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church fathers 3
THE APOLOGY (CHAP. I to CHAP. XXIII)
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I. APOLOGY.
[TRANSLATED BY THE REV. S. THELWALL, LATE SCHOLAR OF CHRIST'S COLLEGE, CANTAB.]
THE APOLOGY.(1) CHAP. I.
Rulers of the Roman Empire, if, seated for the administration of
justice on your lofty tribunal, under the gaze of every eye, and
occupying there all but the highest position in the state, you may not
openly inquire into and sift before the world the real truth in regard
to the charges made against the Christians; if in this case alone you
are afraid or ashamed to exercise your authority in making public
inquiry with the carefulness which becomes justice; if, finally, the
extreme severities inflicted on our people in recently private
judgments, stand in the way of our being permitted to defend ourselves
before you, you cannot surely forbid the Truth to reach your ears by
the secret pathway of a noiseless book.(2) She has no appeals to make
to you in regard of her condition, for that does not excite her wonder.
She knows that she is but a sojourner on the earth, and that among
strangers she naturally finds foes; and more than this, that her
origin, her dwelling-place, her hope, her recompense, her honours, are
above. One thing, meanwhile, she anxiously desires of earthly
rulers--not to be condemned unknown. What harm can it do to the laws,
supreme in their domain, to give her a hearing? Nay, for that part of
it, will not their absolute supremacy be more conspicuous in their
condemning her, even after she has made her plea? But if, unheard,
sentence is pronounced against her, besides the odium of an unjust
deed, you will incur the merited suspicion of doing it with some idea
that it is unjust, as not wishing to hear what you may not be able to
hear and condemn. We lay this before you as the first ground on which
we urge that your hatred to the name of Christian is unjust. And the
very reason which seems to excuse this injustice (I mean ignorance) at
once aggravates and convicts it. For what is there more unfair than to
hate a thing of which you know nothing, even though it deserve to be
hated? Hatred is only merited when it is known to be merited. But
without that knowledge, whence is its justice to be vindicated? for
that is to be proved, not from the mere fact that an aversion exists,
but from acquaintance with the subject. When men, then, give way to a
dislike simply because they are entirely ignorant of the nature of the
thing disliked, why may it not be precisely the very sort of thing they
should not dislike? So we maintain that they are both ignorant while
they hate us, and hate us unrighteously while they continue in
ignorance, the one thing being the result of the other either way of
it. The proof of their ignorance, at once condemning and excusing their
injustice, is this, that those who once hated Christianity because they
knew nothing about it, no sooner come to know it than they all lay down
at once their enmity. From being its haters they become its disciples.
By simply getting acquainted with it, they begin now to hate what they
had formerly been, and to profess what they had formerly hated; and
their numbers are as great as are laid to our charge. The outcry is
that the State is filled with Christians--that they are in the fields,
in the citadels, in the islands: they make lamentation, as for some
calamity, that both sexes, every age and condition, even high rank, are
passing over to the profession of the Christian faith; and yet for all,
their minds are not awakened to the thought of some good they have
failed to notice in it. They must not allow any truer suspicions to
cross their minds; they have no desire to make closer trial. Here alone
the curiosity of human nature slumbers. They like to be ignorant,
though to others the knowledge has been bliss. Anacharsis reproved the
rude venturing to criticise the cultured; how much more this judging of
those who know, by men who are entirely ignorant, might he have
denounced X Because they already dislike, they want to know no more.
Thus they prejudge that of which they are ignorant to be such, that, if
they came to know it, it could no longer be the object of their
aversion; since, if inquiry finds nothing worthy of dislike, it is
certainly proper to cease from an unjust dislike, while if its bad
character comes plainly out, instead of the detestation entertained for
it being thus diminished, a stronger reason for perseverance in that
detestation is obtained, even under the authority of justice itself.
But, says one, a thing is not good merely because multitudes go over to
it; for how many have the bent of their nature towards whatever is bad!
how many go astray into ways of error! It is undoubted. Yet a thing
that is thoroughly evil, not even those whom it carries away venture to
defend as good. Nature throws a veil either of fear or shame over all
evil. For instance, you find that criminals are eager to conceal
themselves, avoid appearing in public, are in trepidation when they are
caught, deny their guilt, when they are accused; even when they are put
to the rack, they do not easily or always confess; when there is no
doubt about their condemnation, they grieve for what they have done. In
their self-communings they admit their being impelled by sinful
dispositions, but they lay the blame either on fate or on the stars.
They are unwilling to acknowledge that the thing is theirs, because
they own that it is wicked. But what is there like this in the
Christian's case? The only shame or regret he feels, is at not having
been a Christian earlier. If he is pointed out, he glories in it; if he
is accused, he offers no defence; interrogated, he makes voluntary
confession; condemned he renders thanks. What sort of evil thing is
this, which wants all the ordinary peculiarities of evil--fear, shame,
subterfuge, penitence, lamenting? What! is that a crime in which the
criminal rejoices? to be accused of which is his ardent wish, to be
punished for which is his felicity? You cannot call it madness, you who
stand convicted of knowing nothing of the matter.
CHAP. II.
If, again, it is certain that we are the most wicked of men, why do you
treat us so differently from our fellows, that is, from other
criminals,it being only fair that the same crime should get the same
treatment? When the charges made against us are made against others,
they are permitted to make use both of their own lips and of hired
pleaders to show their innocence. They have full opportunity of answer
and debate; in fact, it is against the law to condemn anybody
undefended and unheard. Christians alone are forbidden to say anything
in exculpation of themselves, in defence of the truth, to help the
judge to a righteous decision; all that is cared about is having what
the public hatred demands--the confession of the name, not examination
of the charge: while in your ordinary judicial investigations, on a
man's confession of the crime of murder, or sacrilege, or incest, or
treason, to take the points of which we are accused, you are not
content to proceed at once to sentence,--you do not take that step till
you thoroughly examine the circumstances of the confession--what is the
real character of the deed, how often, where, in what way, when he has
done it, who were privy to it, and who actually took part with him in
it. Nothing like this is done in our case, though the falsehoods
disseminated about us ought to have the same sifting, that it might be
found how many murdered children each of us had tasted; how many
incests each of us had shrouded in darkness; what cooks, what dogs had
been witness of our deeds. Oh, how great the glory of the ruler who
should bring to light some Christian who had devoured a hundred
infants! But, instead of that, we find that even inquiry in regard to
our case is forbidden. For the younger Pliny, when he was ruler of a
province, having condemned some Christians to death, and driven some
from their stedfastness, being still annoyed by their great numbers, at
last sought the advice of Trajan,(1) the reigning emperor, as to what
he was to do with the rest, explaining to his master that, except an
obstinate disinclination to offer sacrifices, he found in the religious
services nothing but meetings at early morning for singing hymns to
Christ and(2) God, and sealing home their way of life by a united
pledge to be faithful to their religion, forbidding murder, adultery,
dishonesty, and other crimes. Upon this Trajan wrote back that
Christians were by no means to be sought after; but if they were
brought before him, they should be punished.
O miserable deliverance,--under the necessities of the case, a
self-contradiction! It forbids them to be sought after as innocent, and
it commands them to be punished as guilty. It is at once merciful and
cruel; it, passes by, and it punishes. Why dost thou play a game of
evasion upon thyself, O Judgment? If thou condemnest, why dost thou not
also inquire. If thou does not inquire, why dost thou not also absolve?
Military stations are distributed through all the provinces for
tracking robbers. Against traitors and public foes every man is a
soldier; search is made even for their confederates and accessories.
The Christian alone must not be sought, though he may be brought and
accused before the judge; as if a search had any other end than that in
view And so you condemn the man for whom nobody wished a search to be
made when he is presented to you, and who even now does not deserve
punishment, I suppose, because of his guilt, but because, though
forbidden to be sought, he was found. And then, too, you do not in that
case deal with us in the ordinary way of judicial proceedings against
offenders; for, in the case of others denying, you apply the torture to
make them confess--Christians alone you torture, to make them deny;
whereas, if we were guilty of any crime, we should be sure to deny it,
and you with your tortures would force us to confession. Nor indeed
should you hold that our crimes require no i such investigation merely
on .the ground that you are convinced by our confession of the name
that the deeds were done,--you who are daily wont, though you know well
enough what murder is, none the less to extract from the confessed
murderer a full account of how the crime was perpetrated. So that with
all the greater perversity you act, when, holding our crimes proved by
our confession of the name of Christ, you drive us by torture to fall
from our confession, that, repudiating the name, we may in like manner
repudiate also the crimes with which, from that same confession, you
had assumed that we were chargeable. I suppose, though you believe us
to be the worst of mankind, you do not wish us to perish. For thus, no
doubt, you are in the habit of bidding the murderer deny, and of
ordering the man guilty of sacrilege to the rack if he persevere in his
acknowledgment! Is that the way of it? But if thus you do not, deal
with us as criminals, you declare us thereby innocent, when as innocent
you are anxious that we do not persevere in a confession which you know
will bring on us a condemnation of necessity, not of justice, at your
hands. "I am a Christian," the man cries out. He tells you what he is;
you wish to hear from him what he is not. Occupying your place of
authority to extort the truth, you do your utmost to get lies from us.
"I am," he says, "that which you ask me if I am. Why do you torture me
to sin? I confess, and you put me to the rack. What would you do if I
denied? Certainly you give no ready credence to others when they deny.
When we deny, you believe at once. Let this perversity of yours lead
you to suspect that there is some hidden power in the case under whose
influence you act against the forms, against the nature of public
justice, even against the very laws themselves. For, unless I am
greatly mistaken, the laws enjoin offenders to be searched out, and not
to be hidden away. They lay it down that persons who own a crime are to
be condemned, not acquitted. The decrees of the senate, the commands of
your chiefs, lay this clearly down. The power of which you are servants
is a civil, not a tyrannical domination. Among tyrants, indeed,
torments used to be inflicted even as punishments: with you they are
mitigated to a means of questioning alone. Keep to your law in these as
necessary till confession is obtained; and if the torture is
anticipated by confession, there will be no occasion for it: sentence
should be passed; the criminal should be given over to the penalty
which is his due, not released. Accordingly, no one is eager for the
acquittal of the guilty; it is not right to desire that, and so no one
is ever compelled to deny. Well, you think the Christian a man of every
crime, an enemy of the gods, of the emperor, of the laws, of good
morals, of all nature; yet you compel him to deny, that you may acquit
him, which without him denial you could not do. You play fast and loose
with the laws. You wish him to deny his guilt, that you may, even
against his will, bring him out blameless and free from all guilt in
reference to the past! Whence is this strange perversity on your part?
