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ON
THE POSTERITY OF CAIN AND HIS EXILE{*} I.
(1) "And Cain went out from before the face of God, and dwelt in the II.
(5) And from whence does Cain go forth? is it from the palace of the ruler of
the world? But what house of God can exist perceptible by the outward senses
except this world which it is impossible and impracticable to quit? For the
great circle of the heaven binds round and contains within itself everything
which has ever been created; and of those things which have already perished,
the component parts are resolved into their original elements, and are again
portioned off among those powers of the universe of which they consist, the loan
which, as it were, was advanced to each, being restored back at unequal periods
of time, in accordance with laws previously laid down, to the nature which
originally made it, whenever that nature chooses to call in its debts. (6)
Again, if any person goes out from any place, that which he leaves behind him is
in a different place from that in which he now is, but if this be true it must
follow that there are some portions of the universe deprived of the presence of
God, who never leaves any place empty or destitute of himself, but who fills up
all things for all time; (7) and if God has not a face (inasmuch as he is not
bound by what may seem appropriate for created things), and if he does not exist
in parts inasmuch as he surrounds all things and is not surrounded by any, it is
impossible for anything to remove and depart from this world as from a city, as
there is no portion of it left without. It now remains for us, considering that
none of these things are spoken of in terms of strict propriety, to turn to the
allegorical system, which is dear to men versed in natural philosophy, taking
the first principles of our argument from this source. (8) If it is hard to
depart from before the face and out of the sight of a mortal king, how can it be
anything but extremely difficult to depart and quit the appearance of God, and
to determine no longer to come into his sight. This indeed is to be left without
any idea of him, and to be mutilated as to the eyes of the soul, (9) and all
those who of necessity have endured this fate, being weighed down by the might
of irresistible and implacable power, are objects rather for pity than for
hatred; but all those who voluntarily and of deliberated purposes have rejected
the living God, exceeding even the bounds of wickedness itself, for what other
evil of equal weight can possibly be found? Such men should suffer not the usual
punishments of evil doers, but something new and extraordinary. And surely no
one could invent a more novel or more terrible penalty than a departure and
flight from the presence of the Ruler of the universe. III.
(10) Accordingly God banished Adam; but Cain went forth from his presence of his
own accord; Moses here showing to us the manner of each sort of absence from
God, both the voluntary and the involuntary sort; but the involuntary sort as
not existing in consequence of any intention on our part, will subsequently have
such a remedy applied to it as the case admits of; for God will raise up another
offspring in the place of Abel, whom Cain slew, a male offspring for the soul
which has not turned by its own intention, by name Seth, which name being
interpreted means irrigation; (11) but the voluntary flight from God, as one
that has taken place by deliberate purpose and intention, will await on
irremediable punishment in all eternity, for as good deeds that are done in
consequence of forethought and design, are better than unintentional ones, so
also among offences those that are undesigned are of less heinousness than those
that are premeditated. IV.
(12) Therefore punishment which is the chastiser of impious men, will await Cain
who has now departed from before the face of God, but Moses will suggest to
those who know God, a most excellent suggestion, to love God and to obey him,
and cleave to him, for he tells men that this is the life which in truth is
tranquil and lasting, {2}{Deuteronomy 30:20.} and he very emphatically invites
us to the honor of the one being who is above all others to be beloved and
honored, bidding us cleave to him, recommending to us a continual and constant
and inseparable harmony and union of friendship with him. (13) These suggestions
and such as these are what he gives to the rest of the world, but he himself so
insatiably desires to behold him, and to be beheld by him, that he supplicates
him to display to his eye his nature of which it is impossible to form a
conjecture, so that he may become acquainted with it, {3}{Exodus 33:18.} that
thus he might receive a most well-grounded certainty of knowledge that could not
be mistaken, in exchange for uncertain doubts; and he will never cease from
urging his desire, but even, though he is aware that he desires a matter which
is difficult of attainment, or rather which is wholly unattainable, he still
strives on, in no way remitting his intense anxiety, but without admitting any
excuse, or any hesitation, or vacillation; using all the means in his power to
gain his object. V.
(14) At all events, he will now penetrate into "the darkness where God
Was."{4}{Exodus 20:13.} That is to say, into those unapproachable and
invisible conceptions which are formed of the living Do. For the great Cause of
all things does not exist in time, nor at all in place, but he is superior to
both time and place; for, having made all created things in subjection to
himself, he is surrounded by nothing, but he is superior to everything. And
being superior to, and being also external to the world that he has made, he
nevertheless fills the whole world with himself; for, having by his own power
extended it to its utmost limits, he has connected every portion with another
portion according to the principles of harmony. (15) When, therefore, the soul
that loves God seeks to know what the one living God is according to his
essence, it is entertaining upon an obscure and dark subject of investigation,
from which the greatest benefit that arises to it is to comprehend that God, as
to his essence, is utterly incomprehensible to any being, and also to be aware
that he is invisible. (16) And it appears to me that the great hierophant had
attained to the comprehension of the most important point in this investigation
before he commenced it, when he entreated God to become the exhibitor and
expounder of his own nature to him, {5}{Exodus 33:12.} for he says, "Show
me thyself;" showing very plainly by this expression that no created being
is competent by himself to learn the nature of God in his essence. VI.
(17) On this account too, Abraham, when he had come unto the place which God had
told him of, "On the third day, looking up, saw the place afar
Off."{6}{Genesis 22:4.} What kind of place? Was it the place to which he
came? And how was it still afar off, if he had already come to it? (18) But
perhaps the meaning which is intended under this expression may be something
like this:--The wise man, being always desirous to comprehend the nature of the
Ruler of the universe, when he is proceeding along the road which leads by
knowledge and wisdom, previously meets with words of God, among which he rests
for a while; and though he had previously determined to proceed by some other
road, he now stops and hesitates; for the eyes of his mind being opened, he sees
more clearly that he had entered upon a chase after a thing which was difficult
to overtake, which constantly retreated before him, and was always at a
distance, and which outstripped its pursuers by placing an immeasurable distance
between them. (19) You think, therefore, rightly that all the speediest things
which are under heaven would appear to be standing still if compared with the
rapidity of the sun, and moon, and other stars. And yet the whole heaven was
made by God; and the maker always goes before that which is made. So that, of
necessity, not only the other things which exist among us, but also that which
has the most rapid motion of all, namely, the mind, may fall short of a proper
comprehension of the great cause of all things by an undescribable distance. But
the stars, as they are themselves in motion, pass by all things that move; but,
though it seems incredible, God, while standing still, outstrips everything.
(20) And it is said that he, at the same moment, is close to us and at a great
distance, touching us with his creative or his punishing powers, which are close
to each individual, and yet at the same time driving away the creature to an
excessive distance from his nature as existing according to its essence, so that
it cannot touch him without even the unalloyed and incorporeal efforts of the
intellect. (21) Therefore we sympathise in joy with those who love God and seek
to understand the nature of the living do, even if they fail to discover it; for
the vague investigation of what is good is sufficient by itself to cheer the
heart, even if it fail to attain the end that it desires. But we participate in
indignation against that lover of himself, Cain; because he has left his soul
without any conception whatever of the living God, having of deliberate purpose
mutilated himself of that faculty by which alone he might have been able to see
him. VII.
(22) It is worth while also to consider the wickedness into which a man who
flies from the face of God is driven, since it is called a tempest. The
law-giver showing, by this expression, that he who gives way to inconsiderate
impulses without any stability or firmness exposes himself to surf and violent
tossing, like those of the sea, when it is agitated in the winter season by
contrary winds, and has never even a single glimpse of calm or tranquility. But
as when a ship having been tossed in the sea is agitated, it is then no longer
fit to take a voyage or to anchor in harbor, but being tossed about hither and
thither it leans first to one side and then to the other, and struggles in vain
against the waves; so the wicked man, yielding to a perverse and insane
disposition, and being unable to regulate his voyage through life without
disaster, is constantly tossed about in perpetual expectation of an overturning
of his life. (23) But the connection of the consequence affects me in no
moderate degree; for it happens that that which comes near to him who is
standing still longs for tranquility, as being something which resembles itself.
Now that which stands still without any deviation is God, and that which is
moved is the creature, so that he who comes near to God desires stability; but
he who departs from him, as by so doing he is approaching a creature easily
overturned, is borne towards that which resembles it. VIII.
(24) On this account it is written in the curses contained in scripture,
"Thou shall never rest; nor shall there be any rest for the sole of thy
Foot."{7}{Deuteronomy 28:65.} And, a little afterwards, we read that,
"Thy life shall hang in doubt before Them."{8}{Deuteronomy 28:66.} For
it is the nature of the foolish man, who is always being tossed about in a
manner contrary to right reason, to be hostile to tranquility and rest, and not
to stand firmly or with a sure foundation on any doctrine whatever. (25)
Accordingly he is full of different opinions at different times, and sometimes,
even in the same circumstances, without any new occurrence having arisen to
affect them, he will be perfectly contrary to himself, --now great, now little,
now hostile, now friendly; and, in short, he will, so to say, be everything that
is most inconsistent in a moment of time. And, as the law-giver says, "All
his life shall hang in doubt before him;" having no firm footing, but being
constantly tossed about by opposing circumstances, which drag it different ways.
(26) On which account Moses says, in another place, "Cursed of God is he
that hangeth on a Tree;"{9}{Deuteronomy 21:23.} because what he ought to
hang upon is God. But such a man has, of his own accord, bound himself to the
body, which is a wooden burden upon us, exchanging hope for desire and a perfect
hope for the greatest of evils; for hope, being the expectation of good things,
causes the mind to depend upon the bounteous God; but appetite, creating only
unreasonable desires, depends on the body, which nature has made to be a sort of
receptacle and abode for the soul. IX.
