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| Concerning Loans. Prohibition of Usury and the Usurious Spirit. The Law Preparatory to the Gospel in Its Provisions; So in the Present Instance. On Reprisals. Christ's Teaching Throughout Proves Him to Be Sent by the Creator. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Chapter
XVII.—Concerning Loans. Prohibition of Usury and the Usurious
Spirit. The Law Preparatory to the Gospel in Its Provisions; So in the
Present Instance. On Reprisals. Christ’s Teaching
Throughout Proves Him to Be Sent by the Creator.
And now, on the subject of a loan, when He asks,
“And if ye lend to them of whom ye hope to receive, what thank
have ye?”4093
4093 Luke vi. 34. [Bossuet, Traité de l’usure, Opp. ix. 48.] | compare with this
the following words of Ezekiel, in which He says of the
before-mentioned just man, “He hath not given his money upon
usury, nor will he take any increase”4094 —meaning the redundance of
interest,4095
4095 Literally, what
redounds to the loan. | which is usury. The
first step was to eradicate the fruit of the money lent,4096
4096 Fructum fenoris: the
interest. | the more easily to accustom a man to the
loss, should it happen, of the money itself, the
interest of which he
had learnt to lose. Now this, we affirm, was the function of the law as
preparatory to the gospel. It was engaged in forming the faith of such
as would learn,4097
4097 Quorundam tunc
fidem. | by gradual stages,
for the perfect light of the Christian discipline, through the best
precepts of which it was capable,4098
4098 Primis quibusque
præceptis. | inculcating a
benevolence which as yet expressed itself but falteringly.4099
4099 Balbutientis adhuc
benignitatis. [Elucidation IV.] | For in the passage of Ezekiel quoted
above He says, “And thou shalt restore the pledge of the
loan”4100
4100 Pignus reddes dati
(i.e., fenoris) is his reading of a clause in Ezek. xviii. 16. | —to him,
certainly, who is incapable of repayment, because, as a matter of
course, He would not anyhow prescribe the restoration of a pledge to
one who was solvent. Much more clearly is it enjoined in Deuteronomy:
“Thou shalt not sleep upon his pledge; thou shalt be sure to
return to him his garment about sunset, and he shall sleep in his own
garment.”4101 Clearer still is a
former passage: “Thou shalt remit every debt which thy neighbour
oweth thee; and of thy brother thou shalt not require it, because it is
called the release of the Lord thy God.”4102
Now, when He commands that a debt be remitted to a man who shall be
unable to pay it (for it is a still stronger argument when He forbids
its being asked for from a man who is even able to repay it), what else
does He teach than that we should lend to those of whom we cannot
receive again, inasmuch as He has imposed so great a loss on lending?
“And ye shall be the children of God.”4103
4103 Luke vi. 35. In the original the phrase is,
υἱοὶ
τοῦ
ύψίστου. | What can be more shameless, than for him to
be making us his children, who has not permitted us to make
children for ourselves by forbidding marriage?4104
4104 One of the flagrant
errors of Marcion’s belief of God. See above, chap. xi. |
How does he propose to invest his followers with a name which he has
already erased? I cannot be the son of a eunuch especially when I
have for my Father the same great Being whom the universe claims for
its! For is not the Founder of the universe as much a Father, even of
all men, as (Marcion’s) castrated deity,4105
who is the maker of no existing thing? Even if the Creator had
not united male and female, and if He had not allowed any living
creature whatever to have children, I yet had this relation to
Him4106 before Paradise, before the fall, before the
expulsion, before the two became one.4107 I
became His son a second time,4108 as soon as He
fashioned me4109 with His hands, and
gave me motion with His inbreathing. Now again He names me His son, not
begetting me into natural life, but into spiritual life.4110
4110 Non in animam sed in
spiritum. | “Because,” says He, “He is
kind unto the unthankful and to the evil.”4111 Well done,4112
Marcion! how cleverly have you withdrawn from Him the showers and the
sunshine, that He might not seem to be a Creator! But who is this
kind being4113 which hitherto has
not been even known? How can he be kind who had previously shown
no evidences of such a kindness as this, which consists of the loan to
us of sunshine and rain?—who is not destined to receive from the
human race (the homage due to that) Creator,—who, up to this very
moment, in return for His vast liberality in the gift of the elements,
bears with men while they offer to idols, more readily than Himself,
the due returns of His graciousness. But God is truly kind even
in spiritual blessings. “The utterances4114 of the Lord are sweeter than honey and
honeycombs.”4115 He then has
taunted4116 men as ungrateful
who deserved to have their gratitude—even He, whose sunshine and
rain even you, O Marcion, have enjoyed, but without gratitude! Your
god, however, had no right to complain of man’s ingratitude,
because he had used no means to make them grateful. Compassion also
does He teach: “Be ye merciful,” says He, “as your
Father also that had mercy upon you.”4117
This injunction will be of a piece with, “Deal thy bread to the
hungry; and if he be houseless, bring him into thine house; and if thou
seest the naked, cover him;”4118 also with,
“Judge the fatherless, plead with the widow.”4119 I recognise here that ancient doctrine of
Him who “prefers mercy to sacrifice.”4120 If, however, it be now some other being
which teaches mercy, on the ground of his own mercifulness, how happens
it that he has been wanting in mercy to me for so vast an age?
