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Patrology
علم الباترولوجي
"كتابات الآباء " |
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THE STROMATA, OR
MISCELLANIES: BOOK V (Chap. I to Chap. XII) |
BOOK V.
CHAP. I.--ON FAITH
Of the Gnostic so much has been cursorily, as it were, written. We
proceed now to the sequel, and must again contemplate faith; for
there are some that draw the distinction, that faith has reference
to the Son, and knowledge to the Spirit. But it has escaped their
notice that, in order to believe truly in the Son, we must believe
that He is the Son, and that He came, and how, and for what, and
respecting His passion; and we must know who is the Son of God. Now
neither is knowledge without faith, nor faith without knowledge. Nor
is the Father without the Son; for the Son is with the Father. And
the Son is the true teacher respecting the Father; and that we may
believe in the Son, we must know the Father, with whom also is the
Son. Again, in order that we may know the Father, we must believe in
the Son, that it is the Son of God who teaches; for from faith to
knowledge by the Son is the Father. And the knowledge of the Son and
Father, which is according to the gnostic rule--that which in
reality is gnostic--is the attainment and comprehension of the truth
by the truth.
We, then, are those who are believers in what is not believed, and
who are Gnostics as to what is unknown; that is, Gnostics as to what
is unknown and disbelieved by all, but believed and known by a few;
and Gnostics, not describing actions by speech, but Gnostics in the
exercise of contemplation. Happy is he who speaks in! the ears of
the hearing. Now faith is the ear of the soul. And such the Lord
intimates faith to be, when He says, "He that hath ears to hear, let
him hear;"[1] so that by believing he may comprehend what He says,
as He says it. Homer, too, the oldest of the poets, using the word
"hear" instead of" perceive"--the specific for the generic
term--writes:--
"Him most they heard."[2]
For, in fine, the agreement and harmony of the faith of both[3]
contribute to one end--salvation. We have in the apostle an unerring
witness: "For I desire to see you, that I may impart unto you some
spiritual gift, in order that ye may be strengthened; that is, that
I may be comforted in you, by the mutual faith of you and me."[4]
And further on again he adds, "The righteousness of God is revealed
from faith to faith."[5] The apostle, then, manifestly announces a
twofold faith, or rather one which admits of growth and perfection;
for the common faith lies beneath as a foundation.[6] To those,
therefore, who desire to be healed, and are moved by faith, He
added, "Thy faith hath saved thee."[7] But that which is excellently
built upon is consummated in the believer, and is again perfected by
the faith which results from instruction and the word, in order to
the performance of the commandments. Such were the apostles, in
whose case it is said that "faith removed mountains and transplanted
trees."[8] Whence, perceiving the greatness of its power, they asked
"that faith might be added to them;"[9] a faith which salutarily
bites the soil "like a grain of mustard," and grows magnificently in
it, to such a degree that the reasons of things sublime rest on it.
For if one by nature knows God, as Basilides thinks, who calls
intelligence of a superior order at once faith and kingship, and a
creation worthy of the essence of the Creator; and explains that
near Him exists not power, but essence and nature and substance; and
says that faith is not the rational assent of the soul exercising
free-will, but an undefined beauty, belonging immediately to the
creature;--the precepts both of the Old and of the New Testament
are, then, superfluous, if one is saved by nature, as Valentinus
would have it, and is a believer and an elect man by nature, as
Basilides thinks; and nature would have been able, one time or
other, to have shone forth, apart from the Saviour's appearance. But
were they to say that the visit of the Saviour was necessary, then
the properties of nature are gone from them, the elect being saved
by instruction, and purification, and the doing of good works.
Abraham, accordingly, who through hearing believed the voice, which
promised under the oak in Mamre," I will give this land to thee, and
to thy seed," was either elect or not. But if he was not, how did he
straightway believe, as it were naturally? And if he was elect,
their hypothesis is done away with, inasmuch as even previous to the
coming of the Lord an election was found, and that saved: "For it
was reckoned to him for righteousness."[1] For if any one, following
Marcion, should dare to say that the Creator
(<greek>Dhmiourgon</greek>) saved the man that believed on him, even
before the advent of the Lord, (the' election being saved with their
own proper salvation); the power of the good Being will be eclipsed;
inasmuch as late only, and subsequent to the Creator spoken of by
them in words of be good men, it made the attempt to save, and by
instruction, and in imitation of him. But if, being such, the good
Being save, according to them; neither is it his own that he saves,
nor is it with the consent of him who formed the creation that he
essays salvation, but by force or fraud. And how can he any more be
good, acting thus, and being posterior? But if the locality is
different, and the dwelling-place of the Omnipotent is remote from
the dwelling-place of the good God; yet the will of him who saves,
having been the first to begin, is not inferior to that of the good
God. From what has been previously proved, those who believe not are
proved senseless: "For their paths are perverted, and they know not
peace," saith the prophet.[2] "But foolish and unlearned questions"
the divine Paul exhorted to "avoid, because they gender strifes."[3]
And Aeschylus exclaims:--
"In what profits not, labour not in vain."
For that investigation, which accords with faith, which builds, on
the foundation of faith,[4] the august knowledge of the truth, we
know to be the best. Now we know that neither things which are clear
are made subjects of investigation, such as if it is day, while it
is day; nor things unknown, and never destined to become clear, as
whether the stars are even or odd in number; nor things convertible;
and those are so which can be said equally by those who take the
opposite side, as if what is in the womb is a living creature or
not. A fourth mode is, when, from either side of those, there is
advanced an unanswerable and irrefragable argument. If, then, the
ground of inquiry, according to all of these modes, is removed,
faith is established. For we advance to them the unanswerable
consideration, that it is God who speaks and comes to our help in
writing, respecting each one of the points regarding which I
investigate. Who, then, is so impious as to disbelieve God, and to
demand proofs from God as from men? Again, some questions demand the
evidence of the senses, [5] as if one were to ask whether the fire
be warm, or the snow white; and some admonition and rebuke, as the
question if you ought to honour your parents. And there are those
that deserve punishment, as to ask proofs of the existence of
Providence. There being then a Providence, it were impious to think
that the whole of prophecy and the economy in reference to a Saviour
did not take place in accordance with Providence. And perchance one
should not even attempt to demonstrate such points, the divine
Providence being evident from the sight of all its skilful and wise
works which. are seen, some of which take place in order, and some
appear in order. And He who communicated to us being and life, has
communicated to us also reason, wishing us to live rationally and
rightly. For the Word of the Father of the universe is not the
uttered word (<greek>logou</greek> <greek>proForikou</greek>), but
the wisdom and most manifest kindness of God, and His power too,
which is almighty and truly divine, and not incapable of being
conceived by those who do not confess--the all-potent will. But
since some are unbelieving, and some are disputations, all do not
attain to the perfection of the good. For neither is it possible to
attain it without the exercise of free choice; nor does the whole
depend on our own purpose; as, for example, what is defined to
happen. "For by grace we are saved:" not, indeed, without good
works; but we must, by being formed for what is good, acquire an
inclination for it. And we must possess the healthy mind which is
fixed on the pursuit of the good; in order to which we have the
greatest need of divine grace, and of right teaching, and of holy
susceptibility, and of the drawing of the Father to Him. For, bound
in this earthly body, we apprehend the objects of sense by means of
the body; but we grasp intellectual objects by means of the logical
faculty itself. But if one expect to apprehend all things by the
senses, he has fallen far from the truth. Spiritually, therefore,
the apostle writes respecting the knowledge of God, "For now we see
as through a glass, but then face to face."[1] For the vision of the
truth is given but to few. Accordingly, Plato says in the Epinomis,
"I do not say that it is possible for all to be blessed and happy;
only a few. Whilst we live, I pronounce this to be the case. But
there is a good hope that after death I shall attain all." To the
same effect is what we find in Moses: "No man shall see My face, and
live."[2] For it is evident that no one during the period of life
has been able to apprehend God clearly. But" the pure in heart shall
see God,"[3] when they arrive at the final perfection. For since the
soul became too enfeebled for the apprehension of realities, we
needed a divine teacher. The Saviour is sent down--a teacher and
leader in the acquisition of the good--the secret and sacred token
of the great Providence. "Where, then, is the scribe? where is the
searcher of this world? Hath not God made foolish the wisdom of this
world?"[4] it is said. And again, "I will destroy the wisdom of the
wise, and bring to nothing the understanding of the prudent,"[5]
plainly of those wise in their own eyes, and disputatious.
Excellently therefore Jeremiah says, "Thus saith the Lord, Stand in
the ways, and ask for the eternal paths,"what is the good way, and
walk in it, and ye shall find expiation for your souls."[6] Ask, he
says, and inquire of those who know, without contention and dispute.
And on learning the way of truth, let us walk on the right way,
without turning till we attain to what we desire: It was therefore
with reason that the king of the Romans (his name was Numa), being a
Pythagorean, first of all men, erected a temple to Faith and Peace.
"And to Abraham, on believing, righteousness was reckoned."[7] He,
prosecuting the lofty philosophy of aerial phenomena, and the
sublime philosophy of the movements in the heavens, was called
Abram, which is interpreted "sublime father."[8] But afterwards, on
looking up to heaven, whether it was that he saw the Son in the
spirit, as some explain, or a glorious angel, or in any other way
recognised God to be superior to the creation, and all the order in
it, he receives in addition the Alpha, the knowledge of the one and
only God, and is called Abraam, having, instead of a natural
philosopher, become wise, and a lover of God. For it is interpreted,
"elect father of sound." For by sound is the uttered word: the mind
is its father; and the mind of the good man is elect. I cannot
forbear praising exceedingly the poet of Agrigentum, who celebrates
faith as follows:--
"Friends, I know, then, that there is truth in the myths
Which I will relate. But very difficult to men,
And irksome to the mind, is the attempt of faith."[9]
Wherefore also the apostle exhorts, "that your faith should not be
in the wisdom of men," who profess to persuade, "but in the power of
God,"[10] which alone without proofs, by mere faith, is able to
save. "For the most approved of those that are reputable knows how
to keep watch. And justice will apprehend the forger and witnesses
of lies," says the Ephesian.[11] For he, having derived his
knowledge from the barbarian philosophy, is acquainted with the
purification by fire of those who have led bad lives, which the
Stoics afterwards called the Conflagration
(<greek>ekpurwsiu</greek>), in which also they teach that each will
arise exactly as he was, so treating of the resurrection; while
Plato says as follows, that the earth at certain periods is purified
by fire and water: "There have been many destructions of men in many
ways; and there shall be very great ones by fire and water; and
others briefer by innumerable causes." And after a little he adds:
"And, in truth, there is a change of the objects which revolve about
earth and heaven; and in the course of long periods there is the
destruction of the objects on earth by a great conflagration." Then
he subjoins respecting the deluge: "But when, again, the gods deluge
the earth to purify it with water, those on the mountains herdsmen
and shepherds, are saved; those in your cities are carried down by
the rivers into the sea." And we showed in the first Miscellany[12]
that the philosophers of the Greeks are called thieves, inasmuch as
they have taken without acknowledgment their principal dogmas from
Moses and the prophets. To which also we shall add, that the angels
who had obtained the superior rank, having sunk into pleasures, told
to the women[13] the secrets which had come to their knowledge;
while the rest of the angels concealed them, or rather, kept them
against the coming of the Lord. Thence emanated the doctrine of
providence, and the revelation of high things; and prophecy having
already been imparted to the philosophers of the Greeks, the
treatment of dogma arose among the philosophers, sometimes true when
they hit the mark, and sometimes erroneous, when they comprehended
not the secret of the prophetic allegory. And this it is proposed
briefly to indicate in running over the points requiring mention.
