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A22641 St. Augustine, Of the citie of God vvith the learned comments of Io. Lod. Viues. Englished by I.H.; De civitate Dei. English Augustine, Saint, Bishop of Hippo.; Healey, John, d. 1610.; Vives, Juan Luis, 1492-1540. 1610 (1610) STC 916; ESTC S106897 1,266,989 952

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and this he relateth by way of recapitulation as it was reuealed vnto him I saw saith he a great white throne and one that sate on it from whose face flew away both the earth and heauen and their place was no more found He saith not and heauen and earth flew away from his face as importing their present flight for that befell not vntill after the iudgement but from whose face flew away both heauen and earth namely afterwards when the iudgment shall be finished then this heauen and this earth shall cease and a new world shall begin But the old one shall not be vtterly consumed it shall onely passe through an vniuersall change and therefore the Apostle saith The fashion of this world goeth away and I would haue you with-out care The fashion goeth away not the nature Well let vs follow Saint Iohn who after the sight of this throne c. proceedeth thus And I sawe the dead both great and small stand before God and the bookes were opened and another booke was opened which is the booke a of life and the dead were iudged of those things which were written in the bookes according to their workes Behold the opening of bookes and of one booke This what it was hee sheweth which is the booke of life The other are the holy ones of the Old and New-Testament that therein might be shewed what God had commanded but in the booke b of life were the commissions and omissions of euery man on ●…th particularly recorded If we should imagine this to be an earthly booke 〈◊〉 as ours are who is he that could imagine how huge a volume it were or how long the contents of it all would be a reading Shall there be as many Angells as men and each one recite his deeds that were commited to his guard then shall there not bee one booke for all but each one shall haue one I but the Scripture here mentions but one in this kind It is therefore some diuine power ●…ed into the consciences of each peculiar calling all their workes wonderfully strangely vnto memory and so making each mans knowledge accuse or excuse his owne conscience these are all and singular iudged in themselues This power diuine is called a booke and fitly for therein is read all the facts that the doer hath committed by the working of this hee remembreth all But the Apostle to explaine the iudgement of the dead more fully and to sh●…w how it compriseth greate and small he makes at it were a returne to what he had omitted or rather deferred saying And the sea gaue vp her dead which were within 〈◊〉 and death and Hell deliuered vp the dead which were in them This was before that they were iudged yet was the iudgment mentioned before so that as I said he returnes to his intermission hauing said thus much The sea gaue vp her dead c. As afore he now proceedeth in the true order saying And they were iudged euery 〈◊〉 according to his workes This hee repeateth againe here to shew the order 〈◊〉 was to manage the iudgment whereof hee had spoken before in these words And the dead were iudged of those things which were written in the bookes ac●…g to their workes L. VIVES OF a life So readeth Hierome and so readeth the vulgar wee finde not any that readeth it Of the life of euery one as it is in some copies of Augustine The Greeke is iust as wee ●…d 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of life without addition Of the dead whom the Sea and death and hell shall giue vp to Iudgement CHAP. 15. BVt what dead are they that the Sea shall giue vp for all that die in the sea are not kept from hell neither are their bodyes kept in the sea Shall we say that the sea keepeth the death that were good and hell those that were euill horrible ●…dity Who is so sottish as to beleeue this no the sea here is fitly vnderstood to imply the whole world Christ therefore intending to shew that those whome he found on earth at the time appointed should be iudged with those that were to rise againe calleth them dead men and yet good men vnto whom it was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 are dead and your life is hidden with Christ in God But them he calleth euill of whome hee sayd Let the dead bury their dead Besides they may bee called dead in that their bodies are deaths obiects wherefore the Apostle saith The 〈◊〉 is dead because of sinne but the spirit is life for righteousnesse sake shew that in a mortall man there is both a dead body and a liuing spirit yet said hee not the body is mortall but dead although according to his manner of speach hee had called bodies mortall but alittle before Thus then the sea gaue vppe her dead the world waue vppe all mankinde that as yet had not approached the graue And death and hell quoth hee gaue vp the dead which were in them The sea gaue vp his for as they were then so were they found but death and hell had theirs first called to the life which they had left then gaue them vp Perhaps it were not sufficient to say death onely or hell onely but hee saith both death and hell death for such as might onely die and not enter hell and hell for such as did both for if it bee not absurd to beleeue that the ancient fathers beleeuing in Christ to come were all at rest a in a place farre from all torments and yet within hell vntill Christs passion and descension thether set them at liberty then surely the faithfull that are already redeemed by that passion neuer know what hell meaneth from their death vntill they arise and receiue their rewards And they iudged euery one according to their deedes a briefe declaration of the iudgement And death and hell saith he were cast into the lake of fire this is the second death Death and Hell are but the diuell and his angells the onely authors of death and hells torments This hee did but recite before when he said And the Diuell that deceiued them was cast into a lake of fire and brimstone But his mistical addition Where the beast and the false Prophet shall be tormented c. That he sheweth plainly here Whosoeuer was not found written in the booke of life was cast into the lake of fire Now as for the booke of life it is not meant to put God in remembrance of any thing least hee should forget but it sheweth who are predestinate vnto saluation for God is not ignorant of their number neither readeth hee this booke to finde it his prescience is rather the booke it selfe wherein all are written that is fore-knowen L. VIVES IN a a place They call this place Abrahams bosome wherein were no paines felt as Christ sheweth plainely of Lazarus Luc. 16. and that this place was farre from the dungeon of the wicked but where it is or what is
compared should bee in the guift of any of them Nor can their state and hight compared with the basenesse of an earthly Kingdome in respect of them bee a sufficient cloake for their defect in not beeing able to giue it because forsooth they doe not respect it No what euer hee bee that considering the frailty of mans nature maketh a scorne of the momentary state of earthly dominion he will thinke it a●… vnworthy iniury to the gods to haue the giuing and guarding of such vanities imposed vpon them And by this if that according as wee proued sufficiently in the two bookes last past no one god of all this catalogue of noble and ignoble god●… were fit to behold the bestower of earthly states how much lesse fit were they all to make a mortall man pertaker of immortality Besides because now wee dispute against those that stand for their worship in respect of the life to come they are not to bee worshipped for those things which these mens erronious opinion farre from all truth haue put as their proprieties and things peculiarly in their powre as they beleeue that hold the honouring of them very vsefull in things of this present life against whom I haue spoken to my powre in the 〈◊〉 precedent volumes Which being thus if such as adore Iuuentas flourish in v●…or of youth and those that doe not either die vnder age or passe it with the ●…fes of decrepite sicknesse If the chinnes of Fortuna Barbata her seruants 〈◊〉 ●…ll of haire and all others be beardlesse then iustly might we say that thus 〈◊〉 ●…ese goddesses are limited in their offices and therefore it were no asking li●…●…nall of Iuuentas that could not giue one a beard nor were any good to 〈◊〉 ●…cted of Fortuna Barbata after this life that had not powre to make one 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he had a beard But now their worship beeing of no vse for those things in their powre seeing many haue worshipped Iuuentas that liued not to bee 〈◊〉 and as many honoured Fortuna Barbata that neuer had good beards and many without beardes that worshiped her were mocked by them that had be●…ds and scor●…●…r is any man then so mad that knowing the worshipping ●…f th●…m to bee 〈◊〉 in those things whereto their pretended powre extendeth yet will beleeue it to be effectuall in the obtayning life eternall Nay euen those that did share out their authority for them least beeing so many there should some sit idle and so taught their worshippe to the rude vulgar nor these themselues durst affirme that the life eternall was a gift comprised in any of their powers L. VIVES BLessed a is the man The Septuagints translate it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 That maketh the 〈◊〉 of the LORD his hope But the Hebrew originall hath it as Augustine citeth it Indeed the difference is not of any moment b Though they durst not They feared the lawes as they did the Areopagites at Athens as Tully saith of Epicurus c Being all Plato in Ti●… d Pr●… to laughter Alluding to Virgill in his Palaemon Et quo sed faciles Nymphae risere sacello c. The shrine wherein the pleasant Nymphes were merry 〈◊〉 not call them Faciles pleasant or kind because they were soone mooued to laughter but be●…use they were soone appeased and easie to bee intreated Faciles venerare Nap●…s 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in his Georgikes to adore the gentle Napaeae And in the same sence are men called Ge●… ●…iles What may bee thought of Varro's opinion of the gods who dealeth so with them in his discouery of them and their ceremonies that with more reuerence vnto them he might haue held his peace CHAP 2. VV●… was euer a more curious inquisitor of these matters then Varro a ●…re learned inuentor a more diligent iudge a more elegant diuider or a ●…act recorder And though he be not eloquent yet is hee so documenta●… 〈◊〉 sententious that to reade his vniuersall learning will delight one that 〈◊〉 matter as much as T●…lly will one that loueth wordes Yea Tully a him●…e leaueth this testimony of him that the same disputation that hee handleth in his Academicke dialogues hee had hee saith with Marcus Varro a man the most ●…ute and d doub●…lesse the most learned of his time c Hee saith no●… the mo●…●…quent because herein hee had his betters but most acute and in his A●…kes where hee maketh doubts of all things hee calleth him Doutlesse the ●…st learned being so assured hereof that he would take away all doubt which hee ●…ed to induce into all questions onely in this Academicall disputation forgetting himselfe to bee an Academike And in his first booke hauing com●…ed his workes d Wee saith ●…ee in the Citty were but as wandring p●…lgrimes 〈◊〉 ●…kes brought vs home and taught vs to know what and whom wee were Thy 〈◊〉 age time religious and politique discipline habitations order all the formes causes 〈◊〉 kindes of diuine and ciuill discipline by these are fully discouered So great was his learning as e Terentius also testifieth of him in the verse Vir doctissi●… v●…decunque Varro Varro a man of vniuersall skill Who hath reade so much ●…t ●…ee wonder how hee hath had time to write and f hath written so much that we 〈◊〉 how any man should read so much This man I say so learned and so witty 〈◊〉 he bin a direct opposer of that religion he wrote for held the ceremonies 〈◊〉 ●…ay religious but wholy superstitious could not I imagine haue recorded 〈◊〉 ●…testable absurdities thereof then hee hath already But being a worshippe●… 〈◊〉 ●…ame gods a teacher of that worship that hee proffesseth he feareth that his worke should bee lost not by the enemies incursion but by the citizens negligence and affirmeth that with a more worthy and commodious care were they to bee preserued then that wherewith Metellus fetched the Palladium from the slaues and Aeneas his houshold gods from the sacke of Troy yet for all this doth hee leaue such things to memory as all both learned and ignorant do iudge most absurd and vnworthy to bee mentioned in religion What ought wee then to gather but that this depely Skild man beeing not freed by the holy spirit was ouer-pressed with the custome of his city and yet vnder shew of commending their religion gaue the world notice of his opinion L. VIVES TUlly a himselfe What Tully ment to handle in his Academikes his thirteeneth Epistle of his first booke to Atticus openeth fully beeing rather indeed a whole volume then an Epistle He writeth also de diuinat lib. 2. that hee wrote fourth bookes of Academicall questions And though he certifie Atticus that hee hath drawne them into two yet wanteth there much and of the two that wee haue extant Nonius Marcellus quoteth the second diuers times by the name of the fourth The place Augustine citeth is not extant in the bookes wee haue b Doutbtlesse the most Uarro in his life time when enuy stirre
eyther excerciseth the humility or beates downe the pride nothing a at all in nature being euill euill being but a priuation of good but euery thing from earth to heauen ascending in a degree of goodnesse and so from the visible vnto the inuisible vnto which all are vnequall And in the greatest is God the great workeman yet b no lesser in the lesse which little thinges are not to be measured to their owne greatnesse beeing neare to nothing but by their makers wisedome as in a mans shape shane his eye-brow a very nothing to the body yet how much doth it deforme him his beauty consisting more of proportion and parilyty of parts then magnitude Nor is it a wonder that c those that hold some nature bad and produced from a bad beginning do not receiue GODS goodnesse for the cause of the creation but rather thinke that hee was compelled by this rebellious euill of meere necessity to fall a creating and mixing of his owne good nature with euill in the suppression and reforming thereof by which it was so foyled and so toyled that he had much adoe to re-create and mundifie it nor can yet cleanse it all but that which hee could cleanse serues as the future prison of the captiued enemy This was not the Maniches foolishnes but their madnesse which they should abandon would they like Christians beleeue that Gods nature is vnchangeable incorruptible impassible and that the soule which may be changed by the will vnto worse and by the corruption of sinne be depriued of that vnchangeable light is no part of God nor Gods nature but by him created of a farre inferiour mould L. VIVES NOthing a at all This Augustine repeats often and herein do al writers of our religion besides Plato Aristotle Tully and many other Philosophers agree with him Plato in his Timaeus holds it wicked to imagine any thing that God made euill he being so good a God him-selfe for his honesty enuied nothing but made all like him-selfe And in his 2. de rep he saith The good was author of no euill but only of things good blaming Hesiod and Homer for making Ioue the author of mischiefe confessing God to be the Creator of this vniuerse therby shewing nothing to be euill in nature I will say briefly what I thinke That is good as Aristotle saith i●…●…s ●…etorik which we desire either for it selfe or for another vse And the iust contrary is euil w●…efore in the world some things are vsefull and good some auoideble bad Some 〈◊〉 and indifferent and to some men one thing is good and to others bad yea vnto one man at seuerall times seuerall good bad or neuter vpon seueral causes This opiniō the weaknesse of our iudgements respects of profit do produce But only that is the diuine iudgement which so disposeth all things that each one is of vse in the worlds gouernment And hee knoweth all without error that seeth all things to bee good and vsefull in their due seasons which the wise man intimates when hee saith That God made all things good each in the due time Therefore did hee blesse all with increase and multiplication If any thing were alwayes vnprofitable it should bee rooted out of the creation b No lesse Nature is in the least creatures pismires gnats bees spiders as potent as in horses ox●…n whales or elephants and as admirable Pliny lib. 11. c Those This heresie of the Manichees Augustine declareth De heres ad Quod vult deum Contra Faust. Manich. De Genes ad liter Of the error that Origen incurreth CHAP. 23. Bvt the great wonder is that some hold one beginning with vs of all thinges and that God created all thinges that are not of his essence otherwise they could neuer haue had beeing And yet wil not hold that plaine good beleefe of the Worlds simple and good course of creation that the good God made all thinges good They hold that all that is not GOD after him and yet that all is not good which none but God could make But the a soules they say not part but creatures of God sinned in falling from the maker being cast according to their deserts into diuers degrees down from heauen got certaine bodies for their prisons And ther-upon the world was made say they not for increase of good but restrrint of bad and this is the World Herein is Origen iustly culpable for in his Periarchion or booke of beginnings he affirmes this wherein I haue much maruaile that a man so read indiuine scriptures should not obserue first how contrary this was to the testimony of scripture that confirmeth all Gods workes with this And God saw that it was good And at the conclusion God saw all that hee made and loe it was very good Auerring no cause for this creation but onely that the good God should produce good things where if no man had sinned the world should haue beene adorned and filled b onely with good natures But sin being commited it did not follow that all should be filled with badnes the far greater part remaining still good keeping the course of their nature in heauen nor could the euil willers in breaking the lawes of nature auoyd the iust lawes of the al-disposed God For as a picture sheweth well though it haue black colors in diuers places so the Vniuerse is most faire for all these staines of sins which notwithstāding being waighed by themselues do disgrace the lustre of it Besides Origen should haue seene and all wise men with him that if the world were made onely for a penall prison for the transgressing powers to bee imbodyed in each one according to the guilt the lesse offenders the higher and lighter and the greater ones the baser and heauier that then the Diuels the worst preuaricators should rather haue bin thurst into the basest that is earthly bodies then the worst men But that we might know that the spirits merits are not repaid by the bodies qualitie the worst diuell hath an c ayry body and man though he be bad yet of farre lesse malice and guilt hath an earthly body yea had ere his fall And what can be more fond then to thinke that the Sunne was rather made for a soule to be punished in as a prison rather then by the prouidence of God to bee one in one world as a light to the beauty and a comfort to the creatures Otherwise two ten or en hundred soules sinning all a like the world should haue so many Sunnes To auoyd which we must rather beleeue that there was but one soule sinned in that kind deseruing such a body rather then that the Makers miraculous prouidence did so dispose of the Sunne for the light comfort of things created It is not the soules whereof speake they know not what but it is their owne soules that are so farre from truth that they must needes be attanted and restraned Therefore these three I
Apostle saith Wee know but in part Besides it beleeueth the sence in obiects of which the minde iudgeth by the sensitiue organs because hee is in a grosse error that taketh all trust from them It beleeueth also the holy canonicall scriptures both old and new from which the iust man hath his faith by which hee liueth and wherein a wee all walke with-out doubt as long as wee are in our pilgrimage and personally absent from God and this faith being kept firme wee may lawfully doubt of all such other things as are not manifested vnto vs eyther by sence reason scripture nor testimony of grounded authoritie L. VIVES WE all walke a without doubt We haue no knowledge of it but beleeue it as firmely as what wee see with our eyes Of the habite and manners belonging to a Christian. CHAP. 19. IT is nothing to the Citty of God what attyre the cittizens weare or what rules they obserue as long as they contradict not Gods holy precepts but each one keepe the faith the true path to saluation and therefore when a Philosopher becommeth a Christian they neuer make him alter his habite nor his manners which are no hindrance to his religion but his false opinions They respect not Varro's distinction of the Cynikes as long as they forbeare vncleane and intemperate actions But as concerning the three kindes of life actiue contemplatiue and the meanes betweene both although one may keepe the faith in any of those courses yet there is a difference betweene the loue of the truth and the duties of charitie One may not bee so giuen to contemplation that hee neglect the good of his neighbour nor so farre in loue with action that hee forget diuine speculation In contemplation one may not seeke for idlenesse but for truth to benefite him-selfe by the knowledge thereof and not to grudge to impart it vnto others In action one may not ayme at highnesse or honor because all vnder the sunne is meere vanitie but to performe the worke of a superiour vnto the true end that is vnto the benefite and saluation of the sub ect as wee sayd before And this made the Apostle say If any man desi●…e the office of a Bishop hee desireth a good worke what this office was hee explaineth not it is an office of labour and not of honour a The Greeke word signifieth that hee that is heerein installed is to watch ouer his people that are vnder him Episcopus a Bishop commeth of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which is ouer and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which is a watching or an attendance so that wee may very well translate 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a superintendent to shew that hee is no true Bishop who desireth rather to be Lordly him-selfe then profitable vnto others No man therefore is forbidden to proceed in a lawdable forme of contemplation But to affect soueraignty though the people must bee gouerned though the place be well discharged yet notwithstanding is b taxable of indecencie Wherefore the loue of truth requireth a holy retirednesse and the necessity of charity a iust employment which if it bee not imposed vpon vs wee ought not to seeke it but be take our selues wholy to the holy inquest of truth but if wee bee called forth vnto a place the law and need of charity bindeth vs to vnder-take it c Yet may wee not for all this giue ouer our first resolution least wee loose the sweetnesse of that and bee surcharged with the weight of the other L. VIVES THe a Greeke word of this before lib. 1. cap. 9. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 comes either of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to consider or of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which is to visit The Scripture where the seauenty translated 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 doe read it a watch-man as in Ezechiel Osee chap. 5. where the Lord complaineth that they had beene a snare in their watching and a net vpon mount Thabor As if hee had spoken of the Bishops of these times who set snares for benefices and spread large netts for money but not too wide wasted least the coyne should scatter forth b Taxable of indecencie O but some fine braines haue now brought it so about that bishoprickes may not onely bee sued for but euen bought and sold with-out any preiudice at all vnto this lawe c Yet may wee not Hee sheweth that a Bishop should conuerse with the holy scriptures often and drawe him-selfe home vnto God now and then from all his businesses liuing if he did well as a pilgrim of Gods in this life and one that had a charge of Gods and his owne soules in hand not any temporall trash and yet ought he not to forsake his ministery to which he should be preserred by an heauenly calling and not by an heauy pursse Hope the blisse of the heauenly Cittizens during this life CHAP. 20. THen therefore is the good of the Holy society perfect when their peace is established in eternity not running any more in successions as mortall men doe in life and death one to another but confirmed vnto them together with their immortalitie for euer with-out touch of the least imperfection What is hee that would not accompt such an estate most happy or comparing it with that which man hath heere vpon earth would not auouch this later to bee most miserable were it neuer so well fraught with temporall conueniences yet hee that hath the latter in possession and applyeth it all vnto the vse of his hope●… firme and faithfull obiect the former may not vnfitly bee called happy already but that is rather in his expectation of the first then in his fruition of the later For this possession with-out the other hope is a false beatitude and a most true misery For herein is no vse of the mindes truest goods because there wanteth the true wisdome which in the prudent discretion resolute performance temperate restraint and iust distribution of these things should referre his intent in all these vnto that end where God shall bee all in all where eternity shall be firme and peace most perfect and absolute Whether the Cit●…y of Rome had euer a true common-wealth according to Scipio's definition of a common-wealth in Tully CHAP. 21. NOw it is time to performe a promise which I passed in the second booke of this worke and that was to shew that Rome neuer had a true common-wealth as Scipio defineth one in Tullyes booke De Repub. his Definition was A common-wealth is the estate of the people Respub est res populi If this be true Rome neuer had any for it neuer had an estate of the people which hee defines the common-wealth by For he defineth the people to bee a multitude vnited in one consent of lawe and profite what hee meaneth by a consent of lawe hee sheweth him-selfe and sheweth there-by that a state cannot stand with-out iustice so that where true iustice wanteth there can bee no law
