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| But He Imbues Their Minds, Above All, with Ethical Science; And He Does Not Confine Himself to Discoursing on the Virtues in Word, But He Rather Confirms His Teaching by His Acts. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Argument IX.—But He Imbues Their Minds, Above All, with
Ethical Science; And He Does Not Confine Himself to Discoursing on the
Virtues in Word, But He Rather Confirms His Teaching by His
Acts.
Moreover, as to those things which excel all in
importance, and those for the sake of which, above all else, the
whole214
214
πᾶν τὸ
φιλόσοφον.
Hœschelius and Bengel read πῶς, etc. | family of the
philosophical labours, gathering them like good fruits produced by the
varied growths of all the other studies, and of long practised
philosophizing,—I mean the divine virtues that concern the moral
nature, by which the impulses of the mind have their equable and stable
subsistence,—through these, too, he aimed at making us truly
proof against grief
and disquietude under the pressure of all ills, and at imparting to us
a well-disciplined and stedfast and religious spirit, so that we might
be in all things veritably blessed. And this he toiled at
effecting by pertinent discourses, of a wise and soothing tendency, and
very often also by the most cogent addresses touching our moral
dispositions, and our modes of life. Nor was it only by words,
but also by deeds, that he regulated in some measure our
inclinations,—to wit, by that very contemplation and observation
of the impulses and affections of the mind, by the issue of which most
especially the mind is wont to be reduced to a right estate from one of
discord, and to be restored to a condition of judgment and order out of
one of confusion. So that, beholding itself as in a mirror (and I
may say specifically, viewing, on the one hand, the very beginnings and
roots of evil in it, and all that is reasonless within it, from which
spring up all absurd affections and passions; and, on the other hand,
all that is truly excellent and reasonable within it, under the sway of
which it remains proof against injury and perturbation in
itself215
215 The text
gives ὑφ᾽ ἑαυτῆς, for
which Bengel reads ἐφ᾽
ἑαυτῆς. | , and then
scrutinizing carefully the things thus discovered to be in it), it
might cast out all those which are the growth of the inferior part, and
which waste our powers216
through intemperance, or hinder and choke them through
depression,—such things as pleasures and lusts, or pains and
fears, and the whole array of ills that accompany these different
species of evil. I say that thus it might cast them out and make
away with them, by coping with them while yet in their beginnings and
only just commencing their growth, and not leaving them to wax in
strength even by a short delay, but destroying and rooting them out at
once; while, at the same time, it might foster all those things which
are really good, and which spring from the nobler part, and might
preserve them by nursing them in their beginnings, and watching
carefully over them until they should reach their maturity. For
it is thus (he used to say) that the heavenly virtues will ripen in the
soul: to wit, prudence, which first of all is able to judge of
those very motions in the mind at once from the things themselves, and
by the knowledge which accrues to it of things outside of us, whatever
such there may be, both good and evil; and temperance, the power that
makes the right selection among these things in their beginnings; and
righteousness, which assigns what is just to each; and that virtue
which is the conserver of them all—fortitude. And therefore
he did not accustom us to a mere profession in words, as that prudence,
for instance, is the knowledge217 of
good and evil, or of what ought to be done, and what ought not:
for that would be indeed a vain and profitless study, if there was
simply the doctrine without the deed; and worthless would that prudence
be, which, without doing the things that ought to be done, and without
turning men away from those that ought not to be done, should be able
merely to furnish the knowledge of these things to those who possessed
her,—though many such persons come under our observation.
Nor, again, did he content himself with the mere assertion that
temperance is simply the knowledge of what ought to be chosen and what
ought not; though the other schools of philosophers do not teach even
so much as that, and especially the more recent, who are so forcible
and vigorous in words (so that I have often been astonished at them,
when they sought to demonstrate that there is the same virtue in God
and in men, and that upon earth, in particular, the wise man is
equal218
218
τὰ
πρῶτα Θεῷ
ἶσον εἶναι
τὸν σοφὸν
ἄνθρωπον. | to God), and yet
are incapable of delivering the truth as to prudence, so that one shall
do the things which are dictated by prudence, or the truth as to
temperance, so that one shall choose the things he has learned by it;
and the same holds good also of their treatment of righteousness and
fortitude. Not thus, however, in mere words only did this teacher
go over the truths concerning the virtues with us; but he incited us
much more to the practice of virtue, and stimulated us by the deeds he
did more than by the doctrines he taught.E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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