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Oration
XXVIII.
The Second Theological
Oration.
I. In the former
Discourse we laid down clearly with respect to the Theologian, both
what sort of character he ought to bear, and on what kind of subject he
may philosophize, and when, and to what extent. We saw that he
ought to be, as far as may be, pure, in order that light may be
apprehended by light; and that he ought to consort with serious men, in
order that his word be not fruitless through falling on an unfruitful
soil; and that the suitable season is when we have a calm within from
the whirl of outward things; so as not like madmen3415
3415 A marginal
reading noted by the Benedictines gives “sobbing” or
“panting,” which is a better sense. | to lose our breath; and that the extent to
which we may go is that to which we have ourselves advanced, or to
which we are advancing. Since then these things are so, and we
have broken up for ourselves the fallows of Divinity3416 , so as not to sow upon thorns,3417 and have made plain the face of the
ground,3418 being moulded and
moulding others by Holy Scripture…let us now enter upon
Theological questions, setting at the head thereof the Father, the Son,
and the Holy Ghost, of Whom we are to treat; that the Father may be
well pleased, and the Son may help us, and the Holy Ghost may inspire
us; or rather that one illumination may come upon us from the One God,
One in diversity, diverse in Unity, wherein is a marvel.
II. Now
when I go up eagerly into the Mount3419
—or, to
use a truer expression, when I both eagerly long, and at the same time
am afraid (the one through my hope and the other through my weakness)
to enter within the Cloud, and hold converse with God, for so God
commands; if any be an Aaron, let him go up with me, and let him stand
near, being ready, if it must be so, to remain outside the Cloud.
But if any be a Nadad or an Abihu, or of the Order of the Elders, let
him go up indeed, but let him stand afar off, according to the value of
his purification. But if any be of the multitude, who are
unworthy of this height of contemplation, if he be altogether impure
let him not approach at all,3420 for it would be
dangerous to him; but if he be at least temporarily purified, let him
remain below and listen to the Voice alone, and the trumpet,3421 the bare words of piety, and let him see the
Mountain smoking and lightening, a terror at once and a marvel to those
who cannot get up. But if any is an evil and savage beast, and
altogether incapable of taking in the subject matter of Contemplation
and Theology, let him not hurtfully and malignantly lurk in his den
among the woods, to catch hold of some dogma or saying by a sudden
spring, and to tear sound doctrine to pieces by his misrepresentations,
but let him stand yet afar off and withdraw from the Mount, or he shall
be stoned and crushed, and shall perish miserably in his
wickedness. For to those who are like wild beasts true and sound
discourses are stones. If he be a leopard let him die with his
spots.3422 If a ravening
and roaring lion, seeking what he may devour3423 of
our souls or of our words; or a wild boar, trampling under foot the
precious and translucent pearls of the Truth;3424 or
an Arabian3425
3425
Arabian: So the LXX.
renders the word which in A.V.
Jer. v. 6, is translated “of the
evening,” and in the Vulg. “at
evening.” R.V. gives as an
alternative, “of the deserts.” | and alien wolf, or
one keener even than these in tricks of argument; or a fox, that is a
treacherous and faithless soul, changing its shape according to
circumstances or necessities, feeding on dead or putrid bodies, or on
little vineyards3426
3426 The LXX. in Cant. xi. 15, admits of this translation as
well as of that followed by A.V. | when the large ones
have escaped them; or any other carnivorous beast, rejected by the Law
as unclean for food or enjoyment; our discourse must withdraw from such
and be engraved on solid tables of stone, and that on both sides
because the Law is partly visible, and partly hidden; the one part
belonging to the mass who remain below, the other to the few who press
upward into the Mount.
III. What is this that has happened to me, O
friends, and initiates, and fellow-lovers of the truth? I was
running to lay hold on God, and thus I went up into the Mount, and drew
aside the curtain of the Cloud, and entered away from matter and
material things, and as far as I could I withdrew within myself.
And then when I looked up, I scarce saw the back parts of God;3427 although I was sheltered by the Rock, the
Word that was made flesh for us. And when I looked a little
closer, I saw, not the First and unmingled Nature, known to
Itself—to the Trinity, I mean; not That which abideth within the
first3428 veil, and is hidden by the Cherubim; but
only that Nature, which at last even reaches to us. And that is,
as far as I can learn, the Majesty, or as holy David calls it, the
Glory3429 which is manifested among the creatures,
which It has produced and governs. For these are the Back Parts
of God, which He leaves behind Him, as tokens of Himself3430
3430 The Face of God
signifies His Essence and Deity, which were before all worlds:
His back parts are Creation and Providence, by which He reveals
Himself. | like the shadows and reflection of the sun
in the water, which shew the sun to our weak eyes, because we cannot
look at the sun himself, for by his unmixed light he is too strong for
our power of perception. In this way then shalt thou discourse of
God; even wert thou a Moses and a god to Pharaoh;3431 even wert thou caught up like Paul to the
Third Heaven,3432 and hadst heard
unspeakable words; even wert thou raised above them both, and exalted
to Angelic or Archangelic place and dignity. For though a thing
be all heavenly, or above heaven, and far higher in nature and nearer
to God than we, yet it is farther distant from God, and from the
complete comprehension of His Nature, than it is lifted above our
complex and lowly and earthward sinking composition.
IV. Therefore we must begin again
thus. It is difficult to conceive God but to define Him in words
is an impossibility, as one of the Greek teachers of Divinity3433 taught, not unskilfully, as it appears to
me; with the intention that he might be thought to have apprehended
Him; in that he says it is a hard thing to do; and yet may escape being
convicted of ignorance because of the impossibility of giving
expression to the apprehension. But in my opinion it is
impossible to express Him, and yet more impossible to conceive
Him. For that which may be conceived may perhaps be made clear by
language, if not fairly well, at any rate imperfectly, to any one who
is not quite deprived of his hearing, or slothful of
understanding. But to comprehend the whole of so great a Subject
as this is quite impossible and impracticable, not merely to the
utterly careless and ignorant, but even to those who are highly
exalted, and who love God, and in like manner to every created nature;
seeing that the darkness of this world and the thick covering of the
flesh is an obstacle to the full understanding of the truth. I do
not know whether it is the same with the higher natures and purer
Intelligences3434
3434 No one doubts, say the
Benedictine Editors, that the Angels do see God, and that men, too,
will see Him, when they attain to Eternal Bliss. S. Thomas (Summa
I. qu. xii. 4) argues that the Angels have cognition of God’s
Essence not by nature but by grace: but yet (Ib. qu. lvi. 3) that
they have by nature a certain cognition of Him, as represented and as
it were mirrored in their own essence; though not the actual vision of
His Essence. The Angel, he says again (Ib. qu. lxiv. 1) has a
higher cognition of God than man has, on account of the perfection of
his intellect; and this cognition remains even in the fallen
Angels. | which because of
their nearness to God, and because they are illumined with all His
Light, may possibly see, if not the whole, at any rate more perfectly
and distinctly than we do; some perhaps more, some less than others, in
proportion to their rank.
