Chapter IX.-On the
World and the
Movements of
Rational Creatures, Whether
Good or
Bad; And on the
Causes of Them.
1. But let us now
return to the
order of our
proposed discussion, and
behold the
commencement of
creation, so
far as the
understanding can
behold the beginning of the
creation of
God. In that
commencement, then, we are to
suppose that
God created so
great a
number of
rational or
intellectual creatures (or by whatever
name they are to be
called), which we have formerly
termed understandings, as He
foresaw would be
sufficient. It is
certain that He made them according to some
definite number,
predetermined by Himself: for it is not to be
imagined, as some would have it, that
creatures have not a
limit, because where there is no
limit there can neither be any
comprehension nor any
limitation. Now if this were the
case, then
certainly created things could neither be
restrained nor
administered by
God. For,
naturally, whatever is
infinite will also be
incomprehensible. Moreover, as
Scripture says, "
God has
arranged all
things in
number and
measure; " and therefore
number will be
correctly applied to
rational creatures or
understandings, that they
may be so
numerous as to
admit of
being arranged,
governed, and
controlled by
God. But
measure will be
appropriately applied to a
material body; and this
measure, we are to
believe, was
created by
God such as He
knew would be
sufficient for the
adorning of the
world. These, then, are the
things which we are to
believe were
created by
God in the beginning,
i.e., before all
things. And this, we
think, is
indicated even in that beginning which
Moses has
introduced in
terms somewhat ambiguous, when he
says, "In the beginning
God made the
heaven and the
earth." For it is
certain that the
firmament is not
spoken of, nor the
dry land, but that
heaven and
earth from which this
present heaven and
earth which we now
see afterwards
borrowed their
names.
2. But since those
rational natures, which we have
said above were made in the beginning, were
created when they did not
previously exist, in
consequence of this very
fact of their
nonexistence and
commencement of
being, are they
necessarily changeable and
mutable; since whatever
power was in their
substance was not in it by
nature, but was the
result of the
goodness of their
Maker. What they are, therefore, is neither their own nor
endures for ever, but is
bestowed by
God. For it did not always
exist; and everything which is a
gift may also be
taken away, and
disappear. And a
reason for
removal will
consist in the
movements of
souls not
being conducted according to
right and
propriety. For the
Creator gave, as an
indulgence to the
understandings created by Him, the
power of
free and
voluntary action, by which the
good that was in them might become their own,
being preserved by the
exertion of their own will; but
slothfulness, and a
dislike of
labour in
preserving what is
good, and an
aversion to and a
neglect of
better things,
furnished the beginning of a
departure from
goodness. But to
depart from
good is nothing else than to be made
bad. For it is
certain that to
want goodness is to be
wicked. Whence it
happens that, in
proportion as one
falls away from
goodness, in the same
proportion does he become
involved in
wickedness. In which
condition, according to its
actions, each
understanding,
neglecting goodness either to a
greater or more
limited extent, was
dragged into the
opposite of
good, which
undoubtedly is
evil. From which it
appears that the
Creator of all
things admitted certain seeds and
causes of
variety and
diversity, that He might
create variety and
diversity in
proportion to the
diversity of
understandings,
i.e., of
rational creatures, which
diversity they must be
supposed to have
conceived from that
cause which we have
mentioned above. And what we
mean by
variety and
diversity is what we now
wish to
explain.
3. Now we
term world everything which is above the
heavens, or in the
heavens, or upon the
earth, or in those
places which are
called the
lower regions, or all
places whatever that anywhere
exist, together with their
inhabitants. This whole, then, is
called world. In which
world certain beings are
said to be
super-celestial,
i.e.,
placed in
happier abodes, and
clothed with
heavenly and
resplendent bodies; and among these many
distinctions are
shown to
exist, the
apostle,
e.g.,
saying, "That one is the
glory of the
sun, another the
glory of the
moon, another the
glory of the
stars; for one
star differeth from another
star in
glory."