(27) Let these men, then, hang by their appetites as by a halter; but the wise
Abraham, where he stands, comes near to God, who is also standing. For Moses
says that "Abraham was standing near to God; and coming nigh unto him, he
Said,"{10}{Genesis 18:22, 23.}... For in good truth the unalterable soul is
the only thing that has access to the unalterable God; and being of such a
disposition, it does really stand very near to the Divine power. (28) Therefore
the oracle which was given to the allwise Moses most manifestly shows the
lasting good condition and stability of the virtuous man. Now, the oracle is as
follows: "And do thou thyself stand with Me."{11}{Deuteronomy 5:31.}
By which expression, two things are made clear. One, that it is the living God,
who moves and turns about all other beings, being himself unchangeable and
immoveable. The second is, that he makes the virtuous man a participator in his
own tranquil nature. For, as I suppose, the crooked things are made straight by
his straight rule; so, likewise, are the things that are in motion restrained
and made stationary by the power of him who always stands still and firm. (29)
In this passage, therefore, he commands another being to stand with him: but in
another place he says, "I will go down with thee to X.
(32) Having, therefore, now pointed out each variety, the tranquility of the
good man, and the state of agitation in which the bad man lives, let us now
consider what follows the statement which we have hitherto been examining. For
Moses says that Nod, which name, being interpreted, means the tumult into which
the soul has migrated, is opposite to XI.
(33) After he had said this he proceeds to say, "And Cain knew his wife,
and she conceived and bare Enoch; and he built a city, and called the name of
the city after the name of his son Enoch."{13}{Genesis 4:17.} Is it not
here reasonable to raise the question, why Cain knew his wife? for there had
been no birth of any one other woman since that of Eve who was formed out of the
side of the man, until the woman who is here mentioned; (34) and if any one says
that Cain took his sister to wife, putting the impiety of such a connection out
of the question, he will speak falsely; for Moses represents the daughters of
Adam as born late. What then are we to say? As I imagine, Moses here calls his
wife opinion of impious reason which it forms about things, as crowds of those
who have studied philosophy do: some of them introducing the same opinions into
human life, and others introducing such as are wholly at variance with one
another. (35) What then is the position of the impious man? Why, that the human
mind is the measure of all things; which also they say that one of the ancient
philosophers, Protagoras, used to employ, being a descendant of the folly of
Cain. And from thence I conjecture that his wife, being known to him, brought
forth Enoch; and the name Enoch being interpreted means, thy grace. (36) For if
man is the measure of all things, then, also, all things are a grace and a free
gift of the mind; so that we refer to the eye the grace of sight, to the ears
that of hearing, and to each of the other external senses their appropriate
object, and also to the speech and utterance do we attribute the power of
speaking. And if we judge in this manner of these things, so also do we with
respect to intelligence, in which ten thousand things are comprised, such as
thoughts, perceptions, designs, meditations, conceptions, sciences, arts,
dispositions, and a number of other faculties almost incalculable. (37) What is
it then that the gravest philosophers, who have talked in the most grandiloquent
manner about divine law and the honor due to God, have determined both to say
and to allow to be said, If ye have in ye a mind which is equal to God, which
regulating by its own power all the good and bad things which exist among men,
occasionally mingles both in certain persons, and sometimes distributes both
good and bad to some in an unalloyed state; (38) and if any one accuses you of
impiety, make your defense with a good courage, saying that you have been
brought up very admirably by your guide and teacher, Cain, who recommended you
to honor the powers that are nearest in preference to that cause which was afar
off, to whom you ought to attend for many other reasons, and most especially
because he showed the power of his doctrine by very evident works, having
conquered Abel the expounder of the opposite doctrine, and having removed and
destroyed his doctrine as well as himself. (39) But in my opinion and in that of
my friends, death in the company of the pious would be preferable to life with
the impious; for those who die in the company of the pious everlasting life will
receive, but everlasting death will be the portion of those who live in the
other way. XII.
(40) But as after Cain had begotten Enoch, one of the posterity of Seth is also
subsequently called Enoch, it may be well to consider, whether the two namesakes
were men of different or of similar dispositions and characters. And at the same
time that we examine this question let us also investigate the differences
between other persons bearing the same name. For as Enoch was, so also
Methusaleh and Lamech were both descendants of Cain, and they were no less the
descendants of Seth also. (41) We must therefore be aware that each of the
aforesaid names, being interpreted, has a double signification; for Enoch, being
interpreted, means, as I have already said, "thy grace," and
Methusaleh means, the sending forth of death. Lamech, again means, humiliation.
Now the expression, "Thy grace," is by some persons referred to the
mind that is in us; and by more learned and sounder interpreters it is referred
to the mind of other persons. (42) They therefore who say that all thinking, and
feeling, and speaking, are the free gifts of their own soul, utter an impious
and ungodly opinion, and deserve to be classed among the race of Cain, who,
though he was not able to master himself, yet dared to assert that he had
absolute possession of all other things; but as for those persons who do not
claim all the things in creation as their own, but who ascribe them to the
divine grace, being men really noble and sprung out of those who were rich long
ago, but of those who love virtue and piety, they may be classed under Seth as
the author of their race. (43) The race of these men is difficult to trace,
since they show a life of plotting, and cunning, and wickedness, and
dissoluteness, full of passion and wickednesses, as such a life must be. For all
those whom God, since they pleased him well, has caused to quit their original
abode, and has transformed from the race of perishable beings to that of
immortals, are no longer found among the common multitude. XIII.
(44) Having, therefore, thus distinguished the indications intended to be
afforded by the name of Enoch, let us now proceed in regular order to the name
of Methuselah; and this name is interpreted, a sending forth of death. Now there
are two meanings contained in this word; one, that according to which death is
sent to any one, and the other, that according to which it is sent away from any
one. He, therefore, to whom it is sent, immediately dies, but he, from whom it
is sent, lives and survives. (45) Accordingly, he who receives death is akin to
Cain, who is dying as to the life in accordance with virtue; but he from whom
death is sent away and kept at a distance, is most nearly related to Seth, for
the good man enjoys real life. (46) And again, the name Lamech, which means
humiliation, is a name of ambiguous meaning; for we are humiliated either when
the vigor of our soul is relaxed, according to the diseases and infirmities
which arise from the irrational passions, or in respect of our love for virtue,
when we seek to restrain ourselves from swelling selfopinions. (47) Now the
former kind of humiliation arises out of weakness, being a species of that
multiform disease of many changes, leprosy. "For when his appearance seems
more Humble,"{14}{Leviticus 13:3.} being broken as to its level and fresh
face, than the lawgiver says that that humble disease leprosy exists. (48) But
the second kind of humiliation arises from the strength of perseverance, which
is followed by propitiation, according to the perfect number of the decade; for
the people are enjoined to humble their souls on the tenth day of the month, and
this means to put away all high boasting, the putting away of which works the
rejection of all offences, both voluntary and involuntary. Accordingly, the
Lamech who is humbled in this sense, is the descendant of Seth, and the father
of the just Noah; but he who is humbled in the former manner is the descendant
of Cain. XIV.
(49) And it may become us next to consider on what account this same man is
represented as founding and building a city, for it is only a multitude of men
who have need of a city to dwell in; but the three who were the only human
beings in existence at that time might have thought the foot of a mountain, or a
small cave, a most sufficient abode. And I said, indeed, the three; but in all
probability I might have spoken of him by himself; for the parents of Abel, who
had been so treacherously slain, would never have endured to inhabit the same
city with his murderer--a man who had committed fratricide, which is a greater
pollution than even homicide. (50) For it is plain that it is not only
extraordinary, but utterly contrary to all reason, that one man should build a
city. In what manner could he do it? He could not build even the most trifling
portion of a house, unless he employed other men as his assistants. Would the
same man be able at the same time to cut stones, to cut wood, to work in iron
and in brass, and to throw the vast circumference of walls round the city? to
build up propylaea, and inter-walls, and temples, and sacred precincts, and
porticoes, and docks, and houses, and all the other public and private buildings
which one is accustomed to find in a city? And moreover, besides all these
things, would he be able to carry burdens, to move away masses of earth, to
widen narrow passages, to make fountains and water-courses, and all the other
things with which a city ought to be provided? (51) Perhaps, therefore, since
all these ideas are inconsistent with truth, it would be better to look upon the
statement as an allegory, and to say that Cain determined to build up his own
doctrine like a city. XV.
(52) Since, therefore, every city consists of houses and inhabitants, and laws,
the houses, in Cain's case, are the reasons which he alleges to prove his point;
by which, as from a wall, he fights against the persuasive attacks of his
enemies; inventing fabulous devices against the truth. The inhabitants are the
companions of impiety, ungodliness, self-love, haughtiness, falsehood, vain
opinions; the men wise in their own conceit, the men who know not wisdom as
relating to truth, the men who are full of ignorance, and stupidity, and folly;
and all the other similar and kindred evils. The laws are, lawlessness,
injustice, inequality, intemperance, boldness, folly, insolence, immoderate
indulgence in pleasure, and innumerable appetites in despite of nature. (53) Now
of such a city as this, every impious man is found to be a builder in his own
miserable soul, until God deliberately causes complete and great confusion to
their sophistical Arts.{15}{Genesis 11:4.} And this will be, when not only
"they build a city and tower, the head of which will reach to heaven,"
that is to say, [...]{16}{there is a hiatus in the text here: Mangey translates
it as if the deficiency were to be supplied by ton noun, "the mind."}
the mind or the reason of each individual as conversant about making great
works, which they represent as having for its head a conception peculiar to
itself, which is called in symbolical language heaven. For it is plain that the
head and object of every reasoning must be the aforesaid mind; for the sake of
which, long digressions and sentences are in the habit of being used by men who
write histories. XVI.
