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ON CHRISTIAN DOCTRINE
BOOK III
by St. Augustine
This text is in the public domain.
Argument
The author, having discussed in the preceding book the method of dealing
with unknown signs, goes on in this third book to treat of ambiguous
signs. Such signs may be either direct or figurative. In the case of
direct signs ambiguity may arise from the punctuation, the pronunciation,
or the doubtful signification of the words, and is to be resolved by
attention to the context, a comparison of translations, or a reference to
the original tongue. In the case of figurative signs we need to guard
against two mistakes:--1. the interpreting literal expressions
figuratively; 2. the interpreting figurative expressions literally. The
author lays down rules by which we may decide whether an expression is
literal or figurative; the general rule being, that whatever can be shown
to be in its literal sense inconsistent either with purity of life or
correctness of doctrine must be taken figuratively. He then goes on to
lay down rules for the interpretation of expressions which have been
proved to be figurative; the general principle being, that no
interpretation can be true which does not promote the love of God and the
love of man. The author then proceeds to expound and illustrate the seven
rules of Tichonius the Donatist, which he commends to the attention of
the student of Holy Scripture.
Chap. 1.
--
Summary of the foregoing books, and scope of that which follows
The man who fears God seeks diligently in Holy Scripture for a
knowledge of His will. And when he has become meek through piety, so as
to have no love of strife; when furnished also with a knowledge of
languages, so as not to be stopped by unknown words and forms of speech,
and with the knowledge of certain necessary objects, so as not to be
ignorant of the force and nature of those which are used figuratively;
and assisted, besides, by accuracy in the texts, which has been secured
by skill and care in the matter of correction;--when thus prepared, let
him proceed to the examination and solution of the ambiguities of
Scripture. And that he may not be led astray by ambiguous signs, I so far
as I can give him instruction (it may happen however, that either from
the greatness of his intellect, or the greater clearness of the light he
enjoys, he shall laugh at the methods I am going to point out as
childish),--but yet, as I was going to say, so far as I can give
instruction, let him who is in such a state of mind that he can be
instructed by me know, that the ambiguity of Scripture lies either in
proper words or in metaphorical, classes which I have already described
in the second book.
Chap. 2.
--
Rule for removing ambiguity by attending to punctuation
But when proper words make Scripture ambiguous, we must see in the
first place that there is nothing wrong in our punctuation or
pronunciation. Accordingly, if, when attention is given to the passage,
it shall appear to be uncertain in what way it ought to be punctuated or
pronounced, let the reader consult the rule of faith which he has
gathered from the plainer passages of Scripture, and from the authority
of the Church, and of which I treated at sufficient length when I was
speaking in the first book about things. But if both readings, or all of
them (if there are more than two), give a meaning in harmony with the
faith, it remains to consult the context, both what goes before and what
comes after, to see which interpretation, out of many that offer
themselves, it pronounces for and permits to be dovetailed into itself.
Now look at some examples. The heretical pointing,
"In principio
erat verbum, et verbum erat apud Deum, et Deus erat"
(In the beginning
was the Word, and the Word was with God,and God was), so as to make the
next sentence run,
"Verbum hoc erat in principio apud Deum"
(This word was in the beginning with God), arises out of unwillingness to confess
that the Word was God. But this must be rejected by the rule of faith,
which, in reference to the equality of the Trinity, directs us to say:
"et Deus erat verbum"
(and the Word was God); and then to add:
"hoc erat in principio apud Deum"
(the same was in the beginning with God).
But the following ambiguity of punctuation does not go against the
faith in either way you take it, and therefore must be decided from the
context. It is where the apostle says: "What I shall choose I wot not:
for I am in a strait betwixt two, having a desire to depart, and to be
with Christ, which is far better: nevertheless to abide in the flesh is
more needful for you." Now it is uncertain whether we should read,
"ex
duobus concupiscentiam habens "
[having a desire for two things], or
"compellor autem ex duobus"
[I am in a strait betwixt two]; and so to
add:
"concupiscentiam habens dissolvi, et esse cum Christo"
[having a
desire to depart, and to be with Christ]. But since there follows
"multo
enim magis optimum"
[for it is far better], it is evident that he says he has a desire for that which is better; so that, while he is in a strait
betwixt two, yet he has a desire for one and sees a necessity for the
other; a desire, viz., to be with Christ, and a necessity to remain in
the flesh. Now this ambiguity is resolved by one word that follows, which
is translated denim [for]; and the translators who have omitted this
particle have preferred the interpretation which makes the apostle seem
not only in a strait betwixt two, but also to have a desire for two. We
must therefore punctuate the sentence thus:
"et quid eligam ignoro:
compellor autem ex duobus"
[what I shall choose I wot not: for I am in a
strait betwixt two]; and after this point follows:
"concupiscentiam
habens dissolvi, et esse cum Christo"
[having a desire to depart, and to
be with Christ]. And, as if he were asked why he has a desire for this in
preference to the other, he adds:
"multo enim magis optimum"
[for it is far better]. Why, then, is he in a strait betwixt the two? Because there
is a need for his remaining, which he adds in these terms:
"manere in
carne necessarium propter vos"
[nevertheless to abide in the flesh is
more needful for you].
Where, however, the ambiguity cannot be cleared up, either by the
rule of faith or by the context, there is nothing to hinder us to point
the sentence according to any method we choose of those that suggest
themselves. As is the case in that passage to the Corinthians: "Having
therefore these promises, dearly beloved, let us cleanse ourselves from
all filthiness of the flesh and spirit, perfecting holiness in the fear
of God. Receive us; we have wronged no man." It is doubtful whether we
should read, mundemus nos ab omni coinquinatione carnis et spiritus" [let
us cleanse ourselves from all filthiness of the flesh and spirit], in
accordance with the passage, "that she may be holy both in body and in
spirit," or,
"mundemus nos ab omni coinquintione carnis"
[let us cleanse ourselves from all filthiness of the flesh], so as to make the next
sentence,
"et spiritus perficientes sanctificationem in timore Dei capite
nos"
[and perfecting holiness of spirit in the fear of God, receive us].
Such ambiguities of punctuation, therefore, are left to the reader's
discretion.
Chap. 3.
--
How pronunciation serves to remove ambiguity--different kinds of interrogation
And all the directions that I have given about ambiguous
punctuations are to be observed likewise in the case of doubtful
pronunciations. For these too, unless the fault lies in the carelessness
of the reader, are corrected either by the rule of faith, or by a
reference to the preceding or succeeding context; or if neither of these
methods is applied with success, they will remain doubtful, but so that
the reader will not be in fault in whatever way he may pronounce them.
For example, if our faith that God will not bring any charges against His
elect, and that Christ will not condemn His elect, did not stand in the
way, this passage, "Who shall lay anything to the charge of God's elect?"
might be pronounced in such a way as to make what follows an answer to
this question, "God who justifieth," and to make a second question, "Who
is he that condemneth?" with the answer, "Christ Jesus who died." But as
it would be the height of madness to believe this, the passage will be
pronounced in such a way as to make the first part a question of inquiry,
and the second a rhetorical interrogative. Now the ancients said that the
difference between an inquiry and an interrogative was this, that an
inquiry admits of many answers, but to an interrogative the answer must
be either "No" or "Yes." The passage will be pronounced, then, in such a
way that after the inquiry, "Who shall lay anything to the charge of
God's elect?" what follows will be put as an interrogative: "Shall God
who justifieth?" the answer "No" being understood. And in the same way we
shall have the inquiry, "Who is he that condemneth?" and the answer here
again in the form of an interrogative, "Is it Christ who died? yea,
rather, who is risen again? who is even at the right hand of God? who
also maketh intercession for us?" the answer "No" being understood to
every one of these questions. On the other hand, in that passage where
the apostle says, "What shall we say then? That the Gentiles which
followed not after righteousness have attained to righteousness;" unless
after the inquiry, "What shall we say then?" what follows were given as
the answer to this question: "That the Gentiles, which followed not after
righteousness, have attained to righteousness;" it would not be in
harmony with the succeeding context. But with whatever tone of voice one
may choose to pronounce that saying of Nathanael's, "Can any good thing
come out of Nazareth?"--whether with that of a man who gives an
affirmative answer, so that "out of Nazareth" is the only part that
belongs to the interrogation, or with that of a man who asks the whole
question with doubt and hesitation,--I do not see how a difference can be
made. But neither sense is opposed to faith.
