The Banquet of the Ten Virgins or Concerning…

 Or,

 Marcella.

 Discourse I.—Marcella.

 Chapter II.—Virginity a Plant from Heaven, Introduced Late The Advancement of Mankind to Perfection, How Arranged.

 Chapter III.—By the Circumcision of Abraham, Marriage with Sisters Forbidden In the Times of the Prophets Polygamy Put a Stop To Conjugal Purity Its

 Chapter IV.—Christ Alone Taught Virginity, Openly Preaching the Kingdom of Heaven The Likeness of God to Be Attained in the Light of the Divine Virtu

 Chapter V.—Christ, by Preserving His Flesh Incorrupt in Virginity, Draws to the Exercise of Virginity The Small Number of Virgins in Proportion to th

 Theophila.

 Discourse II.—Theophila.

 Chapter II.—Generation Something Akin to the First Formation of Eve from the Side and Nature of Adam God the Creator of Men in Ordinary Generation.

 Chapter III.—An Ambiguous Passage of Scripture Not Only the Faithful But Even Prelates Sometimes Illegitimate.

 Chapter IV.—Human Generation, and the Work of God Therein Set Forth.

 Chapter V.—The Holy Father Follows Up the Same Argument.

 Chapter VI.—God Cares Even for Adulterous Births Angels Given to Them as Guardians.

 Chapter VII.—The Rational Soul from God Himself Chastity Not the Only Good, Although the Best and Most Honoured.

 Thaleia.

 Discourse III.—Thaleia.

 Chapter II.—The Digressions of the Apostle Paul The Character of His Doctrine: Nothing in It Contradictory Condemnation of Origen, Who Wrongly Turns

 Chapter III.—Comparison Instituted Between the First and Second Adam.

 Chapter IV.—Some Things Here Hard and Too Slightly Treated, and Apparently Not Sufficiently Brought Out According to the Rule of Theology.

 Chapter V.—A Passage of Jeremiah Examined.

 Chapter VI.—The Whole Number of Spiritual Sheep Man a Second Choir, After the Angels, to the Praise of God The Parable of the Lost Sheep Explained.

 Chapter VII.—The Works of Christ, Proper to God and to Man, the Works of Him Who is One.

 Chapter VIII.—The Bones and Flesh of Wisdom The Side Out of Which the Spiritual Eve is Formed, the Holy Spirit The Woman the Help-Meet of Adam Virg

 Chapter IX.—The Dispensation of Grace in Paul the Apostle.

 Chapter X.—The Doctrine of the Same Apostle Concerning Purity.

 Chapter XI.—The Same Argument.

 Chapter XII.—Paul an Example to Widows, and to Those Who Do Not Live with Their Wives.

 Chapter XIII.—The Doctrine of Paul Concerning Virginity Explained.

 Chapter XIV.—Virginity a Gift of God: the Purpose of Virginity Not Rashly to Be Adopted by Any One.

 Theopatra.

 Discourse IV.—Theopatra.

 Chapter II.—The Protection of Chastity and Virginity Divinely Given to Men, that They May Emerge from the Mire of Vices.

 But not to pass away from our subject, come, let us take in our hands and examine this psalm, which the pure and stainless souls sing to God, saying:

 Chapter IV.—The Author Goes on with the Interpretation of the Same Passage.

 Chapter V.—The Gifts of Virgins, Adorned with Which They are Presented to One Husband, Christ.

 Chapter VI.—Virginity to Be Cultivated and Commended in Every Place and Time.

 Thallousa.

 Discourse V.—Thallousa.

 Chapter II.—Abraham’s Sacrifice of a Heifer Three Years Old, of a Goat, and of a Ram Also Three Years Old: Its Meaning Every Age to Be Consecrated to

 Chapter III.—Far Best to Cultivate Virtue from Boyhood.

 Chapter IV.—Perfect Consecration and Devotion to God: What It is.

 Chapter V.—The Vow of Chastity, and Its Rites in the Law Vines, Christ, and the Devil.