the vnbridled out-rage of dissolute souldiers at the sacking of Cities For when HALARICVS was ready to enter into the Citty he caused two Edicts to bee proclamed to his souldiers The one was that euery man should abstaine from slaughter and laying violent handes vpon any person because such cruell deedes did highly displease him The other was that whosoeuer had taken Sanctuarie in the temples of the chiefe Apostles should haue no harme done vnto them nor those holie temples bee prophaned by any and that the offendor should suffer death The City of Rome was taken by the Gothes after it was founded Anno. M. C. L. XIIII Cal. April PLAVIVS and VARRO being Consulls But after what manner is was taken the Historiographers make small relation PAPT STA EGNATIVS saith that he had the manner of the taking of it out of the workes of PROCOPIVS a Greeke author and that hee did not a little maruell why the Interpreter did wittingly and willingly ouer-skippe that place or if it were so that hee lighted vpon an vnperfect booke that hee tooke no better heed to marke what was wanting I my selfe haue not seene PROCOPIVS the Greeke author therefore the truth of the cause shall relie vpon the credit of EGNATIVS a man verie industrious and learned as farre as I canne iudge by his workes These are his words ensuing HALARICVS had now besieged Rome the space of two yeares when HONORIVS remayning carelesse at Rauenna was neither able nor durst come to succor and releeue the Citty For hee regarded nothing lesse then the wel-fare and safety of the City after the death of STILICO hauing no care to place another Generall in his roome which might haue managed the warres against the Gothes These things were motiues to stirre vp the Gothes to besiege the Cittie perceiuing that either the Romane souldiers daylie decaied or that they went about their affaires without any corage But when they found that they could not winne it by force hauing besieged it a long time in vaine then their barbarous enemies turne their thoughts to attempt what they may doe by policy And now they beginne to make a false shew of their departing home into their owne country wherefore they call three hundered young men out of their whole army excelling in actiuity of body and corage of minde which they giue as a present to the Noble-men of Rome hauing instructed them before hand that by their lowly carriage and obsequious seruice they should bend themselues to win the fauor and good liking of their maisters that on a certaine day concluded betwen them about noone-time when the Romane princes were either a sleepe or idly disposed they should come speedily to the gate which is named Asinaria Porta there suddenly rushing vpon the keepers murder them speedely and then set open the gate for their country-men to enter beeing ready at hand In the meane while the Gothes prolonged their returne dissembling cunningly that some-time they wanted this thing and some-time that At last these three hundered young men wake●…il to take the tide of oportunity dispatched their taske coragiously which they had vndertaken at the appointed day set the gate wide open to their countri-men and friends Now the Goths hauing gotten entrance rifle ransack spoile and wast the whole City procuring far greater dishonor shame vnto the Roman Nation then they did losse by the taking of it There are some which thinke the gate was set open by the meanes of PROBA a most famous wealthy woman pittying the lamentable and distressed case of the common people who died euery where like brute beasts pined with famine and afflicted with grieuous diseases There are two things worthy of serious marking first that HALARICVS made an Edict that no violence or harme should be offered vnto them which fled into the Temples of the Saints especially of Saint PETER and PAVL which thing was carefully kept Next when it was told HONORIVS being at Rauenna that Rome was lost hee thought it had beene meant of a certaine French-man a quarrellous and fighting fellow whose name was ROME maruelling that hee was so soone gone with whom hee had so little before beene most pleasant And thus much writeth EGNAT●…VS Now the most blasphemous and wicked people fa●…sly imputed the cause of all their miseries and enormities vnto the Christian Religion denying that euer it would haue come to passe that Rome should haue beene taken if they had kept still the Religions deuoutly obserued by their Ancestors and commended by tradition vn●…o their Posterity As though the French-men before time had not taken wasted and ransacked that Citty for the very same cause namely for the breach of their oth yea at that time when the prophane ceremonies of their Heathenish Religion as they say were in their chiefest prime and pride And as though few Christian Emperors had managed their affaires well or as though the decay of the Empire and ruine of it did not begin vnder the Emperors of the Gentiles And as if HONORIVS had not lost Rome by the same negligence and sloathfulnesse that GALIENVS lost Aegipt A●…a 〈◊〉 passing the matter ouer with a pleasant test when newes came vnto him of th●… l●…se of them Wherefore against these slanderous persons who would haue beene enemies and aduersaries of the Christian Religion though no calamity had happened to them AVGVSTINE wrote two and twenty bookes defending the Citty of God that is to say the Christian Religion against the rage and fury of their frantick and impious calumniations FINIS The argument out of the second booke of the Retractations of Saint Augustine TRiumphant Rome ruinated and deiected from her throne of Maiesty into a gulphe of calamity by the violent irruption of the barbarous Gothes managing their bloudy wars vnder the standard of ALARICVS the worshippers of false and many gods whom wee brand in the fore-head with the common name of heathen●… Pagans began to breath out more damnable and virulent blasphemies against the true GOD then their bestiall mouthes had euer breathed out bef●… labouring with might and maine to lay a heape of slanders vpon the neck of Christian rel●…on as the wicked Mother of all this mischiefe and murderer of their worldly happinesse Wherefore the fire and zeale of Gods House burning within my bowells I resolued to compile these bookes of the Citty of God to batter down the strongest hold of their bitter blasphemies and dispel the thick clowds of their grosse errors Some yeares passed ouer my head before I could compile and finish the whole frame of this worke by reason of many intercedent affaires whose impatient hast of quick expedition would admit no delay But at last this great and laborious worke of the Citty of God was ended in two and twenty bookes of which the first fiue rebate the edge of their erronious opinions which build the prosperity of humane affaires vpon such a tottering foundation that they thinke it cannot stand long
vnlesse it be shored vppe by the worship of many gods whom the blinded Pagans haue beene accustomed to worship and adore auerring but their truth is meere false-hood that neglect and contempt of their vnworthy adoration hath beene the fountaine from whence these bitter waters of aduerse occurrences haue streamed abundantly and ouerflowed them But the other fiue following are not meale-mouthed but speake boldly against them which confesse that the spring of worldly euills is not exhausted nor shal euer be dried vp but the current flowing some-time more some-times lesse some-times swiftly some times slowly changing their state according to the circumstance of places times and persons yet fondly are they opinionated for verity hath not made them a warrant that the deuout adoration of many gods in which sacrifices are offered vnto their imaginary Deity is profitable for the life which wee hope for after death Therefore in these ten bookes the absurdity of these two vaine opinions both deadly foes vnto Christian religion is discouered and confuted But least some man may vpbraid mee that I am too forward to disproue the assertions of others and slow enough to proue mine owne the other part of this worke which is confined within the bounds of twelue bookes is directed to that purpose Although in the first ten where it is needfull wee are not behinde hand to confirme the truth of our owne opinions and also to infringe the authority of contrary oppositions in the twelue bookes ensewing Therefore the first foure of the twelue following containe the originall of two Citties of which one belongeth to GOD the other to this World The second foure containe their progresse The third foure which are the last conteine their due bounds Now though all the two and twenty bookes are compiled together of both Citties yet they haue taken their title from the better part and haue the name of the Citty of God printed on their fore-head In the tenth booke it ought not to bee set downe for a miracle that the fire falling from heauen ranne betweene the deuided sacrifices when ABRAHAM sacrificed because this was shewed vnto him in a vision In the seauenteenth booke where it is sayd of SAMVEL He was not of the sonnes of ARON it should rather haue beene sayd He was not the sonne of the Priest For it was a more lawfull custome that the sonnes of the Priests should succeed in the roome of the deceassed Priests For the Father of SAMVEL is found in the sonnes of ARON but hee was not a Priest yet not so in his sonnes as if ARON had begot him but in such sort as all of that people are said to bee the sonnes of ISRAEL This worke beginneth thus That most glorious society and celestiall Cittie of GOD c. THE CONTENTS OF THE first booke of the City of God 1. Of the aduersaries of the name of Christ spared by the Barbarians in the sacking of Rome onely for Christs sake 2. There neuer was warre wherein the Conquerors would spare them whome they conquered for the gods they worshipped 3. Of the Romaines fondnesse in thinking that those gods could helpe them which could not helpe Troy in her distresse 4. Of the Sanctuary of Iuno in Troy which freed not any that fled into it from the Greeks at the Citties sack whereas the Churches of the Apostles saued all commers from the Barbarians at the sack of Rome Caesars opinion touching the enemies custome in the sack of Citties 5. That the Romaines themselues neuer spared the Temples of those Citties which they conquered 6. That the cruell effects following the losses of warre did but follow the custome of war wherein they were moderated it was through the power of the name of Iesus Christ. 7. Of the commodities and discommodities commonly communicated both to good and ill 8. Of the causes of such corrections as fall both vpon the good and bad together 9. That the Saints in their losse of things temporall loose not any thing at all 10. Of the end of this transitory life whether it be long or short 11. Of buriall of the dead that it is not preiudiciall to the state of a Christian soule to be forbidden it 12. The reasons why wee should bury the bodies of the Saints 13. Of the captiuity of the Saints and that 〈◊〉 they neuer wanted spirituall comfort 14. Of Marcus Regulus who was a famous example to animate all men to the enduring of voluntary ●…tiuity for their religion which notwithstanding was vnprofitable vnto him by reason of his Paganisme 15. Whether the taxes that the holy Uirgins suffered against their wills in their captiuities could pollute the vertues of their minde 16. Of such as chose a voluntary death to avoide the feare of paine and dishonor 17. Of the violent lust of the souldiers executed vpon the bodies of the captiues against their consents 18. Of Lucrecia that stab'd her selfe because Tarquins sonne had rauished her 19. That their is no authority which allowes christians to bee their owne deaths in what cause so euer 20. Of some sort of killing men which notwithstanding are no murthers 21. That voluntary death can neuer bee any signe of magnanimity or greatnesse of spirit 22. Of Cato who killed himselfe being not able to endure Caesars victory 23. That the Christians excell Regulus in that vertue wherein he excelled most 24. That sinne is not to bee avoided by sinne 25. Of some vnlawfull acts done by the Saints and by what occasion they were done 26. Whether wee ought to flie sinne with voluntary death 27. How it was a Iudgement of GOD that the enemy was permitted to excercise his lust vpon the Christians bodies 28. What the seruants of Christ may answer the Infidells when they vpbraide them with Christs not deliuering them in their afliction from the fury of the enemies fury 29. That such as complaine of the Christian times desire nothing but to liue in filthy pleasures 30. By what degrees of corruption the Romans ambition grew to such a height 31. Of the first inducing of stage-plaies 32. Of some vices in the Romaines which their Citties ruine did neuer reforme 33. Of the clemency of GOD in moderating this calamity of Rome 34. Of such of GODS elect as liue secretly as yet amongst the Infidells and of such as are false Christians 35. What subiects are to be handled in the following discourse FINIS THE FIRST BOOKE OF SAINT AVGVSTINE Bishop of Hippo his Cittie of God vnto MARCELLINVS Of the aduersaries of the name of Christ spared by the Barbarians in the sacking of Rome onely for Christs sake CHAP. 1. THAT most glorious society and celestiall Citty of Gods faithfull which is partly seated in the course of these declining times wherein he that liueth a by faith is a Pilgrim amongst the wicked and partly in that solid estate of eternitie which as yet the other part doth paciently expect vntill b righteousnesse be turned into iudgment being then by the
them in these wordes b Gens inimica mihi Tyrrhenum nauigat aequor Ilium in Italiam portans victosque penates The nation that I hate in peace sayles by with Troy and Troyes falne Gods to Italy c Yea would any wise-man haue commended the defence of Rome vnto Gods already proued vnable to defend them-selues but suppose d Iuno spoke this as a woman in anger not knowing what shee said what saies the so often surnamed e godly Aeneas him-selfe does he not say plainly f Panthus Otriades arcis Phoebique sacerdos Sacra manu Victosque deos parvumque nepotem Ipse trahit cursuque amens ad limina tendit Panthus a Priest of Phaebus and the Tower Burdned with his falne gods and in his hand His poore young nephew flyes vnto the strand Doth he not hold these Gods which he dares call falne rather commended vnto him then he to them it being said to him g Sacra suosque tibi commendat Troia penates To thee doth Troy commend her Gods her all If Virgill then call them fallen Gods and conquered Gods needing mans helpe for their escape after their ouerthrow and fall how mad are men to thinke that there was any witte shewen in committing Rome to their keeping or that it could not be lost if first it lost not them To worship conquered and cast Gods as guardians and defenders what is it but to put by good deityes and adore wicked i diuells Were there not more wisdome shewen in beleeuing not that Rome had not come to this calamitie vnlesse it had first lost them but that they had long since come to nothing had not Rome beene as the especially carefull keeper of them Who sees not that will see any thing what an idle presumption it is to build any impossibility of beeing conquered vpon defenders that haue bene conquered and to thinke that Rome therefore perished because it had lost the Gods k guardians when possibly the onely cause why it perished was because it would set the rest vpon such soone perishing guardians Nor listed the Poets to lye when they sung thus of these subuerted Gods it was truth that inforced their vigorous spirits to confesse it But of this more fitly in another place hereafter At this time as I resolued at first I wil haue a little bout as wel as I can with those vngrateful persons whose blasphemous tongues throw those calamities vpon Christ which are onely the guerdons of their owne peruersnesse But wheras Christs name alone was of power to procure them their vndeserued safety that they do scorne to acknowledge and being madde with sacrilegious petulancy they practise their foule tearmes vppon his name which like false wretches they were before glad to take vppon them to saue their liues by and those filthy tongues which when they were in Christes houses feare kept silent to remaine there with more safety where euen for his sake they found mercy those selfe-same getting forth againe shoot at his deity with al their envenomed shafts of mallice and curses of hostility L. VIVES QVo a semel Horace Epist. 2. Commonly cited to proue the power of custome in young and tender mindes such is this too Neque amissos Colores Lana refert madefacta fuco Wooll dyde in graine will not change hew nor staine b Gens inimica Aeneads the 1. Iuno was foe to Troy first because they came from Dardanus sonne of Ioue and Electra one of his whores Secondly because Ganymede Trois son being taken vp to heauen was made Ioues cup-bearer and Hebe Iunos daughter put by Thirdly because Antigone Laomedons daughter scorned Iunos beauty being therfore turned into a storke Lastly because shee was cast in the contention of beauty by the iudgement of Paris Priams sonne c Yea would any wise man The discourse of these Penates houshould or peculiar Gods is much more intricate then that of the Palladium I thinke they are called Penates quasi Penites because they were their penitissimi their most inward proper Gods Macrobius holdes with them that say they are our Penates by which we do penitùs spirare by whom we breath and haue our body by whom we possesse our soules reason So the Penates are the keepers or Gods Guardians of particular estates The Penates of all mankind were held to be Pallas the highest Aether Ioue the middle Aether and Iuno the lowest Heauen also hath the Penates as Martianus Capella saith in his Nuptiae And on earth euery Citty and euery house hath the peculiar Gods Guardians For euery house is a little Citty or rather euery Citty a great house And as these haue the Gods so hath the fire also Dionysius Halicarnasseus writeth that Romulus ordained perticular Vesta's for euery Court ouer all which his successor Numa set vp a common Vesta which was the fire of the Citty as Cicero saith in his 2. De legibus But what Penates Aeneas brought into Italie is vncertaine Some say Neptune and Apollo who as we read built the wals of Troy Other say Vesta For Virgill hauing said Sacra suosque c. To thee doth Troy commend her Gods c. Addes presently Sic ait manibus vittas Vestamque potentem Aeternumque adytis effert penetr alibus ignem This said he fetcheth forth th' eternall fire Almighty Vesta and her pure attire Now I thinke Vesta was none of the Penates but the fire added to them and therefore the Dictator and the rest of the Romaine Magistrates on the day of their instalment sacrificed to Vesta and the Gods guardians Of this Vesta and these Gods thus saith Tully in his twentith booke de natura deorū Nam vestae nomen c. The name of Vesta we haue from the Greekes it is that which they call 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 And her power is ouer fires and altars Therefore in the worship of that Godesse which is the guardian to the most inward and internall things all the praiers and sacrifices offered are externall Nor are the Penates far different from the power aforesaid being either deriued from Penu which is whatsoeuer man eateth or of penitūs in that they are placed within and therefore called of the Poets Penetrales chamber or closetary gods Thus far Tully But here is no time for further dispute of this matter Dionysius in his first booke saith he saw in a certaine blinde obscure temple not far from the Forum two Images of the Troian gods like two young men sitting and hauing Iauelins in their hands two very old peeces of worke and vpon them inscribed D. Penates and that in most of the temples were Images in fashion and habit like these old ones I make no question these were Castor and Pollux for in other places they are called the Romanes Penates which Prudentius testifies vnto Symmachus in these wordes Gemini quoque fratres Corruptâ de matre nothi Ledeia Proles Nocturnique equites celsae duo numina Romae Impendent c. And the two
sacri●…es 5. Of the obscaenaties vsed in the sacrifices offred vnto the mother of the gods 6. That the Pagan gods did neuer establish the doctrine of liuing well 7. That the Philosophers instructions are weake and bootlesse in that they beare no diuine authoritie because that the examples of the Gods are greater confirmation of vices in men then the wise mens disputations are on the contrary 8. Of the Romaine Stage-playes wherin the publishing of their foulest impurities did not any way offend but rather delight them 9. What the Romaines opinion was touching the restraint of the liberty of Poefie which the Greekes by the councell of their Gods would not haue restrained at all 10. That the Deuils through their settled desire to doe men mischiefe were willing to haue any villanie reported of them whether true or false 11. That the Greeks admitted the Plaiers to beare office in their commonweales least they should seeme vniust in despising such men as were the pacifiers of their 〈◊〉 12. That the Romaines in abridging th●…r liberty which their Poets would haue vpon men and allowing them to vse it vpon their Gods did herein shew that they prised themselues aboue the Gods 13. That the Romaines might haue ●…serued their Gods vnworthinesse by the 〈◊〉 of such obscane solemniti●… 14. That Plato who would not allow Poets to dwell in a well gouerned Citie shewed herein that his sole worth was better then all the Gods who desire to bee honored with Stage-playes 15. That flattery and not Reason created some of the Romaine Gods 16. That if the Romaine Gods had had any care of iustice the Citty should haue had her forme of gouernment from them rather then to borrow it of other nations 17. Of the rape of the Sabine women and diuerse other wicked facts done in Romes most ancient honorable times 18. What the history of Salust reports of the Romains conditions both in their times of danger and those of securitie 19. Of the corruptions ruling in the Romaine state before that Christ abolished the worship of their Idols 20. Of what kind of happinesse and of what conditions the accusers of Christianitie desire to pertake 21. Tullies opinion of the Romaine common-weale 22. That the Romaine Gods neuer respected whether the Citty were corrupted and so brought to destruction or no. 23. That the variety of temporall estates dependeth not vpon the pleasure or displeasure of those Deuils but vpon the iudgments of God Almighty 24. Of the acts of Sylla wherein the Deuils shewed themselues his maine helpers and furtherers 25. How powerfully the Deuils incite men to villanies by laying before them examples of diuine authority as it were for them to follow in their villanous acts 26. Of certaine obscure instructions concerning good manners which the Deuils are said to haue giuen in secret whereas all wickednesse was taught in their publique solemnities 27. What a great meanes of the subuersion of the Romaine estate the induction of those Playes was which they surmized to be propitiatory vnto the Gods 28. Of the saluation attained by the Christian religion 29. An exhortation to the Romaines to renounce their Paganisme THE SECOND BOOKE OF THE CITTY OF GOD Written by Saint Augustine Bishop of Hippo vnto Marcellinus Of the method which must of necessity be vsed in this disputation CHAP. 1. IF the weake custome of humaine sence durst not bee so bold as to oppose it selfe against the reasons of apparant truth but would yeeld this languid infirmitie vnto wholesome instruction as vnto a medicine which were fittest to apply vntill by Gods good assistance and faiths operation it were throughly cured then those that can both iudge well and instruct sufficiently should not need many words to confute any erronious opinion or to make it fully apparant vnto such as their desires would truly informe But now because there is so great and inueterate a d●…sease rooted in the mindes of the ignorant that they will out of their extreame blindnesse whereby they see not what is most plaine or out of their obstinate peruersnesse whereby they will not brooke what they see defend their irrationall and brutish opinions after that the truth hath beenetaught them as plaine as one man can teach another hence it is that a there ariseth a necessitie that bindeth vs to dilate more fully of what is already most plaine and to giue the truth not vnto their eyes to see but euen into their heads as it were to touch and feele Yet notwithstanding this by the way What end shall wee make of alteration if we hold that the answerers are continually to be answered For as for those that either cannot comprehend what is said vnto them or else are so obstinate in their vaine opinions that though they do vnderstand the truth yet will not giue it place in their minds but reply against it as it is written of them like spectators of iniquitie those are eternally friuolous And if wee should binde our selues to giue an answer to euery contradiction that their impudencie will thrust forth how falsly they care not so they do but make a shew of opposition vnto our assertions you see what a trouble it would be how endlesse and how fruitlesse And therefore sonne Marcelline I would neither haue you nor any other to whom this our worke may yeeld any benefit in Iesus Christ to read this volume with any surmise that I am bound to answer whatsoeuer you or they shall heare obiected against it least you become like vnto the women of whom the Apostle saith that they were alwayes learning and neuer able to come vnto the knowledge of the truth L. VIVES H●… 〈◊〉 i●… that a there ariseth a necessity The latine text is fit necessitus spoken by a G●…e figure 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 saith Demosthenes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 necessitas for necesse and it is an ordinary phrase with them though the Latynes say est necessitas as Quintilian hath it Arepetition of the Contentes of the first booke CHAP. 2. THerefore in the former booke wherein I began to speake of the City of God to which purpose all the whole worke by Gods assistance shall haue reserence I did first of all take in hand to giue them their answere that are so shamelesse as to impute the calamities inflicted vpon the world and in particular vpon Rome in her last desolation wrought-by the Vandales vnto the religion of Christ which forbids men to offerre seruice or sacrifice vnto deuills whereas they are rather bound to ascribe this as a glory to Christ that for his names sake alone the barbarous nations beyond all practise and custome of warres allowed many and spacious places of religion for those ingratefull men to escape into and gaue such honor vnto the seruants of Christ not only to the true ones but euen to the counterfeit that what the law of armes made lawfull to doe vnto all men they held it vtterly vnlawfull to offer vnto them
and there are Mimikes which are called otherwise Plaine-feete plani-pedes wearing neither shooes nor buskins but comming bare-foote vpon the Stage The Satyres notwithstanding and the Mi●…kes are both included vnder the Comedie And some say so is the Tragedie too But the Tragedie discourseth of lamentable fortunes extreame affects and horrible villanies but farre from turpitude The Comedie treates of the Knaueries and trickes of loue being brought into it by Menander to please the Macedonians that stood affected to such passages The Satyre containeth the looser Faunes and Siluanes whose rusticall iestes delighted much and sometimes they would lament But as they were v●…lceanely and slouenly goddes so were their speeches often times foule and dishonest to heare But the Mimikes forbore no beastlinesse but vsed extreeme licentiousnesse And yet these were more tollerable then other things which were acted in the sollemnities of Bacchus which for their incredible filthinesse were expelled out of Italie by a decree of the Senate Also in the Saturnalia and Floralia which twoo feastes were celebrated by common strumpets and the most raskally sort of all men The actors of the Floralia though they reuerenced not their owne goddesse yet when Cato came they reuerenced him and would not act them in his presence What the Komaines opinion was touching the restraint of the liberty of Poesie which the Greekes by the counsaile of their Goades would not haue restrained at all CHAP. 9. WHat the Romaines held concerning this point a Cicero recordeth in his bookes which he wrote of the Common wealth where Scipio is brought in saying thus If that the priutledge of an old custome had not allowed them Comedies could neuer haue giuen such proofes of their v●…esse vpon Theaters And some of the ancient Greekes pretended a conuenince in their vicious opinion and made it a law that c the Comedian might speake what he would of any man by his name Wherfore as Africanus saith well in the same booke Whom did not the Poet touch nay whom did he not vexe whom spared he perhaphs so saith one he quipt a sort of wicked seditious vulgar fellowes as d Cleo e Clytophon and f Hyperbolus to that we assent quoth hee againe though it were fitter for such falts to bee taxed by the g Censor then by a Poet but it was no more decent that h Pericles should bee snuffed at hauing so many yeares gouerned the Citty so well both in warre and peace then it were for i our Plautus or Naeuius to deride k Publius or Cneius Scipio or for l Caecilius to mocke m Marcus Cato And againe a little after Our twelue Tables quoth hee hauing decreed the obseruation but of a very few things n vpon paine of death yet thought it good to establish this for one of that few that none should o write or acte any verse derogatory from the good name of any man or preiudiciall vnto manners Excellently well for our liues ought not to bee the obiects for Poets to play vpon but for lawfull magistracy and throughly informed iustice to iudge vpon nor is it fit that men should here them-selues reproached but in such places as they may answere and defend their owne cause in Thus much out of Cicero in his fourth booke of The Common wealth which I thought good to rehearse word for word onely I was forced to leaue out some-what and some-what to transpose it for the easier vnderstanding For it giues great light vnto the proposition which I if so be I can must prooue and make apparant Hee proceedeth further in this discourse and in the end concludeth thus that the ancient Romanes vtterly disliked that any man should be either praised or dispraised vpon the stage But as I said before the Greekes in this though they vsed lesse modesty yet they followed more conuenience seeing they saw their gods so well to approue of the represented disgraces not onely of men but euen of themselues when they came vpon the stage whether the plaies were fictions of Poetry or true histories of their deeds and I wish their worshippers had held them onely worth the laughing at and not worth imitation for it were too much pride in a Prince to seeke to haue his owne fame preserued when hee sees his gods before him set theirs at six and seauen For where as it is said in their defence that these tales of their gods were not true but merely poeticall inuentions and false fictions why this doth make it more abhominable if you respect the purity of your religion and if you obserue the malice of the diuil what cūninger or more deceitful fetch can there be For when an honest worthy ruler of a contry is slandered is not the slāder so much more wicked impardonable as this parties life that is slandered is clearer and sounder from touch of any such matter what punishment then can be sufficient for those that offer their gods such foule and impious iniury L. VIVES CIcero a recordeth in his If of all the ancient monuments of learning which are either wholy perished or yet vnpublished if I should desire any one extant it should bee Cicero his sixe bookes de Republica For I doubt not but the worke is admirable and gesse but by the fragments which are extant I doe heare that there are some that haue these bookes but they keepe them as charily as golde apples but vntill they come forth to light let vs make vse of the coniectures recorded in other places of Cicero his workes b where Scipio The Cornelian family amongst other sur-names got vp that of Scipio from one of their bloud that was as a staffe Scipionis Vicè to his kinde and sickly Father Of this family were many famous men of whom wee meane to speake some-what in their due places This whom Tully brings in speaking in his worke De Republica was sonne vnto L. Aemilius Paulus that conquered Perseus King of Macedon Scipio the sonne of the greater Scipio African adopted him for his sonne and so he was called Aemilianus of the stock of whence he was discended He razed Carthage and Numance c The Comedian this was the olde Comedy 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and of this we said before that the citizens for feare of being brought vpon the stage would either begin to liue well if so they intended or at least forbeare to bee seene do euill Socrates said it was meete to expose ones selfe freely to the Comick Pen for if they write true of our vices they are a meane to reforme vs if they write false it concernes not vs. Yet euen Socrates himselfe that innocent hurtlesse man was mocked by Aristophanes in his Nebulae a knauish comedie set forth onely to that end And this was one of the greatest proofes that the Poets of this Old kinde of Comedy at that time had mercenarie Pens and followed peruerse and maleuolent affects c Cleon hee was a Lether-seller a seditious