There is, again, an ambiguity arising out of the doubtful sound of
syllables; and this of course has relation to pronunciation. For example,
in the passage, "My bone [os meum] was not hid from Thee, which Thou
didst make in secret," it is not clear to the reader whether he should
take the word "os" as short or long. If he make it short, it is the
singular of ossa [bones]; if he make it long, it is the singular of ora
[mouths]. Now difficulties such as this are cleared up by looking into
the original tongue, for in the Greek we find not "stome" [mouth], but
"osteon" [bone]. And for this reason the vulgar idiom is frequently more
useful in conveying the sense than the pure speech of the educated. For I
would rather have the barbarism,
"non est absconditum a te ossum meum",
than have the passage in better Latin but the sense less clear. But sometimes when the sound of a syllable is doubtful, it is decided by a
word near it belonging to the same sentence. As, for example, that saying
of the apostle, "Of the which I tell you before [praedico], as I have
also told you in time past [praedixi], that they which do such things
shall not inherit the kingdom of God." Now if he had only said, "Of the
which I tell you before [quae praedico vobis]", and had not added, "as I
have also told you in time past [sicut proedixi]," we could not know
without going back to the original whether in the word praedico the
middle syllable should be pronounced long or short. But as it is, it is
clear that it should be pronounced long; for he does not say, sicut
praedicavi, but sicut praedixi.
Chap. 4.
--
How ambiguities may be solved
And not only these, but also those ambiguities that do not relate
either to punctuation or pronunciation, are to be examined in the same
way. For example, that one in the Epistle to the Thessalonians:
"Propterea consolati sumus fratres in vobis". Now it is doubtful whether
"fratres" [brethren] is in the vocative or accusative case, and it is not
contrary to faith to take it either way. But in the Greek language the
two cases are not the same in form; and accordingly, when we look into
the original, the case is shown to be vocative. Now if the translator had
chosen to say, "propterea consolationem habuimus fratres in vobis", he
would have followed the words less literally, but there would have been
less doubt about the meaning; or, indeed, if he had added "nostri",
hardly any one would have doubted that the vocative case was meant when
he heard "propterea consolationem habuimus fratres in vobis", But this is
a rather dangerous liberty to take. It has been taken, however in that
passage to the Corinthians, where the apostle says, "I protest by your
rejoicing [per vestram gloriam] which I have in Christ Jesus our Lord, I
die daily." For one translator has it, "per vestram" juro "gloriam", the
form of adjuration appearing in the Greek without any ambiguity. It is
therefore very rare and very difficult to find any ambiguity in the case
of proper words, as far at least as Holy Scripture is concerned, which
neither the context, showing the design of the writer, nor a comparison
of translations, nor a reference to the original tongue, will suffice to
explain.
Chap. 5.
--
It is a wretched slavery which takes the figurative expressions of Scripture in a literal sense
But the ambiguities of metaphorical words, about which I am next to
speak, demand no ordinary care and diligence. In the first place, we must
beware of taking a figurative expression literally. For the saying of the
apostle applies in this case too: "The letter killeth, but the spirit
giveth life." For when what is said figuratively is taken as if it were
said literally, it is understood in a carnal manner. And nothing is more
fittingly called the death of the soul than when that in it which raises
it above the brutes, the intelligence namely, is put in subjection to the
flesh by a blind adherence to the letter. For he who follows the letter
takes figurative words as if they were proper, and does not carry out
what is indicated by a proper word into its secondary signification; but,
if he hears of the Sabbath, for example, thinks of nothing but the one
day out of seven which recurs in constant succession; and when he hears
of a sacrifice, does not carry his thoughts beyond the customary
offerings of victims from the flock, and of the fruits of the earth. Now
it is surely a miserable slavery of the soul to take signs for things,
and to be unable to lift the eye of the mind above what is corporeal and
created, that it may drink in eternal light.
Chap. 6.
--
Utility of the bondage of the Jews
This bondage, however, in the case of the Jewish people, differed
widely from what it was in the case of the other nations; because, though
the former were in bondage to temporal things, it was in such a way that
in all these the One God was put before their minds. And although they
paid attention to the signs of spiritual realities in place of the
realities themselves, not knowing to what the signs referred, still they
had this conviction rooted in their minds, that in subjecting themselves
to such a bondage they were doing the pleasure of the one invisible God
of all. And the apostle describes this bondage as being like to that of
boys under the guidance of a schoolmaster. And those who clung
obstinately to such signs could not endure our Lord's neglect of them
when the time for their revelation had come. And hence their leaders
brought it as a charge against Him that He healed on the Sabbath, and the
people, clinging to these signs as it they were realities, could not
believe that one who refused to observe them in the way the Jews did was
God, or came from God. But those who did believe, from among whom the
first Church at Jerusalem was formed, showed clearly how great an
advantage it had been to be so guided by the schoolmaster that signs,
which had been for a season imposed on the obedient, fixed the thoughts
of those who observed them on the worship of the One God who made heaven
and earth. These men, because they had been very near to spiritual things
(for even in the temporal and carnal offerings and types, though they did
not clearly apprehend their spiritual meaning, they had learnt to adore
the One Eternal God,) were filled with such a measure of the Holy Spirit
that they sold all their goods, and laid their price at the apostles'
feet to be distributed among the needy, and consecrated themselves wholly
to God as a new temple, of which the old temple they were serving was but
the earthly type.
Now it is not recorded that any of the Gentile churches did this,
because men who had for their gods idols made with hands had not been so
near to spiritual things.
Chap. 7.
--
The useless bondage of the gentiles
And if ever any of them endeavoured to make it out that their idols
were only signs, yet still they used them in reference to the worship and
adoration of the creature. What difference does it make to me, for
instance, that the image of Neptune is not itself to be considered a god,
but only as representing the wide ocean, and all the other waters besides
that spring out of fountains? As it is described by a poet of theirs, who
says, if I recollect aright, "Thou, Father Neptune, whose hoary temples
are wreathed with the resounding sea, whose beard is the mighty ocean
flowing forth unceasingly, and whose hair is the winding rivers." This
husk shakes its rattling stones within a sweet covering, and yet it is
not food for men, but for swine. He who knows the gospel knows what I
mean. What profit is it to me, then, that the image of Neptune is used
with a reference to this explanation of it, unless indeed the result be
that I worship neither? For any statue you like to take is as much god to
me as the wide ocean. I grant, however, that they who make gods of the
works of man have sunk lower than they who make gods of the works of God.
But the command is that we should love and serve the One God, who is the
Maker of all those things, the images of which are worshipped by the
heathen either as gods, or as signs and representations of gods. If,
then, to take a sign which has been established for a useful end instead
of the thing itself which it was designed to signify, is bondage to the
flesh, how much more so is it to take signs intended to represent useless
things for the things themselves! For even if you go back to the very
things signified by such signs, and engage your mind in the worship of
these, you will not be anything the more free from the burden and the
livery of bondage to the flesh.
Chap. 8.
--
The Jews liberated from their bondage in one way, the gentiles in another
Accordingly the liberty that comes by Christ took those whom it
found under bondage to useful signs, and who were (so to speak) near to
it, and, interpreting the signs to which they were in bondage, set them
free by raising them to the realities of which these were signs. And out
of such were formed the churches of the saints of Israel. Those, on the
other hand, whom it found in bondage to useless signs, it not only freed
from their slavery to such signs, but brought to nothing and cleared out
of the way all these signs themselves, so that the gentiles were turned
from the corruption of a multitude of false gods, which Scripture
frequently and justly speaks of as fornication, to the worship of the One
God: not that they might now fall into bondage to signs of a useful kind,
but rather that they might exercise their minds in the spiritual
understanding of such.
Chap. 9.