(54) And to such a pitch of accursed impiety have they gone, that not only do
they attempt to raise up such cities by themselves, but they even compel the
virtue-loving multitude of Israel to join them, appointing superintendents and
teachers of evil actions to govern them. For it is said that, when they were
ill-treated by the superintendents, they built three cities for the prince of
the country, Peithom, Rameses, {17}{Exodus 1:11.} and On, which is XVII.
(59) This hill Jacob, the wrestler with God, in his agreements with Laban, calls
a witness, showing in a most express manner, and in the form of a precept, that
the mind is a witness to each individual of the determinations which he comes to
in secret; and conscience, which is the most incorruptible and truth-telling
witness of all, was built before these cities; (60) for Moses says that the
spies came to Chebron, and these three are Acheman, and Jesein, and Thalamein,
of the sons of Enoch: and this he adds, "and Chebron was built seven years
before Janis, in Egypt,"{18}{Numbers 13:23.} and these synonymous
appellations are distinguished according to their species in a most natural
manner. Chebron, being interpreted, means compunction, and this is of two kinds;
one with reference to the soul being joined to the body, the other with
reference to its being adapted to virtue. (61) Now the soul that subjects itself
to bodily compunctions has the beforementioned inhabitants. Acheman, being
interpreted, means, my brother, and Jesein means "outside of me," and
Thalmein means, some one in suspense; for it follows of necessity, that the body
must be thought akin to the souls that love the body, and that external good
things must be exceedingly admired by them, and all the souls which have this
kind of disposition depend on dead things, and, like persons who are crucified,
are attached to corruptible matter till the day of their death. (62) But the
soul that is united to virtue has for its inhabitants those persons who are
preeminent for virtue, persons whom the double cavern has received in pairs,
Abraham and Sarah, Isaac and Rebeckah, Leah and Jacob, virtues and those who
possess them; Chebron itself keeping the treasure-house of the memorials of
knowledge and wisdom, which is more ancient than Janis and the whole land of
Egypt, for nature has made the soul more ancient than the body, that is than
Egypt, and virtue more ancient than vice, that is than Janis (and the name
Janis, being interpreted, means the command of answer), estimating seniority
rather by dignity than by length of time. XVIII.
(63) On which principle also it is that he also calls Israel, who was the
younger brother in point of time, "the first born Son,"{19}{Exodus
4:22.} judging of him by his merit, signifying thereby that, since to see God is
the most clear proof of primogeniture, he is in consequence pardoned as the
eldest offspring of the uncreate incomprehensible God, conceived by that virtue
which is hated among men, and to whom the law enjoins that "the honors due
to seniority shall be paid, as being the Eldest."{20}{Deuteronomy 21:17.}
(64) On this account also the number seven is produced in its order,
subsequently to the number six, but in power it is superior to every other
number, and differs not from the unit, and Moses also shows us this in the
conclusion of his account of the creation, where he says, "And God ceased
on the seventh day from all the works that he had made; and God blessed the
seventh day, and hallowed it," because on it he ceased from all his works
which God had begun to make, {21}{Genesis 2:2.} (65) and after that he concludes
his account in these words, "This is the book of the generation of heaven
and of earth when they were made, on the day in which God made the heaven and
the earth; and these things were done in the first day, so that the seventh day
is referred to the unit which is the first day and the beginning of the whole. I
have dwelt at length on this topic, with the object of showing more plainly the
opinion which Cain thought it right to build up like a city. XIX.
(66) Now the son of Enoch is called Gaidad, {22}{Genesis 4:18.} which, being
interpreted, means a flock of sheep, very consistently with what has gone
before; for he who attributes everything to the mind, which is not able to
comprehend even its own nature, so as to pronounce what kind of thing it is,
would be very likely to beget a number of irrational powers collected into one
flock; for such is not the opinion of men who are able to reason. (67) But every
flock which has not a shepherd to govern it does of necessity meet with great
disasters, inasmuch as it is not able, of its own power, to repel what is
injurious to it, and to choose what will be advantageous; in respect of which
Moses says in his prayer, "Let the Lord, the God of spirits and of all
flesh, look out a man who shall be over this assembly, who shall go out before
their faces, and who shall come in, and who shall bring them out, and who shall
bring them in, and so the synagogue of the Lord shall not be like unto sheep
which have no Shepherd."{23}{Numbers 26:16.} (68) For when the president,
or superintendent, or father, or whatever we like to call him, of our composite
body, right reason, is departed, having left the flock that is in us, it being
neglected and suffered to go its own way, perishes and the loss to its master is
great. But the irrational and wandering flock, being deprived of its shepherd,
who ought to admonish and instruct it, strays away to a great distance from
rational and immortal life. XX.
(69) On which account the son of Gaided is called Mehel, the name which, being
interpreted, means, "from the life of God." For since the flock is
devoid of reason, and God is the fountain of reason, it follows of necessity,
that a man who lives in an irrational manner is separated from the life of God;
for to live according to God is defined by Moses to consist in loving him; for
Moses says to the children of Israel, "Your life is to love the living
God."{24}{Deuteronomy 30:20.} (70) And he gives as an example of the
opposite lot the goat, on which the lot falls to be the scape-goat, for he says,
"He shall place it living before the Lord, that he may offer prayers over
it, and send it out into the Wilderness,"{25}{Leviticus 16:10.} giving
these directions with great exactness. (71) For as no one in his senses would
greatly extol old men for abstaining from pleasure, because old age, which is a
long and incurable disease, has relaxed and enfeebled the nerves of their
appetites; but one would praise young men, because, while their appetites are
influenced by the vigor of youth, nevertheless they, being well supplied with
instruments to check them, namely, with reasons derived from good instruction,
have allayed the great conflagration and boiling over of the passions: so, in
the case of these men, whom no disease is accustomed to detach from any evil way
of life, less praise is due to them, because they are fortunate without any
express intention of their own, according to the good fortune of their nature:
but those whom such a disease does rise up against and attack, receive greater
praise; if they, making a fair stand, are willing and prove able to destroy it;
(72) for to be able, by a vigorous exertion, to destroy the baits of attractive
pleasure, properly receives that praise which belongs to good actions, done with
a deliberate purpose. Since,
therefore, [...]{26}{there is something lost from the text here, and Mangey
professes himself unable to supply it without the assistance of some MS. which
may be hereafter discovered.} but diseases and infirmities which have been sent
against us flourish; let us endeavor to overturn and destroy them. For to offer
prayers over them has nearly such an effect as this: it is confessing that,
though we have them in our soul living and flourishing, we nevertheless do not
yield, but make a stand against them all, and resist them vigorously, until we
have entirely sent away the scape-goat and made atonement. XXI.
(73) What, then, follows a man who lives not in accordance with the will of God
but the death of the soul? And this is named Methuselah, the interpretation of
which name is, "the sending out of death," on which account he is the
son of Mehel, who has quilted his own life, to which death is sent, that is to
say the death of the soul, which is nothing else than a conversion of it by
irrational passion. (74) This passion, therefore, when it has conceived, brings
forth incurable diseases and infirmities with great pains, by which it is thrown
down and convulsed, and humbled and tortured. For each of the diseases oppresses
it, bringing upon it an unspeakable burden, such that no one is able even to
raise his head beneath it. And this is named Lamech; the interpretation of which
name is, "humiliation;" so that Lamech is properly represented as the
son of Methuselah, being the passion of the death of the soul, humble, yielding,
an infirmity which is the offspring of irrational desire. XXII.
(75) "And Lamech took to himself two wives; the name of the one was Adah,
and the name of the other was Zillah."{27}{Genesis 4:19.} Everything which
a wicked man taketh himself is altogether blamable, as being polluted by his
impure mind; and so, on the contrary, all deliberate actions of virtuous men are
praise-worthy; on which account now, Lamech, who is taking wives unto himself,
is choosing the greatest possible evils. Again, when Abraham, Jacob, and Aaron
take to themselves wives, they choose appropriate good things to dwell with.
(76) Now Moses speaks thus in the case of Abraham: "And Abraham and Nachor
took unto themselves wives; the name of Abraham's wife was Sarai."{28}{Genesis
11:29.} And in the case of Jacob he says, "Rise up and go into Mesopotamia,
to the house of Bethuel, thy mother's father, and take unto thyself a wife from
thence of the daughters of Laban thy mother's Brother."{29}{Genesis 28:2.}
In the case of Aaron he says, and Aaron took Elizabeth, the daughter of Aminadab,
the sister of Naassom, unto him to be his Wife."{30}{Exodus 6:23.} (77)
Isaac too and Moses take unto themselves wives, but they do not take them of
their own act entirely; but Isaac, "When he went into the house of his
Mother,"{31}{Genesis 24:67.} is said to have taken a wife; and to Moses,
"The man with whom he lodged gave his daughter Zipporah to be his
Wife."{32}{Exodus 2:21.} XXIII.
