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Patrology
علم الباترولوجي
"كتابات الآباء " |
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THEOPHILUS OF
ANTIOCH: THEOPHILUS TO AUTOLYCUS -- BOOK I |
BOOK I.
CHAP. I.--AUTOLYCUS AN IDOLATER AND SCORNER OF CHRISTIANS.
A FLUENT tongue and an elegant style afford pleasure and such praise
as vainglory delights in, to wretched men who have been corrupted in
mind; the lover of truth does not give heed to ornamented speeches,
but examines the real matter of the speech, what it is, and what
kind it is. Since, then, my friend, you have assailed me with empty
words, boasting of your gods of wood and stone, hammered and cast,
carved and graven, which neither see nor hear, for they are idols,
and the works of men's hands; and since, besides, you call me a
Christian, as if this were a damning name to bear, I, for my part,
avow that I am a Christian,[1] and bear this name beloved of God,
hoping to be serviceable[2] to God. For it is not the case, as you
suppose, that the name of God is hard to bear; but possibly you
entertain this opinion of God, because you are yourself yet
unserviceable to Him.
CHAP. II.--THAT THE EYES OF THE SOUL MUST BE PURGED ERE GOD CAN
BE SEEN.
But if you say, "Show me thy God," I would reply, "Show me
yourself,[3] and I will show you my God." Show, then, that the eyes
of your soul are capable of seeing, and the ears of your heart able
to hear; for as those who look with the eyes of the body perceive
earthly objects and what concerns this life, and discriminate at the
same time between things that differ, whether light or darkness,
white or black, deformed or beautiful, well-proportioned and
symmetrical or disproportioned and awkward, or monstrous or
mutilated; and as in like manner also, by the sense of hearing, we
discriminate either sharp, or deep, or sweet sounds; so the same
holds good regarding the eyes of the soul and the ears of the heart,
that it is by them we are able to behold God. For God is seen by
those who are enabled to see Him when they have the eyes of their
soul opened: for all have eyes; but in some they are overspread,[4]
and do not see the light of the sun. Yet it does not follow, because
the blind do not see, that the light of the sun does not shine; but
let the blind blame themselves and their own eyes. So also thou, O
man, hast the eyes of thy soul overspread by thy sins and evil
deeds. As a burnished mirror, so ought man to have his soul pure.
When there is rust on the mirror, it is not possible that a man's
face be seen in the mirror; so also when there is sin in a man, such
a man cannot behold God. Do you, therefore, show me yourself,
whether you are not an adulterer, or a fornicator, or a thief, or a
robber, or a purloiner; whether you do not corrupt boys; whether you
are not insolent, or a slanderer, or passionate, or envious, or
proud, or supercilious; whether you are not a brawler, or covetous,
or disobedient to parents; and whether you do not sell your
children; for to those who do these things God is not manifest,
unless they have first cleansed themselves from all impurity. All
these things, then, involve you in darkness, as when a filmy
defluxion on the eyes prevents one from beholding the light of the
sun: thus also do iniquities, 0 man, involve you in darkness, so
that you cannot see God.
CHAP. III.--NATURE OF GOD.
You will say, then, to me, "Do you, who see God, explain to me the
appearance of God." Hear, O man. The appearance of God is ineffable
and indescribable, and cannot be seen by eyes of flesh. For in glory
He is incomprehensible, in greatness unfathomable, in height
inconceivable, in power incomparable, in wisdom unrivalled, in
goodness inimitable, in kindness unutterable. For if I say He is
Light, I name but His own work; if I call Him Word, I name but His
sovereignty; if I call Him Mind, I speak but of His wisdom; if I say
He is Spirit, I speak of His breath; if I call Him Wisdom, I speak
of His offspring; if I call Him Strength, I speak of His sway; if I
call Him Power, I am mentioning His activity; if Providence, I but
mention His goodness; if I call Him Kingdom, I but mention His
glory; if I call Him Lord, I mention His being judge; if I call Him
Judge, I speak of Him as being just; if I call Him Father, I speak
of all things as being from Him;[1] if I call Him Fire, I but
mention His anger. You will say, then, to me, "Is God angry?" Yes;
He is angry with those who act wickedly, but He is good, and kind,
and merciful, to those who love and fear Him; for He is a
chastener[1] of the godly, and father of the righteous; but he is a
judge and punisher of the impious.