for correcting of falts or increasing verues from those gods whom their owne lawes already doe subuert and conuince The gods require plaies for increase of their honors the Romans exclude plaiers from pertaking of theirs the gods require their owne falts to be celebrated by poets inuentions the Romaines restraine the Poets loosenesse frō touching any of the Romaines imperfections But Plato that Demi-god he both resists this impure affection of the gods and shewes what ought to bee perfected by the h towardlinesse of the Romaines denying Poets all place in a well ordered Common-welth howsoeuer whether they presented the figments of their owne lusts and fancies or related ought els as the guilt of the gods therfore of imitable exāples But we Christians make Plato neither whole God nor Demigod nor do we vouchsafe to compare him with any of Gods Angels or his Prophets not with any of Christs Apostles or his Martirs no not with any Christian man and why we will not by Gods help in the due place we will declare But notwithstanding seeing they wil needs haue him a Demi-god we thinke him worthy to be preferred if not before Romulus or Hercules though there was neuer i historian nor k Poet l affirmed or m fained n that he euer killed his brother o or committed any other mischiuous act yet at least before p Priapus or any q Cynocephalus or lastly any r Febris all which the Romaines either had as s Gods frō strangers or set them vp as their t owne in peculiar How then could such gods as these by any counsel they could giue preuent or cure such great corruption of mindes and maner whether imminent or already infused seeing they regarded nothing els but to diffuse and augment this contagion of wickednes to haue it instilled into the peoples notices from the stage as their own acts or acts which they approue to the end that mans lust might ru●…he course of wickednesse freely after the gods exāples Tully exclaimeth all in vaine vpon it u who being to speake of Poets when he came to them saith The clamor and approbation of the people when it is ioyned with these poeticall fictions as the testimony of some great and learned Maister oh what darknesse doth it involue a man in what fears it inflicts what lusts it enflames L. VIVES THe a actors There are actors ab agendo of acting plaiers vpon the stage Authores the Authors the Poets that write these fables though the name of Author is taken many waies but this is a Grammer question b Is not Plato Plato de rep lib. 2. expels al Poets out of a well ordered citty for the wickednes which they sing of the gods in the tenth booke of the same worke Socrates hauing spoken much against them concludeth al in this that he holds that poetry only fit to be excluded which giues life to vnmanly affections that to be allowed ' which is manly honest So that he condemnes not all poetry for sometimes he calls Poets a diuine kinde of men namely when they sing himmes to the Deities more-ouer hee saith that if the Poets doe sing of any good man though he be pore he is happy againe that an euil man though he bee ritch their songs wil make him miserable if they exceed not in loosenesse nor yeeld to rancour nor consent vnto flattery nor in their songs sowe seeds of corruption such poets are profitable members in Plato's commonwealth c His humanity Humanity is not taken here for any natural gentlenesse or courtesie of the minde or mans good wil called in Greeke 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 not for any knowledge of the liberal arts which the Greekes call 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but for that nature by which wee are men as goodnesse is that by with we are good the sence following proues it for it is compared vnto diuinity in this signification it is also vsed elsewere as in Tully de orat lib. I. d Though hee did not induce Imaruaile much that our Philosophers Diuines could not out of this place learn the difference of Suadeo Persuadeo But they which is very nere a miracle vnderstand latine without knowing the latine tongue and are very perfect Grecians and can read neuer a word of Greeke indeed in Greek 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is both suadere to aduise or counsel and persuadere to perswade or induce e This man did Labeo Here wil I deliuer the orders of the gods first out of Uarro and next out of other bookes of the Platonists The Romains call some of their goddes Summi the highest others Medioxumi middle-most others Heroes infimi or earthly ones 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which the ancients as Capella affirmeth called Earth The Medioxumi were such as were taken vppe to heauen by their deserts as Tulli saith in his booke De legibus that is Semi-gods or as it were a kind of Mungrels begot of mortallity and immortallity such were Romulus Hercules Aesculapius Castor and Pollux with others The Heroes were born of mortal parents on both sides but by their merits got a more aduanced state in desteny then the residue of the vulgar Some to adde vnto these another kinde called Semones but of them else-where f Makes Deities of them both Such as here in this world liued wel and holily the old Romains did stil put into the number of the gods when they were dead and assigned them feastes called Necya Cicero de legibus lib. 2. g He excludeth Poets In the old copy of Bruges and Coleigne the verbe repellit is left out and for Poeticarum here is talium in them h Frowardnesse of By their begun vertue their proofe and demonstration of goodnesse though sometimes towardlynesse stands for full vertue it selfe but here it is as I said and is declared by that which goes before What was to be performed i Historian As there are that do of Romulus k Poet. As do of Hercules l Affirmed The Historian did not m Fained The Poet did not n That he euer killed his brother Which Romulus did in killing of Remus o Or committed any other mischieuous act as is true of Hercules who defiled the whole world with whoredomes rapines robberies and slaughters yet they thought that the world was purged of such guilts by him p Before Priapus Diodorus saith that Priapus was made a god vppon this occasion Osiris King of Egipt beeing murthered by the wicked villeny of his brother Tiphon the conspirators cutte all his body in peeces and euery one tooke a share and because no man would take the priuie members they threw them into the Riuer Nilus Afterwards Isis the wife of Osiris hauing ouercome Tiphon she found all the parts of hir husbands body but the fore-named which being lost shee consecrated them and instituted their diuine worship with many ceremonies and such as were admitted to be Priests in Aegipt offered their first sacrifices
razed out Surely the loue of Saluting one another was great in Rome Highly was hee honored that was saluted and well was hee mannerd that did salute but great plausibility attended on both both were very popular and great steps to powrefulnesse Salust in Iugurth Truely some are verie industrious in saluting the people All the Latines writings are full of salutations b Sardanapalus The Grecians called Sardanapalus Thonos Concoloros Hee was the last King of the Assyrians a man throwne head-long into all kinde of pleasures Who knowing that Arbaces the Median prepared to make warres against him resolued to trie the fortune of warre in this affaire But beeing conquered as he was an effeminate fellow and vnfit for all martiall exercises hee fled vnto his house and set it on fire with himselfe and all his ritches in it Long before this when hee was in his fullest madnesse after pleasures hee causes this epitaph to bee engrauen vpon his tombe 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. Tully translates it thus Haec habeò quae edi quaeque exaturata voluptas Hausit at illa iacent multa et preclara relicta What I consum'd and what my guts engross't I haue but all the wealth I left I lost What else could any man haue written saith Aristotle in Cicero vpon the graue of an Oxe rather then of a King hee saith he hath that being dead which he neuer had whilest hee liued but onely while he was a wasting of it Chrysippus applies the verses vnto his Stoicisme hereof reade Athenaeus lib. 5. Tully his opinion of the Romaine Common-wealth CHAP. 21. BVt if hee be scorned that said their common-wealth was most dishonest and dishonorable and that these fellowes regard not what contagion and corruption of manners doe rage amongst them so that their state may stand and continue now shall they heare that it is not true that Salust saith that their common-wealth is but become vile and so wicked but as Cicero saith it is absolutely gone it is lost and nothing of it remaines For hee brings in Scipio him that destroied Carthage disputing of the weale-publike at such time as it was a presaged that it would perish by that corruption which Saluste describeth For this disputation was b at that time when one of the Gracchi was slaine from which point Salust affirmeth all the great seditions to haue had their originall for in those bookes there is mention made of his death Now Scipio hauing said in the end of the second booke that as in instruments that go with strings or wind or as in voices consorted there is one certaine proportion of discrepant notes vnto one harmony the least alteration whereof is harsh in the care of the skilfull hearer and that this concord doth ●…onsist of a number of contrary sounds and yet all combined into one perfect musicall melody so in a cittye that is gouerned by reason of all the heighest meane and lowest estates as of soundes there is one true concord made out of discordant natures and that which is harmony in musike is vnity in a citty that this is the firmest and surest bond of safety vnto the commonweale and that a commonweale can neuer stand without equity when hee had dilated at large of the benefit that equity brings to any gouernment and of the inconuenience following the absence therof then c Pilus one of the company begins to speake and intreated him to handle this question more fully and make a larger discourse of iustice because it was then become a common report d that a commonwealth could not be gouerned without iniustice and iniury herevpon Scipio agreed that this theame was to be handled more exactly and replied that what was as yet spoken of the commonwealth was nothing and that they could not proceed any farther vntill it were proued not onely that it is faulse that a weale publike cannot stand without iniury but also that it is true that it cannot stand without exact iustice So the disputation concerning this point being deferred vntill the next day following in the third booke it is handled with great controuersie For Pilus he vndertakes the defence of their opinion that hold that a state cannot be gouerned without iniustice but with this prouision that they should not thinke him to bee of that opinion himselfe And he argued very diligently for this iniustice against iustice endevoring by likely reasons and examples to shew that the part hee defended was vse-full in the weale publike and that the contrary was altogether needlesse Then e Laelius being intreated on all sides stept vp and tooke the defence of iustice in hand and withal his knowledge laboured to proue that nothing wrackt a citty sooner then vniustice and that no state could stand without perfect iustice which when hee had concluded and the question seemed to be throughly discussed Scipio betooke himselfe againe to his intermitted discourse and first he rehearseth and approueth his definition of a commonwealth wherein he said it was the estate of the commonty then he determineth this that this commonty is not meant of euery rablement of the multitude but that it is a society gathered together in one consent of law and in one participation of profite Then he teacheth f the profite of definitions in al disputations and out of his definitions he gathereth that onely there is a commonwealth that is onely there is a good estate of the commonty where iustice and honesty hath free execution whether it be by g a King by nobles or by the whole people But when the King becomes vniust whom he calleth h Tyranne as the Greekes do or the nobles be vniust whose combination hee termeth i faction or the people them-selues be vniust for which hee cannot finde a fit name vnlesse he should call the whole company as he called the King a Tyran then that this is not a vicious common-wealth aswas affirmed the day before but as the reasons depending vpon those definitions proued most directly it is iust no common-wealth at all for it is no Estate of the people when the Tyran vsurpeth on it by Faction nor is the commonty a commonty when it is not a society gathered together in one consent of law and one participation of commodities as hee had defined a commonty before VVherefore seeing the Romane Estate was such as Saluste doth descipher it to bee it was now no dishonest or dishonorable Common-wealth as hee affirmed but it was directly no common-wealth at all according vnto the reasons proposed in that discourse of a common-wealth k before so many great Princes and heads thereof and as Tully himselfe not speaking by Scipio or any other but in his owne person doth demonstrate in the beginning of his fift booke where hauing first rehearsed that verse of l Ennius where he saith Moribus antiquis res stat Romana virisque Old manners and old men vpholden Rome Which verse quoth Tully whether you respect the
Cattell dyed also so sore that one would haue thought the worldes vtter vastation was entered And then there was a winter how strangely vnseasonable The snow lying in the Market-place forty daies together in a monstrous depth all Tiber beeing frozen quite ouer If this hadde hapened in our times Lord how it would haue beene scanned vppon And then for that o great pestilence how many thousand tooke it hence which maugre all Aesculapius his druggs lasting till the next yeare they were faine to betake them-selues to the bookes of the Sybils p In which kind of Oracles as Tully saith well in his booke De diuinat the expounders of them are oftener trusted then otherwise gesse they neuer so vnlikely and then it was said that the pestilence raged so because that q many of the Temples were put vnto priuat mens vses Hereby freeing Aesculapius either from great ignorance or negligence But why were these Temples turned vnto priuate habitations without prohibition but onely because they saw they hadde lost too much labour in praying to such a crue of goddes so long and so becomming wiser by degrees had left haunting of those places by little and little and at length abandoned them wholy for the priuate vses of such as would inhabit them For those houses that as then for auoiding of this pestilence were so dilligently repared if they were not afterwards vtterly neglected and so incroched vppon by priuat men as before Varro should bee too blame to say speaking of Temples that many of them were vnknowne But in the meane time this fetch was a pretty excuse for the goddes but no cure at all for the Pestilence L. VIVES A Few a of the greatest The Plebeians either through hate to the Nobles or ambition in them-selues disturbed the common state exceedingly to assure and augment their owne pretending the defence of the peoples freedome notwithstanding in all their courses the Patriots opposed them abstracting from the peoples meanes to share amongst them-selues pretending the defence of the Senates dignity which the state would haue most eminent but indeed they did nothing but contend bandy factions each with other according to his power b deserts Some books put in incesserant but it hurteth the sence c Where then were All this relation of Augustines is out of Liuie read it in him least our repitition becomme both tedious and troublesome d It was scaled Incensum scaled and not incensum fired e SP. Aemilius This must be Melius assuredly by the history f Bed-spreadings It was an old fashion to banket vpon beds But in their appeasiue and sacrifical banquets in the Temples and in the night orgies they made beds in the place for the gods to lye and reuel vpon and this was called Lectisterium Bed-spreading the Citty being sore infected with the plague saith Liuie lib. 5. a few yeares ere it was taken by the Galles the Sybils bookes directed the first Bed-spreading to last eight dayes three beds were fitted one for Apollo and Latona one for Diana and Hercules one for Mercury and Neptune But how this can bee the first Bed-spreading I cannot see seeing that in the secular games that Poplicola Brutus his Collegue ordayned there were three nights Bed-spreadings Valer lib. 2. Censorin de die Natall g Another In y● Consulship of C L. Marcellus T. Ualerius was a great question in the Court about poisons because many great men had bene killed by their wiues vsing such meanes h Then grew wars Against the Samnites Galles Tarentines Lucans Brutians and Hetrurians after al which followed Pyrrhus the King of Epirus his warre But now a word or two of the Proletarij the Brood-men here named Seruius Tullus the sixt King of Rome diuided the people into six companies or formes in the first was those that were censured worth C. M. Asses or more but vnder that King the greatest Censure was but C X M. Plin lib. 33. the second contained all of an estate between C. and LXXV Asses the third them vnder L. the fourth them vnder XXXV the fift them vnder XI the last was a Century of men freed from warre-fare Proletarii or Brood-men and Capiti-censi A Brood-man was hee that was rated ML Asses in the Censors booke more or lesse and such were euer forborne from all offices and vses in the Cittie beeing reserued onely to begette children and therefore were stiled Proletarii of Proles brood or ofspring The Capite Censi were poorer and valued but at CCCLXXV asses Who because they were not censured by their states were counted by the poll as augmenting the number of the Cittizens These two last sorts did Seru. Tullius exempt from all seruice in warre not that they were vnfit them-selues or hadde not pledges to leaue for their fealty but because they could not beare the charges of warre for the soldiers in those daies maintained them-selues It may be this old custome remained after the institution of tribute and the people of Rome thought it not fitte that such men should go to warre because that they accounted all by the purse This reason is giuen by Valerius and Gellius But these Brood-men were diuers times ledde forth to the wars afterward mary the Capite Censi neuer vntill Marius his time and the warre of Iugurthe Salust Valer. Quintillian also toucheth this In milite mariano And here-vppon Marius their Generall was called Capite Census i Pyrrhus Descended by his mother from Achilles by his father from Hercules by both from Ioue This man dreaming on the worlds Monarchy went with speed at the Tarentines intreaty against the Romaines hence hoping to subdue Italie and then the whole world as Alexander had done a while before him k Who asking Cicero de diuinat lib. 2 saith that it is a verse in Ennius Aio and as in the text Which the Poet affirmeth that the Oracle returned as answer to Pyrrhus in his inquiry hereof Whence Tully writeth thus But now to thee Apollo thou that sittest vpon the earths nauell from whence this cruel and superstitious voice first brake Chrysippus fill'd a booke with thine Oracles but partly fained I thinke and partly casuall as is often seene in ordinary discourses and partly equiuocall that the interpreter shall need an interpreter and the lotte must abide the try all by lotte and partly doutful requiring the skil of Logike Thus farre he seeming to taxe Poets verse with falshood Pyrrhus is called Aeacides for Achilles was son to Peleus and Peleus vnto Aacus Virgill ipsumque Aeacidem c. meaning Pyrrhus l Pyrrhus was conqueror Pyrrhus at Heraclea ouerthrew Valerius Consull but got a bloudy victory whence the Heraclean victory grew to a prouerb but after Sulpitius and Decius foyled him and Curius Dentatus at length ouerthrew him and chased him out of Italy m And in this This is out of Orosius lib. 4. hapning in the Consulship of Gurges and Genutiu●… in Pyrrhus his warre n Prince of
citties and all that were in them showers and inundation●… ouer-whelmed whole countries continents were cut into the maine by strange ●…ides and made Ilands and the sea else-where cast vp large grounds and left them bare Stormes and tempests ouer-turned whole cities lightning consumed many of the Easterne countries and deluges as many of the West Fire sprang from the cauldrons of Aetna as from a torrent and ranne downe the hills if I should haue collected all of this kinde that I could which happened long before that the name of Christ beate downe those ruines of saluation what end should I euer make I promised also to make demonstration of the Romaines conditions and why the true God did vouchsafe them that increase of their Empire euen hee in whose hand are all kingdomes when their owne puppetries neuer did them a peny-worth of good but cousened them in all that euer they could Now then am I to discourse of their cousenage but chiefely of the Empires increase For as for their deuills deceites the second booke opened them reasonable fully And in all the three bookes past as occasion serued wee noted how much aide and comfort the great God did vouchsafe both the good and bad in these afflictions of warre onely by the name of CHRIST which the Barbarians so highly reuerenced beyond all vse and custome of hostilitie Euen he did this that maketh the sunne to shine both vpon good and bad raineth both vpon the iust and the vniust L. VIVES AFflictions a of body Bodily goods are three-fold and so are their contraries b Apuleius Hee was of Madaura a Platonist a great louer and follower of antiquitie both in learning and language His Asse hee had from Lucian but added much to the translation His booke de Mundo from Aristotle cunningly dissembling his author which I much admire off though he professe to follow Aristotle and Theophrastus in this worke in a new and ciuill phraise for stealing an imitation is all one herein with him which is more ciuill then to call flying giuing place these are new significations giuen the wordes to grace the stile Iustine Martyr and Themistius to omitte the later writers say directly that the worke d●… mundo is Aristotles Euphradae though the phrase seeme to excell his in elegance But this is no fitte argument fot this place Surely it is either Aristotles or Theophrastus-his or some of the Aristotelians of those times being as Iustine faith a compendium of the Perpatetiques physiology Augustines quotation of him heere is not in the Florentine copy which Pietro Aegidio a great scholler and my most kinde and honest friend lent me nor in the elder Uenice copie which I sawe at Saint Pietro Apostolio's nor in the new one which Asulanus Aldus his father in law Printed for in all them it is thus All earthly things haue their changes reuolutions and dissolutions Lastly that which the gouernour is in the ship c. Yet that Apuleius wrote the rest which Augustine relateth appeareth by the very stile and phrase both trulie Apuley●… as also because it is in Aristotles worke it selfe beginning at these wordes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. as followeth which Apuleius hath translated there where hee saith 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Easterne regions were consumed and burned The burning of Phaeton Aristotle describeth plainely that hee was Apollo's sonne and through want of skill set heauen and hell on fire But the burning of Aetna both mentioned in the sayd words of Aristotle was the first eruption of fire from that mountaine happening in the second yeare of the 88. Olympiade three yeares before Plato's birth if Eusebius his account bee true which is neuer otherwise vnlesse the copiers of him bee in fault In this fire certaine godly men were saued from burning by a miracle which Aristotle toucheth at in this his Booke de Mundo and more at large in his Physickes but I make a question whether these bee his or no. c Reuolutions mine interpreter had beene vndone had hee not put in Intensiones remissiones that hee might make Augustine talke of his formes and formalities about which these fellowes keepe a greater adoe then euer did the Greekes and the Troya●…s about Hellens fayre forme for they thinke their formes are as worthy to bee wrangled for ●…s hers was But in the olde manuscripts are not guiltie of any two such words as intensiones et remissiones nor Aristotle neither in this place 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 hee hath reuolutione●… ●…ritus so that the first must be changes and not subuersions Whether happy and wise men should accoumpt it as part of their felicitie to possesse an Empire that is enlarged by no meanes but warre CHAP. 3. NOw then let vs examine the nature of this spaciousnesse and continuance of Empire which these men giue their gods such great thankes for to whom also they say they exhibited those playes that were so filthy both in actors and the action without any offence of honestie But first I would make a little inquirie seeing you cannot shew such estates to bee any way happy as are in continuall warres being still in terror trouble and guilt of shedding humaine bloud though it be their foes what reason then or what wisdome shall any man shew in glorying in the largenesse of Empire all their ioy being but as a glasse bright and brittle and euer-more in feare and danger of breaking To diue the deeper into this matter let vs not giue the ●…ailes of our soules to euery ayre of humaine breath nor suffer our vnderstandings eye to bee smoaked vp with the fumes of vaine words concerning kingdomes prouinces nations or so No let vs take two men for euery particular man is a part of the greatest cittie and kingdome of the world as a letter is a part of a word and of these two men let vs imagine the one to be poore or but of a meane estate the otherpotent and wealthy but with-all let my wealthy man take with him feares sorrowes couetise suspect disquiet contentions let these bee the hookes for him to hale in the augmentation of his estate and with-all the increase of those cares together with his estate and let my poore man take with him sufficiencie with little loue of kindred neighbours friends ioyous peace peacefull religion soundnesse of body sincerenesse of heart abstinence of dyet chastitie of cariage and securitie of conscience where should a man finde any one so sottish as would make a doubt which of these to preferre in his choyse Well then euen as wee haue done with these two men so let vs doe with two families two nations or two kingdomes Laye them both to the line of equitie which done and duly considered when it is done here doth vanitie lye bare to the view and there shines felicitie Wherefore it is more conuenient that such as feare and follow the lawe of the true God should haue the
