Chapter V.-On
Justice and
Goodness.
I. Now, since this
consideration has
weight with some, that the
leaders of that
heresy (of which we have been
speaking)
think they have
established a
kind of
division, according to which they have
declared that
justice is one
thing and
goodness another, and have
applied this
division even to
divine things,
maintaining that the
Father of our
Lord Jesus Christ is indeed a
good God, but not a
just one, whereas the
God of the
law and the
prophets is
just, but not
good; I
think it
necessary to
return, with as much
brevity as
possible, an
answer to these
statements. These
persons, then,
consider goodness to be some such
affection as would have
benefits conferred on all, although the
recipient of them be
unworthy and
undeserving of any
kindness; but here, in my
opinion, they have not
rightly applied their
definition,
inasmuch as they
think that no
benefit is
conferred on him who is
visited with any
suffering or
calamity.
Justice, on the other
hand, they
view as that
quality which
rewards every one according to his
deserts. But here, again, they do not
rightly interpret the
meaning of their own
definition. For they
think that it is
just to
send evils upon the
wicked and
benefits upon the
good;
i.e., so that, according to their
view, the
just God does not
appear to
wish well to the
bad, but to be
animated by a
kind of
hatred against them. And they
gather together
instances of this, Wherever they
find a
history in the
Scriptures of the
Old Testament,
relating,
e.g., the
punishment of the
deluge, or the
fate of those who are
described as
perishing in it, or the,
destruction of
Sodom and
Gomorrah by a
shower of
fire and
brimstone, or the
falling of all the
people in the
wilderness on
account of their
sins, so that none of those who had
left Egypt were found to have
entered the
promised land, with the
exception of
Joshua and
Caleb. Whereas from the
New Testament they
gather together
words of
compassion and
piety, through which the
disciples are
trained by the
Saviour, and by which it seems to be
declared that no one is
good save God the
Father only; and by this
means they have
ventured to
style the
Father of the
Saviour Jesus Christ a
good God, but to
say that the
God of the
world is a
different one, whom they are
pleased to
term just, but not also
good.
2. Now I
think they must, in the first
place, be
required to
show, if they can,
agreeably to their own
definition, that the
Creator is
just in
punishing according to their
deserts, either those who
perished at the
time of the
deluge, or the
inhabitants of
Sodom, or those who had
quitted Egypt,
seeing we sometimes
behold committed crimes more
wicked and
detestable than those for which the
above-mentioned persons were
destroyed, while we do not yet
sere every
sinner paying the
penalty of his
misdeeds. Will they
say that He who at one
time was
just has been made
good? Or will they rather be of
opinion that He is even now
just, but is
patiently enduring human offences, while that then He was not even
just,
inasmuch as He
exterminated innocent and
sucking children along with
cruel and
ungodly giants? Now, such are their
opinions, because they
know not how to
understand anything beyond the
letter; otherwise they would
show how it is
literal justice for
sins to be
visited upon the
heads of
children to the
third and
fourth generation, and on
children's
children after them. By us, however, such
things are not
understood literally; but, as
Ezekiel taught when
relating the
parable, we
inquire what is the
inner meaning contained in the
parable itself. Moreover, they
ought to
explain this also, how He is
just, and
rewards every one according to his
merits, who
punishes earthly-minded persons and the
devil,
seeing they have done nothing
worthy of
punishment. For they could not do any
good if, according to them, they were of a
wicked and
ruined nature. For as they
style Him a
judge, He
appears to be a
judge not so much of
actions as of
natures; and if a
bad nature cannot do
good, neither can a
good nature do
evil. Then, in the next
place, if He whom the),
call good is
good to all, He is
undoubtedly good also to those who are
destined to
perish. And why does He not
save them? If He does not
desire to do so, He will be no
longer good; if He does
desire it, and cannot
effect it, He will not be
omnipotent. Why do they not rather
hear the
Father of our
Lord Jesus Christ in the
Gospels,
preparing fire for the
devil and his
angels? And how shall that
proceeding, as
penal as it is
sad,
appear to be, according to their
view, the
work of the
good God? Even the
Saviour Himself, the
Son of the
good God,
protests in the
Gospels, and
declares that "if
signs and
wonders had been done in
Tyre and
Sidon, they would have
repented long ago,
sitting in
sackcloth and
ashes." And when He had
come near to those very
cities, and had
entered their
territory, why,
pray, does He
avoid entering those
cities, and
exhibiting to them
abundance of
signs and
wonders, if it were
certain that they would have
repented, after they had been
performed, in
sackcloth and
ashes? But as He does not do this, He
undoubtedly abandons to
destruction those whom the
language of the
Gospel shows not to have been of a
wicked or
mined nature,
inasmuch as it
declares they were
capable of
repentance. Again, in a
certain parable of the
Gospel, where the
king enters in to
see the
guests reclining at the
banquet, he
beheld a
certain individual not
clothed with
wedding raiment, and
said. to him, "
Friend, how
camest thou in
hither, not
having a
wedding garment? "and then
ordered his
servants, "
Bind him
hand and
foot, and
cast him into
outer darkness; there will be
weeping and
gnashing of
teeth." Let them
tell us who is that
king who
entered in to
see the
guests, and
finding one amongst them with
unclean garments,
commanded him to be
bound by his
servants, and
thrust out into
outer darkness. Is he the same whom they
call just? How then had he
commanded good and
bad alike to be
invited, without
directing their
merits to be
inquired into by his
servants? By such
procedure would be
indicated, not the
character of a
just God who
rewards according to
men's
deserts, as they
assert, but of one who
displays undiscriminating goodness towards all. Now, if this must
necessarily be
understood of the
good God,
i.e., either of
Christ or of the
Father of
Christ, what other
objection can they
bring against the
justice of
God's
judgment?