 Chapter VI.—Sikera, a Manufactured and Spurious Wine, Yet Intoxicating Things Which are Akin to Sins are to Be Avoided by a Virgin The Altar of Ince

 Chapter VII.—The Church Intermediate Between the Shadows of the Law and the Realities of Heaven.

 Chapter VIII.—The Double Altar, Widows and Virgins Gold the Symbol of Virginity.

 Agathe.

 Discourse VI.—Agathe.

 If, then, any one will keep this beauty inviolate and unharmed, and such as He who constructed it formed and fashioned it, imitating the eternal and i

 Chapter III.—The Same Endeavour and Effort After Virginity, with a Different Result.

 Chapter IV.—What the Oil in the Lamps Means.

 Chapter V.—The Reward of Virginity.

 Procilla.

 Discourse VII.—Procilla.

 Consider now, O virgins, that, in saying to the bride, “Thou hast ravished my heart, my sister, my spouse,” He shows the clear eye of the understandin

 Chapter III.—Virgins Being Martyrs First Among the Companions of Christ.

 Now if any one should have a doubt about these things, inasmuch as the points are nowhere fully wrought out, and should still wish more fully to perce

 Chapter V.—The Sixty Queens: Why Sixty, and Why Queens The Excellence of the Saints of the First Age.

 Chapter VI.—The Eighty Concubines, What The Knowledge of the Incarnation Communicated to the Prophets.

 Now he calls by the name of virgins, who belong to a countless assembly, those who, being inferior to the better ones, have practised righteousness, a

 Chapter VIII.—The Human Nature of Christ His One Dove.

 Chapter IX.—The Virgins Immediately After the Queen and Spouse.

 Thekla.

 Discourse VIII.—Thekla.

 Chapter II.—The Lofty Mind and Constancy of the Sacred Virgins The Introduction of Virgins into the Blessed Abodes Before Others.

 Chapter III.—The Lot and Inheritance of Virginity.

 Now, then, O Virgins, daughters of undefiled temperance, let us strive for a life of blessedness and the kingdom of heaven. And do ye unite with those

 Chapter V.—The Woman Who Brings Forth, to Whom the Dragon is Opposed, the Church Her Adornment and Grace.

 Chapter VI.—The Works of the Church, the Bringing Forth of Children in Baptism The Moon in Baptism, the Full Moon of Christ’s Passion.

 Chapter VII.—The Child of the Woman in the Apocalypse Not Christ, But the Faithful Who are Born in the Laver.

 Chapter VIII.—The Faithful in Baptism Males, Configured to Christ The Saints Themselves Christs.

 Chapter IX.—The Son of God, Who Ever Is, is To-Day Begotten in the Minds and Sense of the Faithful.

 Chapter X.—The Dragon, the Devil The Stars Struck from Heaven by the Tail of the Dragon, Heretics The Numbers of the Trinity, that Is, the Persons N

 Chapter XI.—The Woman with the Male Child in the Wilderness the Church The Wilderness Belongs to Virgins and Saints The Perfection of Numbers and My

 Chapter XII.—Virgins are Called to the Imitation of the Church in the Wilderness Overcoming the Dragon.

 Chapter XIII.—The Seven Crowns of the Beast to Be Taken Away by Victorious Chastity The Ten Crowns of the Dragon, the Vices Opposed to the Decalogue

 Chapter XIV.—The Doctrine of Mathematicians Not Wholly to Be Despised, When They are Concerned About the Knowledge of the Stars The Twelve Signs of t

 Chapter XV.—Arguments from the Novelty of Fate and Generation That Golden Age, Early Men Solid Arguments Against the Mathematicians.

 Chapter XVI.—Several Other Things Turned Against the Same Mathematicians.

 Chapter XVII.—The Lust of the Flesh and Spirit: Vice and Virtue.

 Tusiane.

 Discourse IX.—Tusiane.

 Chapter II.—Figure, Image, Truth: Law, Grace, Glory Man Created Immortal: Death Brought in by Destructive Sin.