most was called the most learned of the Gowned men and which neuer man had besides him in his life had his statue set vp in the library which Asinius Pollio made publike at Rome c He saith not Varro as by his bookes left vs doth appeare either regarded not or els attained not any pleasing formality of stile d We saith hee Academ quest lib. 1 and the like is in Philippic 2. e Terentianus A Carthaginian liuing in Diocletians time hee wrote a worke of letters syllables and meeters in verse which is yet extant Seruius and Priscian cite him very often The verse Augustine quoteth is in the chapter of Phaleuciakes f hath written Gellius lib. 3. relateth out of Varro his first booke Hebdomarum that beeing foure-score and foure yeares of age hee had written 490. bookes of which some were lost at the ransacking of his library when he was proscribed The diuision of Varro's bookes which he stileth The antiquity of diuine and humaine affaires CHAP. 3. HE wrote one and forty bookes of antiquities diuiding them into affaires diuineand humaine these hee handled in fiue and twenty of them the diuine in sixteene so following the diuision that euery six bookes of humanity he diuided into a foure parts prosecuting the persons place time and nature of them all in his first sixe hee wrote of the men in the second sixe of the places in his third sixe of the times in his last sixe of the actions One singular booke as the argument of them all hee placed before them all In his d diuinitie also hee followeth the same methode touching the gods for their rites are performed by men in time and place The foure heads I rehersed hee compriseth in three bookes peculiar In the first three of the men the next three of places the third of the times the last of the sacrifices herein also handling who offred where when and what they offered with acuity and iudgement But because the chiefe expectation was to know to whom they offered of this followed a full discourse in his three last bookes which made them vp fifteene But in all 16. because a booke went as an argument by it selfe before all that followed which beeing ended consequently out of that fiue-fold diuision the three first bookes did follow of the men so sub-diuided that the first was of the Priests the second of the 3. of the fifteene d rite-obseruers His second three books of the places ●…dled 1. the Chappels second the Temples 3. the religious places The ●…hree bookes of the times handled first their holydaies 2. the Circensian gam●…s 3. the Stage-playes Of the three concerning the sacrifices the 1. handled ●…tions 2. the priuate offerings 3. the publike All these as the partes of th●…●…recedent pompe the goddes them-selues follow in the three last they 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 all this cost is bestowed In the 1. the goddes knowne 2. the goddes ●…ine 3. the whole company of them 4. the selected principals of them 〈◊〉 in this goodly frame and fabri●…e of a well distinguisht worke it is appa●… t●… all that are not obstinately blinde that vayne and impudent are they that begge or expect eternall life of any of these goddes both by that we haue spoken 〈◊〉 ●…at wee will speake These are but the institutions of men or of diuels not go●…●…ells as hee saith but to bee plaine wicked spirits that out of their 〈◊〉 mallice instill such pernitious opinions into mens phantasies by abu●… 〈◊〉 sences and illuding their weake capacities thereby to draw their 〈◊〉 ●…to vanity more deepe and vnloose the hold they haue or might haue 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 changeable and eternall verity Varro professeth him-selfe to write of 〈◊〉 before Diuinity because first saith hee there were Citties and soci●… ●…ich afterward gaue being to these institutions But the true religion 〈◊〉 ●…riginall from earthly societies God the giuer of eternall comfort inspi●… i●…to the hearts of such as honour him L. VIVES 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 parts diuided them into foure sections not inducing parts of contrarieties of 〈◊〉 b In his Diuinity also Identidem the old books read but it may be an error in the 〈◊〉 ●…m is better In like manner c Augurs Their order is of great Antiquitie deri●… 〈◊〉 to Greece thence to Hetruria and the Latine Aborigines and so to Rome Romu●… Augur and made 3. others Dionisius He set an Augur in euery Tribe Liu. In pro●…●…me they added a fourth and afterwards fiue more which made vp nine And so they 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Priests Consuls M. Valerius and Tar●…●…he ●…he proud hauing bought the books of the Sybils appointed two men to looke in them 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 need was those were called the Duumvirs of the sacrifices Afterwards these two were 〈◊〉 ●…enne by the Sextian Licinian law in the contention of the orders two yeares before the ●…ians were made capable of the Consulship and a great while after fiue more added w●…●…mber stood firme euer after That by Varro's disputations the affaires of those men that worshipped the goddes are of farre more Antiquitity then those of the goddes them-selues CHAP. 4. T●…is therefore is the reason Varro giueth why hee writes first of the men 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ●…ter of the goddes who had their ceremonious institutions from men 〈◊〉 saith hee the Painter is elder then the picture and the Carpenter then the 〈◊〉 ●…re Citties before their ordinances But yet hee saith if hee were to write of 〈◊〉 ●…ll nature of the goddes hee would haue begun with them and haue dealt 〈◊〉 men afterwards As though heere hee writ but of part of their natures 〈◊〉 of all Or that a some part of the goddes nature though not all should 〈◊〉 ●…lwaies be preferred before men Nay what say you to his discourse in his 〈◊〉 l●…st bookes of goddes certaine goddes vncertaine and goddes selected 〈◊〉 hee seemes to omit no nature of the gods Why then should he say if wee 〈◊〉 ●…o write of all the nature of gods and men wee would haue done with the goddes ore wee would begin with the men Eyther hee writes of the goddes natures in whole in part or not all if in whole then should the discourse haue hadde first place in his worke if in part why should it not bee first neuerthelesse Is it vnfit to preferre part of the gods nature before whole mans If it be much to preferre it before all the worldes yet it is not so to preferre it before all the Romaines And the Bookes were written only in Romes respect not in the worlds yet saith he the men are fittest before as the Painter to the picture and the Carpenter to the building plainly intimating that the Deities affaires had as pictures and buildings haue their originall directly from man So then remayneth that hee wrote not all of the goddes natures which hee would not speake plainly out but leaue to the readers collection For where hee saith b not all Ordinarily it is vnderstood Some but may bee taken for None For none neyther
we leaue single as wanting m meanes of the bargaine chiefly some beeing widowes as Populonia Fulgura and Rumina nor wonder if these want sutors But this rable of base gods forged by inueterate superstition wee will adore saith hee rather for lawes sake then for religions or any other respect So that neither law nor custome gaue induction to those things either as gratefull to the gods or vse-full vnto men But this man whom the Philosophers as n free yet beeing a great o Senator of Rome worshipped that hee disauowed professed that hee condemned and adored that hee accused because his philosophy had taught him this great matter not to bee superstitious in the world but for law and customes sake to imitate those things in the Temple but not acte them in the Theater so much the more damnably because that which he counterfeited he did it so that the p people thought hee had not counterfeited But the plaier rather delighted them with sport then wronged them with deceite L. VIVES APostles a times It may bee the proofes are the Epistles that are dispersed vnder the name of him to Paul and Paul vnto him but I thinke there was no such matter But sure it is that he liued in Nero's time and was Consull then and that Peter and Paul suffred martirdome about the same time For they and hee left this life both within two yeares it may be both in one yeare when Silius Nerua and Atticus Vestinus were Consulls b Booke against superstitions These and other workes of his are lost one of matrimony quoted by Hierome against Iouinian of timely death Lactant of earth-quakes mentioned by himselfe These and other losses of old authors Andrew Straneo my countriman in his notes vpon Seneca deploreth a tast of which he sent me in his Epistle that vnited vs in friendship He is one highly learned and honest as highly furthering good studies with all his power himselfe and fauoring all good enterprises in others c Strato Son to Archelaus of Lanpsacus who was called the Phisicall because it was his most delightfull studie hee was Theophrastus his scholler his executor his successor in his schoole and maister to Ptolomy Philadelphus There were eight Strato's Laërt in Uit. d That not the The grammarians cannot endure N●… and quidem to come together but wee reade it so in sixe hundred places of Tully Pliny L●… and others vnlesse they answere vnto all these places that the copiers did falsify them I doe not thinke but an interposition doth better this I say e Recorded As Dyonisius Phalaris Mezentius Tarquin the Proud Sylla C●…a Marius Tiberius Cla●… and Caligula f Some haue The Persian Kings had their Eunuches in whome they put especiall trust So had Nero g Osyris Hee beeing cut in peeces by his brother Typhon and that Isis and Orus Apollo had reuenged his death vpon Typhon they went to seeke the body of Osyris with great lamentation and to Isis her great ioy found it though it were disparkled in diuers places and herevpon a yearely feast was instituted on the seeking of Osyris with teares and finding him with ioy Lucane saith herevpon Nunquam satis qua●…us Osyris the ne're wel-sought Osyris h Be his aduocates Uadaeri is to bring one to the iudge at a day appointed Vadimonium the promise to bee there So the phrase is vsed in Tully to come into the Court and the contrary of it is non obire not to appeare Pliny in the preface of his history and many other authors vse it the sence here is they made the gods their aduocates like men when they went to try their causes i Arch-plaier Archimimus co●… of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to imitate because they imitated their gestures whom they would make ridiculous as also their conditions and then they were called Ethopaei and Ethologi whereof comes Ethopeia Quintil. Pantomimi were vniuersall imitators Archimimi the chiefe of all the Mimikes as Fano was in Vespasians time Who this was that Seneca mentions I know not k Terrible She was iealous and maligned all her step-sons and Ioues harlots so that shee would not forbeare that same Daedalian statue which Ioue beeing angry threatned to marry in 〈◊〉 For being reconciled to him she made it be burnt Plut. Hence was Numa's old law No 〈◊〉 touch Iuno's altar Sacrifice a female lambe to Iuno with disheueled hayre l Bellona Some ●…ke her his mother and Nerione or as Varro saith Neriene his wife which is as Gel●… a Sabine word signifieth vertue and valour and thence came the Nero's surname ●…es had it from the Greekes who call the sinewes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and thence comes our Ner●… and the Latine Neruus Plaut Trucul Mars returning from a iourney salutes his wife Ne●… 〈◊〉 Noct. Att. lib. 10. m Meanes of the bargaine That is one to bee coupled with hen●…●…es the Latine phrase Quaerere condicionem filiae to seeke a match for his daughter 〈◊〉 lib. 4. Cic. Philipp It was vsed also of the Lawiers in diuorses Conditione tua 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 I le not vse thy company n As free We must seeme Philosophy saith Seneca to be free vsing free as with a respect not simply o Seneca Hee was banished by Claudius but 〈◊〉 being executed and Agrippina made Empresse she got his reuocation and senatorship ●…torship of the Emperor that hee might bring vp her sonne Nero. So afterward Tr●…●…ximus and he were Consulls Ulp. Pandect 36. Hee was won derfull ritch Tranquill Tatius The gardens of ritch Seneca p People His example did the harme which Ele●…●…ed ●…ed to auoide Macchab. 2. 6. with far more holinesse and Philosophicall truth Seneca his opinion of the Iewes CHAP. 11. THis man amongst his other inuectiues against the superstitions of politique 〈◊〉 Theology condemnes also the Iewes sacrifices chiefly their saboaths say●… 〈◊〉 by their seauenth day interposed they spend the seauenth part of their 〈◊〉 idlenesse and hurt themselues by not taking diuers things in their time ●…et dares he not medle with the Christians though then the Iewes deadly 〈◊〉 vpon either hand least he should praise them against his countries old cus●… or dispraise them perhaps against a his owne conscience Speaking of the 〈◊〉 he saith The custome of that wicked nation getting head through all the world the vanquished gaue lawes to the vanquishers This hee admired not ●…ing the worke of the god-head But his opinion of their sacraments hee subscribeth They know the cause of their ceremonies saith hee but most of the people doe they know not what But of the Iewish sacrifices how farre gods institutions first directed them and then how by the men of God that had the mistery of eternity reuealed to them they were by the same authority abolished wee haue both els-where spoken chiefly against the b Manichees and in this worke in conuenient place meane to say some-what more L. VIVES AGainst a his owne Nero hauing fired Rome many were blamed for the
of vnti●… i●… be so ragged that it bee past wearing Some say they kept them to make childrens s●…g cloathes off And thus for Greece Rome had a great yearely feast of Ceres which mou●…ers might not be present at Liu. They had also the mariages of Ceres or Orcus wherein it was an offence to bring wine but frankincence onely and tapers whereof Plautus saith I 〈◊〉 you are about Ceres feasts for I see no wine Aulular Of this sacrifice read Macrob. 〈◊〉 and Seruius vpon Virgils Georgikes lib. 1. vpon this place Cuncta tibi Cerem pubes agrestis adoret Cui tu lacte fauos miti dilue Baccho Call all the youth vnto these rites diuine And offer Ceres hony milke or wine ●…re were also the Cerealia games in Ceres honour whereof Politian a great scholler hath 〈◊〉 in his Miscellanea whose iudgement least some bee mistaken by I will write mine 〈◊〉 hereof First the old Circian games that Romulus ordained to Hipposeidon and these 〈◊〉 are not al one these are farre later in originall Againe these later were kept long 〈◊〉 Memmius his time Liu. namely the sixteenth yeare of the second African warre by 〈◊〉 ●…ates decree Gn. Seruillus Geminus beeing dictator and Aaelius Paetus Maister of the 〈◊〉 Nor doe Tacitus or Ouid comptroll this in saying the Cerealia were kept in the great 〈◊〉 The Cereal Aediles were made for the cornes prouision not for the plaies though 〈◊〉 made some to Ceres But I maruell that Politian thinketh that that Memmius whome 〈◊〉 made Aedile was hee to whom Lucretius dedicated his booke or if it shall please you 〈◊〉 sonne when as Lucretius died in the second consulships of Pompey and Crassus and the worke was written in Memmius his youthfull daies True it is one error begets many I would not haue any man thinke this spoken in derogation from the glory of so great a scholler for 〈◊〉 is not to bee reiected for beeing deceiued hee was but a man My words ayme at the ●…fit of the most not at detraction from him or any If any man thinke otherwise which is 〈◊〉 know hee that it is no iniury to reprehend either Politian or any man else of the cunning●… in matter of antiquity But of the Cerealia let this suffice Of the obscaenity of Bacchus sacrifices CHAP. 21. BVt now for Libers a sacrifices who ruleth not onely all moisture of seedes and fruites whereof wine seemes principall but of creatures also To ●…ibe their full turpitude It irkes me for losse of time but not for these mens ●…ish pride Amongst a great deale of necessary omission let this goe whereas hee saith that Libers sacrifices were kept with such licence in the high-waies in Italy that they adored mens priuities in his honour their beastlinesse exulting and scorning any more secrecie This beastly sight vpon his feast daies was honorably mounted vpon a b waggon and first rode thus through the country and then was brought into the city in this pompe But at c Lauinium they kept a whole month holy to Liber vsing that space all the beastly words they could deuise vntill the beastly spectacle had passed through the market place and was placed where it vsed to stand And then must the most honest matron of the towne crowne it with a garland Thus for the seeds successe was Liber adored and to expell witch-craft from the fields an honest matron must doe that in publike which an whore should not do vpon the stage if the matrons looked on For this was Saturne accounted insufficient in this charge that the vncleane soule finding occasion to multiply the gods and by this vncleanesse being kept from the true GOD and prostitute vnto the false through more vncleane desires might giue holy names to these sacriledges and entangle it selfe in eternall pollution with the diuells L. VIVES LIbers a sacrifices Kept by the Thebans on mount Cythaeron euery third yeare in the nights and called therefore Nyctilena Seru. and of the yeares Trieretica or Triennalia Herein were the Phally that is huge priuy members vsed Herodot Plutarch de cupid op The Agiptians vsed little statues with such huge perpendents the other nations caried the members onely about for fertility sake The feasts were called Phallogogia Theodoret. lib. 3. Why Priapus and Bacchus haue feasts together there bee diuers reasons 1. Because they were companions 2. because without Bacchus ' Priapus can doe naught and therefore was held the sonne of Bacchus and Uenus 3. because Bacchus is Lord of seede whereof Priapus is the chiese instrument and therefore god of gardens and hath his feasts kept by the husbandmen with great ioye Now Diodorus saith that Osyris whome hee counteth Bacchus being cut in peeces by Typhon and euery friend bearing part away none would take the priuy member so it was cast into Nyle Afterwards Isis hauing reuenged his murther got all his body againe onely that shee wanted and so consecrated an Image thereof and for her comfort honored it more then all the other parts making feasts to it calling it Phallus at the Priests first institution Nazianzene reckneth both Phalli and Ithyphalli but I thinke they differ not but that for the more erection it was called Ithyphallus of the greeke b Waggons To yoake mise in waggons saith Horace in his Satyres lib. 2. It is adiminutiue of waynes Plaustra much difference is about Plaustra and Plostra U. Probus is for Plostra Florius told Vespasian hee must say plaustra so the next day he called him Flaurus for Florus Suctonius c At Lauinium A towne in Latinum built by Aeneas and named after his wife Alba longa was a colony of this of Alba before is sufficient spoken Of Neptune Salacia and Venilia CHAP. 22. NOw Neptune had one Salacia to wife gouernesse they say of the lowest parts of the sea why is Venilia ioyned with her but to keep the poore soule prostitute to a multitude of deuills But what saith this rare Theology to stoppe our mouthes with reason Venilia is the flowing tide Salacia the ebbing What two goddesses when the watter ebbing and the water flowing is al one See how the soules lust a flowes to damnation Though this water going bee the same returning yet by this vanity are two more deuills inuited to whom the soule b goeth and neuer returneth I pray the Varro or you that haue read so much and boast what you haue learned explayne mee this not by the eternall vnchanging nature which is onely god but by the worlds soule and the parts which you hold true gods The error wherein you make Neptune to bee that part of the worlds soule that is in the sea that is some-what tolerable but is the water ebbing and the water flowing two parts of the world or of the worlds soule which of all your wits conteineth this vnwise credence But why did your ancestors ordaine yee those two goddesses but
called Golfo De Venetia which the Grecians vsed oftentimes to crosse ouer I wonder that s●…e haue held al Italy to be called so because Pliny doth write thus What haue the Grecia●…s a most vanie-glorious nation shewne of themselues in calling such a part of Italy Magna Grecia Great Greece Whereby hee sheweth that it was but a little part of Italy that they 〈◊〉 thus Of the 3. baies I spoke of one of them containes these fiue Citties Tarentum Me●…us Heraclea Croto and Turii and lieth betweene the promontories of Sales and La●… Mela. It is called now Golfo di Taranto Here it is said Pythagoras did teach c Io●… Ionia is a country in Asia Minor betweene the Lydians the Lycaonians and our sea ●…ing Aeolia and Caria on the sides this on the South-side that on the North Miletus is the ●…se Citty saith Mela both for all artes of warre and peace the natiue soile of Thales the ●…sopher Tymotheus the Musician Anaximander the Naturalist and diuers other whose w●…s haue made it famous Thales taught his fellow cittizen Anaximander he his fellow cittizen also Anaximenes hee Anaxagoras of Clazomene Pericles Archelaus and Socrates of Athens and Socrates almost all Athens d Pythagoras Aristoxenus saith hee was of Tyrrhe●… in ●…e that the Greekes tooke from the Italians hee went into Egipt with King Amasis and r●…ng backe disliking the tyrannous rule of Polycrates of Samos hee passed ouer to Italy ●…y who also Cicero Tnsc. 5. out of Heraclides of Pontus relateth that Pythagoras beeing ●…ked of Leontes the Phliasian King what hee professed hee answered that whereas the rest of his pros●… had called themselues wise men Sophi hee would bee called But a louer of wisdome a P●…pher with a more modest respect of his glory And herevpon the name Sophi grew quite ●…of custome as ambitious and arrogant and all were called Philosophers after that fo●… inde●… the name of wise is Gods peculiar onely f Thales The first Naturalist of Greece 〈◊〉 first yeare of the 35. Olympiad after Apollodorus his account in Laertius g 〈◊〉 A sort of youthes hauing bought at a venture a draught of the Milesian fishers 〈◊〉 ●…awne vp a tablet of gold they fell to strife about it each would haue had it so vnto 〈◊〉 his oracle they went who bad them giue it vnto the wise So first they gaue it vn●… 〈◊〉 whom the Ionians held wise he sent it vnto another of the seauen and hee to an●… and so till it came to Solon who dedicated it to Apollo as the wisest indeed And these 〈◊〉 had the same of wisdome ouer all Greece and were called the seauen Sages h The ot●… Chilo of Lecedaemon Pittacus of Mitilene Bias of Priene Cleobulus o●… Lindus Peri●… ●…orynthe and Solon of Athens of these at large in the eighteenth booke i Com●… 〈◊〉 Some say that the Astrology of the Saylers was his worke others ascribe it vnto R●…●…f ●…f Samos Laban the Argiue saith he wrote 200. verses of Astrology k Astrologi●… End●…s saith hee presaged the eclipses Hist. Astrolog Amongst the Greeks saith Pliny lib. 〈◊〉 Thales in the fourth yeare of the 48. Olympiade was the first that found their 〈◊〉 of eclipses and prognosticated that which fell out in King Halliattes time in the ●…XX yeare after the building of Rome So saith Eusebius and Cicero de diuinat lib. 1. Wh●…e for Haliattes he writeth Astiages But they liued both at one time and had warres one ●…ith another l Water As Homere calls the sea father of all Plutarch in Placit Philos and o●…e giue Thales his reason because the seede of all creatures animate is moist and so is all ●…nt Nay they held that the seas moisture nourisheth and increaseth the stars m Nor did 〈◊〉 Velleius in Tully affirmeth that Thales thought all things to bee made of water and 〈◊〉 the essence that was the cause of all their production is God and Laertius saith that hee 〈◊〉 all things full of Daemones and beeing asked whether the gods knew not a mans euill ●…ds Yes said he and thoughts too But this proues Gods knowledge onely and no●… his operation to be auouched by him n Anaximander A Milesian also but not hee that wrote the Histories He held an infinite element was the substance of the production of all things but ●…er shewed whether it was fiery ayry earthly or watry Hee held besides that the partes of 〈◊〉 infinite thin̄g were successiuely changed but that the whole was im●…utable Aristot. Plu●… 〈◊〉 Euseb. o Nor did he Herein Plutarch reprehendeth him for finding the matt●… and ●…t the efficient cause For that infinite element is the matter but without some efficient cause it can doe nothing But Tully saith that hee affirmed that there were naturall gods farre distance East and West and that these were their inumerable worlds De nat deor lib. 1. So that these contraries their originall and there efficient are all one namely that eternall cold and heate as Euseb ●…e pr●…par Euang. saith and Aristotle intymateth Phys. lib. 1. p Anaximenes Sonne to Eurystratus a M●…lesian also borne Olympiad 64. He died in the yeare of Craesus his ouerthrow as Apollodorus counteth q Infinite ayre Infinite saith Eusebius in kinde but not in qualities of whose condensation and rarefaction all things haue their generation Hee held the ayre god generated infinite and eternally mouing The stars the Sunne and the Moone were created hee held of the earth Cicero r Anaxagoras Borne at Clazomene a towne in Ionia he died Olymp. 88. beeing 62. yeares of age His worke saith Plutarch and Laertius beganne thus There was one vniuersall masse an essence came and disioyned it and disposed it For hee held a matter or masse including infinite formes of creation and parcells of contraries and others all confused together which the diuine essence did compose and seperate and so made flesh of many parcells of flesh of bones bone and so of the rest yet are these other parcells formally extant in the whole as in their bones there is parcells of flesh and fire and sinewes c. For should bread or meate giue encrease to a bone or the bloud vnlesse there were seedes or little parcells of bone and bloud in the bread though from their smallenesse they be inuifible Arist. Plutarch Laertius s Vnlike Or like either is right For as Aristotle saith Anaxagoras held infinite partes in euery body both contrary and correspondent which hee called Homogenia or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 similaria like Symilarities Gaza translateth it For in bodies they are partes that are similare as in fire water flesh bone c. and here the name of each part is the name of the whole each drop of water is water and each bit of flesh is flesh and so of the rest then are there also partes dissimilar as in a man an horse and so forth wherein are parts seuerally called as bones nerues bloud skin and such