V. But enough has been said on this
point. As to what concerns us, it is not only the Peace of
God3435 which passeth all understanding and
knowledge, nor only the things which God hath stored up in promise for
the righteous, which “eye hath not seen, nor ear heard, nor mind
conceived”3436 except in a very
small degree, nor the accurate knowledge of the Creation. For
even of this I would have you know that you have only a shadow when you
hear the words, “I will consider the heavens, the work of Thy
fingers, the moon and the stars,”3437
and the settled order therein; not as if he were considering them now,
but as destined to do so hereafter. But far before them is That
nature Which is above them, and out of which they spring, the
Incomprehensible and Illimitable—not, I mean, as to the fact of
His being, but as to Its nature. For our preaching is not empty,
nor our Faith vain,3438 nor is this the
doctrine we proclaim; for we would not have you take our candid
statement as a starting point for a quibbling denial of God, or of
arrogance on account of our confession of ignorance. For it is
one thing to be persuaded of the existence of a thing, and quite
another to know what it is.
VI. Now our very eyes and the Law of Nature
teach us that God exists and that He is the Efficient and Maintaining
Cause of all things: our eyes, because they fall on visible
objects, and see them in beautiful stability and progress, immovably
moving and revolving if I may so say; natural Law, because through
these visible things and their order, it reasons back to their
Author. For how could this Universe have come into being or been
put together, unless God had called it into existence, and held it
together? For every one who sees a beautifully made lute, and
considers the skill with which it has been fitted together and
arranged, or who hears its melody, would think of none but the
lutemaker, or the luteplayer, and would recur to him in mind, though he
might not know him by sight. And thus to us also is manifested
That which made and moves and preserves all created things, even though
He be not comprehended by the mind. And very wanting in sense is
he who will not willingly go thus far in following natural proofs; but
not even this which we have fancied or formed, or which reason has
sketched for us, proves the existence of a God. But if any one
has got even to some extent a comprehension of this, how is God’s
Being to be demonstrated? Who ever reached this extremity of
wisdom? Who was ever deemed worthy of so great a gift? Who
has opened the mouth of his mind and drawn in the Spirit,3439 so as by Him that searcheth all things, yea
the deep thing of God,3440 to take in God, and
no longer to need progress, since he already possesses the Extreme
Object of desire, and That to which all the social life and all the
intelligence of the best men press forward?
VII. For what will you conceive the Deity to be,
if you rely upon all the approximations of reason? Or to what
will reason carry you, O most philosophic of men and best of
Theologians, who boast of your familiarity with the Unlimited? Is
He a body? How then is He the Infinite and Limitless, and
formless, and intangible, and invisible? or are these attributes of a
body? What arrogance for such is not the nature of a body!
Or will you say that He has a body, but not these attributes? O
stupidity, that a Deity should possess nothing more than we do.
For how is He an object of worship if He be circumscribed? Or how
shall He escape being made of elements, and therefore subject to be
resolved into them again, or even altogether dissolved? For every
compound is a starting point of strife, and strife of separation, and
separation of dissolution.
But dissolution is altogether foreign to God and to the First
Nature. Therefore there can be no separation, that there may be
no dissolution, and no strife that there may be no separation, and no
composition that there may be no strife. Thus also there must be
no body, that there may be no composition, and so the argument is
established by going back from last to first.
VIII. And how shall we preserve the truth
that God pervades all things and fills all, as it is written “Do
not I fill heaven and earth? saith the Lord,”3441 and “The Spirit of the Lord filleth
the world,”3442 if God partly
contains and partly is contained? For either He will occupy an
empty Universe, and so all things will have vanished for us, with this
result, that we shall have insulted God by making Him a body, and by
robbing Him of all things which He has made; or else He will be a body
contained in other bodies, which is impossible; or He will be enfolded
in them, or contrasted with them, as liquids are mixed, and one divides
and is divided by another;—a view which is more absurd and anile
than even the atoms of Epicurus3443
3443 Epicurus taught that
Matter is eternal, and consists of an indefinite number of Atoms or
indivisible units, floating about in space, and mutually attracting and
repelling each other; and that all that exists is due to some chance
meeting and coalition of these atoms. | and so this
argument concerning the body will fall through, and have no body and no
solid basis at all. But if we are to assert that He is immaterial
(as for example that Fifth Element which some3444
3444 This is a speculation
of Aristotle, who imagined a Fifth Element, consisting of formless
matter. |
have imagined), and that He is carried round in the circular
movement…let us assume that He is immaterial, and that He is the
Fifth Element; and, if they please, let Him be also bodiless in
accordance with the independent drift and arrangement of their
argument; for I will not at present differ with them on this point; in
what respect then will He be one of those things which are in movement
and agitation, to say nothing of the insult involved in making the
Creator subject to the same movement as the creatures, and Him That
carries all (if they will allow even this) one with those whom He
carries. Again, what is the force that moves your Fifth Element,
and what is it that moves all things, and what moves that, and what is
the force that moves that? And so on ad
infinitum. And how can He help being altogether contained in
space if He be subject to motion? But if they assert that He is
something other than this Fifth Element; suppose it is an angelic
nature that they attribute to Him, how will they shew that Angels are
corporeal, or what sort of bodies they have? And how far in that
case could God, to Whom the Angels minister, be superior to the
Angels? And if He is above them, there is again brought in an
irrational swarm of bodies, and a depth of nonsense, that has no
possible basis to stand upon.
IX. And thus we see that God is not a
body. For no inspired teacher has yet asserted or admitted such a
notion, nor has the sentence of our own Court allowed it. Nothing
then remains but to conceive of Him as incorporeal. But this term
Incorporeal, though granted, does not yet set before us—or
contain within itself His Essence, any more than Unbegotten, or
Unoriginate, or Unchanging, or Incorruptible, or any other predicate
which is used concerning God or in reference to Him. For what
effect is produced upon His Being or Substance3445
3445 Petavius (De Trin. IV.
ii. 7) notes that ὑπόστασις seems
used here of the Essence and Nature common to the Three Persons of the
Blessed Trinity. | by
His having no beginning, and being incapable of change or
limitation? Nay, the whole question of His Being is still left
for the further consideration and exposition of him who truly has the
mind of God and is advanced in contemplation. For just as to say
“It is a body,” or “It was begotten,” is not
sufficient to present clearly to the mind the various objects of which
these predicates are used, but you must also express the subject of
which you use them, if you would present the object of your thought
clearly and adequately (for every one of these predicates, corporeal,
begotten, mortal, may be used of a man, or a cow, or a horse).