CHAP. IV.--ATTRIBUTES OF GOD.
And He is without beginning, because He is unbegotten; and He is
unchangeable, because He is immortal. And he is called God
[<greek>Qeos</greek>] on account of His having placed
[<greek>teqeikenai</greek>] all things on security afforded by
Himself; and on account of [<greek>qeein</greek>], for
<greek>qeein</greek> means running, and moving, and being active,
and nourishing, and foreseeing, and governing, and making all things
alive. But he is Lord, because He rules over the universe; Father,
because he is before all things; Fashioner and Maker, because He is
creator and maker of the universe; the Highest, because of His being
above all; and Almighty, because He Himself rules and embraces all.
For the heights of heaven, and the depths of the abysses, and the
ends of the earth, are in His hand, and there is no place of His
rest. For the heavens are His work, the earth is His creation, the
sea is His handiwork; man is His formation and His image; sun, moon,
and stars are His elements, made for signs, and seasons, and days,
and years, that they may serve and be slaves to man; and all things
God has made out of things that were not[3] into things that are, in
order that through His works His greatness may be known and
understood.
CHAP. V.--THE INVISIBLE GOD PERCEIVED THROUGH HIS WORKS.
For as the soul in man is not seen, being invisible to men, but is
perceived through the motion of the body, so God cannot indeed be
seen by human eyes, but is beheld and perceived through His
providence and works. For, in like manner, as any person, when he
sees a ship on the sea rigged and in sail, and making for the
harbour, will no doubt infer that there is a pilot in her who is
steering her; so we must perceive that God is the governor [pilot]
of the whole universe, though He be not visible to the eyes of the
flesh, since He is incomprehensible. For if a man cannot look upon
the sun, though it be a very small heavenly body, on account of its
exceeding heat and power, how shall not a mortal man be much more
unable to face the glory of God, which is unutterable? For as the
pomegranate, with the rind containing it, has within it many cells
and compartments which are separated by tissues, and has also many
seeds dwelling in it, so the whole creation is contained by the
spirit[4] of God, and the containing spirit is along with the
creation contained by the hand of God. As, therefore, the seed of
the pomegranate, dwelling inside, cannot see what is outside the
rind, itself being within; so neither can man, who along with the
whole creation is enclosed by the hand of God, behold God. Then
again, an earthly king is believed to exist, even though he be not
seen by all; for he is recognised by his laws and ordinances, and
authorities, and forces, and statues; and are you unwilling that God
should be recognised by His works and mighty deeds?
CHAP. VI.--GOD IS KNOWN BY HIS WORKS.
Consider, O man, His works,--the timely rotation of the seasons, and
the changes of temperature; the regular march of the stars; the
well-ordered course of days and nights, and months, and years; the
various beauty of seeds, and plants, and fruits; and the divers
species[5] of quadrupeds, and birds, and reptiles, and fishes, both
of the rivers and of the sea; or consider the instinct implanted in
these animals to beget and rear offspring, not for their own profit,
but for the use of man; and the providence with which God provides
nourishment for all flesh, or the subjection in which He has
ordained that all things subserve mankind. Consider, too, the
flowing of sweet fountains and never-failing rivers, and the
seasonable supply of dews, and showers, and rains; the manifold
movement of the heavenly bodies, the morning star rising and
heralding the approach of the perfect luminary; and the
constellation of Pleiades, and Orion, and Arcturus, and the orbit of
the other stars that circle through the heavens, all of which the
manifold wisdom of God has called by names of their own. He is God
alone who made light out of darkness, and brought forth light from
His treasures, and formed the chambers of the south wind,[1] and the
treasure-houses of the deep, and the bounds of the seas, and the
treasuries of snows and hail-storms, collecting the waters in the
storehouses of the deep, and the darkness in His treasures, and
bringing forth the sweet, and desirable, and pleasant light out of
His treasures; "who causeth the vapours to ascend from the ends of
the earth: He maketh lightnings for the rain;"[2] who sends forth
His thunder to terrify, and foretells by the lightning the peal of
the thunder, that no soul may faint with the sudden shock; and who
so moderates the violence of the lightning as it flashes out of
heaven, that it does not consume the earth; for, if the lightning
were allowed all its power, it would burn up the earth; and were the
thunder allowed all its power, it would overthrow all the works that
are therein.