How is it you do not reflect that a spontaneous confession is greatly
more worthy of credit than a compelled denial; or consider whether,
when compelled to deny, a man's denial may not be in good faith, and
whether acquitted, he may not, then and there, as soon as the trial is
over, laugh at your hostility, a Christian as much as ever? Seeing,
then, that in everything you deal differently with us than with other
criminals, bent upon the one object of taking from us our name (indeed,
it is ours no more if we do what Christians never do), it is made
perfectly clear that there is no crime of any kind in the case, but
merely a name which a certain system, ever working against the truth,
pursues with its enmity, doing this chiefly with the object of securing
that men may have no desire to know for certain what they know for
certain they are entirely ignorant of. Hence, too, it is that they
believe about us things of which they have no proof, and they are
disinclined to have them looked into, lest the charges, they would
rather take on trust, are all proved to have no foundation, that the
name so hostile to that rival power--its crimes presumed, not
proved--may be condemned simply on its own confession. So we are put to
the torture if we confess, and we are punished if we persevere, and if
we deny we are acquitted, because all the contention is about a name.
Finally, why do you read out of your tablet-lists that such a man is a
Christian? Why not also that he is a murderer? And if a Christian is a
murderer, why not guilty, too, of incest, or any other vile thing you
believe of us? In our case alone you are either ashamed or unwilling to
mention the very names of our crimes-If to be called a "Christian" does
not imply any crime, the name is surely very hateful, when that of
itself is made a crime.
CHAP. III.
What are we to think of it, that most people so blindly knock their
heads against the hatred of the Christian name; that when they bear
favourable testimony to any one, they mingle with it abuse of the name
he bears? "A good man," says one, "is Gaius Seius, only that he is a
Christian." So another, "I am astonished that a wise man like Lucius
should have suddenly become a Christian." Nobody thinks it needful to
consider whether Gaius is not good and Lucius wise, on this very
account that he is a Christian; or a Christian, for the reason that he
is wise and good. They praise what they know, they abuse what they are
ignorant of, and they inspire their knowledge with their ignorance;
though in fairness you should rather judge of what is unknown from what
is known, than what is known from what is unknown. Others, in the case
of persons whom, before they took the name of Christian, they had known
as loose, and vile, and wicked, put on them a brand from the very thing
which they praise. In the blindness of their hatred, they fall foul of
their own approving judgment! "What a woman she was! how wanton! how
gay! What a youth he was! how profligate! how libidinous!--they have
become Christians!" So the hated name is given to a reformation of
character. Some even barter away their comforts for that hatred,
content to bear injury, if they are kept free at home from the object
of their bitter enmity. The wife, now chaste, the husband, now no
longer jealous, casts out of his house; the son, now obedient, the
father, who used to be so patient, disinherits; the servant, now
faithful, the master, once so mild, commands away from his presence; it
is a high offence for any one to be reformed by the detested name.
Goodness is of less value than hatred of Christians. Well now, if there
is this dislike of the name, what blame can you attach to names? What
accusation can you bring against mere designations, save that something
in the word sounds either barbarous, or unlucky, or scurrilous, or
unchaste? But Christian, so far as the meaning of the word is
concerned, is derived from anointing. Yes, and even when it is wrongly
pronounced by you "Chrestianus" (for you do not even know accurately
the name you hate), it comes from sweetness and benignity. You hate,
therefore, in the guiltless, even a guiltless name. But the special
ground of dislike to the sect is, that it bears the name of its
Founder. Is there anything new in a religious sect getting for its
followers a designation from its master? Are not the philosophers
called from the founders of their systems--Platonists, Epicureans,
Pythagoreans? Are not the Stoics and Academics so called also from the
places in which they assembled and stationed themselves? and are not
physicians named from Erasistratus, grammarians from Aristarchus, cooks
even from Apicius? And yet the bearing of the name, transmitted from
the original institutor with whatever he has instituted, offends no
one. No doubt, if it is proved that the sect is a bad one, and so its
founder bad as well, that will prove that the name is bad and deserves
our aversion, in respect of the character both of the sect and its
author. Before, therefore, taking up a dislike to the name, it behoved
you to consider the sect in the author, or the author in the sect. But
now, without any sifting and knowledge of either, the mere name is made
matter of accusation, the mere name is assailed, and a sound alone
brings condemnation on a sect and its author both, while of both you
are ignorant, because they have such and such a designation, not
because they are convicted of anything wrong.
CHAP. IV.
And so, having made these remarks as it were by way of preface, that I
might show in its true colours the injustice of the public hatred
against us, I shall now take my stand on the plea of our blamelessness;
and I shall not only refute the things which are objected to us, but I
shall also retort them on the objectors, that in this way all may know
that Christians are free from the very crimes they are so well aware
prevail among themselves, that they may at the same time be put to the
blush for their accusations against us,--accusations I shall not say of
the worst of men against the best, but now, as they will have it,
against those who are only their fellows in sin. We shall reply to the
accusation of all the various crimes we are said to be guilty of in
secret, such as we find them committing in the light of day, and as
being guilty of which we are held to be wicked, senseless, worthy of
punishment, deserving of ridicule. But since, when our truth meets you
successfully at all points, the authority of the laws as a last resort
is set up against it, so that it is either said that their
determinations are absolutely conclusive, or the necessity of obedience
is, however unwillingly, preferred to the truth, I shall first, in this
matter of the laws grapple with you as with their chosen protectors.
Now first, when you sternly lay it down in your sentences, "It is not
lawful for you to exist," and with unhesitating rigour you enjoin this
to be carried out, you exhibit the violence and unjust domination of
mere tyranny, if you deny the thing to be lawful, simply on the ground
that you wish it to be unlawful, not because it ought to be. But if you
would have it unlawful because it ought not to be lawful, without doubt
that should have no permission of law which does harm; and on this
ground, in fact, it is already determined that whatever is beneficial
is legitimate. Well, if I have found what your law prohibits to be
good, as one who has arrived at such a previous opinion, has it not
lost its power to debar me from it, though that very thing, if it were
evil, it would justly forbid to me? If your law has gone wrong, it is
of human origin, I think; it has not fallen from heaven. Is it
wonderful that man should err in making a law, or come to his senses in
rejecting it? Did not the Lacedaemonians amend the laws of Lycurgus
himself, thereby inflicting such pain on their author that he shut
himself up, and doomed himself to death by starvation? Are you not
yourselves every day, in your efforts to illumine the darkness of
antiquity, cutting and hewing with the new axes of imperial rescripts
and edicts, that whole ancient and rugged forest of your laws? Has not
Severus, that most resolute of rulers, but yesterday repealed the
ridiculous Papian laws(1) which compelled people to have children
before the Julian laws allow matrimony to be contracted, and that
though they have the authority of age upon their side? There were laws,
too, in old times, that parties against whom a decision had been given
might be cut in pieces by their creditors; however, by common consent
that cruelty was afterwards erased from the statutes, and the capital
penalty turned into a brand of shame. By adopting the plan of
confiscating a debtor's goods, it was sought rather to pour the blood
in blushes over his face than to pour it out. How many laws lie hidden
out of sight which still require to be reformed! For it is neither the
number of their years nor the dignity of their maker that commends
them, but simply that they are just; and therefore, when their
injustice is recognized, they are deservedly condemned, even though
they condemn. Why speak we of them as unjust? nay, if they punish mere
names, we may well call them irrational. But if they punish acts, why
in our case do they punish acts solely on the ground of a name, while
in others they must have them proved not from the name, but from the
wrong done? I am a practiser of incest (so they say); why do they not
inquire into it? I am an infant-killer; why do they not apply the
torture to get from me the truth? I am guilty of crimes against the
gods, against the Caesars; why am I, who am able to clear myself, not
allowed to be heard on my own behalf? No law forbids the sifting of the
crimes which it prohibits, for a judge never inflicts a righteous
vengeance if he is not well assured that a crime has been committed;
nor does a citizen render a true subjection to the law, if he does not
know the nature of the thing on which the punishment is inflicted. It
is not enough that a law is just, nor that the judge should be
convinced of its justice; those from whom obedience is expected should
have that conviction too. Nay, a law lies under strong suspicions which
does not care to have itself tried and approved: it is a positively
wicked law, if, unproved, it tyrannizes over men.
CHAP. V.
To say a word about the origin of laws of the kind to which we now
refer, there was an old decree that no god should be consecrated by the
emperor till first approved by the senate. Marcus AEmilius had
experience of this in reference to his god Alburnus. And this, too,
makes for our case, that among you divinity is allotted at the judgment
of human beings. Unless gods give satisfaction to men, there will be no
deification for them: the god will have to propitiate the man.
Tiberius(1) accordingly, in whose days the Christian name made its
entry into the world, having himself received intelligence from
Palestine of events which had clearly shown the truth of Christ's
divinity, brought the matter before the senate, with his own decision
in favour of Christ. The senate, because it had not given the approval
itself, rejected his proposal. Caesar held to his opinion, threatening
wrath against all accusers of the Christians. Consult your histories;
you will there find that Nero was the first who assailed with the
imperial sword the Christian sect, making profess then especially at
Rome. But we glory in having our condemnation hallowed by the hostility
of such a wretch. For any one who knows him, can understand that not
except as being of singular excellence did anything bring on it Nero's
condemnation. Domitian, too, a man of Nero's type in cruelty, tried his
hand at persecution; but as he had something of the human in him, he
soon put an end to what he had begun, even restoring again those whom
he had banished. Such as these have always been our persecutors,--men
unjust, impious, base, of whom even you yourselves have no good to say,
the sufferers under whose sentences you have been wont to restore. But
among so many princes from that time to the present day, with anything
of divine and human wisdom in them, point out a single persecutor of
the Christian name. So far from that, we, on the contrary, bring before
you one who was their protector, as you will see by examining the
letters of Marcus Aurelius, that most grave of emperors, in which he
bears his testimony that that Germanic drought was removed by the rains
obtained through the prayers of the Christians who chanced to be
fighting under him. And as he did not by public law remove from
Christians their legal disabilities, yet in another way he put them
openly aside, even adding a sentence of condemnation, and that of
greater severity, against their accusers. What sort of laws are these
which the impious alone execute against us--and the unjust, the vile,
the bloody, the senseless, the insane? which Trajan to some extent made
naught by forbidding Christians to be sought after; which neither a
Hadrian, though fond of searching into all things strange and new, nor
a Vespasian, though the subjugator of the Jews, nor a Pius, nor a
Verus, ever enforced? It should surely be judged more natural for bad
men to be eradicated by good princes as being their natural enemies,
than by those of a spirit kindred with their own.
CHAP. VI.
I would now have these most religious protectors and vindicators of the
laws and institutions of their fathers, tell me, in regard to their own
fidelity and the honour, and submission they themselves show to
ancestral institutions, if they have departed from nothing--if they
have in nothing gone out of the old paths--if they have not put aside
whatsoever is most useful and necessary as rules of a virtuous life.
