment:" with profound
calculation, "he hath dispersed, he hath given
to the poor."
CHAP. II. THE SUBJECT OF PLAGIARISMS RESUMED. THE GREEKS PLAGIARIZED FROM ONE ANOTHER.
Before handling the point proposed, we must, by
way of preface, add to the close of the fifth book
what is wanting. For since we have shown that the symbolical
style was ancient, and was employed not only by our
prophets, but also by the majority of the ancient Greeks,
and by not a few of the rest of the Gentile Barbarians,
it was requisite to proceed to the mysteries of the
initiated. I postpone the elucidation of these till
we advance to the confutation of what is said by the
Greeks on first principles; for we shall show that
the mysteries belong to the same branch of speculation.
And having proved that the declaration of Hellenic
thought is illuminated all round by the truth, bestowed
on us in the Scriptures, taking it according to the
sense, we have proved, not to say what is invidious,
that the theft of the truth passed to them.
Come, and let us adduce the Greeks as witnesses
against themselves to the theft. For, inasmuch as they
pilfer from one another, they establish the fact that
they are thieves; and although against their will,
they are detected, clandestinely appropriating to those
of their own race the truth which belongs to us. For
if they do not keep their hands from each other, they
will hardly do it from our authors. I shall say nothing
of philosophic dogmas, since the very persons who are
the authors of the divisions into sects, confess in
writing, so as not to be convicted of ingratitude,
that they have received from Socrates the most important
of their dogmas. But after availing myself of a few
testimonies of men most talked of, and of repute among
the Greeks, and exposing their plagiarizing style,
and selecting them from various periods, I shall turn
to what follows.
Orpheus, then, having composed the line:--
"Since nothing else is more shameless and wretched
than woman,"
Homer plainly says:--
"Since nothing else is more dreadful and shameless
than a woman."[1]
And Musaeus having written:--
"Since art is greatly superior to strength,"
Homer says:--
"By art rather than strength is the woodcutter
greatly superior."[2]
Again, Musaeus having composed the lines:--
"And as the fruitful field produceth leaves,
And on the ash trees some fade, others grow,
So whirls the race of man its leaf," [3]
Homer transcribes:--
"Some of the leaves the wind strews on the ground.
The budding wood bears some; in time of spring,
They come. So springs one race of men, and one departs."[4]
Again, Homer having said:--
"It is unholy to exult over dead men,"[5]
Archilochus and Cratinus write, the former:--
"It is not noble at dead men to sneer;"
and Cratinus in the Lacones:--
"For men 'tis dreadful to exult
Much o'er the stalwart dead."
Again, Archilochus, transferring that Homeric
line:--
"I erred, nor say I nay:-- instead of many"[6]
writes thus:--
"I erred, and this mischief hath somehow seized
another."
As certainly also that line:--
"Evenhanded[7] war the slayer slays."[8]
He also, altering, has given forth thus:--
"I will do it.
For Mars to men in truth is evenhanded."[7]
Also, translating the following:--
"The issues of victory among men depend on the
gods,"[9]
he openly encourages youth, in the following iambic:--
"Victory's issues on the gods depend." Again,
Homer having said:--
"With feet unwashed sleeping on the ground,"
[10] Euripides writes in
Erechteus:--
"Upon the plain spread with no couch they sleep
Nor m the streams of water lave their feet."
Archilochus having likewise said:--
"But one with this and one with that His heart
delights?
in correspondence with the Homeric line:--
"For one in these deeds, one in those delights,"[11]Euripides says in OEneus:--
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"But one in these ways, one in those, has more delight."
And I have heard Aeschylus saying:--
"He who is happy ought to stay at home;
There should he also stay, who speeds not well."
And Euripides, too, shouting the like on the stage:--
Happy the man who, prosperous, stays at home."
Menander, too, on comedy, saying:--
"He ought at home to stay, and free remain, Or
be no longer rightly happy."
Again, Theognis having said:--
"The exile has no comrade dear and true,"
Euripides has written:--
"Far from the poor flies every friend."
And Epicharmus, saying:--
"Daughter, woe worth the day
Thee who art old I marry to a youth; "[1]
and adding:--
"For the young husband takes some other girl, And
for another husband longs the wife,"
Euripides[2] writes:--
"'Tis bad to yoke an old wife to a youth; For he
desires to share another's bed, And she, by him deserted,
mischief plots."
Euripides having, besides, said in the Medea:--
"For no good do a bad man's gifts,"Sophocles
in Ajax Flagellifer
utters this iambic:--
"For foes' gifts are no gifts, nor any boon."[3]
Solon having written:--
"For surfeit insolence begets,
When store of wealth attends."
Theognis writes in the same way:--
"For surfeit insolence begets,
When store of wealth attends the bad."
Whence also Thucydides, in the Histories, says:-- "Many men, to whom in a great degree, and in a short time, unlookedfor prosperity comes, are wont to turn to insolence." And Philistus[4] likewise imitates the same sentiment, expressing himself thus:-- "And the many things which turn out prosperously to men, in accordance with reason, have an incredibly dangerous s tendency to misfortune. For those who meet with unlooked success beyond their expectations, are for the most part wont to turn to insolence." Again, Euripides having written:--
"For children sprung of parents who have led
A hard and toilsome life, superior are;"
Critias writes: "For I begin with a man's origin: how far the best and strongest in body will he be, if his father exercises himself, and eats in a hardy way, anti subjects his body to toilsome labour; and if the mother of the future child be strong in body, and give herself exercise."
Again, Homer having said of the Hephaestusmade shield:--
"Upon it earth and heaven and sea he made,
And Ocean's rivers' mighty strength portrayed,"
Pherecydes of Syros says:-- "Zas makes a cloak
large and beautiful, and works on it earth and Ogenus,
and the palace of Ogenus."
And Homer having said:--
"Shame, which greatly hurts a man or he!ps,"[6]
Euripides writes in Erechtheus:--
"Of shame I find it hard to judge;
' Tis needed.' 'Tis at times a great mischief."
Take, by way of parallel, such plagiarisms as the following,
from those who flourished together, and were rivals
of each other. From the Orestes of Euripides:--
"Dear charm of sleep, aid in disease."
From the Eriphyle of Sophocies:--
"Hie thee to sleep, healer of that disease."
And from the Antigone of Sophocles:--
"Bastardy is opprobrious in name; but the nature
is equal;"[2]
And from the Aleuades of Sophocles:--
"Each good thing has its nature equal."
Again, in the Otimenus[3] of Euripides:--
"For him who toils, God helps;"
And in the Minos of Sophocles;
"To those who act not, fortune is no ally;"
And from the Alexander of Euripides:--
"But time will show; and learning, by that test,
I shall know whether thou art good or bad;"
And from the Hipponos of Sophocles:--
"Besides, conceal thou nought; since Time,
That sees all, hears all, all things will unfold."
But let us similarly run over the following; for
Eumelus having composed the line,
"Of Memory and Olympian Zeus the daughters nine,"
Solon thus begins the elegy:--
"Of Memory and Olympian Zeus the children bright."
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Again, Euripides, paraphrasing the Homeric line:--
"What, whence art thou? Thy city and thy parents,
where?"[1]
employs the following iambics in Aegeus:--
"What country shall we say that thou hast left
To roam in exile, what thy land--the bound
Of thine own native soil? Who thee begat?
And of what father dost thou call thyself the son?"
And what? Theognis[2] having said:--
"Wine largely drunk is bad; but if one use
It with discretion, 'tis not bad, but good,"--
does not Panyasis write?
"Above the gods' best gift to men ranks wine,
In measure drunk; but in excess the worst."
Hesiod, too, saying:--
"But for the fire to thee I'll give a plague,[3]
For all men to delight themselves withal,"--
Euripides writes:--
"And for the fire
Another fire greater and unconquerable,
Sprung up in the shape of women"[4]
And in addition, Homer, saying:--
"There is no satiating the greedy paunch,
Baneful, which many plagues has caused to men."[3]
Euripides says :--
"Dire need and baneful paunch me overcome;
From which all evils come."
Besides, Callias the comic poet having written:--
"With madmen, all men must be mad, they say,"--
Menander, in the Poloumenoi, expresses himself similarly,
saying:--
"The presence of wisdom is not always suitable:
One sometimes must with others play[6] the fool."
And Antimachus of Teos having said:--
"From gifts, to mortals many ills arise,"--
Augias composed the line:--
"For gifts men's mind and acts deceive."
And Hesiod having said:--
"Than a good wife, no man a better thing
Ere gained; than a bad wife, a worse,"--
Simonides said:--
"A better prize than a good wife no man
Ere gained, than a bad one nought worse."
Again, Epicharmas having said :--
"As destined Ion to live, and yet not long,
Think of thyself."--
Euripides writes:--
"Why? seeing the wealth we have uncertain is,
Why don't we live as free from care, as pleasant
As we may?"
Similarly also, the comic poet Diphilus having said:--
"The life of men is prone to change,"--
Posidippus says:--
"No man of mortal mould his life has passed
From suffering free. Nor to the end again
Has continued prosperous."
Similarly[7] speaks to thee Plato, writing of man as a creature subject to change. Again, Euripides having said:--
"Oh life to mortal men of trouble full,
How slippery in everything art thou I
Now grow'st thou, and thou now decay'st away.
And there is set no limit, no, not one,
For mortals of their course to make an end,
Except when Death's remorseless final end
Comes, sent from Zeus,"--
Diphilus writes:--
"There is no life which has not its own ills,
Pains, cares, thefts, and anxieties, disease;
And Death, as a physician, coming, gives
Rest to their victims in his quiet sleep."[5]
Furthermore, Euripides having said:--
"Many are fortune's shapes,
And many things contrary to expectation the gods
perform,"--
The tragic poet Theodectes similarly writes:--
"The instability of mortals' fates."
And Bacchylides having said :--
"To few[9] alone of mortals is it given
To reach hoary age, being prosperous all the while,
And not meet with calamities,"--
Moschion, the comic poet, writes:--
"But he of all men is most blest,
Who leads throughout an equal life."
And you will find that, Theognis having said:--
"For no advantage to a mall grown old
A young wife is, who will not, as a ship
The helm, obey,"--
Aristophanes, the comic poet, writes:--
"An old man to a young wife suits but ill."
For Anacreon, having written:--
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"Luxurious love I sing,
With flowery garlands graced,
He is of gods the king,
He mortal men subdues?--
Euripides writes :--
"For love not only men attacks,
And women; but disturbs
The souls of gods above, and to the sea
Descends."
But not to protract the discourse further, in our
anxiety to show the propensity of the Greeks to plagiarism
in expressions and dogmas, allow us to adduce the express
testimony of Hippias, the sophist of Elea, who discourses
on the point in hand, and speaks thus: "Of these
things some perchance are said by Orpheus, some briefly
by Musaeus; some in one place, others in other places;
some by Hesiod, some by Homer, some by the rest of
the poets; and some in prose compositions, some by
Greeks, some by Barbarians. And I from all these, placing
together the things of most importance and of kindred
character, will make the present discourse new and
varied."
And in order that we may see that philosophy and
history, and even rhetoric, are not free of a like
reproach, it is right to adduce a few instances from
them. For Alcmaeon of Crotona having said, "It
is easier to guard against a man who is an enemy than
a friend," Sophocles wrote in the Antigone :--
"For what sore more grievous than a bad friend?"
And Xenophon said: "No man can injure enemies in
any way other than by appearing to be a friend."
And Euripides having said in Telephus:--
"Shall we Greeks be slaves to Barbarians? "--
Thrasymachus, in the oration for the Larissaeans, says:
"Shall we be slaves to Archelaus--Greeks to a
Barbarian?"
And Orpheus having said:--
"Water is the change for soul, and death for water;
From water is earth, and what comes from earth is
again water,
And from that, soul, which changes the whole
ether;"
and Heraclitus, putting together the expressions from these lines, writes thus:--
"It is death for souls to become water, and death for water to become earth; and from earth comes water, and from water soul."