Certain beings are
called earthly, and among them,
i.e., among
men, there is no
small difference; for some of them are
Barbarians, others
Greeks; and of the
Barbarians some are
savage and
fierce, and others of a
milder disposition. And
certain of them
live under
laws that have been
thoroughly approved; others, again, under
laws of a more
common or
severe kind; while some, again,
possess customs of an
inhuman and
savage character, rather than
laws. And
certain of them, from the
hour of their
birth, are
reduced to
humiliation and
subjection, and
brought up as
slaves,
being placed under the
dominion either of
masters, or
princes, or
tyrants. Others, again, are
brought up in a
manner more
consonant with
freedom and
reason: some with
sound bodies, some with
bodies diseased from their
early years; some
defective in
vision, others in
hearing and
speech; some
born in that
condition, others
deprived of the
use of their
senses immediately after
birth, or at least
undergoing such
misfortune on
reaching manhood. And why should I
repeat and
enumerate all the
horrors of
human misery, from which some have been
free, and in which others have been
involved, when each one can
weigh and
consider them for himself? There are also
certain invisible powers to which
earthly things have been
entrusted for
administration; and amongst them no
small difference must be
believed to
exist, as is also found to be the
case among
men. The
Apostle Paul indeed
intimates that there are
certain lower powers, and that among them, in like
manner, must
undoubtedly be
sought a
ground of
diversity.
Regarding dumb animals, and
birds, and those
creatures which
live in the
waters, it seems
superfluous to
require; since it is
certain that these
ought to be
regarded not as of
primary, but of
subordinate rank.
4.
Seeing, then, that all
things which have been
created are
said to have been made through
Christ, and in
Christ, as the
Apostle Paul most
clearly indicates, when he
says, "For in Him and by Him were all
things created, whether
things in
heaven or
things on
earth,
visible and
invisible, whether they be
thrones, or
powers, or
principalities, or
dominions; all
things were
created by Him, and in Him; " and as in his
Gospel John indicates the same
thing,
saying, "In the beginning was the
Word, and the
Word was with
God, and the
Word was
God: the same was in the beginning with
God: all
things were made by Him; and without Him was not anything made; " and as in the
Psalm also it is
written," In
wisdom hast Thou made them all; " -
seeing, then,
Christ is, as it were, the
Word and
Wisdom, and so also the
Righteousness, it will
undoubtedly follow that those
things which were
created in the
Word and
Wisdom are
said to be
created also in that
righteousness which is
Christ; that in
created things there
may appear to be nothing
unrighteous or
accidental, but that all
things may be
shown to be in
conformity with the
law of
equity and
righteousness. How, then, so
great a
variety of
things, and so
great a
diversity, can be
understood to be
altogether just and
righteous, I am
sure no
human power or
language can
explain, unless as
prostrate suppliants we
pray to the
Word, and
Wisdom, and
Righteousness Himself, who is the
only-begotten Son of
God, and who,
pouring Himself by His
graces into our
senses,
may deign to
illuminate what is
dark, to
lay open what is
concealed, and to
reveal what is
secret; if, indeed, we should be found either to
seek, or
ask, or
knock so
worthily as to
deserve to
receive when we
ask, or to
find when we
seek, or to have it
opened to us when we
knock. Not
relying, then, on our own
powers, but on the
help of that
Wisdom which made all
things, and of that
Righteousness which we
believe to be in all His
creatures, although we are in the meantime
unable to
declare it, yet,
trusting in His
mercy, we shall
endeavour to
examine and
inquire how that
great variety and
diversity in the
world may appear to be
consistent with all
righteousness and
reason. I
mean, of
course,
merely reason in
general; for it would be a
mark of
ignorance either to
seek, or of
folly to
give, a
special reason for each
individual case.
5. Now, when we
say that this
world was
established in the
variety in which we have above
explained that it was
created by
God, and when we
say that this
God is
good, and
righteous, and most
just, there are
numerous individuals,
especially those who,
coming from the
school of
Marcion, and
Valentinus, and
Basilides, have
heard that there are
souls of
different natures, who
object to us, that it cannot
consist with the
justice of
God in
creating the
word to
assign to some of His
creatures an
abode in the
heavens, and not only to
give such a
better habitation, but also to
grant them a
higher and more
honourable position; to
favour others with the
grant of
principalities; to
bestow powers upon some,
dominions on others; to
confer upon some the most
honourable seats in the
celestial tribunals; to
enable some to
shine with more
resplendent glory, and to
glitter with a
starry splendour; to
give to some the
glory of the
sun, to others the
glory of the
moon, to others the
glory of the
stars; to
cause one
star to
differ from another
star in
glory. And, to
speak once for all, and
briefly, if the
Creator God wants neither the will to
undertake nor the
power to
complete a
good and
perfect work, what
reason can there be that, in the
creation of
rational natures,
i.e., of
beings of whose
existence He Himself is the
cause, He should make some of
higher rank, and others of
second, or
third, or of many
lower and
inferior degrees? In the next
place, they
object to us, with
regard to
terrestrial beings, that a
happier lot by
birth is the
case with some rather than with others; as one
man,
e.g., is
begotten of
Abraham, and
born of the
promise; another, too, of
Isaac and
Rebekah, and who, while still in the
womb,
supplants his
brother, and is
said to be
loved by
God before he is
born.
