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CHAP. 23.--WHY WE REPUDIATE ARTS OF DIVINATION.
35. For in this way it comes to pass that men who lust after evil things
are, by a secret judgment of God, delivered over to be mocked and deceived,
as the just reward of their evil desires. For they are deluded and imposed
on by the false angels, to whom the lowest part of the world has been put
in subjection by the law of God's providence, and in accordance with His
most admirable arrangement of things. And the result of these delusions
and deceptions is, that through these superstitious and baneful modes of
divination many things in the past and future are made known, and turn
out just as they are foretold and in the case of those who practise superstitious
observances, many things turn out agreeably to their observances, and ensnared
by these successes, they become more eagerly inquisitive, and involve themselves
further and further in a labyrinth of most pernicious error. And to our
advantage, the Word of God is not silent about this species of fornication
of the soul; and it does not warn the soul against following such practices
on the ground that those who profess them speak lies, but it says, "Even
if what they tell you should come to pass, hearken not unto them."
I For though the ghost of the dead Samuel foretold the truth to King Saul,(2)
that does not make such sacrilegious observances as those by which his
ghost was brought up the less detestable; and though the ventriloquist
woman(3) in the Acts of the Apostles bore true testimony to the apostles
of the Lord, the Apostle Paul did not spare the evil spirit on that account,
but rebuked and cast it out, and so made the woman clean.(4)
36. All arts of this sort, therefore, are either nullities, or are part
of a guilty superstition, springing out of a baleful fellowship between
men and devils, and are to be utterly repudiated and avoided by the Christian
as the covenants of a false and treacherous friendship. "Not as if
the idol were anything," says the apostle; "but because the things
which they sacrifice they sacrifice to devils and not to God; and I would
not that ye should have fellowship with devils."(5) Now what the apostle
has said about idols and the sacrifices offered in their honor, that we
ought to feel in regard to all fancied signs which lead either to the worship
of idols, or to worshipping creation or its parts instead of God, or which
are connected with attention to medicinal charms and other observances
for these are not appointed by God as the public means of promoting love
towards God and our neighbor, but they waste the hearts of wretched men
in private and selfish strivings after temporal things. Accordingly, in
regard to all these branches of knowledge, we must fear and shun the fellowship
of demons, who, with the Devil their prince, strive only to shut and bar
the door against our return. As, then, from the stars which God created
and ordained, men have drawn lying omens of their own fancy, so also from
things that are born, or in any other way come into exIstence under the
government of God's providence, if there chance only to be something unusual
in the occurrence,--as when a mule brings forth young, or an object is
struck by lightning,--men have frequently drawn omens by conjectures of
their own, and have committed them to writing, as if they had drawn them
by rule.
CHAP. 24.--THE INTERCOURSE AND AGREEMENT WITH
DEMONS WHICH SUPERSTITIOUS OBSERVANCES MAINTAIN.
37. And all these omens are of force just so far as has been arranged
with the devils by that previous understanding in the mind which is, as
it were, the common language, but they are all full of hurtful curiosity,
torturing anxiety, and deadly slavery. For it was not because they had
meaning that they were attended to, but it was by attending to and marking
them that they came to have meaning. And so they are made different for
different people, according to their several notions and prejudices. For
those spirits which are bent upon deceiving, take care to provide for each
person the same sort of omens as they see his own conjectures and preconceptions
have already entangled him in. For, to take an illustration, the same figure
of the letter X, which is made in the shape of a cross, means one thing
among the Greeks and another among the Latins, not by nature, but by agreement
and pre-arrangement as to its signification; and so, any one who knows
both languages uses this letter in a different sense when writing to a
Greek from that in which he uses it when writing to a Latin. And the same
sound, beta, which is the name of a letter among the Greeks, is the name
of a vegetable among the Latins; and when I say, lege, these two syllables
mean one thing to a Greek and another to a Latin. Now, just as all these
signs affect the mind according to the arrangements of the community in
which each man lives, and affect different men's minds differently, because
these arrangements are different; and as, further, men did not agree upon
them as signs because they were already significant, but on the contrary
they are now significant because men have agreed upon them; in the same
way also, those signs by which the ruinous intercourse with devils is maintained
have meaning just in proportion to each man's observations. And this appears
quite plainly in the rites of the augurs; for they, both before they observe
the omens and after they have completed their observations, take pains
not to see the flight or hear the cries of birds, because these omens are
of no significance apart from the previous arrangement in the mind of the
observer.
CHAP. 25.--IN HUMAN INSTITUTIONS WHICH ARE NOT
SUPERSTITIOUS, THERE ARE SOME THINGS SUPERFLUOUS AND SOME CONVENIENT AND
NECESSARY.
38. But when all these have been cut away and rooted out of the mind
of the Christian we must then look at human institutions which are not
superstitious, that is, such as are not set up in association with devils,
but by men in association with one another. For all arrangements that aye
in force among men, because they have agreed among themselves that they
should be in force, are human institutions; and of these, some are matters
of superfluity and luxury, some of convenience and necessity. For if those
signs which the actors make in dancing were of force by nature, and not
by the arrangement and agreement of men, the public crier would not in
former times have announced to the people of Carthage, while the pantomime
was dancing, what it was he meant to express,--a thing still remembered
by many old men from whom we have frequently heard it.I And we may well
believe this, because even now, if any one who is unaccustomed to such
follies goes into the theatre, unless some one tells him what these movements
mean, he will give his whole attention to them in vain. Yet all men aim
at a certain degree of likeness in their choice of signs, that the signs
may as far as possible be like the things they signify. But because one
thing may resemble another in many ways, such signs are not always of the
same significance among men, except when they have mutually agreed upon
them.