Faith, then, we say, we are to show must not be inert and alone, but
accompanied with investigation. For I do not say that we are not to
inquire at all. For "Search, and thou shalt find,"[1] it is said.
"What is sought may be captured,
But what is neglected escapes,"
according to Sophocles.
The like also says Menander the comic poet:--
"All things sought,
The wisest say, need anxious thought."
But we ought to direct the visual faculty of the soul aright to
discovery, and to clear away obstacles; and to cast clean away
contention, and envy, and strife, destined to perish miserably from
among men.
For very beautifully does Timon of Phlius write:--
"And Strife, the Plague of Mortals, stalks vainly shrieking,
The sister of Murderous Quarrel and Discord,
Which rolls blindly over all things. But then
It sets its head towards men, and casts them on hope."
Then a little below he adds:--
"For who hath set these to fight in deadly strife?
A rabble keeping pace with Echo; for, enraged at those silent,
It raised an evil disease against men, and many perished;"
Of the speech which denies what is false, and of the dilemma, of
that which is concealed, of the Sorites, and of the Crocodilean, of
that which is open, and of ambiguities and sophisms. To inquire,
then, respecting God, if it tend not to strife, but to discovery, is
salutary. For it is written in David, "The poor eat, and shall be
filled; and they shall praise the Lord that seek Him. Your heart
shall live for ever."[2] For they who seek Him after the true
search, praising the Lord, shall be filled with the gift that comes
from God, that is, knowledge. And their soul shall live; for the
soul is figuratively termed the heart, which ministers life: for by
the Son is the Father known.
We ought not to surrender our ears to all who speak and write
rashly. For cups also, which are taken hold of by many by the ears,
are dirtied, and lose the ears; and besides, when they fall they are
broken. In the same way also, those, who have polluted the pure
hearing of faith by many trifles, at last becoming deaf to the
truth, become useless and fall to the earth. It is not, then,
without reason that we commanded boys to kiss their relations,
holding them by the ears; indicating this, that the feeling of love
is engendered by hearing. And "God," who is known to those who love,
"is love,"[3] as "God," who by instruction is communicated to the
faithful, "is faithful; "[4] and we must be allied to Him by divine
love: so that by like we may see like, hearing the word of truth
guilelessly and purely, as children who obey us. And this was what
he, whoever he was, indicated who wrote on the entrance to the
temple at Epidaurus the inscription:--
"Pure he must be who goes within
The incense-perfumed fane."
And purity is "to think holy thoughts." "Except ye become as these
little children, ye shall not enter," it is said, "into the kingdom
of heaven."[5] For there the temple of God is seen established on
three foundations--faith, hope, and love.
CHAP. II.--ON HOPE.
Respecting faith we have adduced sufficient testimonies of writings
among the Greeks. But in order not to exceed bounds, through
eagerness to collect a very great many also respecting hope and
love, suffice it merely to say that in the Crito Socrates, who
prefers a good life and death to life itself, thinks that we have
hope of another life after death.
Also in the Phaedrus he says, "That only when in a separate state
can the soul become partaker of the wisdom which is true, and
surpasses human power; and when, having reached the end of hope by
philosophic love, desire shall waft it to heaven, then," says he,
"does it receive the commencement of another, an immortal life." And
in the Symposium he says, "That there is instilled into all the
natural love of generating what is like, and in men of generating
men alone, and in the good man of the generation of the counterpart
of himself. But it is impossible for the good man to do this without
possessing the perfect virtues, in which he will train the youth who
have recourse to him." And as he says in the Theaetetus, "He will
beget and finish men. For some procreate by the body, others by the
soul;" since also with the barbarian philosophers to teach and
enlighten is called to regenerate; and "I have begotten you in Jesus
Christ,"[6] says the good apostle somewhere.
Empedocles, too, enumerates friendship among the elements,
conceiving it as a combining love:--
"Which do you look at with your mind; and don't sit gaping with your
eyes."
Parmenides, too, in his poem, alluding to hope, speaks thus:--
"Yet look with the mind certainly on what is absent as present,
For it will not sever that which is from the grasp it has of that
which is Not, even if scattered in every direction over the world or
combined."
CHAP. III.--THE OBJECTS OF FAITH AND HOPE PERCEIVED BY THE MIND
ALONE.
For he who hopes, as he who believes, sees intellectual objects and
future things with the mind. If, then, we affirm that aught is just,
and affirm it to be good, and we also say that truth is something,
yet we have never seen any of such objects with our eyes, but with
our mind alone. Now the Word of God says, "I am the truth."[1] The
Word is then to be contemplated by the mind. "Do you aver," it was
said,[2] "that there are any true philosophers?" "Yes," said I,
"those who love to contemplate the truth." In the Phaedrus also,
Plato, speaking of the truth, shows it as an idea. Now an idea is a
conception of God; and this the barbarians have termed the Word of
God. The words are as follow: "For one must then dare to speak the
truth, especially in speaking of the truth. For the essence of the
soul, being colourless, formless, and intangible, is visible only to
God,[3] its guide." Now the Word issuing forth was the cause of
creation; then also he generated himself, "when the Word had become
flesh,"[4] that He might be seen. The righteous man will seek the
discovery that flows from love, to which if he haste he prospers.
For it is said, "To him that knocketh, it shall be opened: ask, and
it shall be given to you."[5] "For the violent that storm the
kingdom "[6] are not so in disputations speeches; but by continuance
in a right life and unceasing prayers, are said "to take it by
force," wiping away the blots left by their previous sins.
"You may obtain wickedness, even in great abundance?
And him who toils God helps;
For the gifts of the Muses, hard to win,
Lie not before you, for any one to bear away."
The knowledge of ignorance is, then, the first lesson in walking
according to the Word. An ignorant man has sought, and having
sought, he finds the teacher; and finding has believed, and
believing has hoped; and henceforward having loved, is assimilated
to what was loved--en-deavouring to be what he first loved. Such is
the method Socrates shows Alcibiades, who thus questions: "Do you
not think that I shall know about what is right otherwise?" "Yes, if
you have found out." "But you don't think I have found out?"
"Certainly, if you have sought."
"Then you don't think that I have sought?" "Yes, if you think you do
not know."[8] So with the lamps of the wise virgins, lighted at
night in the great darkness of ignorance, which the Scripture
signified by "night." Wise souls, pure as virgins, understanding
themselves to be situated amidst the ignorance of the world, kindle
the light, and rouse the mind, and illumine the darkness, and dispel
ignorance, and seek truth, and await the appearance of the Teacher.
"The mob, then," said I, "cannot become a philosopher."[9]
"Many rod-bearers there are, but few Bacchi," according to Plato.
"For many are called, but few chosen."[10] "Knowledge is not in
all,"[11] says the apostle. "And pray that we may be delivered from
unreasonable and wicked men: for all men have not faith."[12] And
the Poetics of Cleanthes, the Stoic, writes to the following
effect:--
"Look not to glory, wishing to be suddenly wise,
And fear not the undiscerning and rash opinon of the many;
For the multitude has not an intelligent, or wise, or right
judgment,
And it is in few men that you will find this."[13]
And more sententiously the comic poet briefly says:--
"It is a shame to judge of what is right by much noise."
For they heard, I think, that excellent wisdom, which says to us,
"Watch your opportunity in the midst of the foolish, and in the
midst of the intelligent continue."[14] And again, "The wise will
conceal sense."[15] For the many demand demonstration as a pledge of
truth, not satisfied with the bare salvation by faith.
"But it is strongly incumbent to disbelieve the dominant wicked,
And as is enjoined by the assurance of our muse,
Know by dissecting the utterance within your breast."
"For this is habitual to the wicked," says Empedocles, "to wish to
overbear what is true by disbelieving it." And that our tenets are
probable and worthy of belief, the Greeks shall know, the point
being more thoroughly investigated in what follows. For we are
taught what is like by what is like. For says Solomon, "Answer a
fool according to his folly."[15] Wherefore also, to those that ask
the wisdom that is with us, we are to hold out things suitable, that
with the greatest possible ease they may, through their own ideas,
be likely to arrive at faith in the truth. For "I became all things
to all men, that I might gain all men."[1] Since also "the rain" of
the divine grace is sent down "on the just and the unjust."[2] "Is
He the God of the Jews only, and not also of the Gentiles? Yes, also
of the Gentiles: if indeed He is one God,"[3] exclaims the noble
apostle.
CHAP. IV.--DIVINE THINGS WRAPPED UP IN FIGURES BOTH IN THE SACRED
AND IN HEATHEN WRITERS.
But since they will believe neither in what is good justly nor in
knowledge unto salvation, we ourselves reckoning what they claim as
belonging to us, because all things are God's; and especially since
what is good proceeded from us to the Greeks, let us handle those
things as they are capable of hearing. For intelligence or rectitude
this great crowd estimates not by truth, but by what they are
delighted with. And they will be pleased not more with other things
than with what is like themselves. For he who is still blind and
dumb, not having understanding, or the undazzled and keen vision of
the contemplative soul, which the Saviour confers, like the
uninitiated at the mysteries, or the unmusical at dances, not being
yet pure and worthy of the pure truth, but still discordant and
disordered and material, must stand outside of the divine choir.
"For we compare spiritual things with spiritual."[4] Wherefore, in
accordance with the method of concealment, the truly sacred Word
truly divine and most necessary for us, deposited in the shrine of
truth, was by the Egyptians indicated by what were called among them
adyta, and by the Hebrews by the veil. Only the consecrated--that
is, those devoted to God, circumcised in the desire of the passions
for the sake of love to that which is alone divine--were allowed
access to them. For Plato also thought it not lawful for "the impure
to touch the pure."
Thence the prophecies and oracles are spoken in enigmas, and the
mysteries are not exhibited incontinently to all and sundry, but
only after certain purifications and previous instructions.
