SAINT AUGUSTINE
THE CITY OF GOD: BOOK FIVE
TABLE OF CONTENTS
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AUGUSTIN FIRST DISCUSSES THE DOCTRINE OF FATE,
FOR THE SAKE OF CONFUTING THOSE WHO ARE DISPOSED TO REFER TO FATE THE POWER AND INCREASE
OF THE ROMAN EMPIRE, WHICH COULD NOT BE ATTRIBUTED TO FALSE GODS, AS HAS BEEN SHOWN IN THE
PRECEDING BOOK. AFTER THAT, HE PROVES THAT THERE IS NO CONTRADICTION BETWEEN GOD'S
PRESCIENCE AND OUR FREE WILL. HE THEN SPEAKS OF THE MANNERS OF THE ANCIENT ROMANS, AND
SHOWS IN WHAT SENSE IT WAS DUE TO THE VIRTUE OF THE ROMANS THEMSELVES, AND IN HOW FAR TO
THE COUNSEL OF GOD, THAT HE INCREASED THEIR DOMINION, THOUGH THEY DID NOT WORSHIP HIM.
FINALLY, HE EXPLAINS WHAT IS TO BE ACCOUNTED THE TRUE HAPPINESS OF THE CHRISTIAN EMPERORS.
PREFACE
SINCE, then, it is established that the complete
attainment of all we desire is that which constitutes felicity, which is no goddess, but a
gift of God, and that therefore men can worship no god save Him who is able to make them
happy,--and were Felicity herself a goddess, she would with reason be the only object of
worship,--since, I say, this is established, let us now go on to consider why God, who is
able to give with all other things those good gifts which can be possessed by men who are
not good, and consequently not happy, has seen fit to grant such extended and
long-continued dominion to the Roman empire; for that this was not effected by that
multitude of false gods which they worshipped, we have both already adduced, and shall, as
occasion offers, yet adduce considerable proof.
CHAP. 1.--THAT THE CAUSE
OF THE ROMAN EMPIRE, AND OF ALL KINGDOMS, IS NEITHER FORTUITOUS NOR CONSISTS IN THE
POSITION OF THE STARS.
The cause, then, of the greatness of the Roman
empire is neither fortuitous nor fatal, according to the judgment or opinion of those who
call those things fortuitous which either have no causes, or such causes as do not proceed
from some intelligible order, and those things fatal which happen independently of the
will of God and man, by the necessity of a certain order. In a word, human kingdoms are
established by divine providence. And if any one attributes their existence to fate,
because he calls the will or the power of God itself by the name of fate, let him keep his
opinion, but correct his language. For why does he not say at first what he will say
afterwards, when some one shall put the question to him, What he means by fate? For when
men hear that word, according to the ordinary use of the language, they simply understand
by it the virtue of that particular position of the stars which may exist at the time when
any one is born or conceived, which some separate altogether from the will of God, whilst
others affirm that this also is dependent on that will. But those who are of opinion that,
apart from the will of God, the stars determine what we shall do, or what good things we
shall possess, or what evils we shall suffer, must be refused a hearing by all, not only
by those who hold the true religion, but by those who wish to be the worshippers of any
gods whatsoever, even false gods.
For what does this opinion really amount to but this,
that no god whatever is to be worshipped or prayed to ? Against these, however, our
present disputation is not intended to be directed, but against ose who, in defence of
those whom they think to be gods, oppose the Christian religion. They, however, who make the position of the stars depend on the divine will, and in a manner decree what character
each man shall have, and what good or evil shall happen to him, if they think that these
same stars have that power conferred upon them by the supreme power of God, in order that
they may determine these things according to their will, do a great injury to the
celestial sphere, in whose most brilliant senate, and most splendid senate-house, as it
were, they suppose that wicked deeds are decreed to be done,--such deeds as that, if any
terrestrial state should decree them, it would be condemned to overthrow by the decree of
the whole human race.
What judgment, then, is left to God concerning the deeds of men, who
is Lord both of the stars and of men, when to these deeds a celestial necessity is
attributed ? Or, if they do not say that the stars, though they have indeed received a
certain power from God, who is supreme, determine those things according to their own
discretion, but simply that His commands are fulfilled by them instrumentally in the
application and enforcing of such necessities, are we thus to think concerning God even
what it seemed unworthy that we should think concerning the will of the stars ? But, if
the stars are said rather to signify these things than to effect them, so that that
position of the stars is, as it were, a kind of speech predicting, not causing future
things,--for this has been the opinion of men of no ordinary learning,--certainly the
mathematicians are not wont so to speak saying, for example, Mars in such or such a
position signifies a homicide, but makes a homicide. But, nevertheless, though we grant
that they do not speak as they ought, and that we ought to accept as the proper form of
speech that employed by the philosophers in predicting those things which they think they
discover in the position of the stars, how comes it that they have never been able to
assign any cause why, in the life of twins, in their actions, in the events which befall
them, in their professions, arts, honors, and other things pertaining to human life, also
in their very death, there is often so great a difference, that, as far as these things
are concerned, many entire strangers are more like them than they are like each other, though separated at birth by the smallest interval of time, but at conception generated by
the same act of copulation, and at the same moment ?
CHAP. 2.--ON THE
DIFFERENCE IN THE HEALTH OF TWINS.
Cicero says that the famous physician Hippocrates
has left in writing that he had suspected that a certain pair of brothers were twins, from
the fact that they both took ill at once, and their disease advanced to its crisis and
subsided in the same time in each of them. Posidonius the Stoic, who was much given to
astrology, used to explain the fact by supposing that they had been born and conceived
under the same constellation. In this question the conjecture of the physician is by far
more worthy to be accepted, and approaches much nearer to credibility, since, according as
the parents were affected in body at the time of copulation, so might the first elements
of the foetuses have been affected, so that all that was necessary for their growth and
development up till birth having been supplied from the body of the same mother, they
might be born with like constitutions.
Thereafter, nourished in the same house, on the
same kinds of food, where they would have also the same kinds of air, the same locality,
the same quality of water,--which, according to the testimony of medical science, have a
very great influence, good or bad, on the condition of bodily health,--and where they
would also be accustomed to the same kinds ofxercise, they would have bodily
constitutions so similar that they would be similarly affected with sickness at the same
time and by the same causes. But, to wish to adduce that particular position of the stars
which existed at the time when they were born or conceived as the cause of their being
simultaneously affected with sickness, manifests the greatest arrogance, when so many
beings of most diverse kinds, in the most diverse conditions, and subject to the most
diverse events, may have been conceived and born at the same time, and in the same
district, lying under the same sky. But we know that twins do not only act differently,
and travel to very different places, but that they also suffer from different kinds of
sickness; for which Hippocrates would give what is in my opinion the simplest reason,
namely, that, through diversity of food and exercise, which arises not from the
constitution of the body, but from the inclination of the mind, they may have come to be
different from each other in respect of health.
Moreover, Posidonius, or any other
asserter of the fatal influence of the stars, will have enough to do to find anything to
say to this, if he be unwilling to impose upon the minds of the uninstructed in things of
which they are ignorant. But, as to what they attempt to make out from that very small
interval of time elapsing between the births of twins, on account of that point in the
heavens where the mark of the natal hour is placed, and which they call the
"horoscope," it is either disproportionately small to the diversity which is
found in the dispositions, actions, habits, and fortunes of twins, or it is
disproportionately great when compared with the estate of twins, whether low or high,
which is the same for both of them, the cause for whose greatest difference they place, in
every case, in the hour on which one is born; and, for this reason, if the one is born so
immediately after the other that there is no change in the horoscope, I demand an entire
similarity in all that respects them both, which can never be found in the case of any
twins. But if the slowness of the birth of the second give time for a change in the
horoscope, I demand different parents, which twins can never have.
CHAP. 3.---CONCERNING
THE ARGUMENTS WHICH NIGIDIUS THE MATHEMATICIAN DREW FROM THE POTTER'S WHEEL, IN THE
QUESTION ABOUT THE BIRTH OF TWINS.
It is to no purpose, therefore, that that famous
fiction about the potter's wheel is brought forward, which tells of the answer which
Nigidius is said to have given when he was perplexed with this question, and on account of
which he was called Figulus. For, having whirled round the potter's wheel with all his
strength he marked it with ink, striking it twice with the utmost rapidity, so that the
strokes seemed to fall on the very same part of it. Then, when the rotation had ceased,
the marks which he had made were found upon the rim of the wheel at no small distance
apart. Thus, said he, considering the great rapidity with which the celestial sphere
revolves, even though twins were born with as short an interval between their births as
there was between the strokes which I gave this wheel, that brief interval of time is
equivalent to a very great distance in the celestial sphere. Hence, said he, come whatever
dissimilitudes may be remarked in the habits and fortunes of twins.
This argument is more
fragile than the vessels which are fashioned by the rotation of that wheel. For if there
is so much significance in the heavens which cannot be comprehended by observation of the
constellations, that, in the case of twins, an inheritance may fall to the one and not to the other, why, in the case of others who are not
twins, do they dare, having examined their nstellations, to declare such things as
pertain to that secret which no one can comprehend, and to attribute them to the precise
moment of the birth of each individual ? Now, if such predictions in connection with the
natal hours of others who are not twins are to be vindicated on the ground that they are
founded on the observation of more extended spaces in the heavens, whilst those very small
moments of time which separated the births of twins, and correspond to minute portions of
celestial space, are to be connected with trifling things about which the mathematicians
are not wont to be consulted,--for who would consult them as to when he is to sit, when to
walk abroad, when and on what he is to dine ? --how can we be justified in so speaking,
when we can point out such manifold diversity both in the habits, doings, and destinies of
twins ?
CHAP. 4.--CONCERNING THE
TWINS ESAU AND JACOB, WHO WERE VERY UNLIKE EACH OTHER. BOTH IN THEIR CHARACTER AND
ACTIONS.
In the time of the ancient fathers, to speak
concerning illustrious persons, there were born two twin brothers, the one so immediately
after the other, that the first took hold of the heel of the second. So great a difference
existed in their lives and manners, so great a dissimilarity in their actions, so great a
difference in their parents' love for them respectively, that the very contrast between
them produced even a mutual hostile antipathy. Do we mean, when we say that they were so
unlike each other, that when the one was walking the other was sitting, when the one was
sleeping the other was waking,--which differences are such as are attributed to those
minute portions of space which cannot be appreciated by those who note down the position
of the stars which exists at the moment of one's birth, in order that the mathematicians
may be consulted concerning it ? One of these twins was for a long time a hired servant;
the other never served. One of them was beloved by his mother; the other was not so. One
of them lost that honor which was so much valued among their people; the other obtained
it. And what shall we say of their wives, their children, and their possessions ? How
different they were in respect to all these! If, therefore, such things as these are
con-netted with those minute intervals of time which elapse between the births of twins,
and are not to be attributed to the constellations, wherefore are they predicted in the
case of others from the examination of their constellations ? And if, on the other hand,
these things are said to be predicted, because they are connected, not with minute and
inappreciable moments, but with intervals of time which can be observed and noted down,
what purpose is that potter's wheel to Åserve in this matter, except it be to whirl round
men who have hearts of clay, in order that they may be prevented from detecting the
emptiness of the talk of the mathematicians ?