Nay, what else is there so
unjust charged by them against the
God of the
law as to
order him who had been
invited by His
servants, whom He had
sent to
call good and
bad alike, to be
bound hand and
foot, and to be
thrown into
outer darkness, because he had on
unclean garments?
3. And now, what we have
drawn from the
authority of
Scripture ought to be
sufficient to
refute the
arguments of the
heretics. It will not, however,
appear improper if we
discuss the
matter with them
shortly, on the
grounds of
reason itself. We
ask them, then, if they
know what is
regarded among
men as the
ground of
virtue and
wickedness, and if it
appears to
follow that we can
speak of
virtues in
God, or, as they
think, in these
two Gods. Let them
give an
answer also to the
question, whether they
consider goodness to be a
virtue; and as they will
undoubtedly admit it to be so, what will they
say of
injustice? They will never
certainly, in my
opinion, be so
foolish as to
deny that
justice is a
virtue.
Accordingly, if
virtue is a
blessing, and
justice is a
virtue, then without
doubt justice is
goodness. But if they
say that
justice is not a
blessing, it must either be an
evil or an
indifferent thing. Now I
think it
folly to
return any
answer to those who
say that
justice is an
evil, for I shall have the
appearance of
replying either to
senseless words, or to
men out of their
minds. How can that
appear an
evil which is
able to
reward the
good with
blessings, as they themselves also
admit? But if they
say that it is a
thing of
indifference, it
follows that since
justice is so,
sobriety also, and
prudence, and all the other
virtues, are
things of
indifference. And what
answer shall we make to
Paul, when he
says, "If there be any
virtue, and, if there be any
praise,
think on these
things, which ye have
learned, and
received, and
heard, and
seen in me? " Let them
learn, therefore, by
searching the
holy Scriptures, what are the
individual virtues, and not
deceive themselves by
saying that that
God who
rewards every one according to his
merits, does, through
hatred of
evil,
recompense the
wicked with
evil, and not because those who have
sinned need to be
treated with
severer remedies, and because He
applies to them those
measures which, with the
prospect of
improvement, seem nevertheless, for the
present, to
produce a
feeling of
pain. They do not
read what is
written respecting the
hope of those who were
destroyed in the
deluge; of which
hope Peter himself thus
speaks in his first
Epistle: "That
Christ, indeed, was
put to
death in the
flesh, but
quickened by the
Spirit, by which He
went and
preached to the
spirits who were
kept in
prison, who once were
unbelievers, when they
awaited the
long-suffering of
God in the
days of
Noah, when the
ark was
preparing, in which a few,
i.e.,
eight souls, were
saved by
water.
Whereunto also
baptism by a like
figure now
saves you." And with
regard to
Sodom and
Gomorrah, let them
tell us whether they
believe the
prophetic words to be those of the
Creator God-of Him,
viz., who is
related to have
rained upon them a
shower of
fire and
brimstone. What does
Ezekiel the
prophet say of them? "
Sodom," he
says, "shall be
restored to her former
condition." But why, in
afflicting those who are
deserving of
punishment, does He not
afflict them for their
good?-who also
says to
Chaldea, "Thou hast
coals of
fire,
sit upon them; they will be a
help to thee." And of those also who
fell in the
desert, let them
hear what is
related in the
Psalms 78, which
bears the
superscription of
Asaph; for he
says, "When He
slew them, then they
sought Him." He does not
say that some
sought Him after others had been
slain, but he
says that the
destruction of those who were
killed was of such a
nature that, when
put to
death, they
sought God. By all which it is
established, that the
God of the
law and the
Gospels is one and the same, a
just and
good God, and that He
confers benefits justly, and
punishes with
kindness; since neither
goodness without
justice, nor
justice without
goodness, can
display the (
real)
dignity of the
divine nature.