Just so he who is eagerly pursuing the nature of the Self-existent will
not stop at saying what He is not, but must go on beyond what He
is not, and say what He is; inasmuch as it is easier to take in
some single point than to go on disowning point after point in endless
detail, in order, both by the elimination of negatives and the
assertion of positives to arrive at a comprehension of this
subject.
But a man who states what God is not without going on to
say what He is, acts much in the same way as one would who when asked
how many twice five make, should answer, “Not two, nor three, nor
four, nor five, nor twenty, nor thirty, nor in short any number below
ten, nor any multiple of ten;” but would not answer
“ten,” nor settle the mind of his questioner upon the firm
ground of the answer. For it is much easier, and more concise to
shew what a thing is not from what it is, than to demonstrate what it is by stripping
it of what it is not. And this surely is evident to every
one.
X. Now since we have ascertained that God is
incorporeal, let us proceed a little further with our
examination. Is He Nowhere or Somewhere. For if He is
Nowhere,3446
3446 Nowhere is in this
passage used in an ambiguous sense. As asserted of God, it means
that His being is in no way limited by place: not that He has no
existence in place, for He is everywhere, and He transcends all
place. Before the creation of the Universe He existed, and He
created Place, which therefore cannot be the seat of His Being. | then some person of
a very inquiring turn of mind might ask, How is it then that He can
even exist? For if the non-existent is nowhere, then that which
is nowhere is also perhaps non-existent. But if He is Somewhere,
He must be either in the Universe, or above the Universe. And if
He is in the Universe, then He must be either in some part or in
the whole. If in some part, then He will be circumscribed by that
part which is less than Himself; but if everywhere, then by one which
is further and greater—I mean the Universal, which contains the
Particular; if the Universe is to be contained by the Universe, and no
place is to be free from circumscription. This follows if He is
contained in the Universe. And besides, where was He before the
Universe was created, for this is a point of no little
difficulty. But if He is above the Universe, is there
nothing to distinguish this from the Universe, and where is this
above situated? And how could this Transcendence and that
which is transcended be distinguished in thought, if there is not a
limit to divide and define them? Is it not necessary that there
shall be some mean to mark off the Universe from that which is above
the Universe? And what could this be but Place, which we have
already rejected? For I have not yet brought forward the point
that God would be altogether circumscript, if He were even
comprehensible in thought: for comprehension is one form of
circumscription.
XI. Now, why have I gone into all this,
perhaps too minutely for most people to listen to, and in accordance
with the present manner of discourse, which despises noble simplicity,
and has introduced a crooked and intricate3447
3447 v. 1.
Affected. The allusion is especially to the ostentatious
dialectics and tedious arguments of Aëtius and his followers,
Eunomius and others. |
style? That the tree may be known by its fruits;3448 I mean, that the darkness which is at work
in such teaching may be known by the obscurity of the arguments.
For my purpose in doing so was, not to get credit for myself for
astonishing utterances, or excessive wisdom, through tying knots and
solving difficulties (this was the great miraculous gift of
Daniel),3449 but to make clear
the point at which my argument has aimed from the first. And what
was this? That the Divine Nature cannot be apprehended by human
reason, and that we cannot even represent to ourselves all its
greatness. And this not out of envy, for envy is far from the
Divine Nature, which is passionless, and only good and Lord of
all;3450 especially envy of that which is the most
honourable3451
3451 v. 1. Most Akin
to Himself. Combefis. | of all His
creatures. For what does the Word prefer to the rational and
speaking creatures? Why, even their very existence is a proof of
His supreme goodness. Nor yet is this incomprehensibility for the
sake of His own glory and honour, Who is full,3452 as
if His possession of His glory and majesty depended upon the
impossibility of approaching Him. For it is utterly sophistical
and foreign to the character, I will not say of God, but of any
moderately good man, who has any right ideas about himself, to seek his
own supremacy by throwing a hindrance in the way of another.
XII. But whether there be other causes for
it also, let them see who are nearer God, and are eye witnesses and
spectators of His unsearchable judgments;3453 if
there are any who are so eminent in virtue, and who walk in the paths
of the Infinite, as the saying is. As far, however, as we have
attained, who measure with our little measure things hard to be
understood, perhaps one reason is to prevent us from too readily
throwing away the possession because it was so easily come by.
For people cling tightly to that which they acquire with labour; but
that which they acquire easily they quickly throw away, because it can
be easily recovered. And so it is turned into a blessing, at
least to all men who are sensible, that this blessing is not too
easy. Or perhaps it is in order that we may not share the fate of
Lucifer, who fell, and in consequence of receiving the full light make
our necks stiff against the Lord Almighty, and suffer a fall, of all
things most pitiable, from the height we had attained. Or perhaps
it may be to give a greater reward hereafter for their labour and
glorious life to those who have here been purified, and have exercised
long patience in respect of that which they desired.
Therefore this darkness of the body has been
placed between us and God, like the cloud of old between the Egyptians
and the Hebrews;3454 and this is perhaps
what is meant by “He made darkness His secret
place,”3455 namely our dulness,
through which few can see even a little. But as to this point,
let those discuss it whose business it is; and let them ascend as far
as possible in the examination. To us who are (as Jeremiah
saith), “prisoners of the earth,”3456
and covered with the denseness of carnal nature, this at all events is
known, that as it is impossible for a man to step over his own shadow,
however fast he may move (for the shadow will always move on as fast as
it is being overtaken) or, as it is impossible for the eye to draw near
to visible objects apart from the intervening air and light, or for a
fish to glide about outside of the waters; so it is quite impracticable
for those who are in the body to be conversant with objects of pure
thought apart altogether from bodily objects. For something in
our own environment is ever creeping in, even when the mind has most
fully detached itself from the visible, and collected itself, and is
attempting to apply itself to those invisible things which are akin to
itself.
