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Book I
Chapter VI
Now let us pass
to divine testimonies; but I will previously bring forward one which resembles
a divine testimony, both on account of its very great antiquity, and because
he whom I shall name was taken from men and placed among the gods. According
to Cicero, Caius Cotta the pontiff, while disputing against the Stoics concerning
superstitions, and the variety of opinions which prevail respecting the gods,
in order that he might, after the custom of the Academics, make everything
uncertain, says that there were five Mercuries; and having enumerated four
in order, says that the fifth was he by whom Argus was slain, and that on
this account he fled into Egypt, and gave laws and letters to the Egyptians.
The Egyptians call him Thoth; and from him the first month of their year,
that is, September, received its name among them. He also built a town, which
is even now called in Greek Hermopolis (the town of Mercury), and the inhabitants
of Phenae honour him with religious worship. And although he was a man, yet
he was of great antiquity, and most fully imbued with every kind of learning,
so that the knowledge of many subjects and arts acquired for him the name
of Trismegistus. He wrote books, and those in great numbers, relating to
the knowledge of divine things, in which be asserts the majesty of the supreme
and only God, and makes mention of Him by the same names which we use-God
and Father. And that no one might inquire His name, he said that He was without
name, and that on account of His very unity He does not require the peculiarity
of a name. These are his own words: "God is one, but He who is one only does
not need a name; for He who is self-existent is without a name." God, therefore,
has no name, because He is alone; nor is there any need of a proper name,
except in cases where a multitude of persons requires a distinguishing mark,
so that you may designate each person by his own mark and appellation. But
God, because He is always one, has no peculiar name.
It remains for me to bring forward testimonies respecting the sacred responses
and predictions, which are much more to be relied upon. For perhaps they
against whom we are arguing may think that no credence is to be given to
poets, as though they invented fictions, nor to philosophers, inasmuch as
they were liable to err, being themselves but men. Marcus Varro, than whom
no man of greater learning ever lived, even among the Greeks, much less among
the Latins, in those books respecting divine subjects which he addressed
to Caius Caesar the chief pontiff, when he was speaking of the Quindecemviri,
says that the Sibylline books were not the production of one Sibyl only,
but that they were called by one name Sibylline, because all prophetesses
were called by the ancients Sibyls, either from the name of one, the Delphian
priestess, or from their proclaiming the counsels of the gods. For in the
Aeolic dialect they used to call the gods by the word Sioi, not Theoi; and
for counsel they used the word bule, not boule; and so the Sibyl received
her name as though Siobule. But he says that the Sibyls were ten in number,
and he enumerated them all under the writers, who wrote an account of each:
that the first was from the Persians, and of her Nicanor made mention, who
wrote the exploits of Alexander of Macedon; the second of Libya, and of her
Euripides makes mention in the prologue of the Lamia; the third of Delphi,
concerning whom Chrysippus speaks in that book which he composed concerning
divination;-the fourth a Cimmerian in Italy, whom Naevius mentions in his
books of the Punic war, and Piso in his annals;-the fifth of Erythraea, whom
Apollodorus of Erythraea affirms to have been his own country-woman, and
that she foretold to the Greeks when they were setting but for Ilium, both
that Troy was doomed to destruction, and that Homer would write falsehoods;-the
sixth of Samos, respecting whom Eratosthenes writes that he had found a written
notice in the ancient annals of the Samians. The seventh was of Cumae, by
name Amalthaea, who is termed by some Herophile, or Demophile and they say
that she brought nine books to the king Tarquinius Priscus, and asked for
them three hundred philippics, and that the king refused so great a price,
and derided the madness of the woman; that she, in the sight of the king,
burnt three of the books, and demanded the same price for those which were
left; that Tarquinias much more considered the woman to be mad; and that
when she again, having burnt three other books, persisted in asking the same
price, the king was moved, and bought the remaining books for the three hundred
pieces of gold: and the number of these books was afterwards increased, after
the rebuilding of the Capitol; because they were collected from all cities
of Italy and Greece, and especially from those of Erythraea, and were brought
to Rome, under the name of whatever Sibyl they were. Further, that the eighth
was from the Hellespont, born in the Trojan territory, in the village of
Marpessus, about the town of Gergithus; and Heraclides of Pontus writes that
she lived in the times of Solon and Cyrus; the ninth of Phrygia, who gave
oracles at Ancyra;-the tenth of Tibur, by name Albunea, who is worshipped
at Tibur as a goddess, near the banks of the river Anio, in the depths of
which her statue is said to have been found, holding in her hand a book.
The senate transferred her oracles into the Capitol.