CHAP. 5 .--IN WHAT MANNER THE MATHEMATICIANS ARE
CONVICTED OF PROFESSING A VAIN SCIENCE
Do not those very persons whom the medical
sagacity of Hippocrates led him to suspect to be twins, because their disease was observed
by him to develop to its crisis and to subside again in the same time in each of them,--do
not these, I say, serve as a sufficient refutation of those who wish to attribute to the
influence of the stars that which was owing to a similarity of bodily constitution ? For
wherefore were they both sick of the same disease, and at the same time, and not the one
after the other in the order of their birth ? (for certainly they could not both be born
at the same time.) Or, if the fact of their having been born at different times by no
means necessarily implies that they must be sick at different times, why do they contend
that the difference in the time of their births was the cause of their difference in other
things? Why could they travel in foreign parts at different times, marry at different
times, beget children at different times, and do many other things at different times, by
reason of their having been born at different times, and yet could not, for the same
reason, also be sick at different times ? For if a difference in the moment of birth
changed the horoscope, and occasioned dissimilarity in all other things, why has that
simultaneousness which belonged to their conception remained in their attacks of sickness
? Or, if the destinies of health are involved in the time of conception, but those of
other things be said to be attached to the time of birth, they ought not to predict
anything concerning health from examination of the constellations of birth, when the hour
of conception is not also given, that its constellations may be inspected. But if they say
that they predict attacks of sickness without examining the horoscope of conception,
because these are indicated by the moments of birth, how could they inform either of these
twins when he would be sick, from the horoscope of his birth, when the other also, who had
not the same horoscope of birth, must of necessity fall sick
at the same time ?
Again, I ask, if the distance of time between the births of twins is so
great as to occasion a difference of their constellations on account of the difference of
their horoscopes, and therefore of all the cardinal points to which so much influence is
attributed, that even from such change there comes a difference of destiny, how is it
possible that this should be so, since they cannot have been conceived at different times
? Or, if two conceived at the same moment of time could have different destinies with
respect to their births, why may not also two born at the same moment of time have
different destinies for life and for death ? For if the one moment in which both were
conceived did not hinder that the one should be born before the other, why, if two are
born at the same moment, should anything hinder them from dying at the same moment? If a
simultaneous conception allows of twins being differently affected in the womb, why should
not simultaneousness of birth allow of any two individuals having different fortunes in
the world? and thus would all the fictions of this art, or rather delusion, be swept away.
What strange circumstance is this, that two children conceived at the same time, nay, at
the same moment, under the same position of t stars, have different fates which bring
them to different hours of birth, whilst two children, born of two different mothers, at
the same moment of time, under one and the same position of the stars, cannot have
different fates which shall conduct them by necessity to diverse manners of life and of
death ?
Are they at conception as yet without destinies, because they can only have them
if they be born ? What, therefore, do they mean when they say that, if the hour of the
conception be found, many things can be predicted by these astrologers ? from which also
arose that story which is reiterated by some, that a certain sage chose an hour in which
to lie with his wife, in order to secure his begetting an illustrious son. From this
opinion also came that answer of Posidonius, the great astrologer and also philosopher,
concerning those twins who were attacked with sickness at the same time, namely,
"That this had happened to them because they were conceived at the same time, and
born at the same time." For certainly he added "conception," lest it should
be said to him that they could not both be born at the same time, knowing that at any rate
they must both have been conceived at the same time; wishing thus to show that he did not
attribute the fact of their being similarly and simultaneously affected with sickness to
the similarity of their bodily constitutions as its proximate cause, but that he held that
even in respect of the similarity of their health, they were bound together by a sidereal
connection. If, therefore, the time of conception has so much to do with the similarity of
destinies, these same destinies ought not to be changed by the circumstances of birth; or,
if the destinies of twins be said to be changed because they are born at different times,
why should we not rather understand that they had been already changed in order that they
might be born at different times ? Does not, then, the will of men living in the world
change the destinies of birth, when the order of birth can change the destinies they had
at conception ?
CHAP. 6.--CONCERNING
TWINS OF DIFFERENT SEXES.
But even in the very conception of twins, which
certainly occurs at the same moment in the case of both, it often happens that the one is
conceived a male, and the other a female. I know two of different sexes who are twins.
Both of them are alive, and in the flower of their age; and though they resemble each
other in body, as far as difference of sex will permit, still they are Very different in
the whole scope and purpose of their lives (consideration being had of those differences
which necessarily exist between the lives of males and females),--the one holding the
office of a count, and being almost cÉonstantly away from home with the army in foreign
service, the other never leaving her country's soil, or her native district. Still
more,--and this is more incredible, if the destinies of the stars are to be believed in,
though it is not wonderful if we consider the wills of men, and the free gifts of God,--he
is married; she is a sacred virgin: he has begotten a numerous offspring; she has never
even married. But is not the virtue of the horoscope very great ? I think I have said
enough to show the absurdity of that. But, say those astrologers, whatever be the virtue
of the horoscope in other respects, it is certainly of significance with respect to birth.
But why not also with respect to conception, which takes place undoubtedly with one act of
copulation ? And, indeed, so great is the force of nature, that after a woman has once
conceived, she ceases to be liable to conception. Or were they, perhaps, changed at birth,
either he into a male, or she into a female, because of the difference in their horoscopes
? But, whilst it is not altogether absurd to sathat certain sidereal influences have
some power to cause differences in bodies alone,--as, for instance, we see that the
seasons of the year come round by the approaching and receding of the sun, and that
certain kinds of things are increased in size or diminished by the waxings and wanings of
the moon, such as sea-urchins, oysters, and the wonderful tides of the ocean, --it does
not follow that the wills of men are to be made subject to the position of the stars.
The
astrologers, however, when they wish to bind our actions also to the constellations, only
set us on investigating whether, even in these bodies, the changes may not be attributable
to some other than a sidereal cause. For what is there which more intimately concerns a
body than its sex ? And yet, under the same position of the stars, twins of different
sexes may be conceived. Wherefore, what greater absurdity can be affirmed or believed than
that the position of the stars, which was the same for both of them at the time of
conception, could not cause that the one child should not have been of a different sex
from her brother, with whom she had a common constellation, whilst the position of the
stars which existed at the hour of their birth could cause that she should be separated
from him by the great distance between marriage and holy virginity ?
CHAP. 7.--CONCERNING THE
CHOOSING OF A DAY FOR MARRIAGE, OR FOR PLANTING, OR SOWING.
Now, will any one bring forward this, that in
choosing certain particular days for particular actions, men bring about certain new
destinies for their actions ? That man, for instance, according to this doctrine, was not
born to have an illustrious son, but rather a contemptible one, and therefore, being a man
of learning, he choose an hour in which to lie with his wife. He made, therefore, a
destiny which he did not have before, and from that destiny of his own making something
began to be fatal which was not contained in the destiny of his natal hour. Oh, singular
stupidity ! A day is chosen on which to marry; and for this reason, I believe, that unless
a day be chosen, the marriage may fall on an unlucky day, and turn out an unhappy one.
What then becomes of what the stars have already decreed at the hour of birth ? Can a man
be said to change by an act of choice that which has already been determined for him,
whilst that which he himself has determined in the choosing of a day cannot be changed by
another power? Thus, if men alone, and not all things under heaven, are subject to the
influence of the stars, why do they choose some days as suitable for planting vines or
trees, or for sowing grain, other days as suitable for taming beasts on, or for putting
the males to the females, that the cows and mares may be impregnated, and for such-like
things ? If it be said that certain chosen days have an influence on these things, because
the constellations rule over all terrestrial bodies, animate and inanimate, according to
differences in moments of time, let it be considered what innumerable multitudes of beings
are born or arise, or take their origin at the very same instant of time, which come to
ends so different, that they may persuade any little boy that these observations about
days are ridiculous. For who is so mad as to dare affirm that all trees, all herbs, all
beasts, serpents, birds, fishes, worms, have each separately their own moments of birth or
commencement ?
Nevertheless, men are wont, in order to try the skill of the
mathematicians, to bring before them the constellations of dumb animals, the
constellations of whose birth they diligently observe at home with a view to this
discovery; and they prefer those mathematicians to all others, who say from the inspection
of the constellations that they indicate the birth of a beast and not of a man. They also
dare tell what kind of beast it is, whether it is a wool-bearing beast, or a beast suited
for carrying burthens, or one fit for the plough, or for watching a house; for the
astrologers are also tried with respect to the fates of dogs, and their answers concerning
these are followed by shouts of admiration on the part of those who consult them. They so
deceive men as to make them think that during the birth of a man the births of all other
beings are suspended, so that not even a fly comes to life at the same time that he is
being born, under the same region of the heavens. And if this be admitted with respect to
the fly, the reasoning cannot stop there, but must ascend from flies till it lead them up
to camels and elephants. Nor are they willing to attend to this, that when a day has been
chosen whereon to sow a field, so many grains fall into the ground simultaneously,
germinate simultaneously, spring up, come to perfection, and ripen simultaneously; and
yet, of all the ears which are coeval, and, so to speak, congerminal, some are destroyed by mildew, some are devoured by the birds, and some are pulled by men.
How can they say
that all these had their different constellations, which they see coming to so different
ends ? Will they confess that it is folly to choose days for such things, and to affirm
that they do not come within the sphere of the celestial decree, whilst they subject men
alone to the stars, on whom alone in the world God has bestowed free wills ?
All these things being considered, we have good reason to believe that, when the
astrologers give very many wonderful answers, it is to be attributed to the occult
inspiration of spirits not of the best kind, whose care it is to insinuate into the minds
of men, and to confirm in them, those false and noxious opinions concerning the fatal
influence of the stars, and not to their marking and inspecting of horoscopes, according
to some kind of art which in reality has no existence.
CHAP. 8.--CONCERNING
THOSE WHO CALL BY THE NAME OF FATE, NOT THE POSITION OF THE STARS, BUT THE CONNECTION OF
CAUSES WHICH DEPENDS ON THE WILL OF GOD.
But, as to those who call by the name of fate,
not the disposition of the stars as it may exist when any creature is conceived, or born,
or commences its existence, but the whole connection and train of causes which makes
everything become what it does become, there is no need that I should labor and strive
with them in a merely verbal controversy, since they attribute the so-called order and
connection of causes to the will and power of God most high, who is most rightly and most
truly believed to know all things before they come to pass, and to leave nothing
É unordained; from whom are all powers, although the wills of all are not from Him. Now,
that it is chiefly the will of God most high, whose power extends itself irresistibly
through all things which they call fate, is proved by the following verses, of which, if I
mistake not, Annaeus Seneca is the author:--
" Father supreme, Thou ruler of the lofty
heavens,
Lead me where'er it is Thy pleasure; I will give
A prompt obedience, making no delay,
Lo ! here I am. Promptly I come to do Thy
sovereign will;
If thy command shall thwart my inclination, I
will
still Follow Thee groaning, and the work
assigned, With all the suffering of a mind repugnant,
Will perform, being evil; which, had I been good
I should have undertaken and performed, though
hard, With virtuous cheerfulness.
The Fates do lead the man that follows willing;
But the man that is unwilling, him they drag."
Most evidently, in this last verse, he calls that
"fate" which he had before called "the will of the Father supreme,"
whom, he says, he is ready to obey that he may be led, being willing, not dragged, being
unwilling, since "the Fates do lead the man that follows willing, but the man that is
unwilling, him they drag The following Homeric lines, which Cicero translates into Latin,
also favor this opinion :--
"Such are the minds of men, as is the light
Which Father Jove himself doth pour Illustrious o'er the fruitful earth."