--
Who is in bondage to signs, and who not
Now he is in bondage to a sign who uses, or pays homage to, any
significant object without knowing what it signifies: he, on the other
hand, who either uses or honours a useful sign divinely appointed, whose
force and significance he understands, does not honour the sign which is
seen and temporal, but that to which all such signs refer. Now such a man
is spiritual and free even at the time of his bondage, when it is not yet
expedient to reveal to carnal minds those signs by subjection to which
their carnality is to be overcome. To this class of spiritual persons
belonged the patriarchs and the prophets, and all those among the people
of Israel through whose instrumentality the Holy Spirit ministered unto
us the aids and consolations of the Scriptures. But at the present time,
after that the proof of our liberty has shone forth so clearly in the
resurrection of our Lord, we are not oppressed with the heavy burden of
attending even to those signs which we now understand, but our Lord
Himself, and apostolic practice, have handed down to us a few rites in
place of many, and these at once very easy to perform, most majestic in
their significance, and most sacred in the observance; such, for example,
as the Sacrament of baptism, and the celebration of the body and blood of
the Lord. And as soon as any one looks upon these observances he knows to
what they refer, and so reveres them not in carnal bondage, but in
spiritual freedom. Now, as to follow the letter, and to take signs for
the things that are signified by them, is a mark of weakness and bondage;
so to interpret signs wrongly is the result of being misled by error. He,
however, who does not understand what a sign signifies, but yet knows
that it is a sign, is not in bondage. And it is better even to be in
bondage to unknown but useful signs than, by interpreting them wrongly,
to draw the neck from under the yoke of bondage only to insert it in the
coils of error.
Chap. 10.
--
How we are to discern whether a phrase is figurative
But in addition to the foregoing rule, which guards us against
taking a metaphorical form of speech as if it were literal, we must also
pay heed to that which tells us not to take a literal form of speech as
if it were figurative. In the first place, then, we must show the way to
find out whether a phrase is literal or figurative. And the way is
certainly as follows: Whatever there is in the word of God that cannot,
when taken literally, be referred either to purity of life or soundness
of doctrine, you may set down as figurative. Purity of life has reference
to the love of God and one's neighbour; soundness of doctrine to the
knowledge of God and one's neighbour. Every man, moreover, has hope in
his own conscience, so far as he perceives that he has attained to the
love and knowledge of God and his neighbour. Now all these matters have
been spoken of in the first book.
But as men are prone to estimate sins, not by reference to their
inherent sinfulness, but rather by reference to their own customs, it
frequently happens that a man will think nothing blameable except what
the men of his own country and time are accustomed to condemn, and
nothing worthy of praise or approval except what is sanctioned by the
custom of his companions; and thus it comes to pass, that if Scripture
either enjoins what is opposed to the customs of the hearers, or condemns
what is not so opposed, and if at the same time the authority of the word
has a hold upon their minds, they think that the expression is
figurative. Now Scripture enjoins nothing except charity, and condemns
nothing except lust, and in that way fashions the lives of men. In the
same way, if an erroneous opinion has taken possession of the mind, men
think that whatever Scripture asserts contrary to this must be
figurative. Now Scripture asserts nothing but the catholic faith, in
regard to things past, future, and present. It is a narrative of the
past, a prophecy of the future, and a description of the present. But all
these tend to nourish and strengthen charity, and to overcome and root
out lust.
I mean by charity that affection of the mind which aims at the
enjoyment of God for His own sake, and the enjoyment of ones self and
one's neighbour in subordination to God; by lust I mean that affection of
the mind which aims at enjoying one's self and one's neighbour, and other
corporeal things, without reference to God. Again, what lust, when
unsubdued, does towards corrupting one's own soul and body, is called
vice; but what it does to injure another is called crime. And these are
the two classes into which all sins may be divided. But the vices come
first; for when these have exhausted the soul, and reduced it to a kind
of poverty, it easily slides into crimes, in order to remove hindrances
to, or to find assistance in, its vices. In the same way, what charity
does with a view to one's own advantage is prudence; but what it does
with a view to a neighbor's advantage is called benevolence. And here
prudence comes first; because no one can confer an advantage on another
which he does not himself possess. Now in proportion as the dominion of
lust is pulled down, in the same proportion is that of charity built up.
Chap. 11.
--
Rule for interpreting phrases which seem to ascribe severity to God and the saints
Every severity, therefore, and apparent cruelty, either in word or
deed, that is ascribed in Holy Scripture to God or His saints, avails to
the pulling down of the dominion of lust. And if its meaning be clear, we
are not to give it some secondary reference, as if it were spoken
figuratively. Take, for example, that saying of the apostle: "But, after
thy hardness and impenitent heart, treasures up unto thyself wrath
against the day of wrath and revelation of the righteous judgment of God;
who will render to every man according to his deeds: to them who, by
patient continuance in well-doing, seek for glory, and honour, and
immortality, eternal life; but unto them that are contentious, and do not
obey the truth, but obey unrighteousness, indignation and wrath,
tribulation and anguish, upon every soul of man that does evil, of the
Jew first, and also of the Gentile." But this is addressed to those who,
being unwilling to subdue their lust, are themselves involved in the
destruction of their lust. When, however, the dominion of lust is
overturned in a man over whom it had held sway, this plain expression is
used: "They that are Christ's have crucified the flesh, with the
affections and lusts." Only that, even in these instances, some words are
used figuratively, as for example, "the wrath of God" and "crucified."
But these are not so numerous, nor placed in such a way as to obscure the
sense, and make it allegorical or enigmatical, which is the kind of
expression properly called figurative. But in the saying addressed to
Jeremiah, "See, I have this day set thee over the nations, and over the
kingdoms, to root out, and to pull down, and to destroy, and to throw
down," there is no doubt the whole of the language is figurative, and to
be referred to the end I have spoken of.
Chap. 12.
--
Rule for interpreting those sayings and actions which are ascribed to God and the saints and which yet seem to the unskilful to be wicked
Those things, again, whether only sayings or whether actual deeds,
which appear to the inexperienced to be sinful, and which are ascribed to
God, or to men whose holiness is put before us as an example, are wholly
figurative, and the hidden kernel of meaning they contain is to be picked
out as food for the nourishment of charity. Now, whoever uses transitory
objects less freely than is the custom of those among whom he lives, is
either temperate or superstitious; whoever, on the other hand, uses them
so as to transgress the bounds of the custom of the good men about him,
either has a further meaning in what he does, or is sinful. In all such
matters it is not the use of the objects, but the lust of the user, that
is to blame. Nobody in his sober senses would believe, for example, that
when our Lord's feet were anointed by the woman with precious ointment,
it was for the same purpose for which luxurious and profligate men are
accustomed to have theirs anointed in those banquets which we abhor. For
the sweet odour means the good report which is earned by a life of good
works; and the man who wins this, while following in the footsteps of
Christ, anoints His feet (so to speak) with the most precious ointment.
And so that which in the case of other persons is often a sin, becomes,
when ascribed to God or a prophet, the sign of some great truth. Keeping
company with a harlot, for example, is one thing when it is the result of
abandoned manners, another thing when done in the course of his prophecy
by the prophet Hosea. Because it is a shamefully wicked thing to strip
the body naked at a banquet among the drunken and licentious, it does not
follow that it is a sin to be naked in the baths.
We must, therefore, consider carefully what is suitable to times
and places and persons, and not rashly charge men with sins. For it is
possible that a wise man may use the daintiest food without any sin of
epicurism or gluttony, while a fool will crave for the vilest food with a
most disgusting eagerness of appetite. And any sane man would prefer
eating fish after the manner of our Lord, to eating lentils after the
manner of Esau, or barley after the manner of oxen. For there are several
beasts that feed on commoner kinds of food, but it does not follow that
they are more temperate than we are. For in all matters of this kind it
is not the nature of the things we use, but our reason for using them,
and our manner of seeking them, that make what we do either praiseworthy
or blameable.
Now the saints of ancient times were, under the form of an earthly
kingdom, foreshadowing and foretelling the kingdom of heaven. And on
account of the necessity for a numerous offspring, the custom of one man
having several wives was at that time blameless: and for the same reason
it was not proper for one woman to have several husbands, because a woman
does not in that way become more fruitful, but, on the contrary, it is
base harlotry to seek either gain or offspring by promiscuous
intercourse. In regard to matters of this sort, whatever the holy men of
those times did without lust, Scripture passes over without blame,
although they did things which could not be done at the present time,
except through lust. And everything of this nature that is there narrated
we are to take not only in its historical and literal, but also in its
figurative and prophetical sense, and to interpret as bearing ultimately
upon the end of love towards God or our neighbour, or both. For as it was
disgraceful among the ancient Romans to wear tunics reaching to the
heels, and furnished with sleeves, but now it is disgraceful for men
honorably born not to wear tunics of that description: so we must take
heed in regard to other things also, that lust do not mix with our use of
them; for lust not only abuses to wicked ends the customs of those among
whom we live, but frequently also transgressing the bounds of custom,
betrays, in a disgraceful outbreak, its own hideousness, which was
concealed under the cover of prevailing fashions.
Chap. 13.