and Phoronis the first they picture with Erected priuities for hauing beheld Proserpina the later the Laebadians worshippe in a caue and cal him Trophonius n Trismegistus As the French say trespuissant and we thrice mighty But the latter wrot not Trismegistus but his grand-father did yet both were called Hermes Trismegistus The first Theut was a great king a great Priest a Philosopher Thus it pleaseth some to describe his greatnesse o Isis. Isis Osiris do much good saith Hermes his booke p In both their natures Hermes had it without nature extra naturam q Adored The Egyptians had innumerable things to their gods Garlike and Onions by which they swore as Pliny saith and many creatures after whome they named their citties Crocodilopol●…s Lycopolis Leontopolls and L●…polis vpon the crocodyle the wolfe the lion and the place-fish So Apis first instituting the adoration of the Oxe was adored himselfe in an oxes shape Mercury in a dogs Isis in a cowes Diodorus write●…h that their leaders wore such crests on their helmets Anubis a dog Alexander the great a wolfe c. whence the reuerence of those creatures first arose and therevpon those Princes being dead they ordained them diuine worships in those shapes This is that which Mercury saith their soules were adored that in their liues had ordayned honor to those creatures as indeed the Princes wearing them on their helmes and sheelds made them venerable and respected and the simple people thought that much of their victories came from them and so set them vp as deities Of the Honor that Christians giue to the Martires CHAP. 27. YEt we erect no temples alters nor sacrifices to the martirs because not they but their god is our God wee honor their memories as Gods Saints standing till death for the truth that the true religion might be propagated and all Idolatry demolished whereas if any others had beleeued right before them yet feare forbad them confesse it And who hath euer heard the Priest at the altar that was built vp in gods honor and the martires memories say ouer the body I offer vnto thee Peter or vnto thee Paul or a Cyprian hee offers to God in the places of their memorialls whome God had made men and martirs and aduanced them into the society of his Angells in heauen that wee at that sollemnity may both giue thanks to God for their victories and bee incouraged to endeuor the attainement of such crownes and glories as they haue already attained still inuocating him at their memorialls wherefore all the religious performances done there at the martires sollemnities are ornaments of their memories but no sacrifices to the dead as vnto gods and b those that bring banquets thether which notwithstanding the better Christians do not not is this custome obserued in most places yet such as do so setting them downe praying ouer them and so taking them away to eate or bestow on those that neede all this they do onely with a desire that these meates might be sanctified by the martirs in the god of martirs name But hee that knoweth the onely sacrifices that the Christians offer to God c knoweth also that these are no sacrifices to the Martires wherefore we neither worshippe our Martires with Gods honors nor mens crimes neither offer them sacrifices nor turne their d disgraces into any religion of theirs As for Isis Osiris his wife and the Aegyptian goddesse and her parents that haue beene recorded to haue beene all mortall to whome she sacrificing e found three graines of barley and shewed it vnto her husband and Hermes her counsellour and so they will haue her to be Ceres also what grosse absurdities are hereof recorded not by Potes but their own Priests as Leon shewed to Alexander and he to his mother Olimpia let them read that list and remember that haue read and then but consider vnto what dead persones and dead persons workes their diuinest honors were exhibited God forbid they should in the least respect compare them with our Martirs whome neuerthelesse wee account no gods wee make no priests to sacrifice vnto them it is vnlawfull vndecent and Gods proper due neither do wee please them with their owne crimes or obscaene spectacles whereas they celebrate both the guilt that there gods incurred who were men and the fayned pleasures of such of them as were flat deuills If Socrates had had a god he should not haue bin of this sort But such perhaps as loued to excell in this damnable art of making gods thrust such an one vpon him being an inocent honest man and vnskilfull in this their pernicious practise What need wee more none that hath his wits about him will now hold that these spirits are to be adored for the attainement of eternall blisse in the life to come Perhaps they will say that all the gods are good but of these spirits some are good and some badde and that by those that are good wee may come to eternity and therefore ought to adore them well to rip vp this question the next booke shall serue the turne L. VIVES OR a Cyprian Bishoppe of Carthage most learned as wittnesse his holy works He●… receiued the crowne of Martirdome vnder Ualerian so Pontius his Deacon writeth b Th●…se A great custome in Afrike Aug. confess lib. 6. where he saith that his mother at Millaine 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ●…otage and bread and wine to the Martirs shrines and gaue them to the porter B●… Ambrose forbad her both for that it might bee an occasion of gluttony and for the resemblance it had with paganisme c Knoweth also Many Christians offend in not distinguishing betweene their worship of God and the Saints nor doth their opinion of the Saints want much of that the Pagans beleeued of their gods yet impious was Uigilantius to bar the Martirs all honor and fond was Eunomius to forbeare the Churches least hee should bee compelled to adore the dead The Martyres are to be reuerenced but not adored as god is Hieron c●…tra vigilant d Disgraces But now euen at the celebration of Christs passion and our redemption it is a custome to present plaies almost as vile as the old stage-games should I be ●…lent the very absurdity of such shewes in so reuerend a matter would condemne it sufficiently There Iudas plaieth the most ridiculous Mimike euen then when he betraies Christ. There the Apostles run away and the soldiors follow and all resounds with laughter Then comes Peter and cuttes off Malchus care and then all rings with applause as if Christs betraying were now reuenged And by and by this great fighter comes and for feare of a girle denies his Maister all the people laughing at her question and hissing at his deniall and in all these reuells and ridiculous stirres Christ onely is serious and seuere but seeking to mooue passion and 〈◊〉 in the audience hee is so farre from that that hee is cold euen in the diuinest matters to the
set vp vpon a pole herein beeing both a present helpe for the hurt and a type of the future destruction of death by death in the passion of Christ crucified The brazen serpent beeing for this memory reserued and afterward by the seduced people adored as an Idol Ezechias a religious King to his great praise brake in peeces L. VIVES IN a the same This Augustine Retract lib. 2. recanteth In the tenth booke saith he speaking of this worke the falling of the fire from heauen betweene Abrahams diuided sacrifices is to bee held no miracle For it was reuealed him in a vision Thus farre he Indeed it was 〈◊〉 miracle because Abraham woudered not at it because he knew it would come so to passe and so it was no nouelty to him Of vnlawfull artes concerning the deuils worship whereof Porphyry approoueth some and disalloweth others CHAP. 9. THese and multitudes more were done to commend the worship of one God vnto vs and to prohibite all other And they were done by pure faith and confident piety not by charmes and coniuration trickes of damned curiosity by Magike or which is in name worse by a Goetia or to call it more honorably b Theurgie which who so seekes to distinguish which none can they say that the damnable practises of all such as wee call witches belong to the Goetie mary the effects of Theurgy they hold lawdable But indeede they are both damnable and bound to the obseruations of false filthy deuills in stead of Angells Porphyry indeed promiseth a certaine purging of the soule to be done by Theurgy but he d f●…ers and is ashamed of his text hee denies vtterly that one may haue any recourse to God by this arte thus floteth he betweene the surges of sacrilegious curiosity and honest Philosophy For now he condemneth it as doubtfull perilous prohibited and giues vs warning of it and by and by giuing way to the praisers of it hee saith it is vsefull in purging the soule not in the intellectuall part that apprehendeth the truth of intelligibilities abstracted from all bodily formes but the e spirituall that apprehendeth all from corporall obiects This hee saith may be prepared by certaine Theurgike consecrations called f Teletae to receiue a spirit or Angell by which it may see the gods Yet confesseth hee that these Theurgike Teletae profit not the intellectuall part a iot to see the owne God and receiue apprehensions of truth Consequently we see what sweete apparitions of the gods these Teletae can cause when there can bee no truth discerned in these visions Finally he saith the reasonable soule or as he liketh better to say the intellectuall may mount aloft though the spirituall part haue no Th●…ke preparation and if the spirituall doe attaine such preparation yet it is thereby made capable of eternity For though he distinguish Angells and Daemones placing these in the ayre and those in the g skie and giue vs counsell to get the amity of a Daemon whereby to mount from the earth after death professing no other meanes for one to attaine the society of the Angells yet doth hee in manner openly professe that a Daemons company is dangerous saying that the soule beeing plagued for it after death abhorres to adore the Daemones that deceiued it Nor can he deny that this Theurgy which hee maketh as the league betweene the Gods and Angells dealeth with those deuillish powers which either enuy the soules purgation or els are seruile to them that enuy it A Chaldaean saith he a good man complained that all his endeuour to purge his soule was frustrate by reason a great Artyst enuying him this goodnesse a diured the powers hee was to deale with by holy inuocations and bound them from granting him any of his requests So hee bound them saith hee and this other could not loose them Here now is a plaine proofe that Theurgie is an arte effecting euill as well as good both with the gods and men and that the gods are wrought vpon by the same passions and perturbations that Apuleius laies vpon the deuills and men alike who notwithstanding following Plato in that acquits the gods from all such matters by their hight of place being celestiall L. VIVES BY a Goetia It is enchantment a kinde of witch-craft Goetia Magia and Pharmacia saith Suidas are diuers kindes inuented all in Persia. Magike is the inuocation of deuills but those to good endes as Apollonius Tyaneus vsed in his presages Goetie worketh vpon the dead by inuocation so called of the noyse that the practisers hereof make about graues Pharmacia worketh all by charmed potions thereby procuring death Magike and Astrology Magusis they say inuented And the Persian Mages had that name from their countrimen and so had they the name of Magusii Thus farre Suidas b Theurgy It calleth out the superior gods wherein when wee erre saith Iamblichus then doe not the good gods appeare but badde ones in their places So that a most diligent care must bee had in this operation to obserue the priests old tradition to a haires bredth c Witches Many hold that witches and charmes neuer can hurt a man but it is his owne conceite that doth it Bodies may hurt bodies naturally saith Plato de leg lib. 11. and those that goe about any such mischiefe with magicall enchantments or bondes as they call them thinke they can hurt others and that others by art Goetique may hurt them But how this may bee in nature is neither easie to know not make others know though men haue a great opinion of the power of Images and therefore let this stand for a lawe If any one doe hurt another by empoysoning though not deadly nor any of his house or family but his cattell or his bees if hee hurt them howsoeuer beeing a Phisition and conuict of the guilt let him die the death if hee did it ignorantly let the iudges fine or punish him at their pleasures If any one bee conuicted of doing such hurt by charmes or incantations if hee bee a priest or a sooth-saier let him die the death but if any one doe it that is ignorant of these artes let him bee punishable as the law pleaseth in equity Thus farre Plato de legib lib 11. Porphyry saith that the euill Daemones are euermore the effectors of witch-crafts and that they are chiefly to bee adored that ouerthrow them These deuills haue all shapes to take that they please and are most cunning and couzening in their prodigious shewes these also worke in these 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 those vnfortunate loues all intemperancy couetice and ambition doe these supplie men with and especially with deceipt for their propriety most especiall is lying De animal abst lib. 2. d Falters As seeing the deuills trickes in these workes selling themselues to vs by those illusiue operations But Iamblichus beeing initiate and as hee thought more religious held that the arte was not wholy reproueable beeing of that industrie
not This I say is the way that will free all beleeuers wherein Abraham trusting receiued that diuine promise In thy seede shall all the nations bee blessed Abraham●… as a Chaldaean but for to receiue this promise that the seede which was disposed by the Angells in the mediators power to giue this vniuersall way of the soules freedome vnto all nations he was commanded to leaue his owne land and kinred and his fathers house And then was hee first freed from the Chaldaean superstitions and serued the true God to whose promise he firmely trusted This is the way recorded in the Prophet God bee mercifull vnto vs and blesse vs and shew vs the light of his countenance and bee mercifull vnto vs. That thy way may be knowne vpon earth thy sauing health among all nations And long aft●…r Abrahams seede beeing incarnate Christ sayth of himselfe I am the way the truth and the life This is the vniuersall way mentioned so long before by the Prophets It shal be in the last daies that the g mountaine of the house of the Lord shal be prepared in the toppe of the mountaines and shal be exalted aboue the hills and all nations shall flie vnto it And many people shall goe and say come let vs goe vppe to the mountaine of the Lord to the house of the God of Iacob and hee will teach vs his way and wee will walke therein For the lawe shall goe forth of Syon and the word of the LORD from Ierusalem This way therefore is not peculiar to some one nation but common to all Nor did the law and word of God stay in Ierusalem or Syon but come from thence to ouerspread all the world Therevpon the mediator being risen from death sayd vnto his amazed and amated disciples Al things must be fulfilled which are written of mee in the law the Prophets and the Psalmes Then opened hee their vnderstanding that they might vnderstand the scriptures saying thus it behooued CHRIST to suffer and to rise againe from the dead the third day and that repentance and remission of sinnes should be preached in his name amongst all nations beginning at Ierusalem This then is the vniuersall way of the soules freedome which the Saints and Prophets beeing at first but a fewe as God gaue grace and those all Hebrewes for that estate was in a h manner consecrated did both adumbrate in their temple sacrifice and Priest-hood and fore-told also in their prophecy often mistically and some-times plainely And the Mediator himselfe and his Apostles reuealing the grace of the new testament made plaine all those significations that successe of precedent times had retained as it pleased God the miracls which I spoke of before euermore giuing confirmation to them For they had not onely angelicall visions and saw the ministers of heauen but euen these simple men relying wholy vpon Gods word cast out deuills cured diseases i commanded wild-beasts waters birds trees elements and starres raised the dead I except the miracles peculiar to our Sauiour chiefly in his birth and resurrection shewing in the first the mistery of k maternall virginity and in the other the example of our renouation This way cleanseth euery soule and prepareth a mortall man in euery part of his for immortality For least that which Prophyry calls the intellect should haue one purgation the spirital another and the body another therefore did our true and powerfull Sauiour take all vpon him Besides this way which hath neuer failed man-kinde either l in prophecies or in their m performances no man hath euer had freedome or euer hath or euer shall haue And wheras Porphyry saith he neuer had any historicall notice of this way what history can be more famous then this that lookes from such a towring authority downe vpon all the world or more faithfull since it so relateth things past as it prophecyeth things to come a great part whereof wee see already performed which giueth vs assured hope of the fulfilling of the rest Porphyry nor euer a Platonist in the world can contemne the predictions of this way albee they concerne but temporall affaires as they doe all other prophecies and diuinations of what sort soeuer for them they say they neither are spoken by worthy men nor to any worthy purpose true for they are either drawne from inferiour causes as 〈◊〉 can presage much n concerning health vpon such or such signes or cls the vncleane spirits fore-tell the artes that they haue already disposed of o confirming the mindes of the guilty and wicked with deedes fitting their words or words fitting their deedes to get themselues a domination in mans infirmity But the holy men of this vniuersall way of ours neuer respect the prophecying of those things holding them iustly trifles yet doe they both know them and often fore-tell them to confirme the faith in things beyond sence and hard to present vnto plainnesse But they were other and greater matters which they as God inspired them did prophecy namely the incarnation of Christ and all things thereto belonging and fulfilled in his name repentance and conuersion of the will vnto God remission of sinnes the grace of iustice faith and increase of beleeuers throughout all the world destinction of Idolatry temptation for triall mundifying of the proficients freedom from euill the day of iudgement resurrection damnation of the wicked and glorification of the City of GOD in 〈◊〉 eternall Kingdome These are the prophecies of them of this way many are fullfilled and the rest assuredly are to come That this streight way leading to the knowledge and coherence of GOD lieth plaine in the holy scriptures vpon whose truth it is grounded they that beleeue not and therefore know not may oppose this but can neuer ouerthrow it And therefore in these ten bookes I 〈◊〉 spoken by the good assistance of GOD sufficient in sound iudgements though some expected more against the impious contradictors that preferre 〈◊〉 gods before the founder of the holy citty whereof wee are to dispute The 〈◊〉 fiue of the ten opposed them that adored their gods for temporall respects 〈◊〉 fiue later against those that adored them for the life to come It remaines now according as wee promised in the first booke to proceede in our discourse of the two citties that are confused together in this world and distinct in the other of whose originall progresse and consummation I now enter to dispute e●…●…oking the assistance of the almighty L. VIVES KInges a high or road the Kinges the Pr●…tors and the Soldiors way the lawes held holy b Indian The Gymnosophists and the Brachmans much recorded for admirable deeds and doctrine c All the world Therfore is our fayth called Catholike because it was not taught to any peculiar nation as the Iewes was but to all mankind excluding none all may be saued by it and none can without it nor hath euery nation herein as they haue in Paganisme a seuerall religion But
for the other the Romaines had those gods and this worship and the Grecians others the French others from theirs Spaine Scythia India Persia all seuerall B●… all that professe CHRIST haue one GOD and one sacrifice d All for the world Liuing vnder Diocletian a sore persecutor of Christianity e Witnesses 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is a witnesse f ●…hy c●…eth Why came it not ere now or so g Mountaine Some bookes leaue out of 〈◊〉 ●…se the 70. read it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. the mount of the Lord and house of our God h I●…●…er It was the beginning or seminary of Gods Church i Commanded Some adde the deuills to depart but it is needlesse k Maternall The mistery is that nothing that o●… Sauiour touched is stained or corrupted l In prophecies In Moyses lawe m Performances In our law by Apostles and other holy Preachers n Concerning health Or to befal the health better o Confirming or the rule of which they challenge to themselues in fitting wicked a●…fections with correspondent effects For they can vse their powers of nature farre m●…re knowingly then we in procuring health or sicknesse Finis lib 10. THE CONTENTS OF THE eleuenth booke of the City of God 〈◊〉 Of that part of the worke wherein the de●…ion of the beginnings and ends of the ●…es the Heauenly and Earthly are de●… 〈◊〉 Of the knowledge of God which none can 〈◊〉 but through the Mediator betweene ●…d Man the Man Christ Iesus 〈◊〉 Of the authority of the canonicall scrip●…●…de by the spirit of God 〈◊〉 ●…at the state of the world is neither e●… nor ordained by any new thought of 〈◊〉 ●…f he meant that after which he meant ●…re 〈◊〉 ●…at we ought not to seeke to comprehend ●…te spaces of time or place ere the world 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 That the World and Time had both one ●…g nor was the one before the other 〈◊〉 Of the first sixe daies that had morning ●…g ere the Sunne was made 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 we must thinke of Gods resting the 〈◊〉 ●…fter his six daies worke 〈◊〉 ●…is to bee thought of the qualities of 〈◊〉 ●…ording to scripture 〈◊〉 ●…e vncompounded vnchangeable 〈◊〉 Father the Sonne and the Holy 〈◊〉 God in substance and quality euer 〈◊〉 same 〈◊〉 ●…ether the Spirits that fell did euer 〈◊〉 the Angells in their blisse at their 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 happinesse of the iust that ●…as yet 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 reward of the diuine promise com●… the first men of Paradise before sins 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Whether the Angells were created in 〈◊〉 of happinesse that neither those that 〈◊〉 ●…hey should fall nor those that perseue●…●…ew they should perseuer 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 this is meant of the deuill Hee a●… in the truth because there is no 〈◊〉 him 〈◊〉 Th●… meaning of this place The diuell 〈◊〉 from the beginning 〈◊〉 Of the different degrees of creatures 〈◊〉 ●…ble vse and reasons order do differ 17. That the vice of malice is not naturall but against nature following the will not the Creator in sinne 18. Of the beauty of this vniuerse augmented by Gods ordinance out of contraries 19. The meaning of that God seperated the light from the darkenesse 20. Of that place of scripture spoken after the seperation of the light and darkenesse And God saw the light that it was good 21. Of Gods eternall vnchanging will and knowledge wherin he pleased to create al things in forme as they were created 22. Concerning those that disliked some of the good Creators creatures and thought some things naturally euill 23. Of the error that Origen incurreth 24. Of the diuine Trinity notifying it selfe in some part in all the workes thereof 25. Of the tripartite diuision of all philosophicall discipline 26. Of the Image of the Trinity which is in some sort in euery mans nature euen before his glorification 27. Of Essence knowledge of Essence and loue of both 28. Whether we draw nearer to the Image of the holy Trinity in louing of that loue by which we loue to be and to know our being 29. Of the Angells knowledge of the Trinity in the Deity and consequently of the causes of things in the Archetype ere they come to be effected in workes 30. The perfection of the number of sixe the first is compleate in all the parts 31. Of the seauenth day the day of rest and compleate perfection 32. Of their opinion that held Angells to be created before the world 33. Of the two different societies of Angells not vnfitly tearmed light and darkenesse 34. Of the opinion that some held that the Angells were ment by the seuered waters and of others that held waters vncreated FINIS THE ELEVENTH BOOKE OF THE CITTIE OF GOD. Written by Saint Augustine Bishop of Hippo vnto Marcellinus Of that part of the worke wherein the demonstration of the beginings and ends of the two Citties the heauenly and the earthly are declared CHAP. 1. WE giue the name of the Citty of GOD vnto that society wherof that scripture beareth wittnesse which hath gotten the most excellent authority preheminence of all other workes whatsoeuer by the disposing of the diuine prouidence not the affectation of mens iudgements For there it is sayd Glorious things are spoken of thee thou Citty of God and in an other place Great As the LORD and greatly to bee praised in the Citty of our God euen vpon his holy mountaine increasing the ioy of all the earth And by and by in the same Psalme As wee haue heard so haue wee seene in the Citty of the Lord of Hoastes in the Citty of our God God ●…th established it for euer and in another The riuers streames shall make glad the Citie of God the most high hath sanctified his tabernacle God is in the middest of it vn●…ed These testimonies and thousands more teach vs that there is a Citty of God whereof his inspired loue maketh vs desire to bee members The earthly cittizens prefer their Gods before this heauenly Citties holy founder knowing not that he is the God of gods not of those false wicked and proud ones which wanting his light so vniuersall and vnchangeable and beeing thereby cast into an extreame needy power each one followeth his owne state as it were and begs peculiar honors of his seruants but of the Godly and holy ones who select their owne submission to him rather then the worlds to them and loue rather to worship him their God then to be worshipped for gods themselues The foes of this holy Citty our former ten bookes by the helpe of our Lord King I hope haue fully ●…ffronted And now knowing what is next expected of mee as my promise viz. to dispute as my poore talent stretcheth of the originall progresse and consummation of the two Citties that in this worldly confusedly together 〈◊〉 the assistance of the same God and King of ours I set pen to paper intending 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 shew the beginning of these two arising from the difference betweene 〈◊〉 ●…gelical powers Of the
inflicted as sinnes punishment vpon the 〈◊〉 not the body it sel●…e is heauy to the soule and if hee had not added it yet 〈◊〉 haue vnderstood it so But Plato affirming plainely that the gods that the ●…or made haue incorruptible bodies bringing in their maker promising 〈◊〉 as a great benefit to remaine therein eternally and neuer to bee seperated 〈◊〉 them why then do those neuer b dissemble their owne knowledge to 〈◊〉 ●…ristianity trouble and contradict themselues in seeking to oppose against ●…to's words c Tully translateth thus bringing in the great GOD speaking 〈◊〉 the gods hee had made d You that are of the gods originall whom I haue ●…d attend e these your bodies by my will are indissoluble although euery 〈◊〉 ●…ay bee dissolued But f it is euill to desire to dissolue a thing g compounded by 〈◊〉 but seeing that you are created you are neither immortall nor indissoluble yet 〈◊〉 neuer be dissolued nor die these shall not preuaile against my will which is a 〈◊〉 assurance of your eternity then all your formes and compositions are Behold 〈◊〉 ●…ith that their gods by their creation and combination of body and soule 〈◊〉 ●…all and yet immortall by the decree and will of him that made them If 〈◊〉 it be paine to the soule to be bound in any body why should God seeme 〈◊〉 ●…way their feare of death by promising them eternall immortality not 〈◊〉 of their nature which is compounded not simple but because of his 〈◊〉 which can eternize creatures and preserue compounds immortally frō●…on whether Plato hold this true of the stars is another question For h 〈◊〉 not consequently grant him that those globous illuminate bodies 〈◊〉 ●…ht day vpon earth haue each one a peculiar soule whereby it liues 〈◊〉 ●…ed and intellectuall as he affirmeth directly of the world also But this as 〈◊〉 no question for this place This I held fit to recite against those that 〈◊〉 the name of Platonists are proudly ashamed of the name of christians 〈◊〉 ●…e communication of this name with the vulgar should debase the 〈◊〉 because small number of the i Palliate These seeking holes in the coate ●…stianity barke at the eternity of the body as if the desire of the soules 〈◊〉 the continuance of it in the fraile body were contraries whereas their 〈◊〉 Plato holds it as a gift giuen by the great GOD to the lesser that they 〈◊〉 not die that is be seuered from the bodies he gaue them L. VIVES 〈◊〉 a is Philolaus the Pythagorean held that man hauing left his body became an 〈◊〉 God and Plato sayth our body depresseth our thoughts and calls it away from 〈◊〉 ●…emplations that therefore we must leaue it that in this life also as well as we can 〈◊〉 ●…her life where we shal be free we may see the truth loue the good Herevpon 〈◊〉 ●…th a man cannot bee happy without he leaue the body and be ioyned vnto God d 〈◊〉 An imitation of Terence t●… si sapis quod scis nescias a Tully translateth Tullies 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is a peece of Plato's Timaeus the whole worke is very falty in Tully He that will read Plato himselfe the words begin thus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. Plato had it out of Timaeus of Locris his booke after whom he named his dialogue for thus saith Timaeus God desyring to d●…e an excellent worke created or begot this God who shall neuer die vnlesse it please that God that made him to dissolue him But it is euill to desire the dissolution of so rare a worke d You that are of Deorum satu orti e These your Tully hath this sentence a depraued sence by reason of the want of a negatiue f It is euill Or an euill mans part g Compounded Or combined h We may not Augustine durst neuer decide this question Origen it seemes followed Plato and got a many of the learned vnto his side i Palliate The Romanes Toga or gowne was the Greekes Pallium and they that would seeme absolute Grecians went in these Pallia or clokes and such were obserued much for their Graecisme in life and learning For as wee teach all our arts in latine now so did they in greeke then They were but few and therefore more admired Against the opinion that earthly bodies cannot be corruptible nor eternall CHAP 17. THey stand in this also that earthly bodies cannot bee eternall and yet hold the whole earth which they hold but as a part of their great God though not of their highest the world to be eternall Seeng then their greatest GOD made another God greater then all the rest beneath him that is the world and seeing they hold this is a creature hauing an intellectuall soule included in it by which it liues hauing the parts consisting of 4 elements whose connexion that great GOD least this other should euer perish made indissoluble and eternall why should the earth then being but a meane member of a greater creature bee eternall and yet the bodies of earthly creatures God willing the one as well as the other may not bee eternall I but say they earth a must bee returned vnto earth whence the bodies of earthly creatures are shapen therefore say they these must of force be dissolued and die to be restored to the eternall earth from whēce they were taken Wel if one should affirme the same of the fire say that al the bodies taken thence should be restored vnto it againe as the heauenly bodies thereof consisting were not that promise of immortality that Plato sayd God made vnto those gods vtterly broken by this position Or can it not be so because it pleaseth not God whose will as Plato sayth is beyond all other assurance why may not God then haue so resolued of the terrene bodies that being brought forth they should perish no more once composed they should bee dissolued no more nor that which is once taken from the elements should euer bee restored and that the soules being once placed the bodies should neuer for sake them but inioy eternall happinesse in this combination why doth not Plato confesse that God can do this why cannot he preserue earthly things from corruption Is his power as the Platonists or rather as the christians auouch A likely matter the Philosophers know Gods counsells but not the Prophers nay rather it was thus their spirit of truth reuealed what God permitted vnto the Prophets but the weakenesse of coniecture in these questions wholy deluded the Philosophers But they should not haue bin so far besotted in obstinate ignorance as to contradict themselues in publike assertions saying first that the soule cannot be blessed without it abādon al body whatsoeuer by by after b that the gods haue blessed soules yet are continually tied vnto celestiall fiery bodies as for Iupiters the worlds soule that is eternally inherēt in the 4 elements composing this vniuerse For Plato holds