And Athamas the Pythagorean having said, "Thus was produced the beginning of the universe; and there are four roots--fire, water, air, earth: for from these is the origination of what is produced,"--Empedocles of Agrigentum wrote :--
"The four roots of all things first do thou hear--
Fire, water, earth, and ether's boundless height:
For of these all that was, is, shall be, comes."
And Plato having said,"Wherefore also the gods,
knowing men, release sooner from life those they value
most,
"Menander wrote:--
"Whom the gods love, dies young."
And Euripides having written in the OEnomaus:--
"We judge of things obscure from what we see;"
and in the Phoenix:--
"By signs the obscure is fairly grasped?--
Hyperides says, "But we must investigate things unseen by learning from signs and probabilities." And Isocrates having said, "We must conjecture the future by the past," Andocides does not shrink from saying, "For we must make use of what has happened previously as signs in reference to what is to be." Besides, Theognis having said :--
"The evil of counterfeit silver and gold is not
intoler-
able,
O Cyrnus, and to a wise man is not difficult of detection;
But if the mind of a friend is hidden in his breast,
If he is false,[1] and has a treacherous heart within,
This is the basest thing for mortals, caused by God,
And of all things the hardest to detect,"--
Euripides writes :--
"Oh Zeus, why hast thou given to men clear tests
Of spurious gold, while on the body grows
No mark sufficing to discover clear
The wicked man?"
Hyperides himself also says, "There is no feature
of the mind impressed on the countenance Of men."
Again, Stasinus having composed the line:--
"Fool, who, having slain the father, leaves the
children,"--
Xenophon[2] says, "For I seem to myself to have acted in like manner, as if one who killed the father should spare his children." And Sophocles having written in the Antigone:--
"Mother and father being in Hades now,
No brother ever can to me spring forth?--
Herodotus says, "Mother and father being no more, I shall not have another brother." In addition to these, Theopompus having written:--
"Twice children are old men in very truth;"
And before him Sophocles in Peleus:--
"Peleus, the son of Aeacus, I, sole housekeeper,
Guide, old as he is now, and train again,
For the aged man is once again a child,"--
Antipho the orator says, "For the nursing of the old is like the nursing of children." Also the
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philosopher Plato says, "The old man then, as seems, will be twice a child." Further, Thucydides having said, "We alone bore the brunt at Marathon,"--Demosthenes said, "By those who bore the brunt at Marathon." Nor will I omit the following. Cratinus having said in the
"The preparation perchance you know,"
Andocides the orator says, "The preparation, gentlemen of the jury, and the eagerness of our enemies, almost all of you know." Similarly also Nicias, in the speech on the deposit, against Ly-sias, says, "The preparation and the eagerness of the adversaries, ye see, O gentlemen of the jury." After him Aeschines says, "You see the preparation, O men of Athens, and the line of battle." Again, Demosthenes having said, "What zeal and what canvassing, O men of Athens, have been employed in this contest, I think almost all of you are aware;" and Philinus similarly, "What zeal, what forming of the line of battle, gentlemen of the jury, have taken place in this contest, I think not one of you is ignorant." Isocrates, again, having said, "As if she were related to his wealth, not him," Lysias says in the Orphics, "And he was plainly related not to the persons, but to the money." Since Homer also having written:--
"O friend, if in this war, by taking flight,
We should from age and death exemption win,
I would not fight among the first myself,
Nor would I send thee to the glorious fray;
But now--for myriad fates of death attend
In any case, which man may not escape
Or shun--come on. To some one we shall bring
Renown, or some one shall to us,"
Theopompus writes, "For if, by avoiding the present danger, we were to pass the rest of our time in security, to show love of life would not be wonderful. But now, so many fatalities are incident to life, that death in battle seems preferable." And what? Child the sophist having uttered the apophthegm, "Become surety, and mischief is at hand," did not Epicharmus utter the same sentiment in other terms, when he said, "Suretyship is the daughter of mischief, and loss that of suretyship?"[4] Further, Hippocrates the physician having written, "You must look to time, and locality, and age, and disease," Euripides says in Hexameters :[5]--
"Those who the healing art would practise well,
Must study people's modes of life, and note
The soil, and the diseases so consider."
Homer again, having written:--
"I say no mortal man can doom escape,"--
Archinus says, "All men are bound to die either
sooner or later;" and Demosthenes, "To all
men death is the end of life, though one should keep
himself shut up in a coop."
And Herodotus, again, having said, in his discourse
about Glaucus the Spartan, that the Pythian said, "In
the case of the Deity, to say and to do are equivalent,"
Aristophanes said :--
"For to think and to do are equivalent."
And before him, Parmenides of Elea said:--
"For thinking and being are the same."
And Plato having said, "And we shall show, not absurdly perhaps, that the beginning of love is sight; and hope diminishes the passion, memory nourishes it, and intercourse preserves it;" does not Philemon the comic poet write :--
"First all see, then admire;
Then gaze, then come to hope;
And thus arises love?"
Further, Demosthenes having said, "For to all of us death is a debt," and so forth, Phanocles writes in Loves, or The Beautiful:--
"But from the Fates' unbroken thread escape
Is none for those that feed on earth."
You will also find that Plato having said, "For
the first sprout of each plant, having got a fair start,
according to the virtue of its own nature, is most
powerful in inducing the appropriate end;" the
historian writes, "Further, it is not natural
for one of the wild plants to become cultivated, after
they have passed the earlier period of growth;"
and the following of Empedo-
cles:--
"For I already have been boy and girl,
And bush, and bird, and mute fish in the sea,"--
Euripides transcribes in Chrysippus:--
"But nothing dies
Of things that are; but being dissolved,
One from the other,
Shows another form."
And Plato having said, in the Republic, that
women were common, Euripides writes in the Protesilaus:--
"For common, then, is woman's bed."
Further, Euripides having written :--
"For to the temperate enough sufficient is "--
Epicurus expressly says, "Sufficiency is the greatest
riches of all."
Again, Aristophanes having written :--
"Life thou securely shalt enjoy, being just
And free from turmoil, and from fear live well,"--
Epicurus says, "The greatest fruit of righteousness is tranquillity."
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Let these species, then, of Greek plagiarism of
sentiments, being such, stand as sufficient for a clear
specimen to him who is capable of perceiving.
And not only have they been detected pirating and
paraphrasing thoughts and expressions, as will be shown;
but they will also be convicted of the possession of
what is entirely stolen. For stealing entirely what
is the production of others they have published it
as their own; as Eugamon of Cyrene did the entire book
on the Thesprotians from Musaeus, and Pisander of Camirus
the Heraclea of Pisinus of Lindus, and Panyasis of
Halicarnassus, the capture of OEchalia from Cleophilus
of Samos.
You will also find that Homer, the great poet, took
from Orpheus, from the Disappearance of Dionysus, those
words and what follows verbatim:--
"As a man trains a luxuriant shoot of olive."[1]
And in the Theogony, it is said by Orpheus of Kronos:--
"He lay, his thick neck bent aside; and him
All-conquering Sleep had seized."
These Homer transferrred to the Cyclops.[2] And Hesiod writes of Melampous:--
"Gladly to hear, what the immortals have assigned
To men, the brave from cowards clearly marks;"
and so forth, taking it word for word from the poet
Musaeus.
And Aristophanes the comic poet has, in the first
of the Thesmophoriazusoe, transferred the words from
the Empiprameni of Cratinus. And Plato the comic poet,
and Aristophanes in Doeda-lus, steal from one another.
Cocalus, composed by Araros,[3] the son of Aristophanes,
was by the comic poet Philemon altered, and made into
the comedy called Hypobolimoens.
Eumelus and Acusilaus the historiographers changed
the contents of Hesiod into prose, and published them
as their own. Gorgias of Leontium and Eudemus of Naxus,
the historians, stole from Melesagoras. And, besides,
there is Bion of Proconnesus, who epitomized and transcribed
the writings of the ancient Cadmus, and Archilochus,
and Aristotle, and Leandrus, and Hellanicus, and Hecataeus,
and Androtion, and Philochorus. Dieuchidas of Megara
transferred the beginning of his treatise from the
Deucalion of Hellanicus. I pass over in silence Heraclitus
of Ephesus, who took a very great deal from Orpheus.
From Pythagoras Plato derived the immortality of
the soul; and he from the Egyptians. And many of the
Platonists composed books, in
which they show that the Stoics, as we said in the beginning, and Aristotle, took the most and principal of their dogmas from Plato. Epicurus also pilfered his leading dogmas from Democritus. Let these things then be so. For life would fail me, were I to undertake to go over the subject in detail, to expose the selfish plagiarism of the Greeks, and how they claim the discovery of the best of their doctrines, which they have received from us.
CHAP. III.--PLAGIARISM BY THE GREEKS OF THE MIRACLES RELATED IN THE SACRED BOOKS OF THE HEBREWS.
And now they are convicted not only of borrowing
doctrines from the Barbarians, but also of relating
as prodigies of Hellenic mythology the marvels found
in our records, wrought through divine power from above,
by those who led holy lives, while devoting attention
to us. And we shall ask at them whether those things
which they relate are true or false. But they will
not say that they are false; for they will not with
their will condemn themselves of the very great silliness
of composing falsehoods, but of necessity admit them
to be true. And how will the prodigies enacted by Moses
and the other prophets any longer appear to them incredible?
For the Almighty God, in His care for all men, turns
some to salvation by commands, some by threats, some
by miraculous signs, some by gentle promises.
Well, the Greeks, when once a drought had wasted
Greece for a protracted period, and a dearth of the
fruits of the earth ensued, it is said, those that
survived of them, having, because of the famine, come
as suppliants to Delphi, asked the Pythian priestess
how they should be released from the calamity. She
announced that the only help in their distress was,
that they should avail themselves of the prayers of
Aeacus. Prevailed on by them, Aeacus, ascending the
Hellenic hill, and stretching out pure[4] hands to
heaven, and invoking the commons God, besought him
to pity wasted Greece. And as he prayed, thunder sounded,
out of the usual course of things, and the whole surrounding
atmosphere was covered with clouds. And impetuous and
continued rains, bursting down, filled the whole region.
The result was a copious and rich fertility wrought
by the husbandry of the prayers of Aeacus.
"And Samuel called on the LORD," it is
said, "and the LORD gave forth His voice, and
rain in the day of harvest."[6] Do you see that
"He who sendeth His rain on the just and on the
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unjust"[1] by the subject powers is the one God?
And the whole of our Scripture is full of instances
of God, in reference to the prayers of the just, hearing
and performing each one of their petitions.
Again, the Greeks relate, that in the case of a
failure once of the Etesian winds, Aristaeus once sacrificed
in Ceus to Isthmian Zeus. For there was great devastation,
everything being burnt up with the heat in consequence
of the winds which had been wont to refresh the productions
of the earth, not blowing, and he easily called them
back.
And at Delphi, on the expedition of Xerxes against
Greece, the Pythian priestess having made answer:--
"O Delphians, pray the winds, and it will be better,"--
they having erected an altar and performed sacrifice to the winds, had them as their helpers. For, blowing violently around Cape Sepias, they shivered the whole preparations of the Persian expedition. Empedocles of Agrigentum was called "Checker of Winds." Accordingly it is said, that when, on a time, a wind blew from the mountain of Agrigentum, heavy and pestiferous for the inhabitants, and the cause also of barrenness to their wives, he made the wind to cease. Wherefore he himself writes in the lines:--
"Thou shalt the might of the unwearied winds make
still,
Which rushing to the earth spoil mortals' crops,
And at thy will bring back the avenging blasts."
And they say that he was followed by some that used
divinations, and some that had been long vexed by sore
diseases.[2] They plainly, then, believed in the performance
of cures, and signs and wonders, from our Scriptures.