Nay, this very
circumstance,-
especially that one
man is
born among the
Hebrews, with whom he
finds instruction in the
divine law; another among the
Greeks, themselves also
wise, and
men of no
small learning; and then another amongst the
Ethiopians, who are
accustomed to
feed on
human flesh; or amongst the
Scythians, with whom
parricide is an
act sanctioned by
law; or amongst the
people of
Taurus, where
strangers are
offered in
sacrifice,-is a
ground of
strong objection. Their
argument accordingly is this: If there be this
great diversity of
circumstances, and this
diverse and
varying condition by
birth, in which the
faculty of
free-will has no
scope (for no one
chooses for himself either where, or with whom, or in what
condition he is
born); if, then, this is not
caused by the
difference in the
nature of
souls,
i.e., that a
soul of an
evil nature is
destined for a
wicked nation, and a
good soul for a
righteous nation, what other
conclusion remains than that these
things must be
supposed to be
regulated by
accident and
chance? And if that be
admitted, then it will be no
longer believed that the
world was made by
God, or
administered by His
providence; and as a
consequence, a
judgment of
God upon the
deeds of each
individual will
appear a
thing not to be
looked for. In which
matter, indeed, what is
dearly the
truth of
things is the
privilege of Him alone to
know who
searches all
things, even the
deep things of
God.
6. We, however, although but
men, not to
nourish the
insolence of the
heretics by our
silence, will
return to their
objections such
answers as
occur to us, so
far as our
abilities enable us. We have
frequently shown, by those
declarations which we were
able to
produce from the
holy Scriptures, that
God, the
Creator of all
things, is
good, and
just, and
all-powerful. When He in the beginning
created those
beings which He
desired to
create,
i.e.,
rational natures, He had no other
reason for
creating them than on
account of Himself,
i.e., His own
goodness. As He Himself, then, was the
cause of the
existence of those
things which were to be
created, in whom there was neither any
variation nor
change, nor
want of
power, He
created all whom He made
equal and
alike, because there was in Himself no
reason for
producing variety and
diversity. But since those
rational creatures themselves, as we have
frequently shown, and will yet
show in the
proper place, were
endowed with the
power of
free-will, this
freedom of will
incited each one either to
progress by
imitation of
God, or
reduced him to
failure through
negligence. And this, as we have already
stated, is the
cause of the
diversity among
rational creatures,
deriving its
origin not from the will or
judgment of the
Creator, but from the
freedom of the
individual will. Now
God, who
deemed it
just to
arrange His
creatures according to their
merit,
brought down these
different understandings into the
harmony of one
world, that He might
adorn, as it were, one
dwelling, in which there
ought to be not only
vessels of
gold and
silver, but also of
wood and
clay (and some indeed to
honour, and others to
dishonour), with those
different vessels, or
souls, or
understandings. And these are the
causes, in my
opinion, why that
world presents the
aspect of
diversity, while
Divine Providence continues to
regulate each
individual according to the
variety of his
movements, or of his
feelings and
purpose. On which
account the
Creator will neither
appear to be
unjust in
distributing (for the
causes already
mentioned) to every one according to his
merits; nor will the
happiness or
unhappiness of each one's
birth, or whatever be the
condition that
falls to his
lot, be
deemed accidental; nor will
different creators, or
souls of
different natures, be
believed to
exist.
7. But even
holy Scripture does not
appear to me to be
altogether silent on the
nature of this
secret, as when the
Apostle Paul, in
discussing the
case of
Jacob and
Esau,
says: "For the
children being not yet
born, neither
having done any
good or
evil, that the
purpose of
God according to
election might
stand, not of
works, but of Him who
calleth, it was
said, The
elder shall
serve the
younger, as it is
written,
Jacob have I
loved, but
Esau have I
hated." And after that, he
answers himself, and
says, "What shall we
say then? Is there
unrighteousness with
God? "And that he might
furnish us with an
opportunity of
inquiring into these
matters, and of
ascertaining how these
things do not
happen without a
reason, he
answers himself, and
says, "
God forbid." For the same
question, as it seems to me, which is
raised concerning Jacob and
Esau,
may be
raised regarding all
celestial and
terrestrial creatures, and even those of the
lower world as well. And in like
manner it seems to me, that as he there
says, "The
children being not yet
born, neither
having done any
good or
evil," so it might also be
said of all other
things, "When they were not yet"
created, "neither had yet done any
good or
evil, that the
decree of
God according to
election may stand," that (as
certain think) some
things on the one
hand were
created heavenly, some on the other
earthly, and others, again,
beneath the
earth, "not of
works" (as they
think), "but of Him who
calleth," what shall we
say then, if these
things are so? "Is there
unrighteousness with
God?