What has become of the laws repressing expensive and ostentatious ways
of living? which forbade more than a hundred asses to be expended on a
supper, and more than one fowl to be set on the table at a time, and
that not a fatted one; which expelled a patrician from the senate on
the serious ground, as it was counted, of aspiring to be too great,
because he had acquired ten pounds of silver; which put down the
theatres as quickly as they arose to debauch the manners of the people;
which did not permit the insignia of official dignities or of noble
birth to be rashly or with impunity usurped? For I see the Centenarian
suppers must now bear the name, not from the hundred asses, but from
the hundred sestertia(1) expended on them; and that mines of silver are
made into dishes (it were little if this applied only to senators, and
not to freedmen or even mere whip-spoilers(2)). I see, too, that
neither is a single theatre enough, nor are theatres unsheltered: no
doubt it was that immodest pleasure might not be torpid in the
wintertime, the Lacedaemonians invented their woollen cloaks for the
plays. I see now no difference between the dress of matrons and
prostitutes. In regard to women, indeed, those laws of your fathers,
which used to be such an encouragement to modesty and sobriety, have
also fallen into desuetude, when a woman had yet known no gold upon her
save on the finger, which, with the bridal ring, her husband had
sacredly pledged to himself; when the abstinence of women from wine was
carried so far, that a matron, for opening the compartments of a wine
cellar, was starved to death by her friends,--while in the times of
Romulus, for merely tasting wine, Mecenius killed his wife, and
suffered nothing for the deed. With reference to this also, it was the
custom of women to kiss their relatives, that they might be detected by
their breath. Where is that happiness of married life, ever so
desirable, which distinguished our earlier manners, and as the result
of which for about 600 years there was not among us a single divorce?
Now, women have every member of the body heavy laden with gold;
wine-bibbing is so common among them, that the kiss is never offered
with their will; and as for divorce, they long for it as though it were
the natural consequence of marriage. The laws, too, your fathers in
their wisdom had enacted concerning the very gods themselves, you their
most loyal children have rescinded, The consuls, by the authority of
the senate, banished Father Bacchus and his mysteries not merely from
the city, but from the whole of Italy. The consuls Piso and Gabinius,
no Christians surely, forbade Serapis, and Isis, and Arpocrates, with
their dogheaded friend,(1) admission into the Capitol--in the act
casting them out from the assembly of the gods--overthrow their altars,
and expelled them from the country, being anxious to prevent the vices
of their base and lascivious religion from spreading. These, you have
restored, and conferred highest honours on them. What has come to your
religion--of the veneration due by you to your ancestors? In your
dress, in your food, in your style of life, in your opinions, and last
of all in your very speech, you have renounced your progenitors. You
are always praising antiquity, and yet every day you have novelties in
your way of living. From your having failed to maintain what you
should, you make it clear, that, while you abandon the good ways of
your fathers, you retain and guard the things you ought not. Yet the
very tradition of your fathers, which you still seem so faithfully to
defend, and in which you find your principal matter of accusation
against the Christians--I mean zeal in the worship of the gods, the
point in which antiquity has mainly erred--although you have rebuilt
the altars of Serapis, now a Roman deity, and to Bacchus, now become a
god of Italy, you offer up your orgies,--I shall in its proper place
show that you despise, neglect, and overthrow, casting entirely aside
the authority of the men of old. I go on meantime to reply to that
infamous charge of secret crimes, clearing my way to things of open
day.
CHAP. VII.
Monsters of wickedness, we are accused of observing a holy rite in
which we kill a little child and then eat it; in which, after the
feast, we practise incest, the dogs--our pimps, forsooth, overturning
the lights and getting us the shamelessness of darkness for our impious
lusts. This is what is constantly laid to our charge, and yet you take
no pains to elicit the truth of what we have been so long accused.
Either bring, then, the matter to the light of day if you believe it,
or give it no credit as having never inquired into it. On the ground of
your double dealing, we are entitled to lay it down to you that there
is no reality in the thing which you dare not expiscate. You impose on
the executioner, in the case of Christians, a duty the very opposite of
expiscation: he is not to make them confess what they do, but to make
them deny what they are. We date the origin of our religion, as we have
mentioned before, from the reign of Tiberius. Truth and the hatred of
truth come into our world together. As soon as truth appears, it is
regarded as an enemy. It has as many foes as there are strangers to it:
the Jews, as was to be looked for, from a spirit of rivalry; the
soldiers, out of a desire to extort money; our very domestics, by their
nature. We are daily beset by foes, we are daily betrayed; we are
oftentimes surprised in our meetings and congregations. Whoever
happened withal upon an infant wailing, according to the common story?
Whoever kept for the judge, just as he had found them, the gory mouths
of Cyclops and Sirens? Whoever found any traces of uncleanness in their
wives? Where is the man who, when he had discovered such atrocities,
concealed them; or, in the act of dragging the culprits' before the
judge, was bribed into silence? If we always keep our secrets, when
were our proceedings made known to the world? Nay, by whom could they
be made known? Not, surely, by the guilty parties themselves; even from
the very idea of the thing, the fealty of silence being ever due to
mysteries. The Samothracian and Eleusinian make no disclosures--how
much more will silence be kept in regard to such as are sure, in their
unveiling, to call forth punishment from man at once, while wrath
divine is kept in store for the future? If, then, Christians are not
themselves the publishers of their crime, it follows of course it must
be strangers. And whence have they their knowledge, when it is also a
universal custom in religious initiations to keep the profane aloof,
and to beware of witnesses, unless it be that those who are so wicked
have less fear than their neighbors? Every one knows what sort of thing
rumour is. It is one of your own sayings, that "among all evils, none
flies so fast as rumour." Why is rumour such an evil thing? Is it
because it is fleet? Is it because it carries information? Or is it
because it is in the highest degree mendacious?--a thing, not even when
it brings some truth to us, without a taint of falsehood, either
detracting, or adding, or changing from the simple fact? Nay more, it
is the very law of its being to continue only while it lies, and to
live but so long as there is no proof; for when the proof is given, it
ceases to exist; and, as having done its work of merely spreading a
report, it delivers up a fact, and is henceforth held to be a fact, and
called a fact. And then no one says, for instance, "They say that it
took place at Rome," or, "There is a rumour that he has obtained a
province," but, "He has got a province," and, "It took place at Rome."
Rumour, the very designation of uncertainty, has no place when a thing
is certain. Does any but a fool put his trust in it? For a wise man
never believes the dubious. Everybody knows, however zealously it is
spread abroad, on whatever strength of asseveration it rests, that some
time or other from some one fountain it has its origin. Thence it must
creep into propagating tongues and ears; and a small seminal blemish so
darkens all the rest of the story, that no one can determine whether
the lips, from which it first came forth, planted the seed of
falsehood, as often happens, from a spirit of opposition, or from a
suspicious judgment, or from a confirmed, nay, in the case of some, an
inborn, delight in lying. It is well that time brings all to light, as
your proverbs and sayings testify, by a provision of Nature, which has
so appointed things that nothing long is hidden, even though rumour has
not disseminated it. It is just then as it should be, that fame for so
long a period has been alone aware of the crimes of Christians. This is
the witness you bring against us--one that has never been able to prove
the accusation it some time or other sent abroad, and at last by mere
continuance made into a settled opinion in the world; so that I
confidently appeal to Nature herself, ever true, against those who
groundlessly hold that such things are to be credited.
CHAP. VIII.
See now, we set before you the reward of these enormities. They give
promise of eternal life. Hold it meanwhile as your own belief. I ask
you, then, whether, so believing, you think it worth attaining with a
conscience such as you will have. Come, plunge your knife into the
babe, enemy of none, accused of none, child of all; or if that is
another's work, simply take your place beside a human being dying
before he has really lived, await the departure of the lately given
soul, receive the fresh young blood, saturate your bread with it,
freely partake. The while as you recline at table, take note of the
places which your mother and your sister occupy; mark them well, so
that when the dog-made darkness has fallen on you, you may make no
mistake, for you will be guilty of a crime--unless you perpetrate a
deed of incest. Initiated and sealed into things like these, you have
life everlasting. Tell me, I pray you, is eternity worth it? If it is
not, then these things are not to be credited. Even although you had
the belief, I deny the will; and even if you had the will, I deny the
possibility. Why then can others do it, if you cannot? why cannot you,
if others can? I suppose we are of a different nature--are we Cynopae
or Sciapodes?(1) You are a man yourself as well as the Christian: if
you cannot do it, you ought not to believe it of others, for a
Christian is a man as well as you. But the ignorant, forsooth, are
deceived and imposed on. They were quite unaware of anything of the
kind being imputed to Christians, or they would certainly have looked
into it for themselves, and searched the matter out. Instead of that,
it is the custom for persons wishing initiation into sacred rites, I
think, to go first of all to the master of them, that he may explain
what preparations are to be made. Then, in this case, no doubt he would
say, "You must have a child still of tender age, that knows not what it
is to die, and can smile under thy knife; bread, too, to collect the
gushing blood; in addition to these, candlesticks, and lamps, and
dogs--with tid-bits to draw them on to the extinguishing of the lights:
above all things, you will require to bring your mother and your sister
with you." But what if mother and sister are unwilling? or if there be
neither the one nor the other? What if there are Christians with no
Christian relatives? He will not be counted, I suppose, a true follower
of Christ, who has not a brother or a son. And what now, if these
things are all in store for them without their knowledge? At least
afterwards they come to know them; and they bear with them, and pardon
them. They fear, it may be said, lest they have to pay for it if they
let the secret out: nay, but they will rather in that case have every
claim to protection; they will even prefer, one might think, dying by
their own hand, to living under the burden of such a dreadful
knowledge. Admit that they have this fear; yet why do they still
persevere? For it is plain enough that you will have no desire to
continue what you would never have been, if you had had previous
knowledge of it.
CHAP. IX.
That I may refute more thoroughly these charges, I will show that in
part openly, in part secretly, practices prevail among you which have
led you perhaps to credit similar things about us. Children were openly
sacrificed in Africa to Saturn as lately as the proconsulship of
Tiberius, who exposed to public gaze the priests suspended on the
sacred trees overshadowing their temple--so many crosses on which the
punishment which justice craved overtook their crimes, as the soldiers
of our country still can testify who did that very work for that
proconsul. And even now that sacred. crime still continues to be done
in secret. It is not only Christians, you see, who despise you; for all
that you do there is neither any crime thoroughly and abidingly
eradicated, nor does any of your gods reform his ways. When Saturn did
not spare his own children, he was not likely to spare the children of
others; whom indeed the very parents themselves were in the habit of
offering, gladly responding to the call which was made on them, and
keeping the little ones pleased on the occasion, that they might not
die in tears. At the same time, there is a vast difference between
homicide and parricide. A more advanced age was sacrificed to Mercury
in Gaul. I hand over the Tauric fables to their own theatres. Why, even
in that most religious city of the pious descendants of AEneas, there
is a certain Jupiter whom in their games they lave with human blood. It
is the blood of a beast-fighter, you say. Is it less, because of that,
the blood of a man?(1) Or is it viler blood because it is from the
veins of a wicked man? At any rate it is shed in murder. O Jove,
thyself a Christian, and in truth only son of thy father in his
cruelty! But in regard to child murder, as it does not matter whether
it is committed for a sacred object, or merely at one's own
self-impulse--although there is a great difference, as we have said,
between parricide and homicide--I shall turn to the people generally.