(78) Now it is not without a purpose that the differences between these persons
are recorded by the lawgiver. For in the case of those who
practice virtue and improve, and become better,
their deliberate choice of the good bears testimony that their labor shall not
be dismissed without its reward; but in the case of those who are endued with
self-taught and naturally implanted wisdom, it follows that reason is betrothed
to them not by their own act, but by God, and that they take unto themselves
knowledge, the fitting companion through life of the wise. (79) But he who is
wholly devoted to the things of ordinary men, the lowly and grovelling-minded
Lamech, first of all takes for his wife Adah, which name being interpreted,
means "witness," having been his own manager of this marriage. For he
thinks that Leah, which means the motion and passage out of the mind according
to easy perceptions, without anything interfering to hinder its easy
comprehension of all things, is the first good for man. (80) "For
what," says he, "could be better than that one's thoughts, one's
contemplations, one's conjectures, one's suspicions, in a word, all one's ideas,
should, as I may say, proceed on well-set feet, so as to arrive at their desired
goal without stumbling, the mind being borne witness to in everything that is
uttered." But I, if any man employs a felicitous and well directed mind to
good objects only, account that man happy taking the law for my teacher in this
view. For the law called Joseph "a prosperous Man,"{33}{Genesis 39:3.}
not in all things, but "in those matters in which God gave him
prosperity." And all the gifts of God are good. (81) But if any one uses
the acuteness and readiness of his nature, not solely for virtuous objects, but
also for opposite purposes, being himself indifferent in a matter which is not
indifferent, he should be accounted unhappy. At all events, it is said, in the
manner of a curse, in the place where mention is made of the confusion of
tongues, "And now nothing will be restrained from them of all the things
which they have imagined to Do."{34}{Genesis 11:6.} For in truth it is an
irremediable calamity for the soul to be prosperous in whatever it undertakes,
when its undertakings are disgraceful. (82) But I should pray, if ever I had a
design to commit injustice, that I might fail in my iniquity; and if I had a
wish to live in a manner unbecoming a man, that I might fail in my intemperance;
and if I wished to conduct myself with boldness and unscrupulous wickedness,
that my failure in such boldness and unscrupulous wickedness might be complete:
unless in the case of those who have determined to steal, or to commit adultery,
or to murder, it is not an advantage to find their purposes in all these matters
fail and become abortive. XXIV.
(83) Do thou, therefore, O my mind, avoid Adah, who bears witness to evil
things, and who is borne witness to on each of its attempts at such things. And
if you think fit to take her as a partner, she will bring forth to you the
greatest possible evil, namely, Jubal, {35}{Genesis 4:20.} the interpretation of
which name is "changing;" for if you are delighted with any chance
testimony, you will become desirous to upset and overturn every thing, changing
the limits which have been affixed by nature to every thing. (84) And Moses is
very indignant with such people as these, and curses them, saying, "Cursed
is he that removeth his neighbour's Landmark."{36}{Deuteronomy 27:17.} And
what he means by one's neighbours, and that which is near to a man, is the good.
"For it is not good," says he, "to depart to the heave, nor to go
beyond the Sea,"{37}{Deuteronomy 30:12.} in the search after what is good;
for that stand near to, and close by, each individual. (85) And he divides the
good by a threefold division, speaking most strictly in accordance with natural
philosophy. "For it is," says he, "in thy mouth, and in thy
heart, and in they hands;" that is to say, in thy words, and in thy
intentions, and in thy actions; for these are the component parts of the good,
of which it is naturally compounded. So that the want of one portion does not
only make the whole incomplete, but does entirely destroy it; (86) for of what
use is it to say what is excellent, but to think and to do what is most
shameful? This is the way of the sophists. For those who make long speeches
about prudence and perseverance, annoy the ears even of those who are very fond
of hearing good conversation; and yet, in their designs and in the actions of
their lives they are found to err. (87) And what is the use of entertaining such
sentiments as are proper, but acting and speaking most improperly, and injuring
by your actions all who are exposed to the effect of them? Again, it is
blameworthy even to do what is right, without any intention or reason; (88) for
what is done without these is a portion of involuntary conduct, and is on no
account, and under no circumstances to be praised; but if it were to happen
that, as in the case of a lyre, so all the sounds of the good could be adapted
to any man, and that we could make the conversation agree with the intention,
and the intention with the action; then such a man would be considered perfect
and really well constituted. So that he who removes the landmarks of the good is
justly accursed, and is justly spoken of as such. XXV.
(89) But it is not our creation that has established these boundaries, but
reasons, which are older than we, or than any thing upon the earth; and which,
moreover, are divine. In accordance with which the law also has declared the
same thing, charging every one of us not to adulterate the coinage of virtue, in
these words, "Thou shall not remove thy neighbour's landmark which thy
fathers Established."{38}{Deuteronomy 19:14.} And in another passage he
says, "Ask thy father, and he will tell thee; ask thy elders, and they will
make it known to thee, how the Most High, when he divided the nations, dispersed
the sons of Adam, and fixed the boundaries of the nations according to the
number of the angels of God. And the portion of the Lord was his people Jacob,
the limitation of the inheritance of XXVI.
(91) Perhaps, therefore, it is the right reason of our souls that he calls their
father, and its companions and friends that he calls elders. These are they who
first established the boundaries of virtue, to whom it is worth while to become
pupils for the sake of learning and instruction in necessary things. And what is
necessary is as follows. When God was dividing and drawing a wall between the
nations of the soul, separating those who spoke different languages; and when
establishing the sons of the earth in their abodes, he dispersed them and
removed to a distance from himself those whom he called the sons of Adam; then
he fixed the boundaries of the offspring of virtue, making them equal in number
to the angels; for as many angels of God as there are, so many nations and
species of virtue are there. (92) What, then, are the portions of his angels,
and what is that share which is the inheritance of the ruler and governor of
all? The portion of those ministers are the specific virtues; but the portion of
the ruler of all its his chosen people XXVII.
(94) For it is always the case that if a second impression is stamped upon any
thing, the mark of any previous one is effaced. But the impression which is thus
made is so far from permitting evil things to be taken in exchange for what is
good, that it does not allow even what is beautiful to be taken in exchange for
what is laborious; but looking upon what is laborious (poneµron) as evil, since
it would be downright folly not to discard what is bad for the sake of the
acquisition of what is better, but only taking (poneµros) to be equivalent to
epiponos or kamateµros, in which sense, indeed, the Attic writers use the word
when they mark the first syllable with an acute, thus, poneµros. (95) Now the
precept is of this kind, "Of every thing which passeth under the rod, the
tenth is sacred to the Lord; thou shall not exchange good for bad, and if thou
dost exchange, both the thing itself and that for which it is exchanged shall be
sacred,"{40} {Leviticus 27:32.} and yet how can that which is evil possibly
be sacred? The truth is that, as I said, he means here what is laborious, not
what is bad; so that what is really intended is something of this kind:--The
honorable is a perfect good, but labor is an imperfect advantage. If therefore
you acquire what is perfect, you need no longer seek what is deficient; but if
with an excessive superfluity you choose still to continue laboring, then know
that you will appear to be exchanging one thing for another, but in reality you
will be acquiring both, for even if both are of equal value they nevertheless
are not completely whole. XXVIII.
(96) But a thing which is sacred is proved to be so by three witnesses, the
middle number, education, and perfect number. On which account it is said,
"Of everything which cometh in the number under the rod, the tenth is
sacred," for that which is not accounted worthy of being comprehended under
number is profane, not sacred; but that which is according to number is
approved, as having been already tested. Accordingly the law says, that the corn
which was collected in Egypt by Joseph could not be Counted,"{41}{Genesis
41:49.} and adds, "for it was without number," since the things which
nourish the body and the Egyptian passions, are utterly unworthy to be included
in any calculation. (97) But the rod is the symbol of education, for without
being looked at sternly, and chastised for some causes, it is impossible for any
one to be admonished and corrected to any good purpose; but the number ten is a
confirmation of that perfection which takes place in accordance with
improvement, with which he must begin who having brought forth an offspring
educated it, and brought the wished-for fruit to maturity. XXIX.
(98) Thus much it may be sufficient to say concerning him who changes and
adulterates the ancient coinage, whom Moses also calls the father "of those
that dwell in the tents of those who fed cattle." Now by cattle here he
means the irrational and outward senses, and by those who feed cattle he means
the worshippers of pleasure and indulgences of the passions, who supply these
senses with their external objects by way of food, and are a long way removed
from shepherds. For some, like rulers, chastise those of their flocks who are
unruly; but others, like entertainers or masters of a feast, supply them with
unlimited food, and give them fearlessness as to the consequences of their sins;
for it follows of necessity that such men are at once victims of insatiable
appetite, and of insolence, the daughter of satiety; (99) accordingly, he who
re-fashions and changes all honorable things in a seemly and natural manner, is
the father of those who pursue every object of the outward sense, and all other
inanimate objects; for if he had pursued the incorporeal natures which are
accessible only to the intellect, he would have preserved those boundaries
marked out by his elders, which they established as a defense to virtue,
stamping each appearance of virtue with its own appropriate
Image.{42}{Deuteronomy 27:2.} XXX.
(100) And Jacob's brother, he says, was Jubal, {43}{Genesis 4:21.} and the
interpretation of this latter name is "inclining," being symbolically
speech according to utterance; for this is naturally the brother of intellect;
and it is with extraordinary propriety that he called the conversation of that
intellect which changes affairs, "inclining," for it agrees after a
fashion and harmonizes with both, as the equivalent weight does in a scale, or
as a vessel which is tossed by the sea inclines first to one side and then to
the other, from the violence of the waves; for the foolish man has not learnt
how to say anything firm or stable. (101) But Moses does not think it right to
incline either to the right or to the left, or in short to any part of the
earthly Edom; but rather to proceed along the middle way, which he with great
propriety calls the royal road, {44}{Numbers 20:17.} for since God is the first
and only God of the universe, so also the road to him, as being the king's road,
is very properly denominated royal; and this royal road you must consider to be
philosophy, not that philosophy which the existing sophistical crowd of men
pursues (for they, studying the art of words in opposition to truth, have called
crafty wickedness, wisdom, assigning a divine name to wicked action), but that
which the ancient company of those men who practiced
virtue studied, rejecting the persuasive juggleries of pleasure, and adopting a
virtuous and austere study of the honorable--(102) this royal road, which we
have stated to be true and genuine philosophy, the law calls the word and reason
of God; for it is written, "Thou shall not turn aside from the word which I
command thee this day, to the right hand nor to the left," So that it is
shown most manifestly that the word of God is identical with the royal road,
since Moses' words are not to depart either from the royal road, or from this
word, as if the two were synonymous, but to proceed with an upright mind along
the middle and level road, which leads one aright. XXXI.
