Bad Advertisement?
Are you a Christian?
Online Store:Visit Our Store
| Concerning the Opinions of Varro, Who, While Reprobating the Popular Belief, Thought that Their Worship Should Be Confined to One God, Though He Was Unable to Discover the True God. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Chapter 31.—Concerning the
Opinions of Varro, Who, While Reprobating the Popular Belief,
Thought that Their Worship Should Be Confined to One God, Though He
Was Unable to Discover the True God.
What says Varro himself, whom we
grieve to have found, although not by his own judgment, placing the
scenic plays among things divine? When in many passages he is
exhorting, like a religious man, to the worship of the gods, does
he not in doing so admit that he does not in his own judgment
believe those things which he relates that the Roman state has
instituted; so that he does not hesitate to affirm that if he were
founding a new state, he could enumerate the gods and their names
better by the rule of nature? But being born into a nation
already ancient, he says that he finds himself bound to accept the
traditional names and surnames of the gods, and the histories
connected with them, and that his purpose in investigating and
publishing these details is to incline the people to worship the
gods, and not to despise them. By which words this most acute man
sufficiently indicates that he does not publish all things, because
they would not only have been contemptible to himself, but would
have seemed despicable even to the rabble, unless they had been
passed over in silence. I should be thought to conjecture these
things, unless he himself, in another passage, had openly said, in
speaking of religious rites, that many things are true which it is
not only not useful for the common people to know, but that it is
expedient that the people should think otherwise, even though
falsely, and therefore the Greeks have shut up the religious
ceremonies and mysteries in silence, and within walls. In this he
no doubt expresses the policy of the so-called wise men by whom
states and peoples are ruled. Yet by this crafty device the
malign demons are wonderfully delighted, who possess alike the
deceivers and the deceived, and from whose tyranny nothing sets
free save the grace of God through Jesus Christ our
Lord.
The same most acute and learned
author also says, that those alone seem to him to have perceived
what God is, who have believed Him to be the soul of the world,
governing it by design and reason.186
186 See Cicero, De Nat. Deor.
i. 2. | And by this, it appears, that
although he did not attain to the truth,—for the true God is not
a soul, but the maker and author of the soul,—yet if he could
have been free to go against the prejudices of custom, he could
have confessed and counselled others that the one God ought to be
worshipped, who governs the world by design and reason; so that on
this subject only this point would remain to be debated with him,
that he had called Him a soul, and not rather the creator of the
soul. He says, also, that the ancient Romans, for more than a
hundred and seventy years, worshipped the gods without an image.187
187 Plutarch’s Numa, c.
8. | “And if
this custom,” he says, “could have remained till now, the gods
would have been more purely worshipped.” In favor of this
opinion, he cites as a witness among others the Jewish nation; nor
does he hesitate to conclude that passage by saying of those who
first consecrated images for the people, that they have both taken
away religious fear from their fellow-citizens, and increased
error, wisely thinking that the gods easily fall into contempt when
exhibited under the stolidity of images. But as he does not say
they have transmitted error, but that they have increased it, he
therefore wishes it to be understood that there was error already
when there were no images. Wherefore, when he says they alone
have perceived what God is who have believed Him to be the
governing soul of the world, and thinks that the rites of religion
would have been more purely observed without images, who fails to
see how near he has come to the truth? For if he had been able to
do anything against so inveterate an error, he would certainly have
given it as his opinion both that the one God should be worshipped,
and that He should be worshipped
without an image; and having so
nearly discovered the truth, perhaps he might easily have been put
in mind of the mutability of the soul, and might thus have
perceived that the true God is that immutable nature which made the
soul itself. Since these things are so, whatever ridicule such
men have poured in their writings against the plurality of the
gods, they have done so rather as compelled by the secret will of
God to confess them, than as trying to persuade others. If,
therefore, any testimonies are adduced by us from these writings,
they are adduced for the confutation of those who are unwilling to
consider from how great and malignant a power of the demons the
singular sacrifice of the shedding of the most holy blood, and the
gift of the imparted Spirit, can set us free.E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
|