Not that Cicero wishes that a poetical sentiment
should have any weight in a question like this; for when he says that the Stoics, when
asserting the power of fate, were in the habit of using these verses from Homer, he is not
treating concerning the opinion of that poet, but concerning that of those philosophers,
since by these verses, which they quote in connection with the controversy which they hold
about fate, is most distinctly manifested what it is which they reckon fate, since they
call by the name of Jupiter him whom they reckon the supreme god, from whom, they say,
hangs the whole chain of fates.
CHAP. 9.--CONCERNING THE
FOREKNOWLEDGE OF GOD AND THE FREE WILL OF MAN, IN OPPOSITION TO THE DEFINITION OF CICERO.
The manner in which Cicero addresses himself to
the task of refuting the Stoics, shows that he did not think he could effect anything
against them in argument unless he had first demolished divination. And this he
attempts to accomplish by denying that there is any knowledge of future things, and
maintains with all his might that there is no such knowledge either in God or man, and
that there is no prediction of events. Thus he both denies the foreknowledge of God, and
attempts by vain arguments, and by opposing to himself certain oracles very easy to be
refuted, to overthrow all prophecy, even such as is clearer than the light (though even
these oracles are not refuted by him).
But, in refuting these conjectures of the
mathematicians, his argument is triumphant, because truly these are such as destroy and
refute themselves. Nevertheless, they are far more tolerable who assert the fatal
influence of the stars than they who deny the foreknowledge of future events. For, to
confess that God exists, and at the same time to deny that He has foreknowledge of future
things, is the most manifest folly. This Cicero himself saw, and therefore attempted to
assert the doctrine embodied in the words of Scripture, "The feel hath said in his
heart, There is no God." That, however, he did not do in his own person, for he
saw how odious and offensive such an opinion would be; and therefore, in his book on the
nature of the gods, he makes Cotta dispute concerning this against the Stoics, and preferred to give his own opinion
in favor of Lucilius Balbus, to whom he assigned the defence of the Stoical position,
rather than in favor of Cotta, who maintained that no divinity exists. However, in his
book on divination, he in his own person most openly opposes the doctrine of the
prescience of future things. But all this he seems to do in order that he may not grant
the doctrine of fate, and by so doing destroy free will. For he thinks tha the knowledge
of future things being once conceded, fate follows as so necessary a consequence that it
cannot be denied.
But, let these perplexing debatings and
disputations of the philosophers go on as they may, we, in order that we may confess the
most high and true God Himself, do confess His will, supreme power, and prescience.
Neither let us be afraid lest, after all, we do not do by will that which we do by will,
because He, whose foreknowledge is infallible, foreknew that we would do it. It was this
which Cicero was afraid of, and therefore opposed foreknowledge. The Stoics also
maintained that all things do not come to pass by necessity, although they contended that
all things happen according to destiny. What is it, then, that Cicero feared in the
prescience of future things ? Doubtless it was this,--that if all future things have been
foreknown, they will happen in the order in which they have been foreknown; and if they
come to pass in this order, there is a certain order of things foreknown by God; and if a
certain order of things, then a certain order of causes, for nothing can happen which is
not preceded by some efficient cause. But if there is a certain order of causes according
to which everything happens which does happen, then by fate, says he, all things happen
which do happen. But if this be so, then is there nothing in our own power, and there is
no such thing as freedom of will; and if we grant that, says he, the whole economy of
human life is subverted. In vain are laws enacted. In vain are reproaches, praises,
chidings, exhortations had recourse to; and there is no justice whatever in the
appointment of rewards for the good, and punishments for the wicked. And that consequences
so disgraceful, and absurd, and pernicious to humanity may not follow, Cicero chooses to
reject the foreknowledge of future things, and shuts up the religious mind to this
alternative, to make choice between two things, either that something is in our own power,
or that there is foreknowledge,--both of which cannot be true; but if the one is affirmed,
the other is thereby denied. He therefore, like a truly great and wise man, and one who
consulted very much and very skillfully for the good of humanity, of those two chose the
freedom of the will, to confirm which he denied the foreknowledge of future things; and
thus, wishing to make men free he makes them sacrilegious. But the religious mind chooses
both, confesses both, and maintains both by the faith of piety. But how so? says Cicero;
for the knowledge of future things being granted, there follows a chain of consequences
which ends in this, that there can be nothing depending on our own free wills. And
further, if there is anything depending on our wills, we must go backwards by the same
steps of reasoning till we arrive at the conclusion that there is no foreknowledge of
future things. For we go backwards through all the steps in the following order: --If
there is free will, all things do not happen according to fate; if all things do not.
happen according to fate, there is not a certain order of causes; and if there is not a
certain order of causes, neither is there a certain order of things foreknown by God,--for
things cannot come to pass except they are preceded by efficient causes,--but, if there is
no fixed and certain order of causes fore-known by God, all things cannot be said to
happen according as He foreknew that they would happen. And further, if it is not true
that all things happen just as they have been foreknown by Him, there is not, says he, in
God any foreknowledge of future events.
Now, against the sacrilegious and impious darings
of reason, we assert both that God knows all things before they come to pass, and that we
do by our free will whatsoever we know and feel to be done by us only because we will it.
But that all things come to pass by fate, we do not say; nay we affirm that nothing comes
to pass by fate; for we demonstrate that the name of fate, as it is wont to be used by
those who speak of fate, meaning thereby the position of the stars at the time of each
one's conception or birth, is an unmeaning word, for astrology itself is a delusion. But
an order of causes in which the highest efficiency is attributed to the will of God, we
neither deny nor do we designate it by the name of fate, unless, perhaps, we may
understand fate to mean that which is spoken, deriving it from fari, to speak; for we
cannot deny that it is written in the sacred Scriptures, "God hath spoken once; these
two things have I heard, that power belongeth unto God. Also unto Thee, O God, belongeth
mercy: for Thou wilt render unto every man according to his works."
Now the expression, "Once hath He spoken,"
is to be understood as meaning "immovably," that is, unchangeably hath He
spoken, inasmuch as He knows unchangeably all things which shall be, and all things which
He will do. We might, then, use the word fate in the sense it bears when derived from
fari, to speak, had it not already come to be understood in another sense, into which I am
unwilling that the hearts of men should unconsciously slide. But it does not follow that,
though there is for God a certain order of all causes, there must therefore be nothing
depending on the free exercise of our own wills, for our wills themselves are included in
that order of causes which is certain to God, and is embraced by His foreknowledge, for
human wills are also causes of human actions; and He who foreknew all the causes of things
would certainly among those causes not have been ignorant of our wills. For even that very
concession which Cicero himself makes is enough to refute him in this argument. For what
does it help him to say that nothing takes place without a cause, but that every cause is
not fatal, there being a fortuitous cause, a natural cause, and a voluntary cause ? It is
sufficient that he confesses that whatever happens must be preceded by a cause. For we say
that those causes which are called fortuitous are not a mere name for the absence of
causes, but are only latent, and we attribute them either to the will of the true God, or
to that of spirits of some kind or other. And as to natural causes, we by no means
separate them from the will of Him who is the author and framer of all nature. But now as
to voluntary causes. They are referable either to God, or to angels, or to men, or to
animals of whatever description, if indeed those instinctive movements of animals devoid
of reason, by which, in accordance with their own nature, they seek or shun various
things, are to be called wills. And when I speak of the wills of angels, I mean either the
wills of good angels, whom we call the angels of God, or of the wicked angels, whom we
call the angels of the devil, or demons. Also by the wills of men I mean the wills either
of the good or of the wicked. And from this we conclude that there are no efficient causes
of all things which come to pass unless voluntary causes, that is, such as belong to that
nature which is the spirit of life. For the air or wind is called spirit, but, inasmuch as
it is a body, it is not the spirit of life. The spirit of life, therefore, which quickens
all things, and is the creator of every body, and of every created spirit, is God Himself,
the uncreated spirit. In His supreme will resides the power which acts on the wills of all
created spirits, helping the good, judging the evil, controlling all, granting power to
some, not granting it to others. For, as He is the creator of all natures, so also is He
the bestower of all powers, not of all wills; for wicked wills are not from Him, being
contrary to nature, which is from Him.
As to bodies, they areore subject to wills: some
to our wills, by which I mean the wills of all living mortal creatures, but more to the
wills of men than of beasts. But all of them are most of all subject to the will of God,
to whom all wills also are subject, since they have no power except what He has bestowed
upon them. The cause of things, therefore, which makes but is made, is God; but all other causes both make and
are made. Such are all created spirits, and especially the rational. Material causes,
therefore, which may rather be said to be made than to make, are not to be reckoned among
efficient causes, because they can only do what the wills of spirits do by them. How,
then, does an order of causes which is certain to the foreknowledge of God necessitate
that there should be nothing which is dependent on our wills, when our wills themselves
have a very important place in the order of causes ? Cicero, then, contends with those who
call this order of causes fatal, or rather designate this order itself by the name of
fate; to which we have an abhorrence, especially on account of the word, which men have
become accustomed to understand as meaning what is not true. But, whereas he denies that
the order of all causes is most certain, and perfectly clear to the prescience of God, we
detest his opinion more than the Stoics do. For he either denies that God exists,--which,
indeed, in an assumed personage, he has labored to do, in his book De Natura Deorum,--or
if he confesses that He exists, but denies that He is prescient of future things, what is
that but just "the fool saying in his heart there is no God?" For one who is not
prescient of all future things is not God. Wherefore our wills also have just so much
power as God willed and foreknew that they should have; and therefore whatever power they
have, they have it within most certain limits; and whatever they are to do, they are most
assuredly to do, for He whose foreknowledge is infallible foreknew that they would have
the power to do it, and would do it. Wherefore, if I should choose to apply the name of
fate to anything at all, I should rather say that fate belongs to the weaker of two
parties, will to the stronger, who has the other in his power, than that the freedom of
our will is excluded by that order of causes, which, by an unusual application of the word
peculiar to themselves, the Stoics call Fate.
CHAP. 10.--WHETHER OUR
WILLS ARE RULED BY NECESSITY.
Wherefore, neither is that necessity to be
feared, for dread of which the Stoics labored to make such distinctions among the causes
of things as should enable them to rescue certain things from the dominion of necessity.
and to subject others to it. Among those things which they wished not to be subject to
necessity they placed our wills, knowing that they would not be free if subjected to
necessity. For if that is to be called our necessity which is not in our power, but even
though we be unwilling effects what it can effect,--as, for instance, the necessity of
death,--it is manifest that our wills by which we live up-rightly or wickedly are not
under such a necessity; for we do many things which, if we were not willing, we should
certainly not do.
This is primarily true of the act of willing itself,--for if we will, it
is; if we will not, it is not,--for we should not will if we were unwilling. But if we
define necessity to be that according to which we say that it is necessary that anything
be of such or such a nature, or be done in such and such a manner, I know not why we
should have any dread of that necessity taking away the freedom of our will. For we do not
put the life of God or the foreknowledge of God under necessity if we should say that it
is necessary that God should live forever, and foknow all things; as neither is His
power diminished when we say that He cannot die or fall into error,--for this is in such a
way impossible to Him, that if it were possible for Him, He would be of less power. But
assuredly He is rightly called omnipotent, though He can neither die nor fall into error.
For He is called omnipotent on account of His doing what He wills, not on account of His
suffering what He wills not; for if that should befall Him, He would by no means be
omnipotent. Wherefore, He cannot do some things for the very reason that He is omnipotent.
So also, when we say that it is necessary that, when we will, we will by free choice, in
so saying we both affirm what is true beyond doubt, and do not stilI subject our wills
thereby to a necessity which destroys liberty. Our wills, therefore, exist as wills, and
do themselves whatever we do by willing, and which would not be done if we were unwilling.
