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Chapter
XIII.
But as it is in mockery that Celsus says we speak
of “God coming down like a torturer bearing fire,” and thus
compels us unseasonably to investigate words of deeper meaning, we
shall make a few remarks, sufficient to enable our hearers to form an
idea3727 of the defence which disposes of the
ridicule of Celsus against us, and then we shall turn to what
follows. The divine word says that our God is “a consuming
fire,”3728 and that “He
draws rivers of fire before Him;”3729
nay, that He even entereth in as “a refiner’s fire, and as
a fuller’s herb,”3730 to purify His own
people. But when He is said to be a “consuming fire,”
we inquire what are the things which are appropriate to be consumed by
God. And we assert that they are wickedness, and the works which
result from it, and which, being figuratively called “wood, hay,
stubble,”3731 God consumes as a
fire. The wicked man, accordingly, is said to build up on the
previously-laid foundation of reason, “wood, and hay, and
stubble.” If, then, any one can show that these words were
differently understood by the writer, and can prove that the wicked man
literally3732 builds up
“wood, or hay, or stubble,” it is evident that the fire
must be understood to be material, and an object of sense. But
if, on the contrary, the works of the wicked man are spoken of
figuratively under the names of “wood, or hay, or
stubble,” why does it not at once occur (to inquire) in what
sense the word “fire” is to be taken, so that
“wood” of such a kind should be consumed? for (the
Scripture) says: “The fire will try each man’s work
of what sort it is. If any man’s work abide which he hath
built thereupon, he shall receive a reward. If any man’s
work be burned, he shall suffer loss.”3733 But what work can be spoken of in
these words as being “burned,” save all that results from
wickedness? Therefore our God is a “consuming fire”
in the sense in which we have taken the word; and thus He enters in as
a “refiner’s fire,” to refine the rational nature,
which has been filled with the lead of wickedness, and to free it from
the other impure materials, which adulterate the natural gold or
silver, so to speak, of the soul.3734
3734 τὴν τοῦ
χρυσοῦ (ἵν᾽
οὕτως
ὀνομάσω),
φύσιν τῆς
ψυχῆς, ἢ τὴν
ἀργύρου,
δολωσάντων. | And, in
like manner, “rivers of fire” are said to be before God,
who will thoroughly cleanse away the evil which is intermingled
throughout the whole soul.3735
3735 [See note
supra, cap. x. S.] | But these
remarks are sufficient in answer to the assertion, “that thus
they were made to give expression to the erroneous opinion that God
will come down bearing fire like a torturer.”E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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