CHAP. VII.--WE SHALL, SEE GOD WHEN WE PUT ON IMMORTALITY.
This is my God, the Lord of all, who alone stretched out the heaven,
and established the breadth of the earth under it; who stirs the
deep recesses of the sea, and makes its waves roar; who rules its
power, and stills the tumult of its waves; who founded the earth
upon the waters, and gave a spirit to nourish it; whose breath
giveth light to the whole, who, if He withdraw His breath, the whole
will utterly fail. By Him you speak, O man; His breath you breathe
yet Him you know not. And this is your condition, because of the
blindness of your soul, and the hardness of your heart. But, if you
will, you may be healed. Entrust yourself to the Physician, and He
will couch the eyes of your soul and of your heart. Who is the
Physician? God, who heals and makes alive through His word and
wisdom. God by His own word and wisdom made all things; for "by His
word were the heavens made, and all the host of them by the breath
of His mouth."[3] Most excellent is His wisdom. By His wisdom God
founded the earth; and by knowledge He prepared the heavens; and by
understanding were the fountains of the great deep broken up, and
the clouds poured out their dews. If thou perceivest these things, O
man, living chastely, and holily, and righteously, thou canst see
God. But before all let faith and the fear of God have rule in thy
heart, and then shalt thou understand these things. When thou shalt
have put off the mortal, and put on incorruption, then shall thou
see God worthily. For God will raise thy flesh immortal with thy
soul; and then, having become immortal, thou shalt see the Immortal,
if now you believe on Him; and then you shall know that you have.
spoken unjustly against Him.
CHAP. VIII.--FAITH REQUIRED IN ALL MATTERS.
But you do not believe that the dead are raised. When the
resurrection shall take place, then you will believe, whether you
will or no; and your faith shah be reckoned for unbelief, unless you
believe now. And why do you not believe? Do you not know that faith
is the leading principle in all matters? For what husbandman can
reap, unless he first trust his seed to the earth? Or who can cross
the sea, unless he first entrust himself to the boat and the pilot?
And what sick person can be healed, unless first he trust himself to
the care of the physician? And what art or knowledge can any one
learn, unless he first apply and entrust himself to the teacher? If,
then, the husbandman trusts the earth, and the sailor the boat, and
the sick the physician, will you not place confidence in God, even
when you hold so many pledges at His hand? For first He created you
out of nothing, and brought you into existence (for if your father
was not, nor your mother, much more were you yourself at one time
not in being), and formed you out of a small and moist substance,
even out of the least drop, which at one time had itself no being;
and God introduced you into this life. Moreover, you believe that
the images made by men are gods, and do great things; and can you
not believe that the God who made you is able also to make you
afterwards?[4]
CHAP. IX.--IMMORALITIES OF THE GODS.