The predictions of all these Sibyls are both brought forward and esteemed
as such, except those of the Cumaean Sibyl, whose books are concealed by
the Romans; nor do they consider it lawful for them to be inspected by any
one but the Quindecemviri. And them are separate books the production of
each, but because these are inscribed with the name of the Sibyl they are
believed to be the work of one; and they are confused, nor can the productions
of each be distinguished and assigned to their own authors, except in the
case of the Erythraean Sibyl, for she both inserted her own true name in
her verse, and predicted that she would be called Erythraean, though she
was born at Babylon. But we also shall speak of the Sibyl without any
distinction, wherever we shall have occasion to use their testimonies.
All these Sibyls, then, proclaim one God, and especially the Erythraean,
who is regarded among the others as more celebrated and noble; since Fenestella,
a most diligent writer, speaking of the Quindecemviri, says that, after the
rebuilding of the Capitol, Caius Curio the consul proposed to the senate
that ambassadors should be sent to Erythrae to search out and bring to Rome
the writings of the Sibyl; and that, accordingly, Publius Gabinius, Marcus
Otacilius, and Lucius Valerius were sent, who conveyed to Rome about a thousand
verses written out by private persons. We have shown before that Varro made
the same statement. Now in these verses which the ambassadors brought to
Rome, are these testimonies respecting the one God:
1. "One God, who is alone, most mighty, uncreated."This is the only supreme
God, who made the heaven, and decked it with lights.
2. "But there is one only God of pre-eminent power, who made the heaven,
and sun, and stars, and moon, and fruitful earth, and waves of the water
of the sea."And since He alone is the framer of the universe, and the artificer
of all things of which it consists or which are contained in it, it testifies
that He alone ought to be worshipped:-
3. "Worship Him who is alone the ruler of the world, who alone was and is
from age to age."Also another Sibyl, whoever she is, when she said that she
conveyed the voice of God to men, thus spoke:-
4. "I am the one only God, and there is no other God."
I would now follow up the testimonies of the others, were it not that these
are sufficient, and that I reserve others for more befitting opportunities.
But since we are defending the cause of truth before those who err from the
truth and serve false religions, what kind of proof ought we to bring forward
against them, rather than to refute them by the testimonies of their own
gods?
Book IV
Chapter VI
God, therefore,
the contriver and founder of all things, as we have said in the second hook,
before He commenced this excellent work of the world, begat a pure and
incorruptible Spirit, whom He called His Son. And although He had afterwards
created by Himself innumerable other beings, whom we call angels, this
first-begotten, however, was the only one whom He considered worthy of being
called by the divine name, as being powerful in His Father's excellence and
majesty. But that there is a Son of the Most High God, who is possessed of
the greatest power, is shown not only by the unanimous utterances of the
prophets, but also by the declaration of Trismegistus and the predictions
of the Sibyls.
Hermes, in the book which is entitled The Perfect Word, made use of these
words: "The Lord and Creator of all things, whom we have thought right to
call God, since He made the second God visible and sensible. But I use the
term sensible, not because He Himself perceives (for the question is not
whether He Himself perceives), but because He leads to perception and to
intelligence. Since, therefore, He made Him first, and alone, and one only,
He appeared to Him beautiful, and most full of all good things; and He hallowed
Him, and altogether loved Him as His own Son." The Erythraean Sibyl, in the
beginning of her poem, which she commenced with the Supreme God, proclaims
the Son of God as the leader and commander of all, in these verses:
The nourisher and
creator of all things, who placed the sweet breath in all, and made God the
leader of all.
And again, at the
end of the same poem:
But whom God gave
for faithful men to honour.
And another Sibyl
enjoins that He ought to be known:
Know Him as your
God, who is the Son of God.
Assuredly He is
the very Son of God, who by that most wise King Solomon, full of divine
inspiration, spake these things which we have added: "God founded me in the
beginning of His ways, in His work before the ages. He set me up in the
beginning, before He made the earth, and before He established the depths,
before the fountains of waters came forth: the Lord begat me before all the
hills; He made the regions, and the uninhabitable boundaries under the heaven.
When He prepared the heaven, I was by Him: and when He separated His own
seat, when He made the strong clouds above the winds, and when He strengthened
the mountains, and placed them under heaven; when He laid the strong foundations
of the earth, I was with Him arranging all things. I was He in whom He delighted:
I was daily delighted, when He rejoiced, the world being completed." But
on this account Trismegistus spoke of Him as "the artificer of God," and
the Sibyl calls Him "Counsellor," because He is endowed by God the Father
with such wisdom and strength, that God employed both His wisdom and hands
in the creation of the world. |
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