For if certain powers move the winds and dispense showers,
let them hear the psalmist: "How amiable are;
thy tabernacles, O LORD of hosts!"[3] This is
the Lord of powers, and principalities, and authorities,
of whom Moses speaks; so that we may be with Him. "And
ye shall circumcise your hard heart, and shall not
harden your neck any more. For He is Lord of lords
and God of gods, the great God and strong,"[4]
unit so forth. And Isaiah says, "Lift your eyes
to the height, and see who hath produced all these
things."[5]
And some say that plagues, and hail-storms, and
tempests, and the like, are wont to take place, not
alone in consequence of material disturbance, but also
through anger of demons and bad angels. For instance,
they say that the
Magi at Cleone, watching the phenomena of the skies,
when the clouds are about to discharge hail, avert
the threatening of wrath by incantations and sacrifices.
And if at any time there is the want of an animal,
they are satisfied with bleeding their own finger for
a sacrifice. The prophetess Diotima, by the Athenians
offering sacrifice previous to the pestilence, effected
a delay of the plague for ten years. The sacrifices,
too, of Epimenides of Crete, put off the Persian war
for an equal period. And it is considered to be all
the same whether we call these spirits gods or angels.
And those skilled in the matter of consecrating statues,
in many of the temples have erected tombs of the dead,
calling the souls of these Daemons, and teaching them
to be wor-shipped by men; as having, in consequence
of the purity of their life, by the divine foreknowledge,
received the power of wandering about the space around
the earth in order to minister to men. For they knew
that some souls were by nature kept in the body. But
of these, as the work proceeds, in the treatise on
the angels, we shall discourse.
Democritus, who predicted many things from observation
of celestial phenomena, was called "Wisdom"
(<greek>Sofia</greek>). On his meeting
a cordial reception from his brother Damasus, he predicted
that there would be much rain, judging from certain
stars. Some, accordingly, convinced by him, gathered
their crops; for being in summer-time, they were stir
on the threshing-floor. But others lost all, unexpected
and heavy showers having burst down.
How then shall the Greeks any longer disbelieve
the divine appearance on Mount Sinai, when the fire
burned, consuming none of the things that grew on the
mount; and the sound of trampets issued forth, breathed
without instruments? For that which is called the descent
on the mount of God is the advent of divine power,
pervading the whole world, and proclaiming "the
light that is inaccessible."[6]
For such is the allegory, according to the Scripture.
But the fire was seen, as Aristobulus[7] says, while
the whole multitude, amounting to not less than a million,
besides those under age, were congregated around the
mountain, the circuit of the mount not being less than
five days' journey. Over the whole place of the vision
the burning fire was seen by them all encamped as it
were around; so that the descent was not local. For
God is everywhere.
Now the compilers of narratives say that in the
island of Britain s there is a cave situated under
a mountain, and a chasm on its summit;
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and that, accordingly, when the wind falls into the
cave, and rushes into the bosom of the cleft, a sound
is heard like cymbals clashing musically. And often
in the woods, when the leaves are moved by a sudden
gust of wind, a sound is emitted like the song of birds.
Those also who composed the Persics relate that
in the uplands, in the country of the Magi, three mountains
are situated on an extended plain, and that those who
travel through the locality, on coming to the first
mountain, hear a confused sound as of several myriads
shouting, as if in battle array; and on reaching the
middle one, they hear a clamour louder and more distinct;
and at the end hear people singing a paean, as if victorious.
And the cause, in my opinion, of the whole sound, is
the smoothness and cavernous character of the localities;
and the air, entering in, being sent back and going
to the same point, sounds with considerable force.
Let these things be so. But it is possible for God
Almighty,[1] even without a medium, to produce a voice
and vision through the ear, showing that His greatness
has a natural order beyond what is customary, in order
to the conversion of the hitherto unbelieving soul,
and the reception of the commandment given. But there
being a cloud and a lofty mountain, how is it not possible
to hear a different sound, the wind moving by the active
cause? Wherefore also the prophet says, "Ye heard
the voice of words, and saw no similitude."[2]
You see how the Lord's voice, the Word, without shape,
the power of the Word, the luminous word of the Lord,
the truth from heaven, from above, coming to the assembly
of the Church, wrought by the luminous immediate ministry.
CHAP. IV.--THE GREEKS DREW MANY OF THEIR PHILOSOPHICAL TENETS FROM THE EGYPTIAN AND INDIAN GYMNOSOPHISTS.
We shall find another testimony in confirmation, in the fact that the best of the philosophers, having appropriated their most excellent dogmas from us, boast, as it were, of certain of the tenets which pertain to each sect being culled from other Barbarians, chiefly from the Egyptians--both other tenets, and that especially of the transmigration of the soul. For the Egyptians pursue a philosophy of their own. This is principally shown by their sacred ceremonial. For first advances the Singer, bearing some one of the symbols of music. For they say that he must learn two of the books of Hermes, the one of which contains the hymns of the gods, the second the regulations for the king's life. And
after the Singer advances the Astrologer,[3] with a
horologe in his hand, and a palm, the symbols of astrology.
He must have the astrological books of Hermes, which
are four in number, always in his mouth. Of these,
one is about the order of the fixed stars that are
visible, and another about the conjunctions and luminous
appearances of the sun and moon; and the rest respecting
their risings. Next in order advances the sacred Scribe,
with wings on his head, and in his hand a book and
rule, in which were writing ink and the reed, with
which they write. And he must be acquainted with what
are called hieroglyphics, and know about cosmography
and geography, the position of the sun and moon, and
about the five planets; also the description of Egypt,
and the chart of the Nile; and the description of the
equipment of the priests and of the places consecrated
to them, and about the measures and the things in use
in the sacred rites. Then the Stole-keeper follows
those previously mentioned, with the cubit of justice
and the cup for libations. He is acquainted with all
points called Paedeutic(relating to training) and Moschophatic(sacrificial).
There are also ten books which relate to the honour
paid by them to their gods, and containing the Egyptian
worship; as that relating to sacrifices, first-fruits,
hymns, prayers, processions, festivals, and the like.
And behind all walks the Prophet, with the water-vase
carried openly in his arms; who is followed by those
who carry the issue of loaves. He, as being the governor
of the temple, learns the ten books called "Hieratic;"
and they contain all about the laws, and the gods,
and the whole of the training of the priests. For the
Prophet is, among the Egyptians, also over the distribution
of the revenues. There are then forty-two books of
Hermes indispensably necessary; of which the six-and-thirty
containing the whole philosophy of the Egyptians are
learned by the forementioned personages; and the other
six, which are medical, by the Pastophoroi(image-bearers),--treating
of the structure of the body, and of diseases, and
instruments, and medicines, and about the eyes, and
the last about women.[4] Such are the customs of the
Egyptians, to speak briefly.
The philosophy of the Indians, too, has been celebrated.
Alexander of Macedon, having taken ten of the Indian
Gymnosophists, that seemed the best and most sententious,
proposed to them problems, threatening to put to death
him that did not answer to the purpose; ordering one,
who was the eldest of them, to decide.
The first, then, being asked whether he thought
that the living were more in number than the dead,
said, The living; for that the
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dead were not. The second, on being asked Whether the
sea or the land maintained larger beasts, said, The
land; for the sea was part of it. And the third being
asked which was the most cunning of animals? The one,
which has not hitherto been known, man. And the fourth
being interrogated, For what reason they had made Sabba,
who was their prince, revolt, answered, Because they
wished him to live well rather than die ill. And the
fifth being asked, Whether he thought that day or night
was first, said, One day. For puzzling questions must
have puzzling answers. And the sixth being posed with
the query, How shall one be loved most? By being most
powerful; in order that he may not be timid. And the
seventh being asked, How any one of men could become
God? said, If he do what it is impossible for man to
do. And the eighth being asked, Which is the stronger,
life or death? said, Life, which bears such ills. And
the ninth being interrogated, Up to what point it is
good for a man to live? said, Till he does not think
that to die is better than to live. And on Alexander
ordering the tenth to say something, for he was judge,
he said, "One spake worse than another."
And on Alexander saying, Shall you not, then, die first,
having given such a judgment? he said, And how, O king,
wilt thou prove true, after saying that thou wouldest
kill first the first man that answered very badly?
And that the Greeks are called pilferers of all
manner of writing, is, as I think, sufficiently demonstrated
by abundant proofs.[1]
CHAP. V.- THE GREEKS HAD SOME KNOWLEDGE OF THE TRUE GOD.
And that the men of highest repute among the Greeks
knew God, not by positive knowledge, but by indirect
expression,[2] Peter says in the Preaching: "Know
then that there is one God, who made the beginning
of all things, and holds the power of the end; and
is the Invisible, who sees all things; incapable of
being contained, who contains all things; needing nothing,
whom all things need, and by whom they are; incomprehensible,
everlasting, unmade, who made all things by the 'Word
of His power,' that is, according to the gnostic scripture,
His Son."[3]
Then he adds: "Worship this God not as the
Greeks,"--signifying plainly, that the excellent
among the Greeks worshipped the same God as we, but
that they had not learned by perfect knowledge that
which was delivered by the Son. "Do not then worship,"
he did not say, the God whom the Greeks worship, but
"as the Greeks,"-- changing the manner of
the worship of God, not announcing another God. What,
then, the expression "not as the Greeks"
means, Peter himself shall explain, as he adds: "Since
they are carried away by ignorance, and know not God"
(as we do, according to the perfect knowledge); "hut
giving shape to the things[4] of which He gave them
the power for use--stocks and stones, brass and iron,
gold and silver--matter;--and setting up the things
which are slaves for use and possession, worship them.[5]
And what God hath given to them for food--the fowls
of the air, and the fish of the sea, and the creeping
things of the earth, and the wild beasts with the four-footed
cattle of the field, weasels and mice, cats and dogs
and apes, and their own proper food--they sacrifice
as sacrifices to mortals; and offering dead things
to the dead, as to gods, are unthankful to God, denying
His existence by these things." And that it is
said, that we and the Greeks know the same God, though
not in the same way, he will infer thus: "Neither
worship as the Jews; for they, thinking that they only
know God, do not know Him, adoring as they do angels
and archangels, the month and the moon. And if the
moon be not visible, they do not hold the Sabbath,
which is called the first;[6] nor do they hold the
new moon, nor the feast of unleavened bread, nor the
feast, nor the great day."[7] Then he gives the
finishing stroke to the question: "So that do
ye also, learning holily and righteously what we deliver
to you; keep them, worshipping God in a new way, by
Christ." For we find in the Scriptures, as the
Lord says: "Behold, I make with you a new covenant,
not as I made with your fathers in Mount Horeb."[8]
He made a new covenant with us; for what belonged to
the Greeks and Jews is old. But we, who worship Him
in a new way, in the third form, are Christians. For
clearly, as I think, he showed that the one and only
God was known by the Greeks in a Gentile way, by the
Jews Judaically, and in a new and spiritual way by
us.
And further, that the same God that furnished both
the Covenants was the giver of Greek philosophy to
the Greeks, by which the Almighty is glorified among
the Greeks, he shows. And it is clear from this. Accordingly,
then, from the
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Hellenic training, and also from that of the law are gathered into the one race of the saved people those who accept faith: not that the three peoples are separated by time, so that one might suppose three natures, but trained in different Covenants of the one Lord, by the word of the one Lord. For that, as God wished to save the Jews by giving to them prophets, so also by raising up prophets of their own in their own tongue, as they were able to receive God's beneficence, He distinguished the most excellent of the Greeks from the common herd, in addition to "Peter's Preaching," the Apostle Paul will show, saying: "Take also the Hellenic books, read the Sibyl, how it is shown that God is one, and how the future is indicated. And taking Hystaspes, read, and you will find much more luminously and distinctly the Son of God described, and how many kings shall draw up their forces against Christ, hating Him and those that bear His name, and His faithful ones, and His patience, and His coming." Then in one word he asks us, "Whose is the world, and all that is in the world ? Are they not God's ? "[1] Wherefore Peter says, that the Lord said to the apostles: "If any one of Israel then, wishes to repent, and by my name to believe in God, his sins shall be forgiven him, after twelve years. Go forth into the world, that no one may say, We have not heard."