 Chapter III.—How Each One Ought to Prepare Himself for the Future Resurrection.

 Chapter IV.—The Mind Clearer When Cleansed from Sin The Ornaments of the Mind and the Order of Virtue Charity Deep and Full Chastity the Last Ornam

 Chapter V.—The Mystery of the Tabernacles.

 Domnina.

 Discourse X.—Domnina.

 But lest I should appear to some to be sophistical, and to conjecture these things from mere probabilities, and to babble, I will bring forward to you

 Chapter III.—The Bramble and the Agnos the Symbol of Chastity The Four Gospels, that Is, Teachings or Laws, Instructing to Salvation.

 Chapter IV.—The Law Useless for Salvation The Last Law of Chastity Under the Figure of the Bramble.

 Chapter V.—The Malignity of the Devil as an Imitator in All Things Two Kinds of Fig-Trees and Vines.

 Chapter VI.—The Mystery of the Vision of Zechariah.

 Arete.

 Discourse XI.—Arete.

 Chapter II.—Thekla Singing Decorously a Hymn, the Rest of the Virgins Sing with Her John the Baptist a Martyr to Chastity The Church the Spouse of G

 Chapter III.—Which are the Better, the Continent, or Those Who Delight in Tranquillity of Life? Contests the Peril of Chastity: the Felicity of Tranqu

 Elucidations.

Chapter XVI.—Several Other Things Turned Against the Same Mathematicians.

If no action is performed without a previous desire, and there is no desire without a want, yet the Divine Being has no wants, and therefore has no conception of evil. And if the nature of the stars be nearer in order to that of God, being better than the virtue of the best men, then the stars also are neither productive of evil, nor in want.

And besides, every one of those who are persuaded that the sun and moon and stars are divine, will allow that they are far removed from evil, and incapable of human actions which spring from the sense of pleasure and pain; for such abominable desires are unsuitable to heavenly beings. But if they are by nature exempt from these, and in no want of anything, how should they be the causes to men of those things which they do not will themselves, and from which they are exempt?

Now those who decide that man is not possessed of free-will, and affirm that he is governed by the unavoidable necessities of fate, and her unwritten commands, are guilty of impiety towards God Himself, making Him out to be the cause and author of human evils. For if He harmoniously orders the whole circular motion of the stars, with a wisdom which man can neither express nor comprehend, directing the course of the universe; and the stars produce the qualities of virtue and vice in human life, dragging men to these things by the chains of necessity; then they declare God to be the Cause and Giver of evils. But God is the cause of injury to no one; therefore fate259 γένεσις = birth, i.e., our life is not controlled by the star of our nativity.—Tr. [See Hippolytus, vol. v. p. 27, this series.] is not the cause of all things.

Whoever has the least intelligence will confess that God is good, righteous, wise, true, helpful, not the cause of evils, free from passion, and everything of that kind. And if the righteous be better than the unrighteous, and unrighteousness be abominable to them, God, being righteous, rejoices in righteousness, and unrighteousness is hateful to Him, being opposed and hostile to righteousness. Therefore God is not the author of unrighteousness.

If that which profits is altogether good, and temperance is profitable to one’s house and life and friends, then temperance is good. And if temperance be in its nature good, and licentiousness be opposed to temperance, and that which is opposed to good be evil, then licentiousness is evil. And if licentiousness be in its nature evil, and out of licentiousness come adulteries, thefts, quarrels, and murders, then a licentious life is in its nature evil. But the Divine Being is not by nature implicated in evils. Therefore our birth is not the cause of these things.

