IRENAEUS AGAINST HERESIES - BOOK V
PREFACE.
IN the four preceding books, my very dear friend,
which I put forth to thee, all the heretics have been
exposed, and their doctrines brought to light, and
these men refuted who have devised irreligious opinions.
[I have accomplished this by adducing] something from
the doctrine peculiar to each of these men, which they
have left in their writings, as well as by using arguments
of a more general nature, and applicable to them all.(1)
Then I have pointed out the truth, and shown the preaching
of the Church, which the prophets proclaimed (as I
have already demonstrated), but which Christ brought
to perfection, and the apostles have handed down, from
whom the Church, receiving [these truths], and throughout
all the world alone preserving them in their integrity
(bene), has transmitted them to her sons. Then also--having
disposed of all questions which the heretics propose
to us, and having explained the doctrine of the apostles,
and clearly set forth many of those things which were
said and done by the Lord in parables--I shall endeavour,
in this the fifth book of the entire work which treats
of the exposure and refutation of knowledge falsely
so called, to exhibit proofs from the rest of the Lord's
doctrine and the apostolical epistles: [thus] complying
with thy demand, as thou didst request of me (since
indeed I have been assigned a place in the ministry
of the word); and, labouring by every means in my power
to furnish thee with large assistance against the contradictions
of the heretics, as also to reclaim the wanderers
and convert them to the Church of God, to confirm at
the same time the minds of the neophytes, that they
may preserve stedfast the faith which they have received,
guarded by the Church in its integrity, in order that
they be in no way perverted by those who endeavour
to teach
them false doctrines, and lead them away from the truth. It will be incumbent upon thee, however, and all who may happen to read this writing, to peruse with great attention what I have already said, that thou mayest obtain a knowledge of the subjects against which I am contending. For it is thus that thou wilt both controvert them in a legitimate manner, and wilt be prepared to receive the proofs brought forward against them, casting away their doctrines as filth by means of the celestial faith; but following the only true and stedfast Teacher, the Word of God, our Lord Jesus Christ, who did, through His transcendent love, become what we are, that He might bring us to be even what He is Himself.
CHAP. I.--CHRIST ALONE IS ABLE TO TEACH DIVINE THINGS, AND TO REDEEM US: HE, THE SAME, TOOK FLESH OF THE VIRGIN MARY, NOT MERELY IN APPEARANCE, BUT ACTUALLY, BY THE OPERATION OF THE HOLY SPIRIT, IN ORDER TO RENOVATE US. STRICTURES ON THE CONCEITS OF VALENTINUS AND EBION.
1. FOR in no other way could we have learned the things of God, unless our Master, existing as the Word, had become man. For no other being had the power of revealing to us the things of the Father, except His own proper Word. For what other person "knew the mind of the Lord," or who else "has become His counsellor?"(2) Again, we could have learned in no other way than by seeing our Teacher, and hearing His voice with our own ears, that, having become imitators of His works as well as doers of His words, we may have communion with Him, receiving increase from the perfect One, and from Him who is prior to all creation. We--who were but lately created by the only best and good Being, by Him also who has the gift of immortality, having been formed after
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His likeness (predestinated, according to the prescience
of the Father, that we, who had as yet no existence,
might come into being), and made the first-fruits of
creation(1)--have received, in the times known beforehand,
[the blessings of salvation] according to the ministration
of the Word, who is perfect in all things, as the mighty
Word, and very man, who, redeeming us by His own blood
in a manner consonant to reason, gave Himself as a
redemption for those who had been led into captivity.
And since the apostasy tyrannized over us unjustly,
and, though we were by nature the property of the omnipotent
God, alienated us contrary to nature, rendering us
its own disciples, the Word of God, powerful in all
things, and not defective with regard to His own justice,
did righteously turn against that apostasy, and redeem
from it His own property, not by violent means, as
the [apostasy] had obtained dominion over us at the
beginning, when it insatiably snatched away what was
not its own, but by means of persuasion, as became
a God of counsel, who does not use violent means to
obtain what He desires; so that neither should justice
be infringed upon, nor the ancient handiwork of God
go to destruction. Since the Lord thus has redeemed
us through His own blood, giving His soul for our souls,
and His flesh for our flesh,(2) and has also poured
out the Spirit of the Father for the union and communion
of God and man, imparting indeed God to men by means
of the Spirit, and, on the other hand, attaching man
to God by His own incarnation, and bestowing upon us
at His coming immortality durably and truly, by means
of communion with God,--all the doctrines of the heretics
fall to ruin.
2. Vain indeed are those who allege that He appeared
in mere seeming. For these things were not done in
appearance only, but in actual reality. But if He did
appear as a man, when He was not a man, neither could
the Holy Spirit have rested upon Him,--an occurrence
which did actually take place--as the Spirit is invisible;
nor, [in that case], was there any degree of truth
in Him, for He was not that which He seemed to be.
But I have already remarked that Abraham and the other
prophets beheld Him after a prophetical manner, foretelling
in vision what should come to pass. If, then, such
a being has now appeared in outward semblance different
from what he was in reality, there has been a certain
prophetical vision made to men; and another advent
of His must be looked forward to, in which He shall
be such as He has now been seen in a prophetic manner.
And I have proved already, that it is the same thing
to say that He appeared merely to outward seeming,
and [to affirm] that He received nothing from Mary.
For He would not have been one truly possessing flesh
and blood, by which He redeemed us, unless He had
summed up in Himself the ancient formation of Adam.
Vain therefore are the disciples of Valentinus who
put forth this opinion,
in order that they my exclude the flesh from salvation,
and cast aside what God has fashioned.
3. Vain also are the Ebionites, who do not receive
by faith into their soul the union of God and man,
but who remain in the old leaven of [the natural] birth,
and who do not choose to understand that the Holy Ghost
came upon Mary, and the power of the Most High did
overshadow her:(3) wherefore also what was generated
is a holy thing, and the Son of the Most High God the
Father of all, who effected the incarnation of this
being, and showed forth a new [kind of] generation;
that as by the former generation we inherited death,
so by this new generation we might inherit life. Therefore
do these men reject the commixture of the heavenly
wine,(4) and wish it to be water of the world only,
not receiving God so as to have union with Him, but
they remain in that Adam who had been conquered and
was expelled from Paradise: not considering that as,
at the beginning of our formation in Adam, that breath
of life which proceeded from God, having been united
to what had been fashioned, animated the man, and manifested
him as a being endowed with reason; so also, in [the
times of] the end, the Word of the Father and the Spirit
of God, having become united with the ancient substance
of Adam's formation, rendered man living and perfect,
receptive of the perfect Father, in order that as in
the natural [Adam] we all were dead, so in the spiritual
we may all be made alive.(5) For never at any time
did Adam escape the harms(6) of God, to whom the Father
speaking, said, "Let Us make man in Our image,
after Our likeness." And for this reason in the
last times (fine), not by the will of the flesh, nor
by the will of man, but by the good pleasure of the
Father,(7) His hands formed a living man, in order
that Adam might be created [again] after the image
and likeness of God.
CHAP. II.--WHEN CHRIST VISITED US IN HIS GRACE, HE DID NOT COME TO WHAT DID NOT BELONG TO HIM: ALSO, BY SHEDDING HIS TRUE BLOOD FOR US, AND EXHIBITING TO US HIS TRUE FLESH IN THE EUCHARIST, HE CONFERRED UPON OUR FLESH THE CAPACITY OF SALVATION.
1. And vain likewise are those who say that
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God came to those things which did not belong to Him,
as if covetous of another's property; in order that
He might deliver up that man who had been created by
another, to that God who had neither made nor formed
anything, but who also was deprived from the beginning
of His own proper formation of men. The advent, therefore,
of Him whom these men represent as coming to the things
of others, was not righteous; nor did He truly redeem
us by His own blood, if He did not really become man,
restoring to His own handiwork what was said [of it]
in the beginning, that man was made after the image
and likeness of God; not snatching away by stratagem
the property of another, but taking possession of His
own in a righteous and gracious manner. As far as concerned
the apostasy, indeed, He redeems us righteously from
it by His own blood; but as regards us who have been
redeemed, [He does this] graciously. For we have given
nothing to Him previously, nor does He desire anything
from us, as if He stood in need of it; but we do stand
in need of fellowship with Him. And for this reason
it was that He graciously poured Himself out, that
He might gather us into the bosom of the Father.
2. But vain in every respect are they who despise
the entire dispensation of God, and disallow the salvation
of the flesh, and treat with contempt its regeneration,
maintaining that it is not capable of incorruption.
But if this indeed do not attain salvation, then neither
did the Lord redeem us with His blood, nor is the cup
of the Eucharist the communion of His blood, nor the
bread which we break the communion of His body.(1)
For blood can only come from veins and flesh, and whatsoever
else makes up the substance of man, such as the Word
of God was actually made. By His own blood he redeemed
us, as also His apostle declares, "In whom we
have redemption through His blood, even the remission
of sins."(2) And as we are His members, we are
also nourished by means of the creation (and He Himself
grants the creation to us, for He causes His sun to
rise, and sends rain when He wills(3)). He has acknowledged
the cup (which is a part of the creation) as His own
blood, from which He bedews our blood; and the bread
(also a part of the creation) He has established as
His own body, from which He gives increase to our bodies.(4)
3. When, therefore, the mingled cup and the manufactured
bread receives the Word of God, and the Eucharist of
the blood and the body of
Christ is made,(5) from which things the substance of our flesh is increased and supported, how can they affirm that the flesh is incapable of receiving the gift of God, which is life eternal, which [flesh] is nourished from the body and blood of the Lord, and is a member of Him?--even as the blessed Paul declares in his Epistle to the Ephesians, that "we are members of His body, of His flesh, and of His bones."(6) He does not speak these words of some spiritual and invisible man, for a spirit has not bones nor flesh;(7) but [he refers to] that dispensation [by which the Lord became] an actual man, consisting of flesh, and nerves, and bones,--that [flesh] which is nourished by the cup which is His blood, and receives increase from the bread which is His body. And just as a cutting from the vine planted in the ground fructifies in its season, or as a corn of wheat falling into the earth and becoming decomposed, rises with manifold increase by the Spirit of God, who contains all things, and then, through the wisdom of God, serves for the use of men, and having received the Word of God, becomes the Eucharist, which is the body and blood of Christ; so also our bodies, being nourished by it, and deposited in the earth, and suffering decomposition there, shall rise at their appointed time, the Word of God granting them resurrection to the glory of God, even the Father, who freely gives to this mortal immortality, and to this corruptible incorruption,(8) because the strength of God is made perfect in weakness,(9) in order that we may never become puffed up, as if we had life from ourselves, and exalted against God, our minds becoming ungrateful; but learning by experience that we possess eternal duration from the excelling power of this Being, not from our own nature, we may neither undervalue that glory which surrounds God as He is, nor be ignorant of our own nature, but that we may know what God can effect, and what benefits man receives, and thus never wander from the true comprehension of things as they are, that is, both with regard to God and with regard to man. And might it not be the case, perhaps, as I have already observed, that for this purpose God permitted our resolution into the common dust of mortality,(10) that we, being instructed by every mode, may be accurate in all things for the future, being ignorant neither of God nor of ourselves?
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CHAP. III.--HE POWER AND GLORY OF GOD SHINE FORTH IN THE WEAKNESS OF HUMAN FLESH, AS HE WILL RENDER OUR BODY A PARTICIPATOR OF THE RESURRECTION AND OF IMMORTALITY, ALTHOUGH HE HAS FORMED IT FROM THE DUST OF THE EARTH; HE WILL ALSO BESTOW UPON IT THE ENJOYMENT OF IMMORTALITY, JUST AS HE GRANTS IT THIS SHORT LIFE IN COMMON WITH THE SOUL.
1. The Apostle Paul has, moreover, in the most lucid
manner, pointed out that man has been delivered over
to his own infirmity, lest, being uplifted, he might
fall away from the truth. Thus he says in the second
[Epistle] to the Corinthians: "And lest I should
be lifted up by the sublimity of the revelations, there
was given unto me a thorn in the flesh, the messenger
of Satan to buffet me. And upon this I besought the
Lord three times, that it might depart from me. But
he said unto me, My grace is sufficient for thee; for
strength is made perfect in weakness. Gladly therefore
shall I rather glory in infirmities, that the power
of Christ may dwell in me."(1) What, therefore?
(as some may exclaim:) did the Lord wish, in that case,
that His apostles should thus undergo buffering, and
that he should endure such infirmity? Even so it was;
the word says it. For strength is made perfect in weakness,
rendering him a better man who by means of his infirmity
becomes acquainted with the power of God. For how could
a man have learned that he is himself an infirm being,
and mortal by nature, but that God is immortal and
powerful, unless he had learned by experience what
is in both? For there is nothing evil in learning one's
infirmities by endurance; yea, rather, it has even
the beneficial effect of preventing him from forming
an undue opinion of his own nature (non aberrare in
natura sua). But the being lifted up against God, and
taking His glory to one's self, rendering man ungrateful,
has brought much evil upon him. [And thus, I say,
man must learn both things by experience], that he
may not be destitute of truth and love either towards
himself or his Creator.(2) But the experience of both
confers upon him the true knowledge as to God and man,
and increases his love towards God. Now, where there
exists an increase of love, there a greater glory
is wrought out by the power of God for those who love
Him.
2. Those men, therefore, set aside the power of
God, and do not consider what the word declares, when
they dwell upon the infirmity of the flesh, but do
not take into consideration the
power of Him who raises it up from the dead. For if
He does not vivify what is mortal, and does not bring
back the corruptible to incorruption, He is not a God
of power. But that He is powerful in all these respects,
we ought to perceive from our origin, inasmuch as God,
taking dust from the earth, formed man. And surely
it is much more difficult and incredible, from non-existent
bones, and nerves, and veins, and the rest of man's
organization, to bring it about that all this should
be, and to make man an animated and rational creature,
than to re-integrate again that which had been created
and then afterwards decomposed into earth (for the
reasons already mentioned), having thus passed into
those [elements] from which man, who had no previous
existence, was formed. For He who in the beginning
caused him to have being who as yet was not, just when
He pleased, shall much more reinstate again those who
had a former existence, when it is His will [that they
should inherit] the life granted by Him. And that flesh
shall also be found fit for and capable of receiving
the power of God, which at the beginning received the
skilful touches of God; so that one part became the
eye for seeing; another, the ear for hearing; another,
the hand for feeling and working; another, the sinews
stretched out everywhere, and holding the limbs together;
another, arteries and veins, passages for the blood
and the air;(3) another, the various internal organs;
another, the blood, which is the bond of union between
soul and body. But why go [on in this strain]? Numbers
would fail to express the multiplicity of parts in
the human frame, which was made in no other way than
by the great wisdom of God. But those things which
partake of the skill and wisdom of God, do also partake
of His power.
3. The flesh, therefore, is not destitute [of participation]
in the constructive wisdom and power of God. But if
the power of Him who is the bestower of life is made
perfect in weakness--that is, in the flesh--let them
inform us, when they maintain the incapacity of flesh
to receive the life granted by God, whether they do
say these things as being living men at present, and
partakers of life, or acknowledge that, having no part
in life whatever, they are at the present moment dead
men. And if they really are dead men, how is it that
they move about, and speak, and perform those other
functions which are not the actions of the dead, but
of the living? But if they are now alive, and if their
whole body partakes of life, how can they venture the
assertion that the flesh is not quali-
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fled to be a partaker of life, when they do confess that they have life at the present moment? It is just as if anybody were to take up a sponge full of water, or a torch on fire, and to declare that the sponge could not possibly partake of the water, or the torch of the fire. In this very manner do those men, by alleging that they are alive and bear life about in their members, contradict themselves afterwards, when they represent these members as not being capable of [receiving] life. But if the present temporal life, which is of such an inferior nature to eternal life, can nevertheless effect so much as to quicken our mortal members, why should not eternal life, being much more powerful than this, vivify the flesh, which has already held converse with, and been accustomed to sustain, life? For that the flesh can really partake of life, is shown from the fact of it; being alive; for it lives on, as long as it is God's purpose that it should do so. It is manifest, too, that God has the power to confer life upon it, inasmuch as He grants life to us who are in existence. And, therefore, since the Lord has power to infuse life into what He has fashioned, and since the flesh is capable of being quickened, what remains to prevent its participating in incorruption, which is a blissful and never-ending life granted by God?
CHAP. IV.--THOSE PERSONS ARE DECEIVED WHO FEIGN ANOTHER GOD THE FATHER BESIDES THE CREATOR OF THE WORLD; FOR HE MUST HAVE BEEN FEEBLE AND USELESS, OR ELSE MALIGNANT AND FULL OF ENVY, IF HE BE EITHER UNABLE OR UNWILLING TO EXTEND EXTERNAL LIFE TO OUR BODIES.
1. Those persons who feign the existence of another
Father beyond the Creator, and who term him the good
God, do deceive themselves; for they introduce him
as a feeble, worthless, and negligent being, not to
say malign and full of envy, inasmuch as they affirm
that our bodies are not quickened by him. For when
they say of things which it is manifest to all do remain
immortal, such as the spirit and the soul, and such
other things, that they are quickened by the Father,
but that another thing [viz. the body] which is quickened
in no different manner than by God granting [life]
to it, is abandoned by life,--[they must either confess]
that this proves their Father to be weak and powerless,
or else envious and malignant. For since the Creator
does even here quicken our mortal bodies, and promises
them resurrection by the prophets, as I have pointed
out; who [in that case] is shown to be more powerful,
stronger, or truly good? Whether is it the Creator
who vivifies the whole man, or is it their Father,
falsely so called? He feigns to be the quickener of
those things which are immortal by nature, to which
things life is always present by their very nature;
but he does not benevolently quicken those things which
required his assistance, that they might live, but
leaves them carelessly to fall under the power of death.
Whether is it the case, then, that their Father does
not bestow life upon them when he has the power of
so doing, or is it that he does not possess the power?
If, on the one hand, it is because he cannot, he is,
upon that supposition, not a powerful being, nor is
he more perfect than the Creator; for the Creator grants,
as we must perceive, what He is unable to afford. But
if, on the other hand, [it be that he does not grant
this] when he has the power of so doing, then he is
proved to be not a good, but an envious and malignant
Father.
2. If, again, they refer to any cause on account
of which their Father does not impart life to bodies,
then that cause must necessarily appear superior to
the Father, since it restrains Him from the exercise
of His benevolence; and His benevolence will thus be
proved weak, on account of that cause which they bring
forward. Now every one must perceive that bodies are
capable of receiving life. For they live to the extent
that God pleases that they should live; and that being
so, the [heretics] cannot maintain that [these bodies]
are utterly incapable of receiving life. If, therefore,
on account of necessity and any other cause, those
[bodies] which are capable of participating in life
are not vivified, their Father shall be the slave of
necessity and that cause, and not therefore a free
agent, having His will under His own control.
CHAP. V.--THE PROLONGED LIFE OF THE ANCIENTS, THE TRANSLATION OF ELIJAH AND OF ENOCH IN THEIR OWN BODIES, AS WELL AS THE PRESERVATION OF JONAH, OF SHADRACH, MESHACH, AND ABEDNEGO, IN THE MIDST OF EXTREME PERIL, ARE CLEAR DEMONSTRATIONS THAT GOD CAN RAISE UP OUR BODIES TO LIFE ETERNAL.
1. [In order to learn] that bodies did continue in existence for a lengthened period, as long as it was God's good pleasure that they should flourish, let [these heretics] read the Scriptures, and they will find that our predecessors advanced beyond seven hundred, eight hundred, and nine hundred years of age; and that their bodies kept pace with the protracted length of their days, and participated in life as long as God willed that they should live. But why do I refer to these men? For Enoch, when he pleased God, was translated in the same body in which he did please Him, thus pointing out by anticipation the translation of the just. Elijah, too, was caught up [when he was yet] in the substance of the [natural] form; thus exhibiting in prophecy the
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assumption of those who are spiritual, and that nothing
stood in the way of their body being translated and
caught up. For by means of the very same hands through
which they were moulded at the beginning, did they
receive this translation and assumption. For in Adam
the hands of God had become accustomed to set in order,
to rule, and to sustain His own workmanship, and to
bring it and place it where they pleased. Where, then,
was the first man placed? In paradise certainly, as
the Scripture declares "And God planted a garden
[paradisum] eastward in Eden, and there He placed the
man whom He had formed."(1) And then afterwards
when [man] proved disobedient, he was cast out thence
into this world. Wherefore also the elders who were
disciples of the apostles tell us that those who were
translated were transferred to that place (for paradise
has been prepared for righteous men, such as have the
Spirit; in which place also Paul the apostle, when
he was caught up, heard words which are unspeakable
as regards us in our present condition(2)), and that
there shall they who have been translated remain until
the consummation [of all things], as a prelude to immortality.
2. If, however, any one imagine it impossible that
men should survive for such a length of time, and that
Elias was not caught up in the flesh, but that his
flesh was consumed in the fiery chariot, let him consider
that Jonah, when he had been cast into the deep, and
swallowed down into the whale's belly, was by the command
of God again thrown out safe upon the land.(3) And
then, again, when Ananias, Azarias, and Misael were
cast into the furnace of fire sevenfold heated, they
sustained no harm whatever, neither was the smell of
fire perceived upon them. As, therefore, the hand of
God was present with them, working out marvellous things
in their case--[things] impossible [to be accomplished]
by man's nature--what wonder was it, if also in the
case of those who were translated it performed something
wonderful, working in obedience to the will of God,
even the Father? Now this is the Son of God, as the
Scripture represents Nebuchadnezzar the king as having
said, "Did not we cast three men bound into the
furnace? and, lo, I do see four walking in the midst
of the fire, and the fourth is like the Son of God."(4)
Neither the nature of any created thing, therefore,
nor the weakness of the flesh, can prevail against
the will of God. For God is not subject to created
things, but created things to God; and all things yield
obedience to His will. Wherefore also the Lord declares,
"The things which are impossible with men, are
possible with God."(5) As, therefore, it might
seem to the men of the present day, who are ignorant
of God's appointment, to be a thing incredible and
impossible that any man could live for such a number
of years, yet those who were before us did live [to
such an age], and those who were translated do live
as an earnest of the future length of days; and [as
it might also appear impossible] that from the whale's
belly and from the fiery furnace men issued forth unhurt,
yet they nevertheless did so, led forth as it were
by the hand of God, for the purpose of declaring His
power: so also now, although some, not knowing the
power and promise of God, may oppose their own salvation,
deeming it impossible for God, who raises up the dead;
to have power to confer upon them eternal duration,
yet the scepticism of men of this stamp shall not render
the faithfulness of God of none effect.