But when any one suffers anything, being unwilling by the will of another, even in that
case will retains its essential validity, --we do not mean the will of the party who
inflicts the suffering, for we resolve it into the power of God. For if a will should
simply exist, but not be able to do what it wills, it would be overborne by a more
powerful will. Nor would this be the case unless there had existed will, and that not the
will of the other party, but the will of him who willed, but was not able to accomplish
what he willed
Therefore, whatsoever a man suffers contrary to
his own will, he ought not to attribute to the will of men, or of angels, or of any
created spirit, but rather to His will who gives power to wills. It is not the case,
therefore, that because God foreknew what would be in the power of our wills, there is for
that reason nothing in the power of our wills. For he who foreknew this did not foreknow
nothing. Moreover, if He who foreknew what would be in the power of our wills did not
foreknow nothing, but something, assuredly, even though He did foreknow, there is
something in the power of our wills. Therefore we are by no means compelled, either,
retaining the prescience of God, to take away the freedom of the will, or, retaining the
freedom of the will, to deny that He is prescient of future things, which is impious. But
we embrace both. We faithfully and sincerely confess both. The former, that we may believe
well; the latter, that we may live well. For he lives ill who does not believe well
concerning God. Wherefore, be it far from us, in order to maintain our freedom, to deny
the prescience of Him by whose help we are or shall be free. Consequently, it is not in
vain that laws are enacted, and that reproaches, exhortations, praises, and vituperations
are had recourse to; for these also He foreknew, and they are of great avail, even as
great as He foreknew that they would be of. Prayers, also, are of avail to procure those
things which He foreknew that He would grant to those who offered them; and with justice
have rewards been appointed for good deeds, and punishments for sins. For a man does not
therefore sin because God foreknew that he would sin. Nay, it cannot be doubted but that
it is the man himself who sins when he does sin, because He, whose foreknowledge is
infallible, fore knew not that fate, or fortune, or something else would sin, but that the
man himself would sin, who, if he wills not, sins not. But if he shall not will to sin,
even this did God foreknow.
CHAP. 11.---CONCERNING THE UNIVERSAL PROVIDENCE
OF GOD IN THE LAWS OF WHICH ALL THINGS ARE COMPREHENDED.
Therefore God supreme and true, with His Word and
Holy Spirit (which three are one), one God omnipotent, creator and maker of every soul and
of every body; by whose gift all are happy who are happy through verity and not through
vanity; who made man a rational animal consisting of soul and body, who, when he sinned,
neither permitted him to go unpunished, nor left him without mercy; who has given to the
good and to the evil, being in common with stones, vegetable life in common with trees,
sensuous life in common with brutes, intellectual life in common with angels alone; from
whom is every mode, every species, every order; from whom are measure, number, weight;
from whom is everything which has an existence in nature, of whatever kind it be, and of
whatever value; from whom are the seeds of forms and the forms of seeds, and the motion of
seeds and of forms; Who gave also to flesh its origin, beauty, health, reproductive
fecundity, disposition of members, and the salutary concord of its parts; who also to the
irrational soul has given memory, sense, appetite, but to the rational soul, in addition
to these, has given intelligence and will; who has not left, not to speak of heaven and
earth, angels and men, but not even the entrails of the smallest and most contemptible
animal, or the feather of a bird, or the little flower of a plant, or the leaf of a tree,
without an harmony, and, as it were, a mutual peace among all its parts;--that God can
never be believed to have left the kingdoms of men, their dominations and servitudes,
outside of the laws of His providence.
CHAP. 12.--BY WHAT
VIRTUES THE ANCIENT ROMANS MERITED THAT THE TRUE GOD, ALTHOUGH THEY DID NOT WORSHIP HIM,
SHOULD ENLARGE THEIR EMPIRE.
Wherefore let us go on to consider what virtues
of the Romans they were which the true God, in whose power are also the kingdoms of the
earth, condescended to help in order to raise the empire, and also for what reason He did
so. And, in order to discuss this question on clearer ground, we have written the former
books, to show that the power of those gods, who, they thought, were to be worshipped with
such trifling and silly rites, had nothing to do in this matter; and also what we have
already accomplished of the present volume, to refute the doctrine of fate, lest any one
who might have been already persuaded that the Roman empire was not extended and preserved
by the worship of these gods, might still be attributing its extension and preservation to
some kind of fate, rather than to the most powerful will of God most high. The ancient and
primitive Romans, therefore, though their history shows us that, like all the other
nations, with the sole exception of the Hebrews, they worshipped false gods, and
sacrificed victims, not to God, but to demons, have nevertheless this commendation
bestowed on them by their historian, that they were" greedy of praise, prodigal of
wealth, desirous of great glory, and content with a moderate fortune." Glory they
most ardently loved: for it they wished to live, for it they did not hesitate to die.
Every other desire was repressed by the strength of their passion for that one thing. At
length their country itself, because it seemed inglorious to serve, but glorious to rule
and to command, they first earnestly desired to be free, and then to be mistress.
Hence it
was that, not enduring the domination of kings, they put the government into the hands of
two chiefs, holding office for a year, who were called consuls, not kings or lords. But
royal pomp seemed inconsistent with the administration of a ruler (regentis), or the
benevolence of one who consults (that is, for the public good) (consulentis), but rather
with the haughtiness of a lord (dominantis). King Tarquin, therefore, having been
banished, and the consular government having been instituted, it followed, as the same
author already alluded to says in his praises of the Romans, that "the state grew
with amazing rapidity after it had obtained liberty, so great a desire of glory had taken
possession of it." That eagerness for praise and desire of glory, then, was that
which accomplished those many wonderful things, laudable, doubtless, and glorious
according to human judgment. The same Sallust praises the great men of his own time,
Marcus Cato, and Caius Caesar, saying that for a long time the republic had no one great
in virtue, but that within his memory there had been these two men of eminent virtue, and
very different pursuits. Now, among the praises which he pronounces on Caesar he put this,
that he wished for a great empire, an army, and a new war, that he might have a sphere
where his genius and virtue might shine forth. Thus it was ever the prayer of men of
heroic character that Bellona would excite miserable nations to war, and lash them into
agitation with her bloody scourge, so that there might be occasion for the display of
their valor. This, forsooth, is what that desire of praise and thirst for glory did.
Wherefore, by the love of liberty in the first place, afterwards also by that of
domination and through the desire of praise and glory, they
achieved many great things; and their most eminent poet testifies to their having been
prompted by all these motives:
" Porsenna there, with pride elate, Bids
Rome to Tarquin ope her gate; With arms he hems the city in, AEneas' sons stand firm to
win."
At that time it was their greatest ambition
either to die bravely or to live free; but when liberty was obtained, so great a desire of
glory took possession of them, that liberty alone was not enough unless domination also
should be sought, their great ambition being that which the same poet puts into the mouth
of Jupiter:
"Nay, Juno's self, whose wild alarms Set
ocean, earth, and heaven in arms, Shall change for smiles her moody frown, And vie with me
in zeal to crown Rome's sons, the nation of the gown. So stands my will. There comes a
day, While Rome's great ages hold their way, When old Assaracus's sons shall quit them on the myrmidons, O'er Phthia and
Mycenae reign, And humble Argos to their chain."Which things, indeed, Virgil makes Jupiter
predict as future, whilst, in reality, he was only himself passing in review in his own
mind, things which were already done, and which were beheld by him as present realities.
But I have mentioned them with the intention of showing that, next to liberty, the Romans
so highly esteemed domination, that it received a place among those things on which they
bestowed the greatest praise. Hence also it is that that poet, preferring to the arts of
other nations those arts which peculiarly belong to the Romans, namely, the arts of ruling
and commanding, and of subjugating and vanquishing nations, says,
"Others, belike, with happier grace, From
bronze or stone shall call the face, Plead doubtful causes, map the skies, And tell when
planets set or rise; But Roman thou, do thou control
The nations far and wide; Be this thy genius, to
impose
The rule of peace on vanquished foes, Show pity
to the humble soul,
And crush the sons of pride."
These arts they exercised with the more skill the
less they gave themselves up to pleasures, and to enervation of body and mind in coveting
and amassing riches, and through these corrupting morals, by extorting them from the
miserable citizens and lavishing them on base stage-players. Hence these men of base
character, who abounded when Sallust wrote and Virgil sang these things, did not seek
after honors and glory by these arts, but by treachery and deceit. Wherefore the same
says, "But at first it was rather ambition than avarice that stirred the minds of
men, which vice, however, is nearer to virtue. For glory, honor, and power are desired
alike by the good man and by the ignoble; but the former," he says, "strives
onward to them by the true way, whilst the other, knowing nothing of the good arts, seeks
them by fraud and deceit." And what is meant by seeking the attainment of glory,
honor, and power by good arts, is to seek them by virtue, and not by deceitful intrigue;
for the good and the ignoble man alike desire these things, but the good man strives to
overtake them by the true way. The way is virtue, along which he presses as to the goal of
possession--namely, to glory, honor, and power. Now that this was a sentiment engrained in
the Roman mind, is indicated even by the temples of their gods; for they built in very
close proximity the temples of Virtue and Honor, worshipping as gods the gifts of God.
Hence we can understand what they who were good thought to be the end of virtue, and to
what they ultimately referred it, namely, to honor; for, as to the bad, they had no virtue
though they desired honor, and strove to possess it by fraud and deceit. Praise of a
higher kind is bestowed upon Cato, for he says of him "The less he sought glory, the
more it follOwed him." We say praise of a higher kind; for the glory with the
desire of which the Romans burned is the judgment of men thinking well of men. And
therefore virtue is better, which is content with no human judgment save that of one's own
conscience.
Whence the apostle says, "For this is our glory, the testimony of our
conscience." And in another place he says, "But let every one prove his own
work, and then he shall have glory in himself, and not in another." That glory,
honor, and power, therefore, which they desired for themselves, and to which the good
sought to attain by good arts, should not be sought after by virtue, but virtue by them.
For there is no true virtue except that which is directed towards that end in which is the
highest and ultimate good of man. Wherefore even the honors which Cato sought he ought not
to have sought, but the state ought to have conferred them on him unsolicited, on account
of his virtues. But, of the two great Romans of that time, Cato
was he whose virtue was by far the nearest to the true idea of virtue. Where-fore, let us refer to the opinion of Cato
himself, to discover what was the judgment he had formed concerning the condition of the
state both then and in former times. "I do not think," he says, "that it
was by arms that our ancestors made the republic great from being small. Had that been the
case, the republic of our day would have been by far more flourishing than that of their
times, for the number of our allies and citizens is far greater; and, besides, we possess
a far greater abundance of armor and of horses than they did. But it was other things than
these that made them great, and we have none of them: industry at home, just government
without, a mind free in deliberation, addicted neither to crime nor to lust. Instead of
these, we have luxury and avarice, poverty in the state, opulence among citizens; we laud
riches, we follow laziness; there is no difference made between the good and the bad; all
the rewards of virtue are got possession of by intrigue. And no wonder, when every
individual consults only for his own good, when ye are the slaves of pleasure at home,
and, in public affairs, of money and favor, no wonder that an onslaught is made upon the
unprotected republic."