How many, think you, of those crowding around and gaping for Christian
blood,--how many even of your rulers, notable for their justice to you
and for their severe measures against us, may I charge in their own
consciences with the sin of putting their offspring to death? As to any
difference t in the kind of murder, it is certainly the more cruel way
to kill by drowning, or by exposure to cold and hunger and dogs. A
maturer age has always preferred death by the sword. In our case,
murder being once for all forbidden, we may not destroy even the foetus
in the womb, while as yet the human being derives blood from other
parts of the body for its sustenance. To hinder a birth is merely a
speedier man-killing; nor does it matter whether you take away a life
that is born, or destroy one that is coming to the birth. That is a man
which is going to be one; you have the fruit already in its seed. As to
meals of blood and such tragic dishes, read--I am not sure where it is
told (it is in Herodotus, I think)--how blood taken from the arms, and
tasted by both parties, has been the treaty bond among some nations. I
am not sure what it was that was tasted in the time of Catiline. They
say, too, that among some Scythian tribes the dead are eaten by their
friends. But I am going far from home. At this day, among ourselves,
blood consecrated to Bellona, blood drawn from a punctured thigh and
then partaken of, seals initiation into the rites of that goddess.
Those, too, who at the gladiator shows, for the cure of epilepsy, quaff
with greedy thirst the blood of criminals slain in the arena, as it
flows fresh from the wound, and then rush off--to whom do they belong?
those, also, who make meals on the flesh of wild beasts at the place of
combat--who have keen appetites for bear and stag? That bear in the
struggle was bedewed with the blood of the man whom it lacerated: that
stag rolled itself in the gladiator's gore. The entrails of the very
bears, loaded with as yet undigested human viscera, are in great
request. And you have men rifting up man-fed flesh? If you partake of
food like this, how do your repasts differ from those you accuse us
Christians of? And do those, who, with savage lust, seize on human
bodies, do less because they devour the living? Have they less the
pollution of human blood on them because they only lick up what is to
turn into blood? They make meals, it is plain, not so much of infants,
as of grown-up men. Blush for your vile ways before the Christians, who
have not even the blood of animals at their meals of simple and natural
food; who abstain from things strangled and that die a natural death,
for no other reason than that they may not contract pollution, so much
as from blood secreted in the viscera. To clench the matter with a
single example, you tempt Christians with sausages of blood, just
because you are perfectly aware that the thing by which you thus try to
get them to transgress they hold unlawful.(2) And how unreasonable it
is to believe that those, of whom you are convinced that they regard
with horror the idea of tasting the blood of oxen, are eager after
blood of men; unless, mayhap, you have tried it, and found it sweeter
to the taste! Nay, in fact, there is here a test you should apply to
discover Christians, as well as the fire-pan and the censer. They
should be proved by their appetite for human blood, as well as by their
refusal to offer sacrifice; just as otherwise they should be affirmed
to be free of Christianity by their refusal to taste of blood, as by
their sacrificing; and there would be no want of blood of men, amply
supplied as that would be in the trial and condemnation of prisoners.
Then who are more given to the crime of incest than those who have
enjoyed the instruction of Jupiter himself? Ctesias tells us that the
Persians have illicit intercourse with their mothers. The Macedonians,
too, are suspected on this point; for on first hearing the tragedy of
OEdipus they made mirth of the incest-doer's grief, exclaiming,
<greek>hlaune</greek> <greek>eis</greek>
<greek>thn</greek> <greek>mhtera</greek>. Even
now reflect what opportunity there is for mistakes leading to
incestuous comminglings--your promiscuous looseness supplying the
materials. You first of all expose your children, that they may be
taken up by any compassionate passer-by, to whom they are quite
unknown; or you give them away, to be adopted by those who will do
better to them the part of parents. Well, some time or other, all
memory of the alienated progeny must be lost; and when once a mistake
has been made, the transmission of incest thence will still go on--the
race and the crime creeping on together. Then, further, wherever you
are--at home, abroad, over the seas--your lust is an attendant, whose
general indulgence, or even its indulgence in the most limited scale,
may easily and unwittingly anywhere beget children, so that in this way
a progeny scattered about in the commerce of life may have intercourse
with those who are their own kin, and have no notion that there is any
incest in the case. A persevering and stedfast chastity has protected
us from anything like this: keeping as we do from adulteries and all
post-matrimonial unfaithfulness, we are not exposed to incestuous
mishaps. Some of us, making matters still more secure, beat away from
them entirely the power of sensual sin, by a virgin continence, still
boys in this respect when they are old. If you would but take notice
that such sins as I have mentioned prevail among you, that would lead
you to see that they have no existence among Christians. The same eyes
would tell you of both facts. But the two blindnesses are apt to go
together; so that those who do not see what is, think they see what is
not. I shall show it to be so in everything. But now let me speak of
matters which are more dear.
CHAP. X.
"You do not worship the gods," you say; " and you do not offer
sacrifices for the emperors." Well, we do not offer sacrifice for
others, for the same reason that we do not for ourselves,--namely, that
your gods are not at all the objects of our worship. So we are accused
of sacrilege and treason. This is the chief ground of charge against
us--nay, it is the sum-total of our offending; and it is worthy then of
being inquired into, if neither prejudice nor injustice be the judge,
the one of which has no idea of discovering the truth, and the other
simply and at once rejects it. We do not worship your gods, because we
know that there are no such beings. This, therefore, is what you should
do: you should call on us to demonstrate their non-existence, and
thereby prove that they have no claim to adoration; for only if your
gods were truly so, would there be any obligation to render divine
homage to them. And punishment even were due to Christians, if it were
made plain that those to whom they refused all worship were indeed
divine. But you say, They are gods. We protest and appeal from
yourselves to your knowledge; let that judge us; let that condemn us,
if it can deny that all these gods of yours were but men. If even it
venture to deny that, it will be confuted by its own books of
antiquities, from which it has got its information about them, bearing
witness to this day, as they plainly do, both of the cities in which
they were born, and the countries in which they have left traces of
their exploits, as well as where also they are proved to have been
buried. Shall I now, therefore, go over them one by one, so numerous
and so various, new and old, barbarian, Grecian,Roman, foreign, captive
and adopted, private and common, male and female, rural and urban,
naval and military? It were useless even to hunt out all their names:
so I may content myself with a compend; and this not for your
information, but that you may have what you know brought to your
recollection, for undoubtedly you act as if you had forgotten all about
them. No one of your gods is earlier than Saturn: from him you trace
all your deities, even those of higher rank and better known. What,
then, can be proved of the first, will apply to those that follow. So
far, then, as books give us information, neither the Greek Diodorus or
Thallus, neither Cassius Severus or Cornelius Nepos, nor any writer
upon sacred antiquities, have ventured to say that Saturn was any but a
man: so far as the question depends on facts, I find none more
trustworthy than those --that in Italy itself we have the country in
which, after many expeditions, and after having partaken of Attic
hospitalities, Saturn settled, obtaining cordial welcome from Janus,
or, as the Salii will have it, Janis. The mountain on which he dwelt
was called Saturnius; the city he founded is called Saturnia to this
day; last of all, the whole of Italy, after having borne the name of
Oenotria, was called Saturnia from him. He first gave you the art of
writing, and a stamped coinage, and thence it is he presides over the
public treasury. But if Saturn were a man, he had undoubtedly a human
origin; and having a human origin, he was not the offspring of heaven
and earth. As his parents were unknown, it was not unnatural that he
should be spoken of as the son of those elements from which we might
all seem to spring. For who does not speak of heaven and earth as
father and mother, in a sort of way of veneration and honour? or from
the custom which prevails among us of saying that persons of whom we
have no knowledge, or who make a sudden appearance, have fallen from
the skies? In this way it came about that Saturn, everywhere a sudden
and unlooked-for guest, got everywhere the name of the Heaven-born. or
even the common folk call persons whose stock is unknown, sons of
earth. I say nothing of how men in these rude times were wont to act,
when they were impressed by the look of any stranger happening to
appear among them, as though it were divine, since even at this day men
of culture make gods of those whom, a day or two before, they
acknowledged to be dead men by their public mourning for them. Let
these notices of Saturn, brief as they are, suffice. It will thus also
be proved that Jupiter is as certainly a man, as from a man he sprung;
and that one after another the whole swarm is mortal like the primal
stock.
CHAP. XI.
And since, as you dare not deny that these deities of yours once were
men, you have taken it on you to assert that they were made gods after
their decease, let us consider what necessity there was for this. In
the first place, you must concede the existence of one higher God--a
certain wholesale dealer in divinity, who has made gods of men. For
they could neither have assumed a divinity which was not theirs, nor
could any but one himself possessing it have conferred it on them. If
there was no one to make gods, it is vain to, dream of gods being made
when thus you have no god-maker. Most certainly, if they could have
deified themselves, with a higher state at their command, they never
would have been men. If, then, there be one who is able to make gods, I
turn back to an examination of any reason there may be for making gods
at all; and I find no other reason than this, that the great God has
need of their ministrations and aids in performing the offices of
Deity. But first it is an unworthy idea that He should need the help of
a man, and in fact a dead man, when, if He was to be in want of this
assistance from the dead, He might more fittingly have created some one
a god at the beginning. Nor do I see any place for his action. For this
entire world-mass--whether self-existent and uncreated, as Pythagoras
maintains, or brought into being by a creator's hands, as Plato
hold--was manifestly, once for all in its original construction,
disposed, and furnished, and ordered, and supplied with a government of
perfect wisdom. That cannot be imperfect which has made all perfect.
There was nothing waiting on for Saturn and his race to do. Men will
make fools of themselves if they refuse to believe that from the very
first ram poured down from the sky, and stars gleamed, and light shone,
and thunders roared, and Jove himself dreaded the lightnings you put in
his hands; that in like manner before Bacchus, and Ceres, and Minerva,
nay before the first man, whoever that was, every kind of fruit burst
forth plentifully from the bosom of the earth, for nothing provided for
the support and sustenance of man could be introduced after his
entrance on the stage of being. Accordingly, these necessaries of life
are said to have been discovered, not created. But the thing you
discover existed before; and that which had a pre-existence must be
regarded as belonging not to him who discovered it, hut to him who made
it, for of course it had a being before it could be found. But if, on
account of his being the discoverer of the vine, Bacchus is raised to
godship, Lucullus, who first introduced the cherry from Pontus into
Italy, has not been fairly dealt with; for as the discoverer of a new
fruit, he has not, as though he were its creator, been awarded divine
honours. Wherefore, if the universe existed from the beginning,
thoroughly furnished with its system working under certain laws for the
performance of its functions, there is, in this respect, an entire
absence of all reason for electing humanity to divinity; for the
positions and powers which you have assigned to your deities have been
from the beginning precisely what they would have been, although you
had never deified them. But you turn to another reason, telling us that
the conferring of deity was a way of rewarding worth. And hence you
grant, I conclude, that the god-making God is of transcendent
righteousness,--one who will neither rashly, improperly; nor needlessly
bestow a reward so great. I would have you then consider whether the
merits of your deities are of a kind to have raised them to the
heavens, and not rather to have sunk them down into lowest depths of
Tartarus,--the place which you regard, with many, as the prison-house
of infernal punishments. For into this dread place are wont to be cast
all who offend against filial piety, and such as are guilty of incest
with sisters, and seducers of wives, and ravishers of virgins, and
boy-polluters,and men of furious tempers, and murderers, and thieves,
and deceivers; all, in short, who tread in the footsteps of your gods,
not one of whom you can prove free from crime or vice, save by denying
that they had ever a human existence. But as you cannot deny that, you
have those foul blots also as an added reason for not believing that
they were made gods afterwards. For if you rule for the very purpose of
punishing such deeds; if every virtuous man among you rejects all
correspondence, converse, and intimacy with the wicked and base, while,
on the other hand, the high God has taken up their mates to a share of
His majesty, on what ground is it that you thus condemn those whose
fellow-actors you adore? Your goodness is an affront in the heavens.
