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CHAP. 11.--RULE FOR INTERPRETING PHRASES WHICH
SEEM TO ASCRIBE SEVERITY TO GOD AND THE SAINTS.
17. Every severity, therefore, and apparent cruelty, either in word
or deed, that is ascribed in Holy Scripture to God or His saints, avails
to the pulling down of the dominion of lust. And if its meaning be clear,
we are not to, give it some secondary reference, as if it were spoken figuratively.
Take, for example, that saying of the apostle: "But, after thy hardness
and impenitent heart, treasurest up unto thyself wrath against the day
of wrath and revelation of the righteous judgment of God; who will render
to every man according to his deeds: to them who, by patient continuance
in well-doing, seek for glory, and honor, and immortality, eternal life;
but unto them that are contentious, and do not obey the truth, but obey
unrighteousness, indignation and wrath, tribulation and anguish, upon every
soul of man that doeth evil, of the Jew first, and also of the Gentile."(3)
But this is addressed to those who, being unwilling to subdue their lust,
are themselves involved in the destruction of their lust. When, however,
the dominion of lust is overturned in a man over whom it had held sway,
this plain expression is used: "They that are Christ's have crucified
the flesh, with the affections and lusts."(4) Only that, even in these
instances, some words are used figuratively, as for example, "the
wrath of God" and "crucified." But these are not so numerous,
nor placed in such a way as to obscure the sense, and make it allegorical
or enigmatical, which is the kind of expression properly called figurative.
But in the saying addressed to Jeremiah, "See, I have this day set
thee over the nations, and over the kingdoms, to root out, and to pull
down, and to destroy, and to throw down,"(5) there is no doubt the
whole of the language is figurative, and to be referred to the end I have
spoken of.
CHAP. 12.--RULE FOR INTERPRETING THOSE SAYINGS
AND ACTIONS WHICH ARE ASCRIBED TO GOD AND THE SAINTS, AND WHICH YET SEEM
TO THE UNSKILLFUL TO BE WICKED.
18. Those things, again, whether only sayings or whether actual deeds,
which appear to the inexperienced to be sinful, and which are ascribed
to God, or to men whose holiness is put before us as an example, are wholly
figurative, and the hidden kernel of meaning they contain is to be picked
out as food for the nourishment of charity. Now, whoever uses transitory
objects less freely than is the custom of those among whom he lives, is
either temperate or superstitious; whoever, on the other hand, uses them
so as to transgress the bounds of the custom of the good men about him,
either has a further meaning in what he does, or is sinful. In all such
matters it is not the use of the objects, but the lust of the user, that
is to blame. Nobody in his sober senses would believe, for example, that
when our Lord's feet were anointed by the woman with precious ointment,(1)
it was for the same purpose for which luxurious and profligate men are
accustomed to have theirs anointed in those banquets which we abhor. For
the sweet odor means the good report which is earned by a life of good
works; and the man who wins this, while following in the footsteps of Christ,
anoints His feet (so to speak) with the most precious ointment. And so
that which in the case of other persons is often a sin, becomes, when ascribed
to God or a prophet, the sign of some great truth. Keeping company with
a harlot, for example, is one thing when it is the result of abandoned
manners, another thing when done in the course of his prophecy by the prophet
Hosea.(2) Because it is a shamefully wicked thing to strip the body naked
at a banquet among the drunken and licentious, it does not follow that
it is a sin to be naked in the baths.
19. We must, therefore, consider carefully what is suitable to times
and places and persons, and not rashly charge men with sins. For it is
possible that a wise man may use the daintiest food without any sin of
epicurism or gluttony, while a fool will crave for the vilest food with
a most disgusting eagerness of appetite. And any sane man would prefer
eating fish after the manner of our Lord, to eating lentiles after the
manner of Esau, or barley after the manner of oxen. For there are several
beasts that feed on commoner kinds of food, but it does not follow that
they are more temperate than we are. For in all matters of this kind it
is not the nature Of the things we use, but our reason for using them,
and our manner of seeking them, that make what we do either praiseworthy
or blameable.
