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| The Arts by Which Origen Studies to Keep Gregory and His Brother Athenodorus with Him, Although It Was Almost Against Their Will; And the Love by Which Both are Taken Captive. Of Philosophy, the Foundation of Piety, with the View of Giving Himself Therefore Wholly to that Study, Gregory is Willing to Give Up Fatherland, Parents, the Pursuit of Law, and Every Other Discipline. Of the Soul as the Free Principle. The Nobler Part Does Not Desire to Be United with the Inferior, But the Inferior with the Nobler. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Argument VI.—The Arts
by Which Origen Studies to Keep Gregory and His Brother Athenodorus
with Him, Although It Was Almost Against Their Will; And the Love by
Which Both are Taken Captive. Of Philosophy, the Foundation of
Piety, with the View of Giving Himself Therefore Wholly to that Study,
Gregory is Willing to Give Up Fatherland, Parents, the Pursuit of Law,
and Every Other Discipline. Of the Soul as the Free
Principle. The Nobler Part Does Not Desire to Be United with the
Inferior, But the Inferior with the Nobler.
And from the very first day of his receiving us
(which day was, in truth, the first day to me, and the most precious of
all days, if I may so speak, since then for the first time the true Sun
began to rise upon me), while we, like some wild creatures of the
fields, or like fish, or some sort of birds that had fallen into the
toils or nets, and were endeavouring to slip out again and escape, were
bent on leaving him, and making off for Berytus198
198
[I think Lardner’s inclination to credit Gregory with some
claim to be an alumnus of Berytus, is very fairly
sustained.] | or our native country, he studied by all
means to associate us closely with him, contriving all kinds of
arguments, and putting every rope in motion (as the proverb goes), and
bringing all his powers to bear on that object. With that intent
he lauded the lovers of philosophy with large laudations and many noble
utterances, declaring that those only live a life truly worthy of
reasonable creatures who aim at living an upright life and who seek to
know first of all themselves, what manner of persons they are, and then
the things that are truly good, which man ought to strive after, and
then the things that are really evil, from which man ought to
flee. And then he reprehended ignorance and all the
ignorant: and there are many such, who, like brute
cattle,199 are blind in mind,
and have no understanding even of what they are, and are as far astray
as though they were wholly void of reason, and neither know themselves
what is good and what is evil, nor care at all to learn it from others,
but toil feverishly in quest of wealth, and glory, and such honours as
belong to the crowd, and bodily comforts, and go distraught about
things like these, as if they were the real good. And as though
such objects were worth much, yea, worth all else, they prize the
things themselves, and the arts by which they can acquire them, and the
different lines of life which give scope for their
attainment,—the military profession, to wit, and the juridical,
and the study of the laws. And with earnest and sagacious words
he told us that these are the objects that enervate us, when we despise
that reason which ought to be the true master within us.200
200 The text
here is, ταῦθ᾽
ἅπερ ἡμᾶς
ἀνέσειε,
μάλιστα
λέγων και
μάλα
τεχνικῶς, τοῦ
κυριωτάτου,
φησὶ, τῶν ἐν
ἡμῖν λόγου,
ἀμελήσαντας. | I cannot recount at present all the
addresses of this kind which he delivered to us, with the view of
persuading us to take up the pursuit of philosophy. Nor was it
only for a single day that he thus dealt with us, but for many days
and, in fact, as often as we were in the habit of going to him at the
outset; and we were pierced by his argumentation as with an arrow from
the very first occasion of our hearing him201
201 The text
gives ἐκ πρώτης
ἡλικίας, which Bengel takes to be an error for the absolute
ἐκ πρώτης, to which
ὴμέρας would be supplied.
