Chapter VIII.-On the
Angels.
1. A
similar method must be
followed in
treating of the
angels; nor are we to
suppose that it is the
result of
accident that a
particular office is
assigned to a
particular angel: as to
Raphael,
e.g., the
work of
curing and
healing to
Gabriel, the
conduct of
wars; to
Michael, the
duty of
attending to the
prayers and
supplications of
mortals. For we are not to
imagine that they
obtained these
offices otherwise than by their own
merits, and by the
zeal and
excellent qualities which they
severally displayed before this
world was
formed; so that afterwards in the
order of
archangels, this or that
office was
assigned to each one, while others
deserved to be
enrolled in the
order of
angels, and to
act under this or that
archangel, or that
leader or
head of an
order. All of which
things were
disposed, as I have
said, not
indiscriminately and
fortuitously, but by a most
appropriate and
just decision of
God, who
arranged them according to
deserts, in
accordance with His own
approval and
judgment: so that to one
angel the
Church of the
Ephesians was to be
entrusted; to another, that of the
Smyrnaeans; one
angel was to be
Peter's, another
Paul's; and so on through every one of the
little ones that are in the
Church, for such and such
angels as even
daily behold the
face of
God must be
assigned to each one of them; and there must also be some
angel that
encampeth round about them that
fear God. All of which
things,
assuredly, it is to be
believed, are not
performed by
accident or
chance, or because they (the
angels) were so
created,
lest on that
view the
Creator should be
accused of
partiality; but it is to be
believed that they were
conferred by
God, the
just and
impartial Ruler of all
things,
agreeably to the
merits and
good qualities and
mental vigour of each
individual spirit.
2. And now let us
say something
regarding those who
maintain the
existence of a
diversity of
spiritual natures, that we
may avoid falling into the
silly and
impious fables of such as
pretend that there is a
diversity of
spiritual natures both among
heavenly existences and
human souls, and for that
reason allege that they were
called into
being by
different creators; for while it seems, and is
really,
absurd that to one and the same
Creator should be
ascribed the
creation of
different natures of
rational beings, they are nevertheless
ignorant of the
cause of that
diversity. For they
say that it seems
inconsistent for one and the same
Creator, without any
existing ground of
merit, to
confer upon some
beings the
power of
dominion, and to
subject others again to
authority; to
bestow a
principality upon some, and to
render others
subordinate to
rulers. Which
opinions indeed, in my
judgment, are
completely rejected by
following out the
reasoning explained above, and by which it was
shown that the
cause of the
diversity and
variety among these
beings is
due to their
conduct, which has been
marked either with
greater earnestness or
indifference, according to the
goodness or
badness of their
nature, and not to any
partiality on the
part of the
Disposer. But that this
may more
easily be
shown to be the
case with
heavenly beings, let us
borrow an
illustration from what either has been done or is done among
men, in
order that from
visible things we
may, by
way of
consequence,
behold also
things invisible.
Paul and
Peter are
undoubtedly proved to have been
men of a
spiritual nature. When, therefore,
Paul is found to have
acted contrary to
religion, in
having persecuted the
Church of
God, and
Peter to have
committed so
grave a
sin as, when
questioned by the
maid-servant, to have
asserted with an
oath that he did not
know who
Christ was, how is it
possible that
these-who, according to those
persons of whom we
speak, were
spiritual beings-should fall into
sins of such a
nature,
especially as they are
frequently in the
habit of
saying that a
good tree cannot
bring forth evil fruits? And if a
good tree cannot
produce evil fruit, and as, according to them,
Peter and
Paul were
sprung from the
root of a
good tree, how should they be
deemed to have
brought forth fruits so
wicked? And if they should
return the
answer which is
generally invented, that it was not
Paul who
persecuted, but some other
person, I
know not whom, who was in
Paul; and that it was not
Peter who
uttered the
denial, but some other
individual in him; how should
Paul say, if he had not
sinned, that "I am not
worthy to be
called an
apostle, because I
persecuted the
Church of
God? " Or why did
Peter weep most
bitterly, if it were another than he who
sinned? From which all their
silly assertions will be
proved to be
baseless.
3. According to our
view, there is no
rational creature which is not
capable both of
good and
evil. But it does not
follow, that because we
say there is no
nature which
may not
admit evil, we therefore
maintain that every
nature has
admitted evil,
i.e., has become
wicked. As we
may say that the
nature of every
man admits of his
being a
sailor, but it does not
follow from that, that every
man will become so; or, again, it is
possible for every one to
learn grammar or
medicine, but it is not therefore
proved that every
man is either a
physician or a
grammarian; so, if we
say that there is no
nature which
may not
admit evil, it is not
necessarily indicated that it has done so. For, in our
view, not even the
devil himself was
incapable of
good; but although
capable of
admitting good, he did not therefore also
desire it, or make any
effort after
virtue. For, as we are
taught by those
quotations which we
adduced from the
prophets, there was once a
time when he was
good, when he
walked in the
paradise of
God between the
cherubim. As he, then,
possessed the
power either of
receiving good or
evil, but
fell away from a
virtuous course, and
turned to
evil with all the
powers of his
mind, so also other
creatures, as
having a
capacity for either
condition, in the
exercise of the
freedom of their will,
flee from
evil, and
cleave to
good. There is no
nature, then, which
may not
admit of
good or
evil, except the
nature of
God-the fountain of all
good things-and of
Christ; for it is
wisdom, and
wisdom assuredly cannot
admit folly; and it is
righteousness, and
righteousness will never
certainly admit of
unrighteousness; and it is the
Word, or
Reason, which
certainly cannot be made
irrational;
nay, it is also the
light, and it is
certain that the
darkness does not
receive the
light. In like
manner, also, the
nature of the
Holy Spirit,
being holy, does not
admit of
pollution; for it is
holy by
nature, or
essential being. If there is any other
nature which is
holy, it
possesses this
property of
being made
holy by the
reception or
inspiration of the
Holy Spirit, not
having it by
nature, but as an
accidental quality, for which
reason it
may be
lost, in
consequence of
being accidental. So also a
man may possess an
accidental righteousness, from which it is
possible for him to
fall away. Even the
wisdom which a
man has is still
accidental, although it be within our own
power to become
wise, if we
devote ourselves to
wisdom with the
zeal and
effort of our
life; and if we always
pursue the
study of it, we
may always be
participators of
wisdom: and that
result will
follow either in a
greater or less
degree, according to the
desert of our
life or the
amount of our
zeal. For the
goodness of
God, as is
worthy of Him,
incites and
attracts all to that
blissful end, where all
pain, and
sadness, and
sorrow fall away and
disappear.