CHAP. VI.--THE GOSPEL WAS PREACHED TO JEWS AND GENTILES IN HADES.[2]
But as the proclamation [of the Gospel] has come
now at the fit time, so also at the fit time were the
Law and the Prophets given to the Barbarians, and Philosophy
to the Greeks, to fit their ears for the Gospel. "Therefore,"
says the Lord who delivered Israel, "in an acceptable
time have I heard thee, and in a day of salvation have
I helped thee. And I have given thee for a Covenant
to the nations; that thou mightest inhabit the earth,
and receive the inheritance of the wilderness; saying
to those that are in bonds, Come forth; and to those
that are in darkness, Show yourselves." For if
the "prisoners" are the Jews, of whom the
Lord said, "Come forth, ye that will, from your
bonds," --meaning the voluntary bound, and who
have taken on them "the burdens grievous to be
borne"[3] by human injunction--it is plain that
"those in darkness" are they who have the
ruling faculty of the soul buried in idolatry.
For to those who were righteous according to the
law, faith was wanting. Wherefore also the Lord, in
healing them, said, "Thy faith hath saved thee."[4]
But to those that were righteous according to philosophy,
not only faith in the Lord, but also the abandonment
of idolatry, were necessary. Straightway, on the revelation
of the truth, they also repented of their previous
conduct.
Wherefore the Lord preached the Gospel to those
in Hades. Accordingly the Scripture says, "Hades
says to Destruction, We have not seen His form, but
we have heard His voice."[5] It is not plainly
the place, which, the words above say, heard the voice,
but those who have been put in Hades, and have abandoned
themselves to destruction, as persons who have thrown
themselves voluntarily from a ship into the sea. They,
then, are those that hear the divine power and voice.
For who in his senses can suppose the souls of the
righteous and those of sinners in the same condemnation,
charging Providence with injustice?
But how? Do not [the Scriptures] show that. the
Lord preached[6] the Gospel to those that perished
in the flood, or rather had been chained, and to those
kept "in ward and guard"?[7] And it has been
shown also,[8] in the second book of the Stromata,
that the apostles, following the Lord, preached the
Gospel to those in Hades. For it was requisite, in
my opinion, that as here, so also there, the best of
the disciples should be imitators of the Master; so
that He should bring to repentance those belonging
to the Hebrews, and they the Gentiles; that is, those
who had lived in righteousness according to the Law
and Philosophy, who had ended life not perfectly, but
sinfully. For it was suitable to the divine administration,
that those possessed of greater worth in righteousness,
and whose life had been pre-eminent, on repenting of
their transgressions, though found in another place,
yet being confessedly of the number of the people of
God Almighty, should be saved, each one according to
his individual knowledge.
And, as I think, the Saviour also exerts His might
because it is His work to save; which accordingly He
also did by drawing to salvation those who became willing,
by the preaching [of the Gospel], to believe on Him,
wherever they were. If, then, the Lord descended to
Hades for no other end but to preach the Gospel, as
He did descend; it was either to preach the Gospel
to all or to the Hebrews only. If, accordingly, to
all, then all who believe shall be saved, although
they may be of the Gentiles, on making their profession
there; since God's pun-
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ishments are saving and disciplinary, leading to conversion,
and choosing rather the repentance thorn the death
of a sinner;[1] and especially since souls, although
darkened by passions, when released from their bodies,
are able to perceive more clearly, because of their
being no longer obstructed by the paltry flesh.
If, then, He preached only to the Jews, who wanted
the knowledge and faith of the Saviour, it is plain
that, since God is no respecter of persons, the apostles
also, as here, so there preached the Gospel to those
of the heathen who were ready for conversion. And it
is well said by the Shepherd, "They went down
with them therefore into the water, and again ascended.
But these descended alive, and again ascended alive.
But those who had fallen asleep, descended dead, but
ascended alive."[2] Further the Gospel[3] says,
"that many bodies of those that slept arose,"
--plainly as having been translated to a better state.[4]
There took place, then, a universal movement and translation
through the economy of the Saviour.[5]
One righteous man, then, differs not, as righteous,
from another righteous man, whether he be of the Law
or a Greek. For God is not only Lord of the Jews, but
of all men, and more nearly the Father of those who
know Him. For if to live well and according to the
law is to live, also to live rationally according to
the law is to live; and those who lived rightly before
the Law were classed under faith,[6] and judged to
be righteous,--it is evident that those, too, who were
outside of the Law, having lived rightly, in consequence
of the peculiar' nature of the voice,[7] though they
are in Hades and in ward,[8] on hearing the voice of
the Lord, whether that of His own person or that acting
through His apostles, with all speed turned and believed.
For we remember that the Lord is "the power of
God,"[9] and power can never be weak.
So I think it is demonstrated that the God being
good, and the Lord powerful, they save with a righteousness
and equality which extend to all that turn to Him,
whether here or elsewhere. For it is not here alone
that the active power of God is beforehand, but it
is everywhere and is always at work. Accordingly, in
the Preaching of Peter, the Lord says to the disciples
after the resurrection, "I have chosen you twelve
disciples, judging you worthy of me," whom the
Lord wished to be apostles, having judged them faithful,
sending them into the world to the men on the earth,
that they may know that there is one God, showing clearly
what would take place by the faith of Christ; that
they who heard and believed should be saved; and that
those who believed not, after having heard, should
bear witness, not having the excuse to allege, We have
not heard.
What then? Did not the same dispensation obtain
in Hades, so that even there, all the souls, on hearing
the proclamation, might either exhibit repentance,
or confess that their punishment was just, because
they believed not? And it were the exercise of no
ordinary arbitrariness, for those who had departed
before the advent of the Lord (not having the Gospel
preached to them, and having afforded no ground from
themselves, in consequence of believing or not) to
obtain either salvation or punishment. For it is not
right that these should be condemned without trial,
and that those alone who lived after the advent should
have the advantage of the divine righteousness. But
to all rational souls it was said from above, "Whatever
one of you has done in ignorance, without clearly knowing
God, if, on becoming conscious, he repent, all his
sins will be forgiven him."[10] "For, behold,"
it is said, "I have set before your face death
and life, that ye may choose life."[11] '' God
says that He set, not that He made both, in order to
the comparison of choice. And in another Scripture
He says, "If ye hear Me, and be willing, ye shall
eat the good of the land. But if ye hear Me not, and
are not willing, the sword shall devour you: for the
mouth of the LORD hath spoken these things."[12]
Again, David expressly (or rather the Lord in the
person of the saint, and the same from the foundation
of the world is each one who at different periods is
saved, and shall be saved by faith) says, "My
heart was glad, and my tongue rejoiced, and my flesh
shall still rest in hope. For Thou shalt not leave
my soul in hell, nor wilt Thou give Thine holy one
to see corruption. Thou hast made known to me the paths
of life, Thou wilt make me full of joy in Thy presence."[13]
As, then, the people was precious to the Lord, so also
is the entire holy people; he also who is converted
from the Gentiles, who was prophesied under the name
of proselyte, along with the Jew. For rightly the Scripture
says, that "the ox and the bear shall come together."[14]
For the Jew is designated by the ox, from the animal
under the yoke being reckoned clean, according
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to the law; for the ox both parts the hoof and chews
the cud. And the Gentile is designated by the bear,
which is an unclean and wild beast. And this animal
brings forth a shapeless lump of flesh, which it shapes
into the likeness of a beast solely by its tongue.
For he who is convened from among the Gentiles is formed
from a beastlike life to gentleness by the word; and,
when once tamed, is made clean, just as the ox. For
example, the prophet says, "The sirens, and the
daughters of the sparrows, and all the beasts of the
field, shall bless me."[1] Of the number of unclean
animals, the wild beasts of the field are known to
be, that is, of the world; since those who are wild
in respect of faith, and polluted in life, and not
purified by the righteousness which is according to
the law, are called wild beasts. But changed from wild
beasts by the faith of the Lord, they become men of
God, advancing from the wish to change to the fact.
For some the Lord exhorts, and to those who have already
made the attempt he stretches forth His hand, and draws
them up. "For the Lord dreads not the face of
any one, nor will He regard greatness; for He hath
made small and great, and cares alike for all."[2]
And David says, "For the heathen are fixed in
the destruction they have caused; their foot is taken
in the snare which they hid." s "But the
LORD was a refuge to the poor, a help in season also
in affliction."[4] Those, then, that were in affliction
had the Gospel seasonably proclaimed. And therefore
it said, "Declare among the heathen his pursuits,"[5]
that they may not be judged unjustly.
If, then, He preached the Gospel to those in the
flesh that they might not be condemned unjustly, how
is it conceivable that He did not for the same cause
preach the Gospel to those who had departed this life
before His advent? "For the righteous LORD loveth
righteousness: His countenance beholdeth uprightness."[6]
"But he that loveth wickedness hateth his own
soul."[7]
If, then, in the deluge all sinful flesh perished,
punishment having been inflicted on them for correction,
we must first believe that the will of God, which is
disciplinary and beneficent,[8] saves those who turn
to Him. Then, too, the more subtle substance, the soul,
could never receive any injury from the grosser element
of water, its subtle and simple nature rendering it
impalpable, called as it is incorporeal. But whatever
is gross, made so in consequence of sin, this is cast
away along with the carnal spirit which lusts against
the soul.[9]
Now also Valentinus, the Coryphaeus of those who
herald community, in his book on The Intercourse of
Friends, writes in these words: "Many of the things
that are written, though in common hooks, are found
written in the church of God. For those sayings which
proceed from the heart are vain. For the law written
in the heart is the People[10] of the Beloved --loved
and loving Him." For whether it be the Jewish
writings or those of the philosophers that he calls
"the Common Books," he makes the truth common.
And Isidore," at once son and disciple to Basilides,
in the first hook of the Expositions of the Prophet
Parchor, writes also in these words: "The Attics
say that certain things were intimated to Socrates,
in consequence of a daemon attending on him. And Aristotle
says that all men are provided with daemons, that attend
on them during the time they are in the body,-having
taken this piece of prophetic instruction and transferred
it to his own books, without acknowledging whence he
had abstracted this statement." And again, in
the second book of his work, he thus writes: "And
let no one think that what we say is peculiar to the
elect, was said before by any philosophers. For it
is not a discovery of theirs. For having appropriated
it from our prophets, they attributed it to him who
is wise according to them." Again, in the same:
"For to me it appears that those who profess to
philosophize, do so that they may learn what is the
winged oak,'" and the variegated robe on it, all
of which Pherecydes has employed as theological allegories,
having taken them from the prophecy of Chum."
CHAP. VII.--WHAT TRUE PHILOSOPHY IS, AND WHENCE SO CALLED.
As we have long ago pointed out, what we propose as our subject is not the discipline which obtains in each sect, but that which is really philosophy, strictly systematic Wisdom, which furnishes acquaintance with the things which pertain to life. And we define Wisdom to be certain knowledge, being a sure and irrefragable apprehension of things divine and human, comprehending the present, past, and future, which the Lord hath taught us, both by His advent and by the prophets. And it is irrefragable by reason, inasmuch as it has been communicated. And so it is wholly true according to [God's] intention, as being known through means of the Son. And in one aspect
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it is eternal, and in another it becomes useful in time.
Partly it is one and the same, partly many and indifferent--partly
without any movement of passion, partly with passionate
desire--partly perfect, partly incomplete.