(103) "Now this Jubal," says Moses, "is the father who showed men
the use of the psaltery and of the Harp."{45}{Genesis 4:21.} He in the
strictest consistency with nature calls distinctly uttered language the father
of music and of all the instruments used in music; for nature, having given the
organ of voice to animals as the first and most perfect of organs, afterwards
gave to this organ all the harmonies, and all the different kinds of melodies,
in order that it might be a previously made model for those organs which are
hereafter to be made by art. (104) And as he made an ear spherical, fashioning
lesser circles in their greater ones and framing it as in a lathe, with the
object of preventing the sounds of the voice which come from without from being
wasted and dissipated, so that the voice when collected together and closely
packed within the circle might, by a sort of diffusion of the power of hearing,
be poured over the different channels of the principal part. And this
immediately served as a model for those theatres which are found in handsome
cities; so that the shape of a theatre is skilfully dictated by the mechanism of
the ear. So also, nature, which formed animals, stretching the rough artery like
a musical canon, and wearing beneath the harmonic and chromatic and diatonic
kinds of sounds, according to the innumerable variations of combined and
separated melodies, made a model in accordance with which every musical
instrument might be made. XXXII.
(105) Perhaps, at all events, flutes and lyres, and similar instruments which
utter melodies, are as far inferior to the music of nightingales or swans as a
thing made after a model, and an imitation must be from the archetypal model, or
a perishable species from an imperishable genus; for it is not fitting to
compare the music of man with that of any other animal, since it has an especial
privilege with which it is honored, namely, articulate distinctness of speaking;
(106) for all other animals, having a broken utterance in their voice, by this
and by an incessant change of tones alone give pleasure to our ears. But man,
being furnished by nature with the means not only of speaking but also of
singing articulately, charms both the sense of hearing and the mind, soothing
the one with his song and influencing the other with ideas; (107) for, as an
instrument, if it be given into the hands of a man who has no skill as a
musician, is inharmonious, but if given to a musician it becomes harmonious
according to the skill that is in him. So in the same manner speech, when put in
motion by a worthless mind, is inharmonious; but, when it is put in motion by a
virtuous mind, it is found to be very melodious. (108) A lyre, indeed, or any
similar instrument, if it be not struck by some one, is silent; and speech, too,
if it be not struck by the principal part, that is to say, the mind, is of
necessity tranquil. And, again, as musical instruments are transposed and
adapted to an infinite number of mixtures of airs, so also speech corresponds to
them, becoming an interpreter of things; (109) for who would converse in a
similar manner with parents and children, being by nature the slave of the one,
and by birth the master of the others? And who, again, would talk in the same
manner to brothers or cousins; or, in short, to near and to distant relations?
Who, again, could do so to friends and to strangers, to fellow citizens and to
foreigners, though there may be no great difference in point of fortune, or
nature, or age between them? For one must behave differently while associating
with an old man and with a young one; and, again, with a man of high reputation
and a humble man, with a servant and a master; and, again, with a woman and a
man, and with an illiterate and a clever man. (110) And why need one cite an
incredible variety of persons to whom speech varies itself, so as at one time to
assume one character and at another time another? For it would not interpret
great things and small, numerous things and rare, private and public matters,
sacred and profane affairs, or old and new events in the same manner; but would
use, in each case, language appropriate to the number, or importance, or
magnitude of the affairs under discussion; at one time elevating itself to a
lofty style, and at another time, on the contrary, confining and humbling
itself. (111) But as circumstances and persons give varieties to speech, so also
do the causes of things and the manner in which they are done; and, moreover,
those points especially with which everything is concerned, namely, time and
place. Very beautifully, therefore, is he who inclines voices, namely Jubal,
called "the father of the psaltery and of the harp," from a portion of
the whole science of music, as has been shown already. XXXIII.
(112) The descendants, therefore, of Adah, and what she herself is, have now
been explained. Let us consider next the other wife of Lamech, Zillah, and what
she brings forth. Zillah, then, being interpreted, means "shadow," a
symbol of the equalities of the body and of the external good things, which, in
their real essence, are in no way better than a shadow. Is not beauty a shadow,
which, after it has flourished for a brief time, withers away? And are not
strength and activity of body shadows, which any chance disease can destroy? And
the organs of the external senses, and the accuracy of their use, which any
sudden cold may obstruct, or old age, that inevitable and common disease of all
men, may impair, are not they shadows? And, again, are not riches and glory, and
authority and honors, and all the external circumstances which are accounted
goods, are not they, I say, all shadows? (113) But one ought to lead the mind,
as if by the steps of a flight of stairs, up to the origin of everything. Men in
the rank of those who are considered illustrious have gone to Delphi, who have
consecrated their happy lives to the service of that place, and like writings
which have become effaced, not only in consequence of the lapse of ages but also
by the vicissitudes which time brings bout, they have then expired
[...]{46}{there is an hiatus in the text in this sentence. I have followed
Mangey's Latin translation.} There are some again whom the impetuosity of an
overflowing torrent, as it were, has suddenly extinguished and carried away.
(114) From all these shadows, then, and all these unsubstantial dreams a son is
born, whom his parents called Tubal (this name being interpreted means
"all"). For they with great wisdom laying it down (instead of those
things which are accounted good things by the multitude) that competency
combined with good health is happiness, consider that in that is united
everything great or small, in short everything. (115) But if there were any such
thing as an absolutely independent authority added, then becoming full of
arrogant domination, and elated with vanity and false opinions, forgetting
themselves and the contemptible material of which they are composed, they look
upon themselves as composed of a more valuable material than the composition of
man admits of; and becoming swollen with pride, they think themselves worthy of
even divine honors. At all events, before now some persons have ventured to say,
that they "do not know the true God,"{47}{Exodus 5:2.} forgetting
their own human nature, by reason of the immoderate excess of corporeal and
external things [...] and each imagining [...]{48}{another hiatus occurs here.} XXXIV.
(116) Then Moses says, "He was a hammer-beater and forger of brass and
Iron:"{49}{Genesis 4:22, where he is called Tubalcain.} for the soul of
that man who is intent on corporeal pleasures or external things is beaten by a
hammer, like apiece of iron on an anvil, being drawn out according to the long
and thin-drawn extensions of the appetites. Accordingly, you may see men fond of
their bodies at every time, and in every place laying lines and nets to catch
those objects that they desire; and others, who are lovers of money or covetous
of glory, letting loose their desire and eagerness for those things to the
furthest boundaries of earth and sea, and dragging in from all quarters by their
unlimited desires, as if by so many nets, whatever can gratify them, till the
excessive tension, being broken by its great violence, drags back those who are
dragging at it, and throws them down headlong. (117) All these men are causes of
war, on account of which they are said to be workers in brass and iron, by means
of which metals wars are carried on. For if any one contemplates the history of
the greatest public or private quarrels that have arisen among men and among
cities, he will not be wrong if [...]{50}{here again there is an hiatus in the
text.} he looks upon all of them, whether upon those which took place long ago,
or upon those which are now raging, or on all that will ever arise hereafter, as
being caused either by the beauty of a woman, or by a love of money, or, in
short, by some desire for the excessive indulgence of the body, and for some
superfluity of external things: (118) but no foreign war and no civil war has
ever existed for the sake of instruction or virtue, which are the good things of
the mind, which is the best part of us; for these things are in their nature
peaceful, and by them good laws and tranquil stability, and whatever else is
most beautiful to the sharpseeing eyes of the soul, not to the dim perceptions
of the body, are seen to be established. For the perceptive powers of the body
look only upon the external surface, but the eye of the mind penetrates within,
and going deep down surveys all the interior and hidden things which are removed
out of the reach of bodily sight. (119) And nearly all the troubles, and
confusions, and enmities which arise among men, are about absolutely nothing,
but about what is really a shadow: for Moses called Tubal the son of Zillah,
that is to say of shadow, the maker of the warlike instruments of brass and
iron, speaking philosophically, and being guided not by verbal technicalities,
but by the exceeding propriety of the names; for he knew that every naval and
every land expedition chooses to encounter the greatest dangers for the sake of
bodily pleasures, or with a view to obtain a superfluity of external good
things, of which nothing is firm or solid, as is testified by the history of
time, which brings all things to proof: for they are like superficial sketches,
being in themselves perishable and of no duration. XXXV.
(120) Moses proceeds to say, that Tubal's sister was Noeman, the interpretation
of which name is "fatness." For it follows that those who pursue a
luxurious condition of the body, and the other objects which I have mentioned,
do get fat when they obtain any of the things that they desire: but such fatness
as this I lay down as not strength but weakness; for it teaches a man to depart
from the honor due to God, which is the first and most excellent power of the
soul: (121) and the law is a witness to this which in the great hymn speaks
thus--"He was fat, he was rich, he was exceeding broad, and he forsook God
who had made him, and he forgot God his Savior."{51}{Deuteronomy 32:15.}
For in truth those men whose lives have been exceedingly fortunate and are so at
the time, do not remember the eternal God, but they think time their god; (122)
on which account Moses bears witness, exhorting us to war against the contrary
opinions, for he says, "The time has departed from them, and the Lord is
among Us."{52}{Numbers 14:9.} So that those men by whom the life of the
soul is honored, have divine reason dwelling among them, and walking with them;
but those who pursue a life of pleasure have only a brief and fictitious want of
opportunities: these men, therefore, having swollen extravagantly, and become
enormously distended by their profuse fatness and luxury, have burst asunder.