--
Same subject, continued
Whatever, then, is in accordance with the habits of those with whom
we are either compelled by necessity, or undertake as a matter of duty,
to spend this life, is to be turned by good and great men to some prudent
or benevolent end, either directly, as is our duty, or figuratively, as
is allowable to prophets.
Chap. 14.
--
Error of those who think that there is no absolute right and wrong
But when men unacquainted with other modes of life than their own
meet with the record of such actions, unless they are restrained by
authority, they look upon them as sins, and do not consider that their
own customs either in regard to marriage, or feasts, or dress, or the
other necessities and adornments of human life, appear sinful to the
people of other nations and other times. And, distracted by this endless
variety of customs, some who were half asleep (as I may say)--that is,
who were neither sunk in the deep sleep of folly, nor were able to awake
into the light of wisdom--have thought that there was no such thing as
absolute right, but that every nation took its own custom for right; and
that, since every nation has a different custom, and right must remain
unchangeable, it becomes manifest that there is no such thing as right at
all. Such men did not perceive, to take only one example, that the
precept, "Whatsoever ye would that men should do to you, do ye even so to
them," I cannot be altered by any diversity of national customs. And this
precept, when it is referred to the love of God, destroys all vices; when
to the love of one's neighbour, puts an end to all crimes. For no one is
willing to defile his own dwelling; he ought not, therefore, to defile
the dwelling of God, that is, himself. And no one wishes an injury to be
done him by another; he himself, therefore, ought not to do injury to
another.
Chap. 15.
--
Rule for interpreting figurative expressions
The tyranny of lust being thus overthrown, charity reigns through
its supremely just laws of love to God for His own sake, and love to
one's self and one's neighbour for God's sake. Accordingly, in regard to
figurative expressions, a rule such as the following will be observed, to
carefully turn over in our minds and meditate upon what we read till an
interpretation be found that tends to establish the reign of love. Now,
if when taken literally it at once gives a meaning of this kind, the
expression is not to be considered figurative.
Chap. 16.
--
Rule for interpreting commands and prohibitions
If the sentence is one of command, either forbidding a crime or
vice, or enjoining an act of prudence or benevolence, it is not
figurative. If, however, it seems to enjoin a crime or vice, or to forbid
an act of prudence or benevolence, it is figurative. "Except ye eat the
flesh of the Son of man," says Christ, "and drink His blood, ye have no
life in you." This seems to enjoin a crime or a vice; it is therefore a
figure, enjoining that we should have a share in the sufferings of our
Lord, and that we should retain a sweet and profitable memory of the fact
that His flesh was wounded and crucified for us. Scripture says: "If
thine enemy hunger, feed him; if he thirst, give him drink;" and this is
beyond doubt a command to do a kindness. But in what follows, "for in so
doing thou shalt heap coals of fire on his head," one would think a deed
of malevolence was enjoined. Do not doubt, then, that the expression is
figurative; and, while it is possible to interpret it in two ways, one
pointing to the doing of an injury, the other to a display of
superiority, let charity on the contrary call you back to benevolence,
and interpret the coals of fire as the burning groans of penitence by
which a man's pride is cured who bewails that he has been the enemy of
one who came to his assistance in distress. In the same way, when our
Lord says, "He who loveth his life shall lose it," we are not to think
that He forbids the prudence with which it is a man's duty to care for
his life, but that He says in a figurative sense, "Let him lose his
life"--that is, let him destroy and lose that perverted and unnatural use
which he now makes of his life, and through which his desires are fixed
on temporal things so that he gives no heed to eternal. It is written:
"Give to the godly man, and help not a sinner." The latter clause of this
sentence seems to forbid benevolence; for it says, "help not a sinner."
Understand, therefore, that "sinner" is put figuratively for sin, so that
it is his sin you are not to help.
Chap. 17.
--
Some commands are given to all in common, others to particular classes
Again, it often happens that a man who has attained, or thinks he
has attained, to a higher grade of spiritual life, thinks that the
commands given to those who are still in the lower grades are figurative;
for example, if he has embraced a life of celibacy and made himself a
eunuch for the kingdom of heaven's sake, he contends that the commands
given in Scripture about loving and ruling a wife are not to be taken
literally, but figuratively; and if he has determined to keep his virgin
unmarried, he tries to put a figurative interpretation on the passage
where it is said, "Marry thy daughter, and so shalt thou have performed a
weighty matter." Accordingly, another of our rules for understanding the
Scriptures will be as follows,--to recognize that some commands are given
to all in common, others to particular classes of persons, that the
medicine may act not only upon the state of health as a whole, but also
upon the special weakness of each member. For that which cannot be raised
to a higher state must be cared for in its own state.
Chap. 18.
--
We must take into consideration the time at which anything was enjoyed or allowed
We must also be on our guard against supposing that what in the Old
Testament, making allowance for the condition of those times, is not a
crime or a vice even if we take it literally and not figuratively, can be
transferred to the present time as a habit of life. For no one will do
this except lust has dominion over him, and endeavours to find support
for itself in the very Scriptures which were intended to overthrow it.
And the wretched man does not perceive that such matters are recorded
with this useful design, that mere of good hope may learn the salutary
lesson, both that the custom they spurn can be turned to a good use, and
that which they embrace can be used to condemnation, if the use of the
former be accompanied with charity, and the use of the latter with lust.
For, if it was possible for one man to use many wives with
chastity, it is possible for another to use one wife with lust. And I
look with greater approval on the man who uses the fruitfulness of many
wives for the sake of an ulterior object, than on the man who enjoys the
body of one wife for its own sake. For in the former case the man aims at
a useful object suited to the circumstances of the times; in the latter
case he gratifies a lust which is engrossed in temporal enjoyments. And
those men to whom the apostle permitted as a matter of indulgence to have
one wife because of their incontinence, were less near to God than those
who, though they had each of them numerous wives, yet just as a wise man
uses food and drink only for the sake of bodily health, used marriage
only for the sake of offspring. And, accordingly, if these last had been
still alive at the advent of our Lord, when the time not of casting
stones away but of gathering them together had come, they would have
immediately made themselves eunuchs for the kingdom of heaven's sake. For
there is no difficulty in abstaining unless when there is lust in
enjoying. And assuredly those men of whom I speak knew that wantonness
even in regard to wives is abuse and intemperance, as is proved by
Tobit's prayer when he was married to his wife. For he says: "Blessed art
Thou, O God of our fathers, and blessed is Thy holy and glorious name for
ever; let the heavens bless Thee, and all Thy creatures. Thou merriest
Adam, and gavest him Eve his wife for an helper and stay. ... And now, O
Lord. Thou knowest that I take not this my sister for lust, but
uprightly: therefore have pity on us, O Lord."
Chap. 19.
--
Wicked men judge others by themselves
But those who, giving the rein to lust, either wander about
steeping themselves in a multitude of debaucheries, or even in regard to
one wife not only exceed the measure necessary for the procreation of
children, but with the shameless license of a sort of slavish freedom
heap up the filth of a still more beastly excess, such men do not believe
it possible that the men of ancient times used a number of wives with
temperance, looking to nothing but the duty, necessary in the
circumstances of the time, of propagating the race; and what they
themselves, who are entangled in the meshes of lust, do not accomplish in
the case of a single wife, they think utterly impossible in the case of a
number of wives.
But these same men might say that it is not right even to honour
and praise good and holy men, because they themselves when they are
honoured and praised, swell with pride, becoming the more eager for the
emptiest sort of distinction the more frequently and the more widely they
are blown about on the tongue of flattery, and so become so light that a
breath of rumour, whether it appear prosperous or adverse, will carry
them into the whirlpool of vice or dash them on the rocks of crime. Let
them, then, learn how trying and difficult it is for themselves to escape
either being caught by the bait of praise, or pierced by the stings of
insult; but let them not measure others by their own standard.
Chap. 20.
--
Consistency of good men in all outward circumstances
Let them believe, on the contrary, that the apostles of our faith were
neither puffed up when they were honoured by men, nor cast down when they
were despised. And certainly neither sort of temptation was wanting to
those great men. For they were both cried up by the loud praises of
believers, and cried down by the slanderous reports of their persecutors.
But the apostles used all these things, as occasion served, and were not
corrupted; and in the same way the saints of old used their wives with
reference to the necessities of their own times, and were not in bondage
to lust as they are who refuse to believe these things.
For if they had been under the influence of any such passion, they
could never have restrained themselves from implacable hatred towards
their sons, by whom they knew that their wives and concubines were
solicited and debauched.