This wisdom, then--rectitude of soul and of reason,
and purity of life--is the object of the desire of
philosophy, which is kindly and lovingly disposed towards
wisdom, and does everything to attain it.
Now those are called philosophers, among us, who
love Wisdom, the Creator and Teacher of all things,
that is, the knowledge of the Son of God; and among
the Greeks, those who undertake arguments on virtue.
Philosophy, then, consists of such dogmas found in
each sect (I mean those of philosophy) as cannot be
impugned, with a corresponding life, collected into
one selection; and these, stolen from the Barbarian
God-given grace, have been adorned by Greek speech.
For some they have borrowed, and others they have misunderstood.
And in the case of others, what they have spoken, in
consequence of being moved, they have not yet perfectly
worked out; and others by human conjecture and reasoning,
in which also they stumble. And they think that they
have hit the truth perfectly; but as we understand
them, only partially. They know, then, nothing more
than this world. And it is just like geometry, which
treats of measures and magnitudes and forms, by delineation
on plane-surfaces; and just as painting appears to
take in the whole field of view in the scenes represented.
But it gives a false description of the view, according
to the rules of the art, employing the signs that result
from the incidents of the lines of vision. By this
means, the higher and lower points in the view, and
those between, are preserved; and some objects seem
to appear in the foreground, and others in the background,
and others to appear in some other way, on the smooth
and level surface. So also the philosophers copy the
truth, after the manner of painting. And always in
the case of each one of them, their self-love is the
cause of all their mistakes. Wherefore one ought not,
in the desire for the glory that terminates in men,
to be animated by self-love; but loving God, to become
really holy with wisdom. If, then, one treats what
is particular as universal, and regards that, which
serves, as the Lord, he misses the truth, not understanding
what was spoken by David by way of confession: "I
have eaten earth [ashes] like bread."[1] Now,
self-love and self-conceit are, in his view, earth
and error. But if so, science and knowledge are derived
from instruction. And if there is instruction, you
must seek for the master. Cleanthes claims Zeno, and
Metrodorus Epicurus, and Theophrastus Aristotle, and
Plato Socrates. But if I Come to Pythagoras, and Pherecydes,
and Thales, and the first wise men, I come to a stand
in my search for their teacher. Should you say the
Egyptians, the Indians, the Babylonians, and the Magi
themselves, I will not stop from asking their teacher.
And I lead you up to the first generation of men; and
from that point I begin to investigate Who is their
teacher. No one of men; for they had not yet learned.
Nor yet any of the angels: for in the way that angels,
in virtue of being angels, speak, men do not hear;
nor, as we have ears, have they a tongue to correspond;
nor would any one attribute to the angels organs of
speech, lips I mean, and the parts contiguous, throat,
and windpipe, and chest, breath and air to vibrate,
And God is far from calling aloud in the unapproachable
sanctity, separated as He is from even the archangels.
And we also have already heard that angels learned
the truth, and their rulers over them;[1] for they
had a beginning. It remains, then, for us, ascending
to seek their teacher. And since the unoriginated Being
is one, the Omnipotent God; one, too, is the First-begotten,
"by whom all things were made, and without whom
not one thing ever was made."[3] "For one,
in truth, is God, who formed the beginning of all things;"
pointing out "the first-begotten Son," Peter
writes, accurately comprehending the statement, "In
the beginning God made the heaven and the earth."[4]
And He is called Wisdom by all the prophets. This is
He who is the Teacher of all created beings, the Fellow-counsellor
of God, who foreknew all things; and He from above,
from the first foundation of the world, "in many
ways and many times,"[5] trains and perfects;
whence it is rightly said, "Call no man your teacher
on earth."[6]
You see whence the true philosophy has its handles;
though the Law be the image and shadow of the truth:
for the Law is the shadow of the truth. But the self-love
of the Greeks proclaims certain men as their teachers.
As, then, the whole family runs back to God the Creator;[7]
so also all the teaching of good things, which justifies,
does to the Lord, and leads and contributes to this.
But if from any creature they received in any way
whatever the seeds of the Truth, they did not nourish
them; but committing them to a barren and reinless
soil, they choked them with
494
weeds, as the Pharisees revolted from the Law, by introducing
human teachings,--the cause of these being not the
Teacher, but those who choose to disobey. But those
of them who believed the Lord's advent and the plain
teaching of the Scriptures, attain to the knowledge
of the law; as also those addicted to philosophy, by
the teaching of the Lord, are introduced into the knowledge
of the true philosophy: "For the oracles of the
Lord are pure oracles, melted in the fire, tried in
the earth,[1] purified seven times."[2] Just as
silver often purified, so is the just man brought to
the test, becoming the Lord's coin and receiving the
royal image. Or, since Solomon also calls the "tongue
of the righteous man gold that has been subjected to
fire,"[3] intimating that the doctrine which has
been proved, and is wise, is to be praised and received,
whenever it is amply tried by the earth: that is, when
the gnostic soul is in manifold ways sanctified, through
withdrawal from earthy fires. And the body in which
it dwells is purified, being appropriated to the pureness
of a holy temple. But the first purification which
takes place in the body, the soul being first, is abstinence
from evil things, which some consider perfection, and
is, in truth, the perfection of the common believer--Jew
and Greek. But in the case of the Gnostic, after that
which is reckoned perfection in others, his righteousness
advances to activity in well-doing. And in whomsoever
the increased force[4] of righteousness advances to
the doing of good, in his case perfection abides in
the fixed habit of well-doing after the likeness of
God. For those who are the seed of Abraham, and besides
servants of God, are "the called;" and the
sons of Jacob are the elect--they who have tripped
up the energy of wickedness.
If; then, we assert that Christ Himself is Wisdom,
and that it was His working which showed itself in
the prophets, by which the gnostic tradition may be
learned, as He Himself taught the apostles during His
presence; then it follows that the grinds, which is
the knowledge and apprehension of things present, future,
and past, which is sure and reliable, as being imparted
and revealed by the Son of God, is wisdom.
And if, too, the end of the wise man is contemplation,
that of those who are still philosophers aims at it,
but never attains it, unless by the process of learning
it receives the prophetic utterance which has been
made known, by which it grasps both the present, the
future, and the past--how they are, were, and shall
be.
And the gnosis itself is that which has descended
by transmission to a few, having been imparted unwritten
by the apostles. Hence, then, knowledge or wisdom ought
to be exercised up to the eternal and unchangeable
habit of contemplation.
CHAP. VIII.--PHILOSOPHY IS KNOWLEDGE GIVEN BY GOD.
For Paul too, in the Epistles, plainly does not
disparage philosophy; but deems it unworthy of the
man who has attained to the elevation of the Gnostic,
any more to go back to the Hellenic "philosophy,"
figuratively calling it '' the rudiments of this world,"[5]
as being most rudimentary, and a preparatory training
for the truth. Wherefore also, writing to the Hebrews,
who were declining again from faith to the law, he
says," Have ye not need again of one to teach
you which are the first principles of the oracles of
God, and are become such as have need of milk, and
not of strong meat?"[6] So also to the Colossians,
who were Greek converts, "Beware lest any man
spoil you by philosophy and vain deceit, after the
tradition of men, after the rudiments of this world,
and not after Christ,"[7]--enticing them again
to return to philosophy, the elementary doctrine.
And should one say that it was through human understanding
that philosophy was discovered by the Greeks, still
I find the Scriptures saying that understanding is
sent by God. The psalmist, accordingly, considers understanding
as the greatest free gift, and beseeches, saying,"
I am Thy servant; give me understanding."s And
does not David, while asking the abundant experience
of knowledge, write, "Teach me gentleness, and
discipline, and knowledge: for I have believed in Thy
commandments?"[9] He confessed the covenants to
be of the highest authority, and that they were given
to the more excellent. Accordingly the psalm again
says of God, "He hath not done thus to any nation;
and He hath not shown His judgments to them."[10]
The expression "He hath not done so" shows
that He hath done, but not "thus." The "thus,"
then, is put comparatively, with reference to pre-eminence,
which obtains in our case. The prophet might have said
simply, "He hath not done," without the "thus."
Further, Peter in the Acts says, "Of a truth,
I perceive that God is no respecter of persons; but
in every nation he that feareth Him, and worketh righteousness,
is accepted by Him."[11]
495
The absence of respect of persons in God is not
then in time, but from eternity. Nor had His beneficence
a beginning; nor any more is it limited to places or
persons. For His beneficence is not confined to parts.
"Open ye the gates of righteousness," it
is said; "entering into them, I will confess to
the LORD. This is the gate of the LORD. The righteous
shall enter by it."[1] Explaining the prophet's
saying, Barnabas adds, "There being many gates
open, that which is in righteousness is the gate which
is in Christ, by which all who enter are blessed."
Bordering on the same meaning is also the following
prophetic utterance: "The LORD is on many waters;"[2]
not the different covenants alone, but the modes of
teaching, those among the Greek and those among the
Barbarians, conducing to righteousness. And already
clearly David, bearing testimony to the truth, sings,
"Let sinners be turned into Hades, and all the
nations that forget God."[3] They forget, plainly,
Him whom they formerly remembered, and dismiss Him
whom they knew previous to forgetting Him. There was
then a dim knowledge of God also among the nations.
So much for those points.
Now the Gnostic must be erudite. And since the Greeks
say that Protagoras having led the way, the opposing
of one argument by another was invented, it is fitting
that something be said with reference to arguments
of this sort. For Scripture says, "He that says
much, shall also hear in his turn."[4] And who
shall understand a parable of the Lord, but the wise,
the intelligent, and he that loves his Lord? Let such
a man be faithful; let him be capable of uttering his
knowledge; let him be wise in the discrimination of
words; let him be dexterous in action; let him be pure.
"The greater he seems to be, the more humble should
he be," says Clement in the Epistle to the Corinthians,--"such
an one as is capable of complying with the precept,
'And some pluck from the fire, and on others have compassion,
making a difference,'"[5]
The pruning-hook is made, certainly, principally
for pruning; but with it we separate twigs that have
got intertwined, cut the thorns which grow along with
the vines, which it is not very easy to reach. And
all these things have a reference to pruning. Again,
man is made principally for the knowledge of God; but
he also measures land, practises agriculture, and philosophizes;
of which pursuits, one conduces to life, another to
living well, a third to the study of the things which
are capable of demonstration. Further, let those who
say that philosophy took its rise from the devil know
this, that the Scripture says that "the devil
is transformed into an angel of light."[6] When
about to do what? Plainly, when about to prophesy.
But if he prophesies as an angel of light, he will
speak what is true. And if he prophesies what is angelical,
and of the light, then he prophesies what is beneficial
when he is transformed according to the likeness of
the operation, though he be different with respect
to the matter of apostasy. For how could he deceive
any one, without drawing the lover of knowledge into
fellowship, and so drawing him afterwards into falsehood?
Especially he will be found to know the truth, if not
so as to comprehend it, yet so as not to be unacquainted
with it.
Philosophy is not then false, though the thief and
the liar speak truth, through a transformation of operation.
Nor is sentence of condemnation to be pronounced ignorantly
against what is said, on account of him who says it
(which also is to be kept in view, in the case of those
who are now alleged to prophesy); but what is said
must be looked at, to see if it keep by the truth.
And in general terms, we shall not err in alleging
that all things necessary and profitable for life came
to us from God, and that philosophy more especially
was given to the Greeks, as a covenant peculiar to
them--being, as it is, a stepping-stone to the philosophy
which is according to Christ--although those who applied
themselves to the philosophy of the Greeks shut their
ears voluntarily to the truth, despising the voice
of Barbarians, or also dreading the danger suspended
over the believer, by the laws of the state.