"For the Muse was not then Greedy of gain or mercenary; Nor were
Terpsichore's sweet, Honey-toned, silvery soft-voiced Strains made
merchandise of." Now those instructed among the Egyptians learned
first of all that style of the Egyptian letters which is called
Epistolographic; and second, the Hieratic, which the sacred scribes
practise; and finally, and last of all, the Hieroglyphic, of which
one kind which is by the first elements is literal (Kyriologic), and
the other Symbolic. Of the Symbolic, one kind speaks literally by
imitation, and another writes as it were figuratively; and another
is quite allegorical, using certain enigmas.
Wishing to express Sun in writing, they make a circle; and Moon, a
figure like the Moon, like its proper shape. But in using the
figurative style, by transposing and transferring, by changing and
by transforming in many ways as suits them, they draw characters. In
relating the praises of the kings in theological myths, they write
in anaglyphs.[5] Let the following stand as a specimen of the third
species--the Enigmatic. For the rest of the stars, on account of
their oblique course, they have figured like the bodies of serpents;
but the sun, like that of a beetle, because it makes a round figure
of ox-dung,[6] and rolls it before its face. And they say that this
creature lives six months under ground, and the other division of
the year above ground, and emits its seed into the ball, and brings
forth; and that there is not a female beetle. All then, in a word,
who have spoken of divine things, both Barbarians and Greeks, have
veiled the first principles of things, and delivered the truth in
enigmas, and symbols, and allegories, and metaphors, and such like
tropes.[7] Such also are the oracles among the Greeks. And the
Pythian Apollo is called Loxias. Also the maxims of those among the
Greeks called wise men, in a few sayings indicate the unfolding of
matter of considerable importance. Such certainly is that maxim,
"Spare Time:" either because life is short, and we ought not to
expend this time in vain; or, on the other hand, it bids you spare
your personal expenses; so that, though you live many years,
necessaries may not fail you. Similarly also the maxim "Know
thyself" shows many things; both that thou art mortal, and that thou
wast born a human being; and also that, in comparison with the other
excellences of life, thou art of no account, because thou sayest
that thou art rich or renowned; or, on the other hand, that, being
rich or renowned, you are not honoured on account of your advantages
alone. And it says, Know for what thou wert born, and whose image
thou art; and what is thy essence, and what thy creation, and what
thy relation to God, and the like. And the Spirit says by Isaiah the
prophet, "I will give thee treasures, hidden, dark."[8] Now wisdom,
hard to hunt, is the treasures of God and unfailing riches. But
those, taught in theology by those prophets, the poets, philosophize
much by way of a hidden sense. I mean Orpheus, Linus, Musaeus,
Homer, and Hesiod, and those in this fashion wise. The persuasive
style of poetry is for them a veil for the many. Dreams and signs
are all more or less obscure to men, not from jealousy (for it were
wrong to conceive of God as subject to passions), but in order that
research, introducing to the understanding of enigmas, may haste to
the discovery of truth. Thus Sophocles the tragic poet somewhere
says:--
"And God I know to be such an one,
Ever the revealer of enigmas to the wise,
But to the perverse bad, although a teacher in few words,"--
putting bad instead of simple. Expressly then respecting all our
Scripture, as if spoken in a parable, it is written in the Psalms,
"Hear, O My people, My law: incline your ear to the words of My
mouth. I will open My mouth in parables, I will utter My problems
from the beginning."[1] Similarly speaks the noble apostle to the
following effect: "Howbeit we speak wisdom among those that are
perfect; yet not the wisdom of this world, nor of the princes of
this world, that come to nought. But we speak the wisdom of God
hidden in a mystery; which none of the princes of this world knew.
For had they known it, they would not have crucified the Lord of
glory."[2]
The philosophers did not exert themselves in contemning the
appearance of the Lord. It therefore follows that it is the opinion
of the wise among the Jews which the apostle inveighs against it.
Wherefore he adds, "But we preach, as it is written, what eye hath
not seen, and ear hath not heard, and hath not entered into the
heart of man, what God hath prepared for them that love Him. For God
hath revealed it to us by the Spirit. For the Spirit searcheth all
things, even the deep things of God."[3] For he recognises the
spiritual man and the Gnostic as the disciple of the Holy Spirit
dispensed by God, which is the mind of Christ. "But the natural man
receiveth not the things of the Spirit, for they are foolishness to
him."[4] Now the apostle, in contradistinction to gnostic
perfection, calls the common faith[5] the foundation, and sometimes
milk, writing on this wise: "Brethren, I could not speak to you as
to spiritual, but as to carnal, to babes in Christ. I have fed you
with milk, not with meat: for ye were not able. Neither yet are ye
now able. For ye are yet carnal: for whereas there is among you envy
and strife, are ye not carnal, and walk as men? "[6] Which things
are the choice of those men who are sinners. But those who abstain
from these things give their thoughts to divine things, and partake
of gnostic food. "According to the grace," it is said, "given to me
as a wise master builder, I have laid the foundation. And another
buildeth on it gold and silver, precious stones."[7] Such is the
gnostic superstructure on the foundation of faith in Christ Jesus.
But "the stubble, and the wood, and the hay," are the additions of
heresies. "But the fire shall try every man's work, of what sort it
is." In allusion to the gnostic edifice also in the Epistle to the
Romans, he says, "For I desire to see you, that I may impart unto
you a spiritual gift, that ye may be established."[8] It was
impossible that gifts of this sort could be written without
disguise.
CHAP. V.--ON THE SYMBOLS OF PYTHAGORAS.
Now the Pythagorean symbols were connected with the Barbarian
philosophy in the most recondite way. For instance, the Samian
counsels "not to have a swallow in the house ;" that is, not to
receive a loquacious, whispering, garrulous man, who cannot contain
what has been communicated to him. "For the swallow, and the turtle,
and the sparrows of the field, know the times of their entrance,"[9]
says the Scripture; and one ought never to dwell with trifles. And
the turtle-dove murmuring shows the thankless slander of
fault-finding, and is rightly expelled the house.
"Don't mutter against me, sitting by one in one place, another in
another."[10]
The swallow too, which suggests the fable of Pandion, seeing it is
right to detest the incidents reported of it, some of which we hear
Tereus suffered, and some of which he inflicted. It pursues also the
musical grasshoppers, whence he who is a persecutor of the word
ought to be driven away.
"By sceptre-bearing Here, whose eye surveys Olympus, I have a rusty
closet for tongues,"
says Poetry. Aeschylus also says:--
"But, I, too, have a key as a guard on my tongue." Again Pythagoras
commanded, "When the pot is lifted off the fire, not to leave its
mark in the ashes, but to scatter them;" and "people on getting up
from bed, to shake the bed-clothes." For he intimated that it was
necessary not only to efface the mark, but not to leave even a trace
of anger; and that on its ceasing to boil, it was to be composed,
and all memory of injury to be wiped out. "And let not the sun,"
says the Scripture, "go down upon your wrath."[11] And he that said,
"Thou shall not desire,"[12] took away all memory of wrong; for
wrath is found to be the impulse of concupiscence in a mild soul,
especially seeking irrational revenge. In the same way "the bed is
ordered to be shaken up," so that there may be no recollection of
effusion in sleep,[1] or sleep in the day-time; nor, besides, of
pleasure during the night. And he intimated that the vision of the
dark ought to be dissipated speedily by the light of truth. "Be
angry, and sin not," says David, teaching us that we ought not to
assent to the impression, and not to follow it up by action, and so
confirm wrath.
Again, "Don't sail on land" is a Pythagorean saw, and shows that
taxes and similar contracts, being troublesome and fluctuating,
ought to be declined. Wherefore also the Word says that the
tax-gatherers shall be saved with difficulty.[2]
And again, "Don't wear a ring, nor engrave on it the images of the
gods," enjoins Pythagoras; as Moses ages before enacted expressly,
that neither a graven, nor molten, nor moulded, nor painted likeness
should be made; so that we may not cleave to things of sense, but
pass to intellectual objects: for familiarity with the sight
disparages the reverence of what is divine; and to worship that
which is immaterial by matter, is to dishonour it by sense.[3]
Wherefore the wisest of the Egyptian priests decided that the temple
of Athene should be hypaethral, just as the Hebrews constructed the
temple without an image. And some, in worshipping God, make a
representation of heaven containing the stars; and so worship,
although Scripture says, "Let of Eurysus the Pythagorean, which is
as follows, who in his book On Fortune, having said that the
"Creator, on making man, took Himself as an exemplar," added, "And
the body is like the other things, as being made of the same
material, and fashioned by the best workman, who wrought it, taking
Himself as the archetype." And, in fine, Pythagoras and his
followers, with Plato also, and most of the other philosophers, were
best acquainted with the Lawgiver, as may be concluded from their
doctrine. And by a happy utterance of divination, not without divine
help, concurring in certain prophetic declarations, and, seizing the
truth in portions and aspects, in terms not obscure, and not going
beyond the explanation of the things, they honoured it on as
pertaining the appearance of relation with the truth. Whence the
Hellenic philosophy is like the torch of wick which men kindle,
artificially stealing the light from the sun. But on the
proclamation of the Word all that holy light shone forth. Then in
houses by night the stolen light is useful; but by day the fire
blazes, and all the night is illuminated by such a sun of
intellectual light.
Now Pythagoras made an epitome of the statements on righteousness in
Moses, when he said, "Do not step over the balance;" that is, do not
transgress equality in distribution, honouring justice so.
"Which friends to friends for ever, binds,
To cities, cities--to allies, allies,
For equality is what is right for men;
But less to greater ever hostile grows,
And days of hate begin," as is said with poetic grace.
Wherefore the Lord says, "Take My yoke, for it is gentle and
light."[5] And on the disciples, striving for the pre-eminence, He
enjoins equality with simplicity, saying "that they must become as
little children."[6] Likewise also the apostle writes, that "no one
in Christ is bond or free, or Greek or Jew. For the creation in
Christ Jesus is new, is equality, free of strife--not
grasping--just." For envy, and jealousy, and bitterness, stand
without the divine choir.
Thus also those skilled in the mysteries forbid "to eat the heart;"
teaching that we ought not to gnaw and consume the soul by idleness
and by vexation, on account of things which happen against one's
wishes. Wretched, accordingly, was the man whom Homer also says,
wandering alone, "ate his own heart." But again, seeing the Gospel
supposes two ways--the apostles, too, similarly with all the
prophets--and seeing they call that one "narrow and confined" which
is circumscribed according to the commandments and prohibitions, and
the opposite one, which leads to perdition, "broad and roomy," open
to pleasures and wrath, and say, "Blessed is the man who walketh not
in the counsel of the ungodly, and standeth not in the way of
sinners."[7] Hence also comes the fable of Prodicus of Ceus about
Virtue and Vice.[8] And Pythagoras shrinks not from prohibiting to
walk on the public thoroughfares, enjoining the necessity of not
following the sentiments of the many, which are crude and
inconsistent. And Aristocritus, in the first book of his Positions
against Heracliodorus, mentions a letter to this effect: "Atoeeas
king of the Scythians to the people of Byzantium: Do not impair my
revenues in case my mares drink your water;" for the Barbarian
indicated symbolically that he would make war on them. Likewise also
the poet Euphorion introduces Nestor saying,--
"We have not yet wet the Achaean steeds in Simois."