CHAP. VI.--GOD WILL BESTOW SALVATION UPON THE WHOLE NATURE OF MAN, CONSISTING OF BODY AND SOUL IN CLOSE UNION, SINCE THE WORD TOOK IT UPON HIM, AND ADORNED WITH THE GIFTS OF THE HOLY SPIRIT, OF WHOM OUR BODIES ARE, AND ARE TERMED, THE TEMPLES.
1. Now God shall be glorified in His handiwork, fitting it so as to be conformable to, and modelled after, His own Son. For by the hands of the Father, that is, by the Son and the Holy Spirit, man, and not [merely] a part of man, was made in the likeness of God. Now the soul and the spirit are certainly a part of the man, but certainly not the man; for the perfect man consists in the commingling and the union of the soul receiving the spirit of the Father, and the admixture of that fleshly nature which was moulded after the image of God. For this reason does the apostle declare, "We speak wisdom among them that are perfect,"(6) terming those persons "perfect" who have received the Spirit of God, and who through the Spirit of God do speak in all languages, as he used Himself also to speak. In like manner we do also hear many brethren in the Church, who possess prophetic gifts, and who through the Spirit speak all kinds of languages, and bring to light for the general benefit the hidden things of men, and declare the mysteries of God, whom also the apostle terms "spiritual," they being spiritual because they partake of the Spirit, and not because their flesh has been stripped off and taken away, and because they have become purely spiritual. For if any one take away the sub-
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stance of flesh, that is, of the handiwork [of God],
and understand that which is purely spiritual, such
then would not be a spiritual man but would be the
spirit of a man, or the Spirit of God. But when the
spirit here blended with the soul is united to [God's]
handiwork, the man is rendered spiritual and perfect
because of the outpouring of the Spirit, and this is
he who was made in the image and likeness of God. But
if the Spirit be wanting to the soul, he who is such
is indeed of an animal nature, and being left carnal,
shall be an imperfect being, possessing indeed the
image [of God] in his formation (in plasmate), but
not receiving the similitude through the Spirit; and
thus is this being imperfect. Thus also, if any one
take away the image and set aside the handiwork, he
cannot then understand this as being a man, but as
either some part of a man, as I have already said,
or as something else than a man. For that flesh which
has been moulded is not a perfect man in itself, but
the body of a man, and part of a man. Neither is the
soul itself, considered apart by itself, the man; but
it is the soul of a man, and part of a man. Neither
is the spirit a man, for it is called the spirit, and
not a man; but the commingling and union of all these
constitutes the perfect man. And for this cause does
the apostle, explaining himself, make it clear that
the saved man is a complete man as well as a spiritual
man; saying thus in the first Epistle to the Thessalonians,
"Now the God of peace sanctify you perfect (perfectos);
and may your spirit, and soul, and body be preserved
whole without complaint to the coming of the Lord Jesus
Christ."(1) Now what was his object in praying
that these three--that is, soul, body, and spirit--
might be preserved to the coming of the Lord, unless
he was aware of the [future] reintegration and union
of the three, and [that they should be heirs of] one
and the same salvation? For this cause also he declares
that those are "the perfect" who present
unto the Lord the three [component parts] without offence.
Those, then, are the perfect who have had the Spirit
of God remaining in them, and have preserved their
souls and bodies blameless, holding fast the faith
of God, that is, that faith which is [directed] towards
God, and maintaining righteous dealings with respect
to their neighbours.
2. Whence also he says, that this handiwork is "the
temple of God," thus declaring: "Know ye
not that ye are the temple of God, and that the Spirit
of God dwelleth in you? If any man, therefore, will
defile the temple of God, him will God destroy: for
the temple of God is holy, which [temple] ye are."(2)
Here he manifestly declares the body to be the temple
in which the Spirit dwells. As also the Lord speaks
in reference to Himself, "Destroy this temple,
and in three days I will raise it up. He spake this,
however," it is said, "of the temple of His
body."(3) And not only does he (the apostle) acknowledge
our bodies to be a temple, but even the temple of Christ,
saying thus to the Corinthians, "Know ye not that
your bodies are members of Christ? Shall I then take
the members of Christ, and make them the members of
an harlot?"(4) He speaks these things, not in
reference to some other spiritual man; for a being
of such a nature could have nothing to do with an harlot:
but he declares "our body," that is, the
flesh which continues in sanctity and purity, to be
"the members of Christ;" but that when it
becomes one with an harlot, it becomes the members
of an harlot. And for this reason he said, "If
any man defile the temple of God, him will God destroy."
How then is it not the utmost blasphemy to allege,
that the temple of God, in which the Spirit of the
Father dwells, and the members of Christ, do not partake
of salvation, but are reduced to perdition? Also, that
our bodies are raised not from their own substance,
but by the power of God, he says to the Corinthians,
"Now the body is not for fornication, but for
the Lord, and the Lord for the body. But God hath both
raised up the Lord, and shall raise us up by His own
power."(5)
CHAP. VII.--INASMUCH AS CHRIST DID RISE IN OUR FLESH, IT FOLLOWS THAT WE SHALL BE ALSO RAISED IN THE SAME; SINCE THE RESURRECTION PROMISED TO US SHOULD NOT BE REFERRED TO SPIRITS NATURALLY IMMORTAL, BUT TO BODIES IN THEMSELVES MORTAL.
1. In the same manner, therefore, as Christ did rise in the substance of flesh, and pointed out to His disciples the mark of the nails and the opening in His side(6) (now these are the tokens of that flesh which rose from the dead), so "shall He also," it is said, "raise us up by His own power."(7) And again to the Romans he says, "But if the Spirit of Him that raised up Jesus from the dead dwell in you, He that raised up Christ from the dead shall also quicken your mortal bodies."(8) What, then, are mortal bodies? Can they be souls? Nay, for souls are incorporeal when put in comparison with mortal bodies; for God "breathed into the face of man the breath of life, and man became a living soul." Now the breath of life is an incorporeal
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thing. And certainly they cannot maintain that the very
breath of life is mortal. Therefore David says, "My
soul also shall live to Him,"(1) just as if its
substance were immortal. Neither, on the other hand,
can they say that the spirit is the mortal body. What
therefore is there left to which we may apply the term
"mortal body," unless it be the thing that
was moulded, that is, the flesh, of which it is also
said that God will vivify it? For this it is which
dies and is decomposed, but not the soul or the spirit.
For to die is to lose vital power, and to become henceforth
breathless, inanimate, and devoid of motion, and to
melt away into those [component parts] from which also
it derived the commencement of [its] substance. But
this event happens neither to the soul, for it is the
breath of life; nor to the spirit, for the spirit is
simple and not composite, so that it cannot be decomposed,
and is itself the life of those who receive it. We
must therefore conclude that it is in reference to
the flesh that death is mentioned; which [flesh], after
the soul's departure, becomes breathless and inanimate,
and is decomposed gradually into the earth from which
it was taken. This, then, is what is mortal. And it
is this of which he also says," He shall also
quicken your mortal bodies." And therefore in
reference to it he says, in the first [Epistle] to
the Corinthians: "So also is the resurrection
of the dead: it is sown in corruption, it rises in
incorruption."(2) For he declares, "That
which thou sowest cannot be quickened, unless first
it die."(3)
2. But what is that which, like a grain of wheat,
is sown in the earth and decays, unless it be the bodies
which are laid in the earth, into which seeds are also
cast? And for this reason he said, "It is sown
in dishonour, it rises in glory."(4) For what
is more ignoble than dead flesh? Or, on the other hand,
what is more glorious than the same when it arises
and partakes of incorruption? "It is sown in weakness,
it is raised in power:"(5) in its own weakness
certainly, because since it is earth it goes to earth;
but [it is quickened] by the power of God, who raises
it from the dead. "It is sown an animal body,
it rises a spiritual body."(6) He has taught,
beyond all doubt, that such language was not used by
him, either with reference to the soul or to the spirit,
but to bodies that have become corpses. For these are
animal bodies, that is, [bodies] which partake of life,
which when they have lost, they succumb to death; then,
rising through the Spirit's instrumentality, they become
spiritual bodies, so that by the Spirit they possess
a perpetual life. "For now," he says, "we
know in part, and we prophesy in part, but then face
to face."(7) And this it is which has been said
also by Peter: "Whom having not seen, ye love;
in whom now also, not seeing, ye believe; and believing,
ye shall rejoice with joy unspeakable."(8) For
our face shall see the face of the Lord? and shall
rejoice with joy unspeakable,--that is to say, when
it shall behold its own Delight.
CHAP. VIII.--THE GIFTS OF THE HOLY SPIRIT WHICH WE RECEIVE PREPARE US FOR INCORRUPTION, RENDER US SPIRITUAL, AND SEPARATE US FROM CARNAL MEN. THESE TWO CLASSES ARE SIGNIFIED BY THE CLEAN AND UNCLEAN ANIMALS IN THE LEGAL DISPENSATION.
1. But we do now receive a certain portion of His Spirit, tending towards perfection, and preparing us for incorruption, being little by little accustomed to receive and bear God; which also the apostle terms "an earnest," that is, a part of the honour which has been promised us by God, where he says in the Epistle to the Ephesians, "In which ye also, having heard the word of truth, the Gospel of your salvation, believing in which we have been sealed with the Holy Spirit of promise, which is the earnest of our inheritance."(10) This earnest, therefore, thus dwelling in us, renders us spiritual even now, and the mortal is swallowed up by immortality.(11) "For ye," he declares, "are not in the flesh, but in the Spirit, if so be that the Spirit of God dwell in you."(12) This, however does not take place by a casting away of the flesh, but by the impartation of the Spirit. For those to whom he was writing were not without flesh, but they were those who had received the Spirit of God, "by which we cry, Abba, Father."(13) If therefore, at the present time, having the earnest, we do cry, "Abba, Father," what shall it be when, on rising again, we behold Him face to face; when all the members shall burst out into a continuous hymn of triumph, glorifying Him who raised them from the dead, and gave the gift of eternal life? For if the earnest, gathering man into itself, does even now cause him to cry, "Abba, Father," what shall the complete grace of the Spirit effect, which shall be given to men by God? It will render us like unto Him, and accomplish the will(14) of the Father; for it shall make man after the image and likeness of God.
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2. Those persons, then, who possess the earnest
of the Spirit, and who are not enslaved by the lusts
of the flesh, but are subject to the Spirit, and who
in all things walk according to the light of reason,
does the apostle properly term "spiritual,"
because the Spirit of God dwells in them. Now, spiritual
men shall not be incorporeal spirits; but our substance,
that is, the union of flesh and spirit, receiving the
Spirit of God, makes up the spiritual man. But those
who do indeed reject the Spirit's counsel, and are
the slaves of fleshly lusts, and lead lives contrary
to reason, and who, without restraint, plunge headlong
into their own desires, having no longing after the
Divine Spirit, do live after the manner of swine and
of dogs; these men, [I say], does the apostle very
properly term "carnal," because they have
no thought of anything else except carnal things.
3. For the same reason, too, do the prophets compare
them to irrational animals, on account of the irrationality
of their conduct, saying, "They have become as
horses raging for the females; each one of them neighing
after his neighbour's wife."(1) And again, "Man,
when he was in honour, was made like unto cattle."(2)
This denotes that, for his own fault, he is likened
to cattle, by rivalling their irrational life. And
we also, as the custom is, do designate men of this
stamp as cattle and irrational beasts.
4. Now the law has figuratively predicted all these,
delineating man by the [various] animals:(3) whatsoever
of these, says [the Scripture], have a double hoof
and ruminate, it proclaims as clean; but whatsoever
of them do not possess one or other of these [properties],
it sets aside b themselves as unclean. Who then are
the clean? Those who make their way by faith steadily
towards the Father and the Son; for this is denoted
by the steadiness of those which divide the hoof; and
they meditate day and night upon the words of God,(4)
that they may be adorned with good works: for this
is the meaning of the ruminants. The unclean, however,
are those which do neither divide the hoof nor ruminate;
that is, those persons who have neither faith in God,
nor do meditate on His words: and such is the abomination
of the Gentiles. But as to those animals which do indeed
chew the cud, but have not the double hoof, and are
themselves unclean, we have in them a figurative description
of the Jews, who certainly have the words of God in
their mouth, but who do not fix their rooted stedfastness
in the Father and in the Son; wherefore they are an
unstable generation. For those animals which have the
hoof all in one piece easily slip; but those which
have it divided are more sure-footed, their cleft hoofs
succeeding each other as they advance, and the one
hoof supporting the other. In like manner, too, those
are unclean which have the double hoof but do not ruminate:
this is plainly an indication of all heretics, and
of those who do not meditate on the words of God, neither
are adorned with works of righteousness; to whom also
the Lord says, "Why call ye Me Lord, Lord, and
do not the things which I say to you?"(5) For
men of this stamp do indeed say that they believe in
the Father and the Son, but they never meditate as
they should upon the things of God, neither are they
adorned with works of righteousness; but, as I have
already observed, they have adopted the lives of swine
and of dogs, giving themselves over to filthiness,
to gluttony, and recklessness of all sorts. Justly,
therefore, did the apostle call all such "carnal"
and "animal,"(6)--[all those, namely], who
through their own unbelief and luxury do not receive
the Divine Spirit, and in their various phases east
out from themselves the life-giving Word, and walk
stupidly after their own lusts: the prophets, too,
spake of them as beasts of burden and wild beasts;
custom likewise has viewed them in the light of cattle
and irrational creatures; and the law has pronounced
them unclean.
CHAP. IX.--SHOWING HOW THAT PASSAGE OF THE APOSTLE WHICH THE HERETICS PERVERT, SHOULD BE UNDERSTOOD;VIZ., "FLESH AND BLOOD SHALL NOT POSSESS THE KINGDOM OF GOD."
1. Among the other [truths] proclaimed by the apostle, there is also this one, "That flesh and blood cannot inherit the kingdom of God."(7) This is [the passage] which is adduced by all the heretics in support of their folly, with an attempt to annoy us, and to point out that the handiwork of God is not saved. They do not take this fact into consideration, that there are three things out of which, as I have shown, the complete man is composed--flesh, soul, and spirit. One of these does indeed preserve and fashion [the man]--this is the spirit; while as to another it is united and formed--that is the flesh; then [comes] that which is between these two--that is the soul, which sometimes indeed, when it follows the spirit, is raised up by it, but sometimes it sympathizes with the flesh, and falls into carnal lusts. Those then, as many as they be, who have not that which saves and forms [us] into life [eternal], shall be, and shall be called, [mere] flesh and blood; for these are they
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who have not the Spirit of God in themselves. Wherefore
men of this stamp are spoken of by the Lord as "dead;"
for, says He, "Let the dead bury their dead,"(1)
because they have not the Spirit which quickens man.
2. On the other hand, as many as fear God and trust
in His Son's advent, and who through faith do establish
the Spirit of God in their hearts,--such men as these
shall be properly called both "pure," and
"spiritual," and "those living to God,"
because they possess the Spirit of the Father, who
purifies man, and raises him up to the life of God.
For as the Lord has testified that "the flesh
is weak," so [does He also say] that "the
spirit is willing."(2) For this latter is capable
of working out its own suggestions. If, therefore,
any one admix the ready inclination of the Spirit to
be, as it were, a stimulus to the infirmity of the
flesh, it inevitably follows that what is strong will
prevail over the weak, so that the weakness of the
flesh will be absorbed by the strength of the Spirit;
and that the man in whom this takes place cannot in
that case be carnal, but Spiritual, because of the
fellowship of the Spirit. Thus it is, therefore, that
the martyrs bear their witness, and despise death,
not after the infirmity of the flesh, but because of
the readiness of the Spirit. For when the infirmity
of the flesh is absorbed, it exhibits the Spirit as
powerful; and again, when the Spirit absorbs the weakness
[of the flesh], it possesses the flesh as an inheritance
in itself, and from both of these is formed a living
man,--living, indeed, because he partakes of the Spirit,
but man, because of the substance of flesh.
3. The flesh, therefore, when destitute of the Spirit
of God, is dead, not having life, and cannot possess
the kingdom of God: [it is as] irrational blood, like
water poured out upon the ground. And therefore he
says, "As is the earthy, such are they that are
earthy."(3) But where the Spirit of the Father
is, there is a living man; [there is] the rational
blood preserved by God for the avenging [of those that
shed it]; [there is] the flesh possessed by the Spirit,
forgetful indeed of what belongs to it, and adopting
the quality of the Spirit, being made conformable to
the Word of God. And on this account he (the apostle)
declares, "As we have borne the image of him who
is of the earth, we shall also bear the image of Him
who is from heaven."(4) What, therefore, is the
earthly? That which was fashioned. And what is the
heavenly? The Spirit. As therefore he says, when we
were destitute of the celestial Spirit, we walked in
former times in the oldness of the flesh, not obeying
God; so now let us, receiving the Spirit, walk in newness
of life, obeying God. Inasmuch, therefore, as without
the Spirit of God we cannot be saved, the apostle exhorts
us through faith and chaste conversation to preserve
the Spirit of God, lest, having become non-participators
of the Divine Spirit, we lose the kingdom of heaven;
and he exclaims, that flesh in itself, and blood, cannot
possess the kingdom God.
4. If, however, we must speak strictly, [we would
say that] the flesh does not inherit, but is inherited;
as also the Lord declares, "Blessed are the meek,
for they shall possess the earth by inheritance;"(5)
as if in the [future] kingdom, the earth, from whence
exists the substance Of our flesh, is to be possessed
by inheritance. This is the reason for His wishing
the temple (i.e., the flesh) to be clean, that the
Spirit of God may take delight therein, as a bridegroom
with a bride. As, therefore, the bride cannot [be said]
to wed, but to be wedded, when the bridegroom comes
and takes her, so also the flesh cannot by itself possess
the kingdom of God by inheritance; but it can be taken
for an inheritance into the kingdom of God. For a living
person inherits the goods of the deceased; and it is
one thing to inherit, another to be inherited. The
former rules, and exercises power over, and orders
the things inherited at his will; but the latter things
are in a state of subjection, are under order, and
are ruled over by him who has obtained the inheritance.
What, therefore, is it that lives? The Spirit of God,
doubtless. What, again, are the possessions of the
deceased? The various parts of the man, surely, which
rot in the earth. But these are inherited by the Spirit
when they are translated into the kingdom of heaven.
For this cause, too, did Christ die. that the Gospel
covenant being manifested and known to the whole world,
might in the first place set free His slaves; and then
afterwards, as I have already shown, might constitute
them heirs of His property, when the Spirit possesses
them by inheritance. For he who lives inherits, but
the flesh is inherited. In order that we may not lose
life by losing that Spirit which possesses us, the
apostle, exhorting us to the communion of the Spirit,
has said, according to reason, in those words already
quoted, "That flesh and blood cannot inherit the
kingdom of God." Just as if he were to say, "Do
not err; for unless the Word of God dwell with, and
the Spirit of the Father be in you, and if ye shall
live frivolously and carelessly as if ye were this
only, viz., mere flesh and blood, ye cannot inherit
the kingdom of God."
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CHAP. X.--BY A COMPARISON DRAWN FROM THE WILD OLIVE-TREE, WHOSE QUALITY BUT NOT WHOSE NATURE IS CHANGED BY GRAFTING, HE PROVES MORE IMPORTANT THINGS; HE POINTS OUT ALSO THAT MAN WITHOUT THE SPIRIT IS NOT CAPABLE OF BRINGING FORTH FRUIT, OR OF INHERITING THE KINGDOM OF GOD.
1. This truth, therefore, [he declares], in order
that we may not reject the engrafting of the Spirit
while pampering the flesh. "But thou, being a
wild olive-tree," he says, "hast been grafted
into the good olive-tree, and been made a partaker
of the fatness of the olive-tree." As, therefore,
when the wild olive has been engrafted, if it remain
in its former condition, viz., a wild olive, it is
"cut off, and cast into the fire;"(2) but
if it takes kindly to the graft, and is changed into
the good olive-tree, it becomes a fruit-bearing olive,
planted, as it were, in a king's park (paradiso): so
likewise men, if they do truly progress by faith towards
better things, and receive the Spirit of God, and bring
forth the fruit thereof, shall be spiritual, as being
planted in the paradise of God. But if they cast out
the Spirit, and remain in their former condition, desirous
of being of the flesh rather than of the Spirit, then
it is very justly said with regard to men of this stamp,
"That flesh and blood shall not inherit the kingdom
of God;"(3) just as if any one were to say that
the wild olive is not received into the paradise of
God. Admirably therefore does the apostle exhibit our
nature, and God's universal appointment, in his discourse
about flesh and blood and the wild olive. For as the
good olive, if neglected for a certain time, if left
to grow wild and to run to i wood, does itself become
a wild olive; or again, if the wild olive be carefully
tended and grafted, it naturally reverts to its former
fruit-bearing condition: so men also, when they become
careless, and bring forth for fruit the lusts of the
flesh like woody produce, are rendered, by their own
fault, unfruitful in righteousness. For when men sleep,
the enemy sows the material of tares;(4) and for this
cause did the Lord command His disciples to be on the
watch.(5) And again, those persons who are not bringing
forth the fruits of righteousness, and are, as it were,
covered over and lost among brambles, if they use diligence,
and receive the word of God as a graft,(6) arrive at
the pristine nature of man--that which was created
after the image and likeness of God.
2. But as the engrafted wild olive does not certainly
lose the substance of its wood, but changes the quality
of its fruit, and receives another name, being now
not a wild olive, but a fruit-bearing olive, and is
called so; so also, when man is grafted in by faith
and receives the Spirit of God, he certainly does not
lose the substance of flesh, but changes the quality
of the fruit [brought forth, i.e.,] of his works, and
receives another name,(7) showing that he has become
changed for the better, being now not [mere] flesh
and blood, but a spiritual man, and is called such.