And, indeed, the names of those whom you say you worship, are the
names of dead men. And these, too, who and what kind of men were
they? Is not Saturn found to be a cannibal, destroying and devouring
his own children? And if you name his son Jupiter, hear also his
deeds and conduct--first, how he was suckled by a goat on Mount Ida,
and having slain it, according to the myths, and flayed it, he made
himself a coat of the hide. And his other deeds,--his incest, and
adultery, and lust,-- will be better recounted by Homer and the rest
of the poets. Why should I further speak of his sons? How Hercules
burnt himself; and about the drunk and raging Bacchus; and of Apollo
fearing and fleeing from Achilles, and falling in love with Daphne,
and being unaware of the fate of Hyacinthus; and of Venus wounded,
and of Mars, the pest of mortals; and of the ichor flowing from the
so-called gods. And these, indeed, are the milder kinds of legends;
since the god who is called Osiris is found to have been tom limb
from limb, whose mysteries are celebrated annually, as if he had
perished, and were being found, and sought for limb by limb. For
neither is it known whether he perished, nor is it shown whether he
is found. And why should I speak of Atys mutilated, or of Adonis
wandering in the wood, and wounded by a boar while hunting; or of
AEsculapius struck by a thunderbolt; or of the fugitive Serapis
chased from Sinope to Alexandria; or of the Scythian Diana, herself,
too, a fugitive, and a homicide, and a huntress, and a passionate
lover of Endymion? Now, it is not we who publish these things, but
your own writers and poets.
CHAP. X.--ABSURDITIES OF IDOLATRY.
Why should I further recount the multitude of animals worshipped by
the Egyptians, both reptiles, and cattle, and wild beasts, and birds
and river-fishes; and even wash-pots[1] and disgraceful noises?[2]
But if you cite the Greeks and the other nations, they worship
stones and wood, and other kinds of material substances,--the
images, as we have just been saying, of dead men. For Phidias is
found in Pisa making for the Eleians the Olympian Jupiter, and at
Athens the Minerva of the Acropolis. And I will inquire of you, my
friend, how many Jupiters exist. For there is, firstly, Jupiter
surnamed Olympian, then Jupiter Latiaris, and Jupiter Cassius, and
Jupiter Tonans, and Jupiter Propator, and Jupiter Pannychius, and
Jupiter Poliuchus, and Jupiter Capitolinus; and that Jupiter, the
son of Saturn, who is king of the Cretans, has a tomb in Crete, but
the rest, possibly, were not thought worthy of tombs. And if you
speak of the mother of those who are called gods, far be it from me
to utter with my lips her deeds, or the deeds of those by whom she
is worshipped (for it is unlawful for us so much as to name such
things), and what vast taxes and revenues she and her sons furnish
to the king. For these are not gods, but idols, as we have already
said, the works of men's hands and unclean demons. And such may all
those become who make them and put their trust in them!
CHAP. XI.--THE KING TO BE HONOURED, GOD TO BE WORSHIPPED.
Wherefore I will rather honour the king [than your gods], not,
indeed, worshipping him, but praying for him. But God, the living
and true God, I worship, knowing that the king is made by Him. You
will say, then, to me, "Why do you not worship the king?" Because he
is not made to be worshipped, but to be reverenced with lawful
honour, for he is not a god, but a man appointed by God, not to be
worshipped, but to judge justly. For in a kind of way his government
is committed to him by God: as He will not have those called kings
whom He has appointed under Himself; for "king" is his title, and it
is not lawful for another to use it; so neither is it lawful for any
to be worshipped but God only. Wherefore, O man, you are wholly in
error. Accordingly, honour the king, be subject to him, and pray for
him with loyal mind; for if you do this, you do the will of God. For
the law that is of God, says, "My son, fear thou the Lord and the
king, and be not disobedient to them; for suddenly they shall take
vengeance on their enemies."[3]
CHAP. XII.--MEANING OF THE NAME CHRISTIAN.
And about your laughing at me and calling me "Christian," you know
not what you are saying. First, because that which is anointed[4] is
sweet and serviceable, and far from contemptible. For what ship can
be serviceable and seaworthy, unless it be first caulked [anointed]?
Or what castle or house is beautiful and serviceable when it has not
been anointed? And what man, when he enters into this life or into
the gymnasium, is not anointed with oil? And what work has either
ornament or beauty unless it be anointed and burnished? Then the air
and all that is under heaven is in a certain sort anointed by light
and spirit; and are you unwilling to be anointed with the oil of
God? Wherefore we are called Christians on this account, because we
are anointed with the oil of God.[5]
CHAP. XIII.--THE RESURRECTION PROVED BY EXAMPLES.