39. But in regard to pictures and statues, and other works of this kind,
which are intended as representations of things, nobody makes a mistake,
especially if they are executed by skilled artists, but every one, as soon
as he sees the likenesses, recognizes the things they are likenesses of.
And this whole class are to be reckoned among the superfluous devices of
men, unless when it is a matter of importance to inquire in regard to any
of them, for what reason, where, when, and by whose authority it was made.
Finally, the thousands of fables and fictions, in whose lies men take delight,
are human devices, and nothing is to be considered more peculiarly man's
own and derived from himself than anything that is false and lying. Among
the convenient and necessary arrangements of men with men are to be reckoned
whatever differences they choose to make in bodily dress and ornament for
the purpose of distinguishing sex or rank; and the countless varieties
of signs without which human intercourse either could not be carried on
at all, or would be carried on at great inconvenience; and the arrangements
as to weights and measures, and the stamping and weighing of coins, which
are peculiar to each state and people, and other things of the same kind.
Now these, if they were not devices of men, would not be different in different
nations, and could not be changed among particular nations at the discretion
of their respective sovereigns.
40. This whole class of human arrangements, which are of convenience
for the necessary intercourse of life, the Christian is not by any means
to neglect, but on the contrary should pay a sufficient degree of attention
to them, and keep them in memory.
CHAP. 26.--WHAT HUMAN CONTRIVANCES WE ARE TO ADOPT,
AND WHAT WE ARE TO AVOID.
For certain institutions of men are in a sort of way representations
and likenesses of natural objects. And of these, such as have relation
to fellowship with devils must, as has been said, be utterly rejected and
held in detestation; those, on the other hand, which relate to the mutual
intercourse of men, are, so far as they are not matters of luxury and superfluity,
to be adopted, especially the forms of the letters which are necessary
for reading, and the various languages as far as is required--a matter
I have spoken of above.(2) To this class also belong shorthand characters,(3)
those who are acquainted with which are called shorthand writers.(4) All
these are useful, and there is nothing unlawful in learning them, nor do
they involve us in superstition, or enervate us by luxury, if they only
occupy our minds so far as not to stand in the way of more important objects
to which they ought to be subservient
CHAP. 27.--SOME DEPARTMENTS OF KNOWLEDGE, NOT
OF MERE HUMAN INVENTION, AID US IN INTERPRETING SCRIPTURE.
41. But, coming to the next point, we are not to reckon among human
institutions those things which men nave handed down to us, not as arrangements
of their own, but as the result of investigation into the occurrences of
the past, and into the arrangements of God's providence. And of these,
some pertain to the bodily senses, some to the intellect. Those which are
reached by the bodily senses we either believe on testimony, or perceive
when they are pointed out to us, or infer from experience.
CHAP. 28.--TO WHAT EXTENT HISTORY IS AN AID.
42. Anything, then, that we learn from history about the chronology
of past times assists us very much in understanding the Scriptures, even
if it be learnt without the pale of the Church as a matter of childish
instruction. For we frequently seek information about a variety of matters
by use of the Olympiads, and the names of the consuls; and ignorance of
the consulship in which our Lord was born, and that in which He suffered,
has led some into the error of supposing that He was forty-six years of
age when He suffered, that being the number of years He was told by the
Jews the temple (which He took as a symbol of His body) was in building.(1)
Now we know on the authority of the evangelist that He was about thirty
years of age when He was baptized;(2) But the number of years He lived
afterwards, although by putting His actions together we can make it out,
yet that no shadow of doubt might arise from another source, can be ascertained
more clearly and more certainly from a comparison of profane history with
the gospel. It will still be evident, however, that it was not without
a purpose it was said that the temple was forty and six years in building;
so that, as more secret formation of the body which, for our sakes, the
only-begotten Son of God, by whom all things were made, condescended to
put on.(3)
43. As to the utility of history, moreover, passing over the Greeks,
what a great question our own Ambrose has set at rest! For, when the readers
and admirers of Plato dared calumniously to assert that our Lord Jesus
Christ learnt all those sayings of His, which they are compelled to admire
and praise, from the books of Plato--because (they urged) it cannot be
denied that Plato lived long before the coming of our Lord!--did not the
illustrious bishop, when by his investigations into profane history he
had discovered that Plato made a journey into Egypt at the time when Jeremiah
the prophet was there,(4) show that it is much more likely that Plato was
through Jeremiah's means initiated into our literature, so as to be able
to teach and write those views of his which are so justly praised? For
not even Pythagoras himself, from whose successors these men assert Plato
learnt theology, lived at a date prior to the books of that Hebrew race,
among whom the worship of one God sprang up, and of whom as concerning
the flesh our Lord came. And thus, when we reflect upon the dates, it becomes
much more probable that those philosophers learnt Whatever they said that
was good and true from our literature, than that the Lord Jesus Christ
learnt from the writings of Plato,--a thing which it is the height of folly
to believe.
44. And even when in the course of an historical narrative former institutions
of men are described, the history itself is not to be reckoned among human
institutions; because things that are past and gone and cannot be undone
are to be reckoned as belonging to the course of time, of which God is
the author and governor. For it is one thing to tell what has been done,
another to show what ought to be done. History narrates what has been done,
faithfully and with advantage; but the books of the haruspices, and all
writings of the same kind, aim at teaching what ought to be done or observed,
using the boldness of an adviser, not the fidelity of a narrator.
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