Deify your vilest criminals, if you would please your gods. You honour
them by giving divine honours to their fellows. But to say no more
about a way of acting so unworthy, there have been men virtuous, and
pure, and good. Yet how many of these nobler men you have left in the
regions of doom! as Socrates, so renowned for his wisdom, Aristides for
his justice, Themistocles for his warlike genius, Alexander for his
sublimity of soul, Polycrates for his good fortune, Croesus for his
wealth, Demosthenes for his eloquence. Which of these gods of yours is
more remarkable for gravity and wisdom than Cato, more just and warlike
than Scipio? which of them more magnanimous than Pompey, more
prosperous than Sylla, of greater wealth than Crassus, more eloquent
than Tullius? How much better it would have been for the God Supreme to
have waited that He might have taken such men as these to be His
heavenly associates, prescient as He must have surely been of their
worthier character! He was in a hurry, I suppose, and straightway shut
heaven's gates; and now He must surely feel ashamed at these worthies
murmuring over their lot in the regions below.
CHAP. XII.
But I pass from these remarks, for I know and I am going to show what
your gods are not, by showing what they are. In reference, then, to
these, I see only names of dead men of ancient times; I hear fabulous
stories; I recognize sacred rites rounded on mere myths. As to the
actual images, I regard hem as simply pieces of matter akin to the
vessels and utensils in common use among is, or even undergoing in
their consecration a hapless change from these useful articles at the
hands of reckless art, which in the transforming process treats them
with utter contempt, nay, in the very act commits sacrilege; so that it
might be no slight solace to us in all our punishments, suffering as we
do because of these same gods, that in their making they suffer as we
do themselves. You put Christians on crosses and stakes:(1) what image
is not formed from the clay in the first instance, set on cross and
stake? The body of your god is first consecrated on the gibbet. You
tear the sides of Christians with your claws; but in the case of your
own gods, axes, and planes, and rasps are put to work more vigorously
on every member of the body. We lay our heads upon the block; before
the lead, and the glue, and the nails are put in requisition, your
deities are headless. We are cast to the wild beasts, while you attach
them to Bacchus, and Cybele, and Caelestis. We are burned in the
flames; so, too, are they in their original lump. We are condemned to
the mines; from these your gods originate. We are banished to islands;
in islands it is a common thing for your gods to have their birth or
die. If it is in this way a deity is made, it will follow that as many
as are punished are deified, and tortures will have to be declared
divinities. But plain it is these objects of your worship have no sense
of the injuries and disgraces of their consecrating, as they are
equally unconscious of the honours paid to them. O impious words! O
blasphemous reproaches! Gnash your teeth upon us--foam with maddened
rage against us--ye are the persons, no doubt, who censured a certain
Seneca speaking of your superstition at much greater length and far
more sharply! In a word, if we refuse our homage to statues and frigid
images, the very counterpart of their dead originals, with which hawks,
and mice, and spiders are so well acquainted, does it not merit praise
instead of penalty, that we have rejected what we have come to see is
error? We cannot surely be made out to injure those who we are certain
are nonentities. What does not exist, is in its nonexistence secure
from suffering.
CHAP. XIII.
"But they are gods to us," you say. And how is it, then, that in utter
inconsistency with this, you are convicted of impious, sacrilegious,
and irreligious conduct to them, neglecting those you imagine to exist,
destroying those who are the objects of your fear, making mock of those
whose honour you avenge? See now if I go beyond the truth. First,
indeed, seeing you worship, some one god, and some another, of course
you give offence to those you do not worship. You cannot continue to
give preference to one without slighting another, for selection implies
rejection. You despise, therefore, those whom you thus reject; for in
your rejection of them, it is plain you have no dread of giving them
offence. For, as we have already shown, every god depended on the
decision of the senate for his godhead. No god was he whom man in his
own counsels did not wish to be so, and thereby condemned. The family
deities you call Lares, you exercise a domestic authority over,
pledging them, selling them, changing them--making sometimes a
cooking-pot of a Saturn, a firepan of a Minerva, as one or other
happens to be worn done, or broken in its long sacred use, or as the
family head feels the pressure of some more sacred home necessity. In
like manner, by public law you disgrace your state gods, putting them
in the auction-catalogue, and making them a source of revenue. Men seek
to get the Capitol, as they seek to get the herb market, under the
voice of the crier, under the auction spear, under the registration of
the quaestor. Deity is struck off and farmed out to the highest bidder.
But indeed lands burdened with tribute are of less value; men under the
assessment of a poll-tax are less noble; for these things are the marks
of servitude. In the case of the gods, on the other hand, the
sacredness is great in proportion to the tribute which they yield; nay,
the more sacred is a god, the larger is the tax he pays. Majesty is
made a source of gain. Religion goes about the taverns begging. You
demand a price for the privilege of standing on temple ground, for
access to the sacred services; there is no gratuitous knowledge of your
divinities permitted--you must buy their favours with a price. What
honours in any way do you render to them that you do not render to the
dead? You have temples in the one case just as in the other; you have
altars in the one case as in the other. Their statues have the same
dress, the same insignia. As the dead man had his age, his art, his
occupation, so it is with the deity. In what respect does the funeral
feast differ from the feast of Jupiter? or the bowl of the gods from
the ladle of the manes? or the undertaker from the soothsayer, as in
fact this latter personage also attends upon the dead? With perfect
propriety you give divine honours to your departed emperors, as you
worship them in life. The gods will count themselves indebted to you;
nay, it will be matter of high rejoicing among them that their masters
are made their equals. But when you adore Larentina, a public
prostitute --I could have wished that it might at least have been Lais
or Phryne--among your Junos, and Cereses, and Dianas; when you instal
in your Pantheon Simon Magus,(1) giving him a statue and the title of
Holy God; when you make an infamous court page a god of the sacred
synod, although your ancient deities are in reality no better, they
will still think themselves affronted by you, that the privilege
antiquity conferred on them alone, has been allowed to others.
CHAP. XIV.
I wish now to review your sacred rites; and I pass no censure on your
sacrificing, when you offer the worn-out, the scabbed, the corrupting;
when you cut off from the fat and the sound the useless parts, such as
the head and the hoofs, which in your house you would have assigned to
the slaves or the dogs; when of the tithe of Hercules you do not lay a
third upon his altar (I am disposed rather to praise your wisdom in
rescuing something from being lost); but turning to your books, from
which you get your training in wisdom and the nobler duties of life,
what utterly ridiculous things I find!--that for Trojans and Greeks the
gods fought among themselves like pairs of gladiators; that Venus was
wounded by a man, because she would rescue her son Aeneas when he was
in peril of his life from the same Diomede; that Mars was almost wasted
away by a thirteen months' imprisonment; that Jupiter was saved by a
monster's aid from suffering the same violence at the hands of the
other gods; that he now laments the fate of Sarpedon, now foully makes
love to his own sister, recounting (to her) former mistresses, now for
a long time past not so dear as she. After this, what poet is not found
copying the example of his chief, to be a disgracer of the gods? One
gives Apollo to king Admetus to tend his sheep; another hires out the
building labours of Neptune to Laomedon. A well-known lyric poet,
too--Pindar, I mean--sings of Aesculapius deservedly stricken with
lightning for his greed in practising wrongfully his art. A wicked deed
it was of Jupiter--if he hurled the bolt--unnatural to his grandson,
and exhibiting envious feeling to the Physician. Things like these
should not be made public if they are true; and if false, they should
not be fabricated among people professing a great respect for religion.
Nor indeed do either tragic or comic writers shrink from setting forth
the gods as the origin of all family calamities and sins. I do not
dwell on the philosophers, contenting myself with a reference to
Socrates, who, in contempt of the gods, was in the habit of swearing by
an oak, and a goat, and a dog. In fact, for this very thing Socrates
was condemned to death, that he overthrew the worship of the gods.
Plainly, at one time as well as another, that is, always truth is
disliked. However, when rueing their judgment, the Athenians inflicted
punishment on his accusers, and set up a golden image of him in a
temple, the condemnation was in the very act rescinded, and his witness
was restored to its former value. Diogenes, too, makes utter mock of
Hercules and the Roman cynic Varro brings forward three hundred Joves,
or Jupiters they should be called, all headless.
CHAP. XV.
Others of your writers, in their wantonness, even minister to your
pleasures by vilifying the gods. Examine those charming farces of your
Lentuli and Hostilii, whether in the jokes and tricks it is the
buffoons or the deities which afford you merriment; such farces I mean
as Anubis the Adulterer, and Luna of the masculine gender, and Diana
under the lash, and the reading the will of Jupiter deceased, and the
three famishing Herculeses held up to ridicule. Your dramatic
literature, too, depicts all the vileness of your gods. The Sun mourns
his offspring(1) cast down from heaven, and you are full of glee;
Cybele sighs after the scornful swain,(2) and you do not blush; you
brook the stage recital of Jupiter's misdeeds, and the shepherd(3)
judging Juno, Venus, and Minerva. Then, again, when the likeness of a
god is put on the head of an ignominious and infamous wretch, when one
impure and trained up for the art in all effeminacy, represents a
Minerva or a Hercules, is not the majesty of your gods insulted, and
their deity dishonored? Yet you not merely look on, but applaud. You
are, I suppose, more devout in the arena, where after the same fashion
your deities dance on human blood, on the pollutions caused by
inflicted punishments, as they act their themes and stories, doing
their turn for the wretched criminals, except that these, too, often
put on divinity and actually play the very gods. We have seen in our
day a representation of the mutilation of Attis, that famous god of
Pessinus, and a man burnt alive as Hercules. We have made merry amid
the ludicrous cruelties of the noonday exhibition, at Mercury examining
the bodies of the dead with his hot iron; we have witnessed Jove's
brother,(4) mallet in hand, dragging out the corpses of the gladiators.
But who can go into everything of this sort? If by such things as these
the honour of deity is assailed, if they go to blot out every trace of
its majesty, we must explain them by the contempt in which the gods are
held, alike by those who actually do them, and by those for whose
enjoyment they are done. This it will be said, however, is all in
sport. But if I add--it is what all know and will admit as readily to
be the fact--that in the temples adulteries are arranged, that at the
altars pimping is practised, that often in the houses of the
temple-keepers and priests, under the sacrificial fillets, and the
sacred hats,(5) and the purple robes, amid the fumes of incense, deeds
of licentiousness are done, I am not sure but your gods have more
reason to complain of you than of Christians. It is certainly among the
votaries of your religion that the perpetrators of sacrilege are always
found, for Christians do not enter your temples even in the day-time.
Perhaps they too would be spoilers of them, if they worshipped in them.