Chap. 21.
--
David not lustful, though he fell into adultery
But when King David had suffered this injury at the hands of his
impious and unnatural son, he not only bore with him in his mad passion,
but mourned over him in his death. He certainly was not caught in the
meshes of carnal jealousy, seeing that it was not his own injuries but
the sins of his son that moved him. For it was on this account he had
given orders that his son should not be slain if he were conquered in
battle, that he might have a place of repentance after he was subdued;
and when he was baffled in this design, he mourned over his son's death,
not because of his own loss, but because he knew to what punishment so
impious an adulterer and parricide had been hurried. For prior to this,
in the case of another son who had been guilty of no crime, though he was
dreadfully afflicted for him while he was sick, yet he comforted himself
after his death.
And with what moderation and self-restraint those men used their
wives appears chiefly in this, that when this same king, carried away by
the heat of passion and by temporal prosperity, had taken unlawful
possession of one woman, whose husband also he ordered to be put to
death, he was accused of his crime by a prophet, who, when he had come to
show him his sin set before him the parable of the poor man who had but
one ewe-lamb, and whose neighbour, though he had many, yet when a guest
came to him spared to take of his own flock, but set his poor neighbour's
one lamb before his guest to eat. And David's anger being kindled against
the man, he commanded that he should be put to death, and the lamb
restored fourfold to the poor man; thus unwittingly condemning the sin he
had wittingly committed. And when he had been shown this, and God's
punishment had been denounced against him, he wiped out his sin in deep
penitence. But yet in this parable it was the adultery only that was
indicated by the poor man's ewe-lamb; about the killing of the woman's
husband,--that is, about the murder of the poor man himself who had the
one ewe-lamb,--nothing is said in the parable, so that the sentence of
condemnation is pronounced against the adultery alone. And hence we may
understand with what temperance he possessed a number of wives when he
was forced to punish himself for transgressing in regard to one woman.
But in his case the immoderate desire did not take up its abode with him,
but was only a passing guest. On this account the unlawful appetite is
called even by the accusing prophet, a guest. For he did not say that he
took the poor man's ewe-lamb to make a feast for his king, but for his
guest. In the case of his son Solomon, however, this lust did not come
and pass away like a guest, but reigned as a king. And about him
Scripture is not silent, but accuses him of being a lover of strange
women; for in the beginning of his reign he was inflamed with a desire
for wisdom, but after he had attained it through spiritual love, he lost
it through carnal lust.
Chap. 22.
--
Rule regarding passages of Scripture in which approval is expressed of actions which are now condemned by good men
Therefore, although all, or nearly all, the transactions recorded
in the Old Testament are to be taken not literally only, but figuratively
as well, nevertheless even in the case of those which the reader has
taken literally, and which, though the authors of them are praised, are
repugnant to the habits of the good men who since our Lord's advent are
the custodians of the divine commands, let him refer the figure to its
interpretation, but let him not transfer the act to his habits of life.
For many things which were done as duties at that time, cannot now be
done except through lust.
Chap. 23.
--
Rule regarding the narrative of sins of great men
And when he reads of the sins of great men, although he may be able
to see and to trace out in them a figure of things to come, let him yet
put the literal fact to this use also, to teach him not to dare to vaunt
himself in his own good deeds, and in comparison with his own
righteousness, to despise others as sinners, when he sees in the case of
men so eminent both the storms that are to be avoided and the shipwrecks
that are to be wept over. For the sins of these men were recorded to this
end, that men might everywhere and always tremble at that saying of the
apostle: "Wherefore let him that thinketh he standeth take heed lest he
fall." For there is hardly a page of Scripture on which it is not clearly
written that God resisteth the proud and giveth grace to the humble.
Chap. 24.
--
The character of the expressions used is above all to have weight
The chief thing to be inquired into, therefore, in regard to any
expression that we are trying to understand is, whether it is literal or
figurative. For when it is ascertained to be figurative, it is easy, by
an application of the laws of things which we discussed in the first
book, to turn it in every way until we arrive at a true interpretation,
especially when we bring to our aid experience strengthened by the
exercise of piety. Now we find out whether an expression is literal or
figurative by attending to the considerations indicated above.
Chap. 25.
--
The same word does not always signify the same thing
And when it is shown to be figurative, the words in which it is
expressed will be found to be drawn either from like objects or from
objects having some affinity.
But as there are many ways in which things show a likeness to each
other, we are not to suppose there is any rule that what a thing
signifies by similitude in one place it is to be taken to signify in all
other places. For our Lord used leaven both in a bad sense, as when He
said, "Beware of the leaven of the Pharisees," I and in a good sense, as
when He said, "The kingdom of heaven is like unto leaven, which a woman
took and hid in three measures of meal, till the whole was leavened."
Now the rule in regard to this variation has two forms. For things
that signify now one thing and now another, signify either things that
are contrary, or things that are only different. They signify contraries,
for example, when they are used metaphorically at one time in a good
sense, at another in a bad, as in the case of the leaven mentioned above.
Another example of the same is that a lion stands for Christ in the place
where it is said, "The lion of the tribe of Judah has prevailed;" and
again, stands for the devil where it is written, "Your adversary the
devil, as a roaring lion, walketh about seeking whom he may devour." In
the same way the serpent is used in a good sense, "Be wise as serpents;"
and again, in a bad sense, "The serpent beguiled Eve through his
subtilty." Bread is used in a good sense, "I am the living bread which
came down from heaven;" in a bad, "Bread eaten in secret is pleasant."
And so in a great many other case. The examples I have adduced are indeed
by no means doubtful in their signification, because only plain instances
ought to be used as examples. There are passages, however, in regard to
which it is uncertain in what sense they ought to be taken, as for
example, "In the hand of the Lord there is a cup, and the wine is red: it
is full of mixture." Now it is uncertain whether this denotes the wrath
of God, but not to the last extremity of punishment, that is, "to the
very dregs;" or whether it denotes the grace of the Scriptures passing
away from the Jews and coming to the Gentiles, because "He has put down
one and set up another,"--certain observances, however, which they
understand in a carnal manner, still remaining among the Jews, for "the
dregs hereof is not yet wrung out." The following is an example of the
same object being taken, not in opposite, but only in different
significations: water denotes people, as we read in the Apocalypse,l and
also the Holy Spirit, as for example, "Out of his belly shall flow rivers
of living water;" and many other things besides water must be interpreted
according to the place in which they are found.
And in the same way other objects are not single in their
signification, but each one of them denotes not two only but sometimes
even several different things, according to the connection in which it is
found.
Chap. 26.
--
Obscure passages are to be interpreted by those which are clearer
Now from the places where the sense in which they are used is more
manifest we must gather the sense in which they are to be understood in
obscure passages. For example, there is no better way of understanding
the words addressed to God, "Take hold of shield and buckler and stand up
for mine help," than by referring to the passage where we read, "Thou,
Lord, hast crowned us with Thy favour as with a shield." And yet we are
not so to understand it, as that wherever we meet with a shield put to
indicate a protection of any kind, we must take it as signifying nothing
but the favour of God. For we hear also of the shield of faith,
"wherewith," says the apostle, "ye shall be able to quench all the fiery
darts of the wicked." Nor ought we, on the other hand, in regard to
spiritual armour of this kind to assign faith to the shield only; for we
read in another place of the breastplate of faith: "putting on," says the
apostle, "the breastplate of faith and love."
Chap. 27.
--
One passage susceptible of various interpretations
When, again, not some one interpretation, but two or more
interpretations are put upon the same words of Scripture, even though the
meaning the writer intended remain undiscovered, there is no danger if it
can be shown from other passages of Scripture that any of the
interpretations put on the words is in harmony with the truth. And if a
man in searching the Scriptures endeavours to get at the intention of the
author through whom the Holy Spirit spake, whether he succeeds in this
endeavour, or whether he draws a different meaning from the words, but
one that is not opposed to sound doctrine, he is free from blame so long
as he is supported by the testimony of some other passage of Scripture.
For the author perhaps saw that this very meaning lay in the words which
we are trying to interpret; and assuredly the Holy Spirit, who through
him spake these words, foresaw that this interpretation would occur to
the reader, nay, made provision that it should occur to him, seeing that
it too is founded on truth. For what more liberal and more fruitful
provision could God have made in regard to the Sacred Scriptures than
that the same words might be understood in several senses, all of which
are sanctioned by the concurring testimony of other passages equally
divine?