XIII. This will be made clear to you as
follows:—Are not Spirit, and Fire, and Light, Love, and Wisdom,
and Righteousness, and Mind and Reason, and the like, the names of the
First Nature? What then? Can you conceive of Spirit apart
from motion and diffusion; or of Fire without its fuel and its upward
motion, and its proper colour and form? Or of Light unmingled
with air, and loosed from that which is as it were its father and
source? And how do you conceive of a mind? Is it not that
which is inherent in some person not itself, and are not its movements
thoughts, silent or uttered? And Reason…what else can you
think it than that which is either silent within ourselves, or else
outpoured (for I shrink from saying loosed)? And if you conceive
of Wisdom, what is it but the habit of mind which you know as such, and
which is concerned with contemplations either divine or human?
And Justice and Love, are they not praiseworthy dispositions, the one
opposed to injustice, the other to hate, and at one time intensifying
themselves, at another relaxed, now taking possession of us, now
leaving us alone, and in a word, making us what we are, and changing us
as colours do bodies? Or are we rather to leave all these things,
and to look at the Deity absolutely, as best we can, collecting a
fragmentary perception of It from Its images? What then is this
subtile thing, which is of these, and yet is not these, or how can that
Unity which is in its Nature uncomposite and incomparable, still be all
of these, and each one of them perfectly? Thus our mind faints to
transcend corporeal things, and to consort with the Incorporeal,
stripped of all clothing of corporeal ideas, as long as it has to look
with its inherent weakness at things above its strength. For
every rational nature longs for God and for the First Cause, but is
unable to grasp Him, for the reasons I have mentioned. Faint
therefore with the desire, and as it were restive and impatient of the
disability, it tries a second course, either to look at visible things,
and out of some of them to make a god…(a poor contrivance, for in
what respect and to what extent can that which is seen be higher and
more godlike than that which sees, that this should worship that?) or
else through the beauty and order of visible things to attain to that
which is above sight; but not to suffer the loss of God through the
magnificence of visible things.
XIV. From this cause some have made a god of the
Sun, others of the Moon, others of the host of Stars, others of heaven
itself with all its hosts, to which they have attributed the guiding of
the Universe, according to the quality or quantity of their
movement. Others again of the Elements, earth, air, water, fire,
because of their useful nature, since without them human life cannot
possibly exist. Others again have worshipped any chance visible
objects, setting up the most beautiful of what they saw as their
gods. And there are those who worship pictures and images, at
first indeed of their own ancestors—at least, this is the case
with the more affectionate and sensual—and honour the departed
with memorials; and afterwards even those of strangers are worshipped
by men of a later generation separated from them by a long interval;
through ignorance of the First Nature, and following the traditional
honour as lawful and necessary; for usage when confirmed by time was
held to be Law. And I think that some who were courtiers of
arbitrary power and extolled bodily strength and admired beauty, made a
god in time out of him whom they honoured, perhaps getting hold of some
fable to help on their imposture.
XV. And those of them who were most subject to
passion deified their passions, or honoured them among their gods;
Anger and Blood-thirstiness, Lust and Drunkenness, and every similar
wickedness; and made out of this an ignoble and unjust excuse for their
own sins. And some they left on earth, and some they hid beneath the earth (this being the
only sign of wisdom about them), and some they raised to
heaven.3457
3457 Referring to the
mythical partition of the Universe, which gave heaven to Zeus, the sea
to Poseidon, and the infernal regions to Aidoneus. | O ridiculous
distribution of inheritance! Then they gave to each of these
concepts the name of some god or demon, by the authority and private
judgment of their error, and set up statues whose costliness is a
snare, and thought to honour them with blood and the steam of
sacrifices, and sometimes even by most shameful actions, frenzies and
manslaughter. For such honours were the fitting due of such
gods. And before now men have insulted themselves by worshipping
monsters, and fourfooted beasts, and creeping things,3458 and of the very vilest and most absurd, and
have made an offering to them of the glory of God; so that it is not
easy to decide whether we ought most to despise the worshippers or the
objects of their worship. Probably the worshippers are far the
most contemptible, for though they are of a rational nature, and have
received grace from God, they have set up the worse as the
better. And this was the trick of the Evil One, who abused good
to an evil purpose, as in most of his evil deeds. For he laid
hold of their desire in its wandering in search of God, in order to
distort to himself3459
3459 It was a very general
belief in the early Church that the gods whom the heathen worshipped
were in reality actual evil spirits; and this belief is certainly
supported by S. Paul’s argument about εἰδωλόθυτον
in 1 Cor. x.
19–21. | the power, and
steal the desire, leading it by the hand, like a blind man asking a
road; and he hurled down and scattered some in one direction and some
in another, into one pit of death and destruction.
XVI. This was their course. But reason
receiving us in our desire for God, and in our sense of the
impossibility of being without a leader and guide, and then making us
apply ourselves to things visible and meeting with the things which
have been since the beginning, doth not stay its course even
here. For it was not the part of Wisdom to grant the sovereignty
to things which are, as observation tells us, of equal rank. By
these then it leads to that which is above these, and by which being is
given to these. For what is it which ordered things in heaven and
things in earth, and those which pass through air, and those which live
in water; or rather the things which were before these, heaven and
earth, air and water? Who mingled these, and who distributed
them? What is it that each has in common with the other, and
their mutual dependence and agreement? For I commend the man,
though he was a heathen, who said, What gave movement to these, and
drives their ceaseless and unhindered motion? Is it not the
Artificer of them Who implanted reason in them all, in accordance with
which the Universe is moved and controlled? Is it not He who made
them and brought them into being? For we cannot attribute such a
power to the Accidental. For, suppose that its existence is
accidental, to what will you let us ascribe its order? And if you
like we will grant you this: to what then will you ascribe its
preservation and protection in accordance with the terms of its first
creation. Do these belong to the Accidental, or to something
else? Surely not to the Accidental. And what can this
Something Else be but God? Thus reason that proceeds from God,
that is implanted in all from the beginning and is the first law in us,
and is bound up in all, leads us up to God through visible
things. Let us begin again, and reason this out.
XVII. What God is in nature and essence, no
man ever yet has discovered or can discover. Whether it will ever
be discovered is a question which he who will may examine and
decide. In my opinion it will be discovered when that within us
which is godlike and divine, I mean our mind and reason, shall have
mingled with its Like, and the image shall have ascended to the
Archetype, of which it has now the desire. And this I think is
the solution of that vexed problem as to “We shall know even as
we are known.”3460
3460 1 Cor. xiii. 12, but with a reading ἐπιγνώσεσθε,
which is not in the New Testament. | But in our
present life all that comes to us is but a little effluence, and as it
were a small effulgence from a great Light. So that if anyone has
known God, or has had the testimony of Scripture to his knowledge of
God, we are to understand such an one to have possessed a degree of
knowledge which gave him the appearance of being more fully enlightened
than another who did not enjoy the same degree of illumination; and
this relative superiority is spoken of as if it were absolute
knowledge, not because it is really such, but by comparison with the
power of that other.