Then, as to your denying that the dead are raised--for you say,[6]
"Show me even one who has been raised from the dead, that seeing I
may believe,"--first, what great thing is it if you believe when you
have seen the thing done? Then, again, you believe that Hercules,
who burned himself, lives; and that AEsculapius, who was struck with
lightning, was raised; and do you disbelieve the things that are
told you by God? But, suppose I should show you a dead man raised
and alive, even this you would disbelieve. God indeed exhibits to
you many proofs that you may believe Him. For consider, if you
please, the dying of seasons, and days, and nights, how these also
die and rise again. And what? Is there not a resurrection going on
of seeds and fruits, and this, too, for the use of men? A seed of
wheat, for example, or of the other grains, when it is cast into the
earth, first dies and rots away, then is raised, and becomes a stalk
of corn. And the nature of trees and fruit-trees,--is it not that
according to the appointment of God they produce their fruits in
their seasons out of what has been unseen and invisible? Moreover,
sometimes also a sparrow or some of the other birds, when in
drinking it has swallowed a seed of apple or fig, or something else,
has come to some rocky hillock or tomb, and has left the seed in its
droppings, and the seed, which was once swallowed, and has passed
though so great a heat, now striking root, a tree has grown up. And
all these things does the wisdom of God effect, in order to manifest
even by these things, that God is able to effect the general
resurrection of all men. And if you would witness a more wonderful
sight, which may prove a resurrection not only of earthly but of
heavenly bodies, consider the resurrection of the moon, which occurs
monthly; how it wanes, dies, and rises again. Hear further, O man,
of the work of resurrection going on in yourself, even though you
are unaware of it. For perhaps you have sometimes fallen sick, and
lost flesh, and strength, and beauty; but when you received again
from God mercy and healing, you picked up again in flesh and
appearance, and recovered also your strength. And as you do not know
where your flesh went away and disappeared to, so neither do you
know whence it grew, Or whence it came again. But you will say,
"From meats and drinks changed into blood." Quite so; but this, too,
is the work of God, who thus operates, and not of any other.
CHAP. XIV.--THEOPHILUS AN EXAMPLE OF CONVERSION.
Therefore, do not be sceptical, but believe; for I myself also used
to disbelieve that this would take place, but now, having taken
these things into consideration, I believe. At the same time, I met
with the sacred Scriptures(1) of the holy prophets, who also by the
Spirit of God foretold the things that have already happened, just
as they came to pass, and the things now occurring as they are now
happening, and things future in the order in which they shall be
accomplished. Admitting, therefore, the proof which events happening
as predicted afford, I do not disbelieve, t I believe, obedient to
God, whom, if you please, do you also submit to, believing Him, lest
if now you continue unbelieving, you be convinced hereafter, when
you are tormented with eternal punishments; which punishments, when
they had been foretold by the prophets, the later-born poets and
philosophers stole from the holy Scriptures, to make their doctrines
worthy of credit. Yet these also have spoken beforehand of the
punishments that are to light upon the profane and unbelieving, in
order that none be left without a witness, or be able to say, "We
have not heard, neither have we known." But do you also, if you
please, give reverential attention to the prophetic Scriptures,(2)
and they will make your way plainer for escaping the eternal
punishments, and obtaining the eternal prizes of God. For He who
gave the mouth for speech, and formed the ear to hear, and made the
eye to see, will examine all things, and will judge righteous
judgment, rendering merited awards to each. To those who by patient
continuance in well-doing(3) seek immortality, He will give life
everlasting, joy, peace, rest, and abundance of good things, which
neither hath eye seen, nor ear heard, nor hath it entered into the
heart of man to conceive.(4) But to the unbelieving and despisers,
who obey not the truth, but are obedient to unrighteousness, when
they shall have been filled with adulteries and fornications, and
filthiness, and covetousness, and unlawful idolatries, there shall
be anger and wrath, tribulation and anguish,(5) and at the last
everlasting fire shall possess such men. Since you said, "Show me
thy God," this is my God, and I counsel you to fear Him and to trust
Him |