Chap. 28.
--
It is safer to explain a doubtful passage by other passages of Scripture than by reason
When, however, a meaning is evolved of such a kind that what is
doubtful in it cannot be cleared up by indubitable evidence from
Scripture, it remains for us to make it clear by the evidence of reason.
But this is a dangerous practice. For it is far safer to walk by the
light of Holy Scripture; so that when we wish to examine the passages
that are obscured by metaphorical expressions, we may either obtain a
meaning about which there is no controversy, or if a controversy arises,
may settle it by the application of testimonies sought out in every
portion of the same Scripture.
Chap. 29.
--
The knowledge of tropes is necessary
Moreover, I would have learned men to know that the authors of our
Scriptures use all those forms of expression which grammarians call by
the Greek name tropes, and use them more freely and in greater variety
than people who are unacquainted with the Scriptures, and have learnt
these figures of speech from other writings, can imagine or believe.
Nevertheless those who know these tropes recognize them in Scripture, and
are very much assisted by their knowledge of them in understanding
Scripture. But this is not the place to teach them to the illiterate,
lest it might seem that I was teaching grammar. I certainly advise,
however, that they be learnt elsewhere, although indeed I have already
given that advice above, in the second book namely, where I treated of
the necessary knowledge of languages. For the written characters from
which grammar itself gets its name (the Greek name for letters being
"grammata") are the signs of sounds made by the articulate voice with
which we speak. Now of some of these figures of speech we find in
Scripture not only examples (which we have of them all), but the very
names as well: for instance, allegory, enigma, and parable. However,
nearly all these tropes which are said to be learnt as a matter of
liberal education are found even in the ordinary speech of men who have
learnt no grammar, but are content to use the vulgar idiom. For who does
not say, "So may you flourish? " And this is the figure of speech called
metaphor. Who does not speak of a fish-pond in which there is no fish,
which was not made for fish, and yet gets its name from fish? And this is
the figure called catachresis.
It would be tedious to go over all the rest in this way; for the
speech of the vulgar makes use of them all, even of those more curious
figures which mean the very opposite of what they say, as for example,
those called irony and antiphrasis. Now in irony we indicate by the tone
of voice the meaning we desire to convey; as when we say to a man who is
behaving badly, "You are doing well." But it is not by the tone of voice
that we make an antiphrasis to indicate the opposite of what the words
convey; but either the words in which it is expressed are used in the
opposite of their etymological sense, as a grove is called lucus from its
want of light; or it is customary to use a certain form of expression,
although it puts yes for no by a law of contraries, as when we ask in a
place for what is not there, and get the answer, "There is plenty;" or we
add words that make it plain we mean the opposite of what we say, as in
the expression, "Beware of him, for he is a good man." And what
illiterate man is there that does not use such expressions, although he
knows nothing at all about either the nature or the names of these
figures of speech? And yet the knowledge of these is necessary for
clearing up the difficulties of Scripture; because when the words taken
literally give an absurd meaning, we ought forthwith to inquire whether
they may not be used in this or that figurative sense which we are
unacquainted with; and in this way many obscure passages have had light
thrown upon them.
Chap. 30.
--
The rules of Tichonius the Donatist examined
One Tichonius, who, although a Donatist himself, has written most
triumphantly against the Donatists (and herein showed himself of a most
inconsistent disposition, that he was unwilling to give them up
altogether), wrote a book which he called the Book of Rules, because in
it he laid down seven rules, which are, as it were, keys to open the
secrets of Scripture. And of these rules, the first relates to the Lord
and His body, the second to the twofold division of the Lord's body, the
third to the promises and the law, the fourth to species and genus, the
fifth to times, the sixth to recapitulation, the seventh to the devil and
his body. Now these rules, as expounded by their author, do indeed, when
carefully considered, afford considerable assistance in penetrating the
secrets of the sacred writings; but still they do not explain all the
difficult passages for there are several other methods required which are
so far from being embraced in this number of seven, that the author
himself explains many obscure passages without using any of his rules;
finding, indeed, that there was no need for them, as there was no
difficulty in the passage of the kind to which his rules apply. As, for
example, he inquires what we are to understand in the Apocalypse by the
seven angels of the churches to whom John is commanded to write; and
after much and various reasoning, arrives at the conclusion that the
angels are the churches themselves. And throughout this long and full
discussion, although the matter inquired into is certainly very obscure,
no use whatever is made of the rules. This is enough for an example, for
it would be too tedious and troublesome to collect all the passages in
the canonical Scriptures which present obscurities of such a kind as
require none of these seven rules for their elucidation.
The author himself, however, when commending these rules,
attributes so much value to them that it would appear as if, when they
were thoroughly known and duly applied, we should be able to interpret
all the obscure passages in the law--that is, in the sacred books. For he
thus commences this very book: "Of all the things that occur to me, I
consider none so necessary as to write a little book of rules, and, as it
were, to make keys for, and put windows in, the secret places of the law.
For there are certain mystical rules which hold the key to the secret
recesses of the whole law, and render visible the treasures of truth that
are to many invisible. And if this system of rules be received as I
communicate it, without jealousy, what is shut shall be laid open, and
what is obscure shall be elucidated, so that a man travelling through the
vast forest of prophecy shall, if he follow these rules as pathways of
light, be preserved from going astray." Now, if he had said, "There are
certain mystical rules which hold the key to some of the secrets of the
law," or even "which hold the key to the great secrets of the law," and
not what he does say, "the secret recesses of the whole law;" and if he
had not said "What is shut shall be laid open," but, "Many things that
are shut shall be laid open," he would have said what was true, and he
would not, by attributing more than is warranted by the facts to his very
elaborate and useful work, have led the reader into false expectations.
And I have thought it right to say thus much, in order both that the book
may be read by the studious (for it is of very great assistance in
understanding Scripture), and that no more may be expected from it than
it really contains. Certainly it must be read with caution, not only on
account of the errors into which the author falls as a man, but chiefly
on account of the heresies which he advances as a Donatist. And now I
shall briefly indicate what these seven rules teach or advise.
Chap. 31.
--
The first rule of Tichonius
The first is about the Lord and His body, and it is this, that,
knowing as we do that the head and the body--that is, Christ and His
Church--are sometimes indicated to us under one person (for it is not in
vain that it is said to believers, "Ye then are Abraham's seed," when
there is but one seed of Abraham, and that is Christ), we need not be in
a difficulty when a transition is made from the head to the body or from
the body to the head, and yet no change made in the person spoken of. For
a single person is represented as saying, "He has decked me as a
bridegroom with ornaments, and adorned me as a bride with jewels;" and
yet it is, of course, a matter for interpretation which of these two
refers to the head and which to the body, that is, which to Christ and
which to the Church.
Chap. 32.
--
The second rule of Tichonius
The second rule is about the twofold division of the body of the
Lord; but this indeed is not a suitable name, for that is really no part
of the body of Christ which will not be with Him in eternity. We ought,
therefore, to say that the rule is about the true and the mixed body of
the Lord, or the true and the counterfeit, or some such name; because,
not to speak of eternity, hypocrites cannot even now be said to be in
Him, although they seem to be in His Church. And hence this rule might be
designated thus: Concerning the mixed Church. Now this rule requires the
reader to be on his guard when Scripture, although it has now come to
address or speak of a different set of persons, seems to be addressing or
speaking of the same persons as before, just as if both sets constituted
one body in consequence of their being for the time united in a common
participation of the sacraments. An example of this is that passage in
the Song of Solomon, "I am black, but comely, as the tents of Cedar, as
the curtains of Solomon." For it is not said, I *was* black as the tents
of Cedar, but am *now* comely as the curtains of Solomon. The Church
declares itself to be at present both; and this because the good fish and
the bad are for the time mixed up in the one net. For the tents of Cedar
pertain to Ishmael, who "shall not be heir with the son of the free
woman." And in the same way, when God says of the good part of the
Church, "I will bring the blind by a way that they knew not; I will lead
them in paths that they have not known; I will make darkness light before
them, and crooked things straight: these things will I do unto them, and
not forsake them;" He immediately adds in regard to the other part, the
bad that is mixed with the good, "They shall be turned back." Now these
words refer to a set of persons altogether different from the former; but
as the two sets are for the present united in one body, He speaks as if
there were no change in the subject of the sentence. They will not,
however, always he in one body; for one of them is that wicked servant of
whom we are told in the gospel, whose lord, when he comes, "shall cut him
asunder and appoint him his portion with the hypocrites."