Then, again, as the wild olive, if it be not grafted
in, remains useless to its lord because of its woody
quality, and is cut down as a tree bearing no fruit,
and cast into the fire; so also man, if he does not
receive through faith the engrafting of the Spirit,
remains in his old condition, and being [mere] flesh
and blood, he cannot inherit the kingdom of God. Rightly
therefore does the apostle declare, "Flesh and
blood cannot inherit the kingdom of God;"(8) and,
"Those who are in the flesh cannot please God:"(9)
not repudiating [by these words] the substance of flesh,
but showing that into it the Spirit must be infused.(10)
And for this reason, he says, "This mortal must
put on immortality, and this corruptible must put on
incorruption."(11) And again he declares, "But
ye are not in the flesh, but in the Spirit, if so be
that the Spirit of God dwell in you."(12) He sets
this forth still more plainly, where he says, "The
body indeed is dead, because of sin; but the Spirit
is life, because of righteousness. But if the Spirit
of Him who raised up Jesus from the dead dwell in you,
He that raised up Christ from the dead shall also quicken
your mortal bodies, because of His Spirit dwelling
in you."(13) And again he says, in the Epistle
to the Romans, "For if ye live after the flesh,
ye shall die."(14) [Now by these words] he does
not prohibit them from living their lives in the flesh,
for he was himself in the flesh when he wrote to them;
but he cuts away the lusts of the flesh, those which
bring death upon a man. And for this reason he says
in continuation, "But if ye through the Spirit
do mortify the works of the flesh, ye shall live. For
whosoever are led by the Spirit of God, these are the
sons of God."
CHAP. XI.--TREATS UPON THE ACTIONS OF CARNAL AND OF SPIRITUAL PERSONS; ALSO, THAT THE SPIRITUAL CLEANSING IS NOT TO BE REFERRED TO THE SUBSTANCE OF OUR BODIES, BUT TO THE MANNER OF OUR FORMER LIFE.
1. [The apostle], foreseeing the wicked speeches of unbelievers, has particularized the
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works which he terms carnal; and he explains himself,
lest any room for doubt be left to those who do dishonestly
pervert his meaning, thus saying in the Epistle to
the Galatians: "Now the works of the flesh are
manifest, which are adulteries, fornications, uncleanness,
luxuriousness, idolatries, witchcrafts,(1) hatreds,
contentions jealousies, wraths, emulations, animosities,
irritable speeches, dissensions, heresies, envyings,
drunkenness, carousings, and such like; of which I
warn you, as also I have warned you, that they who
do such things shall not inherit the kingdom of God."(2)
Thus does he point out to his hearers in a more explicit
manner what it is [he means when he declares], "Flesh
and blood shall not inherit the kingdom of God."
For they who do these things, since they do indeed
walk after the flesh, have not the power of living
unto God. And then, again, he proceeds to tell us the
spiritual actions which vivify a man, that is, the
engrafting of the Spirit; thus saying, "But the
fruit of the Spirit is love, joy, peace, long-suffering,
goodness, benignity, faith, meekness, continence, chastity:
against these there is no law."(3) As, therefore,
he who has gone forward to the better things, and has
brought forth the fruit of the Spirit, is saved altogether
because of the communion of the Spirit; so also he
who has continued in the aforesaid works of the flesh,
being truly reckoned as carnal, because he did not
receive the Spirit of God, shall not have power to
inherit the kingdom of heaven. As, again, the same
apostle testifies, saying to the Corinthians, "Know
ye not that the unrighteous shall not inherit the kingdom
of God? Do not err," he says: "neither fornicators,
nor idolaters, nor adulterers, nor effeminate, nor
abusers of themselves with mankind, nor thieves, nor
covetous, nor revilers, nor rapacious persons, shall
inherit the kingdom of God. And these ye indeed have
been; but ye have been washed, but ye have been sanctified,
but ye have been justified in the name of the Lord
Jesus Christ, and in the Spirit of our God."(4)
He shows in the clearest manner through what things
it is that man goes to destruction, if he has continued
to live after the flesh; and then, on the other hand,
[he points out] through what things he is saved. Now
he says that the things which save are the name of
our Lord Jesus Christ, and the Spirit of our God.
2. Since, therefore, in that passage he recounts
those works of the flesh which are without the Spirit,
which bring death [upon their doers], he exclaimed
at the end of his Epistle, in accordance with what
he had already declared, "And as we have borne
the image of him who is of the earth, we shall also
bear the image of Him who is from heaven. For this
I say, brethren, that flesh and blood cannot inherit
the kingdom of God."(5) Now this which he says,
"as we have borne the image of him who is of the
earth," is analogous to what has been declared,
"And such indeed ye were; but ye have been washed,
but ye have been sanctified, but ye have been justified
in the name of our Lord Jesus Christ, and in the Spirit
of our God." When, therefore, did we bear the
image of him who is of the earth? Doubtless it was
when those actions spoken of as "works of the
flesh" used to be wrought in us. And then, again,
when [do we bear] the image of the heavenly? Doubtless
when he says, "Ye have been washed," believing
in the name of the Lord, and receiving His Spirit.
Now we have washed away, not the substance of our body,
nor the image of our [primary] formation, but the former
vain conversation. In these members, therefore, in
which we were going to destruction by working the works
of corruption, in these very members are we made alive
by working the works of the Spirit.
CHAP. XII.--OF THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN LIFE AND DEATH; OF THE BREATH OF LIFE AND THE VIVIFYING SPIRIT: ALSO HOW IT IS THAT THE SUBSTANCE OF FLESH REVIVES WHICH ONCE WAS DEAD.
1. For as the flesh is capable of corruption, so
is it also of incorruption; and as it is of death,
so is it also of life. These two do mutually give way
to each other; and both cannot remain in the same place,
but one is driven out by the other, and the presence
of the one destroys that of the other. If, then, when
death takes possession of a man, it drives life away
from him, and proves him to be dead, much more does
life, when it has obtained power over the man, drive
out death, and restore him as living unto God. For
if death brings mortality, why should not life, when
it comes, vivify man? Just as Esaias the prophet says,
"Death devoured when it had prevailed."(6)
And again, "God has wiped away every tear from
every face." Thus that former life is expelled,
because it was not given by the Spirit, but by the
breath.
2. For the breath of life, which also rendered man
an animated being, is one thing, and the vivifying
Spirit another, which also caused him to become spiritual.
And for this reason Isaiah said, "Thus saith the
LORD, who made heaven and established it, who founded
the earth and the things therein, and gave breath to
the people
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upon it, and Spirit to those walking upon it;"(1)
thus telling us that breath is indeed given in common
to all people upon earth, but that the Spirit is theirs
alone who tread down earthly desires. And therefore
Isaiah himself, distinguishing the things already mentioned,
again exclaims, "For the Spirit shall go forth
from Me, and I have made every breath."(2) Thus
does he attribute the Spirit as peculiar to God which
in the last times He pours forth upon the human race
by the adoption of sons; but [he shows] that breath
was common throughout the creation, and points it out
as something created. Now what has been made is a different
thing from him who makes it. The breath, then, is temporal,
but the Spirit eternal. The breath, too, increases
[in strength] for a short period, and continues for
a certain time; after that it takes its departure,
leaving its former abode destitute of breath. But when
the Spirit pervades the man within and without, inasmuch
as it continues there, it never leaves him. "But
that is not first which is spiritual," says the
apostle, speaking this as if with reference to us human
beings; "but that is first which is animal, afterwards
that which is spiritual,"(3) in accordance with
reason. For there had been a necessity that, in the
first place, a human being should be fashioned, and
that what was fashioned should receive the soul; afterwards
that it should thus receive the communion of the Spirit.
Wherefore also "the first Adam was made"
by the Lord "a living soul, the second Adam a
quickening spirit."(4) As, then, he who was made
a living soul forfeited life when he turned aside to
what was evil, so, on the other hand, the same individual,
when he reverts to what is good, and receives the quickening
Spirit, shall find life.
3. For it is not one thing which dies and another
which is quickened, as neither is it one thing Which
is lost and another which is found, but the Lord came
seeking for that same sheep which had been lost. What
was it, then, which was dead? Undoubtedly it was the
substance of the flesh; the same, too, which had lost
the breath of life, and had become breathless and dead.
This same, therefore, was what the Lord came to quicken,
that as in Adam we do all die, as being of an animal
nature, in Christ we may all live, as being spiritual,
not laying aside God's handiwork, but the lusts of
the flesh, and receiving the Holy Spirit; as the apostle
says in the Epistle to the Colossians: "Mortify,
therefore, your members which are upon the earth."
And what these are he himself explains: "Fornication,
uncleanness, inordinate affection, evil concupiscence;
and covetousness, which is idolatry."(5) The laying
aside of these is what the apostle preaches; and he
declares that those who do such things, as being merely
flesh and blood, cannot inherit the kingdom of heaven.
For their soul, tending towards what is worse, and
descending to earthly lusts, has become a partaker
in the same designation which belongs to these [lusts,
viz., "earthly"], which, when the apostle
commands us to lay aside, he says in the same Epistle,
"Cast ye off the old man with his deeds."(6)
But when he said this, he does not remove away the
ancient formation [of man]; for in that case it would
be incumbent on us to rid ourselves of its company
by committing suicide.
4. But the apostle himself also, being one who had
been formed in a womb, and had issued thence, wrote
to us, and confessed in his Epistle to the Philippians
that "to live in the flesh was the fruit of [his]
work;"(7) thus expressing himself. Now the final
result of the work of the Spirit is the salvation of
the flesh.(8) For what other visible fruit is there
of the invisible Spirit, than the rendering of the
flesh mature and capable of incorruption? If then [he
says], "To live in the flesh, this is the result
of labour to me," he did not surely contemn the
substance of flesh in that passage where he said, "Put
ye off the old man with his works;"(9) but he
points out that we should lay aside our former conversation,
that which waxes old and becomes corrupt; and for this
reason he goes on to say, "And put ye on the new
man, that which is renewed in knowledge, after the
image of Him who created him." In this, therefore,
that he says, "which is renewed in knowledge,"
he demonstrates that he, the selfsame man who was in
ignorance in times past, that is, in ignorance of God,
is renewed by that knowledge which has respect to Him.
For the knowledge of God renews man. And when he says,
"after the image of the Creator," he sets
forth the recapitulation of the same man, who was at
the beginning made after the likeness of God.
5. And that he, the apostle, was the very same person
who had been born from the womb, that is, of the ancient
substance of flesh, he does himself declare in the
Epistle to the Galatians: "But when it pleased
God, who separated me from my mother's womb, and called
me by His grace, to reveal His Son in me, that I might
preach Him among the Gentiles," (10) it was not,
as I have already observed, one person who had
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been born from the womb, and another who preached the
Gospel of the Son of God; but that same individual
who formerly was ignorant, and used to persecute the
Church, when the revelation was made to him from heaven,
and the Lord conferred with him, as I have pointed
out in the third book,(1) preached the Gospel of Jesus
Christ the Son of God, who was crucified under Pontius
Pilate, his former ignorance being driven out by his
subsequent knowledge: just as the blind men whom the
Lord healed did certainly lose their blindness, but
received the substance of their eyes perfect, and obtained
the power of vision in the very same eyes with which
they formerly did not see; the darkness being merely
driven away by the power of vision, while the substance
of the eyes was retained, in order that, by means of
those eyes through which they had not seen, exercising
again the visual power, they might give thanks to Him
who had restored them again to sight. And thus, also,
he whose withered hand was healed, and all who were
healed generally, did not change those parts of their
bodies which had at their birth come forth from the
womb, but simply obtained these anew in a healthy condition.
6. For the Maker of all things, the Word of God,
who did also from the beginning form man, when He found
His handiwork impaired by wickedness, performed upon
it all kinds of healing. At one time [He did so], as
regards each separate member, as it is found in His
own handiwork; and at another time He did once for
all restore man sound and whole in all points, preparing
him perfect for Himself unto the resurrection. For
what was His object in healing [different] portions
of the flesh, and restoring them to their original
condition, if those parts which had been healed by
Him were not in a position to obtain salvation? For
if it was [merely] a temporary benefit which He conferred,
He granted nothing of importance to those who were
the subjects of His healing. Or how can they maintain
that the flesh is incapable of receiving the life which
flows from Him, when it received healing from Him?
For life is brought about through healing, and incorruption
through life. He, therefore, who confers healing, the
same does also confer life; and He [who gives] life,
also surrounds His own handiwork with incorruption.
CHAP. XIII.--IN THE DEAD WHO WERE RAISED BY CHRIST WE POSSESS THE HIGHEST PROOF OF THE RESURRECTION; AND OUR HEARTS ARE SHOWN TO BE CAPABLE OF LIFE ETERNAL, BECAUSE THEY CAN NOW RECEIVE THE SPIRIT OF GOD.
1. Let our opponents--that is, they who speak against
their own salvation--inform us [as to this point]:
The deceased daughter of the high priest;(2) the widow's
dead son, who was being carded out [to burial] near
the gate [of the city];(3) and Lazarus, who had lain
four days in the tomb,(4)--in what bodies did they
rise again? In those same, no doubt, in which they
had also died. For if it were not in the very same,
then certainly those same individuals who had died
did not rise again. For [the Scripture] says, "The
Lord took the hand of the dead man, and said to him,
Young man, I say unto thee, Arise. And the dead man
sat up, and He commanded that something should be given
him to eat; and He delivered him to his mother."(5)
Again, He called Lazarus "with a loud voice, saying,
Lazarus, come forth; and he that was dead came forth
bound with bandages, feet and hands." This was
symbolical of that man who had been bound in sins.
And therefore the Lord said, "Loose him, and let
him depart." As, therefore, those who were healed
were made whole in those members which had in times
past been afflicted; and the dead rose in the identical
bodies, their limbs and bodies receiving health, and
that life which was granted by the Lord, who prefigures
eternal things by temporal, and shows that it is He
who is Himself able to extend both healing and life
to His handiwork, that His words concerning its [future]
resurrection may also be believed; so also at the end,
when the Lord utters His voice "by the last trumpet,"(6)
the dead shall be raised, as He Himself declares: "The
hour shall come, in which all the dead which are in
the tombs shall hear the voice of the Son of man, and
shall come forth; those that have done good to the
resurrection of life, and those that have done evil
to the resurrection of judgment."(7)
2. Vain, therefore, and truly miserable, are those
who do not choose to see what is so manifest and clear,
but shun the light of truth, blinding themselves like
the tragic OEdipus. And as those who are not practised
in wrestling, when they contend with others, laying
hold with a determined grasp of some part of [their
opponent's] body, really fall by means of that which
they grasp, yet when they fall, imagine that they are
gaining the victory, because they have obstinately
kept their hold upon that part which they seized at
the outset, and besides falling, become
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subjects of ridicule; so is it with respect to that
[favourite] expression of the heretics: "Flesh
and blood cannot inherit the kingdom of God;"
while taking two expressions of Paul's, without having
perceived the apostle's meaning, or examined critically
the force of the terms, but keeping fast hold of the
mere expressions by themselves, they die in consequence
of their influence (<greek>periautas</greek>),
overturning as far as in them lies the entire dispensation
of God.
3. For thus they will allege that this passage refers
to the flesh strictly so called, and not to fleshly
works, as I have pointed out, so representing the apostle
as contradicting himself. For immediately following,
in the same Epistle, he says conclusively, speaking
thus in reference to the flesh: "For this corruptible
must put on incorruption, and this mortal must put
on immortality. So, when this mortal shall have put
on immortality, then shall be brought to pass the saying
which is written, Death is swallowed up in victory.
O death, where is thy sting? O death, where is thy
victory?"(1) Now these words shall be appropriately
said at the time when this mortal and corruptible flesh,
which is subject to death, which also is pressed down
by a certain dominion of death, rising up into life,
shall put on incorruption and immortality. For then,
indeed, shall death be truly vanquished, when that
flesh which is held down by it shall go forth from
under its dominion. And again, to the Philippians he
says: "But our conversation is in heaven, from
whence also we look for the Saviour, the Lord Jesus,
who shall transfigure the body of our humiliation conformable
to the body of His glory, even as He is able (ita ut
possit) according to the working of His own power."(2)
What, then, is this "body of humiliation"
which the Lord shall transfigure, [so as to be] conformed
to "the body of His glory?" Plainly it is
this body composed of flesh, which is indeed humbled
when it falls into the earth. Now its transformation
[takes place thus], that while it is mortal and corruptible,
it becomes immortal and incorruptible, not after its
own proper substance, but after the mighty working
of the Lord, who is able to invest the mortal with
immortality, and the corruptible with incorruption.
And therefore he says,(3) "that mortality may
be swallowed up of life. He who has perfected us for
this very thing is God, who also has given unto us
the earnest of the Spirit."(4) He uses these words
most manifestly in reference to the flesh; for the
soul is not mortal, neither is the spirit. Now, what
is mortal shall be swallowed up of life, when the flesh
is dead no longer, but remains living and incorruptible,
hymning the praises of God, who has perfected us for
this very thing. In order, therefore, that we may be
perfected for this, aptly does he say to the Corinthians,
"Glorify God in your body."(5) Now God is
He who gives rise to immortality.
4. That he uses these words with respect to the
body of flesh, and to none other, he declares to the
Corinthians manifestly, indubitably, and free from
all ambiguity: "Always bearing about in our body
the dying of Jesus,(6) that also the life of Jesus
Christ might be manifested in our body. For if we who
live are delivered unto death for Jesus' sake, it is
that the life of Jesus may also be manifested in our
mortal flesh."(7) And that the Spirit lays hold
on the flesh, he says in the same Epistle, "That
ye axe the epistle of Christ, ministered by us, inscribed
not with ink, but with the Spirit of the living God,
not in tables of stone, but in the fleshly tables of
the heart."(8) If, therefore, in the present time,
fleshly hearts are made partakers of the Spirit, what
is there astonishing if, in the resurrection, they
receive that life which is granted by the Spirit? Of
which resurrection the apostle speaks in the Epistle
to the Philippians: "Having been made conformable
to His death, if by any means I might attain to the
resurrection which is from the dead."(9) In what
other mortal flesh, therefore, can life be understood
as being manifested, unless in that substance which
is also put to death on account of that confession
which is made of God?--as he has himself declared,
"If, as a man, I have fought with beasts(10) at
Ephesus, what advantageth it me if the dead rise not?
For if the dead rise not, neither has Christ risen.
Now, if Christ has not risen, our preaching is vain,
and your faith is vain. In that case, too, we are found
false witnesses for God, since we have testified that
He raised up Christ, whom [upon that supposition] He
did not raise up.(11) For if the dead rise not, neither
has Christ risen. But if Christ be not risen, your
faith is vain, since ye are yet in your sins. Therefore
those who have fallen asleep in Christ have perished.
If in this life only we have hope in Christ, we are
more miserable than all men. But now Christ has
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risen from the dead, the first-fruits of those that
sleep; for as by man [came] death, by man also [came]
the resurrection of the dead."(1)
5. In all these passages, therefore, as I have already
said, these men must either allege that the apostle
expresses opinions contradicting himself, with respect
to that statement, "Flesh and blood cannot inherit
the kingdom of God;" or, on the other hand, they
will be forced to make perverse and crooked interpretations
of all the passages, so as to overturn and alter the
sense of the words. For what sensible thing can they
say, if they endeavour to interpret otherwise this
which he writes: "For this corruptible must put
on incorruption, and this mortal put on immortality;"(2)
and, "That the life of Jesus may be made manifest
in our mortal flesh;"(3) and all the other passages
in which the apostle does manifestly and clearly declare
the resurrection and incorruption of the flesh? And
thus shall they be compelled to put a false interpretation
upon passages such as these, they who do not choose
to understand one correctly.
CHAP. XIV.--UNLESS THE FLESH WERE TO BE SAVED, THE WORD WOULD NOT HAVE TAKEN UPON HIM FLESH OF THE SAME SUBSTANCE AS OURS: FROM THIS IT WOULD FOLLOW THAT NEITHER SHOULD WE HAVE BEEN RECONCILED BY HIM.
1. And inasmuch as the apostle has not pronounced
against the very substance of flesh and blood, that
it cannot inherit the kingdom of God, the same apostle
has everywhere adopted the term "flesh and blood"
with regard to the Lord Jesus Christ, partly indeed
to establish His human nature (for He did Himself speak
of Himself as the Son of man), and partly that He might
confirm the salvation of our flesh. For if the flesh
were not in a position to be saved, the Word of God
would in no wise have become flesh. And if the blood
of the righteous were not to be inquired after, the
Lord would certainly not have had blood [in His composition].
But inasmuch as blood cries out (vocalis est) from
the beginning [of the world], God said to Cain, when
he had slain his brother, "The voice of thy brother's
blood crieth to Me."(4) And as their blood will
be inquired after, He said to those with Noah, "For
your blood of your souls will I require, [even] from
the hand of all beasts;"(5) and again, "Whosoever
will shed man's blood,(6) it shall be shed for his
blood." In like manner, too, did the Lord say
to those who should afterwards shed His blood, "All
righteous blood shall be required which is shed upon
the earth, from the blood of righteous Abel to the
blood of Zacharias the son of Barachias, whom ye slew
between the temple and the altar. Verily I say unto
you, All these things shall come upon this generation."(7)
He thus points out the recapitulation that should take
place in his own person of the effusion of blood from
the beginning, of all the righteous men and of the
prophets, and that by means of Himself there should
be a requisition of their blood. Now this [blood] could
not be required unless it also had the capability of
being saved; nor would the Lord have summed up these
things in Himself, unless He had Himself been made
flesh and blood after the way of the original formation
[of man], saving in his own person at the end that
which had in the beginning perished in Adam.
2. But if the Lord became incarnate for any other
order of things, and took flesh of any other substance,
He has not then summed up human nature in His own person,
nor in that case can He be termed flesh. For flesh
has been truly made [to consist in] a transmission
of that thing moulded originally from the dust. But
if it had been necessary for Him to draw the material
[of His body] from another substance, the Father would
at the beginning have moulded the material [of flesh]
from a different substance [than from what He actually
did]. But now the case stands thus, that the Word has
saved that which really was [created, viz.,] humanity
which had perished, effecting by means of Himself that
communion which should be held with it, and seeking
out its salvation. But the thing which had perished
possessed flesh and blood. For the Lord, taking dust
from the earth, moulded man; and it was upon his behalf
that all the dispensation of the Lord's advent took
place. He had Himself, therefore, flesh and blood,
recapitulating in Himself not a certain other, but
that original handiwork of the Father, seeking out
that thing which had perished. And for this cause the
apostle, in the Epistle to the Colossians, says, "And
though ye were formerly alienated, and enemies to His
knowledge by evil works, yet now ye have been reconciled
in the body of His flesh, through His death, to present
yourselves holy and chaste, and without fault in His
sight."(8) He says, "Ye have been reconciled
in the body of His flesh," because the righteous
flesh has reconciled that flesh which was being kept
under bondage in sin, and brought it into friendship
with God.