Sat. 15. Saxa inclinatus per humum quaesita lacertis Incipiunt torquere domestica seditione Tela nec hunc lapidem quali se Turnus Aiax Et quo Tydides percussit pondere coxam Aeneae sed quam valeant emittere dextrae Illis dissimiles nostro tempore natae Nam genus hoc viuo iam decrescebat Homero Terra malos homines nunc educat atque pufillos Ergo dous quicunque aspexit ridet odit c. They stoopt for stones to cast and kept a coyle With those fitte weapons for a scambling broyle Not such as Turnus threw nor Aiax tall Nor that Aeneas haunch was hurt withall But such as our weake armes to weald were able Farre short of those those worthies memorable Began to faile ere Homer fail'd his pen And earth brings nothing forth but Pygmee-men The Gods behold our growth with ieasting scorne c. b Intimating And in his Georgikes lib. 1. Girandiaque eff●…ssis mirabitur ●…sse sepulchris And gaze on those huge bones within the tombe c Ax●…th Vpon Saint Christophers day wee went to visite the chiefe Church of our citty and there was a tooth shewen vs as bigge as my fist which they say was Saint Christophers There was with mee Hierom Burgarin●… a man of a most modest and sober carriage and an infatigable student which he hath both from nature and also from the example of his father●… who though hee were old and had a great charge of family yet gaue him-selfe to his booke that his children might see him and imitate him d Plinie His naturall history wee haue I need neither stand to commend this worke nor the authors learned diligence This which Augustine citeth is in his seauenth booke where also hee saith that in Crete there was a mountaine rent by an earth-quake and in it a body of fortie sixe cubites long was found Some sayd it was Otus his body and some Orions Orestes his body was digged vp by oracle and found to be seauen cubites long Now Homer complained of the decrease of stature very neare a thousand yeares agoe Thus farre Pliny Cyprian writes hereof also to Demetrianus and Vriell Gods Angell spake it also vnto Esdras Besides Gellius lib. 3. saith that the ordinary stature of man was neuer aboue seauen foote which I had rather beleeue then Herodotus that fabulous Historiographer who saith that Orestes his body was found to to be seauen cubites which is twelue foote and ¼ vnlesse as Homer thinke the bodies of the ancients were larger then those of later times who decline with the worlds declining age But Plato Aristotle and their followers that held the world to bee eternall affirme that it neither diminisheth nor declineth e Saith Lib. 7. chap. 48. Hellanicus saith that there is a race of the Epirotes in Etolia that liue two hundred yeares and Damastes holdeth so also naming one Pistor●…s a chiefe man amongst them in strength who liued three hundred yeares Of the difference that seemes to bee betweene the Hebrewes computation and ours CHAP. 10. VVHerefore though there seeme to be some difference betweene the Hebrews computation and ours I know not vpon what cause yet it doth not disprooue that those men liued as long as we say they did For Adam ere he begot Seth is sayd by our a bookes to haue liued two hundred and thirty yeares by the Hebrewes but one hundred and thirty But after hee had be gotten Seth hee liued seauen hundred yeares by our account and eight hundred by the Hebrews Thus both agree in the maine summe And so in the following generations the Hebrews are still at such or such an ones birth an hundred yeares behinde vs in this fathers age but in his yeares after his sonnes birth they still come vp vnto our generall summe and both agree in one But in the ●…xt generation they differ not a letter In the seauenth generation wherein Henoch was not hee that dyed but hee that pleased GOD and was translated there is the same difference of the one hundred yeares before hee begotte his sonne but all come to one end still both the bookes making him liue three hundred sixtie and fiue yeares ere his translation The eight generation hath some difference but of lesse moment and no●… like to this For Mathusalem hauing begotten Enoch before hee had his next s●…e whome the Scriptures name is said by the Hebrewes to haue liued twentie yeares longer then wee say hee liued but in the account of his yeares after this sonne wee added the twenty and both doe iumpe in one iust summe Onely in the ninth generation that is in the yeares of Lamech the sonne of Mathusalem and the father of Noah wee differ in the whole summe but it is but soure and 〈◊〉 yeares and that they haue more then we for his age ere he begot Noah in the Hebrew is six yeares lesse then in ours and their summe of his yeares afterwards is thirty more then ours which sixe taken from thirty leaues foure and twenty as I said before L. VIVES 〈◊〉 a bookes Meaning the Latine translations that the Church vsed then out of the 70. 〈◊〉 Hieroms was either published or receiued And by the Hebrew bookes he meanes the 〈◊〉 scriptures and the Hebrew authors thereto agreeing Adam saith Hierome liued 〈◊〉 and begot a sonne like him-selfe and called his name Seth. Where wee are to con●…●…t from Adam to the floud where wee read two hundred yeares and the ouerplus the 〈◊〉 read onely one hundred and the ouer-plus And the dayes of Adam after he had be●… Seth were seauen hundred yeares because the translators had erred an hundred before 〈◊〉 he puts but seauen hundred where the Hebrew hath eight hundred Thus farre Hierome 〈◊〉 ●…cepts not at all at this manner of computation Augustine omittes Iareds begetting of 〈◊〉 in the sixt generation but this indeed goeth not aboue two hundred yeares Of Mathusalems yeares who seemeth to haue liued foureteene yeeres after the deluge CHAP. 11. ●…here is a a notable question arising vpon this difference betweene vs 〈◊〉 ●…he Hebrewes where Mathusalem is reckoned to haue liued foureteene 〈◊〉 ●…fter the deluge whereas the Scripture accompteth but eight persons 〈◊〉 saued therein of all man-kinde whereof Mathusalem was none For in ●…kes Mathusalem liued ere hee begot Lamech one hundred sixty seauen 〈◊〉 and Lamech vntill he begot Noah one hundred foure score eight yeares 〈◊〉 ioyned make three hundred fifty and fiue yeares vnto which adde Noahs 〈◊〉 ●…dred yeares for then begun the deluge and so the time betweene Ma●… birth and the deluge is nine hundred fiftie and fiue yeares Now Ma●… dayes are reckoned to bee nine hundred sixty and nine yeares for 〈◊〉 hundred sixtie and seauen yeares of age ere hee begot Lamech hee 〈◊〉 hundred and two yeares after which make in all nine hundred sixtie 〈◊〉 from whence take nine hundred ●…iftie fiue the time from his birth to 〈◊〉 ●…ge and there remaines fourteene which
vnder the 〈◊〉 of the b Apostles and m Prophets which were all afterward examined 〈◊〉 ●…ust from canonicall authority But according to the Hebrew canonicall ●…res there is no doubt but that there were Gyants vpon the earth before 〈◊〉 ●…ge and that they were the sonnes of the men of earth and Cittizens of ●…all Citty vnto which the sonnes of God being Seths in the flesh forsak●…●…ice adioyned them-selues Nor is it strange if they begot Gyants They 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 all Giants but there were farre more before the deluge then haue 〈◊〉 ●…ce whome it pleased the creator to make that wee might learne that a 〈◊〉 should neither respect hugenesse of body nor fairenesse of face but 〈◊〉 his beatitude out of the vndecaying spirituall and eternall goods that 〈◊〉 ●…iar to the good and not that he shareth with the bad which another 〈◊〉 ●…eth to vs saying There were the Gyants famous from the beginning that 〈◊〉 so great stature and so expert in war These did not the Lord choose neither 〈◊〉 the way of knowledge vnto them but they were destroyed because they 〈◊〉 wisdome and perished through there owne foolishnesse L. VIVES 〈◊〉 a is those That Augustine held that the Angells and Deuills had bodies he that 〈◊〉 ●…th this worke and his bookes de natura daemon de genesi ad literam shall see plain●…●…eld it himselfe and spake it not as an other mans opinion as Peter Lumbard saith 〈◊〉 ●…ke It was his owne nor followed hee any meane authors herein hauing the 〈◊〉 and then Origen Lactantius Basil and almost all the writers of that time on his 〈◊〉 neede saith Michael Psellus de d●…monib that the spirits that are made messengers 〈◊〉 ●…ue bodies too as Saint Paul sayth whereby to mooue to stay and to appeare vi●…●…nd whereas the Scripture may in 〈◊〉 place call ●…hem incorporeall I answer that is 〈◊〉 of our grosser and more solid bodies in comparison of which the transparent in●… bodies are ordinarly called incorporeall Augustine giues the Angels most subtiliat●… 〈◊〉 ●…visible actiue and not pa●…ue and such the Deuills had ere they fell but then 〈◊〉 were condensate and passiue as Psellus holds also b 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 It is N●…ius 〈◊〉 a messenger 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is Mitto to send and therefore the Angell saith Hierom is 〈◊〉 ●…f nature but of ministery And hereof comes Euangelium called the good message Homer and Tully vnto Atticus vse it often c Angels Turning 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 into n and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 into 〈◊〉 d And seeing Psellus affirmeth out of one Marke a great Daemonist that the deuills c●…st forth sperme producing diuerse little creatures and that they haue genitories but not like mens from whence the excrement passeth but all deuills haue not such but onely the wa●…y and the earthly who are also nourished like spunges with attraction of humor e Incub●… O●… 〈◊〉 to lye vpon They are diuels that commix with women those that put them-selues vnder men as women are called succubi There are a people at this day that glory that their descent is from the deuills who accompanied with women in mens shapes and with men in womens This in my conceite is viler then to draw a mans pedegree from Pyrates theeues or famous hacksters as many do●… The Egiptians say that the Diuells can onely accompanie carnally with women and not with men Yet the Greekes talke of many men that the 〈◊〉 haue loued as Hiacinthus Phorbas and Hippolitus of Sicione by Apollo and Cyparissus by Syl●…nus f Yet doe I firmely Lactantius lib. 2. cap. 15. saith that the Angels whome God had appointed to preserue and garde man-kinde being commanded by God to beware of loosing their celestiall and substantiall dignity by earthly pollution not-with-standing were allured by their dayly conuersation with the women to haue carnall action with them and so sinning were kept out of heauen and cast downe to earth and those the deuill tooke vp to bee his agents and officers But those whom they begot being neither pure Angels nor pure men but in a meane betweene both were not cast downe to hell as their parents were not taken vp into heauen and thus became there two kindes of deuills one celestiall and another earthly And these are the authors of all mischiese whose chiefetaine the great Dragon is Thu●… saith Eusebius also lib. 5. And Plutarch confirmeth it saying That the fables of the Gods signified some-things that the deuills had done in the old times and that the fables of the Giants and Titans were all acts of the deuills This maketh mee some-times to doubt whether these were those that were done before the deluge of which the scripture saith And when the Angels of God saw the daughters of men c. For some may suspect that those Giants their spirits are they whome ancient Paganisme tooke for their Gods and that their warres were the subiect of those fables of the Gods g For the scriptures Because 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is both good and faire Terence Phorm E●…ch h Aquila In Adrians time hee turned the Scriptures out of Hebrew into Greeke Hierom calles him a curious and diligent translator and he was the first ●…ter the seauentie that came out in Greeke Euse●…ius liketh him not but to our purpose hee r●…deth it the sonnes of the Gods meaning the holy Gods or Angels for God standing in the congregation of the people and he will iudge the Gods in the midst of it And Symachus following this sence said And when the sonnes of the mighties beheld the daughters of men c. i Apochrypha S●…reta of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to hide They were such bookes as the Church vsed not openly but had them in priuate to read at pleasure as the Reuelation of the Apostle Peter the booke of his Actes c. k Epistle Hierom vpon the first Chapter of Paul to ●…itus ●…aith that Iud●… citeth an Apocryphall booke of Henochs Iudes words are these But Michael the Arc●…gell when hee stro●…e against the deuill and disputed about the body of Moyses durst 〈◊〉 bl●… him with cursed speaking but said onely The Lord rebuke thee Which Enoch●…yd ●…yd these words is vncertaine for they doe not seeme to bee his that was the seuenth from Adam For he was long before Moses vnlesse hee spake prophetically of things to come And therefore Hi●…rome intimateth that the booke onely whence this was was entitled Enoch l Prophets As the N●…rites counterfeited a worke vnder Hieremi●…s name Aug. in Matt. ●…ap 27. m A●… As Thomas his Gospel Peters reuelation and Barnabas his Gospell which was brought 〈◊〉 Alexandria signed with his owne hand in the time of the Emperor Zeno. How the words that God spake of those that were to perish in the deluge and their dayes shall be an hundred and twenty yeares are to bee vnderstood CHAP. 24. BVt whereas God said Their dayes shall be a hundred
both meane sixe and th●…e fingers Iuuenall to make them the more ridiculous saith they were not aboue a foote high d Sciopodae Or foote-shadowed 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is a shadow 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a foote e Checker-worke M●…siuum opus Spartian vseth it and Pliny It is saith Hermolaus Barbarus vpon Plinies sixth booke and Baptista Egnatius vpon Spartian wrought with stones of diuers collours which beeing rightly laied together are the portraytures of images as is ordinary to bee seene in the pauementes at Rome and else-where in old workes for of late it is neglected Our in-laide workes in our chaires and tables in Spaine haue some resemblance thereof Perottus saith it is corrruptly called Musaicum but the true word is Mus●…acum of 〈◊〉 and alledgeth this place of Pliny Barbarus seemes to bee of his minde also The ●…gar called it musaicum because it seemed to bee a worke of great wit and industry 〈◊〉 Cynocephali Worde for worde Dogges-heads Solinus maketh them a kinde of Apes ●…nd possible to bee turned from euer beeing wilde againe Diodorus accountes th●…m wilde beastes g At Hippon Some had added in the Margent Diaritum and Zar●…tum It should bee Diarrhytum Mela Strabo Pliny and Ptolomy speake of two 〈◊〉 in Affrica hauing their names from Knights or horse-men for so is the Greeke 〈◊〉 interpreted the one called Hippon Diarrhytus neare Carthage a little on this side and 〈◊〉 was Augustine Bishoppe the other called Hippon Regius beeing farther East and the 〈◊〉 ancient seate as Silius saith Tum vaga antiquis dilectus regibus Hippon Vaga and Hippon that old seate of Kings Touching at them both h Curious history Which he spake on before i Hermaphrodytes Verbally from the Greeke is the word Androgyuus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a man 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a woman But they are called Hermaphrotes because the sonne of Hermes and Aphrodite that is Mercury and Venus was held to bee the first halfe-male k The chiese The masculine so saith the Latine Semi-mas When those were borne they were counted prodigies in olde times L●… Lucane c. l The East In the East part of Affrick lying towards Nilus and Cyrene 〈◊〉 ●…le parts Affricke on the East from Asia m Exorbitant out of orbita the right path of nature n Definable It is knowne that the Philosophers defined man to bee a reasonable creature and added mortall because they held the most of their Gods and the Demones to be reasonable creatures and yet immortall o Monkeyes Cercopitheri tayled Apes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a tayle 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 an Ape Martiall Callidus admissas eludere Simius hastas Si mihi cauda foret Cercopithecus eram I mockt their darted staues withouten faile Iust like a Monkey had I had a taile Aristotle calles those tailed Apes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 De animal lib. 2. But some beasts there are with Lyons faces and Panthers bodies as bigge as an Hinde which hee calleth Cepi lib. 10. There are also a people neare the Fennes of Meotis called Cepi p Babiouns Sphynga a creature not much vnlike an Ape but bigger with a face like a woman and two dugges dangling before Solinus faith they liue in Ethiope and are easily taught and tamed The Poets giue the Sphinx a Virgins face a Lyons pawes and a Griffons wings Whether there bee any inhabitants of the earth called the Antipodes CHAP. 9. BVt whereas they fable of a a people that inhabite that land where the sunne riseth when it setteth with vs and goe with b their feete towards ours it is incredible They haue no authority for it but onely c coniecture that such a thing may bee because the earth hangeth within the orbes of heauen and each e part of the world is aboue and below alike and thence they gather that the other hemysphere cannot want inhabitants Now they consider not that although that it bee globous as ours is yet it may bee all couered with Sea and if it bee bare yet it followeth not that it is inhabited seeing that the Scripture that prooueth all that it saith to be true by the true euents that 〈◊〉 presageth neuer maketh mention of any such thing And it were too absurd to say that men might sayle ouer that huge Ocean and goe inhabite there that the progenie of the first man might people that part also But let vs goe and seeke amongst those seauentie two nations and their languages whether ●…ee can finde that Citty of GOD which remained a continuall pilgrim on 〈◊〉 vntill the deluge and is shewed to perseuere amongst the sonnes of 〈◊〉 after their blessing chiefly in Sem Noahs eldest sonne for Iaphets blessing 〈◊〉 to dwell in the tents of his brother L. VIVES PEople a that All Cosmographers diuide the heauen and consequently the earth into fiue Zones the vtmost whereof lying vnder the Poles and farre from the Heauens motion and the Sunnes heate are insufferably cold the mid-most being in the most violent motion of Heauen and heate of the Sunne is intolerably hot the two being interposed betweene both extreames are habitable one temperate Zone lying towards the North and the other towards the South the inhabitants of both are called Autichthones Now Cleomedes bids vs diuide those two Zones into foure equall parts those that dwell in the parts that lye in the same Zone are called Periaeci circumferentiall inhabitants those that dwell in diuers or in an vnequall distance from the Poles and equall from the equinoctiall are called Antoeci or opposites they that dwell in equall distances from both are called Antipodes The Periaeci differ in their day and night but not in seasons of the yeare the Antoeci iust contrary the Antipodes in both It was an old opinion which Tully Mela and other chiefe men followed that neuer man had any knowledge of the South Tully puts the great ocean betweene it and vs which no man euer passed Macrobius discourseth at large herevpon I do but glance at this for feare of clogging my reader This was a great perswasion to Augustine to follow Lactantius and deny the Antipodes for the learned men saw well that grant men no passage ouer that great sea vnto the temperate Southerne Clymate as Tully and other great authors vtterly denied them and then they that dwell there could not possibly be of Adams stocke so that he had rather deny them habitation there then contend in argument against so many learned opposits But it is most sure once that Antipodes there are and that we haue found away vnto them not onely in old times but euen by late sea maisters for of old diuers flying into the Persian gulfe for feare of Augustus sayled by the coast of Ethiopia and the Atlantike sea vnto Hercules pillers And in the prime of Carthages height some sayled from thence through Hercules his straytes into the red sea of Arabia and then were not the Bayes of Persia
were to raigne there ●…ingly The Lord will seeke him a man saith hee meaning either Dauid or the mediator prefigured in the vnction of Dauid and his posterity Hee doth not say he will seeke as if hee knew not where to finde but hee speaketh as one that seeketh our vnderstanding for wee were all knowen both to God the father and his sonne the seeker of the lost sheepe and elected in him also before the beginning of the world c He will seeke that is he will shew the world that which hee himselfe knoweth already And so haue we acquiro in the latine with a preposition to attaine and may vse quaero in that sence also as questus the substantiue for gaine L. VIVES T●… a skirt Or hemme or edge any thing that he could come nearest to cut the Iewes vsed edged garments much according to that command in the booke of Numbers The Greek word is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the wing of his doublet Ruffinus translateth it Summitatem b His 〈◊〉 Which were three hundred saith Iosephus lib. 6. c He will seeke A diuersity of rea●… I thinke the words from And so haue we acquiro to the end of the chapter bee some 〈◊〉 of others The Kingdome of Israell rent prefiguring the perpetuall diuision betweene the spirituall and carnall Israell CHAP. 7. SAul fell againe by a disobedience and Samuell told him againe from God Thou hast cast off the Lord and the Lord hath cast off thee that thou shalt no more bee King of Israell Now Saul confessing this sinne and praying for pardon and that Samuell would go with him to intreat the Lord. Not I saith Samuell thou hast cast off the Lord c. And Samuell turned him-selfe to depart and Saul held him by the lappe of his coate and it rent Then quoth Samuell the Lord hath rent the Kingdome of Israell from thee this day and hath giuen it vnto thy neighbor which is better then thee and Israell shall bee parted into two and shall no more bee vnited nor hee is not a man that hee should repent c. Now hee vnto whome these words were said ruled Israell fourty yeares euen as long as Dauid and yet was told this in the beginning of his Kingdome to shew vs that none of his race should reigne after him and to turne our eyes vppon the line of Dauid whence Christ our mediator tooke his humanity Now the originall read not this place as the Latines doe The Lord shall rend the Kingdome of Israell from thee this day but the Lord hath rent c. from thee that is from Israell so that this man was a type of Israell that was to loose the Kingdome as soone as Christ came with the New Testament to rule spiritually not carnally Of whome these wordes and hath giuen it vnto thy neighbour sheweth the consanguinity with Israell in the flesh and so with Saul and that following who is better then thee implyeth not any good in Saul or Israell but that which the Psalme saith vntill I make thine enemies thy footstoole whereof Israell the persecutor whence Christ rent the Kingdome was one Although there were Israell the wheat amongst Israell the chaffe also for the Apostles were thence and Stephen with a many Martyrs besides and from their seed grew up so many Churches as Saint Paul reckoneth all glory fiing God in his conuersion And that which followeth Israell shall bee parted into two concerning this point assuredly namely into Israell Christs friend and Israell Christs foe into Israell the free woman and Israell the slaue For these two were first vnited Abraham accompanying with his maid vntill his wiues barrennesse being fruitfull she cryed out Cast out the bondwoman her sonne Indeed because of Salomons sin we know that in his sonne Roboams time Israell diuided it selfe into two parts and either had a King vntill the Chaldeans came subdued and ren-versed all But what was this vnto Saul Such an euen was rather to be threatned vnto Dauid Salomons father And now in these times the Hebrews are not diuided but dispersed all ouer the world continuing on still in their errour But that diuision that God threatned vnto Saul who was a figure of this people was a premonstration of the eternall irreuocable separation because presently it followeth And shall no more bee vnited nor repent of it for it is no man that it should repent Mans threatnings are transitory but what God once resolueth is irremoueable For where wee read that God repented it portends an alteration of things out of his eternall prescience And likewise where hee did not it portends a fixing of things as they are So here wee see the diuision of Israell perpetuall and irreuocable grounded vppon this prophecy For they that come from thence to Christ or contrary were to doe so by Gods prouidence though humaine conc●… cannot apprehend it and their separation is in the spirit also not in the flesh And those Israelites that shall stand in Christ vnto the end shall neuer per●… with those that stayed with his enemies vnto the end but be as it is here said 〈◊〉 seperate For the Old Testament of Sina begetting in bondage shall doe them no good nor any other further then confirmeth the New Otherwise as long as Moses is read d the vaile is drawne ouer their hearts and when they 〈◊〉 to Christ then is remooued For the thoughts of those that passe from 〈◊〉 to him are changed and bettered in their passe and thence their felicitie 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is spirituall no more carnall Wherefore the great Prophet Samuel 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 had annointed Saul when hee cryed to the Lord for Israel and hee ●…d him and when hee offered the burnt offering the Philistins comming against Israell and the Lord thundred vpon them and scattered them so that they fell before Israell tooke e a stone and placed it betweene the f two Maspha's the Old and the New and named the place Eben Ezer that is the stone of 〈◊〉 saying Hetherto the L●… hath helped vs that stone is the mediation of our 〈◊〉 by which wee come from the Old Maspha to the New from the thought of a carnall kingdome in all felicitie vnto the expectation of a crowne of spiri●… glory as the New Testamen●… teacheth vs and seeing that that is the sum ●…ope of all euen ●…itherto hath God helped vs. L. VIVES B●… disobedience For being commanded by Samuel from God to kill all the Amalechites 〈◊〉 and beast hee tooke Agag the King aliue and droue away a multitude of Cattle 〈◊〉 lappe of his coate Diplois is any double garment c The Lord hath rent Shall rend ●…us But hath rent 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it is in the LXX d The vaile The vaile that Moi●…●…ed ●…ed his face was a tipe of that where-with the Iewes couer their hearts vntill they bee 〈◊〉 1. Corinth 3. e Astone Iosephus saith that hee placed it at Charron and called 〈◊〉 lib. 6. f