If the temperate are better than the incontinent, and incontinence is abominable to them, and God rejoices in temperance, being free from the knowledge of passions, then incontinence is hateful also to God. Moreover, that the action which is in accordance with temperance, being a virtue, is better than that which is in accordance with incontinence, which is a vice, we may learn from kings and rulers, and commanders, and women, and children, and citizens, and masters, and servants, and pedagogues, and teachers; for each of these is useful to himself and to the public when he is temperate; but when he is licentious he is injurious to himself and to the public. And if there be any difference between a filthy man and a noble man, a licentious and a temperate; and if the character of the noble and the temperate be the better, and that of the opposite the worse; and if those of the better character be near to God and His friends, and those of the worse be far from Him and His enemies, those who believe in fate make no distinction between righteousness and unrighteousness, between filthiness and nobility, between licentiousness and temperance, which is a contradiction. For if good be opposed to evil, and unrighteousness be evil, and this be opposed to righteousness and righteousness be good, and good be hostile to evil, and evil be unlike to good, then righteousness is different from unrighteousness. And therefore God is not the cause of evils, nor does He rejoice in evils. Nor does reason commend them, being good. If, then, any are evil, they are evil in accordance with the wants and desires of their minds, and not by necessity.

“They perish self-destroyed,

By their own fault.”260 Hom., Od., i. 7.

If destiny261 γένεσις = birth, h. the star of man’s nativity, h. destiny. leads one on to kill a man, and to stain his hands with murder, and the law forbids this, punishing criminals, and by threats restrains the decrees of destiny, such as committing injustice, adultery, theft, poisoning, then the law is in opposition to destiny; for those things which destiny appointed the law prohibits, and those things which the law prohibits destiny compels men to do. Hence law is hostile to destiny. But if it be hostile, then lawgivers do not act in accordance with destiny; for by passing decrees in opposition to destiny they destroy destiny. Either, then, there is destiny and there was no need of laws; or there are laws and they are not in accordance with destiny. But it is impossible that anyone should be born or anything done apart from destiny; for they say it is not lawful for anyone even to move a finger apart from fate. And therefore it was in accordance with destiny that Minos and Dracon, and Lycurgus, and Solon, and Zaleukos were law-givers and appointed laws, prohibiting adulteries, murders, violence, rape, thefts, as things which neither existed nor took place in accordance with destiny. But if these things were in accordance with destiny, then the laws were not in accordance with destiny. For destiny itself would not be destroyed by itself, cancelling itself, and contending against itself; here appointing laws forbidding adultery and murders, and taking vengeance upon and punishing the wicked, and there producing murders and adulteries. But this is impossible: for nothing is alien and abhorrent to itself, and self-destructive, and at variance with itself. And, therefore, there is no destiny.

If everything in the world falls out in accordance with destiny, and nothing without it, then the law must needs be produced by destiny. But the law destroys destiny, teaching that virtue should be learnt, and diligently performed; and that vice should be avoided, and that it is produced by want of discipline. Therefore there is no destiny.

If destiny makes men to injure one another, and to be injured by one another, what need is there of laws? But if laws are made that they may check the sinful, God having a care for those who are injured, it were better that the evil should not act in accordance with Fate, than that they should be set right, after having acted. But God is good and wise, and does what is best. Therefore there is no fixed destiny. Either education and habit are the cause of sins, or the passions of the soul, and those desires which arise through the body. But whichever of these be the cause, God is not the cause. If it is better to be righteous than to be unrighteous, why is not man made so at once from his birth? But if afterwards he is tempered by instruction and laws, that he may become better, he is so tempered as possessing free-will, and not by nature evil. If the evil are evil in accordance with destiny, by the decrees of Providence, they are not blameworthy and deserving of the punishment which is inflicted by the laws, since they live according to their own nature, and are not capable of being changed.

And, again, if the good, living according to their own proper nature, are praiseworthy, their natal destiny being the cause of their goodness; yet the wicked, living according to their own proper nature, are not blamable in the eye of a righteous judge. For, if we must speak plainly, he who lives according to the nature which belongs to him, in no way sins. For he did not make himself thus, but Fate; and he lives according to its motion, being urged on by unavoidable necessity. Then no one is bad. But some men are bad: and vice is blameworthy, and hostile to God, as reason has shown. But virtue is lovable and praiseworthy, God having appointed a law for the punishment of the wicked. Therefore there is no Fate.