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| That It is Especially with the Platonists that We Must Carry on Our Disputations on Matters of Theology, Their Opinions Being Preferable to Those of All Other Philosophers. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Chapter 5.—That It is Especially
with the Platonists that We Must Carry on Our Disputations on
Matters of Theology, Their Opinions Being Preferable to Those of
All Other Philosophers.
If, then, Plato defined the wise
man as one who imitates, knows, loves this God, and who is rendered
blessed through fellowship with Him in His own blessedness, why
discuss with the other philosophers? It is evident that none come
nearer to us than the Platonists. To them, therefore, let that
fabulous theology give place which delights the minds of men with
the crimes of the gods; and that civil theology also, in which
impure demons, under the name of gods, have seduced the peoples of
the earth given up to earthly pleasures, desiring to be honored by
the errors of men, and by filling the minds of their worshippers
with impure desires, exciting them to make the representation of
their crimes one of the rites of their worship, whilst they
themselves found in the spectators of these exhibitions a most
pleasing spectacle,—a theology in which, whatever was honorable
in the temple, was defiled by its mixture with the obscenity of the
theatre, and whatever was base in the theatre was vindicated by the
abominations of the temples. To these philosophers also the
interpretations of Varro must give place, in which he explains the
sacred rites as having reference to heaven and earth, and to the
seeds and operations of perishable things; for, in the first place,
those rites have not the signification which he would have men
believe is attached to them, and therefore truth does not follow
him in his attempt so to interpret them; and even if they had this
signification, still those things ought not to be worshipped by the
rational soul as its god which are placed below it in the scale of
nature, nor ought the soul to prefer to itself as gods things to
which the true God has given it the preference. The same must be
said of those writings pertaining to the sacred rites, which Numa
Pompilius took care to conceal by causing them to be buried along
with himself, and which, when they were afterwards turned up by the
plough, were burned by order of the senate. And, to treat Numa
with all honor, let us mention as belonging to the same rank as
these writings that which Alexander of Macedon wrote to his mother
as communicated to him by Leo, an Egyptian high priest. In this
letter not only Picus and Faunus, and Æneas and Romulus or even
Hercules, and Æsculapius and Liber, born of Semele, and the twin
sons of Tyndareus, or any other mortals who have been deified, but
even the principal gods themselves,299 to whom Cicero, in his Tusculan
questions,300 alludes
without mentioning their names, Jupiter, Juno, Saturn, Vulcan,
Vesta, and many others whom Varro attempts to identify with the
parts or the elements of the world, are shown to have been men.
There is, as we have said, a similarity between this case
and
that of Numa; for the priest being afraid because he had revealed a
mystery, earnestly begged of Alexander to command his mother to
burn the letter which conveyed these communications to her. Let
these two theologies, then, the fabulous and the civil, give place
to the Platonic philosophers, who have recognized the true God as
the author of all things, the source of the light of truth, and the
bountiful bestower of all blessedness. And not these only, but to
these great acknowledgers of so great a God, those philosophers
must yield who, having their mind enslaved to their body, supposed
the principles of all things to be material; as Thales, who held
that the first principle of all things was water; Anaximenes, that
it was air; the Stoics, that it was fire; Epicurus, who affirmed
that it consisted of atoms, that is to say, of minute corpuscules;
and many others whom it is needless to enumerate, but who believed
that bodies, simple or compound, animate or inanimate, but
nevertheless bodies, were the cause and principle of all things.
For some of them—as, for instance, the Epicureans—believed that
living things could originate from things without life; others held
that all things living or without life spring from a living
principle, but that, nevertheless, all things, being material,
spring from a material principle. For the Stoics thought that
fire, that is, one of the four material elements of which this
visible world is composed, was both living and intelligent, the
maker of the world and of all things contained in it,—that it was
in fact God. These and others like them have only been able to
suppose that which their hearts enslaved to sense have vainly
suggested to them. And yet they have within themselves something
which they could not see: they represented to themselves inwardly
things which they had seen without, even when they were not seeing
them, but only thinking of them. But this representation in
thought is no longer a body, but only the similitude of a body; and
that faculty of the mind by which this similitude of a body is seen
is neither a body nor the similitude of a body; and the faculty
which judges whether the representation is beautiful or ugly is
without doubt superior to the object judged of. This principle is
the understanding of man, the rational soul; and it is certainly
not a body, since that similitude of a body which it beholds and
judges of is itself not a body. The soul is neither earth, nor
water, nor air, nor fire, of which four bodies, called the four
elements, we see that this world is composed. And if the soul is
not a body, how should God, its Creator, be a body? Let all those
philosophers, then, give place, as we have said, to the Platonists,
and those also who have been ashamed to say that God is a body, but
yet have thought that our souls are of the same nature as God.
They have not been staggered by the great changeableness of the
soul,—an attribute which it would be impious to ascribe to the
divine nature,—but they say it is the body which changes the
soul, for in itself it is unchangeable. As well might they say,
“Flesh is wounded by some body, for in itself it is
invulnerable.” In a word, that which is unchangeable can be
changed by nothing, so that that which can be changed by the body
cannot properly be said to be immutable.E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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