A TREATISE
ON THE
CONFUSION OF LANGUAGES.
Philo Judaeus
I. As to the preceding topics, what has been already said will be sufficient.
We must next proceed to consider, and that in no slight or cursory manner,
the philosophical account which Moses gives us of the confusion of languages;
for he speaks in the following manner: “And all the earth had one
pronunciation, and there was one language among all men. And it came to
pass, as they were moving from the east, that they found a plain in the
land of Shinar, and dwelt there. And one man said to his neighbor, Come,
let us make bricks, and let us burn them with fire; and they had bricks
for stone, and asphalt for mortar. And they said, Come, let us build ourselves
a city, and a tower whose head shall reach to heaven; and let us make for
ourselves a name, before we are scattered over the face of all the earth.
And the Lord came down to see the city, and the tower, which the sons of
men had builded. And the Lord said, Behold, all mankind is one race, and
there is but one language among them all; and they have begun to do this
thing, and now there will not fail unto them anything of all the things
which they desire to do. Come, let us go down and confuse their language
there, so that each may not understand the voice of his neighbor. And the
Lord scattered them from thence over the face of all the earth, and they
desisted from building the city, and the tower. On this account, the name
of it was called Confusion, because there the Lord confused the languages
of all the earth, and from thence the Lord scattered them over the face
of all the earth.” [Genesis xi. 1.]
II. Those who are discontented at the constitution under which their fathers
have lived, being always eager to blame and accuse the laws, being impious
men, use these and similar instances as foundations for their impiety,
saying, "Are ye even now speaking boastfully concerning your precepts,
as if they contained the rules of truth itself? For, behold, the books
which you call the sacred scriptures do also contain fables, at which you
are accustomed to laugh, when you hear others relating them.” And what
is the use of devoting our leisure to collecting the fables interspersed
in so many places throughout the history of the giving of the law, as if
we had especial leisure for the consideration of calumnies, and as if it
were not better to attend merely to what is under our hands and before
us? Certainly, this one fable resembles that which is composed about the
Aloadae, who the greatest and most glorious of all poets, Homer, says,
had in contemplation to heap the three loftiest mountains on one another,
and to build them into one mass, hoping that by this means there would
be a road for them, as they were desirous to mount up to heaven, and that
by these mountains it would be easy for them to be raised to the height
of the sky. And the verses of Homer on this subject are these:-
High on Olympus’ top they strove to raise
Gigantic Ossa; and on Ossa’s heights
To place the leafy Pelion, that heaven
Might thus become accessible.
But Olympus and Ossa and Pelion are the names of mountains. But instead
of these mountains the lawgiver represents a tower as having been built
by these men, who, out of ignorance and wicked ambition, were desirous
to reach the heaven. Every alienation of mind, then, is grievous; for even
if every portion of the whole earth could be built over, a slight foundation
being first laid, and then if a superstructure could be raised in the fashion
of a single pillar, it would still be an enormous distance removed from
the heavenly sphere, and above all would it be so according to the tenets
of those curious philosophers who have affirmed that the earth is the center
of the universe.
III. And there is also another story akin to this, related by the devisers
of fables, concerning the sameness of language existing among animals:
for they say that formerly, all the animals in the world, whether land
animals, or aquatic ones, or winged ones, had but one language, and that,
just as among men Greeks speak the same language as Greeks, and the present
race of barbarians speak the same language as barbarians, exactly in the
same manner every animal was able to converse with every other animal with
which it might meet, and with which it did anything, or from which it suffered
anything, so that they sympathized with one another at their mutual misfortunes,
and rejoiced whenever any of them met with any good fortune; for they could
impart their pleasures and their annoyances to one another by their sameness
of language, so that they felt pleasure together and pain together; and
this similarity of manners and union of feelings lasted, until being sated
with the great abundance of good things which they enjoyed, as often happens,
they were at last drawn on to a desire of what was unattainable, and even
sent an embassy to treat for immortality, requesting to he released from
old age, and to be always endowed with the vigor of youth, saying, that
already one animal of their body, and that a reptile, the serpent, had
received this gift; for he, having put off old age, was allowed again to
grow young; and that it was absurd for the more important animals to be
left behind by an inferior one, or for their whole body to be distanced
by one. However, they suffered the punishment suitable to their audacity,
for they immediately were separated in their language, so that, from that
time forth, they have not been able to understand one another, by reason
of the difference in the dialects into which the one common language of
them all had been divided.
IV. But he who brings his account nearer the truth, has distinguished between
the rational and irrational animals, so that he testifies that identity
of language belonged to men alone: and this also, as they say, is a fabulous
story. And indeed they affirm, that the separation of language into an
infinite variety of dialects, which Moses calls the confusion of tongues,
was effected as a remedy for sins, in order that men might not be able
to co-operate in common for deeds of wickedness through understanding one
another; and that they might not, when they were in a manner deprived of
all means of communication with one another, be able with united energies
to apply themselves to the same actions. But this precaution does not appear
to have turned out of any use; for since that time, though men have been
separated into different nations, and have no longer used one language,
nevertheless, land and sea have been repeatedly filled with unspeakable
evils.
For it was not the languages which were the causes of men’s uniting
for evil objects, but the emulation and rivalry of their souls in wrong-doing.
For even those who have had their tongues cut out can intimate what they
wish by nods and looks, and other positions and motions of the body, not
less than by a distinct utterance of words. And besides this consideration,
there is the fact that, very often, one nation by itself, having not merely
one language, but one code of laws, and one system of manners, has arrived
at such a pitch of iniquity that, as to a superfluity of wickedness, it
may counterbalance the sins of all the men in the world put together. And
again, through ignorance of foreign languages, many persons, having no
foreknowledge of the future, have been anticipated and overwhelmed by those
who were plotting against them; as, on the other hand, by knowledge of
foreign languages, men have been able to repel fears and dangers with which
they have been threatened; so that a community of language is an advantageous
thing rather than an injurious one: since, even at the present day, nothing
contributes so greatly to the safety and protection of the people of each
country, and particularly of the natives, as their being of one language.
For if a man has learnt many dialects, he immediately is looked upon with
consideration and respect by those who are also acquainted with them, as
being already a friendly person, and contributing no small introduction
and means of friendship by reason of his familiarity with words which they
too understand; which familiarity very commonly imparts a feeling of security,
that one is not likely to suffer any great evil at the hands of such a
man. Why, then, did God remove sameness of language from among men as a
cause of evils, when it seems it should rather have been established as
a most useful thing?
V. Those, then, who put these things together, and cavil at them, and raise malicious objections, will be easily refuted
separately by those who can produce ready solutions of all such questions as arise from the plain words of the law, arguing
in a spirit far from contentious, and not encountering them by sophisms drawn from any other source, but following the connection
of natural consequences, which does not permit them to stumble, but which easily puts aside any impediments that arise, so that
the course of their arguments proceeds without any interruption or mishap.
We say then that by the expression, that “all the earth had but one
pronunciation and one language,” is intimated a symphony of great
and unspeakable evils, which cities have inflicted upon cities, nations
upon nations, and countries upon countries, and through which men not only
wrong one another, but also behave with impiety towards God, and yet these
things are the iniquities of many; but let us consider the ineffable multitude
of evils which proceed from each individual man, and especially when he
is under the influence of that ill-timed, and inharmonious, and unmusical agreement.
VI. Now who is there who does not know the great influence of fortune,
when men, in addition to the diseases or mutilations of the body, are attacked
also by poverty and want of reputation? And again, when these things are
further united to diseases of the soul, in consequence of moody melancholy,
driving men beside themselves, or of extreme old age, or of any other severe
calamity which presses upon them? For even one of these evils here mentioned
by itself, when it opposes a man with violence, is sufficient to overthrow
and to crush even one who is very proud and haughty; but when all these
evils, to wit, the evils of the body, and the evils of the soul, and external
misfortunes, all come together as if in one regular battalion, moving by
previous arrangement at the same time, so as to attack him in one body,
what resolution is there which they will not overpower? For when the guards
are slain, it follows of necessity that be who relies on his guards must
fall. Now the guards of the body are wealth, glory, and honors, which set
it up and raise it on high, and make it proud, just as the contrary things,
dishonor, want of reputation, and poverty, throw it down like so many enemies.
Again, the body-guards of the soul are hearing, and seeing, and smelling,
and taste, and the whole band of the outward senses, and also health, and
strength, and vigor, and energy. For the mind, when walking among and living
in the company of these things, as between well-fortified boundaries firmly
standing and solidly established, triumphs and rejoices, meeting with no
hindrance on any side to prevent it from exerting its own impulses, but
having its road in every direction easy, and level, and open, and easy
to be travelled. But the things which are set in opposition and hostility
to these guards are mutilation of the organs of the outward senses, and
disease, as I have said before, by which the mind is often precipitated
into disaster; and these things are all the results of fortune, very grievous
and intrinsically miserable, but still, if compared with those which are
brought on ourselves by our own deliberate will, they are far lighter.
VII. Let us now again in its turn consider what is the united body of evils
voluntarily incurred. Our soul being capable of being divided into three
divisions, one division is said to have fallen to the lot of the mind and
of reason, the second to passion, and the third to appetite; and each separate
one of these has its own peculiar evils, and also they have all common
and mutual diseases. Since the mind reaps the harvest which folly, and
cowardice, and intemperance, and injustice sow; and passion brings forth
frantic and insane strife and conflict, and all the other numerous evils
with which it is pregnant; and appetite disseminates in every direction
the impetuous and fickle loves of youth which descend upon every object,
animate or inanimate, which it chances to meet with. For then, as if in
any vessel, the sailors, and the passengers, and the pilots, had all, under
the influence of insanity, agreed to destroy it, those who have joined
in the plot against it are none the less involved in the same destruction.