But the others, being made fat by that wisdom which nourishes the souls that
love virtue, have a firm and unshaken power, a specimen of which is the fat
which is sacrificed as a whole burnt-offering from every victim: (123) for Moses
says, "All the fat shall belong to the Lord by the everlasting
Law;"{53}{Leviticus 3:16.} so that the fat of the mind is offered up to God
and is appropriated to him, owing to which it is made immortal; but the fat
which clings to the body and belongs to external things is referred to time,
which is contrary to God, through which it very rapidly wastes away. XXXVI.
(124) Therefore, concerning the wives of Lamech and his children, I think that
enough has been said. Let us now consider what we may look upon as the
resurrection of Abel, who was treacherously slain. Moses tells us, "And
Adam knew his wife Eve, and she conceived and brought forth a son, and he called
his name Seth; for, said he, "God has raised me up another seed instead of
Abel, whom Cain Slew."{54}{Genesis 4:25.} The interpretation of the name
Seth, is "irrigation." (125) As, therefore, the seeds and plants which
are put into the ground grow and blossom through being irrigated, and are thus
made fertile for the production of fruits, but if they are deprived of moisture
they wither away, so likewise the soul, as it appears when it is watered with
the wholesome stream of wisdom, shoots forth, and brings fruit to perfection.
(126) Now, irrigation may be looked upon in a two-fold light: with regard to
that which irrigates, and with regard to that which is irrigated. And might one
not say that each of the outward senses is irrigated by the mind as by a
fountain, which widens and extends all their faculties, as if they were so many
channels for water? No one, therefore, in his senses would say, that the eyes
see, but that the mind sees by means of the eyes; or that the ears hear, but
that the mind hears by the instrumentality of the ears; or that the nostrils
smell, but that the predominant part of man smells through the medium of the
nostrils. XXXVII.
(127) On which account it is said in Genesis, "And a fountain went up from
the earth, and watered all the face of the Earth."{55}{Genesis 2:6.} For
since nature has allotted the most excellent portion of the whole body, namely
the face, to the outward senses, therefore the fountain which goes up from the
superior part, being diffused over various parts, and sending up its streams
like so many watercourses as high as the face, by their means conducts the
faculties to each of the organs of the outwards senses. In this way in truth, it
is that the word of God irrigates the virtues; for that is the beginning and the
fountain of all good actions. (128) And the lawgiver shows this, when he says,
"And a river went out of XXXVIII.
(130) And of what kind they are, he proceeds to show in a few words, deriving
his explanation from the natural things of art; for he introduces Agar as
filling a leathern bag with water, and giving her child Drink.{58}{Genesis
21:19.} Now Agar is the handmaid of Sarah, the new dispensation of perfect
virtue; and she is correctly represented so. Since, therefore, having come to
the depth of knowledge, which Moses here calls a well, she draws up (filling the
soul as if it were a vessel) the doctrines and speculations which she is in
pursuit of, wishing to feed her child on the things on which she herself is fed.
(131) And Moses, by her child, means, a soul which has lately learnt to desire
instruction, and which has, in a manner, just been born to learn. In reference
to which, the boy, when he has grown up to man's estate, becomes a sophist, whom
Moses calls an archer; {59}{Genesis 21:20.} for whatever argument he applies his
mind to, at that, as at a target, he shoots all his reasons, as an archer shoots
his arrows. XXXIX.
(132) But Rebekkah is found to give her pupil drink no longer by improvement,
but by perfection. How so the law will tell us: "For the damsel," says
Moses, "was very beautiful to the sight, and was a maiden; no man had known
her. And when he had gone down to the fountain, she filled her pitcher, and came
up again; and the servant ran forward to meet her, and said, Give me now to
drink a little water from thy pitcher. And she said, Drink, my lord. And she
made haste, and took down the pitcher on her arm, and gave to him to drink until
he ceased drinking, And said, and I will also give to thy camels to drink, until
they have all drunk; and she made haste, and emptied her pitcher into the
trough, and running to the well, she drew water for the
Camels."{60}{Genesis 24:16.} (133) Here who can help wondering at the
minute accuracy of the lawgiver as to every particular? He calls Rebekkah a
maiden, and a very beautiful maiden, because the nature of virtue is unmixed and
free from guile, and unpolluted, and the only thing in all creation which is
both beautiful and good; from which arose the Stoic doctrine, that the only
thing that was beautiful was the good. XL.
(134) Now of the four virtues, some are always virgins, and some from having
been women become changed into virgins, as Sarah did; "For it had ceased to
be with her after the manner of Women,"{61}{Genesis 18:11.} when she began
to conceive her happy offspring Isaac. But that which is always a virgin, is
that of which Moses says, "And no man whatever knows her." For in
truth, it is not permitted to any mortal to pollute incorruptible nature, nor
even clearly to comprehend what it is. If indeed he were able by any means to
become acquainted with it, he would not cease to hate and regret it; (135) on
which account Moses, in strict accordance with the principles of natural
philosophy, represents Leah as Hated.{62}{Genesis 29:31.} For those whom the
charms of pleasures, which are with Rachel, that is to say, with the outward
sense, cannot be endured by Leah, who is situated out of the reach of the
passions; on which account they repudiate and detest her. But as far as she
herself is concerned, her alienation from the creature produces her a close
connection with God, from whom she receives the seeds of wisdom, and conceives,
and travails, and brings forth virtuous ideas, worthy of the father who begot
them. If therefore, you, O my soul, imitating Leah, reject mortal things, you
will of necessity turn to the incorruptible God, who will shed over you all the
fountains of his good. XLI.
(136) "But Rebekkah," says Moses, "went down to the fountain to
fill her pitcher, and came up again." For from what source is it natural
for the mind that thirsts after wisdom to be filled, except from the wisdom of
God, that fountain which never fails, and to which the soul that descends comes
up again like a virtuous disciple? For those who descend out of a vain pride,
the reason of virtue receives, and taking them up by means of fame raises them
to a height. On which account it is that Moses seems to me to use the
expression, "Go, descend, and come Up,"{63}{Exodus 32:7.} as if every
one who measures his own loveliness comes forth more gloriously in the eyes of
the judges of truth. And he speaks of these matters with great caution. (137)
For Agar bears a leathern bag to the well, but Rebekkah carries a pitcher. For
the one who devotes himself to instruction and to the energetical branches of
learning has need of some incorporeal things as it were of the outward senses,
of vessels, and eyes, and ears, for a proper contemplation of the objects of her
speculation. For from seeing many things and hearing many things, there is
derived, in the case of those who are fond of learning the advantage which
proceeds from knowledge. But the one who is filled with unalloyed wisdom has
need only of a leathern habitation, which is no better than none at all. For the
soul which loves unsubstantial things has learnt to put off the whole leathern
bag of reasons, that is to say the body, and brings only a pitcher which is the
symbol of a vessel, which contains the principal portion in great size and
abundance, like water; as to which, those who are clever in such matters may
make it a subject of philosophical speculation, whether it is a membrane or a
heart. (138) Therefore, the man who is fond of learning, seeing men imbibing the
sciences like water, from wisdom that divine fountain, runs up, and meeting them
becomes a suppliant to them to know how he may allay his thirst for learning.
And the soul which has received the best possible education, namely, the lesson
not to envy, and to be liberal, immediately proffers to him the stream of
wisdom, and invites him to drink abundantly, adding also this that she calls him
who is only a servant her lord. This is the meaning of that most dogmatic
assertion, that the wise man alone is free, and a king, even if he have ten
thousand masters over his body. XLII.
(139) Most correctly, therefore, after the servant has said, "Give me a
little water to drink," does she make answer, not in the manner
corresponding to his request: "I will give you to drink," but
"Drink." For the one expression would have been suited to one who was
displaying the riches of God, which are poured forth for all who are worthy of
them and who are able to think of them; but the other expression is appropriate
to one who professes that she will teach. But nothing which is connected with
mere professions is akin to virtue. (140) But he describes in a most skilful
manner the language used by her who teaches and benefits her pupils. For
"she made haste," he says, "and took down the pitcher on her
arm." Her alacrity to serve the man was displayed by her making haste, and
such alacrity is seated in the mind, beyond which envy is cast away. But by the
expression, "taking down the pitcher on her arm," we see intimated the
prompt and eager attention of the teacher to the pupil; (141) for those teachers
are foolish who attempt to regulate their explanations not by a reference to the
capacity of their pupils, but to their own superior ability, not being aware
that there is a vast difference between making a display and giving a lesson.
For he who is making a display, relying on the good fortune of his present way
of proceeding, brings into sight, without any trouble, the works at which he has
for a long while been laboring at home, like the works of painters or sculptors,
seeking for praise from the multitude. But he who is endeavoring to teach
others, like a good physician, has a regard not to the greatness of his own
skill, but to the capacity of his patient who is to be healed; not thinking how
much he can do by his art, for it is unspeakable how much this may be; but what
the patient requires, aiming at moderation, and bringing forward what may
improve him. XLIII.