What then do they worship, since their objects of worship are different
from yours? Already indeed it is implied, as the corollary from their
rejection of the lie, that they render homage to the truth; nor
continue longer in an error which they have given up in the very fact
of recognizing it to be an error. Take this in first of all, and when
we have offered a preliminary refutation of some false opinions, go on
to derive from it our entire religious system.
CHAP. XVI.
For, like some others, you are under the delusion that our god is an
ass's head.(6) Cornelius Tacitus first put this notion into people's
minds. In the fifth book of his histories, beginning the (narrative of
the) Jewish war with an account of the origin of the nation; and
theorizing at his pleasure about the origin, as well as the name and
the religion of the Jews, he states that having been delivered, or
rather, in his opinion, expelled from Egypt, in crossing the vast
plains of Arabia, where water is so scanty, they were in extremity from
thirst; but taking the guidance of the wild asses, which it was thought
might be seeking water after feeding, they discovered a fountain, and
thereupon in their gratitude they consecrated a head of this species of
animal. And as Christianity is nearly allied to Judaism, from this, I
suppose, it was taken for granted that we too are devoted to the
worship of the same image. But the said Cornelius Tacitus (the very
opposite of tacit in telling lies) informs us in the work already
mentioned, that when Cneius Pompeius captured Jerusalem, he entered the
temple to see the arcana of the Jewish religion, but found no image
there. Yet surely if worship was rendered to any visible object, the
very place for its exhibition would be the shrine; and that all the
more that the worship, however unreasonable, had no need there to fear
outside beholders. For entrance to the holy place was permitted to the
priests alone, while all vision was forbidden to others by an outspread
curtain. You will not, however, deny that all beasts of burden, and not
parts of them, but the animals entire, are with their goddess Epona
objects of worship with you. It is this, perhaps, which displeases you
in us, that while your worship here is universal, we do homage only to
the ass. Then, if any of you think we render superstitious adoration to
the cross, in that adoration he is sharer with us. If you offer homage
to a piece of wood at all, it matters little what it is like when the
substance is the same: it is of no consequence the form, if you have
the very body of the god. And yet how far does the Athenian Pallas
differ from the stock of the cross, or the Pharian Ceres as she is put
up uncarved to sale, a mere rough stake and piece of shapeless wood?
Every stake fixed in an upright position is a portion of the cross; we
render our adoration, if you will have it so, to a god entire and
complete. We have shown before that your deities are derived from
shapes modelled from the cross. But you also worship victories, for in
your trophies the cross is the heart of the trophy.(1) The camp
religion of the Romans is all through a worship of the standards, a
setting the standards above all gods. Well, as those images decking out
the standards are ornaments of crosses. All those hangings of your
standards and banners are robes of crosses. I praise your zeal: you
would not consecrate crosses unclothed and unadorned. Others, again,
certainly with more information and greater verisimilitude, believe
that the sun is our god. We shall be counted Persians perhaps, though
we do not worship the orb of day painted on a piece of linen cloth,
having himself everywhere in his own disk. The idea no doubt has
originated from our being known to turn to the east in prayer.(1) But
you, many of you, also under pretence sometimes of worshipping the
heavenly bodies, move your lips in the direction of the sunrise. In the
same way, if we devote Sun-day to rejoicing, from a far different
reason than Sun-worship, we have some resemblance to those of you who
devote the day of Saturn to ease and luxury, though they too go far
away from Jewish ways, of which indeed they are ignorant. But lately a
new edition of our god has been given to the world in that great city:
it originated with a certain vile man who was wont to hire himself out
to cheat the wild beasts, and who exhibited a picture with this
inscription: The God of the Christians, born of an ass.(2) He had the
ears of an ass, was hoofed in one foot, carried a book,(3) and wore a
toga. Both the name and the figure gave us amusement. But our opponents
ought straightway to have done homage to this biformed divinity, for
they have acknowledged gods dog-headed and lion-headed, with horn of
buck and ram, with goat-like loins, with serpent legs, with wings
sprouting from back or foot. These things we have discussed ex
abundanti, that we might not seem willingly to pass by any rumor
against us unrefuted. Having thoroughly cleared ourselves, we turn now
to an exhibi-ition of what our religion really is.
CHAP. XVII.
The object of our worship is the One God,(4) He who by His commanding
word, His arranging wisdom, His mighty power, brought forth from
nothing this entire mass of our world, with all its array of elements,
bodies, spirits, for the glory of His majesty; whence also the Greeks
have bestowed on it the name of K<greek>osmos</greek>. The
eye cannot see Him, though He is (spiritually) visible. He is
incomprehensible, though in grace He is manifested. He is beyond our
utmost thought, though our human faculties conceive of Him. He is
therefore equally real and great. But that which, in the ordinary
sense, can be seen and handled and conceived, is inferior to the eyes
by which it is taken in, and the hands by which it is tainted, and the
faculties by which it is discovered; but that which is infinite is
known only to itself. This it is which gives some notion of God, while
yet beyond all our conceptions--our very incapacity of fully grasping
Him affords us the idea of what He really is. He is presented to our
minds in His transcendent greatness, as at once known and unknown. And
this is the crowning guilt of men, that they will not recognize One, of
whom they cannot possibly be ignorant. Would you have the proof from
the works of His hands, so numerous and so great, which both contain
you and sustain you, which minister at once to your enjoyment, and
strike you with awe; or would you rather have it from the testimony of
the soul itself? Though under the oppressive bondage of the body,
though led astray by depraving customs, though enervated by lusts and
passions, though in slavery to false gods; yet, whenever the soul comes
to itself, as out of a surfeit, or a sleep, or a sickness, and attains
something of its natural soundness, it speaks of God; using no other
word, because this is the peculiar name of the true God. "God is great
and good"--"Which may God give," are the words on every lip. It bears
witness, too, that God is judge, exclaiming, "God sees," and, "I
commend myself to God," and, "God will repay me." O noble testimony of
the soul by nature(1) Christian! Then, too, in using such words as
these, it looks not to the Capitol, but to the heavens. It knows that
there is the throne of the living God, as from Him and from thence
itself came down.
CHAP. XVIII.
But, that we might attain an ampler and more authoritative knowledge at
once of Himself, and of His counsels and will, God has added a written
revelation for the behoof of every one whose heart is set on seeking
Him, that seeking he may find, and finding believe, and believing obey.
For from the first He sent messengers into the world,--men whose
stainless righteousness made them worthy to know the Most High, and to
reveal Him,--men abundantly endowed with the Holy Spirit, that they
might proclaim that there is one God only who made all things, who
formed man from the dust of the ground (for He is the true Prometheus
who gave order to the world by arranging the seasons and their
course),--these have further set before us the proofs He has given of
His majesty in H judgments by floods and fires, the rules appointed by
Him for securing His favour, as well as the retribution in store for
the ignoring, forsaking and keeping them, as being about at the end of
all to adjudge His worshippers to everlasting life, and the wicked to
the doom of fire at once without ending and without break, raising up
again all the dead from the beginning, reforming and renewing them with
the object of awarding either recompense. Once these things were with
us, too, the theme of ridicule. We are of your stock and nature: men
are made, not born, Christians. The preachers of whom we have spoken
are called prophets, from the office which belongs to them of
predicting the future. Their words, as well as the miracles which they
performed, that men might have faith in their divine authority, we have
still in the literary treasures they have left, and which are open to
all. Ptolemy, surnamed Philadelphus, the most learned of his race, a
man of vast acquaintance with all literature, emulating, I imagine, the
book enthusiasm of Pisistratus, among other remains of the past which
either their antiquity or something of peculiar interest made famous,
at the suggestion of Demetrius Phalereus, who was renowned above all
grammarians of his time, and to whom he had committed the management of
these things, applied to the Jews for their writings--I mean the
writings peculiar to them and in their tongue, which they alone
possessed, for from themselves, as a people dear to God for their
fathers' sake, their prophets had ever sprung, and to them they had
ever spoken. Now in ancient times the people we call Jews bare the name
of Hebrews, and so both their writings and their speech were Hebrew.
But that the understanding of their books might not be wanting, this
also the Jews supplied to Ptolemy; for they gave him seventy-two
interpreters-men whom the philosopher Menedemus, the well-known
asserter of a Providence, regarded with respect as sharing in his
views. The same account is given by Aristaeus. So the king left these
works unlocked to all, in the Greek language.(2) To this day, at the
temple of Serapis, the libraries of Ptolemy are to be seen, with the
identical Hebrew originals in them. The Jews, too, read them publicly.
Under a tribute-liberty, they are in the habit of going to hear them
every Sabbath. Whoever gives ear will find God in them; whoever takes
pains to understand, will be compelled to believe.
CHAP. XIX.
Their high antiquity, first of all, claims authority for these
writings. With you, too, it is a kind of religion to demand belief on
this very ground. Well, all the substances, all the materials, the
origins, classes, contents of your most ancient writings, even most
nations and cities illustrious in the records of the past and noted for
their antiquity in books of annals,--the very forms of your letters,
those revealers and custodiers of events, nay (I think I speak still
within the mark), your very gods themselves, your very temples and
oracles, and sacred rites, are less ancient than the work of a single
prophet, in whom you have the thesaurus of the entire Jewish religion,
and therefore too of ours. If you happen to have heard of a certain
Moses, I speak first of him: he is as far back as the Argive Inachus;
by nearly four hundred years--only seven less--he precedes Danaus, your
most ancient name; while he antedates by a millennium the death of
Priam. I might affirm, too, that he is five hundred years earlier than
Homer, and have supporters of that view. The other prophets also,
though of later date, are, even the most recent of them, as far back as
the first of your philosophers, and legislators, and historians. It is
not so much the difficulty of the subject, as its vastness, that stands
in the way of a statement of the grounds on which these statements
rest; the matter is not so arduous as it would be tedious. It would
require the anxious study of many books, and the fingers busy
reckoning. The histories of the most ancient nations, such as the
Egyptians, the Chaldeans, the Phoenicians, would need to be ransacked;
the men of these various nations who have information to give, would
have to be called in as witnesses. Manetho the Egyptian, and Berosus
the Chaldean, and Hieromus the Phoenician king of Tyre; their
successors too, Ptolemy the Mendesian, and Demetrius Phalereus, and
King Juba, and Apion, and Thallus, and their critic the Jew Josephus,
the native vindicator of the ancient history of his people, who either
authenticates or refutes the others. Also the Greek censors' lists must
be compared, and the dates of events ascertained, that the
chronological connections may be opened up, and thus the reckonings of
the various annals be made to give forth light. We must go abroad into
the histories and literature of all nations. And, in fact, we have
already brought the proof in part before you, in giving those hints as
to how it is to be effected. But it seems better to delay the full
discussion of this, lest in our haste we do not sufficiently carry it
out, or lest in its thorough handling we make too lengthened a
digression.
CHAP. XX.