For the heaviest of all evils, and almost the only one that is incurable,
is the unanimous energy of all the parts of the soul agreeing to commit
sin, not one of the parts being able to act with soundness (just as is
the case in an evil affecting the whole people), so as to heal those that
are sick; but even the physicians being diseased as well as their patients,
whom the pestilential disease has overwhelmed and weighs down under a confessed calamity.
Of this great evil, that great deluge described by the lawgiver is an image;
for the torrents from heaven continually pouring down cataracts of wickedness
itself with impetuous violence, and springs from the ground (by which I
mean the body) continually bursting up and pouring forth streams of every
passion in great numbers and vast size, which, uniting and being mingled
in the same stream with the other waters, are thrown into confusion, and
overthrow the whole region of the soul which has received them with incessant
eddies and whirlpools. “For,” says Moses, “the Lord God,
seeing that the wickedness of men were multiplied upon the earth, and that
every one did think continually in his heart nothing but evil all his days,
determined to punish man (and here by man I understand the mind, together
with all the reptiles and winged creatures, and all the rest of the multitude
of wild animals which surround him), by reason of his incurable wickedness;
and the punishment which God decided upon was the deluge. For there was
unbounded freedom in sinning, and unlimited licence in doing wrong, no
one hindering it, but all restraints being shamelessly broken down in such
a way that there was no fear left behind to restrain those who were thoroughly
ready to snatch at abundant supplies for enjoyment of every kind. And may
we not say that this was natural? For it was not only one portion of the
soul which was corrupted in such a way that it could still be preserved
by the sound condition of the other parts; but there was no part whatever
of it which was left free from disease or from corruption. For the incorruptible
Judge, says Moses, seeing that every thought of man’s heart (not
one single idea by itself) was evil continually, inflicted upon him a deserved punishment.
VIII. These are they who “made a treaty with one another in the valley
of Salt.” [Genesis xiv. 3.]. For the region of the vices and of the
passions is a hollow valley, rough, and full of ravines truly salt, and
producing bitter pains; and their treaty, as one that was not worthy of
being confirmed by any oath or by any libation, the wise Abraham, who knew
the character of it, annulled. For it is said in the scripture that, “All
these men made a treaty at the valley of Salt, that is the sea of Salt.”
Do you not perceive that they who are barren of wisdom and blinded as to
the intellect which it would be natural to expect should be sharp-sighted,
having the name of Sodomites from their real character, did, with all their
people united together, from young to old, “surround the house in
a circle” [Genesis xix. 4] (that is to say, the house of the soul),
in order to pollute and contaminate those strangers from a foreign land,
who had been received in hospitality, namely, sacred and holy reasons,
the guards and defenders of the soul; no one whatever attempting either
to resist those wrong doers, or to avoid doing wrong himself? For Moses
does not speak of some as having consented and of others having stood aloof;
but, as he says, “The whole people surrounded the house all together,
both old and young,” having entered into.a conspiracy against all
those holy actions and words which it is customary to call angels.
IX. But Moses, the prophet of God, will meet them and check them though
they come on with exceeding boldness; even though, placing in the front
him who is the boldest and the most forward and able speaker among them
as their king, namely speech, they rush on with one impulse, hoping to
increase their strength as they go on, and overflowing like a river; “For
behold,” says Moses, “the king of Egypt is coming to the water;
but do thou go to meet him, and stand on the bank of the river.”
[Exodus vii. 15.] Therefore the wicked man goes forth to the stream of
iniquities and passions, and all collected evils, which are here likened
to water; but the wise man first obtains from God, who always stands firm,
an honor akin to his undeviating, and in all respects and under all circumstances,
unchangeable power; for we read in the scripture, “ But do thou stand
here with me,” [Deuteronomy v. 31], that having laid aside doubt
and vacillation, the dispositions of an infirm soul, he may put on that
most steadfast and trustworthy disposition, faith. In the next place, even
while standing still, he (which seems a most extraordinary thing) goes
forward to meet him; for it is said to him, “Thou shalt stand meeting
him,” and yet to go to meet is a part of motion, while to stand still
is regarded as characteristic of tranquillity.
But the prophet does not here say things which are inconsistent, but rather such as are exceedingly in accordance with
nature; for the man whose mind is naturally disposed to be tranquil, and is established undeviatingly, must necessarily be
at variance with all those who delight in disorder and confusion, and who by artificial storms seek to disturb him who is
capable of enjoying tranquillity.
X. It is very appropriately said that the meeting took place on the bank
of the river; but the banks are also called the lips, and the lips are
the boundaries of the mouth, and are a sort of fence to the tongue, through
which the stream of discourse is borne, when it begins to be uttered; but
those who hate virtue and who love learning, use speech as their ally for
the exposition of doctrines which are disapproved; and again on the other
hand, virtuous men employ it for the refutation of such doctrines, and
for establishing the irresistible strength of the better and true wisdom.
When then, after having had recourse to every expedient of contentious
doctrines, men are destroyed, being overwhelmed by the opposing violence
of contrary arguments, then the wise man will very justly and suitably
establish a most sacred chorus, and melodiously sing a triumphal song;
“For,” says Moses, “Israel saw the Egyptians,”
not dead in any other place, but “on the bank of the river;”
[Exodus xiv. 30], meaning here by death, not the separation of the soul
from the body, but the impetuous onset of unholy doctrines and assertions,
which men utter by the mouth, and tongue, and the other organs of speech.
But the death of speech is silence, not that silence which well-bred people
cultivate, making it a symbol of modesty—for this silence is itself
a faculty and a sister of that one which is developed in speech, arranging
what is to he said with reference to time—but that silence which
the sick and the weary against their will endure, on account of the strength
of their antagonists, because they cannot find any handle to answer them;
for whatever they touch slips away from them, and whatever thing they seek
to take their stand on does not remain, so that they of necessity fall
before they stand, like that hydrostatic machine called the helix; for
in the middle of that engine there are some steps, which the husbandman
when he desires to water his fields mounts up upon, but is rolled round
of necessity, and in order to avoid falling he is continually catching
at the nearest firm thing that he can lay his hands on, which he takes
hold of and so supports his whole body; for instead of his hands he uses
his feet, and instead of his feet he uses his hands; for he stands on his
hands, by means of which, actions are usually done, and he acts with his
feet on which it is natural to stand.
XI. But many, who are not able vigorously to refute the plausible inventions
of the sophists, because they have not very much practiced discussion by
reason of their continued application to action, have taken refuge in the
alliance of the only wise Being, and have besought him to become their
defender. As one of the friends of Moses, when praying, says in his hymns,
“Let the treacherous lips become mute;” [Psalm xxx. 19.], and how can they
become mute if they are not curbed by the only being who has speech itself as his subject? We must therefore flee, without
ever turning back, from all associations entered into for the purposes of sin; but the alliance made with the companions of
wisdom and knowledge must be confirmed. In reference to which I admire those who say, “We are all one man’s sons,
we are men of peace,” [Genesis xlii. 11], because of their well-adapted agreement; since
how, I should say, could you, O excellent men, avoid being grieved at war, and delighted in peace, being the sons of one and
the same father, and he not mortal but immortal, the man of God, who being the reason of the ever-lasting God, is of necessity
himself also immortal?
For they who make out many beginnings of the origin of the soul, being
devoted to the evil which is called polytheism, and turning each individual
of them, to the honor of different beings, have caused great confusion
and dissension both at home and abroad, from the beginning of their birth
to the end of their life, filling life with irreconcilable quarrels; but
they who rejoice in one kind alone, and who honor one as their father,
namely right reason, admiring the well-arranged and all-musical harmony
of the virtues, live a tranquil and peaceful life, not an inactive and
ignoble one, as some persons think, but one of great manliness, and sharpened,
and vigorous against those who endeavor to break the confederacy which
they have formed, and who are always studying to bring about a violation
of the oaths which have been taken; for it has come to pass that the men
of peace have become men of war, sitting down to attack and to oppose those
who seek to overturn the firmness of the soul.
XII. And there is testimony in support of this assertion of mine; first
of all, in the disposition of every lover of virtue which acknowledges
these inclinations; and secondly, in that comrade of the band of the prophets,
who being inspired with a sacred frenzy, spoke thus, “O my mother,
how hast thou brought me forth, a man of war, and a man of disquietude
to all the earth! I have not benefited them, and they have not benefited
me; nor is my strength free from their curses.” [Jeremiah xv. 10].
But is not every wise man of necessity an irreconcilable enemy to all wicked
men, not indeed using the apparatus of triremes or warlike engines, or
arms, or soldiers, for his defense, but reasons? For when he sees war stirred
up in the midst of tranquil peace, so as to be continued and incessant
among all men, both public and private, not existing only among nations
and countries, and cities and villages, but also in every house, and between
each particular individual; who is there who does not reproach and admonish
and seek to correct the foolish men whom he sees, and not by day only,
but also by night, his soul being unable to remain tranquil by reason of
the hatred of wickedness implanted in his nature?
For they do in peace every thing that is done in war; they plunder, they
ravage, they drag into slavery, they carry off booty, they lay waste, they
behave insolently, they assault, they destroy, they pollute, they murder
treacherously, they murder openly if they are the more powerful; for every
one of them, proposing to himself riches or glory as his object, aims all
the actions of his life as so many arrows at it, and neglects equality,
and pursues inequality, and repudiates associations, and labors to acquire
to himself all the possessions together properly belonging to every one;
he is a misanthrope and a hater of all his fellows, making a hypocritical
pretense of benevolence, being a companion of a bastard kind of flattery,
an enemy of genuine friendship, a foe to truth, a champion of falsehood,
slow to do good, swift to do injury, very ready to calumniate, very slow
to defend, clever at deceiving, most perjured, most faithless, a slave
of anger, yielding to pleasure, a guardian of all that is evil, a destroyer
of all that is good.