XVIII. Thus Enos “hoped to call upon
the Name of the Lord.”3461
3461 Gen. iv. 26. The verb has by some been taken
as passive, and not middle, “hoped that the Name of the Lord
would be called upon.” | Hope was that
for which he is commended; and that, not that he should know
God, but that he should call upon him. And Enoch was
translated,3462 but it is not yet
clear whether it was because he already comprehended the Divine Nature,
or in order that he might comprehend it. And Noah’s3463
glory was that he was pleasing to God; he who was entrusted with the
saving of the whole world from the waters, or rather of the Seeds of
the world, escaped the Deluge in a small Ark. And Abraham, great
Patriarch though he was, was justified by faith,3464 and offered a strange victim,3465 the type of the Great Sacrifice. Yet
he saw not God as God, but gave Him food as a man.3466 He was approved because he worshipped
as far as he comprehended.3467 And Jacob
dreamed of a lofty ladder and stair of Angels, and in a mystery
anointed a pillar3468 —perhaps to
signify the Rock that was anointed for our sake—and gave to a
place the name of The House of God3469
3469 v. l. The
Form of God, which would refer to the occasion cited below.
The reading is grammatically easier, as an accusative is required; but
in that case we might have expected the wrestling with the Angel to
have been mentioned first, as the name Penuel was given by Jacob on the
day following the night in which he wrestled, and received his own
change of name. The Benedictines, while retaining House in
text and version, express a preference for Form, because the
subject of the argument is the Vision of God. | in honour of
Him whom he saw; and wrestled with God in human form; whatever this
wrestling of God with man may mean…possibly it refers to the
comparison of man’s virtue with God’s; and he bore on his
body the marks of the wrestling, setting forth the defeat of the
created nature; and for a reward of his reverence he received a change
of his name; being named, instead of Jacob, Israel—that great and
honourable name. Yet neither he nor any one on his behalf, unto
this day, of all the Twelve Tribes who were his children, could boast
that he comprehended the whole nature or the pure sight of
God.
XIX. To Elias neither the strong wind, nor
the fire, nor the earthquake, as you learn from the story,3470 but a light breeze adumbrated the Presence
of God, and not even this His Nature. And who was this
Elias? The man whom a chariot of fire took up to heaven,
signifying the superhuman excellency of the righteous man. And
are you not amazed at Manoah the Judge of yore, and at Peter the
disciple in later days; the one being unable to endure the sight even
of one in whom was a representation of God; and saying, “We are
undone, O wife, we have seen God;”3471
speaking as though even a vision of God could not be grasped by human
beings, let alone the Nature of God; and the other unable to endure the
Presence of Christ in his boat and therefore bidding Him
depart;3472 and this though
Peter was more zealous than the others for the knowledge of Christ, and
received a blessing for this,3473 and was entrusted
with the greatest gifts. What would you say of Isaiah or Ezekiel,
who was an eyewitness of very great mysteries, and of the other
Prophets; for one of these saw the Lord of Sabaoth sitting on the
Throne of glory,3474 and encircled and
praised and hidden by the sixwinged Seraphim, and was himself purged by
the live coal, and equipped for his prophetic office. And the
other describes the Cherubic Chariot3475 of God, and
the Throne upon them, and the Firmament over it, and Him that shewed
Himself in the Firmament, and Voices, and Forces, and Deeds.3476
3476 v. l. Orders, i.e. of
angels. | And whether this was an appearance by
day, only visible to Saints, or an unerring vision of the night, or an
impression on the mind holding converse with the future as if it were
the present; or some other ineffable form of prophecy, I cannot say;
the God of the Prophets knoweth, and they know who are thus
inspired. But neither these of whom I am speaking, nor any of
their fellows ever stood before the Council3477
3477 This is a
quotation from the LXX. of Jer. xxiii. 18, where for ὑποστήματι
Aquila has ἀπορρήτῳ, and
Symmachus ὁμιλίᾳ, (according to
Trommius). ὑπόστημα
properly means a Station of troops, and such is the meaning in
the other two places where the word occurs in the LXX., viz.:—2 Sam. xxiii.
14; and 1 Chron. xi. 16. The Hebrew word which it
represents in this passage is one of frequent use, and means “a
Council,” or, in a sense derived from this, Familiar
Intercourse. In Job xv.
8 it is rendered in
A.V. The Secret of God, where the LXX. has σύνταγμα.
The Vulgate in both cases has Concilium Dei; the Benedictines
however render it Substance. A.V. has
Counsel, and in marg. Secret; while R.V. reads
Council, with no marginal alternative. |
and Essence of God, as it is written, or saw, or proclaimed the Nature
of God.
XX. If it had been permitted to Paul to
utter what the Third Heaven3478 contained, and his
own advance, or ascension, or assumption thither, perhaps we should
know something more about God’s Nature, if this was the mystery
of the rapture. But since it was ineffable, we too will honour it
by silence. Thus much we will hear Paul say about it, that we
know in part and we prophesy in part.3479 This and the like to this are the
confessions of one who is not rude in knowledge,3480 who threatens to give proof of Christ
speaking in him, the great doctor and champion of the truth.
Wherefore he estimates all knowledge on earth only as through a glass
darkly,3481 as taking its stand
upon little images of the truth. Now, unless I appear to anyone
too careful, and over anxious about the examination of this matter,
perhaps it was of this and nothing else that the Word Himself
intimated that there
were things which could not now be borne, but which should be borne and
cleared up hereafter,3482 and which John the
Forerunner of the Word and great Voice of the Truth declared even the
whole world could not contain.3483
XXI. The truth then, and the whole Word is full of
difficulty and obscurity; and as it were with a small instrument we are
undertaking a great work, when with merely human wisdom we pursue the
knowledge of the Self-existent, and in company with, or not apart from,
the senses, by which we are borne hither and thither, and led into
error, we apply ourselves to the search after things which are only to
be grasped by the mind, and we are unable by meeting bare realities
with bare intellect to approximate somewhat more closely to the truth,
and to mould the mind by its concepts.