Therefore also the Egyptians place Sphinxes[1] before their temples,
to signify that the doctrine respecting God is enigmatical and
obscure; perhaps also that we ought both to love and fear the Divine
Being: to love Him as gentle and benign to the pious; to fear Him as
inexorably just to the impious; for the sphinx shows the image of a
wild beast and of a man together.
CHAP. VI.--THE MYSTIC MEANING OF THE TABERNACLE AND ITS
FURNITURE.
It were tedious to go over all the Prophets and the Law, specifying
what is spoken in enigmas; for almost the whole Scripture gives its
utterances in this way. It may suffice, I think, for any one
possessed of intelligence, for the proof of the point in hand, to
select a few examples.
Now concealment is evinced in the reference of the seven circuits
around the temple, which are made mention of among the Hebrews; and
the equipment on the robe, indicating by the various symbols, which
had reference to visible objects, the agreement which from heaven
reaches down to earth. And the covering and the veil were variegated
with blue, and purple, and scarlet, and linen. And so it was
suggested that the nature of the elements contained the revelation
of God. For purple is from water, linen from the earth; blue, being
dark, is like the air, as scarlet is like fire.
In the midst of the covering and veil, where the priests were
allowed to enter, was situated the altar of incense, the symbol of
the earth placed in the middle of this universe; and from it came
the fumes of incense. And that place intermediate between the inner
veil, where the high priest alone, on prescribed days, was permitted
to enter, and the external court which surrounded it--free to all
the Hebrews--was, they say, the middlemost point of heaven and
earth. But others say it was the symbol of the intellectual world,
and that of sense. The coveting, then, the barrier of popular
unbelief, was stretched in front of the five pillars, keeping back
those in the surrounding space.
So very mystically the five loaves are broken by the Saviour, and
fill the crowd of the listeners. For great is the crowd that keep to
the things of sense, as if they were the only things in existence.
"Cast your eyes round, and see," says Plato, "that none of the
uninitiated listen." Such are they who think that nothing else
exists, but what they can hold tight with their hands; but do not
admit as in the department of existence, actions and processes of
generation, and the whole of the unseen. For such are those who keep
by the five senses. But the knowledge of God is a thing inaccessible
to the ears and like organs of this kind of people. Hence the Son is
said to be the Father's face, being the revealer of the Father's
character to the five senses by clothing Himself with flesh. "But if
we live in the Spirit, let us also walk in the Spirit."[2] "For we
walk by faith, not by sight,"[3] the noble apostle says. Within the
veil, then, is concealed the sacerdotal service; and it keeps those
engaged in it far from those without.
Again, there is the veil of the entrance into the holy of holies.
Four pillars there are, the sign of the sacred tetrad of the ancient
covenants.[4] Further, the mystic name of four letters which was
affixed to those alone to whom the adytum was accessible, is called
Jave, which is interpreted, "Who is and shall be." The name of God,
too, among the Greeks contains four letters.
Now the Lord, having come alone into the intellectual world, enters
by His sufferings, introduced into the knowledge of the Ineffable,
ascending above every name which is known by sound. The lamp, too,
was placed to the south of the altar of incense; and by it were
shown the motions of the seven planets, that perform their
revolutions towards the south. For three branches rose on either
side of the tamp, and lights on them; since also the sun, like the
lamp, set in the midst of all the planets, dispenses with a kind of
divine music the light to those above and to those below.
The golden lamp conveys another enigma as a symbol of Christ, not in
respect of form alone, but in his casting light, "at sundry times
and divers manners,"[5] on those who believe on Him and hope, and
who see by means of the ministry of the First-born. And they say
that the seven eyes of the Lord "are the seven spirits resting on
the rod that springs from the root of Jesse."[6]
North of the altar of incense was placed a table, on which there was
"the exhibition of the loaves;" for the most nourishing of the winds
are those of the north. And thus are signified certain seats of
churches conspiring so as to form one body and one assemblage.[7]
And the things recorded of the sacred ark signify the properties of
the world of thought, which is hidden and closed to the many.
And those golden figures, each of them with six wings, signify
either the two bears, as some will have it, or rather the two
hemispheres. And the name cherubim meant "much knowledge." But both
together have twelve wings, and by the zodiac and time, which moves
on it, point out the world of sense. It is of them, I think, that
Tragedy, discoursing of Nature, says:--
"Unwearied Time circles full in perennial flow,
Producing itself. And the twin-bears
On the swift wandering motions of their wings,
Keep the Atlantean pole."
And Atlas,[1] the unsuffering pole, may mean the fixed sphere, or
better perhaps, motionless eternity. But I think it better to regard
the ark, so called from the Hebrew word Thebotha,[2] as signifying
something else. It is interpreted, one instead of one in all places.
Whether, then, it is the eighth region and the world of thought, or
God, all-embracing, and without shape, and invisible, that is
indicated, we may for the present defer saying. But it signifies the
repose which dwells with the adoring spirits, which are meant by the
cherubim.
For He who prohibited the making of a graven image, would never
Himself have made an image in the likeness of holy things.[3] Nor is
there at all any composite thing, and creature endowed with
sensation, of the sort in heaven. But the face is a symbol of the
rational soul, and the wings are the lofty ministers and energies of
powers fight and left; and the voice is delightsome glory in
ceaseless contemplation. Let it suffice that the mystic
interpretation has advanced so far.
Now the high priest's robe is the symbol of the world of sense. The
seven planets are represented by the five stones and the two
carbuncles, for Saturn and the Moon. The former is southern, and
moist, and earthy, and heavy; the latter aerial, whence she is
called by some Artemis, as if Aerotomos (cutting the air); and the
air is cloudy. And cooperating as they did in the production of
things here below, those that by Divine Providence are set over the
planets are rightly represented as placed on the breast and
shoulders; and by them was the work of creation, the first week. And
the breast is the seat of the heart and soul.
Differently, the stones might be the various phases of salvation;
some occupying the upper, some the lower parts of the entire body
saved. The three hundred and sixty bells, suspended from the robe,
is the space of a year, "the acceptable year of the Lord,"
proclaiming and resounding the stupendous manifestation of the
Saviour. Further, the broad gold mitre indicates the regal power of
the Lord, "since the Head of the Church" is the Savour.[4] The mitre
that is on it[i.e., the head] is, then, a sign of most princely
rule; and otherwise we have heard it said, "The Head of Christ is
the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ."[5] Moreover, there was
the breastplate, comprising the ephod, which is the symbol of work,
and the oracle <greek>logion</greek>; and this indicated the Word
<greek>logos</greek> by which it was framed, and is the symbol of
heaven, made by the Word,[6] and subjected to Christ, the Head of
all things, inasmuch as it moves in the same way, and in a like
manner. The luminous emerald stones, therefore, in the ephod,
signify the sun and moon, the helpers of nature. The shoulder, I
take it, is the commencement of the hand.
The twelve stones, set in four rows on the breast, describe for us
the circle of the zodiac, in the four changes of the year. It was
otherwise requisite that the law and the prophets should be placed
beneath the Lord's head, because in both Testaments mention is made
of the righteous. For were we to say that the apostles were at once
prophets and righteous, we should say well, "since one and the
self-same Holy Spirit works in all."[7] And as the Lord is above the
whole world, yea, above the world of thought, so the name engraven
on the plate has been regarded to signify, above all rule and
authority; and it was inscribed with reference both to the written
commandments and the manifestation to sense. And it is the name of
God that is expressed; since, as the Son sees the goodness of the
Father, God the Saviour works, being called the first principle of
all things, which was imaged forth from the invisible God first, and
before the ages, and which fashioned all things which came into
being after itself. Nay more, the oracles exhibits the prophecy
which by the Word cries and preaches, and the judgment that is to
come; since it is the same Word which prophesies, and judges, and
discriminates all things.
And they say that the robe prophesied the ministry in the flesh, by
which He was seen in closer relation to the world. So the high
priest, putting off his consecrated robe (the universe, and the
creation in the universe, were consecrated by Him assenting that,
what was made, was good), washes himself, and puts on the other
tunic--a holy-of holies one, so to speak--which is to accompany him
into the adytum; exhibiting, as seems to me, the Levite and Gnostic,
as the chief of other priests (those bathed in water, and clothed in
faith alone, and expecting their own individual abode), himself
distinguishing the objects of the intellect from the things of
sense, rising above other priests, hasting to the entrance to the
world of ideas, to wash himself from the things here below, not in
water, as formerly one was cleansed on being enrolled in the tribe
of Levi. But purified already by the gnostic Word in his whole
heart, and thoroughly regulated, and having improved that mode of
life received from the priest to the highest pitch, being quite
sanctified both in word and life, and having put on the bright array
of glory, and received the ineffable inheritance of that spiritual
and perfect man, "which eye hath not seen and ear hath not heard,
and it hath not entered into the heart of man;" and having become
son and friend, he is now replenished with insatiable contemplation
face to face. For there is nothing like hearing the Word Himself,
who by means of the Scripture inspires fuller intelligence. For so
it is said, "And he shall put off the linen robe, which he had put
on when he entered into the holy place; and shall lay it aside
there, and wash his body in water in the holy place, and put on his
robe."[1] But in one way, as I think, the Lord puts off and puts on
by descending into the region of sense; and in another, he who
through Him has believed puts off and puts on, as the apostle
intimated, the consecrated stole. Thence, after the image of the
Lord. the worthiest were chosen from the sacred tribes to be high
priests, and those elected to the kingly office and to prophecy were
anointed.
CHAP. VII.--THE EGYPTIAN SYMBOLS AND ENIGMAS OF SACRED THINGS.
Whence also the Egyptians did not entrust the mysteries they
possessed to all and sundry, and did not divulge the knowledge of
divine things to the profane; but only to those destined to ascend
the throne, and those of the priests that were judged the worthiest,
from their nurture, culture, and birth. Similar, then, to the Hebrew
enigmas in respect to concealment, are those of the Egyptians also.
Of the Egyptians, some show the sun on a ship, others on a
crocodile. And they signify hereby, that the sun, making a passage
through the delicious and moist air, generates time; which is
symbolized by the crocodile in some other sacerdotal account.
Further, at Diospolis in Egypt, on the temple called Pylon, there
was figured a boy as the symbol of production, and an old man as
that of decay. A hawk, on the other hand, was the symbol of God, as
a fish of hate; and, according to a different symbolism, the
crocodile; of impudence. The whole symbol, then, when put together,
appears to teach this: "Oh ye who are born and die, God hates
impudence."