We shall
add the
following remarks, to which we are
driven by their
subtleties. If
justice is a
different thing from
goodness, then, since
evil is the
opposite of
good, and
injustice of
justice,
injustice will
doubtless be something else than an
evil; and as, in your
opinion, the
just man is not
good, so neither will the
unjust man be
wicked; and again, as the
good man is not
just, so the
wicked man also will not be
unjust. But who does not
see the
absurdity, that to a
good God one should be
opposed that is
evil; while to a
just God, whom they
allege to be
inferior to the
good, no one should be
opposed! For there is none who can be
called unjust, as there is a
Satan who is
called wicked. What, then, are we to do? Let us
give up the
position which we
defend, for they will not be
able to
maintain that a
bad man is not also
unjust, and an
unjust man wicked. And if these
qualities be
indissolubly inherent in these
opposites,
viz.,
injustice in
wickedness, or
wickedness in
injustice, then
unquestionably the
good man will be
inseparable from the
just man, and the
just from the
good; so that, as we
speak of one and the same
wickedness in
malice and
injustice, we
may also
hold the
virtue of
goodness and
justice to be one and the same.
4. They again
recall us, however, to the
words of
Scripture, by
bringing forward that
celebrated question of
theirs,
affirming that it is
written, "A
bad tree cannot
produce good fruits; for a
tree is
known by its
fruit." What, then, is their
position? What
sort of
tree the
law is, is
shown by its
fruits,
i.e., by the
language of its
precepts. For if the
law be found to be
good, then
undoubtedly He who
gave it is
believed to be a
good God. But if it be
just rather than
good, then
God also will be
considered a
just legislator. The
Apostle Paul makes
use of no
circumlocution, when he
says, "The
law is
good; and the
commandment is
holy, and
just, and
good." From which it is
clear that
Paul had not
learned the
language of those who
separate justice from
goodness, but had been
instructed by that
God, and
illuminated by His
Spirit, who is at the same
time both
holy, and
good, and
just; and
speaking by whose
Spirit he
declared that the
commandment of the
law was
holy, and
just, and
good. And that he might
show more
clearly that
goodness was in the
commandment to a
greater degree than
justice and
holiness,
repeating his
words, he used, instead of these
three epithets, that of
goodness alone,
saying, "Was then that which is
good made
death unto me?
God forbid." As he
knew that
goodness was the
genus of the
virtues, and that
justice and
holiness were
species belonging to the
genus, and
having in the former
verses named genus and
species together, he
fell back, when
repeating his
words, on the
genus alone. But in those which
follow he
says, "
Sin wrought death in me by that which is
good," where he
sums up
generically what he had beforehand
explained specifically. And in this
way also is to be
understood the
declaration, "A
good man, out of the
good treasure of his
heart,
bringeth forth good things; and an
evil man, out of the
evil treasure,
bringeth forth evil things." For here also he
assumed that there was a
genus in
good or
evil,
pointing out
unquestionably that in a
good man there were both
justice, and
temperance, and
prudence, and
piety, and everything that can be either
called or
understood to be
good. In like
manner also he
said that a
man was
wicked who should without any
doubt be
unjust, and
impure, and
unholy, and everything which
singly makes a
bad man. For as no one
considers a
man to be
wicked without these
marks of
wickedness (nor indeed can he be so), so also it is
certain that without these
virtues no one will be
deemed to be
good. There still
remains to them, however, that
saying of the
Lord in the
Gospel, which they
think is
given them in a
special manner as a
shield,
viz., "There is none
good but one,
God the
Father." This
word they
declare is
peculiar to the
Father of
Christ, who, however, is
different from the
God who is
Creator of all
things, to which
Creator he
gave no
appellation of
goodness. Let us
see now if, in the
Old Testament, the
God of the
prophets and the
Creator and
Legislator of the
word is not
called good. What are the
expressions which
occur in the
Psalms? "How
good is
God to
Israel, to the
upright in
heart!" and, "Let
Israel now
say that He is
good, that His
mercy endureth for ever; " the
language in the
Lamentations of
Jeremiah, "The
Lord is
good to them that
wait for Him, to the
soul that
seeketh Him." As therefore
God is
frequently called good in the
Old Testament, so also the
Father of our
Lord Jesus Christ is
styled just in the
Gospels.
Finally, in the
Gospel according to
John, our
Lord Himself, when
praying to the
Father,
says, "
O just Father, the
world hath not
known Thee." And
lest perhaps they should
say that it was
owing to His
having assumed human flesh that He
called the
Creator of the
world "
Father," and
styled Him "
Just," they are
excluded from such a
refuge by the
words that
immediately follow, "The
world hath not
known Thee." But, according to them, the
world is
ignorant of the
good God alone. For the
word unquestionably recognises its
Creator, the
Lord Himself
saying that the
world loveth what is its own.
Clearly, then, He whom they
consider to be the
good God, is
called just in the
Gospels. Any one
may at
leisure gather together a
greater number of
proofs,
consisting of those
passages, where in the
New Testament the
Father of our
Lord Jesus Christ is
called just, and in the
Old also, where the
Creator of
heaven and
earth is
called good; so that the
heretics,
being convicted by
numerous testimonies,
may perhaps some
time be
put to the
blush.