Now the subject of God is more hard to come
at,3484
3484 cf. Petav. de Deo,
iii., c. 7. | in proportion as it is more perfect than any
other, and is open to more objections, and the solutions of them are
more laborious. For every objection, however small, stops and
hinders the course of our argument, and cuts off its further advance,
just like men who suddenly check with the rein the horses in full
career, and turn them right round by the unexpected shock. Thus
Solomon, who was the wisest of all men,3485
whether before him or in his own time, to whom God gave breadth of
heart, and a flood of contemplation, more abundant than the sand, even
he, the more he entered into the depth, the more dizzy he became, and
declared the furthest point of wisdom to be the discovery of how very
far off she was from him.3486 Paul also
tries to arrive at, I will not say the nature of God, for this he knew
was utterly impossible, but only the judgments of God; and since he
finds no way out, and no halting place in the ascent, and moreover,
since the earnest searching of his mind after knowledge does not end in
any definite conclusion, because some fresh unattained point is being
continually disclosed to him (O marvel, that I have a like experience),
he closes his discourse with astonishment, and calls this the riches of
God,3487 and the depth, and confesses the
unsearchableness of the judgments of God, in almost the very words of
David, who at one time calls God’s judgments the great deep whose
foundations cannot be reached by measure or sense;3488 and at another says that His knowledge of
him and of his own constitution was marvellous,3489
and had attained greater strength than was in his own power or
grasp.
XXII. For if, he says, I leave everything
else alone, and consider myself and the whole nature and constitution
of man, and how we are mingled, and what is our movement, and how the
mortal was compounded with the immortal, and how it is that I flow
downwards, and yet am borne upwards, and how the soul is
circumscribed;3490
3490 v. l. And how
the soul is carried round. | and how it gives
life and shares in feelings; and how the mind is at once circumscribed
and unlimited,3491 abiding in us and
yet travelling over the Universe in swift motion and flow; how it is
both received and imparted by word, and passes through air, and enters
with all things; how it shares in sense, and enshrouds itself away from
sense. And even before these questions—what was our first
moulding and composition in the workshop of nature, and what is our
last formation and completion? What is the desire for and
imparting of nourishment, and who brought us spontaneously to those
first springs and sources of life? How is the body nourished by
food, and the soul by reason? What is the drawing of nature, and
the mutual relation between parents and children, that it should be
held together by a spell of love? How is it that species are
permanent, and are different in their characteristics, although there
are so many that their individual marks cannot be described? How
is it that the same animal is both mortal and immortal3492
3492 Gregory is not here
speaking of the immorality of the individual soul, but of that of the
Race, which it shares with other animals, and which is effected by
continual succession. | , the one by decease, the other by coming
into being? For one departs, and another takes its place, just
like the flow of a river, which is never still, yet ever
constant. And you might discuss many more points concerning
men’s members and parts, and their mutual adaptation both for use
and beauty, and how some are connected and others disjoined, some are
more excellent and others less comely, some are united and others
divided, some contain and others are contained, according to the law
and reason of Nature. Much too might be said about voices and
ears. How is it that the voice is carried by the vocal organs,
and received by the ears, and both are joined by the smiting and
resounding of the medium of the air? Much too of the eyes, which
have an indescribable communion with visible objects, and which are
moved by the will alone, and that together, and are affected exactly as
is the mind. For with equal speed the mind is joined to
the objects of thought, the eye to
those of sight. Much too concerning the other senses, not objects
of the research of reason. And much concerning our rest in sleep,
and the figments of dreams, and of memory and remembrance; of
calculation, and anger, and desire; and in a word, all by which this
little world called Man is swayed.
XXIII. Shall I reckon up for you the
differences of the other animals, both from us and from each
other,—differences of nature, and of production, and of
nourishment, and of region, and of temper, and as it were of social
life? How is it that some are gregarious and others solitary,
some herbivorous and others carnivorous, some fierce and others tame,
some fond of man and domesticated, others untamable and free? And
some we might call bordering on reason and power of learning, while
others are altogether destitute of reason, and incapable of being
taught. Some with fuller senses, others with less; some
immovable, and some with the power of walking, and some very swift, and
some very slow; some surpassing in size or beauty, or in one or other
of these respects; others very small or very ugly, or both; some
strong, others weak, some apt at self-defence, others timid and
crafty3493
3493 The Benedictines here
insert Some well protected; but it is their own conjecture, and is not
found in the Manuscripts. | and others again
are unguarded. Some are laborious and thrifty, others altogether
idle and improvident. And before we come to such points as these,
how is it that some are crawling things, and others upright; some
attached to one spot, some amphibious; some delight in beauty and
others are unadorned; some are married and some single; some temperate
and others intemperate; some have numerous offspring and others not;
some are long-lived and others have but short lives? It would be
a weary discourse to go through all the details.
XXIV. Look also at the fishy tribe gliding
through the waters, and as it were flying through the liquid element,
and breathing its own air, but in danger when in contact with ours, as
we are in the waters; and mark their habits and dispositions, their
intercourse and their births, their size and their beauty, and their
affection for places, and their wanderings, and their assemblings and
departings, and their properties which so nearly resemble those of the
animals that dwell on land; in some cases community, in others contrast
of properties, both in name and shape. And consider the tribes of
birds, and their varieties of form and colour, both of those which are
voiceless and of songbirds. What is the reason of their melody,
and from whom came it? Who gave to the grasshopper the lute in
his breast, and the songs and chirruping on the branches, when they are
moved by the sun to make their midday music, and sing among the groves,
and escort the wayfarer with their voices? Who wove the song for
the swan when he spreads his wings to the breezes, and makes melody of
their rustling? For I will not speak of the forced voices, and
all the rest that art contrives against the truth. Whence does
the peacock, that boastful bird of Media, get his love of beauty and of
praise (for he is fully conscious of his own beauty), so that when he
sees any one approaching, or when, as they say, he would make a show
before his hens, raising his neck and spreading his tail in circle
around him, glittering like gold and studded with stars, he makes a
spectacle of his beauty to his lovers with pompous strides? Now
Holy Scripture admires the cleverness in weaving even of women, saying,
Who gave to woman skill in weaving and cleverness in the art of
embroidery?3494 This
belongeth to a living creature that hath reason, and exceedeth in
wisdom and maketh way even as far as the things of heaven.