20. Now the saints of ancient times were, under the form of an earthly
kingdom, fore-shadowing and foretelling the kingdom of heaven. And on account
of the necessity for a numerous offspring, the custom of one man having
several wives was at that time blameless: and for the same reason it was
not proper for one woman to have several husbands, because a woman does
not in that way become more fruitful, but, on the contrary, it is base
harlotry to seek either gain or offspring by promiscuous intercourse. In
regard to matters of this sort, whatever the holy men of those times did
without lust, Scripture passes over without blame, although they did things
which could not be done at the present time, except through lust. And everything
of this nature that is there narrated we are to take not only in its historical
and literal, but also in its figurative and prophetical sense, and to interpret
as bearing ultimately upon the end of love towards God or our neighbor,
or both. For as it was disgraceful among the ancient Romans to wear tunics
reaching to the heels, and furnished with sleeves, but now it is disgraceful
for men honorably born not to wear tunics of that description: so we must
take heed in regard to other things also, that lust do not mix with our
use of them; for lust not only abuses to wicked ends the customs of those
among whom we live, but frequently also transgressing the bounds of custom,
betrays, in a disgraceful outbreak, its own hideousness, which was concealed
under the cover of prevailing fashions.
CHAP. 13.--SAME SUBJECT, CONTINUED.
21. Whatever, then, is in accordance with the habits of those with whom
we are either compelled by necessity, or undertake as a matter of duty,
to spend this life, is to be turned by good and great men to some prudent
or benevolent end, either directly, as is our duty, or figuratively, as
is allowable to prophets.
CHAP. 14.--ERROR OF THOSE WHO THINK THAT THERE
IS NO ABSOLUTE RIGHT AND WRONG.
22. But when men unacquainted with other modes of life than their own
meet with the record of such actions, unless they are restrained by authority,
they look upon them as sins, and do not consider that their own customs
either in regard to marriage, or feasts, or dress, or the other necessities
and adornments of human life, appear sinful to the people of other nations
and other times. And, distracted by this endless variety of customs, some
who were half asleep (as I may say)--that is, who were neither sunk in
the deep sleep of folly, nor were able to awake into the light of wisdom--have
thought that there was no such thing as absolute right but that every nation
took its own custom for right; and that, since every nation has a different
custom, and right must remain unchangeable, it becomes manifest that there
is no such thing as right at all. Such men did not perceive, to take only
one example, that the precept, "Whatsoever ye would that men should
do to you, do ye even so to them,"(1) cannot be altered by any diversity
of national customs. And this precept, when it is referred to the love
of God, destroys all vices when to the love of one's neighbor, puts an
end to all crimes. For no one is willing to defile his own dwelling; he
ought not, therefore, to defile the dwelling of God, that is, himself.
And no one wishes an injury to be done him by another; he himself, therefore,
ought not to do injury to another.
CHAP. 15.--RULE FOR INTERPRETING FIGURATIVE EXPRESSIONS.
23. The tyranny of lust being thus over-thrown, charity reigns through
its supremlly just laws of love to God for His own sake, and love to one's
self and one's neighbor for God's sake. Accordingly, in regard to figurative
expressions, a rule such as the following will be observed, to carefully
turn over in our minds and meditate upon what we read till an interpretation
be found that tends to establish the reign of love. Now, if when taken
literally it at once gives a meaning of this kind, the expression is not
to be considered figurative.
CHAP. 16.--RULE FOR INTERPRETING COMMANDS
AND PROHIBITIONS.
24. If the sentence is one of command, either forbidding a crime or
vice, or enjoining an act of prudence or benevolence, it is not figurative.
If, however, it seems to enjoin a crime or vice, or to forbid an act of
prudence or benevolence, it is figurative. "Except ye eat the flesh
of the Son of man," says Christ, "and drink His blood, ye have
no life in you."(2) This seems to enjoin a crime or a vice; it is
therefore a figure, enjoining that we should have a share in the sufferings
of our Lord, and that we should retain a sweet and profitable memory of
the fact that His flesh was wounded and crucified for us. Scripture says:
"If thine enemy hunger, feed him; if he thirst, give him drink;"
and this is beyond doubt a command to do a kindness. But in what follows,
"for in so doing thou shall heap coals of fire on his head,"(3)
one would think a deed of malevolence was enjoined. Do not doubt, then,
that the expression is figurative; and, while it is possible to interpret
it in two ways, one pointing to the doing of an injury, the other to a
display of superiority, let charity on the contrary call you back to benevolence,
and interpret the coals of fire as the burning groans of penitence by which
a man's pride is cured who bewails that he has been the enemy of one who
came to his assistance in distress. In the same way, when our Lord says,
"He who loveth his life shall lose it,"(4) we are not to think
that He forbids the prudence with which it is a man's duty to care for
his life, but that He says in a figurative sense, "Let him lose his
life"--that is, let him destroy and lose that perverted and unnatural
use which he now makes of his life, and through which his desires are fixed
on temporal things so that he gives no heed to eternal. It is written:
"Give to the godly man, and help not a sinner."(5) The latter
clause of this sentence seems to forbid benevolence; for it says, "help
not a sinner." Understand, therefore, that "sinner" is put
figuratively for sin, so that it is his sin you are not to help.
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