And there are those who fashion ears and eyes of costly material,
and consecrate them, dedicating them in the temples to the gods--by
this plainly indicating that God sees and hears all things. Besides,
the lion is with them the symbol of strength and prowess, as the ox
clearly is of the earth itself, and husbandry and food, and the
horse of fortitude and confidence; while, on the other hand, the
sphinx, of strength combined with intelligence--as it had a body
entirely that of a lion, and the face of a man. Similarly to these,
to indicate intelligence, and memory, and power, and art, a man is
sculptured in the temples. And in what is called among them the
Komasiae of the gods, they carry about golden images--two dogs, one
hawk, and one ibis; and the four figures of the images they call
four letters. For the dogs are symbols of the two hemispheres,
which, as it were, go round and keep watch; the hawk, of the sun,
for it is fiery and destructive (so they attribute pestilential
diseases to the sun); the ibis, of the moon, likening the shady
parts to that which is dark in plumage, and the luminous to the
light. And some will have it that by the dogs are meant the tropics,
which guard and watch the sun's passage to the south and north. The
hawk signifies the equinoctial line, which is high and parched with
heat, as the ibis the ecliptic. For the ibis seems, above other
animals, to have furnished to the Egyptians the first rudiments of
the invention of number and measure, as the oblique line did of
circles.
CHAP. VIII.--THE USE OF THE SYMBOLIC STYLE BY POETS AND
PHILOSOPHERS.
But it was not only the most highly intellectual of the Egyptians,
but also such of other barbarians as prosecuted philosophy, that
affected the symbolical style. They say, then, that Idanthuris king
of the Scythians, as Pherecydes of Syros relates, sent to Darius, on
his passing the Ister in threat of war, a symbol, instead of a
letter, consisting of a mouse, a frog, a bird, a javelin, a plough.
And there being a doubt in reference to them, as was to be expected,
Orontopagas the Chiliarch said that they were to resign the kingdom;
taking dwellings to be meant by the mouse, waters by the frog, air
by the bird, land by the plough, arms by the javelin. But Xiphodres
interpreted the contrary; for he said, "If we do not take our flight
like birds, or like mice get below the earth, or like frogs beneath
the water, we shall not escape their arrows; for we are not lords of
the territory."
It is said that Anacharsis the Scythian, while asleep, covered the
pudenda with his left hand, and his mouth with his fight, to
intimate that both ought to be mastered, but that it was a greater
thing to master the tongue than voluptuousness.
And why should I linger over the barbarians, when I can adduce the
Greeks as exceedingly addicted to the use of the method of
concealment? Androcydes the Pythagorean says the far-famed so-called
Ephesian letters were of the class of symbols. For he said that
<greek>askion</greek> (shadowless) meant darkness, for it has no
shadow; and <greek>katas</greek>><greek>kion</greek> (shadowy)
light, since it casts with its rays the shadow; and
<greek>lix</greek> if is the earth, according to an ancient'
appellation; and <greek>tetras</greek> is the year, in reference to
the seasons; and <greek>d</greek>><greek>amnameneus</greek> is the
sun, which overpowers (<greek>damazwn</greek>); and
<greek>ta</greek> <greek>aisia</greek> is the true voice. And then
the symbol intimates that divine things have been arranged in
harmonious order--darkness to light, the sun to the year, and the
earth to nature's processes of production of every sort. Also
Dionysius Thrax, the grammarian, in his book, Respecting the
Exposition of the Symbolical Signification in Circles, says
expressly, "Some signified actions not by words only, but also by
symbols: by words, as is the case of what are called the Delphic
maxims, 'Nothing in excess,' 'Know thyself,' and the like; and by
symbols, as the wheel that is turned in the temples of the gods,
derived from the Egyptians, and the branches that are given to the
worshippers. For the Thracian Orpheus says:--
"Whatever works of branches are a care to men on earth,
Not one has one fate in the mind, but all things
Revolve around; and it is not lawful to stand at one point,
But each one keeps an equal part of the race as they began."
The branches either stand as the symbol of the first food, or they
are that the multitude may know that fruits spring and grow
universally, remaining a very long time; but that the duration of
life allotted to themselves is brief. And it is on this account that
they will have it that the branches are given; and perhaps also that
they may know, that as these, on the other hand, are burned, so also
they themselves speedily leave this life, and will become fuel for
fire.
Very useful, then, is the mode of symbolic interpretation for many
purposes; and it is helpful to the right theology, and to piety, and
to the display of intelligence, and the practice of brevity, and the
exhibition of wisdom. "For the use of symbolical speech is
characteristic of the wise man," appositely remarks the grammarian
Didymus, "and the explanation of what is signified by it." And
indeed the most elementary instruction of children embraces the
interpretation of the four elements; for it is said that the
Phrygians call water Bedu, as also Orpheus says:[1]--
"And bright water is poured down, the Bedu of the nymphs."
Dion Thytes also seems to write similarly:--
"And taking Bedu, pour it on your hands, and turn to divination."
On the other hand, the comic poet, Philydeus, understands by Bedu
the air, as being (Biodoros) life-giver, in the following lines :--
"I pray that I may inhale the salutary Bedu,
Which is the most essential part of health;
Inhale the pure, the unsullied air."
In the same opinion also concurs Neanthes of Cyzicum, who writes
that the Macedonian priests invoke Bedu, which they interpret to
mean the air, to be propitious to them and to their children. And
Zaps some have ignorantly taken for fire (from
<greek>zesin</greek>,boiling); for so the sea is called, as
Euphorion, in his reply to Theoridas:--
"And Zaps, destroyer of ships, wrecked it on the rocks."
And Dionysius Iambus similarly:--
"Briny Zaps moans about the maddened deep."
Similarly Cratinus the younger, the comic poet:--
"Zaps casts forth shrimps and little fishes."
And Simmias of Rhodes:--
"Parent of the Ignetes and the Telchines briny Zaps was born."[2]
And <greek>kqwn</greek> is the earth <greek>kekxmenh</greek> spread
forth to bigness. And Plectron, according to some, is the sky
(<greek>polos</greek>), according to others, it is the air, which
strikes
(<greek>plh</greek>><greek>s</greek>/246><greek>o</greek>/225>/235><greek>a</greek>)
and moves to nature and increase, and which fills all things. But
these have not read Cleanthes the philosopher, who expressly calls
Plectron the sun; for darting his beams in the east, as if striking
the world, he leads the light to its harmonious course. And from the
sun it signifies also the rest of the stars, the Sphinx is not the
comprehension[3] of the universe, and the revolution of the world,
according to the poet Aratus; but perhaps it is the spiritual tone
which pervades and holds together the universe. But it is better to
regard it as the ether, which holds together and presses all things;
as also Empedocles says:--
"But come now, first will I speak of the Sun, the first principle of
all things,
From which all, that we look upon, has sprung,
Both earth, and billowy deep, and humid air;
Titan and Ether too, which binds all things around."
And Apollodorus of Corcyra says that these lines were recited by
Branchus the seer, when purifying the Milesians from plague; for he,
sprinkling the multitude with branches of laurel, led off the hymn
somehow as follows :--
"Sing Boys Hecaergus and Hecaerga."
And the people accompanied him, saying, "Bedu,[1] Zaps, Chthon,
Plectron, Sphinx, Cnaxzbi, Chthyptes, Phlegmos, Drops." Callimachus
relates the story in iambics. Cnaxzbi is, by derivation, the plague,
from its gnawing (<greek>knaiein</greek>) and destroying
<greek>diafqeirein</greek>, and <greek>qxyai</greek> is to consume
with a thunderbolt. Thespis the tragic poet says that something else
was signified by these, writing thus: "Lo, I offer to thee a
libation of white Cnaxzbi, having pressed it from the yellow nurses.
Lo, to thee, O two-horned Pan, mixing Chthyptes cheese with red
honey, I place it on thy sacred altars. Lo, to thee I pour as a
libation the sparkling gleam of Bromius."He signifies, as I think,
the soul's first milk-like nutriment of the four-and-twenty
elements, after which solidified milk comes as food. And last, he
teaches of the blood of the vine of the Word, the sparkling wine,
the perfecting gladness of instruction. And Drops is the operating
Word, which, beginning with elementary training, and advancing to
the growth of the man, inflames and illumines man up to the measure
of maturity. The third is said to be a writing copy for
children--<greek>marptes</greek>, <greek>sfigx</greek>
<greek>klwy</greek>,<greek>zxnkqhdo</greek><s225. And it signifies,
in my opinion, that by the arrangement of the elements and of the
world, we must advance to the knowledge of what is more perfect,
since eternal salvation is attained by force and toil; for
<greek>maryai</greek> is to grasp. And the harmony of the world is
meant by the Sphinx; and <greek>zunkqhdon</greek> means difficulty;
and <greek>klwys</greek> means at once the secret knowledge of the
Lord and day. Well! does not Epigenes, in his book on the Poetry of
Orpheus, in exhibiting the peculiarities found in Orpheus,[2] say
that by " the curved rods" (<greek>keraisi</greek>) is meant
"ploughs;"and by the warp (<greek>sthmosi</greek>), the furrows; and
the woof (<greek>mitos</greek>) is a figurative expression for the
seed; and that the tears of Zeus signify a shower; and that the
"parts" (<greek>moirai</greek>) are, again, the phases of the moon,
the thirtieth day, and the fifteenth, and the new moon, and that
Orpheus accordingly calls them "white-robed," as being parts of the
light? Again, that the Spring is called "flowery," from its nature;
and Night "still," on account of rest; and the Moon" Gorgonian," on
account of the face in it; and that the time in which it is
necessary to sow is called Aphrodite by the "Theologian." [3] In the
same way, too, the Pythagoreans figuratively called the planets the
"dogs of Persephone;" and to the sea they applied the metaphorical
appellation of "the tears of Kronus." Myriads on myriads of
enigmatical utterances by both poets and philosophers are to be
found; and there are also whole books which present the mind of the
writer veiled, as that of Heraclitus On Nature, who on this very
account is called "Obscure." Similar to this book is the Theology of
Pherecydes of Syrup; for Euphorion the poet, and the Causes of
Callimachus, and the Alexandra of Lycophron, and the like, are
proposed as an exercise in exposition to all the grammarians.
It is, then, proper that the Barbarian philosophy, on which it is
our business to speak, should prophecy also obscurely and by
symbols, as was evinced. Such are the injunctions of Moses: "These
common things, the sow, the hawk, the eagle, and the raven, are not
to be eaten."[4] For the sow is the emblem of voluptuous and unclean
lust of food, and lecherous and filthy licentiousness in venery,
always prurient, and material, and lying in the mire, and fattening
for slaughter and destruction.