XIII. These and other similar gifts are the most desirable treasures of
peace, that blessing so celebrated and so admired, which the mind of each
individual among the foolish men sets up for itself as an image, and admires
and worships; at whom, very naturally, every wise man is grieved, and is
accustomed to say to his mother and nurse, wisdom, “O mother, what
a person hast thou brought me forth!” not in strength of body, but
in energy and courage, a determined hater of wickedness, a man of disquietude
and battle, by nature peaceful, and, on this very account, an enemy to
those who pollute the desirable beauty of peace. “I have done no
good to them, nor have they done any good to me;” nor have they even
derived any advantage from my good things, nor have I from their evil things;
but according to the word of Moses, “I have received no desirable
thing from any one of them,” [Numbers xvi. 15.], inasmuch as I look
upon as exceedingly pernicious every object of their desire, which they
treasure up in their hearts as the greatest possible advantage; “Nor
has my strength failed by reason of the curses which they laid upon me;”
[Psalm lxxix. 7.], but embracing the divine doctrines with my most earnest
power, I was not wearied so as to give up, but rather I vigorously reproached
those who cursed me from their hearts.
For God made us to be a contradiction to our neighbors, as is said in my hymns, meaning all of us who aim at right reason:
but are not all those people naturally fond of contradiction who have a zeal for knowledge and virtue, being always at variance
with the neighbors of their soul, reproving the pleasures which live in union with them, and reproving the appetites which have
the same abode, and looking morosely at acts of cowardice and fear, and the whole body of passions and vices?
Reproving then every outward sense, the eyes for what they saw, and the
ears for what they heard, and the sense of smell for the smells that presented
themselves to it, the taste for the flavors which were subjected to it,
and moreover the touch for its various powers developed in the body, with
reference to the peculiarities which come under its notice; and even uttered
speech for the matters which it may have chosen to discuss; for what the
outward sense has perceived, or how it has done so, or why, or what speech
has uttered, or how or why, or in what manner, and how and why passion
has disposed men, it is worth while to investigate in no superficial manner,
and to examine each of the errors into which they fall; but he who contradicts
none of these things, but who assents to every one of them in succession,
without being aware of it, is deceiving himself, and building up troublesome
neighbors for his soul, which he had better have as subjects than as rulers;
for as rulers they will do him manifold and great injury, since folly reigns
among them; but as subjects they will serve him obediently in suitable
matters, and will not at all raise their heads in arrogance, as they will
if they are rulers.
Thus, indeed, while some are learning to be subjects, and others are obtaining
authority, not by knowledge only but also by power, all the body-guards
and champions of the soul, that is to say, its reasonings will keep them
in order, and coming to that which is most important among them will say,
“Thy children have taken the sum of the men that are warriors among us,
and there is not one of them who has disagreed;” [Numbers xxxi. 49], but
like musical instruments, skillfully tuned in all their tones, so we sound
in harmony in all our explanations, neither uttering any word nor doing
any action which shall be unmelodious or discordant, that we may by the
contrast show, that the other company of unlettered men is, in all respects,
voiceless and dead, and an object of deserved ridicule, namely, that nourishment
of the corporeal parts, Midian, and that his offspring too, that mass of
skins, whose name is Belphegor, is asleep; “for we are of the race of picked
men of Israel, that sees God, of whom not one has disagreed;” that the
instrument of the universe, the whole world, may be melodiously sounded
in musical harmony.
On this account Moses says that the “reward of peace” was given to the
very war-like reason, which is called Phinehas; because, having received
a zeal for virtue, and having taken up war against vice, he cut up the
whole of generation; and in the second place, to all those who are willing,
after a careful examination and investigation, using their eyes in preference
to their ears as a trustworthy witness, to believe that the human race
is full of infidelity, depending solely on opinion. Therefore the afore-mentioned
agreement is admirable; and most admirable of all is that common one which
exceeds all the harmonies of all the others, according to which the whole
people is represented as saying with one accord, “All the things which
God has spoken, we will obey and do.” [Deuteronomy v. 27.] For these men
no longer obey reason as their ruler, but God, the governor of the universe,
by whom they are assisted so as to display their energies in actions rather
than in words. For when they hear of others doing such and such things,
these men, which is a thing most contrary to what one would expect, say
that, from some inspiration of God, they will act first and obey afterwards;
in order that they may seem to have advanced to good actions, not in consequence
of instruction and admonition, but by their own spontaneous and self-taught
mind. And then, when they have accomplished these actions, they say that
they will obey in order that they may form an opinion of what they have
done, as to whether their actions are consistent with the divine injunctions
and the sacred admonitions of scripture.
XIV. But those who conspired to commit injustice, he says, “having come
from the east, found a plain in the land of Shinar, and dwelt there;” [Genesis
xi. 2], speaking most strictly in accordance with nature. For there is
a twofold kind of dawning in the soul, the one of a better sort, the other
of a worse. That is the better sort, when the light of the virtues shines
forth like the beams of the sun; and that is the worse kind, when they
are overshadowed, and the vices show forth. Now, the following is an example
of the former kind: “And God planted a paradise in Eden, toward the east,”
[Genesis ii. 8], not of terrestrial but of celestial plants, which the
planter caused to spring up from the incorporeal light which exists around
him, in such a way as to be for ever inextinguishable.
I have also heard of one of the companions of Moses having uttered such
a speech as this: “Behold, a man whose name is the East!” [Zechariah vi.
12]. A very novel appellation indeed, if you consider it as spoken of a
man who is compounded of body and soul; but if you look upon it as applied
to that incorporeal being who in no respect differs from the divine image,
you will then agree that the name of the east has been given to him with
great felicity. For the Father of the universe has caused him to spring
up as the eldest son, whom, in another passage, he calls the firstborn;
and he who is thus born, imitating the ways of his father, has formed such
and such species, looking to his archetypal patterns.
XV. But an example of the worse kind of dawning is afforded by the words
used by the man who was willing “to curse the people who were blessed by
God.” [Numbers xxiii. 7]. For he also is represented as dwelling in the
east. And this dawning, having the same name as the former one, has nevertheless
an opposite nature to it, and is continually at war with it. For Balaam
says, “Balak sent for me out of Mesopotamia, from the mountains of the
east, saying, Come, curse me the people whom God doth not curse.” But the
name of Balak, being interpreted means, “void of sense;” a very felicitous name.
For how can it be otherwise than shocking to hope to deceive the living
God, and to turn aside his most enduring and firmly established
counsels by the sophistical devices of men? On this account he is
represented as living in Mesopotamia, for his mind is overwhelmed as
in the middle of the depth of the river, and is not able to emerge
and to swim away. And this condition is the dawning of folly and the
setting of sound reason.
They, then, who are tuned in an inharmonious symphony are said to be moved
from the east. Is this, then, the east according to wickedness? But the
dawning in accordance with virtue is described as a complete separation,
and the motion from the dawning according to vice is a united one, as when
the hands are moved, not separately and disjunctively, but in a certain
harmony and connection with the whole body. For folly is to the wicked
man the beginning of his energy in the works which are contrary to nature,
that is, of his approach to the region of wickedness. But all those who
have quitted the region of virtue, and have set forth to go over to folly,
have found a most appropriate place in which they dwell, which is called
in the Hebrew language Shinar. And Shinar in Greek, is called “shaking;”
for the whole life of the wicked is shaken, and agitated, and torn to pieces,
being always kept in a state of commotion and confusion, and having no
trace of any genuine good laid up in itself. For as everything which is
not held together by close union, falls out of what is violently shaken,
in the very same manner, it seems to me, that the soul is shaken of every
man who associates with others for the purpose of doing wrong; for he casts
away every appearance of good, so that no shadow or image of it ever appears.
XVI. Accordingly, the body-loving race of the Egyptians is represented
as fleeing, not from the water, but “under the water,” that is to say,
beneath the impetuous speed of the passions. And when it has once placed
itself under the power of the passions, it is shaken and agitated; it casts
away the stable and peaceful qualities of virtue, and takes up in their
stead the turbulent and confused character of wickedness; for it is said
that “God shook the Egyptians in the middle of the sea, fleeing under the
water.” [Exodus xiv. 27.]. These are they who neither knew Joseph—the diversified
pride of life—but who, having their sins revealed, have not received any
trace, or shade, or image of goodness and excellence. For, says Moses,
“Another king arose over the Egyptians who knew not Joseph,” [Exodus i.
8], the latest and most modern good perceptible by the outward senses,
who utterly destroyed not only the perfections but even all improvements,
and all the energy which can be exerted by the sight, and all the teaching
which can be implanted by means of the hearing, saying, “Come, curse me
Jacob; and come, defy Israel for me;” [Numbers xxiii. 7], an expression
which is equivalent to, Destroy both these things, the sight and the hearing
of the soul, that it may neither see nor hear any true and genuine good
thing; for Israel is the emblem of seeing and Jacob of hearing. Accordingly
the mind of such persons rejects the whole nature of good, being in some
degree shaken; and, on the other hand, the mind of good persons, setting
up a claim to the unmingled and unalloyed ideas of good things, shakes
off and discards all that is evil.
Consider, therefore, what the practicer of virtue says: “Take up the foreign gods that are among you from out of the
midst of you, and purify yourselves, and change your garments, and rise up and let us go to Bethel;” [Genesis
xxxv. 2], in order that, even if Laban should demand a power of examining,
the images might not be found in his whole house, but only such things
as have a real subsistence and essence, being fixed like pillars in the
mind of the wise man, which the self-taught offspring Isaac has received
as his inheritance; for he alone receives his father’s substance as his
inheritance. [Genesis xxv. 5].