Chap. 33.
--
The third rule of Tichonius
The third rule relates to the promises and the law, and may be
designated in other terms as relating to the spirit and the letter, which
is the name I made use of when writing a book on this subject. It may be
also named, of grace and the law. This, however, seems to me to be a
great question in itself, rather than a rule to be applied to the
solution of other questions. It was the want of clear views on this
question that originated, or at least greatly aggravated, the Pelagian
heresy. And the efforts of Tichonius to clear up this point were good,
but not complete. For, in discussing the question about faith and works,
he said that works were given us by God as the reward of faith, but that
faith itself was so far our own that it did not come to us from God; not
keeping in mind the saying of the apostle: "Peace be to the brethren, and
love with faith, from God the Father and the Lord Jesus Christ." But he
had not come into contact with this heresy, which has arisen in our time,
and has given us much labour and trouble in defending against it the
grace of God which is through our Lord Jesus Christ and which (according
to the saying of the apostle, "There must be also heresies among you,
that they which are approved may be made manifest among you" has made us
much more watchful and diligent to discover in Scripture what escaped
Tichonius, who, having no enemy to guard against, was less attentive and
anxious on this point, namely, that even faith itself is the gift of Him
who "has dealt to every man the measure of faith." Whence it is said to
certain believers: "Unto you it is given, in the behalf of Christ, not
only to believe on Him, but also to suffer for His sake." Who, then, can
doubt that each of these is the gift of God, when he learns from this
passage, and believes, that each of them is given? There are many other
testimonies besides which prove this. But I am not now treating of this
doctrine. I have, however, dealt with it, one place or another, very
frequently.
Chap. 34.
--
The fourth rule of Tichonius
The fourth rule of Tichonius is about species and genus. For so he
calls it, intending that by species should be understood a part, by genus
the whole of which that which he calls species is a part: as, for
example, every single city is a part of the great society of nations: the
city he calls a species, all nations constitute the genus. There is no
necessity for here applying that subtilty of distinction which is in use
among logicians, who discuss with great acuteness the difference between
a part and a species. The rule is of course the same, if anything of the
kind referred to is found in Scripture, not in regard to a single city,
but in regard to a single province, or tribe, or kingdom. Not only, for
example, about Jerusalem, or some of the cities of the Gentiles, such as
Tyre or Babylon, are things said in Scripture whose significance
oversteps the limits of the city, and which are more suitable when
applied to all nations; but in regard to Judea also, and Egypt, and
Assyria, or any other nation you choose to take which contains numerous
cities, but still is not the whole world, but only a part of it, things
are said which pass over the limits of that particular country, and apply
more fitly to the whole of which this is a part; or, as our author terms
it, to the genus of which this is a species. And hence these words have
come to be commonly known, so that even uneducated people understand what
is laid down specially, and what generally, in any given Imperial
command. The same thing occurs in the case of men: things are said of
Solomon, for example, the scope of which reaches far beyond him, and
which are only properly understood when applied to Christ and His Church,
of which Solomon is a part.
Now the species is not always overstepped, for things are often
said of such a kind as evidently apply to it also, or perhaps even to it
exclusively. But when Scripture, having up to a certain point been
speaking about the species, makes a transition at that point from the
species to the genus, the reader must then be carefully on his guard
against seeking in the species what he can find much better and more
surely in the genus. Take, for example, what the prophet Ezekiel says:
"When the house of Israel dwelt in their own land, they defiled it by
their own way, and by their doings: their way was before me as the
uncleanness of a removed woman. Wherefore I poured my fury upon them for
the blood that they had shed upon the land, and for their idols wherewith
they had polluted it: and I scattered them among the heathen, and they
were dispersed through the countries: according to their way, and
according to their doings, I judged them." Now it is easy to understand
that this applies to that house of Israel of which the apostle says
"Behold Israel after the flesh;" because the people of Israel after the
flesh did both perform and endure all that is here referred to. What
immediately follows, too, may be understood as applying to the same
peep]e. But when the prophet begins to say, "And I will sanctify my great
name, which was profaned among the heathen, which ye have profaned in the
midst of them; and the heathen shall know that I am the Lord," the reader
ought now carefully to observe the way in which the species is
overstepped and the genus taken in. For he goes on to say: "And I shall
be sanctified in you before their eyes. For I will take you from among
the heathen, and gather you out of all countries, and will bring you into
your own land. Then will I sprinkle clean water upon you, and ye shall be
clean: from all your filthiness, and from all your idols, will I cleanse
you. A new heart also will I give you, and a new spirit will I put within
you; and I will take away the stony heart out of your flesh and I will
give you a heart of flesh. And I will put my Spirit within you, and cause
you to walk in my statutes, and ye shall keep my commandments, and do
them. And ye shall dwell in the land that I gave to your fathers; and ye
shall be my people, and I will be your God. I will also save you from all
your uncleannesses." Now that this is a prophecy of the New Testament, to
which pertain not only the remnant of that one nation of which it is
elsewhere said, "For though the number of the children of Israel be as
the sand of the sea, yet a remnant of them shall be saved," but also the
other nations which were promised to their fathers and our fathers; and
that there is here a promise of that washing of regeneration which, as we
see, is now imparted to all nations, no one who looks into the matter can
doubt. And that saying of the apostle, when he is commending the grace of
the New Testament and its excellence in comparison with the Old, "Ye are
our epistle ... written not with ink, but with the Spirit of the living
God; not in tables of stone, but in fleshy tables of the heart," has an
evident reference to this place where the prophet says, "A new heart also
will I give you, and a new spirit will I put within you; and I will take
away the stony heart out of your flesh, and I will give you an heart of
flesh." Now the heart of flesh from which the apostle's expression, "the
fleshy tables of the heart," is drawn, the prophet intended to point out
as distinguished from the stony heart by the possession of sentient life;
and by sentient he understood intelligent life. And thus the spiritual
Israel is made up, not of one nation, but of all the nations which were
promised to the fathers in their seed, that is, in Christ.
This spiritual Israel, therefore, is distinguished from the carnal
Israel which is of one nation, by newness of grace, not by nobility of
descent, in feeling, not in race; but the prophet, in his depth of
meaning, while speaking of the carnal Israel, passes on, without
indicating the transition, to speak of the spiritual, and although now
speaking of the latter, seems to be still speaking of the former; not
that he grudges us the clear apprehension of Scripture, as if we were
enemies, but that he deals with us as a physician, giving us a wholesome
exercise for our spirit. And therefore we ought to take this saying "And
I will bring you into your own land," and what he says shortly
afterwards, as if repeating himself, "And ye shall dwell in the land that
I gave to your fathers," not literally, as if they referred to Israel
after the flesh but spiritually, as referring to the spiritual Israel.
For the Church, without spot or wrinkle, gathered out of all nations, and
destined to reign forever with Christ, is itself the land of the blessed,
the land of the living; and we are to understand that this was given to
the fathers when it was promised to them in the sure and immutable
purpose of God; for what the fathers believed would be given in its own
time was to them, on account of the unchangeableness of the promise and
purpose, the same as if it were already given; just as the apostle,
writing to Timothy, speaks of the grace which is given to the saints:
"Not according to our works, but according to His own purpose and grace,
which was given us in Christ Jesus before the world began; but is now
made manifest by the appearing of our Saviour." He speaks of the grace as
given at a time when those to whom it was to be given were not yet in
existence; because he looks upon that as having been already done in the
arrangement and purpose of God, which was to take place in its own time,
and he himself speaks of it as now made manifest. It is possible,
however, that these words may refer to the land of the age to come, when
there will be a new heaven and a new earth, wherein the unrighteous shall
be unable to dwell. And so it is truly said to the righteous, that the
land itself is theirs, no part of which will belong to the unrighteous;
because it is the same as if it were itself given, when it is firmly
settled that it shall be given.
Chap. 35.