XXV. But I would have you marvel at the natural
knowledge even of irrational creatures, and if you can, explain its
cause. How is it that birds have for nests rocks and trees and
roofs, and adapt them both for safety and beauty, and suitably for the
comfort of their nurslings? Whence do bees and spiders get their
love of work and art, by which the former plan their honeycombs, and
join them together by hexagonal and co-ordinate tubes, and construct
the foundation by means of a partition and an alternation of the angles
with straight lines; and this, as is the case, in such dusky hives and
dark combs; and the latter weave their intricate webs by such light and
almost airy threads stretched in divers ways, and this from almost
invisible beginnings, to be at once a precious dwelling, and a trap for
weaker creatures with a view to enjoyment of food? What Euclid
ever imitated these, while pursuing philosophical enquiries with lines
that have no real existence, and wearying himself with
demonstrations? From what Palamedes came the tactics, and, as the
saying is, the movements and configurations of cranes, and the systems
of their movement in ranks and their complicated flight? Who were
their Phidiæ and Zeuxides, and who were the Parrhasii and
Aglaophons who knew how to draw and mould excessively beautiful
things? What harmonious
Gnossian chorus of Dædalus, wrought for a girl3495
3495 The allusion is to a
group made by Dædalus for Ariadne, representing a chorus of youths
and maidens, which seemed to be moving in musical rhythm. It is
described by Homer (Il., xviii., 592 sqq.). | to the highest pitch of beauty? What
Cretan Labyrinth, hard to get through, hard to unravel, as the poets
say, and continually crossing itself through the tricks of its
construction? I will not speak of the ants’ storehouses and
storekeepers, and of their treasurings of wood in quantities
corresponding to the time for which it is wanted, and all the other
details which we know are told of their marches and leaders and their
good order in their works.
XXVI. If this knowledge has come within your reach
and you are familiar with these branches of science, look at the
differences of plants also, up to the artistic fashion of the leaves,
which is adapted both to give the utmost pleasure to the eye, and to be
of the greatest advantage to the fruit. Look too at the variety
and lavish abundance of fruits, and most of all at the wondrous beauty
of such as are most necessary. And consider the power of roots,
and juices, and flowers, and odours, not only so very sweet, but also
serviceable as medicines; and the graces and qualities of colours; and
again the costly value, and the brilliant transparency of precious
stones. Since nature has set before you all things as in an
abundant banquet free to all, both the necessaries and the luxuries of
life, in order that, if nothing else, you may at any rate know God by
His benefits, and by your own sense of want be made wiser than you
were. Next, I pray you, traverse the length and breadth of earth,
the common mother of all, and the gulfs of the sea bound together with
one another and with the land, and the beautiful forests, and the
rivers and springs abundant and perennial, not only of waters cold and
fit for drinking, and on the surface of the earth; but also such as
running beneath the earth, and flowing under caverns, are then forced
out by a violent blast, and repelled, and then filled with heat by this
violence of strife and repulsion, burst out by little and little
wherever they get a chance, and hence supply our need of hot baths in
many parts of the earth, and in conjunction with the cold give us a
healing which is without cost and spontaneous. Tell me how and
whence are these things? What is this great web unwrought by
art? These things are no less worthy of admiration, in respect of
their mutual relations than when considered separately.
How is it that the earth stands solid and
unswerving? On what is it supported? What is it that props
it up, and on what does that rest? For indeed even reason has
nothing to lean upon, but only the Will of God. And how is it
that part of it is drawn up into mountain summits, and part laid down
in plains, and this in various and differing ways? And because
the variations are individually small, it both supplies our needs more
liberally, and is more beautiful by its variety; part being distributed
into habitations, and part left uninhabited, namely all the great
height of Mountains, and the various clefts of its coast line cut off
from it. Is not this the clearest proof of the majestic working
of God?
XXVII. And with respect to the Sea even if I
did not marvel at its greatness, yet I should have marvelled at its
gentleness, in that although loose it stands within its boundaries; and
if not at its gentleness, yet surely at its greatness; but since I
marvel at both, I will praise the Power that is in both. What
collected it? What bounded it? How is it raised and lulled
to rest, as though respecting its neighbour earth? How, moreover,
does it receive all the rivers, and yet remain the same, through the
very superabundance of its immensity, if that term be
permissible? How is the boundary of it, though it be an element
of such magnitude, only sand? Have your natural philosophers with
their knowledge of useless details anything to tell us, those men I
mean who are really endeavouring to measure the sea with a wineglass,
and such mighty works by their own conceptions? Or shall I give
the really scientific explanation of it from Scripture concisely, and
yet more satisfactorily and truly than by the longest arguments?
“He hath fenced the face of the water with His
command.”3496 This is the
chain of fluid nature. And how doth He bring upon it the Nautilus
that inhabits the dry land (i.e., man) in a little vessel, and with a
little breeze (dost thou not marvel at the sight of this,—is not
thy mind astonished?), that earth and sea may be bound together by
needs and commerce, and that things so widely separated by nature
should be thus brought together into one for man? What are the
first fountains of springs? Seek, O man, if you can trace out or
find any of these things. And who was it who cleft the plains and
the mountains for the rivers, and gave them an unhindered course?
And how comes the marvel on the other side, that the Sea never
overflows, nor the Rivers cease to flow? And what is the
nourishing power of water,
and what the difference therein; for some things are irrigated from
above, and others drink from their roots, if I may luxuriate a little
in my language when speaking of the luxuriant gifts of God.
XXVIII. And now, leaving the earth and the
things of earth, soar into the air on the wings of thought, that our
argument may advance in due path; and thence I will take you up to
heavenly things, and to heaven itself, and things which are above
heaven; for to that which is beyond my discourse hesitates to ascend,
but still it shall ascend as far as may be. Who poured forth the
air, that great and abundant wealth, not measured to men by their rank
or fortunes; not restrained by boundaries; not divided out according to
people’s ages; but like the distribution of the Manna,3497 received in sufficiency, and valued for its
equality of distribution; the chariot of the winged creation; the seat
of the winds; the moderator of the seasons; the quickener of living
things, or rather the preserver of natural life in the body; in which
bodies have their being, and by which we speak; in which is the light
and all that it shines upon, and the sight which flows through
it? And mark, if you please, what follows. I cannot give to
the air the whole empire of all that is thought to belong to the
air. What are the storehouses of the winds?3498 What are the treasuries of the
snow? Who, as Scripture hath said, hath begotten the drops of
dew? Out of Whose womb came the ice? and Who bindeth the waters
in the clouds, and, fixing part in the clouds (O marvel!) held by His
Word though its nature is to flow, poureth out the rest upon the face
of the whole earth, and scattereth it abroad in due season, and in just
proportions, and neither suffereth the whole substance of moisture to
go out free and uncontrolled (for sufficient was the cleansing in the
days of Noah; and He who cannot lie is not forgetful of His own
covenant);…nor yet restraineth it entirely that we should not
again stand in need of an Elias3499 to bring the
drought to an end. If He shall shut up heaven, it saith, who
shall open it? If He open the floodgates, who shall shut them
up?3500 Who can bring an excess or withhold a
sufficiency of rain, unless he govern the Universe by his own measures
and balances? What scientific laws, pray, can you lay down
concerning thunder and lightning, O you who thunder from the earth, and
cannot shine with even little sparks of truth? To what vapours
from earth will you attribute the creation of cloud, or is it due to
some thickening of the air, or pressure or crash of clouds of excessive
rarity, so as to make you think the pressure the cause of the
lightning, and the crash that which makes the thunder? Or what
compression of wind having no outlet will account to you for the
lightning by its compression, and for the thunder by its bursting
out?