XVII. And take notice that Moses does not say that they came unto a plain
in which they remain, but that they “found” one, having searched around
in every direction, and having considered what might be the most suitable
region for folly; for in reality every foolish man does not take from another
for himself, but he seeks for and finds evils, not being content only with
those which wicked nature proceeds towards of its own accord, but also
adding thereto such perfect skill in evil as arises from constant practice
in contriving wrong. And I wish indeed that after he had remained there
a brief time he had changed his abode; but even now he thinks fit to remain,
for it is said that having found the plain they dwelt there; having settled
there as if in their own country and not as if in a foreign land; for it
would have been less terrible for men who had fallen in with wicked actions
to look upon them as strange and foreign to them, and not to consider that
they had any kindred or connection with them. For if they had looked upon
themselves as sojourners among them, they would have changed their abode
at a subsequent time, but now having settled fixedly among them they were
likely to dwell there for ever.
For this reason all the wise men mentioned in the books of Moses are represented as sojourners, for their souls are sent
down from heaven upon earth as to a colony; and on account of their fondness for contemplation, and their love of learning, they
are accustomed to migrate to the terrestrial nature. Since therefore having taken up their abode among bodies, they behold all the
mortal objects of the outward senses by their means, they then subsequently return back from thence to the place from which they
set out at first, looking upon the heavenly country in which they have the rights of citizens as their native land, and as the earthly
abode in which they dwell for a while as in a foreign land.
For to those who are sent to be the inhabitants of a colony, the country
which has received them is in place of their original mother country; but
still the land which has sent them forth remains to them as the house to
which they desire to return. Therefore, very naturally, Abraham says to
the guardians of the dead and to the arrangers of mortal affairs, after
he has forsaken that life which is only dead and the tomb, “I am a stranger
and a sojourner among you,” [Genesis xxiii. 4], but ye are natives of the country, honoring the dust and earth more than
the soul, thinking the name Ephron worthy of precedence, for Ephron, being
interpreted, means “a mound” and naturally, Jacob, the practicer of virtue,
bewails his being a sojourner in the body, saying, “The days of the years
of my life which I spend here as a sojourner have been few and evil; they
have not come up to the days of my fathers which they spent as sojourners.”
[Genesis xlvii. 9]. But
to him who was self-taught the following injunction of scripture was given,
“Do not go down,” says the scripture, “to Egypt,” that is to say to passion;
“but dwell in this land which I will tell thee of,” [Genesis xxvi. 9],
namely, in the incorporeal wisdom which cannot be pointed out to the eye;
and be a sojourner in this land, the substance which can be pointed out
and appreciated by the external sense. And this is said with a view to
show, that the wise man is a sojourner in a foreign land, that is to say
in the body perceptible by the outward senses, who dwells among the virtues
appreciable by the intellect as in his native land, which virtues God utters
as in no way differing from the divine word. But Moses says, “I am a sojourner
in a foreign land;” speaking with peculiar fitness, looking upon his abode
in the body not only as a foreign land, as sojourners do, but also as a
land from which one ought to feel alienated, and never look upon it as
one’s home.
XVIII. But the wicked man, desiring to exhibit the fact that identity of
language, and the sameness of dialect does not consist more in names and
common words than in his participation in iniquitous actions, begins to
build a city and a tower as a citadel for sovereign wickedness; and he
invites all his fellow revellers to partake in his enterprise, preparing
beforehand abundance of suitable materials. For, “Come,” says he, “let
us make bricks, and let us bake them in the fire,” an expression equivalent
to, Now we have all the parts of the soul mingled together and in a state
of confusion, so that there is no species whatever the form of which is
evident to be seen. Therefore it will be consistent with these beginnings
that, as we have assumed a certain essence destitute of all particular
species; and of all distinctive qualities, and have also taken up with
passion and vice, we should also divide it into suitable qualities, and
keep on reducing the proximate to the ultimate species; and with a view
to the more distinct comprehension of them, and also to this employment
and enjoyment of them combined with experience, which appears to produce
many pleasures and delights.
Come, therefore, all ye reasonings of counsellors, in some way or the other
to the assembly of the soul; come, all ye who meditate the destruction
of justice and of all virtue, and let us consider carefully how we may
attain to the end which we desire. Now of success in this matter these
will be the most established foundations: to give to things without form
shape and character, and to distinguish each thing separately with distinct
outlines, lest, if they become shaken and lame (though fixed on firm foundations,)
and if they have assumed a connection with the nature of a quadrangular
shape, (for this is a nature always unshaken), they may then, being established
steadily like a building of brick, support even those things which are
built upon them.
XIX. Of such a structure as this every mind adverse to God, which we call
the king of Egypt (that is to say of the body), is found to be the maker.
For Moses represents the mind as rejoicing in the buildings made of brick;
for after some being or other made the two substances of water and earth
to be the one dry and the other solid, and mingling the two together, for
they were easily dissoluble and corruptible, made a third substance to
be on the confines of the two, which is called clay, he has never ceased
from dissecting this into small portions, giving its own appropriate figure
to each of the fragments, in order that they might be very well compacted
together, and very suitable to the objects for which they were intended.
For in this way what was being made was sure to be very easily perfected.
Imitating this work, those men who are wicked in their natures, when they
mingle the irrational and extravagant impulses of the passions with the
most grievous vices, are, in reality, dissecting that which has been combined
into various species, and unhappy that they are fashioning them again and
reducing them into shape, by means of which the blockade of the soul will
be raised on high; these being, in fact, the divisions of the outward sense
into seeing, and hearing, and taste, and smell, and touch. Passion, again,
is divided into pleasure, and appetite, and fear, and grief; and the universal
genus of vices is divided into folly, and intemperance, and cowardice,
and injustice, and all the other vices which are akin to or closely connected
with them.
XX. And before now some persons, even more excessively extravagant in wickedness
than these, have not only prepared their own souls for such actions, but
have also put a force upon those of a superior class and of the genus which
is endowed with acuteness of vision, and have “compelled them to make bricks
and to build strong cities” [Exodus i. 11] for the mind, which has appeared
to occupy the place of king, wishing to point out this fact, that what
is good is the slave of what is evil, and that subjection to the passions
is more powerful than tranquillity of soul, and prudence, and all virtue
is, but, as it were, a subject of folly and all wickedness, so as of necessity
to minister in all the matters which the master power enjoins; for behold,
says Moses, the most pure, and brilliant, and far-sighted eye of the soul,
to which alone it is permitted to behold God, by name Israel, being formerly
bound in the corporeal nets of Egypt, endures severe commands, so as to
be compelled to make bricks and all sorts of things of clay with the most
grievous and intolerable labors, at which it is very naturally pained,
and at which it groans, having laid up this, as it were, to be its only
treasure amid its evils, the power of bewailing its present distresses.
For it is said, very correctly, that “the children of Israel groaned by
reason of their tasks.” [Exodus ii. 23]. And what man in his senses is
there who, if he saw the tasks of the generality of men, and the exceeding
earnestness with which they labor at the pursuits to which they are accustomed
to devote themselves, whether it be the acquisition of money, or glory,
or the enjoyment of pleasure, would not be greatly concerned and cry out
to God, the only Savior, that he would lighten their labors, and pay a
ransom and price for the salvation of the soul, so as to emancipate and
deliver it?
What, then, is the surest freedom? The service of the only wise God, as the scriptures testify, in which it is said, “Send forth
the people, that they may serve me.” [Exodus viii. 1]. But it is a peculiar property of those who serve
the living God neither to regard the works of cup-bearers, or bakers, or cooks, or any other earthly employments, nor to trouble
themselves about arranging or adorning their bodies like bricks, but to mount up with their reason to the height of heaven, having
elected Moses, the type of the race which loves God, to be the guide of their path; for then “they will see the place which
is visible,” [Exodus xxiv. 10], on which the unchangeable and unalterable God stands; and the footstool
beneath his feet, which is, as it were, a work of sapphire stone, and, as it were, a resemblance to the firmament of heaven, namely,
the world perceptible by the outward senses, which he describes allegorically by these figures. For it is very suitable for those
who have made an association for the purpose of learning to desire to see him; and, if they are unable to do that, at least to see
his image, the most sacred word, and, next to that, the most perfect work of all the things perceptible by the outward senses,
namely, the world? For to philosophize is nothing else but to desire to see these things accurately.
XXI. But he says that the world perceptible to the outward senses is, as
it were, the footstool of God on this account: first of all, that he may
show that there is no efficient cause in the creatures; secondly, for the
purpose of displaying that even the whole world has not a free and unrestrained
spontaneous motion of its own, but God, the ruler of the universe, takes
his stand upon it, regulating it and directing everything in a saving manner
by the helm of his wisdom, using, in truth, neither hands nor feet, nor
any other part whatever such as belongs to created objects; for God is
not as man, but the reason why we at times represent him as such, for the
sake of instruction, is because we are unable to advance out of ourselves,
but derive our apprehension of the uncreate God from the circumstances
with which we ourselves are surrounded.
And it is very beautifully said by Moses, in the form of a parable, when he speaks of the world as if it resembled a brick;
for the world appears to stand and to be firmly fixed like a brick in a house, as far as the vision of the sight of the outward
senses can inform us, but it has a very swift motion, and one which is able to outstrip all particular motions. For the eyes of
our body look upon the appearance of the sun by day and of the moon by night as standing still, and yet who is there who does not
know that the rapidity of movements of these two bodies is incomparable, since they go round the whole heaven in one day? Thus,
indeed, the universal heaven itself also, while appearing to stand still, revolves in a circle; its movement being detected and
comprehended by the invisible and more divine eye which is placed in our mind.