Again, he commands to eat that which parts the hoof and ruminates;
"intimating," says Barnabas, "that we ought to cleave to those who
fear the Lord, and meditate in their heart on that portion of the
word which they have received, to those who speak and keep the
Lord's statutes, to those to whom meditation is a work of gladness,
and who ruminate on the word of the Lord. And what is the parted
hoof? That the righteous walks in this world, and expects the holy
eternity to come." Then he adds, "See how well Moses enacted. But
whence could they understand or comprehend these things? We who have
rightly understood speak the commandments as the Lord wished;
wherefore He circumcised our ears and hearts, that we may comprehend
these things. And when he says, 'Thou shalt not eat the eagle, the
hawk, the kite, and the crow;[1] he says,' Thou shalt not adhere to
or become like those men who know not how to procure for themselves
subsistence by toil and sweat, but live by plunder, and lawlessly.'
For the eagle indicates robbery, the hawk injustice, and the raven
greed. It is also written,' With the innocent man thou wilt be
innocent, and with the chosen choice, and with the perverse thou
shall pervert.'[5] It is incumbent on us to cleave to the saints,
because they that cleave to them shall be sanctified."[6]
Thence Theognis writes:--
"For from the good you will learn good things;
But if you mix with the bad, you will destroy any mind you may
have."
And when, again, it is said in the ode, "For He hath triumphed
gloriously: the home and his rider hath He cast into the sea;"[1]
the manylimbed and brutal affection, lust, with the rider mounted,
who gives the reins to pleasures, "He has cast into the sea,"
throwing them away into the disorders of the world. Thus also Plato,
in his book On the Soul, says that the charioteer and the horse that
ran off--the irrational part, which is divided in two, into anger
and concupiscence--fall down; and so the myth intimates that it was
through the licentiousness of the steeds that Phaethon was thrown
out. Also in the case of Joseph: the brothers having envied this
young man, who by his knowledge was possessed of uncommon foresight,
stripped off the coat of many colours, and took and threw him into a
pit (the pit was empty, it had no water), rejecting the good man's
varied knowledge, springing from his love of instruction; or, in the
exercise of the bare faith, which is according to the law, they
threw him into the pit empty of water, selling him into Egypt, which
was destitute of the divine word. And the pit was destitute of
knowledge; into which being thrown and stript of his knowledge, he
that had become unconsciously wise, stript of knowledge, seemed like
his brethren. Otherwise interpreted, the coat of many colours is
lust, which takes its way into a yawning pit. "And if one open up or
hew out a pit," it is said, "and do not cover it, and there fall in
there a calf or ass, the owner of the pit shall pay the price in
money, and give it to his neighbour; and the dead body shall be
his.[2] Here add that prophecy: "The ox knoweth his owner, and the
ass his master's crib: but Israel hath not understood Me."[3] In
order, then, that none of those, who have fallen in with the
knowledge taught by thee, may become incapable of holding the truth,
and disobey and fall away, it is said, Be thou sure in the treatment
of the word, and shut up the living spring in the depth from those
who approach irrationally, but reach drink to those that thirst for
truth. Conceal it, then, from those who are unfit to receive the
depth of knowledge, and so cover the pit. The owner of the pit,
then, the Gnostic, shall himself be punished, incurring the blame of
the others stumbling, and of being overwhelmed by the greatness of
the word, he himself being of small capacity; or transferring the
worker into the region of speculation, and on that account
dislodging him from off-hand faith. "And will pay money," rendering
a reckoning, and submitting his accounts to the "omnipotent Will."
This, then, is the type of "the law and the prophets which were
until John; "[4] while he, though speaking more perspicuously as no
longer prophesying, but pointing out as now present, Him, who was
proclaimed symbolically from the beginning, nevertheless said, "I am
not worthy to loose the latchet of the Lord's shoe."[5] For he
confesses that he is not worthy to baptize so great a Power; for it
behooves those, who purify others, to free the soul from the body
and its sins, as the foot from the thong. Perhaps also this
signified the final exertion of the Saviour's power toward us--the
immediate, I mean--that by His presence, concealed in the enigma of
prophecy, inasmuch as he, by pointing out to sight Him that had been
prophesied of, and indicating the Presence which had come, walking
forth into the light, loosed the latchet of the oracles of the[old]
economy, by unveiling the meaning of the symbols.
And the observances practised by the Romans in the case of wills
have a place here; those balances and small coins to denote justice,
and freeing of slaves, and rubbing of the ears. For these
observances are, that things may be transacted with justice; and
those for the dispensing of honour; and the last, that he who
happens to be near, as if a burden were imposed on him, should stand
and hear and take the post of mediator.
CHAP. IX.--REASONS FOR VEILING THE TRUTH IN SYMBOLS.
But, as appears, I have, in my eagerness to establish my point,
insensibly gone beyond what is requisite. For life would fail me to
adduce the multitude of those who philosophize in a symbolical
manner. For the sake, then, of memory and brevity, and of attracting
to the truth, such are the Scriptures of the Barbarian philosophy.
For only to those who often approach them, and have given them a
trial by faith and in their whole life, will they supply the real
philosophy and the true theology. They also wish us to require an
interpreter and guide. For so they considered, that, receiving truth
at the hands of those who knew it well, we would be more earnest and
less liable to deception, and those worthy of them would profit.
Besides, all things that shine through a veil show the truth grander
and more imposing; as fruits shining through water, and figures
through veils, which give added reflections to them. For, in
addition to the fact that things unconcealed are perceived in one
way, the rays of light shining round reveal defects. Since, then, we
may draw several meanings, as we do from what is expressed in veiled
form, such being the case, the ignorant and unlearned man fails. But
the Gnostior apprehends. Now, then, it is not wished that all things
should be exposed indiscriminately to all and sundry, or the
benefits of wisdom communicated to those who have not even in a
dream been purified in soul, (for it is not allowed to hand to every
chance comer what has been procured with such laborious efforts);
nor are the mysteries of the word to be expounded to the profane.
They say, then, that Hipparchus the Pythagorean, being guilty of
writing the tenets of Pythagoras in plain language, was expelled
from the school, and a pillar raised for him as if he had been dead.
Wherefore also in the Barbarian philosophy they call those dead who
have fallen away from the dogmas, and have placed the mind in
subjection to carnal passions. "For what fellowship hath
righteousness and iniquity?" according to the divine apostle. "Or
what communion hath light with darkness? or what concord hath Christ
with Belial? or what portion hath the believer with the
unbeliever?"[1] For the honours of the Olympians and of mortals lie
apart. "Wherefore also go forth from the midst of them, and be
separated, saith the Lord, and touch not the unclean thing; and I
will receive you, and will be to you for a Father, and ye shall be
my sons and daughters."[2]
It was not only the Pythagoreans and Plato then, that concealed many
things; but the Epicureans too say that they have things that may
not be uttered, and do not allow all to peruse those writings. The
Stoics also say that by the first Zeno things were written which
they do not readily allow disciples to read, without their first
giving proof whether or not they are genuine philosophers. And the
disciples of Aristotle say that some of their treatises are
esoteric, and others common and exoteric. Further, those who
instituted the mysteries, being philosophers, buried their doctrines
in myths, so as not to be obvious to all. Did they then, by veiling
human opinions, prevent the ignorant from handling them; and was it
not more beneficial for the holy and blessed contemplation of
realities to be concealed? But it was not only the tenets of the
Barbarian philosophy, or the Pythagorean myths. But even those myths
in Plato (in the Republic, that of Hero the Armenian; and in the
Gorgias, that of Aeacus and Rhadamanthus; and in the Phoedo, that of
Tartarus; and in the Protagoras, that of Prometheus and Epimetheus;
and besides these, that of the war between the Atlantini and the
Athenians in the Atlanticum) r are to be expounded allegorically,
not absolutely n in all their expressions, but in those which
express the general sense. And these we shall find indicated by
symbols under the veil of allegory. Also the association of
Pythagoras, and the twofold intercourse with the associates which
designates the majority, hearers (<greek>akousmatikoi</greek>), and
the others that have a genuine attachment to philosophy, disciples
(224><greek>aqhmatikoi</greek>, yet signified that something was
spoken to the multitude, and something concealed from them.
Perchance, too, the twofold species of the Peripatetic
teaching--that called probable, and that called knowable--came very
near the distinction between opinion on the one hand, and glory and
truth on the other.
"To win the flowers of fair renown from men,
Be not induced to speak aught more than right."
The Ionic muses accordingly expressly say, "That the majority of
people, wise in their own estimation, follow minstrels and make use
of laws, knowing that many are bad, few good; but that the best
pursue glory: for the best make choice of the everlasting glory of
men above all. But the multitude cram themselves like brutes,
measuring happiness by the belly and the pudenda, and the basest
things in us." And the great Parmenides of Elea is introduced
describing thus the teaching of the two ways:--
"The one is the dauntless heart of convincing truth;
The other is in the opinions of men, in whom is no true faith."
CHAP. X.--THE OPINION OF THE APOSTLES ON VEILING THE MYSTERIES OF
THE FAITH.