3. If, then, any one allege that in this respect
the flesh of the Lord was different from ours, because
it indeed did not commit sin, neither
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was deceit found in His soul, while we, on the other
hand, are sinners, he says what is the fact. But if
he pretends that the, Lord possessed another substance
of flesh, the sayings respecting reconciliation will
not agree with that man. For that thing is reconciled
which had formerly been in enmity. Now, if the Lord
had taken flesh from another substance, He would not,
by so doing, have reconciled that one to God which
had become inimical through transgression. But now,
by means of communion with Himself, the Lord has reconciled
man to God the Father, in reconciling us to Himself
by the body of His own flesh, and redeeming us by His
own blood, as the apostle says to the Ephesians, "In
whom we have redemption through His blood, the remission
of sins;"(1) and again to the same he says, "Ye
who formerly were far off have been brought near in
the blood of Christ;"(2) and again, "Abolishing
in His flesh the enmities, [even] the law of commandments
[contained] in ordinances."(3) And in every Epistle
the apostle plainly testifies, that through the flesh
of our Lord, and through His blood, we have been saved.
4. If, therefore, flesh and blood are the things
which procure for us life, it has not been declared
of flesh and blood, in the literal meaning (proprie)
of the terms, that they cannot inherit the kingdom
of God; but [these words apply] to those carnal deeds
already mentioned, which, perverting man to sin, deprive
him of life. And for this reason he says, in the Epistle
to the Romans: "Let not sin, therefore, reign
in your mortal body, to be under its control: neither
yield ye your members instruments of unrighteousness
unto sin; but yield yourselves to God, as being alive
from the dead, and your members as instruments of righteousness
unto God."(4) In these same members, therefore,
in which we used to serve sin, and bring forth fruit
unto death, does He wish us to [be obedient] unto righteousness,
that we may bring forth fruit unto life. Remember,
therefore, my beloved friend, that thou hast been redeemed
by the flesh of our Lord, re-established(5) by His
blood; and "holding the Head, from which the whole
body of the Church, having been fitted together, takes
increase"(6)--that is, acknowledging the advent
in the flesh of the Son of God, and [His] divinity
(deum), and looking forward with constancy to His human
nature(7) (hominem), availing thyself also of these
proofs drawn from Scripture--thou dost easily overthrow,
as I have pointed out, all those notions of the heretics
which were concocted afterwards.
CHAP. XV.--PROOFS OF THE RESURRECTION FROM ISAIAH AND EZEKIEL; THE SAME GOD WHO CREATED US WILL ALSO RAISE US UP.
1. Now, that He who at the beginning created man, did promise him a second birth after his dissolution into earth, Esaias thus declares: "The dead shall rise again, and they who are in the tombs shall arise, and they who are in the earth shall rejoice. For the dew which is from Thee is health to them."(8) And again: "I will comfort you, and ye shall be comforted in Jerusalem: and ye shall see, and your heart shall rejoice, and your bones shall flourish as the grass; and the hand of the Lord shall be known to those who worship Him."(9) And Ezekiel speaks as follows: "And the hand of the LORD came upon me, and the LORD led me forth in the Spirit, and set me down in the midst of the plain, and this place was full of bones. And He caused me to pass by them round about: and, behold, there were many upon the surface of the plain very dry. And He said unto me, Son of man, can these bones live ? And I said, Lord, Thou who hast made them dost know. And He said unto me, Prophesy upon these bones, and thou shalt say to them, Ye dry bones, hear the word of the LORD. Thus saith the LORD to these bones, Behold, I will cause the spirit of life to come upon you, and I will lay sinews upon you, and bring up flesh again upon you, and I will stretch skin upon you, and will put my Spirit into you, and ye shall live; and ye shall know that I am the LORD. And I prophesied as the Lord had commanded me. And it came to pass, when I was prophesying, that, behold, an earthquake, and the bones were drawn together, each one to its own articulation: and I beheld, and, lo, the sinews and flesh were produced upon them, and the skins rose upon them round about, but there was no breath in them. And He said unto me, Prophesy to the breath, son of man, and say to the breath, These things saith the LORD, Come from the four winds (spiritibus), and breathe upon these dead, that they may live. So I prophesied as the Lord had commanded me, and the breath entered into them; and they did live, and stood upon their feet, an exceeding great gathering."(10) And again he says, "Thus saith the LORD, Behold, I will set your graves open, and cause you to come out of your graves, and bring you into the land of Israel; and ye shall know that I am the LORD,
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when I shall open your sepulchres, that I may bring
my people again out of the sepulchres: and I will put
my Spirit into you, and ye shall live; and I will place
you in your land, and ye shall know that I am the LORD.
I have said, and I will do, saith the LORD."
(1) As we at once perceive that the Creator (Demiurgo)
is in this passage represented as vivifying our dead
bodies, and promising resurrection to them, and resuscitation
from their sepulchres and tombs, conferring upon them
immortality also (He says, "For as the tree of
life, so shall their days be"(2)), He is shown
to be the only God who accomplishes these things, and
as Himself the good Father, benevolently conferring
life upon those who have not life from themselves.
2. And for this reason did the Lord most plainly
manifest Himself and the Father to His disciples, lest,
forsooth, they might seek after another God besides
Him who formed man, and who gave him the breath of
life; and that men might not rise to such a pitch of
madness as to feign another Father above the Creator.
And thus also He healed by a word all the others who
were in a weakly condition because of sin; to whom
also He said, "Behold, thou art made whole, sin
no more, lest a worse thing come upon thee:"(3)
pointing out by this, that, because of the sin of disobedience,
infirmities have come upon men. To that man, however,
who had been blind from his birth, He gave sight, not
by means of a word, but by an outward action; doing
this not without a purpose, or because it so happened,
but that He might show forth the hand of God, that
which at the beginning had moulded man. And therefore,
when His disciples asked Him for what cause the man
had been born blind, whether for his own or his parents'
fault, He replied, "Neither hath this man sinned,
nor his parents, but that the works of God should be
made manifest in him."(4) Now the work of God
is the fashioning of man. For, as the Scripture says,
He made [man] by a kind of process: "And the Lord
took day from the earth, and formed man."(5) Wherefore
also the Lord spat on the ground and made clay, and
smeared it upon the eyes, pointing out the original
fashioning [of man], how it was effected, and manifesting
the hand of God to those who can understand by what
[hand] man was formed out of the dust. For that which
the artificer, the Word, had omitted to form in the
womb, [viz., the blind man's eyes], He then supplied
in public, that the works of God might be manifested
in him, in order that we might not be seeking out another
hand by which man was fashioned, nor another Father;
knowing that this hand of God which formed us at the
beginning, and which does form us in the womb, has
in the last times sought us out who were lost, winning
back His own, and taking up the lost sheep upon His
shoulders, and with joy restoring it to the fold of
life.
3. Now, that the Word of God forms us in the womb,
He says to Jeremiah, "Before I formed thee in
the womb, I knew thee; and before thou wentest forth
from the belly, I sanctified thee, and appointed thee
a prophet among the nations." (6) And Paul, too,
says in like manner, "But when it pleased God,
who separated me from my mother's womb, that I might
declare Him among the nations."(7) As, therefore,
we are by the Word formed in the womb, this very same
Word formed the visual power in him who had been blind
from his birth; showing openly who it is that fashions
us in secret, since the Word Himself had been made
manifest to men: and declaring the original formation
of Adam, and the manner in which he was created, and
by what hand he was fashioned, indicating the whole
from a part. For the Lord who formed the visual powers
is He who made the whole man, carrying out the will
of the Father. And inasmuch as man, with respect to
that formation which, was after Adam, having fallen
into transgression, needed the layer of regeneration,
[the Lord] said to him [upon whom He had conferred
sight], after He had smeared his eyes with the clay,
"Go to Siloam, and wash;"(8) thus restoring
to him both [his perfect] confirmation, and that regeneration
which takes place by means of the layer. And for this
reason when he was washed he came seeing, that he might
both know Him who had fashioned him, and that man might
learn [to know] Him who has conferred upon him life.
4. All the followers of Valentinus, therefore, lose
their case, when they say that man was not fashioned
out of this earth, but from a fluid and diffused substance.
For, from the earth out of which the Lord formed eyes
for that man, from the same earth it is evident that
man was also fashioned at the beginning. For it were
incompatible that the eyes should indeed be formed
from one source and the rest of the body from another;
as neither would it be compatible that one [being]
fashioned the body, and another the eyes. But He, the
very same who formed Adam at the beginning, with whom
also the Father spake, [saying], "Let Us make
man after Our image and likeness,"(9) revealing
Himself in these last times to men, formed visual organs
(visionem) for him who had been blind [in
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that body which he had derived] from Adam. Wherefore also the Scripture, pointing out what should come to pass, says, that when Adam had hid himself because of his disobedience, the Lord came to him at eventide, called him forth, and said, "Where art thou?"(1) That means that in the last times the very same Word of God came to call man, reminding him of his doings, living in which he had been hidden from the Lord. For just as at that time God spake to Adam at eventide, searching him out; so in the last times, by means of the same voice, searching out his posterity, He has visited them.
CHAP. XVI.--SINCE OUR BODIES RETURN TO THE EARTH, IT FOLLOWS THAT THEY HAVE THEIR SUBSTANCE FROM IT; ALSO, BY THE ADVENT OF THE WORD, THE IMAGE OF GOD IN US APPEARED IN A CLEARER LIGHT.
1. And since Adam was moulded from this earth to
which we belong, the Scripture tells us that God said
to him, "In the sweat of thy face shall thou eat
thy bread, until thou turnest again to the dust from
whence thou weft taken."(2) If then, after death,
our bodies return to any other substance, it follows
that from it also they have their substance. But if
it be into this very [earth], it is manifest that it
was also from it that man's frame was created; as also
the Lord clearly showed, when from this very substance
He formed eyes for the man [to whom He gave sight].
And thus was the hand of God plainly shown forth, by
which Adam was fashioned, and we too have been formed;
and since there is one and the same Father, whose voice
from the beginning even to the end is present with
His handiwork, and the substance from which we were
formed is plainly declared through the Gospel, we should
therefore not seek after another Father besides Him,
nor [look for] another substance from which we have
been formed, besides what was mentioned beforehand,
and shown forth by the Lord; nor another hand of God
besides that which, from the beginning even to the
end, forms us and prepares us for life, and is present
with His handiwork, and perfects it after the image
and likeness of God.
2. And then, again, this Word was manifested when
the Word of God was made man, assimilating Himself
to man, and man to Himself, so that by means of his
resemblance to the Son, man might become precious to
the Father. For in times long past, it was said that
man was created after the image of God, but it was
not [actually] shown; for the Word was as yet invisible,
after whose image man was created, Wherefore also he
did easily lose the similitude. When, however, the
Word of God became flesh, He confirmed both these:
for He both showed forth the image truly, since He
became Himself what was His image; and He re-established
the similitude after a sure manner, by assimilating
man to the invisible Father through means of the visible
Word.
3. And not by the aforesaid things alone has the
Lord manifested Himself, but [He has done this] also
by means of His passion. For doing away with [the effects
of] that disobedience of man which had taken place
at the beginning by the occasion of a tree, "He
became obedient unto death, even the death of the cross;"(3)
rectifying that disobedience which had occurred by
reason of a tree, through that obedience which was
[wrought out] upon the tree [of the cross]. Now He
would not have come to do away, by means of that same
[image], the disobedience which had been incurred towards
our Maker if He proclaimed another Father. But inasmuch
as it was by these things that we disobeyed God, and
did not give credit to His word, so was it also by
these same that He brought in obedience and consent
as respects His Word; by which things He clearly shows
forth God Himself, whom indeed we had offended in the
first Adam, when he did not perform His commandment.
In the second Adam, however, we are reconciled, being
made obedient even unto death. For we were debtors
to none other but to Him whose commandment we had transgressed
at the beginning.
CHAP. XVII.--THERE IS BUT ONE LORD AND ONE GOD, THE FATHER AND CREATOR OF ALL THINGS, WHO HAS LOVED US IN CHRIST, GIVEN US COMMANDMENTS, AND REMITTED OUR SINS; WHOSE SON AND WORD CHRIST PROVED HIMSELF TO BE, WHEN HE FORGAVE OUR SINS.
1. Now this being is the Creator (Demiurgus), who is, in respect of His love, the Father; but in respect of His power, He is Lord; and in respect of His wisdom, our Maker and Fashioner; by transgressing whose commandment we became His enemies. And therefore in the last times the Lord has restored us into friendship through His incarnation, having become "the Mediator between God and men;"(4) propitiating indeed for us the Father against whom we had sinned, and cancelling (consolatus) our disobedience by His own obedience; conferring also upon us the gift of communion with, and subjection to, our Maker. For this reason also He has taught us to say in prayer, "And forgive us our debts;"(5) since indeed He is our Father, whose debtors we were, having transgressed His commandments. But who is this Being? Is He some unknown one, and a Father who gives no com-
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mandment to any one? Or is He the God who is proclaimed
in the Scriptures, to whom we were debtors, having
transgressed His commandment? Now the commandment was
given to man by the Word. For Adam, it is said, "heard
the voice of the LORD God."(1) Rightly then does
His Word say to man, "Thy sins are forgiven thee;"(2)
He, the same against whom we had sinned in the beginning,
grants forgiveness of sins in the end. But if indeed
we had disobeyed the command of any other, while it
was a different being who said, "Thy sins are
forgiven thee;"(2) such an one is neither good,
nor true, nor just. For how can he be good, who does
not give from what belongs to himself? Or how can he
be just, who snatches away the goods of another? And
in what way can sins be truly remitted, unless that
He against whom we have sinned has Himself granted
remission "through the bowels of mercy of our
God," in which "He has visited us"(3)
through His Son?
2. And therefore, when He had healed the man sick
of the palsy, [the evangelist] says "The people
upon seeing it glorified God, who gave such power unto
men."(4) What God, then, did the bystanders glorify?
Was it indeed that unknown Father invented by the heretics?
And how could they glorify him who was altogether unknown
to them? It is evident, therefore, that the Israelites
glorified Him who has been proclaimed as God by the
law and the prophets, who is also the Father of our
Lord; and therefore He taught men, by the evidence
of their senses through those signs which He accomplished,
to give glory to God. If, however, He HimSelf had come
from another Father, and men glorified a different
Father when they beheld His miracles, He [in that case]
rendered the mungrateful to that Father who had sent
the gift of healing. But as the only-begotten Son had
come for man's salvation from Him who is God, He did
both stir up the incredulous by the miracles which
He was in the habit of working, to give glory to the
Father; and to the Pharisees, who did not admit the
advent of His Son, and who consequently did not believe
in the remission [of sins] which was conferred by Him,
He said, "That ye may know that the Son of man
hath power to forgive sins."(5) And when He had
said this, He commanded the paralytic man to take up
the pallet upon which he was lying, and go into his
house. By this work of His He confounded the unbelievers,
and showed that He is Himself the voice of God, by
which man received commandments, which he broke, and
became a sinner; for the paralysis followed as a consequence
of sins.
3. Therefore, by remitting sins, He did indeed heal
man, while He also manifested Himself who He was. For
if no one can forgive sins but God alone, while the
Lord remitted them and healed men, it is plain that
He was Himself the Word of God made the Son of man,
receiving from the Father the power of remission of
sins; since He was man, and since He was God, in order
that since as man He suffered for us, so as God He
might have compassion on us, and forgive us our debts,
in which we were made debtors to God our Creator. And
therefore David said beforehand, "Blessed are
they whose iniquities are forgiven, and whose sins
are covered. Blessed is the man to whom the LORD has
not imputed sin;"(6) pointing out thus that remission
of sins which follows upon His advent, by which "He
has destroyed the handwriting" of our debt, and
"fastened it to the cross;"(7) so that as
by means of a tree we were made debtors to God, [so
also] by means of a tree we may obtain the remission
of our debt.
3. This fact has been strikingly set forth by many
others, and especially through means of Elisha the
prophet. For when his fellow-prophets were hewing wood
for the construction of a tabernacle, and when the
iron [head], shaken loose from the axe, had fallen
into the Jordan and could not be found by them, upon
Elisha's coming to the place, and learning what had
happened, he threw some wood into the water. Then,
when he had done this, the iron part of the axe floated
up, and they took up from the surface of the water
what they had previously lost.(8) By this action the
prophet pointed out that the sure word of God, which
we had negligently lost by means of a tree, and were
not in the way of finding again, we should receive
anew by the dispensation of a tree, [viz., the cross
of Christ]. For that the word of God is likened to
an axe, John the Baptist declares [when he says] in
reference to it, "But now also is the axe laid
to the root of the trees."(9) Jeremiah also says
to the same purport: "The word of God cleaveth
the rock as an axe."(10) This word, then, what
was hidden from us, did the dispensation of the tree
make manifest, as I have already remarked. For as we
lost it by means of a tree, by means of a tree again
was it made manifest to all, showing the height, the
length, the breadth, the depth in itself; and, as a
certain man among our predecessors observed, "Through
the extension of the hands of a divine person,(11)
gathering together the two peoples to one God."
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For these were two hands, because there were two peoples scattered to the ends of the earth; but there was one head in the middle, as there is but one God, who is above all, and through all, and in us all.
CHAP. XVIII.--GOD THE FATHER AND HIS WORD HAVE FORMED ALL CREATED THINGS (WHICH THEY USE) BY THEIR OWN POWER AND WISDOM, NOT OUT OF DEFECT OR IGNORANCE. THE SON OF GOD, WHO RECEIVED ALL POWER FROM THE FATHER, WOULD OTHERWISE NEVER HAVE TAKEN FLESH UPON HIM.
1. And such or so important a dispensation He did
not bring about by means of the creations of others,
but by His own; neither by those things which were
created out of ignorance and defect, but by those which
had their substance from the wisdom and power of His
Father. For He was neither unrighteous, so that He
should covet the property of another; nor needy, that
He could not by His own means impart life to His own,
and make use of His own creation for the salvation
of man. For indeed the creation could not have sustained
Him [on the cross], if He had sent forth [simply by
commission] what was the fruit of ignorance and defect.
Now we have repeatedly shown that the incarnate Word
of God was suspended upon a tree, and even the very
heretics do acknowledge that He was crucified. How,
then, could the fruit of ignorance and defect sustain
Him who contains the knowledge of all things, and is
true and perfect? Or how could that creation which
was concealed from the Father, and far removed from
Him, have sustained His Word? And if this world were
made by the angels (it matters not whether we suppose
their ignorance or their cognizance of the Supreme
God), when the Lord declared, "For I am in the
Father, and the Father in Me,"(1) how could this
workmanship of the angels have borne to be burdened
at once with the Father and the Son? How, again, could
that creation which is beyond the Pleroma have contained
Him who contains the entire Pleroma? Inasmuch, then,
as all these things are impossible and incapable of
proof, that preaching of the Church is alone true [which
proclaims] that His own creation bare Him, which subsists
by the power, the skill, and the wisdom of God; which
is sustained, indeed, after an invisible manner by
the Father, but, on the contrary, after a visible manner
it bore His Word: and this is the true [Word].
2. For the Father bears the creation and His own
Word simultaneously, and the Word borne by the Father
grants the Spirit to all as the Father wills.(2) To
some He gives after the manner of creation what is
made;(3) but to others [He gives] after the manner
of adoption, that is, what is from God, namely generation.
And thus one God the Father is declared, who is above
all, and through all, and in all. The Father is indeed
above all, and He is the Head of Christ; but the Word
is through all things, and is Himself the Head of the
Church; while the Spirit is in us all, and He is the
living water,(4) which the Lord grants to those who
rightly believe in Him, and love Him, and who know
that "there is one Father, who is above all, and
through all, and in us all."(5) And to these things
does John also, the disciple of the Lord, bear witness,
when he speaks thus in the Gospel: "In the beginning
was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word
was God. This was in the beginning with God. All things
were made by Him, and without Him was nothing made."(6)
And then he said of the Word Himself: "He was
in the world, and the world was made by Him, and the
world knew Him not. To His own things He came, and
His own people received Him not. However, as many as
did receive Him, to these gave He power to become the
sons of God, to those that believe in His name."(7)
And again, showing the dispensation with regard to
His human nature, John said: "And the Word was
made flesh, and dwelt among us."(8) And in continuation
he says, "And we beheld His glory, the glory as
of the Only-begotten by the Father, full of grace and
truth." He thus plainly points out to those willing
to hear, that is, to those having ears, that there
is one God, the Father over all, and one Word of God,
who is through all, by whom all things have been made;
and that this world belongs to Him, and was made by
Him, according to the Father's will, and not by angels;
nor by apostasy, defect, and ignorance; nor by any
power of Prunicus, whom certain of them also call "the
Mother;" nor by any other maker of the world ignorant
of the Father.
3. For the Creator of the world is truly the Word
of God: and this is our Lord, who in the last times
was made man, existing in this world, and who in an
invisible manner contains all things created, and is
inherent in the entire creation, since the Word of
God governs and arranges all
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things; and therefore He came to His own in a visible(1) manner, and was made flesh, and hung upon the tree, that He might sum up all things in Himself. "And His own peculiar people did not receive Him," as Moses declared this very thing among the people: "And thy life shall be hanging before thine eyes, and thou wilt not believe thy life."(2) Those therefore who did not receive Him did not receive life. "But to as many as received Him, to them gave He power to become the sons of God."(3) For it is He who has power from the Father over all things, since He is the Word of God, and very man, communicating with invisible beings after the manner of the intellect, and appointing a law observable to the outward senses, that all things should continue each in its own order; and He reigns manifestly over things visible and pertaining to men; and brings in just judgment and worthy upon all; as David also, clearly pointing to this, says, "Our God shall openly come, and will not keep silence."(4) Then he shows also the judgment which is brought in by Him, saying, "A fire shall burn in His sight, and a strong tempest shall rage round about Him. He shall call upon the heaven from above, and the earth, to judge His people."
CHAP. XIX.--A COMPARISON IS INSTITUTED BETWEEN THE DISOBEDIENT AND SINNING EVE AND THE VIRGIN MARY, HER PATRONESS. VARIOUS AND DISCORDANT HERESIES ARE MENTIONED.
1. That the Lord then was manifestly coming to His
own things, and was sustaining them by means of that
creation which is supported by Himself, and was making
a recapitulation of that disobedience which had occurred
in connection with a tree, through the obedience which
was [exhibited by Himself when He hung] upon a tree,
[the effects] also of that deception being done away
with, by which that virgin Eve, who was already espoused
to a man, was unhappily misled,--was happily announced,
through means of the truth [spoken] by the angel to
the Virgin Mary, who was [also espoused] to a man.(5)
For just as the former was led astray by the word of
an angel, so that she fled from God when she had transgressed
His word; so did the latter, by an angelic communication,
receive the glad tidings that she should sustain (portaret)
God, being obedient to His word. And if the former
did disobey God, yet the latter was persuaded to be
obedient to God, in order that the Virgin Mary might
become the patroness(6) (advocata) of the virgin Eve.
