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| On the Error of Idolatrous Worship. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Chapter IV.—On the Error of Idolatrous
Worship.
Whatever has had a beginning, has also an end. Now that which is a
beginning in respect of time, is called a generation: and whatever is
by generation is subject to corruption, and its beauty3383 is impaired by the lapse of time.
How, then, can they whose origin is from corruptible generation, be
immortal? Again, this supposition has gained credit with the ignorant
multitude, that marriages, and the birth of children, are usual among
the gods. Granting, then, such offspring to be immortal, and
continually produced, the race must of necessity multiply to excess:
and if this were so, where is the heaven, or the earth, which could
contain so vast and still increasing a multitude of gods? But what
shall we say of those men who represent these celestial beings as
joined in incestuous union with their sister goddesses, and charge them
with adultery and impurity?3384
3384 A favorite theme of the Christian apologists. Cf. long list given
in the Clementine Recognitions, X. 22. | We declare,
further, with all confidence, that the very honors and worship which
these deities receive from men are accompanied by acts of wantonness
and profligacy. Once more; the experienced and skillful sculptor,
having formed the conception of his design, perfects his work according
to the rules of art; and in a little while, as if forgetful of himself,
idolizes his own creation, and adores it as an immortal god, while yet
he admits that himself, the author and maker of the image, is a mortal
man. Nay, they even show the graves and monuments of those whom they
deem immortal, and bestow divine honors on the dead: not knowing that
that which is truly blessed and incorruptible needs no distinction
which perishable men can give: for that Being, who is seen by the
mental eye, and conceived by the intellect alone, requires to be
distinguished by no external form, and admits no figure to represent
its character and likeness. But the honors of which we speak are given
to those who have yielded to the power of death: they once were men,
and tenants, while they lived, of a mortal body.E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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