like a parcells of some po●…●…hose ●…hose intent concerneth a theame far different Now to shew this testimo●… one in euery Psalme of the booke wee must expound the Psalme 〈◊〉 to do how great a worke it is both others and our volumes wherein wee 〈◊〉 done it do expressly declare let him that can and list read those and there ●…ll see how abundant the prophecies of Dauid concerning Christ and of his Church were namely concerning that celestiall King and the Citty which hee builded L. VIVES LIke e parcells Centones are peeces of cloath of diuerse colours vsed any way on the back or on the bedde Cic. Cato Maior Sisenna C. Caesar. Metaphorically it is a poeme patched out of other poems by ends of verses as Homero-centon and Uirgilio-centon diuerse made by Proba and by Ausonius b Retrograde poeme Sotadicall verses that is verses backward and forwards as Musa mihi causas memora quo numine laesa Laeso numine quo memora causas mihi Musa Sotadicall verses may bee turned backwards into others also as this Iambick Pio precare thure caelestum numina turne it Numina caelestum thure precare pi●… it is a P●…ntameter They are a kinde of wanton verse as Quintilian saith inuented saith Strabo or rather vsed saith Diomedes by Sotades whome Martiall calleth Gnidus some of Augustines copies read it a great poeme and it is the fitter as if one should pick verses out of some greater workes concerning another purpose and apply them vnto his owne as some Centonists did turning Uirgils and Homers words of the Greekes and Troyan warres vnto Christ and diuine matters And Ausonius turneth them vnto an Epithalamion Of the fortie fiue Psalme the tropes and truths therein concerning Christ and the Church CHAP. 16. FOr although there be some manifest prophecies yet are they mixed with figures putting the learned vnto a great deale of labour in making the ignorant vnderstand them yet some shew Christ and his Church at first sight though we must at leisure expound the difficulties that we finde therein as for example Psal. 45. Mine heart hath giuen out a good word I dedicate my workes to the King My tongue is the pen of a ready writer Thou fairer then the children of men gr●… is powred in thy lippes for GOD hath blessed thee for euer Girde thy sworde vpon thy ●…high thou most mighty Proceede in thy beauty and glory and reigne prosperouly because of thy truth thy iustice and thy gentlenesse thy right hand shall guide thee wondrously Thine arrowes are sharpe most mighty against the hearts of the Kings enemies the people shall fall vnder thee Thy throne O GOD is euer-lasting and the scepter of thy kingdome a scepter of direction Thou louest iustice and hatest iniquitie therefore GOD euen thy GOD hath annoynted thee with oyle of gladnesse aboue thy fellowes All thy garments smell of Myrrhe Alloes and Cassia from the I●…ry palaces wherein the Kings daughters had made thee gl●…d in their honour Who is so dull that he discerneth not Christ our God in whome we beleeue by this place hearing him called GOD whose throne is for euer and annoyn●…d by GOD not with visible but with spirituall Chrisme who is so barbarously ignorant in this immortall and vniuersall religion that hee heareth not that Christs name commeth of Chrisma vnction Heere wee know CHRIST let vs see then vnto the types How is hee father then vnto the sonnes of men in a beauty farre more amiable then that of the body What is his sword his shaftes c. all these are tropicall characters of his power and how they are all so let him that is the subiect to this true iust and gentle King looke to at his leasure And then behold his Church that spirituall spouse of his and that diuine wed-locke of theirs here it is The Queene stood on thy right hand her ●…lothing was of gold embrodered with diuers collours Hea●…e Oh daughter and 〈◊〉 attend and forget thy people and thy fathers house For the King taketh pleasure in thy beauty and hee is the Lord thy God The sonnes of Tyre shall adore him 〈◊〉 guifts the ritch men of the people shall ●…ooe him with presents The Kings daughter 〈◊〉 all glorious within her cloathing is of wrought gold The Virgins shal be brought after her vnto the King and her kinsfolkes and companions shal follow her with ioy and gladnesse shal they be brought and shall enter into the Kings chamber Instead of fathers 〈◊〉 shalt haue children to make them Princes through out the earth They shal remember thy name O Lord from a generation to generation therefore shall their people giue ●…ks vnto thee world without end I doe not think any one so besotted as to thinke this to be meant of any personal woman no no she is his spouse to whō it is said Thy throne O God is euerlasting and the scepter of thy Kingdome a scepter of direction 〈◊〉 hast loued iustice and hated iniquity therefore the Lord thy God hath annointed 〈◊〉 ●…ith the oyle of gladnesse before thy fellowes Namely Christ before the christi●… For they are his fellowes of whose concord out of all nations commeth this Queene as an other psalme saith the Citty of the great King meaning the spirituall Syon Syon is speculation for so it speculateth the future good that it is to receiue and thither directeth it all the intentions This is the spirituall Ierusalem whereof wee haue all this while spoken this is the foe of that deuillish Babilon hight confusion and that the foe of this Yet is this City by regeneration freed from the Babilonian bondage and passeth ouer the worst King for the best that euer was turning from the deuill and comming home to Christ for which it is sayd forget thy people and thy fathers house c. The Israelites were a part of thi●… ●…tty in the flesh but not in that faith but became foes both to this great 〈◊〉 Queene Christ was killed by them and came from them to b those 〈◊〉 ●…euer saw in the flesh And therefore our King saith by the mouth of the 〈◊〉 in another place thou hast deliuered me from the contentions of the people 〈◊〉 me the head of the heathen a people whom I haue not knowne hath serued 〈◊〉 assoone as they heard me obeyed me This was the Gentiles who neuer 〈◊〉 ●…rist in the flesh nor hee them yet hearing him preached they beleeued 〈◊〉 ●…astly that he might well say as soone as they heard me they obeyed mee for 〈◊〉 ●…es by hearing This people conioyned with the true Israell both 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and spirit is that Citty of God which when it was onely in Israell brought 〈◊〉 ●…hrist in the flesh for thence was the Virgin Mary from whom Christ 〈◊〉 our man-hood vpon him Of this cittie thus saith another psalme c 〈◊〉 ●…ll call it our Mother Sion he became man therein the most high hath founded 〈◊〉 was this most high but
it was no sinne either in the King or people of Israel but the Lords wil that was herein fulfilled which beeing knowne both partes tooke vppe themselues and rested for they were onely diuided in rule not in religion How Hieroboam infected his subiects with Idolatry yet did God neuer faile them in Prophets nor in keeping many from that infection CHAP. 22. BVt Hieroboam the King of Israell fell peruersly from God who had truely enthroned him as he had promised and fearing that the huge resort of all Israel to Hierusalem for they came to worship sacrifice in the Temple according to the law might be a mean to with-draw the from him vnto the line of Dauid their old King began to set vp Idols in his own Realme and to seduce Gods people by this damnable and impious suttlety yet God neuer ceased to reproue him for it by his Prophets and the people also that obeied him and his successors in it for that time were the two great men of God Helias and his disciple Heliseus And when Helias said vnto GOD LORD they haue staine thy Prophets and digged downe thine Altars and I onely am left and now they seeke my life hee was answered that God had yet seauen thousand in Israel that had not bowed downe the knee to B●…l The state of Israel and Iudah vnto both their Captiuities which befell at different times diuersly altered Iudah vnited to Israel and lasty both vnto Rome CHAP. 23. NOr wanted there Prophets in Iudah that lay vnder Ierusalem in all these successions Gods pleasure was still to haue them ready to send out either for prediction of euents or reformation of maners For the Kings of Iuda did offend God also though in farre lesse measure then Israel and deserued punishment both they and their people All their good Kings haue their due commendations But Israel had not one good King from thence but all were wicked more or lesse So that both these kingdomes as it pleased God had their reuolutions of fortune now prosperous now aduerse through forraine and ciuill warres as Gods wrath or mercy was mooued vntill at length their sinnes prouoking him he gaue them all into the hands of the Chaldaeans who led most part of them captiues into Assyria first the tenne Tribes of Israel and then Iudah also destroying Ierusalem and that goodly Temple and that bondage lasted 70. years And then being freed they repaired the ruined Temple and then although many of them liued in other nations yet was the land no more diuided but one Prince onely reigned in Ierusalem and thether came all the whole land to offer and to celebrate their feasts at the time appointed But they were not yet secure from all the nations for then a came the Romanes and vnder their subiection must Christ come and finde his Israel L. VIVES THen a came Pompey the great quelled them first and made them tributaries to Rome Cicero and Antony being consulls And from that time they were ruled by the Romane Presidents of Syria and Prouosts of Iudaea That they paied tribute to the Romanes both prophane histories and that question in the Ghospell Is it lawfull to giue tribute vnto Caesar doe witnesse Of the last Prophets of the Iewes about the time that Christ was borne CHAP. 24. AFter their returne from Babilon at which time they had the Prophets Aggee Zacharie and Malachi and Esdras they had no more Prophets vntill our Sauiours birth but one other Zacharie and Elizabeth his wife and hard before his birth old Symeon Anna a widow and Iohn the last of all who was about Christs yeares and did not prophecy his comming but protested his presence a being before vnknowne Therefore saith CHRIST The prophets and the law prophecied vnto Iohn The prophecies of these fiue last wee finde in the Ghospell where the Virgin Our Lords Mother prophecied also before Iohn But these prophecies the wicked Iewes reiect yet an innumerable company of them did beleeue and receiued them For then was Israel truely diuided as was prophecied of old by Samuel vnto Saul and avouched neuer to bee altered But the reprobate Iewes also haue Malachie Aggee Zacharie and Esdras in their Canon and they are the last bookes thereof for their bookes are as the others full of great prophecies otherwise they were but few that wrote worthy of cannonicall authority Of these aforesaid I see I must make some abstracts to insert into this worke as farre as shall concerne Christ and his church But that I may doe better in the next booke L. VIVES BEing a before vnknowne Hee knew hee was come but hee knew not his person yet vntill the Holy Ghost descended like a doue and God the Father spake from heauen then hee ●…w him and professed his knowledge THE CONTENTS OF THE eighteenth booke of the City of God 1. A recapitulation of the 17. bookes past ●…rning the two Citties continuing vnto the time of Christs birth the Sauiour of the ●…ld 2. Of the Kings and times of the Earthly Citty correspondent vnto those of Abraham 3. What Kings reigned in Assiria and Sicy●… in the hundreth yeare of Abrahams age 〈◊〉 Isaac was borne according to the promise 〈◊〉 at the birth of Iacob and Esau. 4. Of the times of Iacob and his sonne Ioseph 5. Of Apis the Argiue King called Sera●… in Egipt and there adored as a deity 6. The Kings of Argos and Assiria at the 〈◊〉 of Iacobs death 7. In what Kings time Ioseph died in E●… 8. What Kings liued when Moyses was 〈◊〉 and what Gods the Pagans had as then 9. The time when Athens was built and the 〈◊〉 that Varro giueth for the name 10. Varroes relation of the originall of the 〈◊〉 Areopage and of Deucalions deluge 11. About whose times Moyses brought 〈◊〉 out of Egipt of Iosuah in whose tim●… hee 〈◊〉 12. The false Gods adored by those Greek●… Princes which liued betweene Israells freedome and 〈◊〉 death 13. What fictions got footing in the nations when the Iudges began first to rule Israell 14. Of the theologicall poets 15. The ruine of the Argiue Kingdome Picus Saturnes sonne succeeding him in Laurentum 16. How Diomedes was deified after the destruction of Troy and his fellowes said to be turned into birds 17. Of the incredible changes of men that Varro beleeued 18. Of the diuills power in transforming mans shape what a christian may beleeue herein 19. That Aeneas came into Italy when Labdon was Iudge of Israell 20. Of the succession of the Kingdome in Israell after the Iudges 21. Of the Latian Kings Aeneas the first and Auentinus the twelf●…h are made Gods 22. Rome founded at the time of the Assirian Monarchies fall Ezechias beeing King of Iudaea 23. Of the euident prophecy of Sybilla Erythraea concerning Christ. 24. The seauen Sages in Romulus his time Israell led into captiuity Romulus dieth and is deified 25. Philosophers liuing in Tarquinius Priscus his time and Zedechias his when Ierusalem was
Greece but that the Barbarians as Egypt for example had their peculier doctrines before Moyses time which they called their wisdome Otherwise our scripture would not haue said that Moyses was learned in al the wisdome of the Egyptians for there was hee borne adopted and brought vp worthily 〈◊〉 by the daughter of Pharao But their wisdome could not bee before our prophets for Abraham him-selfe was a prophet And what wisdome could there be in Egypt before Isis their supposed goddesse taught them letters This Isis was daughter to Inachus King of Argos who raigned in the times of Abrahams Grandchildren L. VIVES IN our a prophets Here Augustine prooues the Old Testament ancienter then all the philosophy of the greekes This question Iosephus handleth worthily against Ap●…on so doth Euseb. prep euang and Iustin. Martyr Ad Gentes The case is plaine inough by our allegations vpon other chapters of this booke b Pythagoras Tully saith he liued in his progenitor Seruius Tullus his time and so saith Liuy lib. 1. True in his later yeares and in the whole time of Cyrus the Persian for hee flourished Olympiade sixty wherein Tarquin the proud beganne his 〈◊〉 He died according to Eusebius Olymp. 70. after the Iewes were freed from captiuity and liued quietly at Ierusalem c Socrates He liued Olymp. 77. saith Apollodorus almost forty ●…res after Darius sent the Iewes to the reparation of the temple d Sonne after was In the eighty eight Olympiad Apollod e By the daughter Maenis the daughter of Chenephres King 〈◊〉 Egipt hauing no children adopted a Iewish child called in hebrew Moyses in greeke Mu●… This Eusebius lib. 9. praep citeth out of Artapanus Of some scriptures too ancient for the Church to allow because that might procure suspect that they are rather counterfeit then true CHAP. 38. NOw if I should goe any higher there is the Patriarch Noah before the great deluge we may very well cal him a prophet for his very Arke and his escape in that floud were propheticall references vnto these our times What was Enoch the seauenth from Adam Doth not the Canonicall Epistle of Iude s●…y that hee prophecied The reason that wee haue not their writings nor the Iewes neither is their to great antiquity which may procure a suspect that they are rather feigned to bee theirs then theirs indeed For many that beleeue a●… they like and speake as they list defend themselues with quotations from bookes But the cannon neither permitteth that such holy mens authority should be reiected nor that it should be abused by counterfeit pamphlets Nor is it any maruell that such antiquity is to be suspected when as we read in the histories of the Kings of Iuda and Israel which we hold canonicall of many things touched at there which are not there explaned but are said a to bee found in other bookes of the prophets who are sometimes named yet those workes wee haue not in our Canon nor the Iewes in theirs I know not the reason of this only I thinke that those prophets whom it pleased the holy spirrit to inspire wrote ●…e-things historically as men and other things prophetically as from the ●…outh of God and that these workes were really distinct some being held their own as they were men and some the Lords as speaking out of their bosomes so that the first might belong to the bettring of knowledge and the later to the con●…ming of religion to which the Canon onely hath respect besides which if there be any workes going vnder prophets names they are not of authority to better the knowledge because it is a doubt whether they are the workes of those prophets or no therefore wee may not trust them especially when they make against the canonical truth wheein they proue themselues directly false birthes L. VIVES TO bee found in a other For we read Concerning the deedes of Dauid c. they are written in the booke of Samuel the Seer and in the booke of Nathan the prophet and of Gad c. Chron. 1. 29. 29. so likewise of Salomons Chron. 29. 29. And of Iosaphats Chronic. 2. ●…0 34. That the Hebrew letters haue beene euer continued in that language CHAP. 39. VVEE may not therefore thinke as some doe that the hebrew tongue onely was deriued from Heber to Abraham that a Moyses first gaue the hebrew letters with the law no that tongue was deriued from man to man successiuely by letters aswell as language For Moyses appointed men to teach them before the law was giuen These the scriptures call b Grammaton Isagogos that is introductors of letters because they did as it were bring them into the hearts of men or rather their hearts into them So then no nation can ouer-poise our Prophets and Patriarches in antiquity of wisdome for they had diuine inspirations the Egyptians themselues that vse to giue out such extreame and palpable lies of their learnings are prooued short of time in comparison with our Patriarches For none of them dare say that they had any excellence of vnderstanding before they had letters that is before Isis came and taught them And what was their goodly wisdome thinke you Truely nothing but c Astronomy and such other sciences as rather seemed to exercise the wit then to eleuate the knowledge For as for morality it stirred not in Egypt vntill Trismegistus his time who was indeed long before d the sages and Philosophers of Greece but after Abraham Isaac Iacob Ioseph vea Moyses also for at the time when Moyses was borne was Atlas Prometheus his brother a great Astronomer lyuing and hee was grand-father by the mother-side to the elder Mercury who begot the father of this Trismegistus L. VIVES MOyses a first gaue It is the common opinion both of the Iewes Christians that Moyses did giue the first letters to that language Eupolemus Artapanus many other prophane authors affirme it also and that the Phaenicians had their letters thence Artapanus thinketh that Moyses gaue letters to the Egyptians also and that he was that Mercury whom all affirme did first make the Egyptian language literate If any one aske then in what letter that wisdome of Egipt that Moyses learned was contained hee shal be answered it went partly by tradition and partly was recorded by Hierog●…yphicks Philo the Iew saith Abraham inuented the Hebrew letters But that they were long before Abraham it seemes by Iosephus who saith that the sonnes of Seth erected two pillers one of stone and another of brick whereon the artes that they had inuented were ingrauen and that the stone piller was to bee seene in Syria in his time Antiq. lib. 1. These Augustine seemeth here to take for the Hebrew letters b Grammato isagogos Hierome translateth it Doctors and Maysters and Scribes They taught onely the letter of the scriptures and declined not from it an inch but the greater professors were the Pharises of Phares diuision for they seuered
oppressed and such like as these Oh who can stand to collect or recount them These now albeit they kept this seemingly absurd order continually that in 〈◊〉 whole life wherein as the Prophet saith in the Psalme Man is like to 〈◊〉 and his daies like a shadow that vanisheth the wicked alone should pos●… those temporall goods and the good onelie suffer euills yet might this 〈◊〉 referred to GODS iust iudgements yea euen to his mercies that such 〈◊〉 ●…ught not for eternall felicitie might either for their malice bee iustly 〈◊〉 by this transitory happinesse or by GODS mercie bee a comfort vnto the good and that they beeing not to loose the blisse eternall might for 〈◊〉 while bee excercised by crosses temporall either for the correction of 〈◊〉 or a augmentation of their vertues 〈◊〉 now seeing that not onely the good are afflicted and the badde ex●… which seemes iniustice but the good also often enioy good and the 〈◊〉 euill this prooues GODS iudgements more inscrutable and his 〈◊〉 more vnsearcheable Although then wee see no cause why GOD ●…ld doe thus or thus hee in whome is all wisdome and iustice and no ●…nesse nor rashnesse nor iniustice yet heere wee learne that wee may 〈◊〉 esteeme much of those goods or misfortunes which wee see the badde share with the righteous But to seeke the good peculiar to the one and to a●… the euill reserued for the other And when we come to that great iudgement properly called the day of doome 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 consummation of time there we shall not onely see all things apparant but ●…ledge all the iudgements of GOD from the first to the last to bee firme●…●…ded vpon iustice And there wee shall learne and know this also why 〈◊〉 iudgements are generally incomprehensible vnto vs and how iust his ●…nts are in that point also although already indeede it is manifest vnto ●…full that wee are iustly as yet ignorant in them all or at least in the 〈◊〉 them L. VIVES 〈◊〉 augmentation That vertue might haue meanes to exercise her powers for shee 〈◊〉 ●…ction and leauing that shee languisheth nay euen perisheth as fire doth which 〈◊〉 ●…ell to worke vpon dieth But practise her vpon obiects of aduerse fortune and she 〈◊〉 out her owne perfection Salomons disputation in Ecclesiastes concerning those goods which both the iust and the vniust doe share in CHAP. 3. 〈◊〉 the wisest King that euer reigned ouer Israel beginneth his booke cal●… a Ecclesiastes which the Iewes themselues hold for Canonicall in this 〈◊〉 b Vanity of Vanities all is vanity What remaineth vnto man of all ●…uells which hee suffereth vnder the Sunne Vnto which hee annex●… tormentes and tribulations of this declining worlde and the short ●…ift courses of time wherein nothing is firme nothing constant 〈◊〉 vanitie of althings vnder the Sunne hee bewayleth this also 〈◊〉 that seeing c There is more profitte in wisdome then in follie 〈◊〉 light is more excellent then darkenesse and seeing the wise-mans eyes are in his head when the foole wallketh in darkenesse yet that one condition one estate should befall them both as touching this vaine and transitory life meaning hereby that they were both a like exposed to those euills that good men and bad do some-times both a like endure Hee saith further that the good shall suffer as the bad do and the bad shall enioy goods as the good do in these words There is a vanity which is done vpon the earth that there bee righteous men to whome it commeth according to the worke of the wicked and there bee wicked men to whome it commeth according to the worke of the iust I thought also that this is vanity In discouery of this vanity the wise man wrote al this whole worke for no other cause but that wee might discerne that life which is not vanity vnder the sunne but truth vnder him that made the sunne But as d touching this worldly vanity is it not Gods iust iudgement that man being made like it should vanish also like it yet in these his daies of vanity there is much betweene the obeying and the opposing of truth and betweene partaking and neglecting of Godlinesse and goodnesse but this is not in respect of attayning or auoyding any terrestriall goods or euills but of the great future iudgment which shall distribute goods to the good and euils to the euil to remaine with them for euer Finally the said wise King concludeth his booke thus feare God and keepe his commandements for this is the whole duty of man for GOD will bring euery worke vnto iudgment e of euery dispisedman be it good or be it euill how can wee haue an instruction more briefe more true or more wholesome feare God saith he and keepe his commandements for this is the whole duty of man for he that doth this is full man and he that doth it not is in accompt nothing because he is not reformed according to the Image of truth but sticketh still in the shape of vanity for God will bring euery worke that is euery act of man in this life vnto iudgement be it good or euill yea the workes of euery dispised man of euery contemptible person that seemeth not t●… be noted at all God seeth him and despiseth him not neither ouer-passeth him in his iudgement L. VIVES ECclesiastes a Or the Preacher Many of the Hebrewes say that Salomon wrot this in the time of his repentance for the wicked course that he had runne Others say that he fore-saw the diuision of his kingdome vnder his sonne Rehoboam and therefore wrote it in contempt of the worlds vnstable vanity b Uanity of So the seauenty read it but other read it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 smoke of fumes Hierome c There is more Wisdome and folly are as much opposed as light and darkenesse d Touching this But that GOD instructeth our vnderstanding in this vanity it would vanish away and come to nought conceyuing falshood for truth and lying all consumed with putrifiing sinne at length like a fume it would exhale a way vnto che second death e Of euery despised man Our translations read it with euery secret thing Hierome hath it Pro omni errato The authors resolution in this discourse of the iudgement to produce the testimonies of the New-Testament first and then of the old CHAP. 4. THe testimonies of holy Scriptures by which I meane to proue this last iudgement of God must bee first of all taken out of the New-Testament and then out of the Old For though the later bee the more ancient yet the former are more worthie as beeing the true contents of the later The former then shall proceed first and they shal be backt by the later These that is the old ones the law and the prophets afford vs the former the new ones the Gospells and the writings of the Apostles Now the Apostle saith By the law commeth the knowledge of sinne But now
Father inherite you the kingdome prepared for you for if there were not another reigning of Christ with the Saints in another place whereof him-selfe saith I am with you alway vnto the end of the world the Church now vpon earth should not bee called his kingdome or the kingdome of heauen for the Scribe that was taught vnto the kingdome of God liued in this thousand yeares And the Reapers shall take the tares out of the Church which grew vntill haruest together with the good corne which Parable he expoundeth saying The ●…est is the end of the world and the reapers are the Angels as then the tares are gathered and burned in the fire so shall it be in the end of the world The sonne of man shall send forth his Angels and they shall gather out of his kingdome all things that offend What doth hee speake heare of that kingdome where there is no offence No but of the Church that is heere below Hee saith further Who-so-euer shall breake one of these least commandements and teach men so hee shall bee called the least in the kingdome of heauen but who-so-euer shall obserue and teach them the same shall bee called great in the kingdome of heauen Thus both these are done in the kingdome of heauen both the breach of the commandements and the keeping of them ●…hen hee proceedeth Except your righteousnesse exceed the righteousnesse of the Scribes and Pharisees that is of such as breake what they teach and as Christ 〈◊〉 else-where of them Say well but doe nothing vnlesse you exceed these that is ●…th teach and obserue you shall not enter into the kingdome of heauen Now the kingdome where the keeper of the commandements and the contemner were 〈◊〉 said to be is one and the kingdome into which he that saith and doth not shal not enter is another So then where both sorts are the church is that now is but where the better sort is only the church is as it shal be here-after vtterly exempt from euill So that the church now on earth is both the kingdom of Christ and the kingdome of heauen The Saints reigne with him now but not as they shall doe here-after yet the tares reigne hot with them though they grow in the Church ●…ngst the good seed They reigne with him who do as the Apostle saith If yee 〈◊〉 be risen with Christ seeke the things which are aboue where Christ sitteth at the 〈◊〉 ●…d of God Set your affections on things which are aboue and not on things 〈◊〉 are on earth of whome also hee saith that their conuersation is in heauen ●…ly they reigne with Christ who are with all his kingdom where he reigneth 〈◊〉 how do they reigne with him at all who continuing below vntill the worlds 〈◊〉 vntill his kingdome be purged of all the tares do neuer-the-lesse seeke their 〈◊〉 pleasures and not their redeemers This booke therefore of Iohns●…th ●…th of this kingdome of malice wherein there are daily conflicts with the ●…my some-times with victory and some-times with foyle vntill the time of that most peaceable kingdome approach where no enemy shall euer shew his 〈◊〉 this and the first resurrection are the subiect of the Apostles Reuelation For hauing sayd that the deuill was bound for a thousand yeares and then was to bee loosed for a while hee recapitulateth the gifts of the Church during the sayd thousand yeares And I saw seates saith he and they sat vpon them and iudgement was giuen vnto them This may not bee vnderstood of the last iudgement but by the seales are 〈◊〉 the rulers places of the Church and the persons them-selues by whom it is gouerned and for the Iudgement giuen them it cannot be better explaned then in these words what-so-euer yee binde on earth shall be bound in heauen and what-so-euer yee loose on earth shall bee loosed in heauen Therefore saith Saint Paul 〈◊〉 haue I to doe to iudge them also that bee without doe not yee iudge them that 〈◊〉 within On. And I saw the soules of them which were slaine for the witnesse of Iesus 〈◊〉 for the word of God vnderstand that which followeth they raigned with Christ a 〈◊〉 yeares These were the martires soules hauing not their bodies as yet for 〈◊〉 soules of the Godly are not excluded from the Church which as it is now is 〈◊〉 kingdome of God Otherwise she shold not mention them nor celebrate their ●…ories at our communions of the body and bloud of Christ nor were it necessary 〈◊〉 ●…in our perills to run vnto his Baptisme or to be afraid to dy without it nor to seeke reconciliation to his church if a man haue incurred any thing that exacteth repentance or burdeneth his conscience Why doe we those things but that euen such as are dead in the faith are members of Gods Church Yet are they not with their bodies and yet neuer-the-lesse their soules reigne with Christ the whole space of this thousand yeares And therefore wee reade else-where in the same booke Blessed are the dead which dye in the Lord Euen so saith the spirit for they rest from their labours and their workes follow them Thus then the Church raigneth with Christ first in the quick and the dead for Christ as the Apostle saith that hee might thence-forth rule both ouer the quick and the dead But the Apostle heere nameth the soules of the martyrs onely because their kingdome is most glorious after death as hauing fought for the truth vntill death But this is but a taking of the part for the whole for wee take this place to include all the dead that belong to Chrsts kingdome which is the Church But the sequell And which did not worship the beast neither his Image neither had taken his marke vpon their fore-heads or on their hands this is meant both of the quick and dead Now although wee must make a more exact inquiry what this beast was yet is it not against Christianity to interpret it the society of the wicked opposed against the com pany of Gods seruants and against his holy Citty Now his image that is his dissimulation in such as professe religion and practise infidelity They faigne to bee what they are not and their shew not their truth procureth them the name of Christians For this Beast consisteth not onely of the professed enemies of Christ and his glorious Hierarchy but of the tares also that in the worlds end are to be gathered out of the very fields of his owne Church And who are they that adore not the beast but those of whome Saint Pauls aduise taketh effect Bee not vnequally yoaked with the Infidells These giue him no adoration no consent no obedience nor take his marke that is the brand of their owne sinne vpon their fore-heads by professing it or on their hands by working according to it They that are cleare of this be they liuing or be they dead they reigne with Christ
