Bad Advertisement?
Are you a Christian?
Online Store:Visit Our Store
| The Dual Principle Falls to the Ground; Plurality of Gods, of Whatever Number, More Consistent. Absurdity and Injury to Piety Resulting from Marcion's Duality. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Chapter
V.—The Dual Principle Falls to the Ground; Plurality of Gods, of
Whatever Number, More Consistent. Absurdity and Injury to Piety
Resulting from Marcion’s Duality.
But on what principle did Marcion confine his
supreme powers to two? I would first ask, If there be two, why
not more? Because if number be compatible with the substance of
Deity, the richer you make it in number the better. Valentinus was more
consistent and more liberal; for he, having once imagined two deities,
Bythos and Sige,2381 poured forth a
swarm of divine essences, a brood of no less than thirty Æons,
like the sow of Æneas.2382
2382 See Virgil,
Æneid, viii. 43, etc. | Now, whatever
principle refuses to admit several supreme beings, the same must reject
even two, for there is plurality in the very lowest number after
one. After unity, number commences. So, again, the same
principle which could admit two could admit more. After two,
multitude begins, now that one is exceeded. In short, we feel
that reason herself expressly2383 forbids the belief
in more gods than one, because the self-same rule lays down one God and
not two, which declares that God must be a Being to which, as the great
Supreme, nothing is equal; and that Being to which nothing is equal
must, moreover, be unique. But further, what can be the use or
advantage in supposing two supreme beings, two co-ordinate2384 powers? What numerical difference could
there be when two equals differ not from one? For that thing
which is the same in two is one. Even if there were several equals, all
would be just as much one, because, as equals, they would not differ
one from another. So, if of two beings neither differs from the other,
since both of them are on the supposition2385
supreme, both being gods, neither of them is more excellent than the
other; and so, having no pre-eminence, their numerical
distinction2386 has no reason in
it. Number, moreover, in the Deity ought to be consistent with the
highest reason, or else His worship would be brought into doubt. For
consider2387 now, if, when I saw
two Gods before me (who, being both Supreme Beings, were equal to each
other), I were to worship them both, what should I be doing? I should
be much afraid that the abundance of my homage would be deemed
superstition rather than piety. Because, as both of them are so equal
and are both included in either of the two, I might serve them both acceptably
in only one; and by this very means I should attest their equality and
unity, provided that I worshipped them mutually the one in the other,
because in the one both are present to me. If I were to worship
one of the two, I should be equally conscious of seeming to pour
contempt on the uselessness of a numerical distinction, which was
superfluous, because it indicated no difference; in other words, I
should think it the safer course to worship neither of these two Gods
than one of them with some scruple of conscience, or both of them to
none effect.E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
|