(142) On which account Moses says in another passage, "Thou shall lend a
loan to him who asks you for one, as much as he requires, having regard to what
he Requires."{64}{Deuteronomy 15:8.} By the second phrase showing that it
is not everything which is to be given, but only such things as are suitable to
the requirements of those who are asking for them. For to give an anchor, or an
oar, or a rudder to a husbandman, or ploughs or a spade to a captain of a ship,
or a lyre to a physician, or instruments suited to manual labor to a musician,
would be ridiculous, unless indeed one ought to offer a thirsty man costly
viands, or a hungry man unmixed wine in abundance, so as to show at once one's
own riches and one's want of humanity, by turning the souls of one's companions
into ridicule. The quantity to be given in an act of beneficence is defined
according to due proportion, which is a most useful thing. For, says Moses, do
not give all that right reason is able to give, but as much as he who is asking
the loan is worthy to receive. (143) Do you not see that even God does not utter
his oracles, having a regard to their being in proportion to the magnitude of
his own oracular power, but always having respect to the capacity of those who
are to be benefited by them? Since who could receive the whole power of the
words of God, which are too mighty for any one to listen to? On which account
those persons appear to speak with great truth, who say to Moses, "Do thou
speak to us, and let not God speak to us, lest we Die."{65}{Exodus 20:19.}
For they know that they have not in themselves any organ which can be worthy of
God who is giving laws to his church; (144) nor, indeed, could even the whole
world, both land and sea, contain his riches if he were inclined to display
them, unless we think that the descent of the rains and of the other things that
happen in the world are appointed to take place according to the pre-arranged
periods of the seasons, and not all at once, because of the scarcity and rarity
of the things themselves, and not from any regard to the advantage of those who
are benefited by them; who would be injured rather than be benefited by a
continual enjoyment of such gifts. (145) On this account it is, that God always
judiciously limits and brings out with wise moderation his first benefits,
stopping them before those who partake of them become wanton through satiety;
and then he bestows others in their stead; and again a third class of advantages
instead of the second set, and so on, continually substituting new blessings for
those of older date, at one time giving such as are different from those which
went before, and at another time such as are almost identical with them; for the
creature is never wholly destitute of the blessings bestowed by God, since if he
were he would be utterly destroyed; but he is unable to endure an unlimited and
measureless abundance of them. On which account, as he is desirous that we
should derive advantage from the benefits which he bestows upon us, he weighs
out what he gives so as to proportion it to the strength of those who receive
it. XLIV.
(146) Rebekkah, therefore, must be praised, who, in obedience to the injunctions
of her father, having taken down the vessel of wisdom on her arm from a higher
place, proffered her pitcher to the disciple; by the pitcher being understood
that teaching which he is competent to receive. (147) And beyond all other
things, I especially admire her exceeding liberality; for though she had only
been asked for a small draught, she gave a large one, until she had filled the
whole soul of the learner with wholesome speculations. For Moses says, "She
gave him to drink till he ceased from drinking," a most marvelous example
to teach us humanity. For if any one should not happen to be in want of many
things, but should come forward, and out of shame ask only for a very little,
let us not give him only what he mentions, but also those things of which he
makes no mention, but of which he is nevertheless in reality in need. (148) But
it is not sufficient for the complete enjoyment of his teacher's lessons, that
the disciple should merely comprehend what the master has taught him, unless he
has also got memory. On which account, making a display of her bounteous
disposition, when he has satisfied himself with the water, she offers to give
his camels water also, which we have already said are here put symbolically for
memory. For the animal while eating its food ruminates, and when, having stooped
down it has received a heavy burden, with exceedingly great vigor of muscle it
rises up lightly; (149) and in the same manner also, the soul of the man who is
devoted to learning, when the burden of its speculations is placed upon it,
becomes more lowly, and when it has risen up it rejoices; and from that
mastication, and as it were the softening, of the first food that is placed down
before it, arises its memory of those speculations. (150) But she, beholding the
nature of the servant to be well calculated for the reception of virtue, emptied
her whole pitcher into the cistern, that is to say, she emptied the whole
knowledge of the teacher into the soul of the learner. For the sophists, from a
desire of gain and also from envy, repressing the natural characters of their
pupils, keep silence about many things which ought to be mentioned, laying up
for themselves a source of gain for future times. (151) But virtue is an
ungrudging and most liberal feeling, so that it does not hesitate to assist
another with hand and foot, as the proverb goes, and with all its power.
Therefore, pouring all that she knew into the mind of the pupil as into a
cistern, she went again to the well to draw water, that is to say, she went to
the ever-flowing wisdom of God, that what had been already imparted might be
firmly fixed in by memory, and that he might also be irrigated with the
knowledge of other and newer things. For the wealth of the wisdom of God is
illimitable, and as a tree which is continually putting forth new shoots after
the old ones, so that it never ceases growing young again, and being in the
flower of its strength. (152) So that they are marvelously simple people who
have ever had an idea of coming to the end of any branch of knowledge whatever.
For that which has seemed to be near and within reach is nevertheless a long way
distant from the end; since no created being is perfect in any department of
learning, but falls as far short of it as a thoroughly infant child just
beginning to learn does, in comparison of a man who both by age and skill is
qualified to be a master. XLV.
(153) And we must inquire the cause why the handmaid gave the servant drink from
the fountain, but gave the camels water from the well. May it not perhaps be
that the stream here signifies the sacred scripture itself, which irrigates the
sciences, and that the well is rather akin to memory? For the depths which he
has already mentioned, he produces by means of memory as it were out of a well;
(154) and such persons as these one ought to admit because of the goodness of
their natural disposition. But there are some men among those who
practice virtue to whom the all-beneficent God has shown the way that
leads to virtue, such that at first it is accounted rough, and steep, and
difficult, but subsequently level and easy, having changed the bitterness of the
wayfarer's labor to sweetness. And how he has wrought this change we will now
tell. (155) When he led us forth out of Egypt, that is to say, out of the
passions which excite the body, we, travelling in the desert, that is to say, in
the path of pleasure, encamped in the place called Marah, a place which had no
drinkable water, but where all the water was Bitter.{66}{Exodus 15:23.} For
still the pleasures which are brought into action by means of the eyes, and
ears, and belly, and the parts adjacent to the belly, were tempting to us, and
charmed us exceedingly, sounding close to us. (156) When, therefore, we desired
to be entirely separated from them, they dragged us back, exerting themselves in
opposition to us, and entwining themselves round us, and soothing us with all
kinds of juggling tricks and assiduous blandishments; so that we, yielding to
their unremitting caresses, became alienated from and disinclined to labor, as
something very bitter and intolerable, and designed to run back again to Egypt,
that is to say, to the condition of an intemperate and lascivious life, if the
Savior had not speedily taken pity on us, and thrown a sweetening branch like a
medicine upon our soul, causing it to love labor instead of hating it. (157) For
he knew, inasmuch as he was our Creator, that we could not possibly survive any
existing thing unless there were in us an intense love of doing so. Therefore,
men never succeed in attaining any object that they desire if they pursue it
without any connection with or consideration of fitness. But when friendship is
added, and also a familiarity with the loved object, their endeavors then
succeed rightly. XLVI.
(158) This is the food of a soul which is inclined to the practice of virtue, to
consider labor a very sweet thing instead of a bitter one, which, however, it is
not allowed to all persons to participate in; but to those only by whom the
golden calf, the animal made by the Egyptians, the body, is sprinkled over with
water after having been burnt with fire, and broken to pieces. For it is said in
the sacred scriptures, that "Moses having taken the calf burnt it with
fire, and broke it up into small pieces, and threw the pieces into the water and
caused the children of XLVII.
(162) And why need I dwell on the subject more, going through each of the senses
and animals separately? For this point has been long agreed upon among all the
most eminent historians and philosophers, who have all said that nature is the
mother of the irrational animals, and the stepmother of men, perceiving the
bodily weakness of men, and the surpassing strength of brute animals in
everything. With great propriety, therefore, the artist pounded the calf to
pieces; that is to say, dividing it into parts, he showed that all the things
which the body has in abundance are very far removed from real good, and are in
no respect different from those things which are scattered on the water. (163)
On which account the scripture tells us that the calf, after having been pounded
to pieces, was scattered on the water, to signify that no genuine plant of good
can ever flourish in corruptible matter; for as a seed, when thrown into the
stream of a river or into the sea, cannot display its proper powers; for it is
impossible, unless it has once taken hold with its roots, as with anchors, of
some firm portion of earth, that any branch should be firmly fixed or should
shoot up, I do not say to any height, but even as a creeper along the ground, or
that it should ever bring forth fruit at the periodical seasons of the year, for
any great and violent rush of water coming on washes away all the germinating
vigor of the seed. In the same manner all the superfluities contained in the
vessel of the soul which are ever spoken of or celebrated are destroyed before
they can have any existence, the corporeal substance continually flowing off
from them. (164) For how can there be such things as disease and old age and all
kinds of corruptions, if there were not a continual drawing off of words, which
are theoretical streams; the hierophant, therefore, thinks it Right{68}{i have
followed Mangey here in reading axioi, instead of apaxioi, though he prints the
latter in the text as the reading of all the MSS.} to irrigate our minds with
these words, for the sake of burning up the pleasures, of pounding to pieces and
reducing to a thin and impalpable dust, and utterly destroying the system of the
corporeal goods; and of making us recollect that the true good has never at any
time germinated or blossomed from any one of them, just as nothing flourishes
from seeds which are sown in water. XLVIII.
(165) But bulls, and rams, and goats, which Egypt holds in honor, and all other
images of corruptible matter which, in report alone, are accounted God's, have
no real existence, but are all fictitious and false; for those who look upon
life as only a tragedy full of acts of arrogance and stories of love, impressing
false ideas on the tender minds of young men, and using the ears as their
ministers, into which they pour fabulous trifles, waste away and corrupt their
minds, compelling them to look upon persons who were never even men in their
minds, but always effeminate creatures as God's; (166) for the calf was not made
of every description of female ornament, but only of the earrings of the women.