Casaubon and Rhodomanus read ὁμιλίας for ὴλικίας. | (for he was possessed of a rare combination
of a certain sweet grace and persuasiveness, along with a strange power
of constraint), though we still wavered and debated the matter
undecidedly with ourselves, holding so far by the pursuit of
philosophy, without however being brought thoroughly over to it, while
somehow or other we found ourselves quite unable to withdraw from it
conclusively, and thus were always drawn towards him by the power of
his reasonings, as by the force of some superior necessity. For
he asserted further that there could be no genuine piety towards the
Lord of all in the man who despised this gift of philosophy,—a
gift which man alone of all the creatures of the earth has been deemed
honourable and worthy enough to possess, and one which every man
whatsoever, be he wise or be he ignorant, reasonably embraces, who has
not utterly lost the power of thought by some mad distraction of
mind. He asserted, then, as I have said, that it was not possible
(to speak correctly) for any one to be truly pious who did not
philosophize. And thus he continued to do with us, until, by
pouring in upon us many such argumentations, one after the other, he at
last carried us fairly off somehow or other by a kind of divine power,
like people with his reasonings, and established us (in the practice of
philosophy), and set us down without the power of movement, as it were,
beside himself by his
arts. Moreover, the stimulus of friendship was also brought to
bear upon us,—a stimulus, indeed, not easily withstood, but keen
and most effective,—the argument of a kind and affectionate
disposition, which showed itself benignantly in his words when he spoke
to us and associated with us. For he did not aim merely at
getting round us by any kind of reasoning; but his desire was, with a
benignant, and affectionate, and most benevolent mind, to save us, and
make us partakers in the blessings that flow from philosophy, and most
especially also in those other gifts which the Deity has bestowed on
him above most men, or, as we may perhaps say, above all men of our own
time. I mean the power that teaches us piety, the word of
salvation, that comes to many, and subdues to itself all whom it
visits: for there is nothing that shall resist it, inasmuch as it
is and shall be itself the king of all; although as yet it is hidden,
and is not recognised, whether with ease or with difficulty, by the
common crowd, in such wise that, when interrogated respecting it, they
should be able to speak intelligently about it. And thus, like
some spark lighting upon our inmost soul, love was kindled and burst
into flame within us,—a love at once to the Holy Word, the most
lovely object of all, who attracts all irresistibly toward Himself by
His unutterable beauty, and to this man, His friend and advocate.
And being most mightily smitten by this love, I was persuaded to give
up all those objects or pursuits which seem to us befitting, and among
others even my boasted jurisprudence,—yea, my very fatherland and
friends, both those who were present with me then, and those from whom
I had parted. And in my estimation there arose but one object
dear and worth desire,—to wit, philosophy, and that master of
philosophy, this inspired man. “And the soul of Jonathan
was knit with David.”202 This word, indeed, I did not read till
afterwards in the sacred Scriptures; but I felt it before that time,
not less clearly than it is written: for, in truth, it reached me
then by the clearest of all revelations. For it was not simply
Jonathan that was knit with David; but those things were knit together
which are the ruling powers in man—their souls,—those
objects which, even though all the things which are apparent and
ostensible in man are severed, cannot by any skill be forced to a
severance when they themselves are unwilling. For the soul is
free, and cannot be coerced by any means, not even though one should
confine it and keep guard over it in some secret prison-house.
For wherever the intelligence is, there it is also of its own nature
and by the first reason. And if it seems to you to be in a kind
of prison-house, it is represented as there to you by a sort of second
reason. But for all that, it is by no means precluded from
subsisting anywhere according to its own determination; nay, rather it
is both able to be, and is reasonably believed to be, there alone and
altogether, wheresoever and in connection with what things soever those
actions which are proper only to it are in operation. Wherefore,
what I experienced has been most clearly declared in this very short
statement, that “the soul of Jonathan was knit with the soul of
David;” objects which, as I said, cannot by any means be forced
to a separation against their will, and which of their own inclination
certainly will not readily choose it. Nor is it, in my opinion,
in the inferior subject, who is changeful and very prone to vary in
purpose, and in whom singly there has been no capacity of union at
first, that the power of loosing the sacred bonds of this affection
rests, but rather in the nobler one, who is constant and not readily
shaken, and through whom it has been possible to tie these bonds and to
fasten this sacred knot. Therefore it is not the soul of David
that was knit by the divine word with the soul of Jonathan; but, on the
contrary, the soul of the latter, who was the inferior, is said to be
thus affected and knit with the soul of David. For the nobler
object would not choose to be knit with one inferior, inasmuch as it is
sufficient for itself; but the inferior object, as standing in need of
the help which the nobler can give, ought properly to be knit with the
nobler, and fitted dependently to it: so that this latter,
retaining still its sufficiency in itself, might sustain no loss by its
connection with the inferior; and that that which is of itself without
order203 being now united
and fitted harmoniously with the nobler, might, without any detriment
done, be perfectly subdued to the nobler by the constraints of such
bonds. Wherefore, to apply the bonds is the part of the superior,
and not of the inferior; but to be knit to the other is the part of the
inferior, and this too in such a manner that it shall possess no power
of loosing itself from these bonds. And by a similar constraint,
then, did this David of ours once gird us to himself; and he holds us
now, and has held us ever since that time, so that, even though we
desired it, we could not loose ourselves from his bonds. And
hence it follows that, even though we were to depart, he would not
release this soul of mine, which, as the Holy Scripture puts it, he
holds knit so closely with himself.E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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