not the lesser and lower doe so too If Ioue doe not like this whose oracle as Porphyry saith hath condemned the Christians credulity why doth hee not condemne the Hebrewes also for leauing this doctrine especially recorded in their holyest writings But if this Iewish wisdome which he doth so commend affirme that the heauens shall perish how vaine a thing is it to detest the Christian faith for auouching that the world shall perish which if it perish not then cannot the heauens perish Now our owne scriptures with which the Iewes haue nothing to doe our Ghospels and Apostolike writings do all affirme this The fashion of this world goeth away The world passeth away Heauen and earth shall passe away But I thinke that passeth away doth not imply so much as perisheth But in Saint Peters Epistle where hee saith how the world perished being ouer-flowed with water is plainly set downe both what he meant by the world how farre it perished and what was reserued for fire and the perdition of the wicked And by and by after The day of the Lord will come as a thiefe in the night in the which the Heauens shall passe away with a noyse the elements shall melt vvith heate and the earth vvith the rockes that are therein shall bee burnt vp and so concludeth that seeing all these perish what manner persons ought yee to be Now we may vnderstand that those heauens shall perish which he said were reserued for fire and those elements shall melt which are here below in this mole of discordant natures wherein also he saith those heauens are reserued not meaning the vpper spheres that are the seats of the stars for whereas it is written that the starres shall fall from heauen it is a good proofe that the heauens shall remaine vntouched if these words bee not figuratiue but that the starres shall fall indeed or some such wonderous apparitions fill this lower ayre as Virgil speaketh of Stella a facem ducens multa cum luce cucurrit A tailed Starre flew on with glistring light And so hid it selfe in the woods of Ida. But this place of the Psalme seemes to exempt none of all the heauens from perishing The heauens are the workes of thine hands they shall perish thus as hee made all so all shall bee destroyed The Pagans scorne I am sure to call Saint Peter to defend that Hebrew doctrine which their gods doe so approoue by alledging the figuratiue speaking hereof pars pro toto all shall perrish meaning onely all the lower parts as the Apostle saith there that the world perished in the deluge when it was onely the earth and some part of the ayre This shift they will not make least they should eyther yeeld to Saint Peter or allow this position that the fire at the last iudgement may doe as much as wee say the deluge did before their assertion that all man-kinde can neuer perish will allow them neither of these euasions Then they must needes say that when their gods commended the Hebrews wisdom they had not read this Psalme but there is another Psalme as plaine as this Our God shall come and shall not keepe silence a fire shall deuoure before him and a mightie tempest shall bee mooued round about him Hee shall call the heauen aboue and the earth to iudge his people Gather my Saints together vnto mee those that make a couenant with mee with sacrifice This is spoken of Christ whome wee beleeue shall come from heauen to iudge both the quick and the dead Hee shall come openly to iudge all most iustly who when hee came in secret was iudged himselfe most vniustly Hee shall come and shall not bee silent his voyce now shall confound the iudge before whome hee was silent when hee was lead like a sheepe to the slaughter and as a lambe before the shearer is dumbe as the Prophet saith of him and as it was fulfilled in the Ghospell Of this fire and tempest wee spake before in our discourse of Isaias prophecie touching this point But his calling the heauens aboue that is the Saints this is that which Saint Paul saith Then shall wee bee caught vp also in the clouds to meete the Lord in the ●…yre For if it meant not this how could the Heauens bee called aboue as though they could bee any where but aboue The words following And the earth if you adde not Aboue heere also may bee taken for those that are to bee iudged and the heauens for those that shall iudge with Christ. And then the calling of the heauens aboue implyeth the placing of the Saints in seates of iudgments not their raptures into the ayre Wee may further vnderstand it to bee his calling of the Angels from their high places to discend with him to iudgement and by the earth those that are to bee iudged But if wee doe vnderstand Aboue at both clauses it intimateth the Saints raptures directly putting the heauens for their soules and the earth for their bodyes to iudge or discerne his people that is to seperate the sheepe from the goates the good from the bad Then speaketh he to his Angels Gather my Saints together vnto mee this is done by the Angels ministery And whome gather they Those that make a couenant with mee with sacrifice and this is the duty of all iust men to doe For either they must offer their workes of mercy which is aboue sacrifice as the Lord saith I will haue mercy and not sacrifice or else their workes of mercy is the sacrifice it selfe that appeaseth Gods wrath as I prooued in the ninth booke of this present volume In such workes doe the iust make couenants with God in that they performe them for the promises made them in the New Testament So then Christ hauing gotten his righteous on his right hand will giue them this well-come Come yee blessed of my Father inherite yee the kingdome prepared for you from the foundations of the world for I was an hungred and you gaue me to eate and so forth of the good workes and their eternall rewards which shall be returned for them in the last iudgment L. VIVES SStella a facem ducens Virg. Aeneid 2. Anchises beeing vnwilling to leaue Troy and Aeneas being desperate and resoluing to dye Iupiter sent them a token for their flight namely this tailed starre all of which nature saith Aristotle are produced by vapours enflamed in the ayres mid region If their formes be only lineall they call them 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is lampes or torches Such an one saith Plynie glided amongst the people at noone day when Germanicus Caesar presented his Sword-players prize others of them are called Bolidae and such an one was seene at Mutina The first sort of these flye burning onely at one end the latter burneth all ouer Thus Pliny lib. 2. Malachies Prophecy of the iudgement and of such as are to be purged by fire CHAP. 25. THe Prophet a Malachiel or Malachi
inextinguible lampe This they may obiect to put vs to our plunges for if wee say it is false wee detract from the truth of our former examples and if wee say it is true wee shall seeme to avouch a Pagan deity But as I sayd in the eighteenth booke we need not beleeue all that Paganisme hath historically published their histories as Varro witnesseth seemeing to conspire in voluntary contention one against an other but wee may if we will beleeue such of their relations as doe not contradict those bookes which wee are bound to beleeue Experience and sufficient testimony shall afford vs wonders enow of nature to conuince the possibility of what we intend against those Infidells As for that lampe of Venus it rather giueth our argument more scope then any way suppresseth it For vnto that wee can adde a thousand strange things effected both by humane inuention and Magicall operation Which if wee would deny we should contradict those very bookes wherein wee beleeue Wherefore that lampe either burned by the artificiall placing a of some Asbest in it or it was effected by b art magike to procure a religious wonder or else some deuill hauing honour there vnder the name of Venus continued in this apparition for the preseruation of mens misbeleefe For the c deuills are allured to inhabite some certaine bodies by the very creatures of d God and not their delighting in them not as other creatures doe in meates but as spirits doe in characters and signes ad-apted to their natures either by stones herbes plants liuing creatures charmes and ceremonies And this allurement they doe sutly entice man to procure them either by inspiring him with the secrets thereof or teaching him the order in a false and flattering apparition making some few schollers to them and teachers to a many more For man could neuer know what they loue and what they loathe but by their owne instructions which were the first foundations of arte Magike And then doe they get the fastest hold of mens hearts which is all they seeke and glory in when they appeare like Angells of light How euer their workes are strange and the more admired the more to be avoided which their owne natures doe perswade vs to doe for if these foule deuills can worke such wonders what cannot the glorious angells doe then Nay what cannot that GOD doe who hath giuen such power to the most hated creatures So then if humane arte can effect such rare conclusions that such as know them not would thinke them diuine effects as there was an Iron Image hung e in a certaine temple so strangely that the ignorant would haue verely beleeued they had seene a worke of GODS immediate power it hung so iust betweene two loade-stones whereof one was placed in the roofe of the temple and the other in the floore without touching of any thing at all and as there might be such a tricke of mans art in that inextinguible lampe of Venus if Magicians which the scriptures call sorcerers and enchanters can doe such are exploytes by the deuills meanes as Virgil that famous Poet relateth of an Enchantresse in these words f Haec se carminibus promittit soluere mentes Quas velit ast aliis dur as immittere curas Sistere aquam fluuiis vertere sydera retrò Nocturnosque ci●…t manes mugire videbis Sub pedibus terram descendere montibus Ornos She said her charmes could ease ones heart of paine Euen when she list and make him greeue againe Stop flouds bring back the stars and with her breath Rouse the black fiends vntill the earth beneath Groan'd and the trees came marching from the hills c. If all this bee possible to those how much more then can the power of GOD exceed them in working such things as are incredible to infidelity but easie to his omnipotency who hath giuen vertues vnto stones witte vnto man and such large power vnto Angells his wonderfull power exceedeth all wonders his wisdome permitteth and effecteth all and euery perticular of them and cannot hee make the most wonderfull vse of all the parts of that world that hee onely hath created L. VIVES PLacing a of some Asbest Or of a kinde of flaxe that will neuer bee consumed for such there is Plin. lib. 19. Piedro Garsia and I saw many lampes of it at Paris where wee saw also a napkin of it throwne into the middest of a fire and taken out againe after a while more white and cleane then all the sope in Europe would haue made it Such did Pliny see also as hee saith himselfe b By art magique In my fathers time there was a tombe ●…ound wherein there burned a lampe which by the inscription of the tombe had beene lighted therein the space of one thousand fiue hundered yeares and more Beeing touched it fell all to dust c Deuills are allured Of this reade more in the eight and tenth bookes of this present worke and in Psell. de Daem d And not theirs The Manichees held the deuills to bee the creators of many things which this denieth e In a certaine temple In the temple of Serapis of Alexandria Ruf●…n Hist. Eccl. lib. 21. f Haee se Aeneid 4. Gods omnipotency the ground of all beleefe in things admired CHAP. 7. VVHy then cannot a GOD make the bodies of the dead to rise againe and the damned to suffer torment and yet not to consume seeing hee hath filled heauen earth ayre and water so full of inumerable miracles and the world which hee made beeing a greater miracle then any it containeth But our aduersaries beleeuing a God that made the world and the other gods by whom he gouerneth the world doe not deny but auoutch that there are powers that effect wonders in the world either voluntarily or ceremonially and magically but when wee giue them an instance wrought neither by man nor by spirit they answere vs it is nature nature hath giuen it this quality So then it was nature that made the Agrigentine salt melt in the fire and crackle in the water Was it so this seemes rather contrary to the nature of salt which naturally dissolueth in water and crakleth in the fire I but nature say they made this perticular salt of a quality iust opposite Good this then is the reason also of the heare and cold of the Garamantine fountaine and of the other that puts out the torch and lighteth it againe as also of the A●…beste and those other all which to reherse were too tedious There is no other reason belike to bee giuen for them but such is their nature A good briefe reason verely and b a sufficient But GOD beeing the Authour of all nature why then doe they exact a stronger reason of vs when as wee in proouing that which they hold for an impossibility affirme that it is thus by the will of Almighty GOD who is therefore called Almighty because hee can doe all that hee will hauing created so
condemne the wicked that not knowing this thing and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 they might liue well and so there may bee some which may pray 〈◊〉 wicked how then doth hee performe it to them which hope in him seeing that 〈◊〉 they dreame by this sweetnesse he will not condemne them which doe not hope in him Therefore let vs seeke that sweetnesse of his which he performeth to them which hope in him and not that which hee is thought to effect vnto them which contemne and blaspheme him c In vaine therefore man inquireth that when he is departed out of the body which hee hath neglected to obtaine to himselfe beeing in the bodie That saying also of the Apostle d For God hath shut vp all in vnbeliefe that he may haue mercy on all is not spoken to that end that he will condemne none but it appeareth before in what sence it was spoken For when as the Apostle spake vnto the Gentiles to whom now beleeuing he wrote his Epistles concerning the Iewes who should afterward beleeue As yee saith hee in time past haue not beleeued GOD. Yet now haue obtained mercy through their vnbeliefe euen so now haue they not beleeued by the mercy shewed vnto you that they may also obtaine mercy Then he addeth whereby they flatter themselues in their errors and sayth For GOD hath shut vppe all in vnbeliefe that hee may haue mercy on all Who are they all but they of whom he did speake saying as it were Both yee and they Therefore GOD hath shut vp both Gentiles and Iewes all in vnbeliefe whom hee fore-knew and predestinated to bee made like the Image of his Sonne that beeing ashamed and cast downe by repenting for the bitternesse of their vnbeliefe and conuerted by beleeuing vnto the sweetnesse of the mercies of GOD might proclaime that in the Psalme How great is the multitude of thy sweetnesse Oh Lord which thou hast laid vp for them which feare thee but hast performed it to them which hope not in them-selues but in thee Therefore he hath mercy on all the vessells of mercy What meaneth of all That is to say of those of the Gentiles and also of those of the Iewes whom hee hath predestinated called iustified glorified not of all men and will con●…mne none of those L. VIVES FOr a some departed this life In the ancient bookes printed at Bruges and Coline those tenne or twelue lines which follow are not to bee found for it is written in this manner For the prayer either of the Church or of some godly persons is heard for some departed this ●…fe but for them whose life hath not beene spent so wickedly being regenerate in Christ c. Those things which follow are not extant in them neither in the copies printed at Friburge Neuer-the-lesse the stile is not dissonant from Augustines phrase peraduenture they are eyther wanting in some bookes or else are added heere out of some other worke of Augustine as the first Scholion afterward adioyned to the context of the speech Yet not so that they may b escape The particle of negation is to bee put formost that wee may read it yet not so that they may vnder-goe those punishments at any time In vaine c therefore man In the Bruges copie it is read thus In vaine therefore doth man inquire that after this body which hee hath neglected to get in the body d For GOD hath shut vp all in vnbeleefe Commonly wee read all things in the Greeke 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is to say all men Paul signifieth that no man hath any occasion to boast that hee is glorious vnto GOD by his owne merits 〈◊〉 that it is wholy to be attributed to the goodnesse and bounty of GOD. Whether that such as beeing baptized by heretiques become wicked in life or amongst Catholiques and then fall away into heresies and schismes or continuing amongst Catholiques be of vicious conuersation can haue any hope of escaping damnation by the priuiledge of the Sacraments CHAP. 12. NOw let vs answer those who doe both exclude the deuills from saluation as the other before doe and also all men besides whatsoeuer excepting such 〈◊〉 are 〈◊〉 in CHRIST and made pertakers of his body and bloud and these they will haue saued bee their liues neuer so spotted by sinne or heresie 〈◊〉 ●…ostle doth plainely controll them saying The workes of the flesh are 〈◊〉 which are adultery fornication vncleanesse wantonnesse Idolatry c. 〈◊〉 such like whereof I tell you now as I told you before that they which doe such things 〈◊〉 not inherite the Kingdome of GOD. This were false now if that such men should become Saints at any time whatsoeuer But this is true scripture and therefore that shall neuer come to passe And if they bee neuer made 〈◊〉 of the ioyes of heauen then shall they bee euer-more bound in the ●…ines of 〈◊〉 for there is no medium wherein hee that is not in blisse might ●…ue a pla●… free from torment And therefore it is fitte wee see how our Sauiours words may bee vnderstood ●…ere hee sayth This is the bread that came downe from heauen that hee 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of it should not die I am the lyuing bread which came downe from hea●… 〈◊〉 of this bread hee shall liue for euer c. Those whome wee 〈◊〉 answere by and by haue gotten an interpretation for these places somewhat more restrained then those whome wee are to answere at this present For those other doe not promise deliuery to all that receiue the Sacraments but onely to the Catholikes of what manner of life soeuer for they onely are those that receiue the bodie of CHRIST not onely sacramentally but 〈◊〉 al●… 〈◊〉 they as beeing the true members of his bodie whereof the Apostle saith 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 are one bread and one bodie Hee therefore that is in this ●…ity of CHRISTS members in one bodie the sacrament whereof the faithfull doe daylie communicate hee is truely sayd to receiue 〈◊〉 bodie and to drinke the bloud of CHRIST So that Heretiques and 〈◊〉 who are cut off from this bodie may indeed receiue the same 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in 〈◊〉 them no good but a great deale of hurt in that great 〈◊〉 it will both make their paines more heauy and their continuance 〈◊〉 For they are not in that vnity of peace which is expressed a in 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 But ●…ow these that can obserue that hee that is not in CHRIST cannot receiue his body 〈◊〉 doe ouer-shoote themselues in promising absolution at one time or other to all the ●…ators of superstition Idolatry or heresie First because they ought 〈◊〉 obserue how absurd and farre from all likely hood 〈◊〉 that those bee they more or lesse that haue left the church and become 〈◊〉 heretiques should bee in beer estate then those whome they 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to bee heretiques with them before that they were Catholikes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 church if to bee baptized and to receiue CHRISTS body in the church bee
ignes Vp to that round ithyes Where the darke ayre doth kisse the spangled skies For in that region 'twixt the Moone and vs The Demi-gods and spirits generous Of those whom vertuous ardor guided well On earth in euer-lasting glory dwell Homer saith that the Elysian fields are in the farthest parts of Spaine whence the Fauonian windes blowe Witnesse Strabo who saith also that the Riuer Limaea now called Liuia was whilom called Lethe So doth Silius and Mela call it when Decimus Brutus lead the Romaine souldiours that way they were afraide to passe it least they should haue forgotten their country wiues friends them-selues and all The translation of Strabo calleth it Ess●… but it is an errour Silius saith it runnes amongst the Grauii Mela amongst the Celtici Indeede the Insulae fortunata a second Elysium are not farre from this part of Spaine Finis lib. 21. THE CONTENTS OF THE TWO and twentith booke of the City of God 1. Of the estate of Angels and of Men. 2. Of the eternall and vnchangeable will of God 3. The promise of the Saints eternall blisse and the wickeds perpetuall torment 4. Against the wise-men of the world that hold it impossible for mans body to bee transported vp to the dwellings of ioy in heauen 5. Of the resurrection of the body beleeued by the whole world excepting some few 6 That loue made the Romaines deifie their founder Romulus and faith made the Church to loue her Lord and maister Christ Iesus 7. That the beleefe of Christs deity was wrought by Gods power not mans perswasion 8. Of the miracles which haue beene and are as yet wrought to procure and confirme the worlds beleefe in Christ. 9. That all the miracles done by the Martyrs in the name of Christ were onely confirmations of that faith whereby the Mariyrs beleeued in Christ. 10. How much honour the Martyres deserue in obtaining miracles for the worship of the true God in respect of the Deuills whose workes tend all to make men thinke that they are Gods 11. Against the Platonists that oppose the eleuation of the body vp to Heauen by arguments of elementary ponderosity 12. Against the Infidels calumnies cast out in scorne of the Christians beleefe of the resurrection 13. Whether Abortiues belong not to the resurrection if they belong to the dead 14. Whether Infants shall rise againe in the stature that they dyed in 15. Whether all of the resurrection shall bee of the stature of Christ. 16. What is meant by the confirmation of the Saints vnto the Image of the Sonne of God 17. Whether that women shall retaine their proper sexe in the resurrection 18. Of Christ the perfect man and the Church his body and fulnesse 19. That our bodies in the resurrection shall haue no imperfection at all what-so-euer they haue had during this life but shall ●…e perfect both in quantity and quality 20. That euery mans body how euer dispersed heere shall bee restored him perfect at the resurrection 21. What new and spirituall bodies shall bee giuen vnto the Saints 22. Of mans miseries drawne vpon him by his first parents and taken away from him onely by Christs merits and gratious goodnesse 23. Of accidents seuered from the common estate of man and peculiar onely to the iust and righteous 24. Of the goods that God hath bestowed vpon this miserable life of ours 25. Of the obstinacie of some few in denying the resurrection which the whole world beleeueth as it was fore-told 26. That Porphiries opinion that the blessed soules should haue no bodies is confuted by Plato him-selfe who saith that the Creator promised the inferiour Deities that they should neuer loose their bodies 27. Contrarieties betweene Plato and Porphery wherein if either should yeeld vnto other both should finde out the truth 28. What either Plato Labeo or Varro might haue auailed to the true faith of the resurrection if they had had an harmony in their opinions 29. Of the quality of the vision with which the Saints shall see GOD in the world to come 30. Of the eternall felicity of the Citty of GOD and the perpetuall Sabboth FINIS THE TVVO AND TVVENTITH BOOKE OF THE CITTIE OF GOD Written by Saint Augustine Bishop of Hippo vnto Marcellinus Of the estate of Angels and of men CHAP. 1. THIS present volume being the last of this whole worke shall containe a discourse of the eternall beatitude of the Citty of God Which Cittie is not called eternall as if it should continue for the space of so many or so many thousand ages and then haue an end but as it is written in the Ghospell Of his kingdome there shall bee none end Nor shall this perpetuitie preserue the forme by succession as a Baye tree seemeth to keepe a continuall verdure though one leafe fall of and another spring vp but euery Cittizen therein shall bee immortall and man shall attaine to that which the Angells haue neuer forgone This God the founder of this Citty will effect for so hee hath promised who cannot lye and who to confirme the rest hath effected part of his promises already Hee it is that made the world with all things sensible and intelligible therein whose chiefe worke the spirits were to whome hee gaue an vnderstanding making them capable of his contemplation and combining them in one holy and vnited society which wee call the Citty of God holy and heauenly wherein God is their life their nutriment and their beatitude Hee gaue a free election also vnto those intellectuall natures that if they would for sake him who was their blisse they should presently bee enthralled in misery And fore-knowing that certaine of the Angels proudly presuming that them-selues were sufficient beatitude to them-selues would forsake him and all good with him hee did not abridge them of his power knowing it a more powerfull thing to make good vse of such as were euill then to exclude euill for altogether Nor had there beene any euill at all but that those spirits though good yet mutable which were formed by the omnipotent and vnchangeable Deitie procured such euill vnto them-selues by sinne which very sinne prooued that their natures were good in them-selues For if they had not beene so although inferiour to the maker their apostacie had not fallen so heauie vpon them For as blindnesse beeing a defect prooueth plainely that the eye was made to see the excellencie of the eye beeing heereby made more apparent for other-wise blindnesse were no deffect so those natures enioying GOD prooued them-selues to bee created good in their very fall and that eternall misery that fell vpon them for forsaking GOD who hath giuen assurance of eternall perseuerance vnto those that stood firme in him as a fitte reward for their constancy He also made man vpright of a free election earthly yet worthy of Heauen if he stuck fast to his Creator otherwise to pertake of such misery as sorted with a nature of that kinde and fore-knowing likewise that he