And as in the Barbarian philosophy, so also in the
Hellenic, "tares were sown" by the proper
husbandman of the tares; whence also heresies grew
up among us along with the productive wheat; and those
who in the Hellenic philosophy preach the impiety and
voluptuousness of Epicurus, and whatever other tenets
are disseminated contrary to right reason, exist among
the Greeks as spurious fruits of the divinely bestowed
husbandry. This voluptuous and selfish philosophy the
apostle calls "the wisdom of this world;"
in consequence of its teaching the things of this world
and about it alone, and its consequent subjection,
as far as respects ascendancy, to those who rule here.
Wherefore also this fragmentary philosophy is very
elementary, while truly perfect science deals with
intellectual objects, which are beyond the sphere of
the world, and with the objects still more spiritual
than those which "eye saw not, and ear heard not,
nor did it enter into the heart of men," till
the Teacher told the account of them to us;
496
unveiling the holy of holies; and in ascending order,
things still holier than these, to those who are truly
and not spuriously heirs of the Lord's adoption. For
we now dare aver (for here is the faith that is characterized
by knowledge[1]) that such an one knows all things,
and comprehends all things in the exercise of sure
apprehension, respecting matters difficult for us,
and really pertaining to the true gnosis[2] such as
were James, Peter, John, Paul, and the rest of the
apostles. For prophecy is full of knowledge (gnosis),
inasmuch as it was given by the Lord, and again explained
by the Lord to the apostles. And is not knowledge (gnosis)
an attribute of the rational soul, which trains itself
for this, that by knowledge it may become entitled
to immortality? For both are powers of the soul both
knowledge and impulse. And impulse is found to be a
movement after an assent. For he who has an impulse
towards an action, first receives the knowledge of
the action, and secondly the impulse. Let us further
devote our attention to this. For since learning is
older than action; (for naturally, he who does what
he wishes to do learns it first; and knowledge comes
from learning, and impulse follows knowledge; after
which comes action;) knowledge turns out the beginning
and author of all rational action. So that rightly
the peculiar nature of the rational soul is characterized
by this alone; for in reality impulse, like knowledge,
is excited by existing objects. And knowledge (gnosis)
is essentially a contemplation of existences on the
part of the soul, either of a certain thing or of certain
things, and when perfected, of all together. Although
some say that the wise man is persuaded that there
are some things incomprehensible, in such wise as to
have respecting them a kind of comprehension, inasmuch
as he comprehends that things incomprehensible are
incomprehensible; which is common, and pertains to
those who are capable of perceiving little. For such
a man affirms that there are some things incomprehensible.
But that Gnostic of whom I speak, himself comprehends
what seems to be incomprehensible to others; believing
that nothing is incomprehensible to the Son of God,
whence nothing incapable of being taught. For He who
suffered out of His love for us, would have suppressed
no element of knowledge requisite for our instruction.
Accordingly this faith becomes sure demonstration;
since truth follows what has been delivered by God.
But if one desires extensive knowledge, "he knows
things ancient, and conjectures things future; he understands
knotty sayings, and the solutions of enigmas. The disciple
of wisdom foreknows signs and omens, and the issues
of seasons and of times."[3]
CHAP. IX.--THE GNOSTIC FREE OF ALL PERTURBATIONS OF THE SOUL.
The Gnostic is such, that he is subject only to
the affections that exist for the maintenance of the
body, such as hunger, thirst, and the like. But in
the case of the Saviour, it were ludicrous [to suppose]
that the body, as a body, demanded the necessary aids
in order to its duration. For He ate, not for the sake
of the body, which was kept together by a holy energy,
but in order that it might not enter into the minds
of those who were with Him to entertain a different
opinion of Him; in like manner as certainly some afterwards
supposed that He appeared in a phantasmal shape (<greek>dokhsei</greek>).
But He was entirely impassible (<greek>apaqhg</greek>);
inaccessible to any movement of feeling--either pleasure
or pain. While the apostles, having most gnostically
mastered, through the Lord's teaching, angel and fear,
and lust, were not liable even to such of the movements
of feeling, as seem good, courage, zeal, joy, desire,
through a steady condition of mind, not changing a
whit; but ever continuing unvarying in a state of training
after the resurrection of the Lord.
And should it be granted that the affections specified
above, when produced rationally, are good, yet they
are nevertheless inadmissible in the case of the perfect
man, who is incapable of exercising courage: for neither
does he meet what inspires fear, as he regards none
of the things that occur in life as to be dreaded;
nor can aught dislodge him from this--the love he has
towards God. Nor does he need cheerfulness of mind;
for he does not fall into pain, being persuaded that
all things happen well. Nor is he angry; for there
is nothing to move him to anger, seeing he ever loves
God, and is entirely turned towards Him alone, and
therefore hates none of God's creatures. No more does
he envy; for nothing is wanting to him, that is requisite
to assimilation, in order that he may be excellent
and good. Nor does he consequently love any one with
this common affection, but loves the Creator in the
creatures. Nor, consequently, does he fall into any
desire and eagerness; nor does he want, as far as respects
his soul, aught appertaining to others, now that he
associates through love with the Beloved One, to whom
he is allied by free choice, and by the habit which
results from training, approaches closer to Him, and
is blessed through the abundance of good things. So
that on these accounts he is compelled to
497
become like his Teacher in impassibility. For the Word
of God is intellectual, according as the image of mind
is seen 'in man alone. Thus also the good man is godlike
in form and semblance as respects his soul. And, on
the other hand, God is like man. For the distinctive
form of each one is the mind by which we are characterized.
Consequently, also, those who sin against man are unholy
and impious. For it were ridiculous to say that the
gnostic and perfect man must not eradicate anger and
courage, inasmuch as without these he will not struggle
against circumstances, or abide what is terrible. But
if we take from him desire; he will be quite overwhelmed
by troubles, and therefore depart from this life very
basely. Unless possessed of it, as some suppose, he
will not conceive a desire for what is like the excellent
and the good. If, then, all alliance with what is good
is accompanied with desire, how, it is said, does he
remain impassible who desires what is excellent?
But these people know not, as appears, the divinity
of love. For love is not desire on the part of him
who loves; but is a relation of affection, restoring
the Gnostic to the unity of the faith,--independent
of time and place. But he who by love is already in
the midst of that in which he is destined to be, and
has anticipated hope by knowledge, does not desire
anything, having, as far as possible, the very thing
desired. Accordingly, as to be expected, he continues
in the exercise of gnostic love, in the one unvarying
state.
Nor will he, therefore, eagerly desire to be assimilated
to what is beautiful, possessing, as he does, beauty
by love. What more need of courage and of desire to
him, who has obtained the affinity to the impassible
God which arises from love, and by love has enrolled
himself among the friends of God?
We must therefore rescue the gnostic and perfect
man from all passion of the soul. For knowledge (gnosis)
produces practice, and practice habit or disposition;
and such a state as this produces impassibility, not
moderation of passion. And the complete eradication
of desire reaps as its fruit impassibility. But the
Gnostic does not share either in those affections that
are commonly celebrated as good, that is, the good
things of the affections which are allied to the passions:
such, I mean, as gladness, which is allied to pleasure;
and dejection, for this is conjoined with pain; and
caution, for it is subject to fear. Nor yet does he
share in high spirit, for it takes its place alongside
of wrath; although some say that these are no longer
evil, but already good. For it is impossible that he
who has been once made perfect by love, and feasts
eternally and insatiably on the boundless joy of contemplation,
should delight in small and grovelling things. For
what rational cause remains any more to the man who
has gained "the light inaccessible,"[2] for
revering to the good things of the world? Although
not yet true as to time and place, yet by that gnostic
love through which the inheritance and perfect restitution
follow, the giver of the reward makes good by deeds
what the Gnostic, by gnostic choice, had grasped by
anticipation through love.
For by going away to the Lord, for the love he bears
Him, though his tabernacle be visible on earth, he
does not withdraw himself from life. For that is not
permitted to him. But he has withdrawn his soul from
the passions. For that is granted to him. And on the
other hand he lives, having put to death his lusts,
and no longer makes use of the body, but allows it
the use of necessaries, that he may not give cause
for dissolution.
How, then, has he any more need of fortitude, who
is not in the midst of dangers, being not present,
but already wholly with the object of love? And what
necessity for self-restraint to him who has not need
of it? For to have such desires, as require self-restraint
in order to their control, is characteristic of one
who is not yet pure, but subject to passion. Now, fortitude
is assumed by reason of fear and cowardice. For it
were no longer seemly that the friend of God, whom
"God hath fore-ordained before the foundation
of the world"[3] to be enrolled in the highest
"adoption," should fall into pleasures or
fears, and be occupied in the repression of the passions.
For I venture to assert, that as he is predestinated
through what he shall do, and what he shall obtain,
so also has he predestinated himself by reason of what
he knew and whom he loved; not having the future indistinct,
as the multitude live, conjecturing it, but having
grasped by gnostic faith what is hidden from others.
And through love, the future is for him already present.
For he has believed, through prophecy and the advent,
on God who lies not. And what he believes he possesses,
and keeps hold of the promise. And He who hath promised
is truth. And through the trustworthiness of Him who
has promised, he has firmly laid hold of the end of
the promise by knowledge. And he, who knows the sure
comprehension of the future which there is in the circumstances,
in which he is placed, by love goes to meet the future.
So he, that is persuaded that he will obtain the things
that are really good, will not pray to obtain what
is here, but that he may always cling to the faith
which hits the mark and succeeds. And besides, he will
pray that as many as possible may become like him,
to the glory of God,
498
which is perfected through knowledge. For he who is
made like the Saviour is also devoted to saving; performing
unerringly the commandments as far as the human nature
may admit of the image. And this is to worship God
by deeds and knowledge of the true righteousness. The
Lord will not wait for the voice of this man in prayer.
"Ask," He says, "and I will do it; think,
and I will give."[1]
For, in fine, it is impossible that the immutable
should assume firmness and consistency in the mutable.
But the ruling faculty being in perpetual change, and
therefore unstable, the force of habit is not maintained.
For how can he who is perpetually changed by external
occurrences mad accidents, ever possess habit and disposition,
and in a word, grasp of scientific knowledge (<greek>episthmh</greek>)?
Further, also, the philosophers regard the virtues
as habits, dispositions, and sciences. And as knowledge
(gnosis) is not born with men, but is acquired,[2]
and the acquiring of it in its elements demands application,
and training, and progress; and then from incessant
practice it passes into a habit; so, when perfected
in the mystic habit, it abides, being infallible through
love. For not only has he apprehended the first Cause,
and the Cause produced by it, and is sure about them,
possessing firmly firm and irrefragable and immoveable
reasons; but also respecting what is good and what
is evil, and respecting all production, and to speak
comprehensively, respecting all about Which the Lord
has spoken, he has learned, from the truth itself,
the most exact truth from the foundation of the world
to the end. Not preferring to the truth itself what
appears plausible, or, according to Hellenic reasoning,
necessary; but what has been spoken by the Lord he
accepts as clear and evident, though concealed from
others; and he has already received the knowledge of
all things. And the oracles we possess give their utterances
respecting what exists, as it is; and respecting what
is future, as it shall be; and respecting what is past,
as it was.
In scientific matters, as being alone possessed
of scientific knowledge, he will hold the pre-eminence,
and will discourse on the discussion respecting the
good, ever intent on intellectual objects, tracing
out his procedure in human affairs from the archetypes
above; as navigators direct the ship according to the
star; prepared to hold himself in readiness for every
suitable action; accustomed to despise all difficulties
and dangers when it is necessary to undergo them; never
doing anything precipitate or incongruous either to
himself or the common weal; fore-seeing; and inflexible
by pleasures both of waking hours and of dreams. For,
accustomed to spare living and frugality, he is moderate,
active, mad grave; requiring few necessaries for life;
occupying himself with nothing superfluous. But desiring
not even these things as chief, but by reason of fellowship
in life, as necessary for his sojourn in life, as far
as necessary.