He who hears these words of Cato or of Sallust
probably thinks that such praise bestowed on the ancient Romans was applicable to all of
them, or, at least, to very many of them. It is not so; otherwise the things which Cato
himself writes, and which I have quoted in the second book of this work, would not be
true. In that passage he says, that even from the very beginning of the state wrongs were
committed by the more powerful, which led to the separation of the people from the
fathers, besides which there were other internal dissensions; and the only time at which
there existed a just and moderate administration was after the banishment of the kings,
and that no longer than whilst they had cause to be afraid of Tarquin, and were carrying
on the grievous war which had been undertaken on his account against Etruria; but
afterwards the fathers oppressed the people as slaves, flogged them as the kings had done,
drove them from their land, and, to the exclusion of all others, held the government in
their own hands alone. And to these discords, whilst the fathers were wishing to rule, and
the people were unwilling to serve, the second Punic war put an end; for again great fear
began to press upon their disquieted minds, holding them back from those distractions by
another and greater anxiety, and bringing them back to civil concord. But the great things
which were then achieved were accomplished through the administration of a few men, who
were good in their own way. And by the wisdom and forethought of these few good men, which
first enabled the republic to endure these evils and mitigated them, it waxed greater and
greater. And this the same historian affirms, when he says that, reading and hearing of
the many illustrious achievements of the Roman people in peace and in war, by land and by
sea, he wished to understand what it was by which these great things were specially
sustained. For he knew that very often the Romans had with a small company contended with
great legions of the enemy; and he knew also that with small resources they had carried on
wars with opulent kings. And he says that, after having given the matter much
consideration, it seemed evident to him that the pre-eminent virtue of a few citizens had
achieved the whole, and that that explained how poverty overcame wealth, and small numbers
great multitudes. But, he adds, after that the state had been corrupted by luxury and
indolence, again the republic, by its own greatness, was able to bear the vices of its
magistrates and generals. Wherefore even the praises of Cato are only applicable to a few;
for only a few were possessed of that virtue which leads men to pursue after glory, honor,
and power by the true way,--that is, by virtue itself. This industry at home, of which
Cato speaks, was the consequence of a desire to enrich the public treasury, even though
the result should be poverty at home; and therefore, when he speaks of the evil arising
out of the corruption of morals, he reverses the expression, and says, "Poverty in
the state, riches at home."
CHAP. 13.--CONCERNING
THE LOVE OF PRAISE, WHICH, THOUGH IT IS A VICE, IS RECKONED A VIRTUE, BECAUSE BY IT
GREATER VICE IS RESTRAINED.
Wherefore, when the kingdoms of the East had been
illustrious for a long time, it pleased God that there should also arise a Western empire,
which, though later in time, should be more illustrious in extent and greatness. And, in
order that it might overcome the grievous evils which existed among other nations, He
purposely granted it to such men as, for the sake of honor, and praise, and glory,
consulted well for their country, in whose glory they sought their own, and whose safety
they did not hesitate to prefer to their own, suppressing the desire of wealth and many
other vices for this one vice, namely, the love of praise. For he has the soundest
perception who recognizes that even the love of praise is a vice; nor has this escaped the
perception of the poet Horace, who says,
"You're bloated by ambition ? take advice:
Yon book will ease you if you read it
thrice."
And the same poet, in a lyric song, hath thus
spoken with the desire of repressing the passion for domination:
"Rule an ambitious spirit, and thou hast
A wider kingdom than if thou shouldst join To
distant Gades Lybia, and thus
Shouldst hold in service either
Carthaginian."
Nevertheless, they who restrain baser lusts, not
by the power of the Holy Spirit obtained by the faith of piety, or by the love of
intelligible beauty, but by desire of human praise, or, at all events, restrain them
better by the love of such praise, are not indeed yet holy, but only less base. Even Tully
was not able to conceal this fact; for, in the same books which he wrote, De Republica,
when speaking concerning the education of a chief of the state, who ought, he says, to be
nourished on glory, goes on to say that their ancestors did many wonderful and illustrious
things through desire of glory. So far, therefore, from resisting this vice, they even
thought that it ought to be excited and kindled up, supposing that that would be
beneficial to the republic. But not even in his books on philosophy does Tully dissimulate
this poisonous opinion, for he there avows it more clearly than day. For when he is
speaking of those studies which are to be pursued with a view to the true good, and not
with the vainglorious desire of human praise, he introduces the following universal and
general statement:
"Honor nourishes the arts, and all are
stimulated to the prosecution of studies by glory; and those pursuits are always neglected
which are generally discredited."
CHAP. 14.--CONCERNING
THE ERADICATION OF THE LOVE OF HUMAN PRAISE, BECAUSE ALL THE GLORY OF THE RIGHTEOUS IS IN
GOD.
It is, therefore, doubtless far better to resist
this desire than to yield to it, for the purer one is from this defilement, the liker is
he to God; and, though this vice be not thoroughly eradicated from his heart,--for it does
not cease to tempt even the minds of those who are making good progress in vi-tue,--at any
rate, let the desire of glory be surpassed by the love of righteousness, so that, if there
be seen anywhere "lying neglected things which are generally discredited if they are
good, if they are right, even the love of human praise may blush and yield to the love of
truth. For so hostile is this vice to pious faith, if the love of glory be greater in the
heart than the fear or love of God, that the Lord said, "How can ye believe, who look
for glory from one another, and do not seek the glory which is from God alone?"
Also, concerning some who had believed on Him, but were afraid to confess Him openly, the
evangelist says, "They loved the praise of men more than the praise of God;" which did not the holy apostles, who, when they proclaimed the name of Christ in those
places where it was not only discredited, and therefore neglected,--according as Cicero
says, "Those things are always neglected which are generally discredited,"--but
was even held in the utmost detestation, holding to what they had heard from the Good
Master, who was also the physician of minds, "If any one shall deny me before men,
him will I also deny before my Father who is in heaven, and before the angels of
God," amidst maledictions and reproaches, and most grievous persecutions and
cruel punishments, were not deterred from the preaching of human salvation by the noise of
human indignation. And when, as they did and spake divine things, and lived divine lives,
conquering, as it were, hard hearts, and introducing into them the peace of righteousness,
great glory followed them in the church of Christ, they did not rest in that as in the end
of their virtue, but, referring that glory itself to the glory of God, by whose grace they
were what they were, they sought to kindle, also by that same flame, the minds of those
for whose good they con-suited, to the love of Him, by whom they could be made to be what
they themselves were. For their Master had taught them not to seek to be good for the sake
of human glory, saying, "Take heed that ye do not your righteousness before men to be
seen of them, or otherwise ye shall not have a reward from your Father who is in
heaven." But again, lest, understanding this wrongly, they should, through fear
of pleasing men, be less useful through concealing their goodness, showing for what end
they ought to make it known, He says, "Let your works shine before men, that they may
see your good deeds, and glorify your Father who is in heaven." Not, observe,
"that ye may be seen by them, that is, in order that their eyes may be directed upon
you,"--for of yourselves ye are, nothing,--but "that they may glorify your Father who is in heaven," by fixing their
regards on whom they may become such as ye are. These the martyrs followed, who surpassed
the Scaevolas, and the Curtiuses, and the Deciuses, both in true virtue, because in true
piety, and also in the greatness of their number. But since those Romans were in an
earthly city, and had before them, as the end of all the offices undertaken in its behalf,
its safety, and a kingdom, not in heaven, but in earth,--not in the sphere of eternal
life, but in the sphere of demise and succession, where the dead are succeeded by the
dying,--what else but glory should they love, by which they wished even after death to
live in the mouths of their admirers?
CHAP. 15.--CONCERNING
THE TEMPORAL REWARD WHICH GOD GRANTED TO THE VIRTUES OF THE ROMANS.
Now, therefore, with regard to those to whom God
did not purpose to give eternal life with His holy angels in His own celestial city, to
the society of which that true piety which does not render the service of religion, which
the Greeks call latrei, to any save the true God conducts, if He had also withheld from
them the terrestrial glory of that most excellent empire, a reward would not have been
rendered to their good arts,--that is, their virtues,--by which they sought to attain so
great glory. For as to those who seem to do some good that they may receive glory from
men, the Lord also says, "Verily I say unto you, they have received their
reward." So also these despised their own private affairs for the sake of the
republic, and for its treasury resisted avarice, consulted for the good of their country
with a spirit of freedom, addicted neither to what their laws pronounced to be crime nor
to lust. By all these acts, as by the true way, they pressed forward to honors, power, and
glory; they were honored among almost all nations; they imposed the laws of their empire
upon many nations; and at this day, both in literature and history, they are glorious
among almost all nations. There is no reason why they should complain against the justice
of the supreme and true God,--"they have received their reward."
CHAP. 16.--CONCERNING
THE REWARD OF THE HOLY CITIZENS OF THE CELESTIAL CITY, TO WHOM THE EXAMPLE OF THE VIRTUES
OF THE ROMANS ARE USEFUL.
But the reward of the saints is far different,
who even here endured reproaches for that city of God which is hateful to the lovers of
this world. That city is eternal. There none are born, for none die. There is true and
full felicity,--not a goddess, but a gift of God. Thence we receive the pledge of faith
whilst on our pilgrimage we sigh for its beauty. There rises not the sun on the good and
the evil, but the Sun of Righteousness protects the good alone. There no great industry
shall be expended to enrich the public treasury by suffering privations at home, for there
is the common treasury of truth. And, therefore, it was not only for the sake of
recompensing the citizens of Rome that her empire and glory had been so signally extended,
but also that the citizens of that eternal city, during their pilgrimage here, might
diligently and soberly contemplate these examples, and see what a love they owe to the
supernal country on account of life eternal, if the terrestrial country was so much
beloved by its citizens on account of human glory.
CHAP. 17.--TO WHAT PROFIT THE ROMANS I CARRIED ON
WARS, AND HOW MUCH THEY CONTRIBUTED TO THE WELL-BEING OF THOSE WHOM THEY CONQUERED.
For, as far as this life of mortals is concerned,
which is spent and ended in a few days, what does it matter under whose government a dying
man lives, if they who govern do not force him to impiety and iniquity? Did the Romans at
all harm those nations, on whom, when subjugated, they imposed their laws, except in as
far as that was accomplished with great slaughter in war? Now, had it been done with
consent of the nations, it would have been done with greater success, but there would have
been no glory of conquest, for neither did the Romans themselves live exempt from those
laws which they imposed on others. Had this been done without Mars and Bellona, so that
there should have been no place for victory, no one conquering where no one had fought,
would not the condition of the Romans and of the other nations have been one and the same,
especially if that had been done at once which afterwards was done most humanely and most
acceptably, namely, the admission of all to the rights of Roman citizens who belonged to
the Roman empire, and if that had been made the privilege of all which was formerly the
privilege of a few, with this one condition, that the humbler class who had no lands of
their own should live at the public expense--an alimentary impost, which would have been
paid with a much better grace by them into the hands of good administrators of the
republic, of which they were members, by their sown hearty consent, than it would have been paid
with had it to be extorted from them as conquered men? For I do not see what it makes for
the safety, good morals, and certainly not for the dignity, of men, that some have
conquered and others have been conquered, except that it yields them that most insane pomp
of human glory, in which "they have received their reward," who burned with
excessive desire of it, and carried on most eager wars. For do not their lands pay
tribute? Have they any privilege of learning what the others are not privileged to learn?
Are there not many senators in the other countries who do not even know Rome by sight?
