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| Whether It is Credible that the Men of the Primitive Age Abstained from Sexual Intercourse Until that Date at Which It is Recorded that They Begat Children. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Chapter 15.—Whether It is
Credible that the Men of the Primitive Age Abstained from Sexual
Intercourse Until that Date at Which It is Recorded that They Begat
Children.
Some one, then, will say, Is it to
be believed that a man who intended to beget children, and had no
intention of continence, abstained from sexual intercourse a
hundred years and more, or even, according to the Hebrew version,
only a little less, say eighty, seventy, or sixty years; or, if he
did not abstain, was unable to beget offspring? This question
admits of two solutions. For either puberty was so much later as
the whole life was longer, or, which seems to me more likely, it is
not the first-born sons that are here mentioned, but those whose
names were required to fill up the series until Noah was reached,
from whom again we see that the succession is continued to Abraham,
and after him down to that point of time until which it was needful
to mark by pedigree the course of the most glorious city, which
sojourns as a stranger in this world, and seeks the heavenly
country. That which is undeniable is that Cain was the first who
was born of man and woman. For had he not been the first who was
added by birth to the two unborn persons, Adam could not have said
what he is recorded to have said, “I have gotten a man by the
Lord.”813 He was
followed by Abel, whom the elder brother slew, and who was the
first to show by a kind of foreshadowing of the sojourning city of
God, what iniquitous persecutions that city would suffer at the
hands of wicked and, as it were, earth-born men, who love their
earthly origin, and delight in the earthly happiness of the earthly
city. But how old Adam was when he begat these sons does not
appear. After this the generations diverge, the one branch
deriving from Cain, the other from him whom Adam begot in the room
of Abel slain by his brother, and whom he called Seth, saying, as
it is written, “For God hath raised me up another seed for Abel
whom Cain slew.”814 These two series of generations
accordingly, the one of Cain, the other of Seth, represent the two
cities in their distinctive ranks, the one the heavenly city, which
sojourns on earth, the other the earthly, which gapes after earthly
joys, and grovels in them as if they were the only joys. But
though eight generations, including Adam, are registered before the
flood, no man of Cain’s line has his age recorded at which the
son who succeeded him was begotten. For the Spirit of God refused
to mark the times before the flood in the generations of the
earthly city, but preferred to do so in the heavenly line, as if it
were more worthy of being remembered. Further, when Seth was
born, the age of his father is mentioned; but already he had
begotten other sons, and who will presume to say that Cain and Abel
were the only ones previously begotten? For it does not follow
that they alone had been begotten of Adam, because they alone were
named in order to continue the series of generations which it was
desirable to mention. For though the names of all the rest are
buried in silence, yet it is said that Adam begot sons and
daughters; and who that cares to be free from the charge of
temerity will dare to say how many his offspring numbered? It was
possible enough that Adam was divinely prompted to say, after Seth
was born, “For God hath raised up to me another seed for Abel,”
because that son was to be capable of representing Abel’s
holiness, not because he was born first after him in point of
time. Then because it is written, “And Seth lived 205 years,”
or, according to the Hebrew reading, “105 years, and begat
Enos,”815 who but a
rash man could affirm that this was his first-born? Will any man
do so to excite our wonder, and cause us to inquire how for so many
years he remained free from sexual intercourse, though without any
purpose of continuing so, or how, if he did not abstain, he yet had
no children? Will any man do so when it is written of him, “And
he begat sons and daughters, and all the days of Seth were 912
years, and he died?”816 And similarly regarding those
whose years are afterwards mentioned, it is not disguised that they
begat sons and daughters.
Consequently it does not at all
appear whether he who is named as the son was himself the first
begotten. Nay, since it is incredible that those fathers were
either so long in attaining puberty, or could not get wives, or
could not impregnate them, it is also incredible that those sons
were their first-born. But as the writer of the sacred history
designed to descend by well-marked intervals through a series of
generations to the birth and life of Noah, in whose time the flood
occurred, he mentioned not those sons who were first begotten, but
those by whom the succession was handed down.
Let me make this clearer by here
inserting an example, in regard to which no one can have any doubt
that what I am asserting is true. The evangelist Matthew, where
he designs to commit to our memories the generation of the Lord’s
flesh by a series of parents,
beginning from Abraham and
intending to reach David, says, “Abraham begat Isaac;”817 why did he
not say Ishmael, whom he first begat? Then “Isaac begat
Jacob;” why did he not say Esau, who was the first-born? Simply
because these sons would not have helped him to reach David. Then
follows, “And Jacob begat Judah and his brethren:” was Judah
the first begotten? “Judah,” he says, “begat Pharez and
Zara;” yet neither were these twins the first-born of Judah, but
before them he had begotten three other sons. And so in the order
of the generations he retained those by whom he might reach David,
so as to proceed onwards to the end he had in view. And from this
we may understand that the antediluvians who are mentioned were not
the first-born, but those through whom the order of the succeeding
generations might be carried on to the patriarch Noah. We need
not, therefore, weary ourselves with discussing the needless and
obscure question as to their lateness of reaching
puberty.E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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