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| Virginity a Plant from Heaven, Introduced Late; The Advancement of Mankind to Perfection, How Arranged. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Chapter II.—Virginity a Plant from Heaven, Introduced Late;
The Advancement of Mankind to Perfection, How Arranged.
For truly by a great stretch of power the plant of
virginity was sent down to men from heaven, and for this reason it was
not revealed to the first generations. For the race of mankind
was still very small in number; and it was necessary that it should
first be increased in number, and then brought to perfection.
Therefore the men of old times thought it nothing unseemly to take
their own sisters for wives, until the law coming separated them, and
by forbidding that which at first had seemed to be right, declared it
to be a sin, calling him cursed who should “uncover the
nakedness” of his sister;2513 God thus mercifully bringing to our race
the needful help in due season, as parents do to their children.
For they do not at once set masters over them, but allow them, during
the period of childhood, to amuse themselves like young animals, and
first send them to teachers stammering like themselves, until they cast
off the youthful wool of the mind, and go onwards to the practice of
greater things, and from thence again to that of greater still.
And thus we must consider that the God and Father of all acted towards
our forefathers. For the world, while still unfilled with men,
was like a child, and it was necessary that it should first be filled
with these, and so grow to manhood. But when hereafter it was
colonized from end to end, the race of man spreading to a boundless
extent, God no longer allowed man to remain in the same ways,
considering how they might now proceed from one point to another, and
advance nearer to heaven, until, having attained to the very greatest
and most exalted lesson of virginity, they should reach to perfection;
that first they should abandon the intermarriage of brothers and
sisters, and marry wives from other families; and then that they should
no longer have many wives, like brute beasts, as though born for the
mere propagation of the species; and then that they should not be
adulterers; and then again that they should go on to continence, and
from continence to virginity, when, having trained themselves to despise the flesh, they
sail fearlessly into the peaceful haven of immortality.2514
2514
[Contending with the worse than bestial sensuality of paganism, and
inured to the sorrows of martyr-ages, when Christian families could not
be reared in peace, let us not wonder at the high conceptions of these
heroic believers, based on the words of Christ Himself, and on the
promise, “Blessed are the pure in heart, for they shall see
God.”] | E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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