Take away outward show, and what are all men after all but men? But even though the
perversity of the age should permit that all the better men should be more highly honored
than others, neither thus should human honor be held at a great price, for it is smoke
which has no weight. But let us avail ourselves even in these things of the kindness of
God. Let us consider how great things they despised, how great things they endured, what
lusts they subdued for the sake of human glory, who merited that glory, as it were, in
reward for such virtues; and let this be useful to us even in suppressing pride, so that,
as that city in which it has been promised us to reign as far surpasses this one as heaven
is distant from the earth, as eternal life surpasses temporal joy, solid glory empty
praise, or the society of angels the society of mortals, or the glory of Him who made the
sun and moon the light of the sun and moon, the citizens of so great a country may not
seem to themselves to have done anything very great, if, in order to obtain it, they have
done some good works or endured some evils, when those men for this terrestrial country
already obtained, did such great things, suffered such great things. And especially are
all these things to be considered, because the remission of sins which collects citizens
to the celestial country has something in it to which a shadowy resemblance is found in
that asylum of Romulus, whither escape from the punishment of all manner of crimes
congregated that multitude with which the state was to be founded.
CHAP. 18.--HOW FAR
CHRISTIANS OUGHT TO BE FROM BOASTING, IF THEY HAVE DONE ANYTHING FOR THE LOVE OF THE
ETERNAL COUNTRY, WHEN THE ROMANS DID SUCH GREAT THINGS FOR HUMAN GLORY AND A TERRESTRIAL
CITY.
What great thing, therefore, is it for that
eternal and celestial city to despise all the charms of this world, however pleasant, if
for the sake of this terrestrial city Brutus could even put to death his son,--a sacrifice
which the heavenly city compels no one to make? But certainly it is more difficult to put
to death one's sons, than to do what is required to be done for the heavenly country, even
to distribute to the poor those things which were looked upon as things to be massed and
laid up for one's children, or to let them go, if there arise any temptation which compels
us to do so, for the sake of faith and righteousness. For it is not earthly riches which
make us or our sons happy; for they must either be lost by us in our lifetime, or be
possessed when we are dead, by whom we know not, or perhaps by whom we would not. But it
is God who makes us happy, who is the true riches of minds. But of Brutus, even the poet
who celebrates his praises testifies that it was the occasion of unhappiness to him that
he slew his son, for he says,
"And call his own rebellious seed For
menaced liberty to bleed. Unhappy father ! howsoe'er
The deed be judged by after days."
But in the following verse he consoles him in his
unhappiness, saying,
"His country's love shall all
o'erbear."
There are those two things, namely, liberty and
the desire of human praise, which compelled the Romans to admirable deeds. If, therefore,
for the liberty of dying men, and for the desire of human praise which is sought after by
mortals, sons could be put to death by a father, what great thing is it, if, for the true
liberty which has made us free from the dominion of sin, and death, and the devil,-not
through the desire of human praise, but through the earnest desire of fleeing men, not
from King Tarquin, but from demons and the prince of the demons,--we should, I do not say
put to death our sons, but reckon among our sons Christ's poor ones? If, also, another
Roman chief, surnamed Torquatus, slew his son, not because he fought against his country,
but because, being challenged by an enemy, he through youthful impetuosity fought, though
for his country, yet contrary to orders which he his father had given as general; and this
he did, notwithstanding that his son was victorious, lest there should be more evil in the
example of authority despised, than good in the glory of slaying an enemy;--if, I say,
Torquatus acted thus, wherefore should they boast themselves, who, for the laws of a celestial country, despise all
earthly good things, which are loved far less than sons?
If Furius Camillus, who was
condemned by those who envied him, notwithstanding that he had thrown off from the necks
of his countrymen the yoke of their most bitter enemies, the Veientes, again delivered his
ungrateful country from the Gauls, because he had no other in which he could have better
opportunities for living a life of glory;--if Camillus did thus, why should he be extolled
as having done some great thing, who, having, it may be, suffered in the church at the
hands of carnal enemies most grievous and dishonoring injury, has not betaken himself to
heretical enemies, or himself raised some heresy against her, but has rather defended her,
as far as he was able, from the most pernicious perversity of heretics, since there is not
another church, I say not in which one can live a life of glory, but in which eternal life
can be obtained? If Mucius, in order that peace might be made with King Porsenna, who was
pressing the Romans with a most grievous war, when he did not succeed in slaying Porsenna,
but slew another by mistake for him, reached forth his right hand and laid it on a red-hot
altar, saying that many such as he saw him to be had conspired for his destruction, so
that Porsenna, terrified at his daring, and at the thought of a conspiracy of such as he,
without any delay recalled all his warlike purposes, and made peace;--if, I say, Mucius
did this, who shall speak of his meritorious claims to the kingdom of heaven, if for it he
may have given to the flames not one hand, but even his whole body, and that not by his
own spontaneous act, but because he was persecuted by another? If Curtius, spurring on his
steed, threw himself all armed into a precipitous gulf, obeying the oracles of their gods,
which had commanded that the Romans should throw into that gulf the best thing which they
possessed, and they could only understand thereby that, since they excelled in men and
arms, the gods had commanded that an armed man should be cast headlong into that
destruction;--if he did this, shall we say that that man has done a great thing for the
eternal city who may have died by a like death, not, however, precipitating himself
spontaneously into a gulf, but having suffered this death at the hands of some enemy of
his faith, more especially when he has received from his Lord, who is also King of his
country, a more certain oracle, "Fear not them who kill the body, but cannot kill the
soul?" If the Decii dedicated themselves to death, consecrating themselves in a
form of words, as it were, that falling, and pacifying by their blood the wrath of the
gods, they might be the means of delivering the Roman army;--if they did this, let not the
holy martyrs carry themselves proudly, as though they had done some meritorious thing for
a share in that country where are eternal life and felicity, if even to the shedding of
their blood, loving not only the brethren for whom it was shed, but, according as had been
commanded them, even their enemies by whom it was being shed, they have vied with one
another in faith of love and love of faith. If Marcus Pulvillus, when engaged in
dedicating a temple to Jupiter, Juno, and Minerva, received with such indifference the
false intelligence which was brought to him of the death of his son, with the intention of
so agitating him that he should go away, and thus the glory of dedicating the temple
should fall to his colleague; --if he received that intelligence with such indifference
that he even ordered that his son should be cast out unburied, the love of glory having
overcome in his heart the grief of bereavement, how shall any one affirm that he had done
a great thing for the preaching of the gospel, by which the citizens of the heavenly city
are delivered from divers errors and gathered together from divers wanderings, to whom his
Lord has said, when anxious about the burial of his father, "Follow me, and let the
dead bury their dead?" Regulus, in order not to break his oath, even with his most
cruel enemies, returned to them from Rome itself, because (as he is said to have replied
to the Romans when they wished to retain him) he could not have the dignity of an
honorable citizen at Rome after having been a slave to the Africans, and the Carthaginians
put him to death with the utmost tortures, because he had spoken against them in the
senate. If Regulus acted thus, what tortures are not to be despised for the sake of good
faith toward that country to whose beatitude faith itself leads? Or what will a man have
rendered to the Lord for all He has bestowed upon him, if, for the faithfulness he owes to
Him, he shall have suffered such things as Regulus suffered at the hands of his most
ruthless enemies for the good faith which he owed to them? And how shall a Christian dare
vaunt himself of his voluntary poverty, which he has chosen in order that during the
pilgrimage of this life he may walk the more disencumbered on the way which leads to the
country where the true riches are, even God Himself;--how, I say, shall he vaunt himself
for this, when he hears or reads that Lucius
Valerius, who died when he was holding the office
of consul, was so poor that his funeral expenses were paid with money collected by the
people?--or when he hears that Quintius Cincinnatus, who, possessing only four acres of
land, and cultivating them with his own hands, was taken from the plough to be made
dictator,--an office more honorable even than that of consul,--and that, after having won
great glory by conquering the enemy, he preferred notwithstanding to continue in his
poverty? Or how shall he boast of having done a great thing, who has not been prevailed
upon by the offer of any reward of this world to renounce his connection with that
heavenly and eternal country, when he hears that Fabricius could not be prevailed on to
forsake the Roman city by the great gifts offered to him by Pyrrhus king of the Epirots,
who promised him the fourth part of his kingdom, but preferred to abide there in his
poverty as a private individual? For if, when their republic, --that is, the interest of
the people, the interest of the country, the common interest, --was most prosperous and
wealthy, they themselves were so poor in their own houses, that one of them, who had
already been twice a consul, was expelled from that senate of poor men by the censor,
because he was discovered to possess ten pounds weight of silverplate,--since, I say,
those very men by whose triumphs the public treasury was enriched were so poor, ought not
all Christians, who make common property of their riches with a far nobler purpose, even
that (according to what is written in the Acts of the Apostles) they may distribute to
each one according to his need, and that no one may say that anything is his own, but that
all things may be their common possession,--ought they not to understand that they
should not vaunt themselves, because they do that to obtain the society of angels, when
those men did well-nigh the same thing to preserve the glory of the Romans?
How could these, and whatever like things are
found in the Roman history, have become so widely known, and have been proclaimed by so
great a fame, had not the Roman empire, extending far and wide, been raised to its
greatness by magnificent successes? Wherefore, through that empire, so extensive and of so
long continuance, so illustrious and glorious also through the virtues of such great men,
the reward which they sought was rendered to their earnest aspirations, and also examples
are set before us, containing necessary admonition, in order that we may be stung with
shame if we shall see that we have not held fast those virtues for the sake of the most
glorious city of God, which are, in whatever way, resembled by those virtues which they
held fast for the sake of the glory of a terrestrial city, and that, too, if we shall feel
conscious that we have held them fast, we may not be lifted up with pride, because, as the
apostle says, "The sufferings of the present time are not worthy to be compared to
the glory which shall be revealed in us." But so far as regards human and
temporal glory, the lives of these ancient Romans were reckoned sufficiently worthy.
Therefore, also, we see, in the light of that truth which, veiled in the Old Testament, is
revealed in the New, namely, that it is not in view of terrestrial and temporal benefits,
which divine providence grants promiscuously to good and evil, that God is to be
worshipped, but in view of eternal life, everlasting gifts, and of the society of the
heavenly city itself;--in the light of this truth we see that the Jews were most
righteously given as a trophy to the glory of the Romans; for we see that these Romans,
who rested on earthly glory, and sought to obtain it by virtues, such as they were,
conquered those who, in their great depravity, slew and rejected the giver of true glory,
and of the eternal city.
CHAP. 19.--CONCERNING
THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN TRUE GLORY AND THE DESIRE OF DOMINATION.
There is assuredly a difference between the
desire of human glory and the desire of domination; for, though he who has an overweening
delight in human glory will be also very prone to aspire earnestly after domination,
nevertheless they who desire the true glory even of human praise strive not to displease
those who judge well of them. For there are many good moral qualities, of which many are
competent judges, although they are not possessed by many; and by those good moral
qualities those men press on to glory, honor and domination, of whom Sallust says,
"But they press on by the true way."