And thus, as the human race fell into bondage to death
by means of a virgin, so is it rescued by a virgin;
virginal disobedience having been balanced in the opposite
scale by virginal obedience. For in the same way the
sin of the first created man (protoplasti) receives
amendment by the correction of the First-begotten,
and the coming of the serpent is conquered by the harmlessness
of the dove, those bonds being unloosed by which we
had been fast bound to death.
2. The heretics being all unlearned and ignorant
of God's arrangements, and not acquainted with that
dispensation by which He took upon Him human nature
(inscii ejus quoe est secundum hominem dispensationis),
inasmuch as they blind themselves with regard to the
truth, do in fact speak against their own salvation.
Some of them introduce another Father besides the Creator;
some, again, say that the world and its substance was
made by certain angels; certain others [maintain] that
it was widely separated by Horos(7) from him whom they
represent as being the Father--that it sprang forth
(floruisse) of itself, and from itself was born. Then,
again, others [of them assert] that it obtained substance
in those things which are contained by the Father,
from defect and ignorance; others still, despise the
advent of the Lord manifest [to the senses], for they
do not admit His incarnation; while others, ignoring
the arrangement [that He should be born] of a virgin,
main-rain that He was begotten by Joseph. And still
further, some affirm that neither their soul nor their
body can receive eternal life, but merely the inner
man. Moreover, they will have it that this [inner man]
is that which is the understanding (sensum) in them,
and which they decree as being the only thing to ascend
to "the perfect." Others [maintain], as I
have said in the first book, that while the soul is
saved, their body does not participate in the salvation
which comes from God; in which [book] I have also set
forward the hypotheses of all these men, and in the
second have pointed out their weakness and inconsistency.
CHAP. XX.--THOSE PASTORS ARE TO BE HEARD TO WHOM THE APOSTLES COMMITTED THE CHURCHES, POSSESSING ONE AND THE SAME DOCTRINE OF SALVATION; THE HERETICS, ON THE OTHER HAND, ARE TO BE AVOIDED. WE MUST THINK SOBERLY WITH REGARD TO THE MYSTERIES OF THE FAITH.
1. Now all these [heretics] are of much later date than the bishops to whom the apostles committed the Churches; which fact I have in the third book taken all pains to demonstrate. It follows, then, as a matter of course, that these
548
heretics aforementioned, since they are blind to the
truth, and deviate from the [right] way, will walk
in various roads; and therefore the footsteps of their
doctrine are scattered here and there without agreement
or connection. But the path of those belonging to the
Church circumscribes the whole world, as possessing
the sure tradition from the apostles, and gives unto
us to see that the faith of all is one and the same,
since all receive one and the same God the Father,
and believe in the same dispensation regarding the
incarnation of the Son of God, and are cognizant of
the same gift of the Spirit, and are conversant with
the same commandments, and preserve the same form of
ecclesiastical constitution,(1) and expect the same
advent of the Lord, and await the same salvation of
the complete man, that is, of the soul and body. And
undoubtedly the preaching of the Church is true and
stedfast, in which one and the same way of salvation
is shown throughout the whole world. For to her is
entrusted the light of God; and therefore the "wisdom"
of God, by means of which she saves all men, "is
declared in [its] going forth; it uttereth [its voice]
faithfully in the streets, is preached on the tops
of the walls, and speaks continually in the gates of
the city."(3) For the Church preaches the truth
everywhere, and she is the seven-branched candlestick
which bears the light of Christ.
2. Those, therefore, who desert the preaching of
the Church, call in question the knowledge of the holy
presbyters, not taking into consideration of how much
greater consequence is a religious man, even in a private
station, than a blasphemous and impudent sophist.(4)
Now, such are all the heretics, and those who imagine
that they have hit upon something more beyond the truth,
so that by following those things already mentioned,
proceeding on their way variously, in harmoniously,
and foolishly, not keeping always to the same opinions
with regard to the same things, as blind men are led
by the blind, they shall deservedly fall into the ditch
of ignorance lying in their path, ever seeking and
never finding out the truth.(5) It behoves us, therefore,
to avoid their doctrines, and to take careful heed
lest we suffer any injury from them; but to flee to
the Church, and be brought up in her bosom, and be
nourished with the Lord's Scriptures. For the Church
has been planted as a garden (paradisus) in this world;
therefore says the Spirit of God, "Thou mayest
freely eat from every tree of the garden,"(6)
that is, Eat ye from every Scripture of the Lord; but
ye shall not eat with an uplifted mind, nor touch any
heretical discord. For these men do profess that they
have themselves the knowledge of good and evil; and
they set their own impious minds above the God who
made them. They therefore form opinions on what is
beyond the limits of the understanding. For this cause
also the apostle says, "Be not wise beyond what
it is fitting to be wise, but be wise prudently,"(7)
that we be not east forth by eating of the "knowledge"
of these men (that knowledge which knows more than
it should do) from the paradise of life. Into this
paradise the Lord has introduced those who obey His
call, "summing up in Himself all things which
are in heaven, and which are on earth;"(8) but
the things in heaven are spiritual, while those on
earth constitute the dispensation in human nature (secundum
hominem est dispositio). These things, therefore, He
recapitulated in Himself: by uniting man to the Spirit,
and causing the Spirit to dwell in man, He is Himself
made the head of the Spirit, and gives the Spirit to
be the head of man: for through Him (the Spirit) we
see, and hear, and speak.
CHAP. XXI.--CHRIST IS THE HEAD OF ALL THINGS ALREADY MENTIONED. IT WAS FITTING THAT HE SHOULD BE SENT BY THE FATHER, THE CREATOR OF ALL THINGS, TO ASSUME HUMAN NATURE, AND SHOULD BE TEMPTED BY SATAN, THAT HE MIGHT FULFIL THE PROMISES, AND CARRY OFF A GLORIOUS AND PERFECT VICTORY.
1. He has therefore, in His work of recapitulation, summed up all things, both waging war against our enemy, and crushing him who had at the beginning led us away captives in Adam, and trampled upon his head, as thou canst perceive in Genesis that God said to the serpent, "And I will put enmity between thee and the woman, and between thy seed and her seed; He shall be on the watch for (observabit(9)) thy head, and thou on the watch for His heel."(10) For from that time, He who should be born of a woman, [namely] from the Virgin, after the likeness of Adam, was preached as keeping watch for the head of the serpent. This is the seed of which the apostle says in the Epistle to the Galatians, "that the law of works was established until the seed should come to whom the promise was made."(11) This fact is exhibited in a still clearer light in the same Epistle, where he thus speaks: "But when the fulness of time was come, God
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sent forth His Son, made of a woman."(1) For indeed
the enemy would not have been fairly vanquished, unless
it had been a man [born] of a woman who conquered him.
For it was by means of a woman that he got the advantage
over man at first, setting himself up as man's opponent.
And therefore does the Lord profess Himself to be the
Son of man, comprising in Himself that original man
out of whom the woman was fashioned (ex quo ea quae
secundum mulierem est plasmatio facta est), in order
that, as our species went down to death through a vanquished
man, so we may ascend to life again through a victorious
one; and as through a man death received the palm [of
victory] against us, so again by a man we may receive
the palm against death.
2. Now the Lord would not have recapitulated in
Himself that ancient and primary enmity against the
serpent, fulfilling the promise of the Creator (Demiurgi),
and performing His command, if He had come from another
Father. But as He is one and the same, who formed us
at the beginning, and sent His Son at the end, the
Lord did perform His command, being made of a woman,
by both destroying our adversary, and perfecting man
after the image and likeness of God. And for this reason
He did not draw the means of confounding him from any
other source than from the words of the law, and made
use of the Father's commandment as a help towards the
destruction and confusion of the apostate angel. Fasting
forty days, like Moses and Elias, He afterwards hungered,
first, in order that we may perceive that He was a
real and substantial man--for it belongs to a man to
suffer hunger when fasting; and secondly, that His
opponent might have an opportunity of attacking Him.
For as at the beginning it was by means of food that
[the enemy] persuaded man, although not suffering hunger,
to transgress God's commandments, so in the end he
did not succeed in persuading Him that was an hungered
to take that food which proceeded from God. For, when
tempting Him, he said, "If thou be the Son of
God, command that these stones be made bread."(2)
But the Lord repulsed him by the commandment of the
law, saying, "It is written, Man doth not live
by bread alone."(3) As to those words '[of His
enemy,] "If thou be the Son of God," [the
Lord] made no remark; but by thus acknowledging His
human nature He baffled His adversary, and exhausted
the force of his first attack by means of His Father's
word. The corruption of man, therefore, which occurred
in paradise by both [of our first parents] eating,
was done away with by [the Lord's] want of food in
this world.(4) But he, being thus vanquished by the
law, endeavoured again to make an assault by himself
quoting a commandment of the law. For, bringing Him
to the highest pinnacle of the temple, he said to Him,
"If thou art the Son of God, cast thyself down.
For it is written, That God shall give His angels charge
concerning thee, and in their hands they shall bear
thee up, lest perchance thou dash thy foot against
a stone;"(5) thus concealing a falsehood under
the guise of Scripture, as is done by all the heretics.
For that was indeed written, [namely], "That He
hath given His angels charge concerning Him;"
but "east thyself down from hence" no Scripture
said in reference to Him: this kind of persuasion the
devil produced from himself. The Lord therefore confuted
him out of the law, when He said, "It is written
again, Thou shalt not tempt the LORD thy God;"(6)
pointing out by the word contained in the law that
which is the duty of man, that he should not tempt
God; and in regard to Himself, since He appeared in
human form, [declaring] that He would not tempt the
LORD his God.(7) The pride of reason, therefore, which
was in the serpent, was put to nought by the humility
found in the man [Christ], and now twice was the devil
conquered from Scripture, when he was detected as advising
things contrary to God's commandment, and was shown
to be the enemy of God by [the expression of] his thoughts.
He then, having been thus signally defeated, and then,
as it were, concentrating his forces, drawing up in
order all his available power for falsehood, in the
third place "showed Him all the kingdoms of the
world, and the glory of them,"(8) saying, as Luke
relates, "All these will I give thee,--for they
are delivered to me; and to whom I will, I give them,--if
thou wilt fall down and worship me." The Lord
then, exposing him in his true character, says, "Depart,
Satan; for it is written, Thou shalt worship the Lord
thy God, and Him only shalt thou serve."(9) He
both revealed him by this name, and showed [at the
same time] who He Himself was. For the Hebrew word
"Satan" signifies an apostate. And thus,
vanquishing him for the third time, He spurned him
from Him finally as being conquered out of the law;
and there was done away with that infringement of God's
commandment which had occurred in Adam, by means of
the precept of the law, which the Son of man ob-
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served, who did not transgress the commandment of God.
3. Who, then, is this Lord God to whom Christ bears
witness, whom no man shall tempt, whom all should worship,
and serve Him alone? It is, beyond all manner of doubt,
that God who also gave the law. For these things had
been predicted in the law, and by the words (sententiam)
of the law the Lord showed that the law does indeed
declare the Word of God from the Father; and the apostate
angel of God is destroyed by its voice, being exposed
in his true colours, and vanquished by the Son of man
keeping the commandment of God. For as in the beginning
he enticed man to transgress his Maker's law, and thereby
got him into his power; yet his power consists in transgression
and apostasy, and with these he bound man [to himself];
so again, on the other hand, it was necessary that
through man himself he should, when conquered, be bound
with the same chains with which he had bound man, in
order that man, being set free, might return to his
Lord, leaving to him (Satan) those bonds by which he
himself had been fettered, that is, sin. For when Satan
is bound, man is set free; since "none can enter
a strong man's house and spoil his goods, unless he
first bind the strong man himself."(1) The Lord
therefore exposes him as speaking contrary to the word
of that God who made all things, and subdues him by
means of the commandment. Now the law is the commandment
of God. The Man proves him to be a fugitive from and
a transgressor of the law, an apostate also from God.
After [the Man had done this], the Word bound him securely
as a fugitive from Himself, and made spoil of his goods,--namely,
those men whom he held in bondage, and whom he unjustly
used for his own purposes. And justly indeed is he
led captive, who had led men unjustly into bondage;
while man, who had been led captive in times past,
was rescued from the grasp of his possessor, according
to the tender mercy of God the Father, who had compassion
on His own handiwork, and gave to it salvation, restoring
it by means of the Word--that is, by Christ--in order
that men might learn by actual proof that he receives
incorruptibility not of himself, but by the free gift
of God.
CHAP. XXII.--THE TRUE LORD AND THE ONE GOD IS DECLARED
BY THE LAW, AND MANIFESTED BY CHRIST HIS SON IN THE
GOSPEL; WHOM ALONE WE SHOULD ADORE, AND FROM HIM WE
MUST LOOK FOR ALL GOOD THINGS, NOT FROM SATAN.
1. Thus then does the Lord plainly show that it
was the true Lord and the one God who had been set
forth by the law; for Him whom the law proclaimed as
God, the same did Christ point out as the Father, whom
also it behoves the disciples of Christ alone to serve.
By means of the statements of the law, He put our adversary
to utter confusion; and the law directs us to praise
God the Creator (Demiurgum), and to serve Him alone.
Since this is the case, we must not seek for another
Father besides Him, or above Him, since there is one
God who justifies the circumcision by faith, and the
uncircumcision through faith.(2) For if there were
any other perfect Father above Him, He (Christ) would
by no means have overthrown Satan by means of His words
and commandments. For one ignorance cannot be done
away with by means of another ignorance, any more than
one defect by another defect. If, therefore, the law
is due to ignorance and defect, how could the statements
contained therein bring to nought the ignorance of
the devil, and conquer the strong man? For a strong
man can be conquered neither by an inferior nor by
an equal, but by one possessed of greater power. But
the Word of God is the superior above all, He who is
loudly proclaimed in the law: "Hear, O Israel,
the LORD thy God is one God;" and, "Thou
shalt love the LORD thy God with all thy heart;"
and, "Him shall thou adore, and Him alone shall
thou serve."(3) Then in the Gospel, casting down
the apostasy by means of these expressions, He did
both overcome the strong man by His Father's voice,
and He acknowledges the commandment of the law to express
His own sentiments, when He says, "Thou shall
not tempt the LORD thy God."(4) For He did not
confound the adversary by the saying of any other,
but by that belonging to His own Father, and thus overcame
the strong man.
2. He taught by His commandment that we who have
been set free should, when hungry, take that food which
is given by God; and that, when placed in the exalted
position of every grace [that can be received], we
should not, either by trusting to works of righteousness,
or when adorned with super-eminent [gifts of] ministration,
by any means be lifted up with pride, nor should we
tempt God, but should feel humility in all things,
and have ready to hand [this saying], "Thou shall
not tempt the LORD thy God."(5) As also the apostle
taught, saying, "Minding not high things, but
consenting to things of low estate;"(6) that we
should neither be ensnared with riches, nor mundane
glory, nor present fancy, but should know that we must
"worship the LORD thy God, and serve Him alone,"
and
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give no heed to him who falsely promised things not his own, when he said, "All these will I give thee, if, falling down, thou wilt worship me." For he himself confesses that to adore him, and to do his will, is to fall from the glory of God. And in what thing either pleasant or good can that man who has fallen participate? Or what else can such a person hope for or expect, except death? For death is next neighbour to him who has fallen. Hence also it follows that he will not give what he has promised. For how can he make grants to him who has fallen? Moreover, since God rules over men and him too, and without the will of our Father in heaven not even a sparrow falls to the ground,(1) it follows that his declaration, "All these things are delivered unto me, and to whomsoever I will I give them," proceeds from him when puffed up with pride. For the creation is not subjected to his power, since indeed he is himself but one among created things. Nor shall he give away the rule over men to men; but both all other things, and all human affairs, are arranged according to God the Father's disposal. Besides, the Lord declares that "the devil is a liar from the beginning, and the truth is not in him."(2) If then he be a liar and the truth be not in him, he certainly did not speak truth, but a lie, when he said, "For all these things are delivered to me, and to whomsoever I will I give them."(3)
CHAP. XXIII.--THE DEVIL IS WELL PRACTISED IN FALSEHOOD, BY WHICH ADAM HAVING BEEN LED ASTRAY, SINNED ON THE SIXTH DAY OF THE CREATION, IN WHICH DAY ALSO HE HAS BEEN RENEWED BY CHRIST.
1. He had indeed been already accustomed to lie
against God, for the purpose of leading men astray.
For at the beginning, when God had given to man a variety
of things for food, while He commanded him not to eat
of one tree only, as the Scripture tells us that God
said to Adam: "From every tree which is in the
garden thou shalt eat food; but from the tree of knowledge
of good and evil, from this ye shall not eat: for in
the day that ye shall eat of it, ye shall die by death;"(4)
he then, lying against the Lord, tempted man, as the
Scripture says that the serpent said to the woman:
"Has God indeed said this, Ye shall not eat from
every tree of the garden?"(5) And when she had
exposed the falsehood, and simply related the command,
as He had said, "From every tree of the garden
we shall eat; but of the fruit of the tree which is
in the midst of the garden, God hath said, Ye shall
not eat of it, neither shall ye touch it, lest ye die:"(6)
when he had [thus] learned from the woman the command
of God, having brought his cunning into play, he finally
deceived her by a falsehood, saying, "Ye shall
not die by death; for God knew that in the day ye shall
eat of it your eyes shall be opened, and ye shall be
as gods, knowing good and evil."(7) In the first
place, then, in the garden of God he disputed about
God, as if God was not there, for he was ignorant of
the greatness of God; and then, in the next place,
after he had learned from the woman that God had said
that they should die if they tasted the aforesaid tree,
opening his mouth, he uttered the third falsehood,"
Ye shall not die by death." But that God was true,
and the serpent a liar, was proved by the result, death
having passed upon them who had eaten. For along with
the fruit they did also fall under the power of death,
because they did eat in disobedience; and disobedience
to God entails death. Wherefore, as they became forfeit
to death, from that [moment] they were handed over
to it.
2. Thus, then, in the day that they did eat, in
the same did they die, and became death's debtors,
since it was one day of the creation. For it is said,
"There was made in the evening, and there was
made in the morning, one day." Now in this same
day that they did eat, in that also did they die. But
according to the cycle and progress of the days, after
which one is termed first, another second, and another
third, if anybody seeks diligently to learn upon what
day out of the seven it was that Adam died, he will
find it by examining the dispensation of the Lord.
For by summing up in Himself the whole human race from
the beginning to the end, He has also summed up its
death. From this it is clear that the Lord suffered
death, in obedience to His Father, upon that day on
which Adam died while he disobeyed God. Now he died
on the same day in which he did eat. For God said,
"In that day on which ye shall eat of it, ye shall
die by death." The Lord, therefore, recapitulating
in Himself this day, underwent His sufferings upon
the day preceding the Sabbath, that is, the sixth day
of the creation, on which day man was created; thus
granting him a second creation by means of His passion,
which is that [creation] out of death. And there are
some, again, who relegate the death of Adam to the
thousandth year; for since "a day of the Lord
is as a thousand years,"(8) he did not overstep
the thousand years, but died within them, thus bearing
out the sentence of his sin. Whether, therefore, with
respect to disobedience, which is death; whether
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[we consider] that, on account of that, they were delivered over to death, and made debtors to it; whether with respect to [the fact that on] one and the same day on which they ate they also died (for it is one day of the creation); whether [we regard this point], that, with respect to this cycle of days, they died on the day in which they did also eat, that is, the day] of the preparation, which is termed "the pure supper," that is, the sixth day of the feast, which the Lord also exhibited when He suffered on that day; or whether [we reflect] that he (Adam) did not overstep the thousand years, but died within their limit,--it follows that, in regard to all these significations, God is indeed true. For they died who tasted of the tree; and the serpent is proved a liar and a murderer, as the Lord said of him: "For he is a murderer from the beginning, and the truth is not in him."(1)
CHAP. XXIV.--OF THE CONSTANT FALSEHOOD OF THE DEVIL, AND OF THE POWERS AND GOVERNMENTS OF THE WORLD, WHICH WE OUGHT TO OBEY, INASMUCH AS THEY ARE APPOINTED OF GOD, NOT OF THE DEVIL.
1. As therefore the devil lied at the beginning,
so did he also in the end, when he said, "All
these are delivered unto me, and to whomsoever I will
I give them."(2) For it is not he who has appointed
the kingdoms of this world, but God; for "the
heart of the king is in the hand of God."(3) And
the Word also says by Solomon, "By me kings do
reign, and princes administer justice. By me chiefs
are raised up, and by me kings rule the earth."(4)
Paul the apostle also says upon this same subject:
"Be ye subject to all the higher powers; for there
is no power but of God: now those which are have been
ordained of God."(5) And again, in reference to
them he says, "For he beareth not the sword in
vain; for he is the minister of God, the avenger for
wrath to him who does evil."(6) Now, that he spake
these words, not in regard to angelical powers, nor
of invisible rulers--as some venture to expound the
passage--but of those of actual human authorities,
[he shows when] he says, "For this cause pay ye
tribute also: for they are God's ministers, doing service
for this very thing."(7) This also the Lord confirmed,
when He did not do what He was tempted to by the devil;
but He gave directions that tribute should be paid
to the tax-gatherers for Himself and Peter;(8) because
"they are the ministers of God, serving for this
very thing."
2. For since man, by departing from God, reached
such a pitch of fury as even to look upon his brother
as his enemy, and engaged without fear in every kind
of restless conduct, and murder, and avarice; God imposed
upon mankind the fear of man, as they did not acknowledge
the fear of God, in order that, being subjected to
the authority of men, and kept under restraint by their
laws, they might attain to some degree of justice,
and exercise mutual forbearance through dread of the
sword suspended full in their view, as the apostle
says: "For he beareth not the sword in vain; for
he is the minister of God, the avenger for wrath upon
him who does evil." And for this reason too, magistrates
themselves, having laws as a clothing of righteousness
whenever they act in a just and legitimate manner,
shall not be called in question for their conduct,
nor be liable to punishment. But whatsoever they do
to the subversion of justice, iniquitously, and impiously,
and illegally, and tyrannically, in these things shall
they also perish; for the just judgment of God comes
equally upon all, and in no case is defective. Earthly
rule, therefore, has been appointed by God for the
benefit of nations,(9) and not by the devil, who is
never at rest at all, nay, who does not love to see
even nations conducting themselves after a quiet manner,
so that under the fear of human rule, men may not eat
each other up like fishes; but that, by means of the
establishment of laws, they may keep down an excess
of wickedness among the nations. And considered from
this point of view, those who exact tribute from us
are "God's ministers, serving for this very purpose."