Now if you have in your thought passed through the air
and all the things of air, reach with me to heaven and the things of
heaven. And let faith lead us rather than reason, if at least you
have learnt the feebleness of the latter in matters nearer to you, and
have known reason by knowing the things that are beyond reason, so as
not to be altogether on the earth or of the earth, because you are
ignorant even of your ignorance.
XXIX. Who spread the sky around us, and set
the stars in order? Or rather, first, can you tell me, of your
own knowledge of the things in heaven, what are the sky and the
stars; you who know not what lies at your very feet, and cannot even
take the measure of yourself, and yet must busy yourself about what is
above your nature, and gape at the illimitable? For, granted that
you understand orbits and periods, and waxings and wanings, and
settings and risings, and some degrees and minutes, and all the other
things which make you so proud of your wonderful knowledge; you have
not arrived at comprehension of the realities themselves, but only at
an observation of some movement, which, when confirmed by longer
practice, and drawing the observations of many individuals into one
generalization, and thence deducing a law, has acquired the name of
Science (just as the lunar phenomena have become generally known to our
sight), being the basis of this knowledge. But if you are very
scientific on this subject, and have a just claim to admiration, tell
me what is the cause of this order and this movement. How came
the sun to be a beacon-fire to the whole world, and to all eyes like
the leader of some chorus, concealing all the rest of the stars by his
brightness, more completely than some of them conceal others. The
proof of this is that they shine against him, but he outshines them and
does not even allow it to be perceived that they rose simultaneously
with him, fair as a bridegroom, swift and great as a giant3501 for I will not let his praises be sung from
any other source than my own Scriptures—so mighty in strength that
from one end to the other of the world he embraces all things in his
heat, and there is nothing hid from the feeling thereof, but it fills
both every eye with light, and every embodied creature with heat;
warming, yet not burning, by the gentleness of its temper, and the
order of its movement, present to all, and equally embracing all.
XXX. Have you considered the importance of
the fact that a heathen writer3502 speaks of the sun
as holding the same position among material objects as God does among
objects of thought? For the one gives light to the eyes, as the
Other does to the mind; and is the most beautiful of the objects of
sight, as God is of those of thought. But who gave him motion at
first? And what is it which ever moves him in his circuit, though
in his nature stable and immovable, truly unwearied, and the giver and
sustainer of life, and all the rest of the titles which the poets
justly sing of him, and never resting in his course or his
benefits? How comes he to be the creator of day when above the
earth, and of night when below it? or whatever may be the right
expression when one contemplates the sun? What are the mutual
aggressions and concessions of day and night, and their regular
irregularities—to use a somewhat strange expression? How
comes he to be the maker and divider of the seasons, that come and
depart in regular order, and as in a dance interweave with each other,
or stand apart by a law of love on the one hand, and of order on the
other, and mingle little by little, and steal on their neighbour, just
as nights and days do, so as not to give us pain by their
suddenness. This will be enough about the sun.
Do you know the nature and phenomena of the Moon,
and the measures and courses of light, and how it is that the sun bears
rule over the day, and the moon presides over the night; and while She
gives confidence to wild beasts, He stirs Man up to work, raising or
lowering himself as may be most serviceable? Know you the bond of
Pleiades, or the fence of Orion3503 as He who
counteth the number of the stars and calleth them all by their
names?3504 Know you the
differences of the glory3505 of each, and the
order of their movement, that I should trust you, when by them you
weave the web of human concerns, and arm the creature against the
Creator?
XXXI. What say you? Shall we pause
here, after discussing nothing further than matter and visible things,
or, since the Word knows the Tabernacle of Moses to be a figure of the
whole creation—I mean the entire system of things visible and
invisible—shall we pass the first veil, and stepping beyond the
realm of sense, shall we look into the Holy Place, the Intellectual and
Celestial creation? But not even this can we see in an
incorporeal way, though it is incorporeal, since it is called—or
is—Fire and Spirit. For He is said to make His Angels
spirits, and His Ministers a flame of fire3506 …though perhaps this
“making” means preserving by that Word by which they came
into existence. The Angel then is called spirit and fire; Spirit,
as being a creature of the intellectual sphere; Fire, as being of a
purifying nature; for I know that the same names belong to the First
Nature. But, relatively to us at least, we must reckon the
Angelic Nature incorporeal, or at any rate as nearly so as
possible. Do you see how we get dizzy over this subject, and
cannot advance to any point, unless it be as far as this, that we know
there are Angels and Archangels, Thrones, Dominions, Princedoms,
Powers, Splendours, Ascents, Intelligent Powers or Intelligencies, pure
natures and unalloyed, immovable to evil, or scarcely movable; ever
circling in chorus round the First Cause (or how should we sing their
praises?) illuminated thence with the purest Illumination, or one in
one degree and one in another, proportionally to their nature and
rank…so conformed to beauty and moulded that they become
secondary Lights, and can enlighten others by the overflowings and
largesses of the First Light? Ministrants of God’s Will,
strong with both inborn and imparted strength, traversing all space,
readily present to all at any place through their zeal for ministry and
the agility of their nature…different individuals of them
embracing different parts of the world, or appointed over different
districts of the Universe, as He knoweth who ordered and distributed it
all. Combining all things in one, solely with a view to the
consent of the Creator of all things; Hymners of the Majesty of the
Godhead, eternally contemplating the Eternal Glory, not that God may
thereby gain an increase of glory, for nothing can be added to that
which is full—to Him, who supplies good to all outside Himself
but that there may never be a cessation of blessings to these first
natures after God. If we have told these things as they deserve,
it is by the grace of the Trinity, and of the one Godhead in Three
Persons; but if less perfectly than we have desired, yet even so our
discourse has gained its purpose. For this is what we were labouring to shew, that
even the secondary natures surpass the power of our intellect; much
more then the First and (for I fear to say merely That which is above
all), the only Nature.E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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