“Judge not, and ye shall not be judged; condemn not, and ye shall
not be condemned; forgive, and ye shall be forgiven; give, and it shall
be given unto you: good measure, pressed down, and running over,
shall men give into your bosom. For with the same measure that ye
measure withal, it
shall be measured to you again.”4121 As
it seems to me, this passage announces a retribution proportioned to
the merits. But from whom shall come the retribution? If only
from men, in that case he teaches a merely human discipline and
recompense; and in everything we shall have to obey man: if from the
Creator, as the Judge and the Recompenser of merits, then He compels
our submission to Him, in whose hands4122 He
has placed a retribution which will be acceptable or terrible according
as every man shall have judged or condemned, acquitted or dealt
with,4123 his neighbour; if from (Marcion’s god)
himself, he will then exercise a judicial function which Marcion
denies. Let the Marcionites therefore make their choice: Will it
not be just the same inconsistency to desert the prescription of their
master, as to have Christ teaching in the interest of men or of the
Creator? But “a blind man will lead a blind man into the
ditch.”4124 Some persons
believe Marcion. But “the disciple is not above his
master.”4125 Apelles ought to
have remembered this—a corrector of Marcion, although his
disciple.4126 The heretic ought
to take the beam out of his own eye, and then he may convict4127 the Christian, should he suspect a mote to
be in his eye. Just as a good tree cannot produce evil fruit, so
neither can truth generate heresy; and as a corrupt tree cannot yield
good fruit, so heresy will not produce truth. Thus, Marcion brought
nothing good out of Cerdon’s evil treasure; nor Apelles out of
Marcion’s.4128
4128 Luke vi. 41–45. Cerdon is here referred to as
Marcion’s master, and Apelles as Marcion’s pupil. | For in applying to
these heretics the figurative words which Christ used of men in
general, we shall make a much more suitable interpretation of them than
if we were to deduce out of them two gods, according to Marcion’s
grievous exposition.4129
4129 Scandalum. See above,
book i. chap. ii., for Marcion’s perverse application of the
figure of the good and the corrupt tree. | I think that I have
the best reason possible for insisting still upon the position which I
have all along occupied, that in no passage to be anywhere found has
another God been revealed by Christ. I wonder that in this place alone
Marcion’s hands should have felt benumbed in their adulterating
labour.4130
4130 In hoc solo adulterium
Marcionis manus stupuisse miror. He means that this passage has
been left uncorrupted by M. (as if his hand failed in the pruning
process), foolishly for him. | But even robbers
have their qualms now and then. There is no wrong-doing without fear,
because there is none without a guilty conscience. So long, then, were
the Jews cognisant of no other god but Him, beside whom they knew none
else; nor did they call upon any other than Him whom alone they
knew. This being the case, who will He clearly be4131 that said, “Why callest thou me Lord,
Lord?”4132 Will it be he who
had as yet never been called on, because never yet revealed;4133 or He who was ever regarded as the Lord,
because known from the beginning—even the God of the Jews? Who,
again, could possibly have added, “and do not the things which I
say?” Could it have been he who was only then doing his
best4134
4134 Temptabat. Perhaps,
“was tampering with them.” | to teach them? Or He who from the beginning
had addressed to them His messages4135 both by the
law and the prophets? He could then upbraid them with disobedience,
even if He had no ground at any time else for His reproof. The fact is,
that He who was then imputing to them their ancient obstinacy was none
other than He who, before the coming of Christ, had addressed to them
these words, “This people honoureth me with their lips, but their
heart standeth far off from me.”4136
Otherwise, how absurd it were that a new god, a new Christ, the
revealer of a new and so grand a religion should denounce as obstinate
and disobedient those whom he had never had it in his power to make
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