4. I am of
opinion, then, so
far as
appears to me, that the
preceding discussion has
sufficiently proved that it is neither from
want of
discrimination, nor from any
accidental cause, either that the "
principalities"
hold their
dominion, or the other
orders of
spirits have
obtained their
respective offices; but that they have
received the
steps of their
rank on
account of their
merits, although it is not our
privilege to
know or
inquire what those
acts of
theirs were, by which they
earned a
place in any
particular order. It is
sufficient only to
know this much, in
order to
demonstrate the
impartiality and
righteousness of
God, that,
conformably with the
declaration of the
Apostle Paul, "there is no
acceptance of
persons with Him," who rather
disposes everything according to the
deserts and
moral progress of each
individual, So, then, the
angelic office does not
exist except as a
consequence of their
desert; nor do "
powers"
exercise power except in
virtue of their
moral progress; nor do those which are
called "
seats"
i.e., the
powers of
judging and
ruling,
administer their
powers unless by
merit; nor do "
dominions"
rule undeservedly, for that
great and
distinguished order of
rational creatures among
celestial existences is
arranged in a
glorious variety of
offices. And the same
view is to be
entertained of those
opposing influences which have
given themselves up to such
places and
offices, that they
derive the
property by which they are made "
principalities," or "
powers," or
rulers of the
darkness of the
world, or
spirits of
wickedness, or
malignant spirits, or
unclean demons, not from their
essential nature, nor from their
being so
created, but have
obtained these
degrees in
evil in
proportion to their
conduct, and the
progress which they made in
wickedness. And that is a
second order of
rational creatures, who have
devoted themselves to
wickedness in so
headlong a
course, that they are
unwilling rather than
unable to
recall themselves; the
thirst for
evil being already a
passion, and
imparting to them
pleasure. But the
third order of
rational creatures is that of those who are
judged fit by
God to
replenish the
human race,
i.e., the
souls of
men,
assumed in
consequence of their
moral progress into the
order of
angels; of whom we
see some
assumed into the
number: those,
viz., who have been made the
sons of
God, or the
children of the
resurrection, or who have
abandoned the
darkness, and have
loved the
light, and have been made
children of the
light; or those who,
proving victorious in every
struggle, and
being made
men of
peace, have been the
sons of
peace, and the
sons of
God; or those who,
mortifying their
members on the
earth, and,
rising above not only their
corporeal nature, but even the
uncertain and
fragile movements of the
soul itself, have
united themselves to the
Lord,
being made
altogether spiritual, that they
may be for ever one
spirit with Him,
discerning along with Him each
individual thing, until they
arrive at a
condition of
perfect spirituality, and
discern all
things by their
perfect illumination in all
holiness through the
word and
wisdom of
God, and are themselves
altogether undistinguishable by any one.
We
think that those
views are by no
means to be
admitted, which some are
wont unnecessarily to
advance and
maintain,
viz., that
souls descend to such a
pitch of
abasement that they
forget their
rational nature and
dignity, and
sink into the
condition of
irrational animals, either
large or
small; and in
support of these
assertions they
generally quote some
pretended statements of
Scripture, such as, that a
beast, to which a
woman has
unnaturally prostituted herself, shall be
deemed equally guilty with the
woman, and shall be
ordered to be
stoned; or that a
bull which
strikes with its
horn, shall be
put to
death in the same
way; or even the
speaking of
Balaam's
ass, when
God opened its
mouth, and the
dumb beast of
burden,
answering with
human voice,
reproved the
madness of the
prophet. All of which
assertions we not only do not
receive, but, as
being contrary to our
belief, we
refute and
reject. After the
refutation and
rejection of such
perverse opinions, we shall
show, at the
proper time and
place, how those
passages which they
quote from the
sacred Scriptures ought to be
understood.
Fragment from the First
Book of the
de Principiis.
Translated by
Jerome in His
Epistle to
Avitus.
"It is an
evidence of
great negligence and
sloth, that each one should
fall down to such (a
pitch of
degradation), and be so
emptied, as that, in
coming to
evil, he
may be
fastened to the
gross body of
irrational beasts of
burden."
Another
Fragment from the Same.
Translated in the Same
Epistle to
Avitus.
"At the end and
consummation of the
world, when
souls and
rational creatures shall have been
sent forth as from
bolts and
barriers, some of them
walk slowly on
account of their
slothful habits, others
fly with
rapid flight on
account of their
diligence. And since all are
possessed of
free-will, and
may of their own
accord admit either of
good or
evil, the former will be in a
worse condition than they are at
present, while the latter will
advance to a
better state of
things; because
different conduct and
varying wills will
admit of a
different condition in either
direction,
i.e.,
angels may become
men or
demons, and again from the latter they
may rise to be
men or
angels."