3. As, then, "the powers that be are ordained
of God," it is clear that the devil lied when
he said, "These are delivered unto me; and to
whomsoever I will, I give them." For by the law
of the same Being as calls men into existence are kings
also appointed, adapted for those men who are at the
time placed under their government. Some of these [rulers]
are given for the correction and the benefit of their
subjects, and for the preservation of justice; but
others, for the purposes of fear and punishment and
rebuke: others, as [the subjects] deserve it, are for
deception, disgrace, and pride; while the just judgment
of God, as I have observed already, passes equally
upon all. The devil, however, as he is the apostate
angel, can only go to this length, as he did at the
beginning, [namely] to deceive and lead astray the
mind of man into disobeying the commandments of God,
and grad-
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ually to darken the hearts of those who would endeavour
to serve him, to the forgetting of the true God, but
to the adoration of himself as God.
4. Just as if any one, being an apostate, and seizing
in a hostile manner another man's territory, should
harass the inhabitants of it, in order that he might
claim for himself the glory of a king among those ignorant
of his apostasy and robbery; so likewise also the devil,
being one among those angels who are placed over the
spirit of the air, as the Apostle Paul has declared
in his Epistle to the Ephesians,(1) becoming envious
of man, was rendered an apostate from the divine law:
for envy is a thing foreign to God. And as his apostasy
was exposed by man, and man became the [means of] searching
out his thoughts (et examinatio sententioe ejus, homo
factus est), he has set himself to this with greater
and greater determination, in opposition to man, envying
his life, and wishing to involve him in his own apostate
power. The Word of God, however, the Maker of all things,
conquering him by means of human nature, and showing
him to be an apostate, has, on the contrary, put him
under the power of man. For He says, "Behold,
I confer upon you the power of treading upon serpents
and scorpions, and upon all the power of the enemy,"(2)
in order that, as he obtained dominion over man by
apostasy, so again his apostasy might be deprived of
power by means of man turning back again to God.
CHAP. XXV.--THE FRAUD, PRIDE, AND TYRANNICAL KINGDOM OF ANTICHRIST, AS DESCRIBED BY DANIEL AND PAUL.
1. And not only by the particulars already mentioned,
but also by means of the events which shall occur in
the time of Antichrist is it shown that he, being
an apostate and a robber, is anxious to be adored as
God; and that, although a mere slave, he wishes himself
to be proclaimed as a king. For he (Antichrist) being
endued with all the power of the devil, shall come,
not as a righteous king, nor as a legitimate king,
[i.e., one] in subjection to God, but an impious, unjust,
and lawless one; as an apostate, iniquitous and murderous;
as a robber, concentrating in himself [all] satanic
apostasy, and setting aside idols to persuade [men]
that he himself is God, raising up himself as the only
idol, having in himself the multifarious errors of
the other idols. This he does, in order that they who
do [now] worship the devil by means of many abominations,
may serve himself by this one idol, of whom the apostle
thus speaks in the second Epistle to the Thessalonians:
"Unless there shall come a failing away first,
and the man of sin shall be revealed, the son of perdition,
who opposeth and exalteth himself above all that is
called God, or that is worshipped; so that he sitteth
in the temple of God, showing himself as if he were
God." The apostle therefore clearly points out
his apostasy, and that he is lifted up above all that
is called God, or that is worshipped--that is, above
every idol--for these are indeed so called by men,
but are not [really] gods; and that he will endeavour
in a tyrannical manner to set himself forth as God.
2. Moreover, he (the apostle) has also pointed out
this which I have shown in many ways, that the temple
in Jerusalem was made by the direction of the true
God. For the apostle himself, speaking in his own person,
distinctly called it the temple of God. Now I have
shown in the third book, that no one is termed God
by the apostles when speaking for themselves, except
Him who truly is God, the Father of our Lord, by whose
directions the temple which is at Jerusalem was constructed
for those purposes which I have already mentioned;
in which [temple] the enemy shall sit, endeavouring
to show himself as Christ, as the Lord also declares:
"But when ye shall see the abomination of desolation,
which has been spoken of by Daniel the prophet, standing
in the holy place (let him that readeth understand),
then let those who are in Judea flee into the mountains;
and he who is upon the house-top, let him not come
down to take anything out of his house: for there shall
then be great hardship, such as has not been from the
beginning of the world until now, nor ever shall be."(3)
3. Daniel too, looking forward to the end of the
last kingdom, i.e., the ten last kings, amongst whom
the kingdom of those men shall be partitioned, and
upon whom the son of perdition shall come, declares
that ten horns shall spring from the beast, and that
another little horn shall arise in the midst of them,
and that three of the former shall be rooted up before
his face. He says: "And, behold, eyes were in
this horn as the eyes of a man, and a mouth speaking
great things, and his look was more stout than his
fellows. I was looking, and this horn made war against
the saints, and prevailed against them, until the Ancient
of days came and gave judgment to the saints of the
most high God, and the time came, and the saints obtained
the kingdom."(4) Then, further on, in the interpretation
of the vision, there was said to him: "The fourth
beast shall be the fourth kingdom upon earth, which
shall excel all other kingdoms, and devour the whole
earth, and tread it down, and cut it in pieces. And
its ten horns are ten kings which shall arise; and
after them shall arise another, who shall surpass in
evil deeds all that were be-
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fore him, and shall overthrow three kings; and he shall
speak words against the most high God, and wear out
the saints of the most high God, and shall purpose
to change times and laws; and [everything] shall be
given into his hand until a time of times and a half
time,"(1) that is, for three years and six months,
during which time, when he comes, he shall reign over
the earth. Of whom also the Apostle Paul again, speaking
in the second [Epistle] to the Thessalonians, and at
the same time proclaiming the cause of his advent,
thus says: "And then shall the wicked one be revealed,
whom the Lord Jesus shall slay with the spirit of His
mouth, and destroy by the presence of His coming; whose
coming [i.e., the wicked one's] is after the working
of Satan, in all power, and signs, and portents of
lies, and with all deceivableness of wickedness for
those who perish; because they did not receive the
love of the truth, that they might be saved. And therefore
God will send them the working of error, that they
may believe a lie; that they all may be judged who
did not believe the truth, but gave consent to iniquity,"(2)
4. The Lord also spoke as follows to those who did
not believe in Him: "I have come in my Father's
name, and ye have not received Me: when another shall
come in his own name, him ye will receive,"(3)
calling Antichrist "the other," because he
is alienated from the Lord. This is also the unjust
judge, whom the Lord mentioned as one "who feared
not God, neither regarded man,"(4) to whom the
widow fled in her forgetfulness of God,--that is, the
earthly Jerusalem,--to be avenged of her adversary.
Which also he shall do in the time of his kingdom:
he shall remove his kingdom into that [city], and shall
sit in the temple of God, leading astray those who
worship him, as if he were Christ. To this purpose
Daniel says again: "And he shall desolate the
holy place; and sin has been given for a sacrifice,(5)
and righteousness been cast away in the earth, and
he has been active (fecit), and gone on prosperously."(6)
And the angel Gabriel, when explaining his vision,
states with regard to this person: "And towards
the end of their kingdom a king of a most fierce countenance
shall arise, one understanding [dark] questions, and
exceedingly powerful, full of wonders; and he shall
corrupt, direct, influence (faciet), and put strong
men down, the holy people likewise; and his yoke shall
be directed as a wreath [round their neck]; deceit
shall be in his hand, and he shall be lifted up in
his heart: he shall also ruin many by deceit, and lead
many to perdition, bruising them in his hand like eggs."(7)
And then he points out the time that his tyranny shall
last, during which the saints shall be put to flight,
they who offer a pure sacrifice unto God: "And
in the midst of the week," he says, "the
sacrifice and the libation shall be taken away, and
the abomination of desolation [shall be brought] into
the temple: even unto the consummation of the time
shall the desolation be complete."(8) Now three
years and six months constitute the half-week.
5. From all these passages are revealed to us, not
merely the particulars of the apostasy, and [the doings]
of him who concentrates in himself every satanic error,
but also, that there is one and the same God the Father,
who was declared by the prophets, but made manifest
by Christ. For if what Daniel prophesied concerning
the end has been confirmed by the Lord, when He said,
"When ye shall see the abomination of desolation,
which has been spoken of by Daniel the prophet"(9)
(and the angel Gabriel gave the interpretation of the
visions to Daniel, and he is the archangel of the Creator
(Demiurgi), who also proclaimed to Mary the visible
coining and the incarnation of Christ), then one and
the same God is most manifestly pointed out, who sent
the prophets, and made promise(10) of the Son, and
called us into His knowledge.
CHAP. XXVI.--JOHN AND DANIEL HAVE PREDICTED THE DISSOLUTION AND DESOLATION OF THE ROMAN EMPIRE, WHICH SHALL PRECEDE THE END OF THE WORLD AND THE ETERNAL KINGDOM OF CHRIST. THE GNOSTICS ARE REFUTED, THOSE TOOLS OF SATAN, WHO INVENT ANOTHER FATHER DIFFERENT FROM THE CREATOR.
1. In a still clearer light has John, in the Apocalypse, indicated to the Lord's disciples what shall happen in the last times, and concerning the ten kings who shall then arise, among whom the empire which now rules [the earth] shall be partitioned. He teaches us what the ten horns shall be which were seen by Daniel, telling us that thus it had been said to him: "And the ten horns which thou sawest are ten kings, who have received no kingdom as yet, but shall receive power as if kings one hour with the beast. These have one mind, and give their strength and power to the beast. These shall make war with the Lamb, and the Lamb shall overcome them, because He is the Lord of lords and the King of kings."(11) It is manifest, therefore, that
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of these [potentates], he who is to come shall slay
three, and subject the remainder to his power, and
that he shall be himself the eighth among them. And
they shall lay Babylon waste, and burn her with fire,
and shall give their kingdom to the beast, and put
the Church to flight. After that they shall be destroyed
by the coming of our Lord. For that the kingdom must
be divided, and thus come to ruin, the Lord [declares
when He] says: "Every kingdom divided against
itself is brought to desolation, and every city or
house divided against itself shall not stand."(1)
It must be, therefore, that the kingdom, the city,
and the house be divided into ten; and for this reason
He has already foreshadowed the partition and division
[which shall take place]. Daniel also says particularly,
that the end of the fourth kingdom consists in the
toes of the image seen by Nebuchadnezzar, upon which
came the stone cut out without hands; and as he does
himself say: "The feet were indeed the one part
iron, the other part clay, until the stone was cut
out without hands, and struck the image upon the iron
and clay feet, and dashed them into pieces, even to
the end."(2) Then afterwards, when interpreting
this, he says: "And as thou sawest the feet and
the toes, partly indeed of clay, and partly of iron,
the kingdom shall be divided, and there shall be in
it a root of iron, as thou sawest iron mixed with baked
clay. And the toes were indeed the one part iron, but
the other part clay."(3) The ten toes, therefore,
are these ten kings, among whom the kingdom shall be
partitioned, of whom some indeed shall be strong and
active, or energetic; others, again, shall be sluggish
and useless, and shall not agree; as also Daniel says:
"Some part of the kingdom shall be strong, and
part shall be broken from it. As thou sawest the iron
mixed with the baked clay, there shall be minglings
among the human race, but no cohesion one with the
other, just as iron cannot be welded on to pottery
ware."(4) And since an end shall take place, he
says: "And in the days of these kings shall the
God of heaven raise up a kingdom which shall never
decay, and His kingdom shall not be left to another
people. It shall break in pieces and shatter all kingdoms,
and shall itself be exalted for ever. As thou sawest
that the stone was cut without hands from the mountain,
and brake in pieces the baked clay, the iron, the brass,
the silver, and the gold, God has pointed out to the
king what shall come to pass after these things; and
the dream is true, and the interpretation trustworthy."(5)
2. If therefore the great God showed future things
by Daniel, and confirmed them by His Son; and if Christ
is the stone which is cut out without hands, who shall
destroy temporal kingdoms, and introduce an eternal
one, which is the resurrection of the just; as he declares,
"The God of heaven shall raise up a kingdom which
shall never be destroyed,"--let those thus confuted
come to their senses, who reject the Creator (Demiurgum),
and do not agree that the prophets were sent beforehand
from the same Father from whom also the Lord came,
but who assert that prophecies originated from diverse
powers. For those things which have been predicted
by the Creator alike through all the prophets has Christ
fulfilled in the end, ministering to His Father's will,
and completing His dispensations with regard to the
human race. Let those persons, therefore, who blaspheme
the Creator, either by openly expressed words, such
as the disciples of Marcion, or by a perversion of
the sense [of Scripture], as those of Valentinus and
all the Gnostics falsely so called, be recognised as
agents of Satan by all those who worship God; through
whose agency Satan now, and not before, has been seen
to speak against God, even Him who has prepared eternal
fire for every kind of apostasy. For he did not venture
to blaspheme his Lord openly of himself; as also in
the beginning he led man astray through the instrumentality
of the serpent, concealing himself as it were from
God. Truly has Justin remarked:(6) That before the
Lord's appearance Satan never dared to blaspheme God,
inasmuch as he did not yet know his own sentence, because
it was contained in parables and allegories; but that
after the Lord's appearance, when he had clearly ascertained
from the words of Christ and His apostles that eternal
fire has been prepared for him as he apostatized from
God of his own free-will, and likewise for all who
unrepentant continue in the apostasy, he now blasphemes,
by means of such men, the Lord who brings judgment
[upon him] as being already condemned, and imputes
the guilt of his apostasy to his Maker, not to his
own voluntary disposition. Just as it is with those
who break the laws, when punishment overtakes them:
they throw the blame upon those who frame the laws,
but not upon themselves. In like manner do those men,
filled with a satanic spirit, bring innumerable accusations
against our Creator, who has both given to us the spirit
of life, and established a law adapted for all; and
they will not admit that the judgment of God is just.
Wherefore also they set about imagining some other
Father who neither cares about nor exercises a providence
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over our affairs, nay, one who even approves of all sins.
CHAP. XXVII.--THE FUTURE JUDGMENT BY CHRIST. COMMUNION WITH AND SEPARATION FROM THE DIVINE BEING. THE ETERNAL PUNISHMENT OF UNBELIEVERS.
1. If the Father, then, does not exercise judgment,
[it follows] that judgment does not belong to Him,
or that He consents to all those actions which take
place; and if He does not judge, all persons will be
equal, and accounted in the same condition. The advent
of Christ will therefore be without an object, yea,
absurd, inasmuch as [in that case] He exercises no
judicial power. For "He came to divide a man against
his father, and the daughter against the mother, and
the daughter-in-law against the mother-in-law;"(1)
and when two are in one bed, to take the one, and to
leave the other; and of two women grinding at the mill,
to take one and leave the other:(2) [also] at the time
of the end, to order the reapers to collect first the
tares together, and bind them in bundles, and burn
them with unquenchable fire, but to gather up the wheat
into the barn;(3) and to call the lambs into the kingdom
prepared for them, but to send the goats into everlasting
fire, which has been prepared by His Father for the
devil and his angels.(4) And why is this? Has the Word
come for the ruin and for the resurrection of many?
For the ruin, certainly, of those who do not believe
Him, to whom also He has threatened a greater damnation
in the judgment-day than that of Sodom and Gomorrah;(5)
but for the resurrection of believers, and those who
do the will of His Father in heaven. If then the advent
of the Son comes indeed alike to all, but is for the
purpose of judging, and separating the believing from
the unbelieving, since, as those who believe do His
will agreeably to their own choice, and as, [also]
agreeably to their own choice, the disobedient do not
consent to His doctrine; it is manifest that His Father
has made all in a like condition, each person having
a choice of his own, and a free understanding; and
that He has regard to all things, and exercises a providence
over all, "making His sun to rise upon the evil
and on the good, and sending rain upon the just and
unjust."(6)
2. And to as many as continue in their love towards
God, does He grant communion with Him. But communion
with God is life and light, and the enjoyment of all
the benefits which He has in store. But on as many
as, according to their own choice, depart from God.
He inflicts that separation from Himself which they
have chosen of their own accord. But separation from
God is death, and separation from light is darkness;
and separation from God consists in the loss of all
the benefits which He has in store. Those, therefore,
who cast away by apostasy these forementioned things,
being in fact destitute of all good, do experience
every kind of punishment. God, however, does not punish
them immediately of Himself, but that punishment falls
upon them because they are destitute of all that is
good. Now, good things are eternal and without end
with God, and therefore the loss of these is also eternal
and never-ending. It is in this matter just as occurs
in the case of a flood of light: those who have blinded
themselves, or have been blinded by others, are for
ever deprived of the enjoyment of light. It is not,
[however], that the light has inflicted upon them the
penalty of blindness, but it is that the blindness
itself has brought calamity upon them: and therefore
the Lord declared, "He that believeth in Me is
not condemned,"(7) that is, is not separated from
God, for he is united to God through faith. On the
other hand, He says, "He that believeth not is
condemned already, because he has not believed in the
name of the only-begotten Son of God;" that is,
he separated himself from God of his own accord. "For
this is the condemnation, that light is come into this
world, and men have loved darkness rather than light.
For every one who doeth evil hateth the light, and
cometh not to the light, lest his deeds should be reproved.
But he that doeth truth cometh to the light, that his
deeds may be made manifest, that he has wrought them
in God."
CHAP. XXVIII.--THE DISTINCTION TO BE MADE BETWEEN THE RIGHTEOUS AND THE WICKED. THE FUTURE APOSTASY IN THE TIME OF ANTI-CHRIST, AND THE END OF THE WORLD.
1. Inasmuch, then, as in this world (<greek>aiwni</greek>)
some persons betake themselves to the light, and by
faith unite themselves with God, but others shun the
light, and separate themselves from God, the Word of
God comes preparing a fit habitation for both. For
those indeed who are in the light, that they may derive
enjoyment from it, and from the good things contained
in it; but for those in darkness, that they may partake
in its calamities. And on this account He says, that
those upon the right hand are called into the kingdom
of heaven, but that those on the left He will send
into eternal fire for they have deprived themselves
of all good.
2. And for this reason the apostle says: "Be-
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cause they received not the love of God, that they might
be saved, therefore God shall also send them the operation
of error, that they may believe a lie, that they all
may be judged who have not believed the truth, but
consented to unrighteousness."(1) For when he
(Antichrist) is come, and of his own accord concentrates
in his own person the apostasy, and accomplishes whatever
he shall do according to his own will and choice, sitting
also in the temple of God, so that his dupes may adore
him as the Christ; wherefore also shall he deservedly
"be cast into the lake of fire:"(2) [this
will happen according to divine appointment], God by
His prescience foreseeing all this, and at the proper
time sending such a man, "that they may believe
a lie, that they all may be judged who did not believe
the truth, but consented to unrighteousness;"
whose coming John has thus described in the Apocalypse:
"And the beast which I had seen was like unto
a leopard, and his feet as of a bear, and his mouth
as the mouth of a lion; and the dragon conferred his
own power upon him, and his throne, and great might.
And one of his heads was as it were slain unto death;
and his deadly wound was healed, and all the world
wondered after the beast. And they worshipped the dragon
because he gave power to the beast; and they worshipped
the beast, saying, Who is like unto this beast, and
who is able to make war with him? And there was given
unto him a mouth speaking great things, and blasphemy
and power was given to him during forty and two months.
And he opened his mouth for blasphemy against God,
to blaspheme His name and His tabernacle, and those
who dwell in heaven. And power was given him over every
tribe, and people, and tongue, and nation. And all
who dwell upon the earth worshipped him, [every one]
whose name was not written in the book of the Lamb
slain from the foundation of the world. If any one
have ears, let him hear. If any one shall lead into
captivity, he shall go into captivity. If any shall
slay with the sword, he must be slain with the sword.
Here is the endurance and the faith of the saints."(3)
After this he likewise describes his armour-bearer,
whom he also terms a false prophet: "He spake
as a dragon, and exercised all the power of the first
beast in his sight, and caused the earth, and those
that dwell therein, to adore the first beast, whose
deadly wound was healed. And he shall perform great
wonders, so that he can even cause fire to descend
from heaven upon the earth in the sight of men, and
he shall lead the inhabitants of the earth astray."(4)
Let no one imagine that he performs these wonders by
divine power, but by the working of magic. And we must
not be surprised if, since the demons and apostate
spirits are at his service, he through their means
performs wonders, by which he leads the inhabitants
of the earth astray. John says further: "And he
shall order an image of the beast to be made, and he
shall give breath to the image, so that the image shall
speak; and he shall cause those to be slain who will
not adore it." He says also: "And he will
cause a mark [to be put] in the forehead and in the
fight hand, that no one may be able to buy or sell,
unless he who has the mark of the name of the beast
or the number of his name; and the number is six hundred
and sixty-six,"(5) that is, six times a hundred,
six times ten, and six units. [He gives this] as a
summing up of the whole of that apostasy which has
taken place during six thousand years.
3. For in as many days as this world was made, in
so many thousand years shall it be concluded. And for
this reason the Scripture says: "Thus the heaven
and the earth were finished, and all their adornment.
And God brought to a conclusion upon the sixth day
the works that He had made; and God rested upon the
seventh day from all His works."(6) This is an
account of the things formerly created, as also it
is a prophecy of what is to come. For the day of the
Lord is as a thousand years;(7) and in six days created
things were completed: it is evident, therefore, that
they will come to an end at the sixth thousand year.
4. And therefore throughout all time, man, having
been moulded at the beginning by the hands of God,
that is, of the Son and of the Spirit, is made after
the image and likeness of God: the chaff, indeed, which
is the apostasy, being cast away; but the wheat, that
is, those who bring forth fruit to God in faith, being
gathered into the barn. And for this cause tribulation
is necessary for those who are saved, that having been
after a manner broken up, and rendered fine, and sprinkled
over by the patience of the Word of God, and set on
fire [for purification], they may be fitted for the
royal banquet. As a certain man of ours said, when
he was condemned to the wild beasts because of his
testimony with respect to God: "I am the wheat
of Christ, and am ground by the teeth of the wild beasts,
that I may be found the pure bread of God."(8)
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CHAP.XXIX.--ALL THINGS HAVE BEEN CREATED FOR THE SERVICE OF MAN. THE DECEITS, WICKEDNESS, AND APOSTATE POWER OF ANTICHRIST. THIS WAS PREFIGURED AT THE DELUGE, AS AFTERWARDS BY THE PERSECUTION OF SHADRACH, MESHACH, AND ABEDNEGO.