XXII. And they are represented as baking the bricks in the fire, for the purpose of intimating by this symbolical expression
that they are strengthened and hardened as to their vices and their passions by warm and most energetic reason, so that they can
never be overthrown by the body-guards of wisdom, by whom engines for their defeat are being continually put in operation. On which
account we have this further statement also made, “Their brick was to them for stone;” for the weak and lax character of that impetuosity
which is not in company with reason, when it is closely pressed and condensed so as to assume a nature capable of solidity and
resistance, owes this change to powerful reasons and most convincing demonstrations; the comprehension of such speculations being,
in a manner, endowed with manliness and vigor, which comprehensions, while in a tender age, melt away by reason of the mixture
of the soul, which is not as yet able to consolidate and preserve the character impressed upon it.
“And they had slime for mortar;” not, on the contrary, mortar for slime.
For the wicked appear to strengthen and fortify what is weak against what
is more powerful, and from their own resources to consolidate and preserve
what melts and flows away from such things, in order that they may aim
and shoot at virtue from a safe place. But the merciful God and father
of the good will not permit their buildings to be established in indissoluble
safety, their work of melting zeal not being able to withstand, but becoming
like soft mud.
For, if their clay had become mortar, then perchance that earthy thing
perceptible by the outward senses, which is for ever and ever in a continued
state of flux, would have been able to arrive at a safe and unalterable
power; but since, on the contrary, their mortar became mere slime, we must
not despair, for there is in this, certain hope that the strong fortifications
of vice may be overthrown by the might of God. Therefore the just man,
even in the great and incessant deluge of life, while he is not as yet
able to see things really as they are by the energy of his soul alone without
the assistance of the outward sense, will anoint “the ark,” by which I
understand the body, “both within and without with pitch,” [Genesis vi.
14], strengthening his imaginations and energies by his own resources;
but when the danger has ceased and the violence of the flood abated, then
he will come forth, availing himself of his incorporeal mind for the comprehension
of truth.
For the good disposition being from the very birth of the man planted in
virtue, and being spoken of as such, its name being Moses, dwelling in
the whole world as his native city and country, becoming, as it were, a
cosmopolite, being bound up in the body, smeared over as with “bitumen
and pitch,” [Exodus ii. 3], and appearing to be able to receive and to
contain in security all the imaginations of all things which might be subjected
to the outward senses, weeps [Exodus ii. 6] at being so bound up, being
overwhelmed with a desire for an incorporeal nature. And he weeps over
the miserable mind of men in general as being wandering and puffed up with
pride, inasmuch as, being elated with false opinion, it thinks that it
has in itself something firm and safe, and, as a general fact, that there
something immutable in some creature or other, though the example of perpetual
stability, which is at all times the same, is set up in God alone.
XXIII. And the expression, “Come, and let us build ourselves a city and
a tower, the top of which shall reach to heaven,” has such a meaning as
this concealed beneath it: the lawgiver does not conceive that those only
are cities which are built upon the earth, the materials of which are wood
and stone, but he thinks that there are other cities also which men bear
about with them, being built in their souls; and these are, as is natural,
the archetypes and models of the others, inasmuch as they have received
a more divine building, and the others are but imitations of them, as consisting
of perishable substances.
But there are two species of cities, the one better, the other worse. That
is the better which enjoys a democratic government, a constitution which
honors equality, the rulers of which are law and justice; and such a constitution
as this is a hymn to God. But that is the worse kind which adulterates
this constitution, just as base and clipped money is adulterated in the
coinage, being, in fact, ochlocracy, which admires inequality, in which
injustice and lawlessness bear sway. Now good men are enrolled as citizens
in the constitution of the first-mentioned kind of city; but the multitude
of the wicked clings to the other and worse sort, loving disorder more
than orderliness, and confusion rather than well-established steadiness.
And the wicked man seeks for coadjutors in his practice of wickedness, not looking upon himself as sufficient by himself.
And he exhorts the sight, and he exhorts the hearing, and he exhorts every outward sense in succession, to range itself on his
side without delay, and every one of them to bring to him all things necessary for his service. And he raises up and sharpens
all the rest of the company of the passions, which are by their own nature unmanageable, in order that by the addition of practice
and care they may become irresistible. The mind, therefore, having called in these allies, says, “Let us build ourselves a city;”
an expression equivalent to, Let us fortify our own things; let us fence them around to the best of our power, so that we may not
be easily taken by those who attack us; let us divide and distribute, as into tribes and boroughs, each of the powers existing in
the soul, allotting some to the rational part, and some to the irrational part; let us choose competent rulers, wealth, glory, honor,
pleasure, by means of which we may be able to become masters of everything; banishing to a distance justice, the invariable cause
of poverty and ingloriousness; and let us enact laws, which shall confirm the chief power and advantage to those who are always
able to get the better of others.
And let a tower be built in this city as a citadel, to be a strong palace
for the tyrant vice, whose feet shall walk upon the earth, and its head
shall, through pride, be raised to such a height as to reach even to heaven;
for, in good truth, it rests not only upon human sins, but it also hastens
forward as far as heaven, pushing up its words of impiety and ungodliness,
since it either speaks of God so as to assert that he has no existence,
or that, though he exists, he has no providence, or to affirm that the
world had no beginning of creation, or that, admitting that it has been
created, it is borne on by unsteady causes, just as chance may direct,
at one time wrongly, at another time in an irreproachable manner, just
as often happens in the case of chariots or ships. For sometimes the voyage
of a ship, or the course of a chariot, goes on properly even without charioteers
or pilots; but success is not only now and then owing to providences, but
very often to human prudence and invariably to divine, since error is admitted
to be altogether incompatible with divine power. Now what object can the
foolish men have who, speaking figuratively, build up the reasonings of
wickedness like a tower, except the desire of leaving behind them a name
which shall be far from a good name?
XXIV. For they say, “Let us make for ourselves a name.” O, the excessive
and profligate impudence of such a saying! What say ye? When ye ought to
seek to bury your iniquities under night and profound darkness, and to
assume as a veil for them, shame, if not genuine, at all events pretended
shame, whether for the sake of gaining favor in the eyes of the moderate
and virtuous, or for that of avoiding punishment for admitted wickedness;
do ye, nevertheless, proceed to such a pitch of audacity, as all but to
come forth and display yourselves in the light and in the most brilliant
beams of the sun, and to fear neither the threats of better men, nor the
implacable justice of God, which impends over such ungodly and desperate
men? But ye think fit even to send around in every direction reports, to
carry intelligence of your domestic iniquities, in order that no one may
be uninformed of or unacquainted with your deeds of daring wickedness,
wretched and infamous men that ye are.
What name, therefore, do ye wish to assume? Is it the one which is most suitable to your actions? But is there not one
name only which is suited to them? It may, perhaps, be one in genus; but there are ten thousand such names in species, which
you will hear from others, even if ye keep silence yourselves. The names adapted to your conduct are, rashness united with
shamelessness, insolence combined with violence, violence in union with homicide, corruption in combination with adultery,
undefined appetite accompanied by unmeasured indulgence in pleasures, folly joined with impudence, injustice united to crafty
wickedness, theft combined with rapine, perjury united with lying, impiety combined with utter lawlessness. Such, and similar
to these, are the names of such actions. And it is well for them to boast over and pride themselves, upon seeking for reputation
from actions which it would be more seemly to hide and to be ashamed of.
And, indeed, some persons do pride themselves on these things, thinking
that in consequence of them they do derive a certain irresistible degree
of power among men from this idea being entertained respecting them; but
they will not escape the divine vengeance for their enormous audacity,
and very soon they will have occasion not only to anticipate at a distance,
but even to see immediately impending their own death. For they say, “Before
we are dispersed, let us have a care for our name and our glory.” Should
I not then say to them, Ye know that ye will be dispersed? Why, then, do
ye commit iniquity?
But perhaps he is here placing before us the manner of foolish men who,
even when the very greatest punishments are not obscurely impending over
them, but are often visibly threatening them, nevertheless do not hesitate
to commit iniquity. And the punishments, however they may seem to be concealed,
are in reality most notorious, which are inflicted by God. For all the
most wicked of men adopt ideas that they can never escape the knowledge
of the deity when doing wrong, and that they shall never be able to ward
off altogether the day of retribution. Since otherwise, how do they know
that they will be dispersed? And yet they say, “Before we are dispersed.”
But their conscience, which is within, convicts them, and pricks them vehemently,
when devoting themselves to ungodliness, so as to draw them against their
will to a confession that all the circumstances affecting men are overlooked
by a superior nature, and that justice is watching above, as an incorruptible
chastiser, hating the unjust actions of the impious, and the reasonings
and speeches which undertake their defense.
XXV. But all these men are the offspring of that wickedness which is always
dying but which never dies, the name of which is Cain. Is not Cain represented
as having begotten a son whom he called Enoch, [Genesis iv. 17] and as
building a city to which he gave the same name, and as after a fashion
building up created and mortal things to the destruction of those things
which have received a more divine formation? For the name Enoch, being
interpreted, means “thy grace.” But every impious man supposes that what
he thinks and understands is owing to the bounty of his intellect towards
him; that what he sees is the gift of his eyes to him, what he hears of
his ears, what he smells of his nostrils, and so that each of his outward
senses bestows on him those perceptions which are in accordance with them.
Again, that it is the organs of the voice which endow him with the capacity
of speaking, and that there is actually no such thing as a God at all,
or at all events that be is not the primary cause of things.
