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| That the Name of Gods is Falsely Given to the Gods of the Gentiles, Though Scripture Applies It Both to the Holy Angels and Just Men. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Chapter 23.—That the Name of Gods
is Falsely Given to the Gods of the Gentiles, Though Scripture
Applies It Both to the Holy Angels and Just Men.
If the Platonists prefer to call
these angels gods rather than demons, and to reckon them with those
whom Plato, their founder and master, maintains were created by the
supreme God,362 they are
welcome to do so, for I will not spend strength in fighting about
words. For if they say that these beings are immortal, and yet
created by the supreme God, blessed but by cleaving to their
Creator and not by their own power, they say what we say, whatever
name they call these beings by. And that this is the opinion
either of all or the best of the Platonists can be ascertained by
their writings. And regarding the name itself, if they see fit to
call such blessed and immortal creatures gods, this need not give
rise to any serious discussion between us, since in our own
Scriptures we read, “The God of gods, the Lord hath spoken;”363 and again,
“Confess to the God of gods;”364 and again, “He is a great King
above all gods.”365 And where it is said, “He is to
be feared above all gods,” the reason is forthwith added, for it
follows, “for all the gods of the nations are idols, but the Lord
made the heavens.”366 He said, “above all gods,”
but added, “of the nations;” that is to say, above all those
whom the nations count gods, in other words, demons. By them He
is to be feared with that terror in which they cried to the Lord,
“Hast Thou come to destroy us?” But where it is said, “the
God of gods,” it cannot be understood as the god of the demons;
and far be it from us to say that “great King above all gods”
means “great King above all demons.” But the same Scripture
also calls men who belong to God’s people “gods:” “I have
said, Ye are gods, and all of you children of the Most High.”367
Accordingly, when God is styled God of gods, this may be understood
of these gods; and so, too, when He is styled a great King above
all gods.
Nevertheless, some one may say,
if men are called gods because they belong to God’s people, whom
He addresses by means of men and angels, are not the immortals, who
already enjoy that felicity which men seek to attain by worshipping
God, much more worthy of the title? And what shall we reply to
this, if not that it is not without reason that in holy Scripture
men are more expressly styled gods than those immortal and blessed
spirits to whom we hope to be equal in the resurrection, because
there was a fear that the weakness of unbelief, being overcome with
the excellence of these beings, might presume to constitute some of
them a god? In the case of men this was a result that need not be
guarded against. Besides, it was right that the men belonging to
God’s people should be more expressly called gods, to assure and
certify them that He who is called God of gods is their God;
because, although those immortal and blessed spirits who dwell in
the heavens are called gods, yet they are not called gods of gods,
that is to say, gods of the men who constitute God’s people, and
to whom it is said, “I have said, Ye are gods, and all of you the
children of the Most High.” Hence the saying of the apostle,
“Though there be that are called gods, whether in heaven or in
earth, as there be gods many and lords many, but to us there is but
one God, the Father, of whom are all things, and we in Him; and one
Lord Jesus Christ, by whom are all things, and we by Him.”368
We need not, therefore, laboriously
contend about the name, since the reality is so obvious as to admit
of no shadow of doubt. That which we say, that the angels who are
sent to announce the will of God to men belong to the order of
blessed immortals, does not satisfy the Platonists, because they
believe that this ministry is discharged, not by those whom they
call gods, in other words, not by blessed immortals, but by demons,
whom they dare not affirm to be blessed, but only immortal, or if
they do rank them among the blessed immortals, yet only as good
demons, and not as gods who dwell in the heaven of heavens remote
from all human contact. But, though it may seem mere wrangling
about a name, yet the name of demon is so detestable that we cannot
bear in any sense to apply it to the holy angels. Now, therefore,
let us close this book in the assurance that, whatever we call
these immortal and blessed spirits, who yet are only creatures,
they do not act as mediators to introduce to everlasting felicity
miserable mortals, from whom they are severed by a twofold
distinction. And those others who are mediators, in so far as
they have immortality in common with their superiors, and misery in
common with their inferiors (for they are justly miserable in
punishment of their wickedness), cannot bestow upon us, but rather
grudge that we should possess, the blessedness from which they
themselves are excluded. And so the friends of the demons have
nothing considerable to allege why we should rather worship them
as
our helpers than avoid them as traitors to our
interests. As for those spirits who are good, and who are
therefore not only immortal but also blessed, and to whom they
suppose we should give the title of gods, and offer worship and
sacrifices for the sake of inheriting a future life, we shall, by
God’s help, endeavor in the following book to show that these
spirits, call them by what name, and ascribe to them what nature
you will, desire that religious worship be paid to God alone, by
whom they were created, and by whose communications of Himself to
them they are blessed. E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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