To make up for our delay in this, we bring under your notice something
of even greater importance; we point to the majesty of our Scriptures,
if not to their antiquity. If you doubt that they are as ancient as we
say, we offer proof that they are divine. And you may convince
yourselves of this at once, and without going very far. Your
instructors, the world, and the age, and the event, are all be fore
you. All that is taking place around you I was fore-announced; all that
you now see with your eye was previously heard by the ear. The
swallowing up of cities by the earth; the theft of islands by the sea;
wars, bringing external and internal convulsions; the collision of
kingdoms with kingdoms; famines and pestilences, and local massacres,
and widespread desolating mortalities; the exaltation of the lowly, and
the humbling of the proud; the decay of righteousness, the growth of
sin, the slackening interest in all good ways; the very seasons and
elements going out of their ordinary course, monsters and portents
taking the place of nature's forms--it was all foreseen and predicted
before it came to pass. While we suffer the calamities, we read of them
in the Scriptures; as we examine, they are proved. Well, the truth of a
prophecy, I thinks is the demonstration of its being from above. Hence
there is among us an assured faith in regard to coming events as things
already proved to us, for they were predicted along with what we have
day by day fulfilled. They are uttered by the same voices, they are
written in the same books--the same Spirit inspires them. All time is
one to prophecy foretelling the future. Among men, it may be, a
distinction of times is made while the fulfilment is going on: from
being future we think of it as presents and then from being present we
count it as belonging to the past. How are we to blame, I pray you,
that we believe in things to come as though they already were, with the
grounds we have for our faith in these two steps?
CHAP. XXI.
But having asserted that our religion is supported by the writings of
the Jews, the oldest which exist, though it is generally known, and we
fully admit that it dates from a comparatively recent period--no
further back indeed than the reign of Tiberius--a question may perhaps
be raised on this ground about its standing, as if it were hiding
something of its presumption under shadow of an illustrious religion,
one which has at any rate undoubted allowance of the law, or because,
apart from the question of age, we neither accord with the Jews in
their peculiarities in regard to food, nor in their sacred days, nor
even in their well-known bodily sign, nor in the possession of a common
name, which surely behoved to be the case if we did homage to the same
God as they. Then, too, the common people have now some knowledge of
Christ, and think of Him as but a man, one indeed such as the Jews
condemned, so that some may naturally enough have taken up the idea
that we are worshippers of a mere human being. But we are neither
ashamed of Christ --for we rejoice to be counted His disciples, and in
His name to suffer--nor do we differ from the Jews concerning God. We
must make, therefore, a remark or two as to Christ's divinity. In
former times the Jews enjoyed much of God's favour, when the fathers of
their race were noted for their righteousness and faith. So it was that
as a people they flourished greatly, and their kingdom attained to a
lofty eminence; and so highly blessed were they, that for their
instruction God spake to them in special revelations, pointing out to
them beforehand how they should merit His favor and avoid His
displeasure. But how deeply they have sinned, puffed up to their fall
with a false trust in their noble ancestors, turning from God's way
into a way of sheer impiety, though they themselves should refuse to
admit it, their present national ruin would afford sufficient proof.
Scattered abroad, a race of wanderers, exiles from their own land and
clime, they roam over the whole world without either a human or a
heavenly king, not possessing even the stranger's right to set so much
as a simple footstep in their native country. The sacred writers
withal, in giving previous warning of these things, all with equal
clearness ever declared that, in the last days of the world, God would,
out of every nation, and people, and country, choose for Himself more
faithful worshippers, upon whom He would bestow His grace, and that
indeed in ampler measure, in keeping with the enlarged capacities of a
nobler dispensation. Accordingly, He appeared among us, whose coming to
renovate and illuminate man's nature was pre-announced by God--I mean
Christ, that Son of God. And so the supreme Head and Master of this
grace and discipline, the Enlightener and Trainer of the human race,
God's own Son, was announced among us, born--but not so born as to make
Him ashamed of the name of Son or of His paternal origin. It was not
His lot to have as His father, by incest with a sister, or by violation
of a daughter or another's wife, a god in the shape of serpent, or ox,
or bird, or lover, for his vile ends transmuting himself into the gold
of Danaus. They are your divinities upon whom these base deeds of
Jupiter were done. But the Son of God has no mother in any sense which
involves impurity; she, whom men suppose to be His mother in the
ordinary way, had never entered into the marriage bond.(1) But, first,
I shall discuss His essential nature, and so the nature of His birth
will be understood. We have already asserted that God made the world,
and all which it contains, by His Word, and Reason, and Power. It is
abundantly plain that your philosophers, too, regard the Logos--that
is, the Word and Reason--as the Creator of the universe. For Zeno lays
it down that he is the creator, having made all things according to a
determinate plan; that his name is Fate, and God, and the soul of
Jupiter, and the necessity of all things. Cleanthes ascribes all this
to spirit, which he maintains pervades the universe. And we, in like
manner, hold that
the Word, and Reason, and Power, by which we have said God made all,
have spirit as their proper and essential substratum, in which the Word
has inbeing to give forth utterances, and reason abides to dispose and
arrange, and power is over all to execute. We have been taught that He
proceeds forth from God, and in that procession He is generated; so
that He is the Son of God, and is called God from unity of substance
with God. For God, too, is a Spirit. Even when the ray is shot from the
sun, it is still part of the parent mass; the sun will still be in the
ray, because it is a ray of the sun--there is no division of substance,
but merely an extension. Thus Christ is Spirit of Spirit, and God of
God, as light of light is kindled.(2) The material matrix remains
entire and unimpaired, though you derive from it any number of shoots
possessed of its qualities; so, too, that which has come forth out of
God is at once God and the Son of God, and the two are one. In this way
also, as He is Spirit of Spirit and God of God, He is made a second in
manner of existence--in position, not in nature; and He did not
withdraw from the original source, but went forth. This ray of God,
then, as it was always foretold in ancient times, descending into a
certain virgin, and made flesh in her womb, is in His birth God and man
united. The flesh formed by the Spirit is nourished, grows up to
manhood, speaks, teaches, works, and is the Christ. Receive meanwhile
this fable, if you choose to call it so--it is like some of your
own--while we go on to show how Christ's claims are proved, and who the
parties are with you by whom such fables have been set agoing to
overthrow the truth, which they resemble. The Jews, too, were well
aware that Christ was coming, as those to whom the prophets spake. Nay,
even now His advent is expected by them; nor is there any other
contention between them and us, than that they believe the advent has
not yet occurred. For two comings of Christ having been revealed to us:
a first, which has been fulfilled in the lowliness of a human lot; a
second, which impends over the world, now near its close, in all the
majesty of Deity unveiled; and, by misunderstanding the first, they
have concluded that the second--which, as matter of more manifest
prediction, they set their hopes on--is the only one. It was the
merited punishment of their sin not to understand the Lord's first
advent: for if they had, they would have believed; and if they had
believed, they would have obtained salvation. They themselves read how
it is written of them that they are deprived of wisdom and
understanding--of the use of eyes and ears.(1) As, then, under the
force of their pre-judgment, they had convinced themselves from His
lowly guise that Christ was no more than man, it followed from that, as
a necessary consequence, that they should hold Him a magician from the
powers which He displayed,--expelling devils from men by a word,
restoring vision to the blind, cleansing the leprous, reinvigorating
the paralytic, summoning the dead to life again, making the very
elements of nature obey Him, stilling the storms and walking on the
sea; proving that He was the Logos of God, that primordial
first-begotten Word, accompanied by power and reason, and based on
Spirit,--that He who was now doing all things by His word, and He who
had done that of old, were one and the same. But the Jews were so
exasperated by His teaching, by which their rulers and chiefs were
convicted of the truth, chiefly because so many turned aside to Him,
that at last they brought Him before Pontius Pilate, at that time Roman
governor of Syria; and, by the violence of their outcries against Him,
extorted a sentence giving Him up to them to be crucified. He Himself
had predicted this; which, however, would have signified little had not
the prophets of old done it as well. And yet, nailed upon the cross, He
exhibited many notable signs, by which His death was distinguished from
all others. At His own free-will, He with a word dismissed from Him His
spirit, anticipating the executioner's work. In the same hour, too, the
light of day was withdrawn, when the sun at the very time was in his
meridian blaze. Those who were not aware that this had been predicted
about Christ, no doubt thought it an eclipse. You yourselves have the
account of the world-portent still in your archives.(2) Then, when His
body was taken down from the cross and placed in a sepulchre, the Jews
in their eager watchfulness surrounded it with a large military guard,
lest, as He had predicted His resurrection from the dead on the third
day, His disciples might remove by stealth His body, and deceive even
the incredulous. But, lo, on the third day there a was a sudden shock
of earthquake, and the stone which sealed the sepulchre was rolled
away, and the guard fled off in terror: without a single disciple near,
the grave was found empty of all but the clothes of the buried One. But
nevertheless, the leaders of the Jews, whom it nearly concerned both to
spread abroad a lie, and keep back a people tributary and submissive to
them from the faith, gave it out that the body of Christ had been
stolen by His followers. For the Lord, you see, did not go forth into
the public gaze, lest the wicked should be delivered from their error;
that faith also, destined to a great reward, might hold its ground in
difficulty. But He spent forty days with some of His disciples down in
Galilee, a region of Judea, instructing them in the doctrines they were
to teach to others. Thereafter, having given them commission to preach
the gospel through the world, He was encompassed with a cloud and taken
up to heaven,--a fact more certain far than the assertions of your
Proculi concerning Romulus.(3) All these things Pilate did to Christ;
and now in fact a Christian in his own convictions, he sent word of Him
to the reigning Caesar, who was at the time Tiberius. Yes, and the
Caesars too would have believed on Christ, if either the Caesars had
not been necessary for the world, or if Christians could have been
Caesars. His disciples also, spreading over the world, did as their
Divine Master bade them; and after suffering greatly themselves from
the persecutions of the Jews, and with no unwilling heart, as having
faith undoubting in the truth, at last by Nero's cruel sword sowed the
seed of Christian blood at Rome.(1) Yes, and we shall prove that even
your own gods are effective witnesses for Christ. It is a great matter
if, to give you faith in Christians, I can bring forward the authority
of the very beings on account of whom you refuse them credit. Thus far
we have carried out the plan we laid down. We have set forth this
origin of our sect and name, with this account of the Founder of
Christianity. Let no one henceforth charge us with infamous wickedness;
let no one think that it is otherwise than we have represented, for
none may give a false account of his religion. For in the very fact
that he says he worships another god than he really does, he is guilty
of denying the object of his worship, and transferring his worship and
homage to another; and, in the transference, he ceases to worship the
god he has repudiated. We say, and before all men we say, and torn and
bleeding under your tortures, we cry out, "We worship God through
Christ." Count Christ a man, if you please; by Him and in Him God would
be known and be adored. If the Jews object, we answer that Moses, who
was but a man, taught them their religion; against the Greeks we urge
that Orpheus at Pieria, Musaeus at Athens, Melampus at Argos,
Trophonius in Boeotia, imposed religious rites; turning to yourselves,
who exercise sway over the nations, it was the man Numa Pompilius who
laid on the Romans a heavy load of costly superstitions. Surely Christ,
then, had a right to reveal Deity, which was in fact His own essential
possession, not with the object of bringing boers and savages by the
dread of multitudinous gods, whose favour must be won into some
civilization, as was the case with Numa; but as one who aimed to
enlighten men already civilized, and under illusions from their very
culture, that they might come to the knowledge of the truth. Search,
then, and see if that divinity of Christ be true. If it be of such a
nature that the acceptance of it transforms a man, and makes him truly
good, there is implied in that the duty of renouncing what is opposed
to it as false; especially and on every ground that which, hiding
itself under the names and images of dead, the labours to convince men
of its divinity by certain signs, and miracles, and oracles.