1. In the previous books I have set forth the causes
for which God permitted these things to be made, and
have pointed out that all such have been created for
the benefit of that human nature which is saved, ripening
for immortality that which is [possessed] of its own
free will and its own power, and preparing and rendering
it more adapted for eternal subjection to God. And
therefore the creation is suited to [the wants of]
man; for man was not made for its sake, but creation
for the sake of man. Those nations however, who did
not of themselves raise up their eyes unto heaven,
nor returned thanks to their Maker, nor wished to behold
the light of truth, but who were like blind mice concealed
in the depths of ignorance, the word justly reckons
"as waste water from a sink, and as the turning-weight
of a balance--in fact, as nothing;"(1) so far
useful and serviceable to the just, as stubble conduces
towards the growth of the wheat, and its straw, by
means of combustion, serves for working gold. And therefore,
when in the end the Church shall be suddenly caught
up from this, it is said, "There shall be tribulation
such as has not been since the beginning, neither shall
be."(2) For this is the last contest of the righteous,
in which, when they overcome they are crowned with
incorruption.
2. And there is therefore in this beast, when he
comes, a recapitulation made of all sorts of iniquity
and of every deceit, in order that all apostate power,
flowing into and being shut up in him, may be sent
into the furnace of fire. Fittingly, therefore, shall
his name possess the number six hundred and sixty-six,
since he sums up in his own person all the commixture
of wickedness which took place previous to the deluge,
due to the apostasy of the angels. For Noah was six
hundred years old when the deluge came upon the earth,
sweeping away the rebellious world, for the sake of
that most infamous generation which lived in the times
of Noah. And [Antichrist] also sums up every error
of devised idols since the flood, together with the
slaying of the prophets and the cutting off of the
just. For that image which was set up by Nebuchadnezzar
had indeed a height of sixty cubits, while the breadth
was six cubits; on account of which Ananias, Azarias,
and Misael, when they did not worship it, were cast
into a furnace of fire, pointing out prophetically,
by what happened to them, the wrath against the righteous
which shall arise towards the [time of the] end. For
that image, taken as a whole, was a prefiguring of
this man's coming, decreeing that he should undoubtedly
himself alone be worshipped by all men. Thus, then,
the six hundred years of Noah, in whose time the deluge
occurred because of the apostasy, and the number of
the cubits of the image for which these just men were
sent into the fiery furnace, do indicate the number
of the name of that man in whom is concentrated the
whole apostasy of six thousand years, and unrighteousness,
and wickedness, and false prophecy, and deception;
for which things' sake a cataclysm of fire shall also
come [upon the earth].
CHAP. XXX.--ALTHOUGH CERTAIN AS TO THE NUMBER OF THE NAME OF ANTICHRIST, YET WE SHOULD COME TO NO RASH CONCLUSIONS AS TO THE NAME ITSELF, BECAUSE THIS NUMBER IS CAPABLE OF BEING FITTED TO MANY NAMES. REASONS FOR THIS POINT BEING RESERVED BY THE HOLY SPIRIT. ANTICHRIST'S REIGN AND DEATH.
1. Such, then, being the state of the case, and this number being found in all the most approved and ancient copies(3) [of the Apocalypse], and those men who saw John face to face bearing their testimony [to it]; while reason also leads us to conclude that the number of the name of the beast, [if reckoned] according to the Greek mode of calculation by the [value of] the letters contained in it, will amount to six hundred and sixty and six; that is, the number of tens shall be equal to that of the hundreds, and the number of hundreds equal to that of the units (for that number which [expresses] the digit six being adhered to throughout, indicates the recapitulations of that apostasy, taken in its full extent, which occurred at the beginning, during the intermediate periods, and which shall take place at the end),--I do not know how it is that some have erred following the ordinary mode of speech, and have vitiated the middle number in the name, deducting the amount of fifty from it, so that instead of six decads they will have it that there is but one. [I am inclined to think that this occurred through the fault of the copyists, as is wont to happen, since numbers also are expressed by letters; so that the Greek letter which expresses the number sixty was easily expanded into the letter Iota of the Greeks.](4) Others then received this read-
559
ing without examination; some in their simplicity, and
upon their own responsibility, making use of this number
expressing one decad; while some, in their inexperience,
have ventured to seek out a name which should contain
the erroneous and spurious number. Now, as regards
those who have done this in simplicity, and without
evil intent, we are at liberty to assume that pardon
will be granted them by God. But as for those who,
for the sake of vainglory, lay it down for certain
that names containing the spurious number are to be
accepted, and affirm that this name, hit upon by themselves,
is that of him who is to come; such persons shall not
come forth without loss, because they have led into
error both themselves and those who confided in them.
Now, in the first place, it is loss to wander from
the truth, and to imagine that as being the case which
is not; then again, as there shall be no light punishment
[inflicted] upon him who either adds or subtracts anything
from the Scripture,(1) under that such a person must
necessarily fall. Moreover, another danger, by no means
trifling, shall overtake those who falsely presume
that they know the name of Antichrist. For if these
men assume one [number], when this [Antichrist] shall
come having another, they will be easily led away by
him, as supposing him not to be the expected one, who
must be guarded against.
2. These men, therefore, ought to learn [what really
is the state of the case], and go back to the true
number of the name, that they be not reckoned among
false prophets. But, knowing the sure number declared
by Scripture, that is, six hundred sixty and six, let
them await, in the first place, the division of the
kingdom into ten; then, in the next place, when these
kings are reigning, and beginning to set their affairs
in order, and advance their kingdom, [let them learn]
to acknowledge that he who shall come claiming the
kingdom for himself, and shall terrify those men of
whom we have been speaking, having a name containing
the aforesaid number, is truly the abomination of desolation.
This, too, the apostle affirms: "When they shall
say, Peace and safety, then sudden destruction shall
come upon them."(2) And Jeremiah does not merely
point out his sudden coming, but he even indicates
the tribe from which he shall come, where he says,
"We shall hear the voice of his swift horses from
Dan; the whole earth shall be moved by the voice of
the neighing of his galloping horses: he shall also
come and devour the earth, and the fulness thereof,
the city also, and they that dwell therein."(3)
This, too, is the reason that this tribe is not reckoned
in the Apocalypse along with those which are saved.(4)
3. It is therefore more certain, and less hazardous,
to await the fulfilment of the prophecy, than to be
making surmises, and casting about for any names that
may present themselves, inasmuch as many names can
be found possessing the number mentioned; and the same
question will, after all, remain unsolved. For if there
are many names found possessing this number, it will
be asked which among them shall the coming man bear.
It is not through a want of names containing the number
of that name that I say this, but on account of the
fear of God, and zeal for the truth: for the name Evanthas
(E<greek>U</greek>AN<greek>Q</greek>A<greek>S</greek>)
contains the required number, but I make no allegation
regarding it. Then also Lateinos (<greek>L</greek>ATEINO<greek>S</greek>)
has the number six hundred and sixty-six; and it is
a very probable [solution], this being the name of
the last kingdom [of the four seen by Daniel]. For
the Latins are they who at present bear rule:(5) I
will not, however, make any boast over this [coincidence].
Teitan too, (TEITAN, the first syllable being written
with the two Greek vowels <greek>e</greek>
and <greek>i</greek>), among all the names
which are found among us, is rather worthy of credit.
For it has in itself the predicted number, and is composed
of six letters, each syllable containing three letters;
and [the word itself] is ancient, and removed from
ordinary use; for among our kings we find none bearing
this name Titan, nor have any of the idols which are
worshipped in public among the Greeks and barbarians
this appellation. Among many persons, too, this name
is accounted divine, so that even the sun is termed
"Titan" by those who do now possess [the
rule]. This word, too, contains a certain outward appearance
of vengeance, and of one inflicting merited punishment
because he (Antichrist) pretends that he vindicates
the oppressed.(6) And besides this, it is an ancient
name, one worthy of credit, of royal dignity, and still
further, a name belonging to a tyrant. Inasmuch, then,
as this name "Titan" has so much to recommend
it, there is a strong degree of probability, that from
among the many [names suggested], we infer, that perchance
he who is to come shall be called "Titan."
We will not, however, incur the risk of pronouncing
positively as to the name of Antichrist; for if it
were necessary that his name should be distinctly
revealed in this present time, it would have been announced
by him who beheld the apocalyptic vision. For that
was seen no very long time
560
since, but almost in our day, towards the end of Domitian's
reign.
4. But he indicates the number of the name now,
that when this man comes we may avoid him, being aware
who he is: the name, however, is suppressed, because
it is not worthy of being proclaimed by the Holy Spirit.
For if it had been declared by Him, he (Antichrist)
might perhaps continue for a long period. But now as
"he was, and is not, and shall ascend out of the
abyss, and goes into perdition,"(1) as one who
has no existence; so neither has his name been declared,
for the name of that which does not exist is not proclaimed.
But when this Antichrist shall have devastated all
things in this world, he will reign for three years
and six months, and sit in the temple at Jerusalem;
and then the Lord will come from heaven in the clouds,
in the glory of the Father, sending this man and those
who follow him into the lake of fire; but bringing
in for the righteous the times of the kingdom, that
is, the rest, the hallowed seventh day; and restoring
to Abraham the promised inheritance, in which kingdom
the Lord declared, that "many coming from the
east and from the west should sit down with Abraham,
Isaac, and Jacob."(2)
CHAP. XXXI.--THE PRESERVATION OF OUR BODIES IS CONFIRMED BY THE RESURRECTION AND ASCENSION OF CHRIST: THE SOULS OF THE SAINTS DURING THE INTERMEDIATE PERIOD ARE IN A STATE OF EXPECTATION OF THAT TIME WHEN THEY SHALL RECEIVE THEIR PERFECT AND CONSUMMATED GLORY.
1. Since, again, some who are reckoned among the
orthodox go beyond the pre-arranged plan for the exaltation
of the just, and are ignorant of the methods by which
they are disciplined beforehand for incorruption, they
thus entertain heretical opinions. For the heretics,
despising the handiwork of God, and not admitting the
salvation of their flesh, while they also treat the
promise of God contemptuously, and pass beyond God
altogether in the sentiments they form, affirm that
immediately upon their death they shall pass above
the heavens and the Demiurge, and go to the Mother
(Achamoth) or to that Father whom they have feigned.
Those persons, therefore, who disallow a resurrection
affecting the whole man (universam reprobant resurrectionem),
and as far as in them lies remove it from the midst
[of the Christian scheme], how can they be wondered
at, if again they know nothing as to the plan of the
resurrection? For they do not choose to understand,
that if these things are as they say, the Lord Himself,
in whom they profess to believe, did not rise again
upon the third day; but immediately upon His expiring
on the cross, undoubtedly departed on high, leaving
His body to the earth. But the case was, that for three
days He dwelt in the place where the dead were, as
the prophet says concerning Him: "And the Lord
remembered His dead saints who slept formerly in the
land of sepulture; and He descended to them, to rescue
and save them."(3) And the Lord Himself says,
"As Jonas remained three days and three nights
in the whale's belly, so shall the Son of man be in
the heart of the earth."(4) Then also the apostle
says, "But when He ascended, what is it but that
He also descended into the lower parts of the earth?"(5)
This, too, David says when prophesying of Him, "And
thou hast delivered my soul from the nethermost hell;"(6)
and on His rising again the third day, He said to Mary,
who was the first to see and to worship Him, "Touch
Me not, for I have not yet ascended to the Father;
but go to the disciples, and say unto them, I ascend
unto My Father, and unto your Father."(7)
2. If, then, the Lord observed the law of the dead,
that He might become the first-begotten from the dead,
and tarried until the third day "in the lower
parts of the earth;"(8) then afterwards rising
in the flesh, so that He even showed the print of the
nails to His disciples,(9) He thus ascended to the
Father;--[if all these things occurred, I say], how
must these men not be put to confusion, who allege
that "the lower parts" refer to this world
of ours, but that their tuner man, leaving the body
here, ascends into the super-celestial place? For as
the Lord "went away in the midst of the shadow
of death,"(10) where the souls of the dead were,
yet afterwards arose in the body, and after the resurrection
was taken up [into heaven], it is manifest that the
souls of His disciples also, upon whose account the
Lord underwent these things, shall go away into the
invisible place allotted to them by God, and there
remain until the resurrection, awaiting that event;
then receiving their bodies, and rising in their entirety,
that is bodily, just as the Lord arose, they shall
come thus into the presence of God. "For no disciple
is above the Master, but every one that is perfect
shall be as his Master."(11) As our Master, therefore,
did not at once depart, taking flight [to heaven],
but awaited the time of His resurrection prescribed
by the Father, which had been also shown forth through
Jonas, and rising again after three days was taken
up [to heaven];
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so ought we also to await the time of our resurrection prescribed by God and foretold by the prophets, and so, rising, be taken up, as many as the Lord shall account worthy of this [privilege].(1)
CHAP. XXXII.--IN THAT FLESH IN WHICH THE SAINTS HAVE SUFFERED SO MANY AFFLICTIONS, THEY SHALL RECEIVE THE FRUITS OF THEIR LABOURS; ESPECIALLY SINCE ALL CREATION WAITS FOR THIS, AND GOD PROMISES IT TO ABRAHAM AND HIS SEED.
1. Inasmuch, therefore, as the opinions of certain
[orthodox persons] are derived from heretical discourses,
they are both ignorant of God's dispensations, and
of the mystery of the resurrection of the just, and
of the [earthly] kingdom which is the commencement
of incorruption, by means of which kingdom those who
shall be worthy are accustomed gradually to partake
of the divine nature (capere Deum(2)); and it is necessary
to tell them respecting those things, that it behoves
the righteous first to receive the promise of the inheritance
which God promised to the fathers, and to reign in
it, when they rise again to behold God in this creation
which is renovated, and that the judgment should take
place afterwards. For it is just that in that very
creation in which they toiled or were afflicted, being
proved in every way by suffering, they should receive
the reward of their suffering; and that in the creation
in which they were slain because of their love to God,
in that they should be revived again; and that in the
creation in which they endured servitude, in that they
should reign. For God is rich in all things, and all
things are His. It is fitting, therefore, that the
creation itself, being restored to its primeval condition,
should without restraint be under the dominion of the
righteous; and the apostle has made this plain in the
Epistle to the Romans, when he thus speaks: "For
the expectation of the creature waiteth for the manifestation
of the sons of God. For the creature has been subjected
to vanity, not willingly, but by reason of him who
hath subjected the same in hope; since the creature
itself shall also be delivered from the bondage of
corruption into the glorious liberty of the sons of
God."(3)
2. Thus, then, the promise of God, which He gave
to Abraham, remains stedfast. For thus He said: "Lift
up thine eyes, and look from this place where now thou
art, towards the north and south, and east and west.
For all the earth which thou seest, I will give to
thee and to thy seed, even for ever."(4) And again
He says, "Arise, and go through the length and
breadth of the land, since I will give it unto thee;"(5)
and [yet] he did not receive an inheritance in it,
not even a footstep, but was always a stranger and
a pilgrim therein.(6) And upon the death of Sarah his
wife, when the Hittites were willing to bestow upon
him a place where he might bury her, he declined it
as a gift, but bought the burying-place (giving for
it four hundred talents of silver) from Ephron the
son of Zohar the Hittite.(7) Thus did he await patiently
the promise of God, and was unwilling to appear to
receive from men, what God had promised to give him,
when He said again to him as follows: "I will
give this land to thy seed, from the river of Egypt
even unto the great river Euphrates."(8) If, then,
God promised him the inheritance of the land, yet he
did not receive it during all the time of his sojourn
there, it must be, that together with his seed, that
is, those who fear God and believe in Him, he shall
receive it at the resurrection of the just. For his
seed is the Church, which receives the adoption to
God through the Lord, as John the Baptist said: "For
God is able from the stones to raise up children to
Abraham."(9) Thus also the apostle says in the
Epistle to the Galatians: "But ye, brethren, as
Isaac was, are the children of the promise."(10)
And again, in the same Epistle, he plainly declares
that they who have believed in Christ do receive Christ,
the promise to Abraham thus saying, "The promises
were spoken to Abraham, and to his seed. Now He does
not say, And of seeds, as if [He spake] of many, but
as of one, And to thy seed, which is Christ."(11)
And again, confirming his former words, he says, "Even
as Abraham believed God, and it was accounted to him
for righteousness. Know ye therefore, that they which
are of faith are the children of Abraham. But the Scripture,
fore-seeing that God would justify the heathen through
faith, declared to Abraham beforehand, That in thee
shall all nations be blessed. So then they which are
of faith shall be blessed with faithful Abraham."(12)
Thus, then, they who are of faith shall be blessed
with faithful Abraham, and these are the children of
Abraham. Now God made promise of the earth to Abraham
and his seed; yet neither Abraham nor his seed, that
is, those who are justified by faith, do now receive
any
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inheritance in it; but they shall receive it at the resurrection of the just. For God is true and faithful; and on this account He said, "Blessed are the meek, for they shall inherit the earth."(1)
CHAP. XXXIII.--FURTHER PROOFS OF THE SAME PROPOSITION, DRAWN FROM THE PROMISES MADE BY CHRIST, WHEN HE DECLARED THAT HE WOULD DRINK OF THE FRUIT OF THE VINE WITH HIS DISCIPLES IN HIS FATHER'S KINGDOM, WHILE AT THE SAME TIME HE PROMISED TO REWARD THEM AN HUNDRED-FOLD, AND TO MAKE THEM PARTAKE OF BANQUETS. THE BLESSING PRONOUNCED BY JACOB HAD POINTED OUT THIS ALREADY, AS PAPIAS AND THE ELDERS HAVE INTERPRETED IT.
1. For this reason, when about to undergo His sufferings,
that He might declare to Abraham and those with him
the glad tidings of the inheritance being thrown open,
[Christ], after He had given thanks while holding the
cup, and had drunk of it, and given it to the disciples,
said to them: "Drink ye all of it: this is My
blood of the new covenant, which shall be shed for
many for the remission of sins. But I say unto you,
I will not drink henceforth of the fruit of this vine,
until that day when I will drink it new with you in
my Father's kingdom."(2) Thus, then, He will Himself
renew the inheritance of the earth, and will re-organize
the mystery of the glory of [His] sons; as David says,
"He who hath renewed the face of the earth."(3)
He promised to drink of the fruit of the vine with
His disciples, thus indicating both these points: the
inheritance of the earth in which the new fruit of
the vine is drunk, and the resurrection of His disciples
in the flesh. For the new flesh which rises again is
the same which also received the new cup. And He cannot
by any means be understood as drinking of the fruit
of the vine when settled down with his [disciples]
above in a super-celestial place; nor, again, are they
who drink it devoid of flesh, for to drink of that
which flows from the vine pertains to flesh, and not
spirit.
2. And for this reason the Lord declared, "When
thou makest a dinner or a supper, do not call thy friends,
nor thy neighbours, nor thy kinsfolk, lest they ask
thee in return, and so repay thee. But call the lame,
the blind, and the poor, and thou shall be blessed,
since they cannot recompense thee, but a recompense
shall be made thee at the resurrection of the just."(4)
And again He says, "Whosoever shall have left
lands, or houses, or parents, or brethren, or children
because of Me, he shall receive in this world an hundred-fold,
and in that to come he shall inherit eternal life."(5)
For what are the hundred-fold [rewards] in this word,
the entertainments given to the poor, and the suppers
for which a return is made? These are [to take place]
in the times of the kingdom, that is, upon the seventh
day, which has been sanctified, in which God rested
from all the works which He created, which is the true
Sabbath of the righteous, which they shall not be engaged
in any earthly occupation; but shall have a table at
hand prepared for them by God, supplying them with
all sorts of dishes.
3. The blessing of Isaac with which he blessed his
younger son Jacob has the same meaning, when he says,
"Behold, the smell of my son is as the smell of
a full field which the Lord has blessed."(6) But
"the field is the world."(7) And therefore
he added, "God give to thee of the dew of heaven,
and of the fatness of the earth, plenty of corn and
wine. And let the nations serve thee, and kings bow
down to thee; and be thou lord over thy brother, and
thy father's sons shall bow down to thee: cursed shall
be he who shall curse thee, and blessed shall be he
who shall bless thee."(8) If any one, then, does
not accept these things as referring to the appointed
kingdom, he must fall into much contradiction and contrariety,
as is the case with the Jews, who are involved in absolute
perplexity. For not only did not the nations in this
life serve this Jacob; but even after he had received
the blessing, he himself going forth [from his home],
served his uncle Laban the Syrian for twenty years;(9)
and not only was he not made lord of his brother, but
he did himself bow down before his brother Esau, upon
his return from Mesopotamia to his father, and offered
many gifts to him.(10) Moreover, in what way did he
inherit much corn and wine here, he who emigrated to
Egypt because of the famine which possessed the land
in which he was dwelling, and became Subject to Pharaoh,
who was then ruling over Egypt? The predicted blessing,
therefore, belongs unquestionably to the times of the
kingdom, when the righteous shall bear rule upon their
rising from the dead;(11) when also the creation, having
been renovated and set free, shall fructify with an
abundance of all kinds of food, from the dew of heaven,
and from the fertility of the earth: as the elders
who saw John, the disciple of the Lord, related that
they had heard
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from him how the Lord used to teach in regard to these
times, and say: The days will come, in which vines
shall grow, each having ten thousand branches, and
in each branch ten thousand twigs, and in each true(1)
twig ten thousand shoots, and in each one of the shoots
ten thousand dusters, and on every one of the clusters
ten thousand grapes, and every grape when pressed will
give five and twenty metretes of wine. And when any
one of the saints shall lay hold of a cluster,(2) another
shall cry out, "I am a better cluster, take me;
bless the Lord through me." In like manner [the
Lord declared] that a grain of wheat would produce
ten thousand ears, and that every ear should have ten
thousand grains, and every grain would yield ten pounds
(quinque bilibres) of clear, pure, fine flour; and
that all other fruit-bearing trees,(3) and seeds and
grass, would produce in similar proportions (secundum
congruentiam iis consequentem); and that all animals
feeding [only] on the productions of the earth, should
[in those days] become peaceful and harmonious among
each other, and be in perfect subjection to man.