God forbid." As, therefore, when the
Scriptures are
carefully examined regarding Jacob and
Esau, it is not found to be
unrighteousness with
God that it should be
said, before they were
born, or had done anything in this
life, "the
elder shall
serve the
younger; "and as it is found not to be
unrighteousness that even in the
womb Jacob supplanted his
brother, if we
feel that he was
worthily beloved by
God, according to the
deserts of his
previous life, so as to
deserve to be
preferred before his
brother; so also is it with
regard to
heavenly creatures, if we
notice that
diversity was not the
original condition of the
creature, but that,
owing to
causes that have
previously existed, a
different office is
prepared by the
Creator for each one in
proportion to the
degree of his
merit, on this
ground, indeed, that each one, in
respect of
having been
created by
God an
understanding, or a
rational spirit, has, according to the
movements of his
mind and the
feelings of his
soul,
gained for himself a
greater or less
amount of
merit, and has become either an
object of
love to
God, or else one of
dislike to Him; while, nevertheless, some of those who are
possessed of
greater merit are
ordained to
suffer with others for the
adorning of the
state of the
world, and for the
discharge of
duty to
creatures of a
lower grade, in
order that by this
means they themselves
may be
participators in the
endurance of the
Creator, according to the
words of the
apostle: "For the
creature was made
subject to
vanity, not
willingly, but by
reason of him who hath
subjected the same in
hope."
Keeping in
view, then, the
sentiment expressed by the
apostle, when,
speaking of the
birth of
Esau and
Jacob, he
says, "Is there
unrighteousness with
God?
God forbid," I
think it
fight that this same
sentiment should be
carefully applied to the
case of all other
creatures, because, as we formerly
remarked, the
righteousness of the
Creator ought to
appear in everything. And this, it
appears to me, will be
seen more
clearly at last, if each one, whether of
celestial or
terrestrial or
infernal beings, be
said to have the
causes of his
diversity in himself, and
antecedent to his
bodily birth. For all
things were
created by the
Word of
God, and by His
Wisdom, and were
set in
order by His
Justice. And by the
grace of His
compassion He
provides for all
men, and
encourages all to the
use of whatever
remedies may lead to their
cure, and
incites them to
salvation.
8. As, then, there is no
doubt that at the
day of
judgment the
good will be
separated from the
bad, and the
just from the
unjust, and all by the
sentence of
God will be
distributed according to their
deserts throughout those
places of which they are
worthy, so I am of
opinion some such
state of
things was formerly the
case, as,
God willing, we shall
show in what
follows. For
God must be
believed to do and
order all
things and at all
times according to His
judgment. For the
words which the
apostle uses when he
says, "In a
great house there are not only
vessels of
gold and
silver, but also of
wood and of
earth, and some to
honour and some to
dishonour; " and those which he
adds,
saying, "If a
man purge himself, he will be a
vessel unto
honour,
sanctified and
meet for the
Master's
use, unto every
good work,"
undoubtedly point out this, that he who shall
purge himself when he is in this
life, will be
prepared for every
good work in that which is to
come; while he who does not
purge himself will be, according to the
amount of his
impurity, a
vessel unto
dishonour,
i.e.,
unworthy. It is therefore
possible to
understand that there have been also formerly
rational vessels, whether
purged or not,
i.e., which either
purged themselves or did not do so, and that
consequently every
vessel, according to the
measure of its
purity or
impurity,
received a
place, or
region, or
condition by
birth, or an
office to
discharge, in this
world. All of which, down to the
humblest,
God providing for and
distinguishing by the
power of His
wisdom,
arranges all
things by His
controlling judgment, according to a most
impartial retribution, so
far as each one
ought to be
assisted or
cared for in
conformity with his
deserts. In which
certainly every
principle of
equity is
shown, while the
inequality of
circumstances preserves the
justice of a
retribution according to
merit. But the
grounds of the
merits in each
individual case are only
recognised truly and
clearly by
God Himself, along with His
only-begotten Word, and His
Wisdom, and the
Holy Spirit.