CHAP. XXII.
And we affirm indeed the existence of certain spiritual essences; nor
is their name unfamiliar. The philosophers acknowledge there are
demons; Socrates himself waiting on a demon's will. Why not? since it
is said an evil spirit attached itself specially to him even from his
childhood--turning his mind no doubt from what was good. The poets are
all acquainted with demons too; even the ignorant common people make
frequent use of them in cursing. In fact, they call upon Satan, the
demon-chief, in their execrations, as though from some instinctive
soul-knowledge of him. Plato also admits the existence of angels. The
dealers in magic, no less, come forward as witnesses to the existence
of both kinds of spirits. We are instructed, moreover, by our sacred
books how from certain angels, who fell of their own flee-will, there
sprang a more wicked demon-brood, condemned of God along with the
authors of their race, and that chief we have referred to. It will for
the present be enough, however, that some account is given of their
work. Their great business is the ruin of mankind. So, from the very
first, spiritual wickedness sought our destruction. They inflict,
accordingly, upon our bodies diseases and other grievous calamities,
while by violent assaults they hurry the soul into sudden and
extraordinary excesses. Their marvellous subtleness and tenuity give
them access to both parts of our nature. As spiritual, they can do no
harm; for, invisible and intangible, we are not cognizant of their
action save by its effects, as when some inexplicable, unseen poison in
the breeze blights the apples and the grain while in the flower, or
kills them in the bud, or destroys them when they have reached
maturity; as though by the tainted atmosphere in some unknown way
spreading abroad its pestilential exhalations. So, too, by an influence
equally obscure, demons and angels breathe into the soul, and rouse up
its corruptions with furious passions and vile excesses; or with cruel
lusts accompanied by various errors, of which the worst is that by
which these deities are commended to the favour of deceived and deluded
human beings, that they may get their proper food of flesh-fumes and
blood when that is offered up to idol-images. What is daintier food to
the spirit of evil, than turning men's minds away from the true God by
the illusions of a false divination? And here I explain how these
illusions are managed. Every spirit is possessed of wings. This is a
common property of both angels and demons. So they are everywhere in a
single moment; the whole world is as one place to them; all that is
done over the whole extent of it, it is as easy for them to know as to
report. Their swiftness of motion is taken for divinity, because their
nature is unknown. Thus they would have themselves thought sometimes
the authors of the things which they announce; and sometimes, no doubt,
the bad things are their doing, never the good. The purposes of God,
too, they took up of old from the lips of the prophets, even as they
spoke them; and they gather them still from their works, when they hear
them read aloud. Thus getting, too, from this source some intimations
of the future, they set themselves up as rivals of the true God, while
they steal His divinations. But the skill with which their responses
are shaped to meet events, your Croesi and Pyrrhi know too well. On the
other hand, it was in that way we have explained, the Pythian was able
to declare that they were cooking a tortoise(1) with the flesh of a
lamb; in a moment he had been to Lydia. From dwelling in the air, and
their nearness to the stars, and their commerce with the clouds, they
have means of knowing the preparatory processes going on in these upper
regions, and thus can give promise of the rains which they already
feel. Very kind too, no doubt, they are in regard to the healing of
diseases. For, first of all, they make you ill; then, to get a miracle
out of it, they command the application of remedies either altogether
new, or contrary to those in use, and straightway withdrawing hurtful
influence, they are supposed to have wrought a cure. What need, then,
to speak of their other artifices, or yet further of the deceptive
power which they have as spirits: of these Castor apparitions,(2) of
water carried by a sieve, and a ship drawn along by a girdle, and a
beard reddened by a touch, all done with the one object of showing that
men should believe in the deity of stones, and not seek after the only
true God?
CHAP. XXIII.
Moreover, if sorcerers call forth ghosts, and even make what seem the
souls of the dead to appear; if they put boys to death, in order to get
a response from the oracle; if, with their juggling illusions, they
make a pretence of doing various miracles; if they put dreams into
people's minds by the power of the angels and demons whose aid they
have invited, by whose influence, too, goats and tables are made to
divine,--how much more likely is this power of evil to be zealous in
doing with all its might, of its own inclination, and for its own
objects, what it does to serve the ends of others! Or if both angels
and demons do just what your gods do, where in that case is the
pre-eminence of deity, which we must surely think to be above all in
might? Will it not then be more reasonable to hold that these spirits
make themselves gods, giving as they do the very proofs which raise
your gods to godhead, than that the gods are the equals of angels and
demons? You make a distinction of places, I suppose, regarding as gods
in their temple those whose divinity you do not recognize elsewhere;
counting the madness which leads one man to leap from the sacred
houses, to be something different from that which leads another to leap
from an adjoining house; looking on one who cuts his arms and secret
pans as under a different furor from another who cuts his throat. The
result of the frenzy is the same, and the manner of instigation is one.
But thus far we have been dealing only in words: we now proceed to a
proof of facts, in which we shall show that under different names you
have real identity. Let a person be brought before your tribunals, who
is plainly under demoniacal possession. The wicked spirit, bidden to
speak by a follower of Christ,(3) will as readily make the truthful
confession that he is a demon, as elsewhere he has falsely asserted
that he is a god. Or, if you will, let there be produced one of the
god-possessed, as they are supposed, who, inhaling at the altar,
conceive divinity from the fumes, who are delivered of it by retching,
who vent it forth in agonies of gasping. Let that same Virgin Caelestis
herself the rain-promiser, let Aesculapius discoverer of medicines,
ready to prolong the life of Socordius, and Tenatius, and
Asclepiodotus, now in the last extremity, if they would not confess, in
their fear of lying to a Christian, that they were demons, then and
there shed the blood of that most impudent follower of Christ. What
clearer than a work like that? what more trustworthy than such a proof?
The simplicity of truth is thus set forth; its own worth sustains it;
no ground remains for the least suspicion. Do you say that it is done
by magic, or some trick of that sort? You will not say anything of the
sort, if you have been allowed the use of your ears and eyes. For what
argument can you bring against a thing that is exhibited to the eye in
its naked reality? If, on the one hand, they are really gods, why do
they pretend to be demons? Is it from fear of us? In that case your
divinity is put in subjection to Christians; and you surely can never
ascribe deity to that which is under authority of man, nay (if it adds
aught to the disgrace)of its very enemies. If, on the other hand, they
are demons or angels, why, inconsistently with this, do they presume to
set themselves forth as acting the pan of gods? For as beings who put
themselves out as gods would never willingly call themselves demons, if
they were gods indeed, that they might not thereby in fact abdicate
their dignity; so those whom you know to be no more than demons, would
not dare to act as gods, if those whose names they take and use were
really divine. For they would not dare to treat with disrespect the
higher majesty of beings, whose displeasure they would feel was to be
dreaded. So this divinity of yours is no divinity; for if it were, it
would not be pretended to by demons, and it would not be denied by
gods. But since on beth sides there is a concurrent acknowledgment that
they are not gods, gather from this that there is but a single race--I
mean the race of demons, the real race in both cases. Let your search,
then, now be after gods; for those whom you had imagined to be so you
find to be spirits of evil. The truth is, as we have thus not only
shown from our own gods that neither themselves nor any others have
claims to deity, you may see at once who is really God, and whether
that is He and He alone whom we Christians own; as also whether you are
to believe in Him, and worship Him, after the manner of our Christan
faith and discipline. But at once they will say, Who is this Christ
with his fables? is he an ordinary man? is he a sorcerer? was his body
stolen by his disciples from its tomb? is he now in the realms below?
or is he not rather up in the heavens, thence about to come again,
making the whole world shake, filling the earth with dread alarms,
making all but Christians wail--as the Power of God, and the Spirit of
God, as the Word, the Reason, the Wisdom, and the Son of God? Mock as
you like, but get the demons if you can to join you in your mocking;
let them deny that Christ is coming to judge every human soul which has
existed from the world's beginning, clothing it again with the body it
laid aside at death; let them declare it, say, before your tribunal,
that this work has been allotted to Minos and Rhadamanthus, as Plato
and the poets agree; let them put away from them at least the mark of
ignominy and condemnation. They disclaim being unclean spirits, which
yet we must hold as indubitably proved by their relish for the blood
and fumes and foetid carcasses of sacrificial animals, and even by the
vile language of their ministers. Let them deny that, for their
wickedness condemned already, they are kept for that very judgment-day,
with all their worshippers and their works. Why, all the authority and
power we have over them is from our naming the name of Christ, and
recalling to their memory the woes with which God threatens them at the
hands of Christ as Judge, and which they expect one day to overtake
them. Fearing Christ in God, and God in Christ, they become subject to
the servants of God and Christ. So at our touch and breathing,
overwhelmed bY the thought and realization of those judgment fires,
they leave at our command the bodies they have entered, unwilling, and
distressed, and before your very eyes put to an open shame. You believe
them when they lie; give credit to them, then, when they speak the
truth about themselves. No one plays the liar to bring disgrace upon
his own head, but for the sake of honour rather. You give a readier
confidence to people making confessions against themselves, than
denials in their own behalf. It has not been an unusual thing,
accordingly, for those testimonies of your deities to convert men to
Christianity; for in giving full belief to them, we are led to believe
in Christ. Yes, your very gods kindle up faith in our Scriptures, they
build up the confidence of our hope. You do homage, as I know, to them
also with the blood of Christians. On no account, then, would they lose
those who are so useful and dutiful to them, anxious even to hold you
fast, lest some day or other as Christians you might put them to the
rout,--if under the power of a follower of Christ, who desires to prove
to you the Truth, it were at all possible for them to lie.
THE APOLOGY (CHAP. XXIV to CHAP. L)
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CHAP. XXIV.
This whole confession of these beings, in which they declare that they
are not gods, and in which they tell you that there is no God but one,
the God whom we adore, is quite sufficient to clear us from the crime
of treason, chiefly against the Roman religion. For if it is certain
the gods have no existence, there is no religion in the case. If there
is no religion, because there are no gods, we are assuredly not guilty
of any offence against religion. Instead of that, the charge recoils on
your own head: worshipping a lie, you are really guilty of the crime
you charge on us, not merely by refusing the true religion of the true
God, but by going the further length of persecuting it. But now,
granting that these objects of your worship are really gods, is it not
generally held that there is one higher and more potent, as it were the
world's chief ruler, endowed with absolute power and majesty? For the
common way is to apportion deity, giving an imperial and supreme
domination to one, while its offices are put into the hands of many, as
Plato describes great Jupiter in the heavens, surrounded by an array at
once of deities and demons. It behooves us, therefore, to show equal
respect to the procurators, prefects, and governors of the divine
empire. And yet how great a crime does he commit, who, with the object
of gaining higher favour with the Caesar, transfers his endeavours and
his hopes to another, and does not confess that the appellation of God
as of Emperor belongs only to the Supreme Head, when it is held a
capital offence among us to call, or hear called, by the |
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