Because of these views he assigns to himself the first fruits of the fruits
which he extracts from the earth by his husbandry, being contented afterwards
to offer to God some of the fruit, and that too though he has a sound example
at hand; for his brother offers a sacrifice of the offspring of the flock,
offering the firstborn, and not those which are of secondary value; confessing
that the eldest causes of all existing things are suited to the eldest
and first cause. But the impious man thinks exactly the contrary, namely,
that the mind is endowed with absolute power to do whatever it desires,
and that the outward senses have absolute power as to all that they feel,
for that both the mind and the outward senses decide in an irreproachable
and unerring manner, the one on bodies, and the other on everything. Now
what can be more open to blame, or more capable of conviction by truth,
than such ideas as these? Has not the mind been repeatedly convicted of
innumerable acts of folly? And have not all the outward senses been convicted
of bearing false witness, and that too not by irrational judges who, it
is natural to suppose, may be deceived, but before the tribunal of nature
herself, which it is impossible to corrupt or to pervert?
And indeed as the criteria both of our mind and of our outward senses are liable to error respecting even ourselves,
it follows of necessity that we must make the corresponding confession that God sheds upon the mind the power of intellect,
and on the outward senses the faculty of apprehension, and that these benefits are conferred upon us not by our own members
but by him to whom also we owe our existence.
XXVI. The children who have received from their father the inheritance
of self-love are eager to go on increasing up to heaven, until justice,
which loves virtue and hates iniquity, coming destroys their cities which
they have built up by the side of their miserable souls, and the tower
the name of which is displayed in the book which is entitled the Book of
Judgment. And the name is, as the Hebrews say, Phanuel, which translated
into our language means, “turning away from God.” For any strong building
which is erected by means of plausible arguments is not built for the sake
of any other object except that of averting and alienating the mind from
the honor due to God, than which object what can be more iniquitous? But
for the destruction of this strong fortification a ravager and an enemy
of iniquity is prepared who is always full of hostility towards it; whom
the Hebrews call Gideon; which name being interpreted means, “a retreat
for robbers.” “For,” says Moses, “Gideon swore to the men of Phanuel, saying,
On the day when I return victorious in peace, I will overthrow this tower.”
[Judges viii. 9]. A very beautiful and most becoming boast for the soul
which hates wickedness and is sharpened against the impious, namely, that
it is resolved to overthrow every reasoning which by its persuasions seeks
to turn the mind away from holiness, and this indeed is the natural result.
For when the mind turns round, then that which turns away from it, and
rejects it is again dissolved, and this is the opportunity for destroying
it which (a most wonderful thing) he calls not war but peace. For, owing
to the stability and firmness of the mind which piety is accustomed to
produce, every reasoning which impiety has formed is overturned.
Many also have even erected the outward senses after the fashion of a tower,
raising them to such a height as to be able to reach the very borders of
heaven. But the term heaven is here used symbolically to signify our mind,
according to which the best and most divine natures revolve. But they who
dare such deeds prefer the outward senses to the intellect, and desire
by means of the outward senses forcibly to destroy all the objects of intellect,
compelling those things which are, at present masters to descend into the
rank of servants, and raising those things which are by nature slaves to
the rank of masters.
XXVII. And the statement, “The Lord went down to see that city and that
tower” must be listened to altogether as if spoken in a figurative sense.
For to think that the divinity can go towards, or go from, or go down,
or go to meet, or, in short, that it has the same positions and motions
as particular animals, and that it is susceptible of real motion at all,
is, to use a common proverb, an impiety deserving of being banished beyond
the sea and beyond the world. But these things are spoken, as if of man,
by the lawgiver, of God who is not invested with human form, for the sake
of advantage to us who are to be instructed, as I have often said before
with reference to other passages. Since who is there who does not know
that it is indispensable for a person who goes down, to leave one place
and to occupy another? But all places are filled at once by God, who surrounds
them all and is not surrounded by any of them, to whom alone it is possible
to be everywhere and also nowhere. Nowhere, because he himself created
place and space at the same time that he created bodies, and it is impious
to say that the Creator is contained in anything that he has created.
Again, he is everywhere, because, having extended his powers so as to make
them pervade earth, and water, and air, and heaven, he has left no portion
of the world desolate, but, having collected everything together, he has
bound them with chains which cannot be burst, so that they are never emancipated,
on which account he is especially to be praised with hymns.
For that which is higher than all powers is understood to exceed them,
not merely in the fact of its existence. But the power of this being which
made and arranged everything is with perfect truth called God, and it contains
everything in its bosom, and pervades every portion of the universe. But
the divine being, both invisible and incomprehensible, is indeed everywhere,
but still, in truth, he is nowhere visible or comprehensible. But when
he says, “I am he who stands before thee,” [Exodus xvii. 6], he appears
indeed to be displayed and to be comprehended, though before any exhibition
or conception he was superior to all created things. Therefore, no one
of the words which implies a motion from place to place is appropriate
to that God who exists only in essence; such expressions, I mean, as going
upwards or downwards, to the right or to the left, forwards or backwards.
For he is not conceived of in any one of the above mentioned ideas, inasmuch
as he never turns round or changes his place.
But, nevertheless, he is said to have come down and to have seen, he who
by his foreknowledge comprehends everything, not only that has happened,
but even before it happens; and this expression is used for the sake of
exhortation and instruction, in order that no man, indulging in uncertain
conjectures about matters which he is not present to behold may, while
standing afar off, be too prompt to believe idle fancies, but that every
one may come close to the facts, and examining each one separately, may
carefully and thoroughly consider them. For certain sight is more deserving
to be looked upon as a trustworthy witness than fallacious hearing. On
which account a law has been enacted among those nations which have the
most excellent constitution, that one must not give evidence on hearsay,
because by its own nature the tribunal of the sense of hearing is liable
to be corrupted. And Moses indeed says in the prohibitory part of his law,
“Thou shalt not receive vain hearing.” [Exodus xxiii. 1.] Meaning not only
this, that one ought not to receive false or silly reports by hearsay,
but that, as far as the clear comprehension of the truth is concerned,
the hearing is a long way behind the sight, being full of vanity.
XXVIII. We say that this is the reason why it is said that God went down
to see the city and the tower; and the addition, “Which the sons of men
had built,” is not a mere superfluity. For perhaps some profanely disposed
person may mock and say, “The lawgiver is here teaching us a very novel
kind of lesson, when he says that no one else but the sons of men build
cities and towers; for who, even of the most crazy people is ignorant of
what is so evident and notorious as that?” But we must not suppose that
such a plain and unquestionable fact as that, is what is intended to be
conveyed by the mention of it in the holy scriptures, but rather there
is some hidden meaning concealed under these apparently plain words which
we must trace out. What than is this hidden meaning?
Those who, as it were, attribute many fathers to existing things, and who
represent the company of the gods as numerous, displaying great ignorance
of the nature of things and causing great confusion, and making pleasure
the proper object of the soul, are those who are, if we must tell the plain
truth, spoken of as the builders of the aforesaid city, and of the citadel
in it; having increased the efficient causes of the desired end, building
them up like houses, being, as I imagine, in no respect different from
the children of the harlot whom the law expels from the assembly of God,
where it says, “The offspring of a harlot shall not come into the assembly
of the Lord.” [Deuteronomy xxiii. 2].
Because, like archers shooting at random at many objects, and not aiming
skillfully or successfully at any one mark, so these men, putting forward
ten thousand principles and causes for the creation of the universe, every
one of which is false, display a perfect ignorance of the one Creator and
Father of all things; but they who have real knowledge, are properly addressed
as the sons of the one God, as Moses also entitles them, where he says,
“Ye are the sons of the Lord God.” [Deuteronomy xiv. 1.] And again, “God
who begot thee;” [Deuteronomy xxxii. 18], and in another place, “Is not
he thy father?”
Accordingly, it is natural for those who have this disposition of soul
to look upon nothing as beautiful except what is good, which is the citadel
erected by those who are experienced in this kind of warfare as a defense
against the end of pleasure, and as a means of defeating and destroying
it. And even if there be not as yet any one who is worthy to be called
a son of God, nevertheless let him labor earnestly to be adorned according
to his first-born word, the eldest of his angels, as the great archangel
of many names; for he is called, the authority, and the name of God, and
the Word, and man according to God’s image, and he who sees Israel. For
which reason I was induced a little while ago to praise the principles
of those who said, “We are all one man’s sons.” [Genesis xlii. 11]. For
even if we are not yet suitable to be called the sons of God, still we
may deserve to be called the children of his eternal image, of his most
sacred word; for the image of God is his most ancient word.
And, indeed, in many passages of the law, the children of Israel are called
hearers of him that seeth, since hearing is honored with the second rank
next after the sense of sight, and since that which is in need of instruction
is at all times second to that which can receive clear impressions of the
subjects submitted to it without any such information. And I also admire
the things which are spoken under divine inspiration in the books of Kings,
according to which those who flourished many generations afterwards and
lived in a blameless manner, are spoken of as the sons of David who wrote
hymns to God; though, during his lifetime, even their great grandfathers
had not yet been born. The truth is, that the birth here spoken of is that
of souls made immortal by their virtues, not of perishable bodies, and
this birth is naturally referred to the leaders of virtue, as its parents
and progenitors.
XXIX. But against those who pride themselves on injustice, the Lord said, “Behold, there is one race and one language
among them all,” an expression equivalent to, Behold, there is one family and one bond of relationship, and also, one harmony
and agreement among them all together, no one being in his mind at all alienated from or disconnected with his neighbor, as
is the case with illiterate men. For at times, the organ of speech among them is, in all its tones, out of tune and inharmonious
in no slight degree, being in fact carefully arranged so as to produce inharmoniousness, and having only such a concert as will
cause a want of melody.
And in the case of fevers, one may see very similar effects; for they are periodical changes, in some recurring every day,
in others every third or every fourth day, as the sons of the physicians say; and they have also stated hours, both by day
and night, at which important crises may be expected, and they at all times keep nearly the same order.