CHAP. X.--THE GNOSTIC AVAILS HIMSELF OF THE HELP OF ALL HUMAN KNOWLEDGE.
For to him knowledge (gnosis) is the principal thing.
Consequently, therefore, he applies to the subjects
that are a training for knowledge, taking from each
branch of study its contribution to the truth. Prosecuting,
then, the proportion of harmonies in music; and in
arithmetic noting the increasing and decreasing of
numbers, and their relations to one another, and how
the most of things fall under some proportion of numbers;
studying geometry, which is abstract essence, he perceives
a continuous distance, and an immutable essence which
is different from these bodies. And by astronomy, again,
raised from the earth in his mind, he is elevated along
with heaven, and will revolve with its revolution;
studying ever divine things, and their harmony with
each other; from which Abraham starting, ascended to
the knowledge of Him who created them. Further, the
Gnostic will avail himself of dialectics, fixing on
the distinction of genera into species, and will master[3]
the distinction of existences, till he come to what
are primary and simple.
But the multitude are frightened at the Hellenic
philosophy, as children are at masks, being afraid
lest it lead them astray. But if the faith (for I cannot
call it knowledge) which they possess be such as to
be dissolved by plausible speech, let it be by all
means dissolved,[4] and let them confess that they
will not retain the truth. For truth is immoveable;
but false opinion dissolves. We choose, for instance,
one purple by comparison with another purple. So that,
if one confesses that he has not a heart that has been
made right, he has not the table of the money-changers
or the test of words.[5] And how can he be any longer
a money-changer, who is not able to prove and distinguish
spurious coin, even offhand?
Now David cried, "The righteous shall not be
shaken for ever;"[6] neither, consequently, by
deceptive speech nor by erring pleasure.
499
Whence he shall never be shaken from his own heritage.
"He shall not be afraid of evil tidings; "[1]
consequently neither of unfounded calumny, nor of the
false opinion around him. No more will he dread cunning
words, who is capable of distinguishing them, or of
answering rightly to questions asked. Such a bulwark
are dialectics, that truth cannot be trampled under
foot by the Sophists. "For it behoves those who
praise in the holy name of the Lord," according
to the prophet, "to rejoice in heart, seeking,
the Lord. Seek then Him, and be strong. Seek His face
continually in every way."[2] "For, having
spoken at sundry times and in divers manners,"[3]
it is not in one way only that He is known.
It is, then, not by availing himself of these as
virtues that our Gnostic will be deeply learned.
But by using them as helps in distinguishing what is
common and what is peculiar, he will admit the truth.
For the cause of all error and false opinion, is inability
to distinguish in what respect things are common, and
in what respects they differ. For unless, in things
that are distinct, one closely watch speech, he will
inadvertently confound what is common and what is peculiar
And where this takes place, he must of necessity fall
into pathless tracts and error.
The distinction of names and things also in the
Scriptures themselves produces great light in men's
souls. For it is necessary to understand expressions
which signify several things, and several expressions
when they signify one thing. The result of which is
accurate answering. But it is necessary to avoid the
great futility which occupies itself in irrelevant
matters; since the Gnostic avails himself of branches
of learning as auxiliary preparatory exercises, in
order to the accurate communication of the truth, as
far as attainable and with as little distraction as
possible, and for defence against reasonings that plot
for the extinction of the truth. He will not then be
deficient in what contributes to proficiency in the
curriculum of studies and the Hellenic philosophy;
but not principally, but necessarily, secondarily,
and on account of circumstances. For what those labouring
in heresies use wickedly, the Gnostic will use tightly.
Therefore the truth that appears in the Hellenic
philosophy, being partial, the real truth, like the
sun glancing on the colours both white and black, shows
what like each of them is. So also it exposes all sophistical
plausibility. Rightly, then, was it proclaimed also
by the Greeks:--
"Truth the queen is the beginning of great virtue."[4]
CHAP. Xl.--THE MYSTICAL MEANINGS IN THE PROPORTIONS OF NUMBERS, GEOMETRICAL RATIOS, AND MUSIC.
As then in astronomy we have Abraham as an instance,
so also in arithmetic we have the same Abraham. "For,
hearing that Lot was taken captive, and having numbered
his own servants, born in his house, 318 (<greek>tih</greek>[5]),"
he defeats a very great number of the enemy.
They say, then, that the character representing
300 is, as to shape, the type of the Lord's sign,[6]
and that the Iota and the Eta indicate the Saviour's
name; that it was indicated, accordingly, that Abraham's
domestics were in salvation, who having fled to the
Sign and the Name became lords of the captives, and
of the very many unbelieving nations that followed
them.
Now the number 300 is, 3 by 100. Ten is allowed
to be the perfect number. And 8 is the first cube,
which is equality in all the dimensions --length, breadth;
depth. "The days of men shall be," it is
said, "120 (<greek>rk</greek>) years."[7]
And the sum is made up of the numbers from r to 15
added together.[8] And the moon at 15 days is full.
On another principle, 120 is a triangular[9] number,
and consists of the equality[10] of the number 64,
[which consists of eight of the odd numbers beginning
with unity],[12] the addition of which (1, 3, 5, 7,
9, 11, 13, 15) in succession generate squares;[12]
and of the inequality of the number 56, consisting
of seven of the even numbers beginning with 2 (2, 4,
6, 8, 10, 12, 14), which produce the numbers that are
not squares[13]
Again, according to another way of indicating. the
number 120 consists of four numbers--of one triangle,
15; of another, a square, 25; of a third, a pentagon,
35; and of a fourth, a hexagon, 45. The 5 is taken
according to the same ratio in each mode. For in triangular
numbers, from the unity 5 comes 15; and in squares,
25; and of those in succession, proportionally. Now
25, which is the number 5 from unity, is said to be
the symbol of the Levitical tribe. And the
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number 35 depends also on the arithmetic, geometric,
and harmonic scale of doubles--6, 8, 9, 12; the addition
of which makes 35. In these days, the Jews say that
seven months' children are formed. And the number 45
depends on the scale of triples--6, 9, 12, 18--the
addition of which makes 45; and similarly, in these
days they say that nine months' children are formed.
Such, then, is the style of the example in arithmetic.
And let the testimony of geometry be the tabernacle
that was constructed, and the ark that was fashioned,--constructed
in most regular proportions, and through divine ideas,
by the gift of understanding, which leads us from things
of sense to intellectual objects, or rather from these
to holy things, and to the holy of holies. For the
squares of wood indicate that the square form, producing
fight angles, pervades all, and points out security.
And the length of the structure was three hundred cubits,
and the breadth fifty, and the height thirty; and above,
the ark ends in a cubit, narrowing to a cubit from
the broad base like a pyramid, the symbol of those
who are purified and tested by fire. And this geometrical
proportion has a place, for the transport of those
holy abodes, whose differences are indicated by the
differences of the numbers set down below.
And the numbers introduced are sixfold, as three
hundred is six times fifty; and tenfold, as three hundred
is ten times thirty; and containing one and two-thirds
(<greek>epidimoiroi</greek>), for fifty
is one and two-thirds of thirty.
Now there are some who say that three hundred cubits
are the symbol of the Lord's sign;[1] and fifty, of
hope and of the remission given at Pentecost; and thirty,
or as in some, twelve, they say points out the preaching
[of the Gospel]; because the LOrd preached in His thirtieth
year; and the apostles were twelve. And the structure's
terminating in a cubit is the symbol of the advancement
of the righteous to oneness and to "the unity
of the faith."[2]
And the table which was in the temple was six cubits;[3]
and its four feet were about a cubit and a half.
They add, then, the twelve cubits, agreeably to
the revolution of the twelve months, in the annual
circle, during which the earth produces and matures
all things; adapting itself to the four seasons. And
the table, in my opinion, exhibits the image of the
earth, supported as it is on four feet, summer, autumn,
spring, winter, by which the year travels. Wherefore
also it is said that the table has "wavy chains;"[4]
either because the universe revolves in the circuits
of the times, or perhaps it indicated the earth surrounded
with ocean's tide.
Further, as an example of music, let us adduce David,
playing at once and prophesying, melodiously praising
God. Now the Enarmonic s suits best the Dorian harmony,
and the Diatonic the Phrygian, as Aristoxenus says.
The harmony, therefore, of the Barbarian psaltery,
which exhibited gravity of strain, being the most ancient,
most certainly became a model for Terpander, for the
Dorian harmony, who sings the praise of Zeus thus:--
"O Zeus, of all things the Beginning, Rule,
of, all;
O Zeus, I send thee this beginning of hymns."
The lyre, according to its primary signification, may
by the psalmist be used figuratively for the Lord;
according to its secondary, for those who continually
strike the chords of their souls under the direction
of the Choir-master, the Lord. And if the people saved
be called the lyre, it will be understood to be in
consequence of their giving glory musically, through
the inspiration of the Word and the knowledge of God,
being struck by the Word so as to produce faith. You
may take music in another way, as the ecclesiastical
symphony at once of the law and the prophets, and the
apostles along with the Gospel, and the harmony which
obtained in each prophet, in the transitions of the
persons.
But, as seems, the most of those who are inscribed
with the Name,[6] like the companions of Ulysses, handle
the word unskilfully, passing by not the Sirens, but
the rhythm and the melody, stopping their ears with
ignorance; since they know that, after lending their
ears to Hellenic studies, they will never subsequently
be able to retrace their steps.
But he who culls what is useful for the advantage
of the catechumens, and especially when they are Greeks
(and the earth is the Lord's, and the fulness thereof[7]),
must not abstain from erudition, like irrational animals;
but he must collect as many aids as possible for his
hearers. But he must by no means linger over these
studies, except solely for the advantage accruing from
them; so that, on grasping and obtaining this, he may
be able to take his departure home to the true philosophy,
which is a strong cable for the soul, providing security
from everything.
Music is then to be handled for the sake of the
embellishment and composure of manners. For instance,
at a banquet we pledge each other while the music is
playing;[8] soothing by song the eagerness of our desires,
and glorifying God
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for the copious gift of human enjoyments, for His perpetual
supply of the food necessary for the growth of the
body and of the soul. But we must reject superfluous
music, which enervates men's souls, and leads to variety,--now
mournful, and then licentious and voluptuous, and then
frenzied and frantic.
The same holds also of astronomy. For treating of
the description of the celestial objects, about the
form of the universe, and the revolution of the heavens,
and the motion of the stars, leading the soul nearer
to the creative power, it teaches to quickness in perceiving
the seasons of the year, the changes of the air, and
the appearance of the stars; since also navigation
and husbandry derive from this much benefit, as architecture
and building from geometry. This branch of learning,
too, makes the soul in the highest degree observant,
capable of perceiving the true and detecting the false,
of discovering correspondences and proportions, so
as to hunt out for similarity in things dissimilar;
and conducts us to the discovery of length without
breadth, and superficial extent without thickness,
and an indivisible point, and transports to intellectual
objects from those of sense.
The studies of philosophy, therefore, and philosophy
itself, are aids in treating of the truth. For instance,
the cloak was once a fleece; then it was shorn, and
became warp and woof; and then it was woven. Accordingly
the soul must be prepared and variously exercised,
if it would become in the highest degree good. For
there is the scientific and the practical element in
truth; and the latter flows from the speculative; and
there is need of great practice, and exercise, and
experience.
But in speculation, one element relates to one's
neighbours and another to one's self. Wherefore also
training ought to be so moulded as to be adapted to
both. He, then, who has acquired a competent acquaintance
with the subjects which embrace the principles which
conduce to scientific knowledge (gnosis), may stop
and remain for the future in quiet, directing his actions
in l conformity with his theory.
But for the benefit of one's neighbours, in the
case of those who have proclivities for writing, and
those who set themselves to deliver the word, both
is other culture beneficial, and the reading of the
Scriptures of the Lord is necessary, in order to the
demonstration of what is said, and especially if those
who hear are accessions from Hellenic culture.