Rightly, therefore, the divine apostle says, "By revelation the
mystery was made known to me (as I wrote before in brief, in
accordance with which, when ye read, ye may understand my knowledge
in the mystery of Christ), which in other ages was not made known to
the sons of men, as it is now revealed to His holy apostles and
prophets."[3] For there is an instruction of the perfect, of which,
writing to the Colossians, he says, "We cease not to pray for you,
and beseech that ye may be filled with the knowledge of His will in
all wisdom and spiritual understanding; that ye may walk worthy of
the Lord to all pleasing; being fruitful in every good work, and
increasing in the knowledge of God; strengthened with all might
according to the glory of His power."[4] And again he says,
"According to the disposition of the grace of God which is given me,
that ye may fulfil the word of God; the mystery which has been hid
from ages and generations, which now is manifested to His saints: to
whom God wished to make known what is the riches of the glory of
this mystery among the nations."[5] So that, on the one hand, then,
are the mysteries which were hid till the time of the apostles, and
were delivered by them as they received from the Lord, and,
concealed in the Old Testament, were manifested to the saints. And,
on the other hand, there is "the riches of the glory of the mystery
in the Gentiles," which is faith and hope in Christ; which in
another place he has called the "foundation."[1] And again, as if in
eagerness to divulge this knowledge, he thus writes: "Warning every
man in all wisdom, that we may present every man (the whole man)
perfect in Christ;" not every man simply, since no one would be
unbelieving. Nor does he call every man who believes in Christ
perfect; but he[2] says all the man, as if he said the whole man, as
if purified in body and soul. For that the knowledge does not
appertain to all, he expressly adds: "Being knit together in love,
and unto all the riches of the full assurance of knowledge, to the
acknowledgment of the mystery of God in Christ, in whom are hid all
the treasures of wisdom and of knowledge."[3] "Continue in prayer,
watching therein with thanksgiving."[4] And thanksgiving has place
not for the soul and spiritual blessings alone, but also for the
body, and for the good things of the body. And he still more clearly
reveals that knowledge belongs not to all, by adding: "Praying at
the same time for you, that God would open to us a door to speak the
mystery of Christ, for which I am bound; that I may make it known as
I ought to speak."[5] For there were certainly, among the Hebrews,
some things delivered unwritten. "For when ye ought to be teachers
for the time," it is said, as if they had grown old in the Old
Testament, "ye have again need that one teach you which be the first
principles of the oracles of God; and are become such as have need
of milk, and not of solid food. For every one that par-taketh of
milk is unskilful in the word of righteousness; for he is a babe,
being instructed with the first lessons. But solid food belongs to
those who are of full age, who by reason of use have their senses
exercised so as to distinguish between good and evil. Wherefore,
leaving the first principles of the doctrine of Christ, let us go on
to perfection."[6]
Barnabas, too, who in person preached the word along with the
apostle in the ministry of the Gentiles, says, "I write to you most
simply, that ye may understand." Then below, exhibiting already a
clearer trace of gnostic tradition, he says, "What says the other
prophet Moses to them? Lo, thus saith the Lord God, Enter ye into
the good land which the Lord God sware, the God of Abraham, and
Isaac, and Jacob; and ye received for an inheritance that land,
flowing with milk and honey.[7] What says knowledge? Learn, hope, it
says, in Jesus, who is to be manifested to you in the flesh. For man
is the suffering land; for from the face of the ground was the
formation of Adam. What, then, does it say in reference to the good
land, flowing with milk and honey? Blessed be our Lord, brethren,
who has put into our hearts wisdom, and the understanding of His
secrets. For the prophet says, "Who shall understand the Lord's
parable but the wise and understanding, and he that loves his Lord?"
It is but for few to comprehend these things. For it is not in the
way of envy that the Lord announced in a Gospel, "My mystery is to
me, and to the sons of my house;" placing the election in safety,
and beyond anxiety; so that the things pertaining to what it has
chosen and taken may be above the reach of envy. For he who has not
the knowledge of good is wicked: for there is one good, the Father;
and to be ignorant of the Father is death, as to know Him is eternal
life, through participation in the power of the incorrupt One. And
to be incorruptible is to participate in divinity; but revolt from
the knowledge of God brings corruption. Again the prophet says: "And
I will give thee treasures, concealed, dark, unseen; that they may
know that I am the LORD."[8] Similarly David sings: "For, lo, Thou
hast loved truth; the obscure and hidden things of wisdom hast Thou
showed me."[9] "Day utters speech to day"[10] (what is clearly
written), "and night to night proclaims knowledge" (which is hidden
in a mystic veil); "and there are no words or utterances whose
voices shall not be heard" by God, who said, "Shall one do what is
secret, and I shall not see him?"
Wherefore instruction, which reveals hidden things, is called
illumination, as it is the teacher only who uncovers the lid of the
ark, contrary to what the poets say, that "Zeus stops up the jar of
good things, but opens that of evil." "For I know," says the
apostle, "that when I come to you, I shall come in the fulness of
the blessing of Christ;"[11] designating the spiritual gift, and the
gnostic communication, which being present he desires to impart to
them present as "the fulness of Christ, according to the revelation
of the mystery sealed in the ages of eternity, but now manifested by
the prophetic Scriptures, according to the command of the eternal
God, made known to all the nations, in order to the obedience of
faith," that is, those of the nations who believe that it is. But
only to a few of them is shown what those things are which are
contained in the mystery. Rightly then, Plato, in the Epistles,
treating of God, says: "We must speak in enigmas that should the
tablet come by any mischance on its leaves either by sea or land, he
who reads may remain ignorant." For the God of the universe, who is
above all speech, all conception, all thought, can never be
committed to writing, being inexpressible even by His own power. And
this too Plato showed, by saying: "Considering, then, these things,
take care lest some time or other you repent on account of the
present things, departing in a manner unworthy. The greatest
safeguard is not to write, but learn; for it is utterly impossible
that what is written will not vanish."
Akin to this is what the holy Apostle Paul says, preserving the
prophetic and truly ancient secret from which the teachings that
were good were derived by the Greeks: "Howbeit we speak wisdom among
them who are perfect; but not the wisdom of this world, or of the
princes of this world, that come to nought; but we speak the wisdom
of God hidden in a mystery."[1] Then proceeding, he thus inculcates
the caution against the divulging of his words to the multitude in
the following terms: "And I, brethren, could not speak to you as to
spiritual, but as to carnal, even to babes in Christ. I have fed you
with milk, not with meat: for ye were not yet able; neither are ye
now able. For ye are yet carnal."[2]
If, then, "the milk" is said by the apostle to belong to the babes,
and "meat" to be the food of the full-grown, milk will be understood
to be catechetical instruction--the first food, as it were, of the
soul. And meat is the mystic contemplation; for this is the flesh
and the blood of the Word, that is, the comprehension of the divine
power and essence. "Taste and see that the Lord is Christ,"[3] it is
said. For so He imparts of Himself to those who partake of such food
in a more spiritual manner; when now the soul nourishes itself,
according to the truth-loving Plato. For the knowledge of the divine
essence is the meat and drink of the divine Word. Wherefore also
Plato says, in the second book of the Republic, "It is those that
sacrifice not a sow, but some great and difficult sacrifice," who
ought to inquire respecting God. And the apostle writes, "Christ our
passover was sacrificed for us;"[4]--a sacrifice hard to procure, in
truth, the Son of God consecrated for us.
CHAP, XI.--ABSTRACTION FROM MATERIAL THINGS NECESSARY IN ORDER TO
ATTAIN TO THE TRUE KNOWLEDGE OF GOD.
Now the sacrifice which is acceptable to God is unswerving
abstraction from the body and its passions. This is the really true
piety. And is not, on this account, philosophy rightly called by
Socrates the practice of Death? For he who neither employs his eyes
in the exercise of thought, nor draws aught from his other senses,
but with pure mind itself applies to objects, practises the true
philosophy. This is, then, the import of the silence of five years
prescribed by Pythagoras, which he enjoined on his disciples; that,
abstracting themselves from the objects of sense, they might with
the mind alone contemplate the Deity. It was from Moses that the
chief of the Greeks drew these philosophical tenets.[5] For he
commands holocausts to be skinned and divided into parts. For the
gnostic soul must be consecrated to the light, stript of the
integuments of matter, devoid of the frivolousness of the body and
of all the passions, which are acquired through vain and lying
opinions, and divested of the lusts of the flesh. But the most of
men, clothed with what is perishable, like cockles, and rolled all
round in a ball in their excesses, like hedgehogs, entertain the
same ideas of the blessed and incorruptible God as of themselves.
But it has escaped their notice, though they be near us, that God
has bestowed on us ten thousand things in which He does not share:
birth, being Himself unborn; food, He wanting nothing; and growth,
He being always equal; and long life and immortality, He being
immortal and incapable of growing old. Wherefore let no one imagine
that hands, and feet, and mouth, and eyes, and going in and coming
out, and resentments and threats, are said by the Hebrews to be
attributes of God. By no means; but that certain of these
appellations are used more sacredly in an allegorical sense, which,
as the discourse proceeds, we shall explain at the proper time.
"Wisdom of all medicines is the Panacea,[1] writes Callimachus in
the Epigrams. "And one becomes wise from another, both in past times
and at present," says Bacchylides in the Paans; "for it is not very
easy to find the portals of unutterable words." Beautifully,
therefore, Isocrates writes in the Panathenaic, baring put the
question, "Who, then, are well trained?" adds, "First, those who
manage well the things which occur each day, whose opinion jumps
with opportunity, and is able for the most part to hit on what is
beneficial; then those who behave becomingly and rightly to those
who approach them, who take lightly and easily annoyances and
molestations offered by others, but conduct themselves as far as
possible, to those with whom they have intercourse, with consummate
care and moderation; further, those who have the command of their
pleasures, and are not too much overcome by misfortunes, but conduct
themselves in the midst of them with manliness, and in a way worthy
of the nature which we share; fourth--and this is the
greatest--those who are not corrupted by prosperity, and are not put
beside themselves, or made haughty, but continue in the class of
sensible people." Then he puts on the top-stone of the discourse:
"Those who have the disposition of their soul well suited not to one
only of these things, but to them all--those I assert to be wise and
perfect men, and to possess all the virtues."
Do you see how the Greeks deify the gnostic life (though not knowing
how to become acquainted with it)? And what knowledge it is, they
know not even in a dream. If, then, it is agreed among us that
knowledge is the food of reason, "blessed truly are they," according
to the Scripture, "who hunger and thirst after truth: for they shall
be filled" with everlasting food. In the most wonderful harmony with
these words, Euripides, the philosopher of the drama, is found in
the following words,--making allusion, I know not how, at once to
the Father and the Son:--
"To thee, the Lord of all, I bring
Cakes and libations too, O Zeus,
Or Hades would'st thou choose be called;
Do thou accept my offering of all fruits,
Rare, full, poured forth."
For a whole burnt-offering and rare sacrifice for us is Christ. And
that unwittingly he mentions
the Saviour, he will make plain, as he adds:--"
For thou who, 'midst the heavenly gods,
Jove's sceptre sway'st, dost also share
The rule of those on earth."
Then he says expressly:--
"Send light to human souls that fain would know
Whence conflicts spring, and what the root of ills,
And of the blessed gods to whom due rites
Of sacrifice we needs must pay, that so
We may from troubles find repose."
It is not then without reason that in the mysteries that obtain
among the Greeks, lustrations hold the first place; as also the
layer among the Barbarians. After these are the minor[1] mysteries,
which have some foundation of instruction and of preliminary
preparation for what is to come after; and the great mysteries, in
which nothing remains to be learned of the universe, but only to
contemplate and comprehend nature and things.
We shall understand the mode of purification by confession, and that
of contemplation by analysis, advancing by analysis to the first
notion, beginning with the properties underlying it; abstracting
from the body its physical properties, taking away the dimension of
depth, then that of breadth, and then that of length. For the point
which remains is a unit, so to speak, having position; from which if
we abstract position, there is the conception of unity.
If, then, abstracting all that belongs to bodies and things called
incorporeal, we cast ourselves into the greatness of Christ, and
thence advance into immensity by holiness, we may reach somehow to
the conception of the Almighty, knowing not what He is, but what He
is not. And form and motion, or standing, or a throne, or place, or
right hand or left, are not at all to be conceived as belonging to
the Father of the universe, although it is so written. But what each
of these means will be shown in its proper place. The First Cause is
not then in space, but above both space, and time, and name, and
conception.