And the expression, “And they began to do this,” is said with no moderate
indignation, because it has not been sufficient for wicked men to confuse
all the principles of justice which affect these of the same country as
themselves, but they have ventured to transgress even the laws of Heaven,
sowing injustice and reaping impiety. But these wretched men derive no
advantage, for though those who seek to inflict mutual injuries on one
another, succeed in many of the objects which they have at heart, bringing
to their accomplishment in action what they have decided on in their unwise
minds, yet the case is not the same with the impious. For all things belonging
to the Deity are incapable of receiving either damage or injury, and the
unclean can only find out the beginnings of sinning in respect of them,
but can never arrive at the end which they propose to themselves; on which
account this expression also occurs, “They began to do.”
Men full of an insatiable desire of doing wrong, not being content with
the crimes which they can perpetrate on earth, by sea, and in the air,
inasmuch as they are of a perishable nature, have determined to array themselves
against the divine natures existing in heaven; which, as they are not reckoned
among existing creatures are also out of all reach of injury. Even calumny
itself can inflict no injury on those things if it ventures to speak ill
of them, inasmuch as they are never moved from their everlasting and eternal
natures, but it inflicts incurable calamity on those who accuse it.
Are they not to be blamed, since indeed they have only begun, being unable
to arrive at the end of the impiety they propose to themselves, are they
not, I say, to be blamed just as much as if they had accomplished all the
objects that they had in view? On this account also, Moses speaks of them
as having finished the tower, though in fact they had not yet completed
it, where he says, “ The Lord went down to see the city and the tower,”
not which the sons of men were going to build, but which they had built.
XXX. What, then, is the proof that they had not entirely completed this building? First of all, the manifest notoriety
of the fact. For it is impossible for even so slight a portion of the earth to touch the heaven, by reason of the cause before-mentioned,
that no center can ever touch the circumference; in the second place, because the aether is sacred fire and an unquenchable flame,
as its very name shows, being derived from 'aitho', to burn, which is a synonymous word with 'chaio.' And we have
a witness in our favor in one portion of the heavenly system of fire, that is in the sun, who, though he is at such a distance
from the earth, sends his beams down into his inmost recesses, and sometimes warms and at times even scorches the earth itself,
and the air which reaches from the earth up to the heavenly sphere, though it is by nature cold; for all those things which are
removed to a distance from his rapid course, or which are in an oblique direction, one side of it only warms; but those which are
near to him, or in a direct line from him, is violently burnt up.
If, then, these things are so, was it not necessary that those men who
were endeavoring to mount up to heaven must have been stricken with thunderbolts
and burnt up, their high-minded and proud designs being unaccomplished
by them? This is the meaning which Moses appears to intend to convey, figuratively,
by the expressions which follow: “For they ceased,” says he, “to build
the city and the tower.” [Genesis xi. 8.] Not, indeed, because they had
finished their work, but because they were prevented from accomplishing
it by the confusion which supervened. Nevertheless, they have not escaped
blame for their actions, inasmuch as they had decided on them and attempted
to carry them out.
XXXI. At all events, the law says that that soothsayer and diviner who
was led into folly in respect of his unstable conjectures (for the name,
Balaam, being interpreted, means unstable), “cursed the people that saw;”
[Deut. xxiii. 4], and that, too, though as far as his words go he uttered
only words of good omen and prayers. The law here looking not at the words
he uttered, which, through the providence of God, did change their character,
becoming good money instead of base coinage, but having regard to the intention
in which injurious things were resolved in preference to beneficial ones.
But these things are, by nature inimical to one another, conjectures being
at variance with truth, and vain opinion with knowledge, and prophecy,
which is not dictated by divine inspiration, being directly opposed to
sober wisdom.
And even if any one, rising up as it were from his ambush, were to try,
but to be unable, to slay a man, still he is none the less liable to the
punishment due to homicides, as the law which is enacted about such persons
shows. “For if,” says the law, “any one attacks his neighbor, wishing to
slay him by treachery, and escapes, thou shalt apprehend him, even at the
altar, to put him to death.” [Exodus xxi. 14.] And yet the thing condemned
is the attacking with intent to kill, not the actual killing, but the law
looks upon the intention to slay as equal in guilt to the actual slaying;
on which account it does not grant pardon to such a man even if he supplicates
for it, but bids one drag the man who has cherished so unholy a design
even from the temple itself.
And such a man is unholy, not merely because he has plotted slaughter against
a soul which might have lived for ever through its acquisition and use
of virtue, making an attack on it through the agency of wickedness, but
also because he blames God as the cause of his ungodly audacity; for the
word, “escapes,” has such a meaning as this concealed under it. Because
many men wish to escape from accusations which are brought against themselves,
and think it fitting that they should be delivered from the punishments
due to the offenses which they have committed, and so they attribute their
own iniquity to him who is the cause of no evil, but of all kinds of good,
namely, to God: for which reason it was accounted as no violation of divine
law to drag such men even from the altars themselves.
And it was an excessive punishment which was then denounced against the
reasons which were thus built up and put together for purposes of impiety;
which, however, perhaps some foolish persons will look upon not as injury,
but as a benefit. “For,” says Moses, “there shalt not fail to them any
one of the things which they have endeavored to do.” [Genesis xi. 6.] Alas
for their unlimited and interminable misery! All the objects which the
most insane intention fixes its desires upon shall be successfully carried
out, and shall obey its will, so that nothing whatever shall fail, either
small or great, but everything shall, as it were, make haste to meet and
to anticipate their requirements.
XXXII. These things are an exhibition of a soul destitute of prudence,
and which meets with no impediment to its indulging in sin; for whoever
is not utterly incurable would rather pray that all the purposes of his
mind might fail, so that if he had formed a resolution to steal, or to
commit adultery, or to murder a man, or to commit sacrilege, or to perpetrate
any similar crime, he might not succeed, but might find innumerable obstacles.
For such hindrance would get rid of the greatest of all diseases, injustice;
but any one who is free from all fear is sure to admit this malady.
Why then, my friends, do you any longer praise or admire the fortunes of
tyrants, owing to which they succeed with ease in everything which they
undertake, and which a frenzied and unrestrained mind prompts them to do?
And yet one ought rather to lament over them, since inability and powerlessness
to succeed in their objects is advantageous to the wicked, just as abundant
opportunity and power is the most beneficial thing for the good. But one
of the crowd of foolish men, perceiving to what an abundant superfluity
of misery indulgence in sinning leads, said, speaking with perfect freedom,
“My wickedness is too great for me to be forgiven.” [Genesis iv. 13.]
It is, therefore, very melancholy indeed for the soul, which is by its
own nature unmanageable, to be left without any restraint; while it is
scarcely possible for any one to hold it in with reins, and by that means,
in conjunction with the infliction of stripes, to reduce it to reason.
On which account an oracle of the all-merciful God has been given, full
of gentleness, which shadows forth good hopes to those who love instruction,
in these terms: “I will never leave thee, nor forsake thee.” [Joshua i.
5.] For when the chains of the soul, by which it has been used to be held
in bondage, are loosened, then the greatest of all calamities follows,
namely, the being deserted by God, who has fastened chains which can never
be broken round the universe, namely, his own powers, with which he binds
everything, willing that it shall never more be released. Accordingly,
he says, in another passage, that “all things which are bound with a chain
are pure;” [Numbers xix. 15] since unbinding is the cause of the destruction
of that which is impure.
Beware, then, lest when you see a man accomplishing without difficulty all the objects which he endeavors to effect, you
admire him as a prosperous man; take care rather to pity him as a very unfortunate one, because he passes his whole life in
a perfect destitution of virtue and a great abundance of vice.
XXXIII. And it is worth while to consider in no superficial manner what
the meaning is of that expression which is put by Moses into the month
of God: “Come, let us go down and confuse their language there.” [Genesis
xi. 7.] For here God is represented as if he were speaking to some beings
who were his coadjutors. And the very same idea may he excited by what
is said in the account of the creation of the world, for there, too, Moses
records that “the Lord God said, Come, let us now make man in our image;
man in our similitude.” [Genesis i. 26.] The expression, “Let us make,”
implying a number of creators. And, in another place, we are told that
God said, “Behold, the man, Adam, has become as one of us, in respect of
his knowing good and evil;” for the expression, “as one of us,” is not
applicable to one person, but to many.
In the first place then, we must say this, that there is no existing being
equal in honor to God, but there is one only ruler and governor and king,
to whom alone it is granted to govern and to arrange the universe. For
the verse -
A multitude of kings is never good,
Let there one sovereign, one sole monarch be, [Iliad ii. 204]
is not more justly said with respect to cities and men than with respect to the world and to God; for it is clear from the
necessity of things that there must be one creator, and one father, and one master of the one universe.
XXXIV. This point then being thus granted, it is necessary to convert with
it also what follows, so as to adapt it properly. Let us then consider
what this is: God, being one, has about him an unspeakable number of powers,
all of which are defenders and preservers of every thing that is created;
and among these powers those also which are conversant with punishment
are involved. But even punishment is not a disadvantageous thing, inasmuch
as it is both a hindrance to and a correction of doing wrong.
Again, it is by means of these powers that the incorporeal world, perceptible
by the intellect, has been put together, which is the archetypal model
of this invisible world, being compounded of invisible species, just as
this world is of invisible bodies. Some persons therefore, admiring exceedingly
the nature of both these worlds, have not only deified them in their wholes,
but have also deified the most beautiful parts of them, such as the sun
and the moon, and the entire heaven, which, having no reverence for anything,
they have called gods. But Moses, perceiving their design, says, “O Lord,
Lord, King of the gods,” [Deuteronomy x. 17], in order to show the difference
between the ruler and those subject to him. And there is also in the air
a most sacred company of incorporeal souls as an attendant upon the heavenly
souls; for the word of prophecy is accustomed to call these souls angels.