Such David describes the Church: "The queen
stood on thy right hand, enveloped in a golden robe,
variegated; "[1] and with Hellenic and superabundant
accomplishments, "clothed variegated with gold-fringed
garments."[2] And the Truth says by the Lord,
"For who had known Thy counsel, hadst Thou not
given wisdom, and sent Thy Holy Spirit from the Highest;
and so the ways of those on earth were corrected, and
men learned Thy decrees, and were saved by wisdom?"
For the Gnostic knows things ancient by the Scripture,
and conjectures things future: he understands the involutions
of words and the solutions of enigmas. He knows beforehand
signs and wonders, and the issues of seasons and periods,
as we have said already. Seest thou the fountain of
instructions that takes its rise from wisdom? But to
those who object, What use is there in knowing the
causes of the manner of the sun's motion, for example,
and the rest of the heavenly bodies, or in having studied
the theorems of geometry or logic, and each of the
other branches of study?--for these are of no service
in the discharge of duties, and the Hellenic philosophy
is human wisdom, for it is incapable of teachings the
truth--the following remarks are to be made. First,
that they stumble in reference to the highest of things--namely,
the mind's free choice. "For they," it is
said, "who keep holy holy things, shall be made
holy; and those who have been taught will find an answer."[4]
For the Gnostic alone will do holily, in accordance
with reason all that has to be done, as he hath learned
through the Lord's teaching, received through men.
Again, on the other hand, we may hear: "For
in His hand, that is, in His power and wisdom, are
both we and our words, and all wisdom and skill in
works; for God loves nothing but the man that dwells
with wisdom."[5] And again, they have not read
what is said by Solomon; for, treating of the construction
of the temple, he says expressly, "And it was
Wisdom as artificer that framed it; and Thy providence,
O Father, governs throughout."[6] And how irrational,
to regard philosophy as inferior to architecture and
shipbuilding! And the Lord fed the multitude of those
that reclined on the grass opposite to Tiberias with
the two fishes and the five barley loaves, indicating
the preparatory training of the Greeks and Jews previous
to the divine grain, which is the food cultivated by
the law. For barley is sooner ripe for the harvest
than wheat; and the fishes signified the Hellenic philosophy
that was produced and moved in the midst of the Gentile
billow, given, as they were, for copious food to those
lying on the ground, increasing no more, like the fragments
of the
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loaves, but having partaken of the Lord's blessing, and breathed into them the resurrection of Godhead[1] through the power of the Word. But if you are curious, understand one of the fishes to mean the curriculum of study, and the other the philosophy which supervenes. The gatherings' point out the word of the Lord.
"And the choir of mute fishes rushed to it,"
says the Tragic Muse somewhere.
"I must decrease," said the prophet John,[3]
and the Word of the Lord alone, in which the law terminates,
"increase." Understand now for me the mystery
of the truth, granting pardon if I shrink from advancing
further in the treatment of it, by announcing this
alone: "All things were made by Him, and without
Him was not even one thing."[4] Certainly He is
called "the chief corner stone; in whom the whole
building, fitly joined together, groweth into an holy
temple of God,"[5] according to the divine apostle.
I pass over in silence at present the parable which
says in the Gospel: "The kingdom of heaven is
like a man who cast a net into the sea and out of the
multitude of the fishes caught, makes a selection of
the better ones."[6]
And now the wisdom which we possess announces the
four virtues[7] in such a way as to show that the sources
of them were communicated by the Hebrews to the Greeks.
This may be learned from the following: "And if
one loves justice, its toils are virtues. For temperance
and prudence teach justice and fortitude; and than
these there is nothing more useful in life to men."
Above all, this ought to be known, that by nature
we are adapted for virtue; not so as to be possessed
of it from our birth, but so as to be adapted for acquiring
it.
CHAP. XII.--HUMAN NATURE POSSESSES AN ADAPTATION FOR PERFECTION; THE GNOSTIC ALONE ATTAINS IT.
By which consideration s is solved the question
propounded to us by the heretics, Whether Adam was
created perfect or imperfect? Well, if imperfect, how
could the work of a perfect God--above all, that work
being man--be imperfect? And if perfect, how did he
transgress the commandments? For they shall hear from
us that he was not perfect in his creation, but adapted
to the reception of virtue. For it is of great importance
in regard to virtue to be made fit for its attainment.
And it is intended that we should be saved by ourselves.
This, then, is the nature of the soul, to move of itself.
Then, as we are rational, and philosophy being rational,
we have some affinity with it. Now an aptitude is a
movement towards virtue, not virtue itself. All, then,
as I said, are naturally constituted for the acquisition
of virtue.
But one man applies less, one more, to learning
and training. Wherefore also some have been competent
to attain to perfect virtue, and others have attained
to a kind of it. And some, on the other hand, through
negligence, although in other respects of good dispositions,
have turned to the opposite. Now much more is that
knowledge which excels all branches of culture in greatness
and in truth, most difficult to acquire, and is attained
with much toil. "But, as seems, they know not
the mysteries of God. For God created man for immortality,
and made him an image of His own nature;"[9] according
to which nature of Him who knows all, he who is a Gnostic,
and righteous, and holy with prudence, hastes to reach
the measure of perfect manhood. For not only are actions
and thoughts, but words also, pure in the case of the
Gnostic: "Thou hast proved mine heart; Thou hast
visited me by night," it is said; "Thou hast
subjected me to the fire, and unrighteousness was not
found in me: so that my mouth shall not speak the works
of men."[10]
And why do I say the works of men? He recognises
sin itself, which is not brought forward in order to
repentance (for this is common to all believers); but
what sin is. Nor does he condemn this or that sin,
but simply all sin; nor is it what one has done ill
that he brings up, but what ought not to be done. Whence
also repentance is twofold: that which is common, on
account of having transgressed; and that which, from
learning the nature of sin, persuades, in the first
instance, to keep from sinning, the result of which
is not sinning.
Let them not then say, that he who does wrong and
sins transgresses through the agency of demons; for
then he would be guiltless. But by choosing the same
things as demons, by sinning; being unstable, and light,
and fickle in his desires, like a demon, he becomes
a demoniac man. Now he who is bad, having become, through
evil, sinful by nature, becomes depraved, having what
he has chosen; and being sinful, sins also in his actions.
And again, the good man does right. Wherefore we call
not only the virtues, but also right actions, good.
And of things that are
503.
good we know that some are desirable for themselves,
as knowledge; for we hunt for nothing from it when
we have it, but only [seek] that it be with us, and
that we be in uninterrupted contemplation, and strive
to reach it for its own sake. But other things are
desirable for other considerations, such as faith,
for escape from punishment, and the advantage arising
from reward, which accrue from it. For, in the case
of many, fear is the cause of their not sinning; and
the promise is the means of pursuing obedience, by
which comes salvation. Knowledge, then, desirable as
it is for its own sake, is the most perfect good; and
consequently the things which follow by means of it
are good. And punishment is the cause of correction
to him who is punished; and to those who are able to
see before them he becomes an example, to prevent them
failing into the like.
Let us then receive knowledge, not desiring its
results, but embracing itself for the sake of knowing.
For the first advantage is the habit of knowledge (<greek>gnpstikh</greek>),
which furnishes harmless pleasures and exultation both
for the present and the future. And exultation is said
to be gladness, being a reflection of the virtue which
is according to truth, through a kind of exhilaration
and relaxation of soul. And the acts which partake
of knowledge are good and fair actions. For abundance
in the actions that are according to virtue, is the
true riches, and destitution in decorous[1] desires
is poverty. For the use and enjoyment of necessaries
are not injurious in quality, but in quantity, when
in excess. Wherefore the Gnostic circumscribes his
desires in reference both to possession and to enjoyment,
not exceeding the limit of necessity. Therefore, regarding
life in this world as necessary for the increase of
science (<greek>episthmh</greek>) and the
acquisition of knowledge (<greek>gnpsid</greek>),
he will value highest, not living, but living well.
He will therefore prefer neither children, nor marriage,
nor parents, to love for God, and righteousness in
life. To such an one, his wife, after conception, is
as a sister, and is judged as if of the same father;
then only recollecting her husband, when she looks
on the children; as being destined to become a sister
in reality after putting off the flesh, which separates
and limits the knowledge of those who are spiritual
by the peculiar characteristics of the sexes. For souls,
themselves by themselves, are equal. Souls are neither
male nor female, when they no longer marry nor are
given in marriage. And is not woman translated into
man, when she is become equally unfeminine, and manly,
and perfect? Such, then, was the laughter of Sarah[2]
when she received the good news of the birth of a son;
not, in my opinion, that she disbelieved the angel,
but that she felt ashamed of the intercourse by means
of which she was destined to become the mother of a
son.
And did not Abraham, when he was in danger on account
of Sarah's beauty, with the king of Egypt, properly
call her sister, being of the same father, but not
of the same mother?[3]
To those, then, who have repented and not firmly
believed, God grants their requests through their supplications.
But to those who live sinlessly and gnostically, He
gives, when they have but merely entertained the thought.
For example, to Anna, on her merely conceiving the
thought, conception was vouchsafed of the child Samuel.[4]
"Ask," says the Scripture, "and I will
do. Think, and I will give." For we have heard
that God knows the heart, not judging [5] the soul
from [external] movement, as we men; nor yet from the
event, For it is ridiculous to think so. Nor was it
as the architect praises the work when accomplished
that God, on making the light and then seeing it, called
it good. But He, knowing before He made it what it
would be, praised that [which was made, He having potentially
made good, from the first by His purpose that had
no beginning, what was destined to be good actually.
Now that which has future He already said beforehand
was good, the phrase concealing the truth by hyperbaton.
Therefore the Gnostic prays in thought during every
hour, being by love allied to God. And first he will
ask forgiveness of sins; and after, that he may sin
no more; and further, the power of well-doing and of
comprehending the whole creation and administration
by the Lord, that, becoming pure in heart through the
knowledge, which is by the Son of God, he may be initiated
into the beatific vision face to face, having heard
the Scripture which says, "Fasting with prayer
is a good thing."[6]
Now fastings signify abstinence from all evils whatsoever,
both in action and in word, and in thought itself.
As appears, then, righteousness is quadrangular;[7]
on all sides equal and like in word, in deed, in abstinence
from evils, in beneficence, in gnostic perfection;
nowhere, and in no respect halting, so that he does
not appear unjust and unequal. As one, then, is righteous,
so certainly is he a believer. But as he is a believer,
he is not yet also righteous--I mean ac-
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cording to the righteousness of progress and perfection,
according to which the Gnostic is called righteous.
For instance, on Abraham becoming a believer, it
was reckoned to him for righteousness, he having advanced
to the greater and more perfect degree of faith. For
he who merely abstains from evil conduct is not just,
unless he also attain besides beneficence and knowledge;
and for this reason some things are to be abstained
from, others are to be done. "By the armour of
righteousness on the right hand and on the left,"[1]
the apostle says, the righteous man is sent on to the
inheritance above,--by some [arms] defended, by others
putting forth his might. For the defence of his panoply
alone, and abstinence from sins, are not sufficient
for perfection, unless he assume in addition the work
of righteousness--activity in doing good.
Then our dexterous man and Gnostic is revealed in
righteousness already even here, as Moses, glorified
in the face of the soul,[2] as we have formerly said,
the body bears the stamp of the righteous soul. For
as the mordant of the dyeing process, remaining in
the wool, produces in it a certain quality and diversity
from other wool; so also in the soul the pain is gone,
but the good remains; and the sweet is left, but the
base is wiped away. For these are two qualities characteristic
of each soul, by which is known that which is glorified,
and that which is condemned.
And as in the case of Moses, from his righteous
conduct, and from his uninterrupted intercourse with
God, who spoke to him, a kind of glorified hue settled
on his face; so also a divine power of goodness clinging
to the righteous