--
The fifth rule of Tichonius
The fifth rule Tichonius lays down is one he designates of
times,--a rule by which we can frequently discover or conjecture
quantities of time which are not expressly mentioned in Scripture. And he
says that this rule applies in two ways: either to the figure of speech
called synecdoche, or to legitimate numbers. The figure synecdoche either
puts the part for the whole, or the whole for the part. As, for example,
in reference to the time when, in the presence of only three of His
disciples, our Lord was transfigured on the mount, so that His face shone
as the sun, and His raiment was white as snow, one evangelist says that
this event occurred "after eight days," while another says that it
occurred "after six days." Now both of these statements about the number
of days cannot be true, unless we suppose that the writer who says "after
eight days," counted the latter part of the day on which Christ uttered
the prediction and the first part of the day on which he showed its
fulfilment as two whole days; while the writer who says "after six days,"
counted only the whole unbroken days between these two. This figure of
speech, which puts the part for the whole, explains also the great
question about the resurrection of Christ. For unless to the latter part
of the day on which He suffered we join the previous night, and count it
as a whole day, and to the latter part of the night in which He arose we
join the Lord's day which was just dawning, and count it also a whole
day, we cannot make out the three days and three nights during which He
foretold that He would be in the heart of the earth.
In the next place, our author calls those numbers legitimate which
Holy Scripture more highly favours, such as seven, or ten, or twelve, or
any of the other numbers which the diligent reader of Scripture soon
comes to know. Now numbers of this sort are often put for time universal;
as, for example, "Seven times in the day do I praise Thee," means just
the same as "His praise shall continually be in my mouth." And their
force is exactly the same, either when multiplied by ten, as seventy and
seven hundred (whence the seventy years mentioned in Jeremiah may be
taken in a spiritual sense for the whole time during which the Church is
a sojourner among aliens); or when multiplied into themselves, as ten
into ten gives one hundred, and twelve into twelve gives one hundred and
forty-four, which last number is used in the Apocalypse to signify the
whole body of the saints. Hence it appears that it is not merely
questions about times that are to be settled by these numbers, but that
their significance is of much wider application, and extends to many
subjects. That number in the Apocalypse, for example, mentioned above,
has not reference to times, but to men.
Chap. 36.
--
The sixth rule of Tichonius
The sixth rule Tichonius calls the recapitulation, which, with
sufficient watchfulness, is discovered in difficult parts of Scripture.
For certain occurrences are so related, that the narrative appears to be
following the order of time, or the continuity of events, when it really
goes back without mentioning it to previous occurrences, which had been
passed over in their proper place. And we make mistakes if we do not
understand this, from applying the rule here spoken of. For example, in
the book of Genesis we read, "And the Lord God planted a garden eastwards
in Eden; and there He put the man whom He had formed. And out of the
ground made the Lord God to grow every tree that is pleasant to the
sight, and good for food." Now here it seems to be indicated that the
events last mentioned took place after God had formed man and put him in
the garden; whereas the fact is, that the two events having been briefly
mentioned, viz., that God planted a garden, and there put the man whom He
had formed, the narrative goes back, by way of recapitulation, to tell
what had before been omitted, the way in which the garden was planted:
that out of the ground God made to grow every tree that is pleasant to
the sight, and good for food. Here there follows "The tree of life also
was in the midst of the garden, and the tree of knowledge of good and
evil." Next the river is mentioned which watered the garden, and which
was parted into four heads, the sources of four streams; and all this has
reference to the arrangements of the garden. And when this is finished,
there is a repetition of the fact which had been already told, but which
in the strict order of events came after all this: "And the Lord God took
the man, and put him into the garden of Eden." For it was after all these
other things were done that man was put in the garden, as now appears
from the order of the narrative itself: it was not after man was put
there that the other things were done, as the previous statement might be
thought to imply, did we not accurately mark and understand the
recapitulation by which the narrative reverts to what had previously been
passed over.
In the same book, again, when the generations of the sons of Noah
are recounted, it is said: "These are the sons of Ham, after their
families, after their tongues, in their countries, and in their nations."
And, again, when the sons of Shem are enumerated: "These are the sons of
Shem, after their families, after their tongues, in their lands, after
their nations." And it is added in reference to them all: "These are the
families of the sons of Noah, after their generations, in their nations;
and by these were the nations divided in the earth after the flood. And
the whole earth was of one language and of one speech." Now the addition
of this sentence, "And the whole earth was of one language and of one
speech," seems to indicate that at the time when the nations were
scattered over the earth they had all one language in common; but this is
evidently inconsistent with the previous words, in their families, after
their tongues." For each family or nation could not be said to have its
own language if all had one language in common. And so it is by way of
recapitulation it is added, "And the whole earth was of one language and
of one speech," the narrative here going back, without indicating the
change, to tell how it was, that from having one language in common, the
nations were divided into a multitude of tongues. And, accordingly, we
are forthwith told of the building of the tower, and of this punishment
being there laid upon them as the judgment of God upon their arrogance;
and it was after this that they were scattered over the earth according
to their tongues.
This recapitulation is found in a still more obscure form; as, for
example, our Lord says in the gospel: "The same day that Lot went out of
Sodom it rained fire from heaven, and destroyed them all. Even thus shall
it be in the day when the Son of man is revealed. In that day, he which
shall be upon the housetop, and his stuff in the house, let him not come
down to take it away; and he that is in the field, let him likewise not
return back. Remember Lot's wife." Is it when our Lord shall have been
revealed that men are to give heed to these sayings, and not to look
behind them, that is, not to long after the past life which they have
renounced? Is not the present rather the time to give heed to them, that
when the Lord shall have been revealed every man may receive his reward
according to the things he has given heed to or despised? And yet because
Scripture says, "In that day," the time of the revelation of the Lord
will be thought the time for giving heed to these sayings, unless the
reader be watchful and intelligent so as to understand the
recapitulation, in which he will be assisted by that other passage of
Scripture which even in the time of the apostles proclaimed: "Little
children, it is the last time." The very time then when the gospel is
preached, up to the time that the Lord shall be revealed. is the day in
which men ought to give heed to these sayings: for to the same day, which
shall be brought to a close by a day of judgment, belongs that very
revelation of the Lord here spoken of.
Chap. 37.
--
The seventh rule of Tichonius
The seventh rule of Tichonius and the last, is about the devil and
his body. For he is the head of the wicked, who are in a sense his body,
and destined to go with him into the punishment of everlasting fire, just
as Christ is the head of the Church, which is His body, destined to be
with Him in His eternal kingdom and glory. Accordingly, as the first
rule, which is called of the Lord and His body, directs us, when
Scripture speaks of one and the same person, to take pains to understand
which part of the statement applies to the head and which to the body; so
this last rule shows us that statements are sometimes made about the
devil, whose truth is not so evident in regard to himself as in regard to
his body; and his body is made up not only of those who are manifestly
out of the way, but of those also who, though they really belong to him,
are for a time mixed up with the Church, until they depart from this
life, or until the chaff is separated from the wheat at the last great
winnowing. For example, what is said in Isaiah, "How he is fallen from
heaven, Lucifer, son of the morning! " and the other statements of the
context which, under the figure of the king of Babylon, are made about
the same person, are of course to be understood of the devil; and yet the
statement which is made in the same place, "He is ground down on the
earth, who sendeth to all nations," does not altogether fitly apply to
the head himself. For, although the devil sends his angels to all
nations, yet it is his body, not himself, that is ground down on the
earth, except that he himself is in his body, which is beaten small like
the dust which the wind blows from the face of the earth.
Now all these rules, except the one about the promises and the law,
make one meaning to be understood where another is expressed, which is
the peculiarity of figurative diction; and this kind of diction, it seems
to me, is too widely spread to be comprehended in its full extent by any
one. For, wherever one thing is said with the intention that another
should be understood we have a figurative expression, even though the
name of the trope is not to be found in the art of rhetoric. And when an
expression of this sort occurs where it is customary to find it, there is
no trouble in understanding it; when it occurs, however, where it is not
customary, it costs labour to understand it, from some more, from some
less, just as men have got more or less from God of the gifts of
intellect, or as they have access to more or fewer external helps. And,
as in the case of proper words which I discussed above, and in which
things are to be understood just as they are expressed, so in the case of
figurative words, in which one thing is expressed and another is to be
understood, and which I have just finished speaking of as much as I
thought enough, students of these venerable documents ought to be
counselled not only to make themselves acquainted with the forms of
expression ordinarily used in Scripture, to observe them carefully, and
to remember them accurately, but also, what is especially and before all
things necessary, to pray that they may understand them. For in these
very books on the study of which they are intent, they read, "The Lord
giveth wisdom: out of His mouth comets knowledge and understanding;" and
it is from Him they have received their very desire for knowledge, if it
is wedded to piety. But about signs, so far as relates to words, I have
now said enough. It remains to discuss, in the following book, so far as
God has given me light, the means of communicating our thoughts to
others.
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