It happens therefore that the whole army of each of these worlds, being
marshalled in their suitable ranks, are servants and ministers of the ruler
who has marshalled them, whom they follow as their leader, in obedience
to the principles of law and justice; for it is impossible to suppose that
the divine army can even be detected in desertion. But it is suitable to
the character of the king to associate with his own powers, and to avail
himself of them, with a view to their ministrations in such matters as
it is not fitting should be settled by God alone, for the Father of the
universe has no need of anything, so as to require assistance from any
other quarter if he wishes to make any thing.
But seeing at once what is becoming, both for himself and for his works of creation, there are some things which he has entrusted
to his subordinate powers to fashion; and yet he has not at once given even to them completely independent knowledge to enable it to
accomplish their objects, in order that no one of those things which come to be created may be found to be erroneously made.
XXXV. These things, then, it was necessary to give an idea of beforehand; but for what reason this was necessary we must now
say. The nature of animals was originally divided into the portion endowed with and into that devoid of reason, the two being at
variance with one another. Again the rational division was subdivided into the perishable and imperishable species, the perishable
species being the race of mankind, and the imperishable species being the company of incorporeal souls which revolve about the air and heaven.
But these have no participation in wickedness, having received from the
very beginning an inheritance without stain and full of happiness; and
not being bound up in the region of interminable calamities, that is to
say, in the body. The divisions also of the irrational part are free from
any participation in wickedness, inasmuch as, having no endowment of intellect,
they are never convicted of those deliberate acts of wickedness which proceed
upon consideration.
But man is almost the only one of all living things which, having a thorough knowledge of good and evil, often chooses that which
is worst, and rejects those things which are worthy of earnest pursuit, so that he is often most justly condemned as being guilty of
deliberate and studied crime.
Very appropriately therefore has God attributed the creation of this being, man, to his lieutenants, saying, “Let us make
man,” in order that the successes of the intellect may be attributed
to him alone, but the errors of the being thus created, to his subordinate
power: for it did not appear to be suitable to the dignity of God, the
ruler of the universe, to make the road to wickedness in a rational soul
by his own agency; for which reason he has committed to those about him
the creation of this portion of the universe; for it was necessary that
the voluntary principle, as the counterpoise to the involuntary principle,
should be established and made known, with a view to the completion and
perfection of the universe.
XXXVI. And this may be enough to say in this manner; and it is right that this point also should be considered, namely that
God is the cause only of what is good but is absolutely the cause of no evil whatever, since he himself is the most ancient of all
existing things, and the most perfect of all goods; and it is most natural and becoming that he should do what is most akin to his
own nature, that is to say, that the best of all beings should be the cause of all the best things, but that the punishments appointed
for the wicked are inflicted by the means of his subordinate ministers. And there is an evidence in favor of this assertion of mine in
this expression, which was uttered by the man who was made perfect by practice; “The God who nourished me from my youth up, the angel
who defended me from all evils;” [Genesis xlviii. 16] for by these words he already confesses that those
genuine good things which nourish the souls which love virtue, are referred to God as their sole cause; but the fate of the wicked is,
on the other hand, referred to the angels, and even they have not independent and absolute power of inflicting punishment, that this
salutary nature may not afford an opportunity to any one of the things which tend to destruction.
For this reason God says, “Come, let us go down and confuse;” for the wicked,
deserving to meet with such punishment as this, that the merciful, and
beneficent, and bounteous, powers of God should become known to them chiefly
by its inflictions. Knowing therefore that these powers are beneficial
to the race of man, he has appointed the punishments to be inflicted by
other beings; for it was expedient that he himself should be looked upon
as the cause of well-doing, but in such a way that the fountains of his
everlasting graces should be kept unmingled with any evils, not merely
with those that are really evils, but even with those which are accounted such.
XXXVII. We must now examine what this confusion is. How then shalt we enter
on this examination? In this manner, in my opinion. We have very often
known those whom we had knowledge of before, from certain similarities
and a comparison of circumstances which have some connection with them.
Therefore we also become acquainted with things in the same manner, which
it is not easy to form a conception of from their own nature, from some
similarity of other things connected with them. What things then resemble
confusion? Mixture, as the ancient report has it, and combination; but
mixture takes place in dry things, and combination is looked upon as belonging
to wet substances. Mixture then is a placing side by side of different
bodies in no regular order, as if any one were to make a heap, bringing
barley, and wheat, and pease, and all sorts of other seeds, all into one
mass; but combination is not a placing side by side, but rather a mutual
penetration of dissimilar parts entering into one another at all points,
so that the distinctive qualities are still able to be distinguished by
some artificial skill, as they say is the case with respect to wine and
water; for these substances coming together form a combination, but that
which is combined is not the less capable of being resolved again into
the distinctive qualities from which it was originally formed.
For with a sponge saturated with oil it is possible for the water to be
taken up and for the wine to be left behind, which may perhaps be because
the origin of sponge is derived from water, and therefore it is natural
that water being a kindred substance is calculated by nature to be taken
up by the sponge out of the combination, but that that substance which
is of a different nature, namely the wine, is naturally left behind.
But confusion is the destruction of all the original distinctive qualities,
owing to their component parts penetrating one another at every point,
so as to generate one thing wholly different, as is the case in that composition
of the physicians which they call the tetrapharmacon. For that, I imagine,
is made up of wax, and fat, and pitch, and resin, all compounded together,
but when the medicine has once been compounded, then it is impossible for
it again to be resolved into the powers of which it was originally composed,
but every one of them is destroyed separately, and the destruction of them
all has produced one other power of exceeding excellence. But when God
threatens impious reasonings with confusion, he is in fact not only commanding
the whole species and power of each separate wickedness to be destroyed,
but also that thing which has been made up of all their joint contributions;
so that neither the parts by themselves, nor the union and harmony of the
whole, can contribute any strength hereafter towards the destruction of
the better part; on which account, he says, “Let us then confuse their
language, so that each of them may not understand the voice of his neighbor;”
which is equivalent to, let us make each separate one of the parts of wickedness
deaf and dumb, so that it shall neither utter a voice of its own, nor be
able to sound in unison with any other part, so as to be a cause of mischief.
XXXVII. This, now, is our opinion upon and interpretation of this passage.
But they who follow only what is plain and easy, think that what is here
intended to be recorded, is the origin of the languages of the Greeks and
barbarians, whom, without blaming them (for, perhaps, they also put a correct
interpretation on the transaction), I would exhort not to be content with
stopping at this point, but to proceed onward to look at the passage in
a figurative way, considering that the mere words of the scriptures are,
as it were, but shadows of bodies, and that the meanings which are apparent
to investigation beneath them, are the real things to be pondered upon.
Accordingly, this lawgiver usually gives a handle for this doctrine to
those who are not utterly blind in their intellect; as in fact he does
in his account of this very event, which we are now discussing: for he
has called what took place, confusion; and yet, if he had only intended
to speak of the origin of languages, he would have given a more felicitous
name, and one of better omen, calling it division instead of confusion:
for things that are divided, are not confused, but, on the contrary, are
distinguished from one another, and not only is the one name contrary to
the other, but the one fact is contrary to the other fact.
For confusion, as I have already said, is the destruction of simple powers for the production of one concrete power; but
division is the dissection of one thing into many parts, as is the case when one distinguishes a genus into its subordinate
species, so that, if the wise God had ordered his ministers to divide language, which was previously only one, into the divisions
of several dialects, he would have used more appropriate expressions, which should have given a more accurate idea of the case:
calling what he did, dissection, or distribution, or division, or something of that kind, but not confusion, a name which is at
variance with all of them.
But his especial object here is to dissolve the company of wickedness,
to put an end to their confederacy, to destroy their community of action,
to put out of sight and extirpate all their powers, to overthrow the might
of their dominion, which they had strengthened by fearful lawlessness.
Do you not see that he also who made the parts of the soul did not unite
any one part to another in such a way as to enable one to discharge the
duties of the other? But the eyes would never be able to hear, nor the
ears to see, nor the lips of the mouth to smell, nor the nostrils to taste;
nor, again, could reason ever be exposed to those influences which operate
upon the outward senses, nor again, would the outward senses be able to
develop reason. For the Creator knew that it was desirable that each of
these parts should not hear the voice of its neighbor, but that the parts
of the soul should each exert its own peculiar faculties without confusion,
for the advantage of living animals, and should, with the same object,
be deprived of any power of exerting themselves in common, and that all
the powers of vice should be brought to confusion and utter destruction,
so that they might neither in confederacy, nor separately, be injurious
to the better parts.
On which account Moses tells us, “The Lord scattered them from thence;”
which is equivalent to, he dispersed them, he put them to flight, he banished
them, he destroyed them; for to scatter is sometimes done with a view to
the production, and growth, and increase of other things; but there is
another kind which has for its object overthrow and destruction: but God,
the planter of the world, wishes to sow in every one excellence, but to
scatter and drive from the world accursed impiety: that the disposition
which hates virtue may at last desist from building up a city of wickedness,
and a tower of impiety: for when these are put to the rout, then those
who have long ago been banished by the tyranny of folly, now, at one proclamation,
find themselves able to return to their own country, God having drawn up
and confirmed the proclamation, as the scriptures show, in which it is
expressly stated that, “Even though thy dispersion be from one end of heaven
to the other end of heaven, he will bring thee together from thence.” [Deuteronomy
xxx. 4.]
So that it is proper that the harmony of the virtues should be arranged
and cherished by God, and that he should dissolve and destroy wickedness;
and confusion is a name most appropriate to wickedness, of which every
foolish man is a visible proof, having all his words, and intentions, and
actions, incapable of standing an examination and destitute of steadiness.
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