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| Whether Those Angels Who Demand that We Pay Them Divine Honor, or Those Who Teach Us to Render Holy Service, Not to Themselves, But to God, are to Be Trusted About the Way to Life Eternal. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Chapter 16.—Whether Those Angels
Who Demand that We Pay Them Divine Honor, or Those Who Teach Us to
Render Holy Service, Not to Themselves, But to God, are to Be
Trusted About the Way to Life Eternal.
What angels, then, are we to
believe in this matter of blessed and eternal life?—those who
wish to be worshipped with religious rites and observances, and
require that men sacrifice to them; or those who say that all this
worship is due to one God, the Creator, and teach us to render it
with true piety to Him, by the vision of whom they are themselves
already blessed, and in whom they promise that we shall be so?
For that vision of God is the beauty of a vision so great, and is
so infinitely desirable, that Plotinus does not hesitate to say
that he who enjoys all other blessings in abundance, and has not
this, is supremely miserable.410 Since, therefore, miracles are
wrought by some angels to induce us to worship this God, by others,
to induce us to worship themselves; and since the former forbid us
to worship these, while the latter dare not forbid us to worship
God, which are we to listen to? Let the Platonists reply, or any
philosophers, or the theurgists, or rather, periurgists,411
411 Meaning, officious
meddlers. | —for this
name is good enough for those who practise such arts. In short,
let all men answer,—if, at least, there survives in them any
spark of that natural perception which, as rational beings, they
possess when created,—let them, I say, tell us whether we should
sacrifice to the gods or angels who order us to sacrifice to them,
or to that One to whom we are ordered to sacrifice by those who
forbid us to worship either themselves or these others. If
neither the one party nor the other had wrought miracles, but had
merely uttered commands, the one to sacrifice to themselves, the
other forbidding that, and ordering us to sacrifice to God, a godly
mind would have been at no loss to discern which command proceeded
from proud arrogance, and which from true religion. I will say
more. If miracles had been wrought only by those who demand
sacrifice for themselves, while those who forbade this, and
enjoined sacrificing to the one God only, thought fit entirely to
forego the use of visible miracles, the authority of the latter was
to be preferred by all who would use, not their eyes only, but
their reason. But since God, for the sake of commending to us the
oracles of His truth, has, by means of these immortal messengers,
who proclaim His majesty and not their own pride, wrought miracles
of surpassing grandeur, certainty, and distinctness, in order that
the weak among the godly might not be drawn away to false religion
by those who require us to sacrifice to them and endeavor to
convince us by stupendous appeals to our senses, who is so utterly
unreasonable as not to choose and follow the truth, when he finds
that it is heralded by even more striking evidences than
falsehood?
As for those miracles which history
ascribes to the gods of the heathen,—I do not refer to those
prodigies which at intervals happen from some unknown physical
causes, and which are arranged and appointed by Divine Providence,
such as monstrous births, and unusual meteorological phenomena,
whether startling only,
or also injurious, and which
are said to be brought about and removed by communication with
demons, and by their most deceitful craft,—but I refer to these
prodigies which manifestly enough are wrought by their power and
force, as, that the household gods which Æneas carried from Troy
in his flight moved from place to place; that Tarquin cut a
whetstone with a razor; that the Epidaurian serpent attached
himself as a companion to Æsculapius on his voyage to Rome; that
the ship in which the image of the Phrygian mother stood, and which
could not be moved by a host of men and oxen, was moved by one weak
woman, who attached her girdle to the vessel and drew it, as proof
of her chastity; that a vestal, whose virginity was questioned,
removed the suspicion by carrying from the Tiber a sieve full of
water without any of it dropping: these, then, and the like, are
by no means to be compared for greatness and virtue to those which,
we read, were wrought among God’s people. How much less can we
compare those marvels, which even the laws of heathen nations
prohibit and punish,—I mean the magical and theurgic marvels, of
which the great part are merely illusions practised upon the
senses, as the drawing down of the moon, “that,” as Lucan says,
“it may shed a stronger influence on the plants?”412 And if
some of these do seem to equal those which are wrought by the
godly, the end for which they are wrought distinguishes the two,
and shows that ours are incomparably the more excellent. For
those miracles commend the worship of a plurality of gods, who
deserve worship the less the more they demand it; but these of ours
commend the worship of the one God, who, both by the testimony of
His own Scriptures, and by the eventual abolition of sacrifices,
proves that He needs no such offerings. If, therefore, any angels
demand sacrifice for themselves, we must prefer those who demand
it, not for themselves, but for God, the Creator of all, whom they
serve. For thus they prove how sincerely they love us, since they
wish by sacrifice to subject us, not to themselves, but to Him by
the contemplation of whom they themselves are blessed, and to bring
us to Him from whom they themselves have never strayed. If, on
the other hand, any angels wish us to sacrifice, not to one, but to
many, not, indeed, to themselves, but to the gods whose angels they
are, we must in this case also prefer those who are the angels of
the one God of gods, and who so bid us to worship Him as to
preclude our worshipping any other. But, further, if it be the
case, as their pride and deceitfulness rather indicate, that they
are neither good angels nor the angels of good gods, but wicked
demons, who wish sacrifice to be paid, not to the one only and
supreme God, but to themselves, what better protection against them
can we choose than that of the one God whom the good angels serve,
the angels who bid us sacrifice, not to themselves, but to Him
whose sacrifice we ourselves ought to be?E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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