Wherefore also Moses says, " Show Thyself to me,"[2]--intimating
most clearly that God is not capable of being taught by man, or
expressed in speech, but to be known only by His own power. For
inquiry was obscure and dim; but the grace of knowledge is from Him
by the Son. Most clearly Solomon shall testify to us, speaking thus:
"The prudence of man is not in me: but God giveth me wisdom, and I
know holy things."[3] Now Moses, describing allegorically the divine
prudence, called it the tree of life planted in Paradise; which
Paradise may be the world in which all things proceeding from
creation grow. In it also the Word blossomed and bore fruit, being
"made flesh," and gave life to those "who had tasted of His
graciousness;" since it was not without the wood of the tree that He
came to our knowledge. For our life was hung on it, in order that we
might believe. And Solomon again says: "She is a tree of immortality
to those who take hold of her."[4] "Behold, I set before thy face
life and death, to love the LORD thy God, and to walk in His ways,
and hear His voice, and trust in life. But if ye transgress the
statutes and the judgments which I have given you, ye shall be
destroyed with destruction. For this is life, and the length of thy
days, to love the LORD thy God."[5]
Again: "Abraham, when he came to the place which God told him of on
the third day, looking up, saw the place afar off."[6] For the first
day is that which is constituted by the sight of good things; and
the second is the soul's[1] best desire; on the third, the mind
perceives spiritual things, the eyes of the understanding being
opened by the Teacher who rose on the third day. The three days may
be the mystery of the seal,[2] in which God. is really believed. It
is consequently afar off that he sees the place. For the region of
God is hard to attain; which Plato called the region of ideas,
having learned from Moses that it was a place which contained all
things universally. But it is seen by Abraham afar off, rightly,
because of his being in the realms of generation, and he is
forthwith initiated by the angel. Thence says the apostle: "Now we
see as through a glass, but then face to face," by those sole pure
and incorporeal applications of the intellect. In reasoning, it is
possible to divine respecting God, if one attempt without any of the
senses, by reason, to reach what is individual; and do not quit the
sphere of existences, till, rising up to the things which transcend
it, he apprehends by the intellect itself that which is good, moving
in the very confines of the world of thought, according to Plato.
Again, Moses, not allowing altars and temples to be constructed in
many places, but raising one temple of God, announced that the world
was only-begotten, as Basilides says, and that God is one, as does
not as yet appear to Basilides. And since the gnostic Moses does not
circumscribe within space Him that cannot be circumscribed, he set
up no image in the temple to be worshipped; showing that God was
invisible, and incapable of being circumscribed; and somehow leading
the Hebrews to the conception of God by the honour for His name in
the temple. Further, the Word, prohibiting the constructing of
temples and all sacrifices, intimates that the Almighty is not
contained in anything, by what He says: "What house will ye build to
Me? saith the LORD. Heaven is my throne,"[3] and so on. Similarly
respecting sacrifices: "I do not desire the blood of bulls and the
fat of lambs,"[4] and what the Holy Spirit by the prophet in the
sequel forbids.
Most excellently, therefore, Euripides accords with these, when he
writes:--
"What house constructed by the workmen's hands,
With folds of walls, can clothe the shape divine?"
And of sacrifices he thus speaks:--
"For God needs nought, if He is truly God.
These of the minstrels are the wretched myths."
"For it was not from need that God made the world; that He might
reap honours from men and the other gods and demons, winning a kind
of revenue from creation, and from us, fumes, and from the gods and
demons, their proper ministries," says Plato. Most instructively,
therefore, says Paul in the Acts of the Apostles: "The God that made
the world, and all things in it, being the Lord of heaven and earth,
dwelleth not in temples made with hands; neither is worshipped by
men's hands, as if He needed anything; seeing that it is He Himself
that giveth to all breath, and life, and all things."[5] And Zeno,
the founder of the Stoic sect, says in this book of the Republic,
"that we ought to make neither temples nor images; for that no work
is worthy of the gods." And he was not afraid to write in these very
words: "There will be no need to build temples. For a temple is not
worth much, and ought not to be regarded as holy. For nothing is
worth much, and holy, which is the work of builders and mechanics."
Rightly, therefore, Plato too, recognising the world as God's
temple, pointed out to the citizens a spot in the city where their
idols were to be laid up. "Let not, then, any one again," he says,
"consecrate temples to the gods. For gold and silver in other
states, in the case of private individuals and in the temples, is an
invidious possession; and ivory, a body which has abandoned the
life, is not a sacred votive offering; and steel and brass are the
instruments of wars; but whatever one wishes to dedicate, let it be
wood of one tree, as also stone for common temples." Rightly, then,
in the great Epistle he says: "For it is not capable of expression,
like other branches of study. But as the result of great intimacy
with this subject, and living with it, a sudden light, like that
kindled by a coruscating fire, arising in the soul, feeds itself."
Are not these statements like those of Zephaniah the prophet? "And
the Spirit of the Lord took me, and brought me up to the fifth
heaven, and I beheld angels called Lords; and their diadem was set
on in the Holy Spirit; and each of them had a throne sevenfold
brighter than the light of the rising sun; and they dwelt in temples
of salvation, and hymned the ineffable, Most High God."[6]
CHAP. XII.--GOD CANNOT BE EMBRACED IN WORDS OR BY THE MIND.
"For both is it a difficult task to discover the Father and Maker of
this universe; and having found Him, it is impossible to declare Him
to all. For this is by no means capable of expression, like the
other subjects of instruction," says the truth-loving Plato. For he
that had heard right well that the all-wise Moses, ascending the
mount for holy contemplation, to the summit of intellectual objects,
necessarily commands that the whole people do not accompany him. And
when the Scripture says, "Moses entered into the thick darkness
where God was," this shows to those capable of understanding, that
God is invisible and beyond expression by words, And "the darkness
"--which is, in truth, the unbelief and ignorance of the multitude--
obstructs the gleam of truth. And again Orpheus, the theologian,
aided from this quarter, says:--
"One is perfect in himself, and all things are made the progeny of
one,"
or, "are born;" for so also is it written. He adds:--
"Him
No one of mortals has seen, but He sees all."
And he adds more clearly:--
"Him see I not, for round about, a cloud
Has settled; for in mortal eyes are small,
And mortal pupils--only flesh and bones grow there."
To these statements the apostle will testify: "I know a man in
Christ, caught up into the third heaven, and thence into Paradise,
who heard unutterable words which it is not lawful for a man to
speak,"--intimating thus the impossibility of expressing God, and
indicating that what is divine is unutterable by human[1] power; if,
indeed, he begins to speak above the third heaven, as it is lawful
to initiate the elect souls in the mysteries there. For I know what
is in Plato (for the examples from the barbarian philosophy, which
are many, are suggested now by the composition which, in accordance
with promises previously given, waits the suitable time). For
doubting, in Timaoeus, whether we ought to regard several worlds as
to be understood by many heavens, or this one, he makes no
distinction in the names, calling the world and heaven by the same
name. But the words of the statement are as follows: "Whether, then,
have we rightly spoken of one heaven, or of many and infinite? It
were more correct to say one, if indeed it was created according to
the model." Further, in the Epistle of the Romans to the Corinthians
it is written, "An ocean illimitable by men and the worlds after
it." Consequently, therefore, the noble apostle exclaims, "Oh the
depth of the riches both of the wisdom and the knowledge of God
!"[3]
And was it not this which the prophet meant, when he ordered
unleavened cakes[4] to be made, intimating that the truly sacred
mystic word, respecting the unbegotten and His powers, ought to be
concealed? In confirmation of these things, in the Epistle to the
Corinthians the apostle plainly says: "Howbeit we speak wisdom among
those who are perfect, but not the wisdom of this world, or of the
princes of this world, that come to nought. But we speak the wisdom
of God hidden in a mystery."[5] And again in another place he says:
"To the acknowledgment of the mystery of God in Christ, in whom are
hid all the treasures of wisdom and knowledge."[6] These things the
Saviour Himself seals when He says: "To you it is given to know the
mysteries of the kingdom of heaven."[7] And again the Gospel says
that the Saviour spake to the apostles the word in a mystery. For
prophecy says of Him: "He will open His mouth in parables, and will
utter things kept secret from the foundation of the world."[8] And
now, by the parable of the leaven, the Lord shows concealment; for
He says, "The kingdom of heaven is like leaven, which a woman took
and hid in three measures of meal, till the whole was leavened."[9]
For the tripartite soul is saved by obedience, through the spiritual
power hidden in it by faith; or because the power of the word which
is given to us, being strong[10] and powerful, draws to itself
secretly and invisibly every one who receives it, and keeps it
within himself, and brings his whole system into unity.
Accordingly Solon has written most wisely respecting God thus:--
"It is most difficult to apprehend the mind's invisible measure
Which alone holds the boundaries of all things."
For "the divine," says the poet of Agrigenturn,[11]--
"Is not capable of being approached with our eyes,
Or grasped with our hands; but the highway
Of persuasion, highest o£ all, leads to men's minds."
And John the apostle says: "No man hath seen God at any time. The
only-begotten God, who is in the bosom of the Father, He hath
declared Him,"[12]--calling invisibility and ineffableness the bosom
of God. Hence some have called it the Depth, as containing and
embosoming all things, inaccessible and boundless.
This discourse respecting God is most difficult to handle. For since
the first principle of everything is difficult to find out, the
absolutely first and oldest principle, which is the cause of all
other things being and having been, is difficult to exhibit. For bow
can that be expressed which is neither genus, nor difference, nor
species, nor individual, nor number; nay more, is neither an event,
nor that to which an event happens? No one can rightly express Him
wholly. For on account of His greatness He is ranked as the All, and
is the Father of the universe. Nor are any parts to be predicated of
Him. For the One is indivisible; wherefore also it is infinite, not
considered with reference to inscrutability, but with reference to
its being without dimensions, and not having a limit. And therefore
it is without form and name. And if we name it, we do not do so
properly, terming it either the One, or the Good, or Mind, or
Absolute Being, or Father, or God, or Creator or Lord. We speak not
as supplying His name; but for want, we use good names, in order
that the mind may have these as points of support, so as not to err
in other respects. For each one by itself does not express God; but
all together are indicative of the power of the Omnipotent. For
predicates are expressed either from what belongs to things
themselves, or from their mutual relation. But none of these are
admissible in reference to God. Nor any more is He apprehended by
the science of demonstration. For it depends on primary and better
known principles. But there is nothing antecedent to the Unbegotten.
It remains that we understand, then, the Unknown, by divine grace,
and by the word alone that proceeds from Him; as Luke in the Acts of
the Apostles relates that Paul said, "Men of Athens, I perceive that
in all things ye are too superstitious.[1] For in walking about, and
beholding the objects of your worship, I found an altar on which was
inscribed, To the Unknown God. Whom therefore ye ignorantly worship,
Him declare I unto you."[2] |