But whosoever, without possessing that desire of
glory which makes one fear to displease those who judge his conduct, desires domination
and power, very often seeks to obtain what he loves by most open crimes. Therefore he who
desires glory presses on to obtain it either by the true way, or certainly by deceit and
artifice, wishing to appear good when he is not. Therefore to him who possesses virtues it
is a great virtue to despise glory; for contempt of it is seen by God, but is
not manifest to human judgment. For whatever any one does before the eyes of men in order
to show himself to be a despiser of glory, if they suspect that he is doing it in order to
get greater praise,--that is, greater glory,--he has no means of demonstrating to the
perceptions of those who suspect him that the case is really otherwise than they suspect
it to be. But he who despises the judgment of praisers, despises also the rashness of
suspectors. Their salvation, indeed, he does not despise, if he is truly good; for so
great is the righteousness of that man who receives his virtues from the Spirit of God,
that he loves his very enemies, and so loves them that he desires that his haters and
detractors may be turned to righteousness, and become his associates, and that not in an
earthly but in a heavenly country. But with respect to his praisers, though he sets little
value on their praise, he does not set little value on their love; neither does he elude
their praise, lest he should forfeit their love. And, therefore, he strives earnestly to
have their praises directed to Him from whom every one receives whatever in him is truly
praiseworthy. But he who is a despiser of glory, but is greedy of domination, exceeds the
beasts in the vices of cruelty and luxuriousness. Such, indeed, were certain of the
Romans, who, wanting the love of esteem, wanted not the thirst for domination; and that
there were many such, history testifies. But it was Nero Caesar who was the first to reach
the summit, and, as it were, the citadel, of this vice; for so great was his
luxuriousness, that one would nave thought there was nothing manly to be dreaded in him,
and such his cruelty, that, had not the contrary been known, no one would have thought
there was anything effeminate in his character. Nevertheless power and domination are not
given even to such men save by the providence of the most high God, when He judges that
the state of human affairs is worthy of such lords. The divine utterance is clear on this
matter; for the Wisdom of God thus speaks: "By me kings reign, and tyrants possess
the land." But, that it may not be thought that by "tyrants" is meant,
not wicked and impious kings, but brave men, m accordance with the ancient use of the
word, as when Virgil says,
"For know that treaty may not stand where king greets king and joins not hand,"
in another place it is most unambiguously said of
God, that He "maketh the man who is an hypocrite to reign on account of the
perversity of the people." Wherefore, though have, according to my ability, shown
for what reason God, who alone is true and just, helped forward the Romans, who were good
according to a certain standard of an earthly state, to the aCquirement of the glory of so
great an empire, there may be, nevertheless, a more hidden cause, known better to God than
to us, depending on the diversity of the merits of the human race. Among all who are truly
pious, it is at all events agreed that no one without true piety,--that is, true worship
of the true God--can have true virtue; and that it is not true virtue which is the slave
of human praise. Though, nevertheless, they who are not citizens of the eternal city,
which is called the city of God in the sacred Scriptures, are more useful to the earthly
city when they possess even that virtue than if they had not even that. But there could be
nothing more fortunate for human affairs than that, by the mercy of God, they who are
endowed with true piety of life, if they have the skill for ruling people, should also
have the power. But such men, however great virtues they may possess in this life,
attribute it solely to the grace of God that He has bestowed it on them--willing,
believing, seeking. And, at the same time, they understand how far they are short of that
perfection of righteousness which exists in the society of those holy angels for which
they are striving to fit themselves. But however much that virtue may be praised and cried
up, which without true piety is the slave of human glory, it is not at all to be compared
even to the feeble beginnings of the virtue of the saints, whose hope is placed in the
grace and mercy of the true God.
CHAP. 20.--THAT IT IS AS
SHAMEFUL FOR THE VIRTUES TO SERVE HUMAN GLORY AS BODILY PLEASURE.
Philosophers,--who place the end of human good in
virtue itself, in order to put to shame certain other philosophers, who indeed approve of
the virtues, but measure them all with reference to the end of bodily pleasure, and think
that this pleasure is to be sought for its own sake, but the virtues on account of
pleasure,--are wont to paint a kind of word-picture, in which Pleasure sits like a
luxurious queen on a royal seat, and all the virtues are subjected to her as slaves,
watching her nod, that they may do whatever she shall command. She commands Prudence to be
ever on the watch to discover how Pleasure may rule, and be safe. Justice she orders to
grant what benefits she can,in order to secure those friendships which are necessary for
bodily pleasure; to do wrong to no one, lest, on account of the
breaking of the laws, Pleasure be not able to live in security. Fortitude she orders to
keep her mistress, that is, Pleasure, bravely in her mind, if any affliction befall her
body which does not occasion death, in order that by remembrance of former delights she
may mitigate the poignancy of present pain. Temperance she commands to take only a certain
quantity even of the most favorite food, lest, through immoderate use, anything prove
hurtful by disturbing the health of the body, and thus Pleasure, which the Epicureans make
to consist chiefly in the health of the body, be grievously offended. Thus the virtues,
with the whole dignity of their glory, will be the slaves of Pleasure, as of some
imperious and disreputable woman.
There is nothing, say our philosophers, more
disgraceful and monstrous than this picture, and which the eyes of good men can less
endure. And they say the truth. But I do not think that the picture would be sufficiently
becoming, even if it were made so that the virtues should be represented as the slaves of
human glory; for, though that glory be not a luxurious woman, it is nevertheless puffed
up, and has much vanity in it. Wherefore it is unworthy of the solidity and firmness of
the virtues to represent them as serving this glory, so that Prudence shall provide
nothing, Justice distribute nothing, Temperance moderate nothing, except to the end that
men may be pleased and vain glory served. Nor will they be able to defend themselves from
the charge of such baseness, whilst they, by way of being despisers of glory, disregard
the judgment of other men, seem to themselves wise, and please themselves. For their
virtue,--if, indeed, it is virtue at all,--is only in another way subjected to human
praise; for he who seeks to please himself seeks still to please man. But he who, with
true piety towards God, whom he loves, believes, and hopes in, fixes his attention more on
those things in which he displeases himself, than on those things, if there are any such,
which please himself, or rather, not himself, but the truth, does not attribute that by
which he can now please the truth to anything but to the mercy of Him whom he has feared
to displease, giving thanks for what in him is healed, and pouring out prayers for the
healing of that which is yet unhealed.
CHAP. 21.--THAT THE
ROMAN DOMINION WAS GRANTED BY HIM FROM WHOM IS ALL POWER, AND BY WHOSE PROVIDENCE ALL
THINGS ARE RULED.
These things being so, we do not attribute the
power of giving kingdoms and empires to any save to the true God, who gives happiness in
the kingdom of heaven to the pious alone, but gives kingly power on earth both to the
pious and the impious, as it may please Him, whose good pleasure is always just. For
though we have said something about the principles which guide His administration, in so
far as it has seemed good to Him to explain it, nevertheless it is too much for us, and
far surpasses our strength, to discuss the hidden things of men's hearts, and by a clear
examination to determine the merits of various kingdoms. He, therefore, who is the one
true God, who never leaves the human race without just judgment and help, gave a kingdom
to the Romans when He would, and as great as He would, as He did also to the Assyrians,
and even the Persians, by whom, as their own books testify, only two gods are worshipped,
the one good and the other evil,--to say nothing concerning the Hebrew people, of whom I
have already spoken as much as seemed necessary, who, as long as they were a kingdom,
worshipped none save the true God.
The same, therefore, who gave to the Persians harvests,
though they did not worship the goddess Segetia, who gave the other blessings of the
earth, though they did not worship the many gods which the Romans supposed to preside,
each one over some particular thing, or even many of them over each several thing,--He, I
say, gave the Persians dominion, though they worshipped none of those gods to whom the
Romans believed themselves indebted for the empire. And the same is true in respect of men
as well as nations. He who gave power to Marius gave it also to Caius Caesar; He who gave
it to Augustus gave it also to Nero; He also who gave it to the most benignant emperors,
the Vespasians, father and son, gave it also to the cruel Domitian; and, finally, to avoid
the necessity of going over them all, He who gave it to the Christian Constantine gave it
also to the apostate Julian, whose gifted mind was deceived by a sacrilegious and
detestable curiosity, stimulated by the love of power. And it was because he was addicted
through curiosity to vain oracles, that, confident of victory, he burned the ships which
were laden with the provisions necessary for his army, and therefore, engaging with hot
zeal in rashly audacious enterprises, he was soon slain, as the just consequence of his
recklessness, and left his army unprovisioned in an enemy's country, and in such a
predicament that it never could have escaped, save by altering the boundaries of the Roman
empire, in violation of that omen of the god Terminus of which I spoke in the preceding
book; for the god Terminus yielded to necessity, though he had not yielded to Jupiter.
Manifestly these things are ruled and governed by the one God according as He pleases; and
if His motives are hid, are they therefore unjust?
CHAP. 22.--THE DURATIONS
AND ISSUES OF WAR DEPEND ON THE WILL OF GOD.
Thus also the durations of wars are determined by
Him as He may see meet, according to His righteous will, and pleasure, and mercy, to
afflict or to console the human race, so that they are sometimes of longer, sometimes of
shorter duration. The war of the Pirates and the third Punic war were terminated with
incredible celerity, Also the war of the fugitive gladiators, though in it many Roman
generals and the consuls were defeated, and Italy was terribly wasted and ravaged, was
nevertheless ended in the third year, having itself been, during its continuance, the end
of much. The Picentes, the Marsi, and the Peligni, not distant but Italian nations, after
a long and most loyal servitude under the Roman yoke, attempted to raise their heads into
liberty, though many nations had now been subjected to the Roman power, and Carthage had
been overthrown. In this Italian war the Romans were very often defeated, and two consuls
perished, besides other noble senators; nevertheless this calamity was not protracted over
a long space of time, for the fifth year put an end to it. But the second Punic war,
lasting for the space of eighteen years, and occasioning the greatest disasters and
calamities to the republic, wore out and well-nigh consumed the strength of the Romans;
for in two battles about seventy thousand Romans fell.
The first Punic war was
terminated after having been waged for three-and-twenty years. The Mithridatic war was
waged for forty years. And that no one may think that in the early and much belauded times
of the Romans they were far braver and more able to bring wars to a speedy termination,
the Samnite war was protracted for nearly fifty years; and in this war the Romans were so
beaten that they were even put under the yoke. But because they did not love glory for the
sake of justice, but seemed rather to have loved justice for the sake of glory, they broke
the peace and the treaty which had been concluded. These things I mention, because many,
ignorant of past things, and some also dissimulating what they know, if in Christian times
they see any war protracted a little longer than they expected, straightway make a fierce
and insolent attack on our religion, exclaiming that, but for it, the deities would have
been supplicated still, according to ancient rites; and then, by that bravery of the
Romans, which, with the help of Mars and Bellona, speedily brought to an end such great
wars, this war also would be speedily terminated. Let them, therefore, who have read
history recollect what long-continued wars, having various issues and en-tailing woeful
slaughter, were waged by the ancient Romans, in accordance with the general truth that the
earth, like the tempestuous deep, is subject to agitations from tempests--tempests of such
evils, in various degrees,--and let them sometimes confess what they do not like to own,
and not, by madly speaking against God, destroy themselves and deceive the ignorant.
CHAP. 23.--CONCERNING THE WAR IN WHICH
RADAGAISUS, KING OF THE GOTHS, A WORSHIPPER OF DEMONS, WAS CONQUERED IN ONE DAY, WITH ALL
HIS MIGHTY FORCES.
Nevertheless they do not mention with
thanksgiving what God has very recently, and within our own memory, wonderfully and
mercifully done, but as far as in them lies they attempt, if possible, to bury it in
universal oblivion. But should we be silent about these things, we should be in like
manner ungrateful. When Radagaisus, king of the Goths, having taken up his position very
near to the city, with a vast and savage army, was already close upon the Romans, he was
in one day so speedily and so thoroughly beaten, that, whilst not even one Roman was
wounded, much less slain, far more than a hundred thousand of his army were prostrated,
and he himself and his sons, having been captured, were forthwith put to death, suffering
the punishment they deserved. For had so impious a man, with so great and so impious a
host, entered the city, whom would he have spared? what tombs of the martyrs would he have
respected? in his treatment of what person would he have manifested the fear of God? whose
blood would he have refrained from shedding? whose chastity would he have wished to
preserve inviolate? But how loud would they not have been in the praises of their gods!