4. And these things are bone witness to in writing
by Papias, the hearer of John, and a companion of Polycarp,
in his fourth book; for there were five books compiled
(<greek>suntetagmena</greek>) by him.(4)
And he says in addition, "Now these things are
credible to believers." And he says that, "when
the traitor Judas did not give credit to them, and
put the question, 'How then can things about to bring
forth so abundantly be wrought by the Lord?' the Lord
declared, 'They who shall come to these [times] shall
see.'" When prophesying of these times, therefore,
Esaias says: "The wolf also shall feed with the
lamb, and the leopard shall take his rest with the
kid; the calf also, and the bull, and the lion shall
eat together; and a little boy shall lead them. The
ox and the bear shall feed together, and their young
ones shall agree together; and the lion shall eat straw
as well as the ox. And the infant boy shall thrust
his hand into the asp's den, into the nest also of
the adder's brood; and they shall do no harm, nor have
power to hurt anything in my holy mountain." And
again he says, in recapitulation, "Wolves and
lambs shall then browse together, and the lion shall
eat straw like the ox, and the serpent earth as if
it were bread; and they shall neither hurt nor annoy
anything in my holy mountain, saith the Lord."(5)
I am quite aware that some persons endeavour to refer
these words to the case of savage men, both of different
nations and various habits, who come to believe, and
when they have believed, act in harmony with the righteous.
But although this is [true] now with regard to some
men coming from various nations to the harmony of the
faith, nevertheless in the resurrection of the just
[the words shall also apply] to those animals mentioned.
For God is non in all things. And it is right that
when the creation is restored, all the animals should
obey and be in subjection to man, and revert to the
food originally given by God (for they had been originally
subjected in obedience to Adam), that is, the productions
of the earth. But some other occasion, and not the
present, is [to be sought] for showing that the lion
shall [then] feed on straw. And this indicates the
large size and rich quality of the fruits. For if that
animal, the lion, feeds upon straw [at that period],
of what a quality must the wheat itself be whose straw
shall serve as suitable food for lions?
CHAP. XXXIV.--HE FORTIFIES HIS OPINIONS WITH REGARD TO THE TEMPORAL AND EARTHLY KINGDOM OF THE SAINTS AFTER THEIR RESURRECTION, BY THE VARIOUS TESTIMONIES OF ISAIAH, EZEKIEL, JEREMIAH, AND DANIEL; ALSO BY THE PARABLE OF THE SERVANTS WATCHING, TO WHOM THE LORD PROMISED THAT HE WOULD MINISTER.
1. Then, too, Isaiah himself has plainly declared that there shall be joy of this nature at the resurrection of the just, when he says: "The dead shall rise again; those, too, who are in the tombs shall arise, and those who are in the earth shall rejoice. For the dew from Thee is health to them."(6) And this again Ezekiel also says: "Behold, I will open your tombs, and will bring you forth out of your graves; when I will draw my people from the sepulchres, and I will put breath in you, and ye shall live; and I will place you on your own land, and ye shall know that I am the LORD."(7) And again the same speaks thus: "These things saith the LORD, I will gather Israel from all nations whither they have been driven, and I shall be sanctified in them in the sight of the sons of the nations: and they shall dwell in their own land, which I gave to my servant Jacob. And they shall dwell in it in peace; and they shall build houses, and plant vineyards, and dwell in hope, when I shall cause judgment to fall among all who have dishonoured them, among those who encircle them round about; and they shall know that I am the LORD their God, and the God of their fathers."(8) Now I have shown a short time ago that the church is the seed of Abraham; and for this reason, that we may know that He who in the New Testament "raises up from the stones children unto
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Abraham,"(1) is He who will gather, according to
the Old Testament, those that shall be saved from all
the nations, Jeremiah says: "Behold, the days
come, saith the LORD, that they shall no more say,
The LORD liveth, who led the children of Israel from
the north, and from every region whither they had been
driven; He will restore them to their own land which
He gave to their fathers."(2)
2. That the whole creation shall, according to God's
will, obtain a vast increase, that it may bring forth
and sustain fruits such [as we have mentioned], Isaiah
declares: "And there shall be upon every high
mountain, and upon every prominent hill, water running
everywhere in that day, when many shall perish, when
walls shall fall. And the light of the moon shall be
as the light of the sun, seven times that of the day,
when He shall heal the anguish of His people, and do
away with the pain of His stroke."(3) Now "the
pain of the stroke" means that inflicted at the
beginning upon disobedient man in Adam, that is, death;
which [stroke] the Lord will heal when He raises us
from the dead, and restores the inheritance of the
fathers, as Isaiah again says: "And thou shall
be confident in the LORD, and He will cause thee to
pass over the whole earth, and feed thee with the inheritance
of Jacob thy father."(4) This is what the Lord
declared: "Happy are those servants whom the Lord
when He cometh shall find watching. Verily I say unto
you, that He shall gird Himself, and make them to sit
down [to meat], and will come forth and serve them.
And if He shall come in the evening watch, and find
them so, blessed are they, because He shall make them
sit down, and minister to them; or if this be in the
second, or it be in the third, blessed are they."(5)
Again John also says the very same in the Apocalypse:
"Blessed and holy is he who has part in the first
resurrection."(6) Then, too, Isaiah has declared
the time when these events shall occur; he says: "And
I said, Lord, how long? Until the cities be wasted
without inhabitant, and the houses be without men,
and the earth be left a desert. And after these things
the LORD shall remove us men far away (longe nos faciet
Deus homines), and those who shall remain shall multiply
upon the earth."(7) Then Daniel also says this
very thing: "And the kingdom and dominion, and
the greatness of those under the heaven, is given to
the saints of the Most High God, whose kingdom is everlasting,
and all dominions shall serve and obey Him."(8)
And lest the promise named should be understood as
referring to this time, it was declared to the prophet:
"And come thou, and stand in thy lot at the consummation
of the days."(9)
3. Now, that the promises were not announced to
the prophets and the fathers alone, but to the Churches
united to these from the nations, whom also the Spirit
terms "the islands" (both because they are
established in the midst of turbulence, suffer the
storm of blasphemies, exist as a harbour of safety
to those in peril, and are the refuge of those who
love the height [of heaven], and strive to avoid Bythus,
that is, the depth of error), Jeremiah thus declares:
"Hear the word of the LORD, ye nations, and declare
it to the isles afar off; say ye, that the LORD will
scatter Israel, He will gather him, and keep him, as
one feeding his flock of sheep. For the Lord hath redeemed
Jacob, and rescued him from the hand of one stronger
than he. And they shall come and rejoice m Mount Zion,
and shall come to what is good, and into a land of
wheat, and wine, and fruits, of animals and of sheep;
and their soul shall be as a tree bearing fruit, and
they shall hunger no more. At that time also shall
the virgins rejoice in the company of the young men:
the old men, too, shall be glad, and I will turn their
sorrow into joy; and I will make them exult, and will
magnify them, and satiate the souls of the priests
the sons of Levi; and my people shall be satiated with
my goodness."(10) Now, in the preceding book(11)
I have shown that all the disciples of the Lord are
Levites and priests, they who used in the temple to
profane the Sabbath, but are blameless.(12) Promises
of such a nature, therefore, do indicate in the clearest
manner the feasting of that creation in the kingdom
of the righteous, which God promises that He will Himself
serve.
4. Then again, speaking of Jerusalem, and of Him
reigning there, Isaiah declares, "Thus saith the
LORD, Happy is he who hath seed in Zion, and servants
in Jerusalem. Behold, a righteous king shall reign,
and princes shall rule with judgment"(13) And
with regard to the foundation on which it shall be
rebuilt, he says: "Behold, I will lay in order
for thee a carbuncle stone, and sapphire for thy foundations;
and I will lay thy ramparts with jasper, and thy gates
with crystal, and thy wall with choice stones: and
all thy children shall be taught of God, and great
shall be the peace of thy children; and in righteousness
shalt thou be built up."(14) And yet again
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does he say the same thing: "Behold, I make Jerusalem a rejoicing, and my people [a joy]; for the voice of weeping shall be no more heard in her, nor the voice of crying. Also there shall not be there any immature [one], nor an old man who does not fulfil his time: for the youth shall be of a hundred years; and the sinner shall die a hundred years old, yet shall be accursed. And they shall build houses, and inhabit them themselves; and shall plant vineyards, and eat the fruit of them themselves, and shall drink wine. And they shall not build, and others inhabit; neither shall they prepare the vineyard, and others eat. For as the days of the tree of life shall be the days of the people in thee; for the works of their hands shall endure."(1)
CHAP. XXXV.--HE CONTENDS THAT THESE TESTIMONIES ALREADY ALLEGED CANNOT BE UNDERSTOOD ALLEGORICALLY OF CELESTIAL BLESSINGS, BUT THAT THEY SHALL HAVE THEIR FULFILMENT AFTER THE COMING OF ANTICHRIST, AND THE RESURRECTION, IN THE TERRESTRIAL JERUSALEM. TO THE FORMER PROPHECIES HE SUBJOINS OTHERS DRAWN FROM ISAIAH, JEREMIAH, AND THE APOCALYPSE OF JOHN.
1. If, however, any shall endeavour to allegorize
[prophecies] of this kind, they shall not be found
consistent with themselves in all points, and shall
be confuted by the teaching of the very expressions
[in question]. For example: "When the cities"
of the Gentiles "shall be desolate, so that they
be not inhabited, and the houses so that there shall
be no men in them and the land shall be left desolate."(2)
"For, behold," says Isaiah, "the day
of the LORD cometh past remedy, full of fury and wrath,
to lay waste the city of the earth, and to root sinners
out of it."(3) And again he says, "Let him
be taken away, that he behold not the glory of God."(4)
And when these things are done, he says, "God
will remove men far away, and those that are left shall
multiply in the earth."(5) "And they shall
build houses, and shall inhabit them themselves: and
plant vineyards, and eat of them themselves."(6)
For all these and other words were unquestionably spoken
in reference to the resurrection of the just, which
takes place after the coming of Antichrist, and the
destruction of all nations under his rule; in [the
times of] which [resurrection] the righteous shall
reign in the earth, waxing stronger by the sight of
the Lord: and through Him they shall become accustomed
to partake in the glory of God the Father, and shall
enjoy in the kingdom intercourse and communion with
the holy angels, and union with spiritual beings; and
[with respect to] those whom the Lord shall find in
the flesh, awaiting Him from heaven, and who have suffered
tribulation, as well as escaped the hands of the Wicked
one. For it is in reference to them that the prophet
says: "And those that are left shall multiply
upon the earth," And Jeremiah(7) the prophet has
pointed out, that as many believers as God has prepared
for this purpose, to multiply those left upon earth,
should both be under the rule of the saints to minister
to this Jerusalem, and that [His] kingdom shall be
in it, saying, "Look around Jerusalem towards
the east, and behold the joy which comes to thee from
God Himself. Behold, thy sons shall come whom thou
hast sent forth: they shall come in a band from the
east even unto the west, by the word of that Holy One,
rejoicing in that splendour which is from thy God.
O Jerusalem, put off thy robe of mourning and of affliction,
and put on that beauty of eternal splendour from thy
God. Gird thyself with the double garment of that righteousness
proceeding from thy God; place the mitre of eternal
glory upon thine head. For God will show thy glory
to the whole earth under heaven. For thy name shall
for ever be called by God Himself, the peace of righteousness
and glory to him that worships God. Arise, Jerusalem,
stand on high, and look towards the east, and behold
thy sons from the rising of the sun, even to the west,
by the Word of that Holy One, rejoicing in the very
remembrance of God. For the footmen have gone forth
from thee, while they were drawn away by the enemy.
God shall bring them in to thee, being borne with glory
as the throne of a kingdom. For God has decreed that
every high mountain shall be brought low, and the eternal
hills, and that the valleys be filled, so that the
surface of the earth be rendered smooth, that Israel,
the glory of God, may walk in safety. The woods, too,
shall make shady places, and every sweet-smelling tree
shall be for Israel itself by the command of God. For
God shall go before with joy in the light of His splendour,
with the pity and righteousness which proceeds from
Him."
2. Now all these things being such as they are,
cannot be understood in reference to super-celestial
matters; "for God," it is said, "will
show to the whole earth that is under heaven thy glory."
But in the times of the kingdom, the earth has been
called again by Christ [to its pristine condition],
and Jerusalem rebuilt after the pattern of the Jerusalem
above, of which the prophet Isaiah says, "Behold,
I have depicted thy walls upon my hands, and thou art
always in
566
my sight,"(1) And the apostle, too, writing to the Galatians, says in like manner, "But the Jerusalem which is above is free, which is the mother of us all."(2) He does not say this with any thought of an erratic AEon, or of any other power which departed from the Pleroma, or of Prunicus, but of the Jerusalem which has been delineated on [God's] hands. And in the Apocalypse John saw this new [Jerusalem] descending upon the new earth.(3) For after the times of the kingdom, he says, "I saw a great white throne, and Him who sat upon it, from whose face the earth fled away, and the heavens; and there was no more place for them."(4) And he sets forth, too, the things connected with the general resurrection and the judgment, mentioning "the dead, great and small." "The sea," he says, "gave up the dead which it had in it, and death and hell delivered up the dead that they contained; and the books were opened. Moreover," he says, "the book of life was opened, and the dead were judged out of those things that were written in the books, according to their works; and death and hell were sent into the lake of fire, the second death."(5) Now this is what is called Gehenna, which the Lord styled eternal fire.(6) "And if any one," it is said, "was not found written in the book of life, he was sent into the lake of fire."(7) And after this, he says, "I saw a new heaven and a new earth, for the first heaven and earth have passed away; also there was no more sea. And I saw the holy city, new Jerusalem, coming down from heaven, as a bride adorned for her husband." "And I heard," it is said, "a great voice from the throne, saying, Behold, the tabernacle of God is with men, and He will dwell with them; and they shall be His people, and God Himself shall be with them as their God. And He will wipe away every tear from their eyes; and death shall be no more, neither sorrow, nor crying, neither shall there be any more pain, because the former things have passed away."(8) Isaiah also declares the very same: "For there shall be a new heaven and a new earth; and there shall be no remembrance of the former, neither shall the heart think about them, but they shall find in it joy and exultation."(9) Now this is what has been said by the apostle: "For the fashion of this world passeth away."(10) To the same purpose did the Lord also declare, "Heaven and earth shall pass away."(11) When these things, therefore, pass away above the earth, John, the Lord's disciple, says that the new Jerusalem above shall [then] descend, as a bride adorned for her husband; and that this is the tabernacle of God, in which God will dwell with men. Of this Jerusalem the former one is an image--that Jerusalem of the former earth in which the righteous are disciplined beforehand for incorruption and prepared for salvation. And of this tabernacle Moses received the pattern in the mount;(12) and nothing is capable of being allegorized, but all things are stedfast, and true, land substantial, having been made by God for righteous men's enjoyment. For as it is God truly who raises up man, so also does man truly rise from the dead, and not allegorically, as I have shown repeatedly. And as he rises actually, so also shall he be actually disciplined beforehand for incorruption, and shall go forwards and flourish in the times of the kingdom, in order that he may be capable of receiving the glory of the Father. Then, when all things are made new, he shall truly dwell in the city of God. For it is said, "He that sitteth on the throne said, Behold, I make all things new. And the Lord says, Write all this; for these words are faithful and true. And He said to me, They are done."(13) And this is the truth of the matter.
CHAP. XXXVI.--MEN SHALL BE ACTUALLY RAISED: THE WORLD SHALL NOT BE ANNIHILATED; BUT THERE SHALL BE VARIOUS MANSIONS FOR THE SAINTS, ACCORDING TO THE RANK ALLOTTED TO EACH INDIVIDUAL. ALL THINGS SHALL BE SUBJECT TO GOD THE FATHER, AND SO SHALL HE BE ALL IN ALL.
1. For since there are real men, so must there also be a real establishment (plantationem), that they vanish not away among non-existent things, but progress among those which have an actual existence. For neither is the substance nor the essence of the creation annihilated (for faithful and true is He who has established it), but "the fashion of the world passeth away;"(14) that is, those things among which transgression has occurred, since man has grown old in them. And therefore this [present] fashion has been formed temporary, God foreknowing all things; as I have pointed out in the preceding book,(15) and have also shown, as far as was possible, the cause of the creation of this world of temporal things. But when this [present] fashion [of things] passes away, and man has been renewed, and flourishes in an incorruptible state, so as to preclude the possibility of becoming old, [then] there shall be the new heaven and the new earth, in which the new man shall remain [con-
567
tinually], always holding fresh converse with God. And
since (or, that) these things shall ever continue without
end, Isaiah declares, "For as the new heavens
and the new earth which I do make, continue in my sight,
saith the LORD, so shall your seed and your name remain."(1)
And as the presbyters say, Then those who are deemed
worthy of an abode in heaven shall go there, others
shall enjoy the delights of paradise, and others shall
possess the splendour of the city; for everywhere the
Saviour(2) shall be seen according as they who see
Him shall be worthy.
2. [They say, moreover], that there is this distinction
between the habitation of those who produce an hundred-fold,
and that of those who produce sixty-fold, and that
of those who produce thirty-fold: for the first will
be taken up into the heavens, the second will dwell
in paradise, the last will inhabit the city; and that
was on this account the Lord declared, "In My
Father's house are many mansions."(3) For all
things belong to God, who supplies all with a suitable
dwelling-place; even as His Word says, that a share
is allotted to all by the Father, according as each
person is or shall be worthy. And this is the couch
on which the guests shall recline, having been invited
to the wedding.(4) The presbyters, the disciples of
the apostles, affirm that this is the gradation and
arrangement of those who are saved, and that they advance
through steps of this nature; also that they ascend
through the Spirit to the Son, and through the Son
to the Father, and that in due time the Son will yield
up His work to the Father, even as it is said by the
apostle, "For He must reign till He hath put all
enemies under His feet. The last enemy that shall be
destroyed is death."(5) For in the times of the
kingdom, the righteous man who is upon the earth shall
then forget to die. "But when He saith, All things
shall be subdued unto Him, it is manifest that He is
excepted who did put all things under Him. And when
all things shall be subdued unto Him, then shall the
Son also Himself be subject unto Him who put all things
under Him, that God may be all in all."(6)
3. John, therefore, did distinctly foresee the first
"resurrection of the just,"(7) and the inheritance
in the kingdom of the earth; and what the prophets
have prophesied concerning it harmonize [with his vision].
For the Lord also taught these things, when He promised
that He would have the mixed cup new with His disciples
in the kingdom. The apostle, too, has confessed that
the creation shall be free from the bondage of corruption,
[so as to pass] into the liberty of the sons of God.(8)
And in all these things, and by them all, the same
God the Father is manifested, who fashioned man, and
gave promise of the inheritance of the earth to the
fathers, who brought it (the creature) forth [from
bondage] at the resurrection of the just, and fulfils
the promises for the kingdom of His Son; subsequently
bestowing in a paternal manner those things which neither
the eye has seen, nor the ear has heard, nor has [thought
concerning them] arisen within the heart of man,(9)
For there is the one Son, who accomplished His Father's
will; and one human race also in which the mysteries
of God are wrought, "which the angels desire to
look into;"(10) and they are not able to search
out the wisdom of God, by means of Which His handiwork,
confirmed and incorporated with His Son, is brought
to perfection; that His offspring, the First-begotten
Word, should descend to the creature (facturam), that
is, to what had been moulded (plasma), and that it
should be contained by Him; and, on the other hand,
the creature should contain the Word, and ascend to
Him, passing beyond the angels, and be made after the
image and likeness of God.(11)
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The Real Jesus: Who is the Real Jesus? Ever since the dawn of modern rationalism, skeptics have sought to use textual criticism, archaeology and historical reconstructions to uncover the "historical Jesus" -- a wise teacher who said many wonderful things, but fulfilled no prophecies, performed no miracles and certainly did not rise from the dead in triumph over sin. Over the past 100 years, however, startling discoveries in biblical archaeology and scholarship have all but vanquished the faulty assumptions of these doubting modernists. Regretably, these discoveries have often been ignored by the skeptics as well as by the popular media. As a result, the liberal view still holds sway in universities and impacts the culture and even much of the church.
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This presentation explodes the myths of these critics and the movies, books and television programs that have popularized their views.
Presented in ten parts -- perfect for individual, family and classroom study -- viewers will be challenged to go deeper in their knowledge of Christ in order to be able to defend their faith and present the truth to a skeptical modern world – that the Jesus of the Gospels is the Jesus of history -- "the same yesterday, today and forever" (Hebrews 13:8). He is the real Jesus. Speakers include: George Grant, Ted Baehr, Stephen Mansfield, Raymond Ortlund, Phil Kayser, David Lutzweiler, Jay Grimstead, J.P. Holding, and Eric Holmberg. Ten parts, over two hours of instruction! Running Time: 130 minutes
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| The Beast of Revelation: IDENTIFIED
Who is the dreaded beast of Revelation? Now at last, a plausible candidate for this personification of evil incarnate has been identified (or re-identified). Ken Gentry's insightful analysis of scripture and history is likely to revolutionize your understanding of the book of Revelation -- and even more importantly -- amplify and energize your entire Christian worldview! Historical footage and other graphics are used to illustrate the lecture Dr. Gentry presented at the 1999 Ligonier Conference in Orlando, Florida. It is followed by a one-hour question and answer session addressing the key concerns and objections typically raised in response to his position. This presentation also features an introduction that touches on not only the confusion and controversy surrounding this issue -- but just why it may well be one of the most significant issues facing the Church today. Ideal for group meetings, personal Bible study -- for anyone who wants to understand the historical context of John's famous letter "... to the seven churches which are in Asia." (Revelation 1:4) |
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(Available in DVD only) $17.95 ORDER NOW!
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INCLUDES A FREE Sixteen Christian leaders and scholars answer some of the most common questions and misperceptions related to this volatile issue: Download the free |
Perfect for group instruction as well as personal
Bible study. Speakers include: George Grant, Howard Phillips,
R.C. Sproul Jr., Ken Gentry, Gary DeMar, Jay Grimstead, R.J. Rushdoony,
Steven Schlissel, Andrew Sandlin, Eric Holmberg, and more!
Ten parts, over four hours of instruction! Watch over 60 streaming videos from God's Law and Society at:
Price reduced! |
| Amazing Grace: The History and Theology of Calvinism
Over four hours of instruction! Just what is “Calvinism?” Does this teaching make man a deterministic robot and God the author of sin? What about free will? If the church accepts Calvinism, won’t evangelism be stifled, perhaps even extinguished? How can we balance God’s sovereignty and man’s responsibility? What are the differences between historic Calvinism and hyper-Calvinism? Why did men like Augustine, Luther, Calvin, Spurgeon, Whitefield, Edwards and a host of renowned Protestant evangelists embrace the teaching of predestination and election and deny free will theology? This is the first video documentary that answers these and other related questions. Hosted by Eric Holmberg, this fascinating three-part, four-hour presentation is detailed enough so as to not gloss over the controversy. At the same time, it is broken up into ten “Sunday-school-sized” sections to make the rich content manageable and accessible for the average viewer. |
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$19.95 ORDER NOW!
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