The lawgiver showing us by this that nothing wrought with hands is a visible and
true God, but only so by report, and as far as he is thought so, and that, too,
the report of a woman and not of a man; for it is the conduct of a soul utterly
enervated and rendered completely effeminate to receive such nonsense. (167) But
he who is truly God is perceived, and felt, and recognized, not only by means of
one's ears, but also by the eyes of our mind, through his mighty works which are
done in the world, and through the rapidity of his operations; on which account
in the great song it is said (the speaker assuming the character of God),
"Behold! behold! it is I!"{69}{Deuteronomy 32:39.} as if that real
existing God could be more easily conceived by the mind than proved by verbal
demonstration; (168) but it is not correct to say that the living God is
visible, that is rather an abuse of language, arising from referring God himself
to his separate acts of power; for even in the passage cited above, he does not
say, "Behold me," for it is wholly impossible that God according to
his essence should be perceived or beheld by any creature, but he says,
"Behold! it is I," that is to say, behold my existence; for it is
sufficient for the reasoning powers of man to advance so far as to learn that
there is and actually exists the great cause of all things, and to attempt to
proceed further, so as to pursue investigations into the essence or distinctive
qualities of God, is an absolute piece of folly; (169) for God did not grant
this even to the all-wise Moses; not though he addressed innumerable requests to
him, all having this object; but an oracle was delivered to him, telling him,
"Thou shall see my back parts, but my face thou shall not
See;"{70}{Exodus 33:23.} and the meaning of this is, that all the things
which are behind God are within the comprehension of a virtuous man, but he
himself alone is incomprehensible; and he is incomprehensible by any direct and
immediate access (for by such means it is only explained what kind of being he
is), but he may be understood in his subsequent and consistent faculties; for
they, by means of the works accomplished by them, declare not his essence, but
his existence. XLIX.
(170) Therefore the mind having generated the foundation of good [...]{71}{there
is again an hiatus in the text here. Mangey conjectures diagoµgeµs, "way
of life," to be the word which has fallen out.} and the primary principle
of virtue, namely Seth, or irrigation, boasts with an honorable and holy boast;
for she says, "God has raised up to me another seed, instead of Abel whom
Cain Slew,"{72}{Genesis 4:25.} for it has been said with great exactness
and neatness, that no single divine seed ever falls to the ground, but that they
all rise up from the things of earth, and leave them, and are borne upwards to
heaven; (171) but the seeds which are sown by mortals, whether for the
generation of animals or of plants, do not all come to perfection; but we must
be content if more are not wasted than those which remain above; and God sows
nothing in our souls which is incomplete; but his seed is all so seasonable and
so perfect that every one of them is at once borne forward to produce abundance
of its appropriate fruit. L.
(172) But when Moses says here that Seth sprung up as another or different seed,
he does not say from which it was different; was it different from Abel who was
treacherously slain, or from Cain who slew him? But may we not say perhaps that
the original seed from which each of these sprung was different? That from which
Cain sprung, inasmuch as it was hostile; for a thirst for virtue is the most
hostile thing possible to that deserter, wickedness; that from which Abel
sprung, as friendly and kindred; for that which is beginning to exist is a
different thing from, but not a contrary thing to, that which is perfected; and
so that which pertains to creation is different from that which pertains to the
uncreate. (173) On this account Abel, after having quitted the mortal body,
departed to the better nature, and took up his abode with that. But Seth, as
being the seed of human virtue, will never quit the race of mankind. But first
of all he will receive his growth up to the number ten, that perfect number,
according to which the just Noah exists; and then he will receive a second and a
better growth from his son Shem, ending in a second ten, from which the faithful
Abraham is named. And he will also have a third growth, and one more perfect
than the number ten, extending from him to Moses, that man who is wise in all
things, for he is the seventh from Abraham, not revolving, like an initiated
worshipper, in the circle which is exterior to holy things, but like a
hierophant, making his abode in the inmost shrines. LI.
(174) And consider the advances towards improvement made by the soul of the man
who is eager for, and insatiable in, his craving after good things; and the
illimitable riches of God, who gives the end of some things to be the beginnings
of others; for the end of the knowledge which is according to Seth is the
beginning of the just Noah; and his perfection again is the beginning of the
education of Abraham; and the most perfect wisdom of Abraham is the first
instruction of Moses; (175) and the two daughters of Lot, the man who was
subdued and overthrown by the weakness of the soul, namely, intention and
agreement, desire to become pregnant by the mind, that is to say, by their
father, acting in opposition to him who said, "God has raised up for me
..."{73}{Genesis 19:32.} For that which the living God did for him, this
they affirm that the mind is able to do for them, introducing the doctrine of an
intoxicated and frenzied soul. It is indeed the act of sober reason, both to
confess that God is the Creator and the Father of the universe; and the conduct
of one utterly fallen in intoxication and drunkenness, to fancy that he himself
is the bringer about of each of human affairs. (176) Evil opinions therefore
will not come into association with their father, before a great quantity of the
unmixed wine of folly has been found upon him, and destroyed any sense that may
have previously been in him; for it is written, "They made their father
drink wine." So that if they do not give him drink, they will never receive
legitimate seed from him while he is sober; but when he has been soaked in wine,
and has become utterly intoxicated and senseless, then they will become
pregnant, and have a culpable labor and offspring, which will be truly accursed.
LII.
(177) On which account Moses has separated his impious and obscure progeny from
the whole of the divine company; for he says, "The Ammonites and the
Moabites shall not come into the assembly of the Lord:"{74}{Deuteronomy
23:3.} and these are the descendants of the daughters of Lot, supposing that
everything is generated of the outward sense and of mind, being male and female
like a father and mother, and looking upon this as in real truth the cause of
all generation: (178) but as, even if we were to commit such an error as this,
still emerging as it were out of that troubled sea, we may lay hold on
repentance, which is a firm and saving thing, and must never let it go till we
have completely escaped from the billowy sea, the headlong violence of sin:
(179) as Rachel, when formerly praying for mind, as if that were able to raise
up children, and when she received the answer, "Am I equal to
God?"{75}{Genesis 30:2.} attended to what was said to her, and when she
understood it, made a most pious recantation; for the recantation of Rachel is
recorded in scripture, a most God-loving prayer, "May God grant to me
another Son,"{76}{Genesis 30:24.} such a prayer as no foolish person is
permitted to make, who pursues no object but his own pleasure, and who thinks
everything else mere folly and ridiculousness. LIII.
(180) And the leader of this opinion is Onan the brother of the skin-wearing Er.
"For he," says the scripture, "knowing that the seed would not be
his, when he went in unto his brother's wife, spilled his seed upon the
Ground:"{77}{Genesis 38:9.} he transgressed all the boundaries of self-love
and of fondness for pleasure. (181) Should I not say to this man, If you have a
regard to your own advantage you will destroy everything that is excellent, and
that too without deriving any advantage therefrom? You will put an end to the
honor due to parents, the attention of a wife, the education of children, the
blameless services of servants, the management of a house, the government of a
city, the firm establishment of laws, the guardianship of morals, reverence to
one's elders, the habit of speaking well of the dead, good fellowship with the
living, piety towards God as shown both in words and in deeds: for you are
overturning and throwing into confusion all these things, sowing seed for
yourself alone, and nursing up pleasure, that gluttonous intemperate origin of
all evil. LIV.
(182) From which that priest and servant of the only good God, Phineas, rising
up{78}{--that wise regulator of all the corporeal words and expressions, so as
never to behave erroneously or insolently through the medium of them; for the
interpretation of the name Phineas is "the bridle of the
mouth"--}having taken a coadjutor, that is to say, having inquired into and
examined the nature of things, and having found that nothing is more honorable
than virtue, stabbed and slew with a sword the creature devoted to pleasure, and
hostile to virtue, and all the places from which all false and illegitimate
delights and enjoyments spring: (183) for the law says that, "He thrust the
woman through her belly." Thus, therefore, having caused the difference
that existed in him to cease, and having discarded his own pleasure, and burning
with zeal for God, the First Cause and holy God, he was honored and crowned with
the two most valuable of all prizes, peace and the priesthood; with the one
because both his name and his conduct are akin to peace: (184) for it follows of
necessity that a consecrated mind, being its minister and servant, must do
everything in which its master delights; and he delights in the firm
establishment of good law, and tranquility, and stability, and in the discarding
of wars and [...]{79}{there is another hiatus here, which Mangey proposes to
fill up with the words kai staseoµn, "and seditions."} meaning not
only such as cities make upon one another, but also those which take place in
the soul; and these are more important and more injurious, inasmuch as they
injure the more divine portion of us, namely, our reason, while arms and weapons
can only reach to the injury of our bodies or possessions, but have never any
power to injure a healthy soul. (185) Rightly therefore have cities established
a custom, that before they turn arms and engines of destruction against one
another to lead to slavery and utter destruction, they should seek to persuade
all the citizens to put An{80}{the text is corrupt here. The text has katageµs,
a word manifestly mutilated. Mangey proposes katargeµsasthai, and translates it
"ut tollerent."} end to the great and formidable and unceasing
factions which exist in themselves, for faction and sedition, if we must speak
the truth, is the archetypal model of wars, and if that be destroyed, there will
no longer be any wars which are made in imitation of it; but the race of mankind
will attain to the blessing and enjoyment of profound peace, being taught by the
law of nature, that is, by virtue, to honor God, and to cleave to the employment
of serving him, for this is the source of happiness and length of life. |
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