How insultingly they would have boasted, saying that Radagaisus had conquered, that he had
been able to achieve such great things, because he propitiated and won over the gods by
daily sacrifices,--a thing which the Christian religion did not allow the Romans to do!
For when he was approaching to those places where he was overwhelmed at the nod of the
Supreme Majesty, as his fame was everywhere increasing, it was being told us at Carthage
that the pagans were believing, publishing, and boasting, that he, on account of the help
and protection of the gods friendly to him, because of the sacrifices which he was said to
be daily offering to them, would certainly not be conquered by those who were not
performing such sacrifices to the Roman gods, and did not even permit that they should be
offered by any one. And now these wretched men do not give thanks to God for his great
mercy, who, having determined to chastise the corruption of men, which was worthy of far
heavier chastisement than the corruption of the barbarians, tempered His indignation with
such mildness as, in the first instance, to cause that the king of the Goths should be
conquered in a wonderful manner, lest glory should accrue to demons, whom he was known to
be supplicating, and thus the minds of the weak should be overthrown; and then,
afterwards, to cause that, when Rome was to be taken, it should be taken by those
barbarians who, contrary to any custom of all former wars, protected, through reverence
for the Christian religion, those who fled for refuge to the sacred places, and who so
opposed the demons themselves, and the rites of impious sacrifices, that they seemed to be
carrying on a far more terrible war with them than with men. Thus did the true Lord and
Governor of things both scourge the Romans mercifully, and, by the marvellous defeat of
the worshippers of demons, show that those sacrifices were not necessary even for the
safety of present things; so that, by those who dO not obstinately hold out, but prudently
consider the matter, true religion may not be deserted on account of the urgencies of the
present time, but may be more clung to in most confident expectation of eternal life.
CHAP. 24.--WHAT WAS THE
HAPPINESS OF THE CHRISTIAN EMPERORS, AND HOW FAR IT WAS TRUE HAPPINESS.
For neither do we say that certain Christian
emperors were therefore happy because they ruled a long time, or, dying a peaceful death,
left their sons to succeed them in the empire, or subdued the enemies of the republic, or
were able both to guard against and to suppress the attempt of hostile citizens rising
against them. These and other gifts or comforts of this sorrowful life even certain
worshippers of demons have merited to receive, who do not belong to the kingdom of God to
which these belong; and this is to be traced to the mercy of God, who would not have those
who believe in Him desire such things as the highest good. But we say that they are happy
if they rule justly; if they are not lifted up amid the praises of those who pay them
sublime honors, and the obsequiousness of those who salute them with an excessive
humility, but remember that they are men; if they make their power the handmaid of His
majesty by using it for the greatest possible extension of His worship; if they fear,
love, worship God; if more than their own they love that kingdom in which they are not
afraid to have partners; if they are slow to punish, ready to pardon; if they apply that
punishment as necessary to government and defence of the republic, and not in order to
gratify their own enmity; if they grant pardon, not that iniquity may go unpunished, but
with the hope that the transgressor may amend his ways; if they compensate with the lenity
of mercy and the liberality of benevolence for whatever severity they may be compelled to
decree; if their luxury is as much restrained as it might have been unrestrained; if they
prefer to govern depraved desires rather than any nation whatever; and if they do all
these things, not through ardent desire of empty glory, but through love of eternal
felicity, not neglecting to offer to the true God, who is their God, for their sins, the
sacrifices of humility, contrition, and prayer. Such Christian emperors, we say, are happy
in the present time by hope, and are destined to be so in the enjoyment of the reality
itself, when that which we wait for shall have arrived.
CHAP. 25.--CONCERNING
THE PROSPERITY WHICH GOD GRANTED TO THE CHRISTIAN EMPEROR CONSTANTINE.
For the good God, lest men, who believe that He
is to be worshipped with a view to eternal life, should think that no one could attain to
all this high estate, and to this terrestrial dominion, unless he should be a worshipper
of the demons,--supposing that these spirits have great power with respect to such
things,--for this reason He gave to the Emperor Constantine, who was not a worshipper of
demons, but of the true God Himself, such fullness of earthly gifts as no one would even
dare wish for. To him also He granted the honor of founding a city, a companion to the
Roman empire, the daughter, as it were, of Rome itself, but without any temple or image of
the demons. He reigned for a long period as sole emperor, and unaided held and defended
the whole Roman world. In conducting and carrying on wars he was most victorious; in
overthrowing tyrants he was most successful. He died at a great age, of sickness and old
age, and left his sons to succeed him in the empire. But again, lest any emperor should
become a Christian in order to merit the happiness of Constantine, when every one should
be a Christian for the sake of eternal life, God took away Jovian far sooner than Julian,
and permitted that Gratian should be slain by the sword of a tyrant. But in his case there
was far more mitigation of the calamity than in the case of the great Pompey, for he could
not be avenged by Cato, whom he had left, as it were, heir to the civil war. But Gratian,
though pious minds require not such consolations, was avenged by Theodosius, whom he had
associated with himself in the empire, though he had a little brother of his own, being
more desirous of a faithful alliance than of extensive power.
CHAP. 26.--ON THE FAITH
AND PIETY OF THEODOSIUS AUGUSTUS.
And on this account, Theodosius not only
preserved during the lifetime of Gratian that fidelity which was due to him, but also,
after his death, he, like a true Christian, took his little brother Valentinian under his
protection, as joint emperor, after he had been expelled by Maximus, the murderer of his
father. He guarded him with paternal affection, though he might without any difficulty
have got rid of him, being entirely destitute of all resources, had he been animated with
the desire of extensive empire, and not with the ambition of being a benefactor. It was
therefore a far greater pleasure to him, when he had adopted the boy, and preserved to him
his imperial dignity, to console him by his very humanity and kindness. Afterwards, when
that success was rendering Maximus terrible, Theodosius, in the midst of his perplexing
anxieties, was not drawn away to follow the suggestions of a sacrilegious and unlawful
curiosity, but sent to John, whose abode was in the desert of Egypt,--for he had learned
that this servant of God (whose fame was spreading abroad) was endowed with the gift of
prophecy,--and from him he received assurance of victory. Immediately the slayer of the
tyrant Maximus, with the deepest feelings of compassion and respect, restored the boy
Valentinianus to his share in the empire from which he had been driven. Valentinianus
being soon after slain by secret assassination or by some other plot or accident,
Theodosius, having again received a response from the prophet, and placing entire
confidence in it, marched against the tyrant Eugenius, who had been unlawfully elected to
succeed that emperor, and defeated his very powerful army, more by prayer than by the
sword. Some soldiers who were at the battle reported to me that all the missiles they were
throwing were snatched from their hands by a vehement wind, which blew from the direction
of Theodosius' army upon the enemy; nor did it only drive with greater velocity the darts
which were hurled against them, but also turned back upon their own bodies the darts which
they themselves were throwing. And therefore the poet Claudian, although an alien from the
name of Christ, nevertheless says in his praises of him, "O prince, too much beloved
by God, for thee AEolus pours armed tempests from their caves; for thee the air fights,
and the winds with one accord obey thy bugles." But the victor, as he had believed
and predicted, overthrew the statues of Jupiter, which had been, as it were, consecrated
by I know not what kind of rites against him, and set up in the Alps. And the thunderbolts
of these statues, which were made of gold, he mirthfully and graciously presented to his
couriers who (as the joy of the occasion permitted) were jocularly saying that they would
be most happy to be struck by such thunderbolts The sons of his own enemies, whose fathers
had been slain not so much by his orders as by the vehemence of war, having fled for
refuge to a church, though they were not yet Christians, he was anxious, taking advantage
of the occasion, to bring over to Christianity, and treated them with Christian love. Nor
did he deprive them of their property, but, besides allowing them to retain it, bestowed
on them additional honors.
He did not permit private animosities to affect the treatment
of any man after the war. He was not like Cinna, and Marius, and Sylla, and other such
men, who wished not to finish civil wars even when they were finished, but rather grieved
that they had arisen at all, than wished that when they were finished they should harm any
one. Amid all these events, from the very commencement of his reign, he did not cease to
help the troubled church against the impious by most just and merciful laws, which the
heretical Valens, favoring the Arians, had vehemently afflicted. Indeed, he rejoiced more
to be a member of this church than he did to be a king upon the earth. The idols of the
Gentiles he everywhere ordered to be overthrown, understanding well that not even
terrestrial gifts are placed in the power of demons, but in that of the true God. And what could be more admirable than his religious humility, when, compelled by the urgency of
certain of his intimates, he avenged the grievous crime of the Thessalonians, which at the
prayer of the bishops he had promised to pardon, and, being laid hold of by the discipline
of the church, did penance in such a way that the sight of his imperial loftiness
prostrated made the people who were interceding for him weep more than the consciousness
of offence had made them fear it when enraged? These and other similar good works, which
it would be long to tell, he carried with him from this world of time, where the greatest
human nobility and loftiness are but vapor. Of these works the reward is eternal
happiness, of which God is the giver, though only to those who are sincerely pious. But
all other blessings and privileges of this life, as the world itself, light, air, earth,
water, fruits, and the soul of man himself, his body, senses, mind, life, He lavishes on
good and bad alike. And among these blessings is also to be reckoned the possession of an
empire, whose extent He regulates according to the requirements of His providential
government at various times. Whence, I see, we must now answer those who, being confuted
and convicted by the most manifest proofs, by which it is shown that for obtaining these
terrestrial things, which are all the foolish desire to have, that multitude of false gods
is of no use, attempt to assert that the gods are to be worshipped with a view to the
interest, not of the present life, but of that which is to come after death. For as to
those who, for the sake of the friendship of this world, are willing to worship vanities,
and do not grieve that they are left to their puerile understandings, I think they have
been sufficiently answered in these five books; of which books, when I had published the
first three, and they had begun to come into the hands of many, I heard that certain
persons were preparing against them an answer of some kind or other in writing. Then it
was told me that they had already written their answer, but were waiting a time when they
could publish it without danger. Such persons I would advise not to desire what cannot be
of any advantage to them; for it is very easy for a man to seem to himself to have
answered arguments, when he has only been unwilling to be silent. For what is more
loquacious than vanity? And though it be able, if it like, to shout more loudly than the
truth, it is not, for all that, more powerful than the truth. But let men consider
diligently all the things that we have said, and if, perchance, judging without party
spirit, they shall clearly perceive that they are such things as may rather be shaken than
torn up by their most impudent garrulity, and, as it were, satirical and mimic levity, let
them restrain their absurdities, and let them choose rather to be corrected by the wise
than to be lauded by the foolish. For if they are waiting an opportunity, not for liberty
to speak the truth, but for license to revile, may not that befall them which Tully says
concerning some one, "Oh, wretched man! who was at liberty to sin?"
Wherefore, whoever he be who deems himself happy because of license to revile, he would be
far happier if that were not allowed him at all; for he might all the while, laying aside
empty boast, be contradicting those to whose views he is opposed by way of free
consultation with them, and be listening, as it becomes him, honorably, gravely, candidly,
to all that can be adduced by those whom he consults by friendly disputation.
BOOK SIX
TABLE OF CONTENTS
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