An Address to Demetrianus.

 

 1. I had frequently, Demetrianus, treated with contempt your railing and noisy clamour with sacrilegious mouth and impious words against the one and t

 2. In consideration of this, I have frequently held my tongue, and overcome an impatient man with patience since I could neither teach an unteachable

 3. You have said that all these things are caused by us, and that to us ought to be attributed the misfortunes wherewith the world is now shaken and d

 4. You impute it to the Christians that everything is decaying as the world grows old. What if old men should charge it on the Christians that they gr

 5. Moreover, that wars continue frequently to prevail, that death and famine accumulate anxiety, that health is shattered by raging diseases, that the

 6. In fine, listen to Himself speaking Himself with a divine voice at once instructing and warning us:  “Thou shalt worship the Lord thy God,” says H

 7. Behold, the Lord is angry and wrathful, and threatens, because you turn not unto Him. And you wonder or complain in this your obstinacy and contemp

 8. You complain that the fountains are now less plentiful to you, and the breezes less salubrious, and the frequent showers and the fertile earth affo

 9. And therefore with reason in these plagues that occur, there are not wanting God’s stripes and scourges and since they are of no avail in this mat

 10. You who judge others, be for once also a judge of yourself look into the hiding-places of your own conscience nay, since now there is not even a

 11. So great a terror of destruction cannot give the teaching of innocency and in the midst of a people dying with constant havoc, nobody considers t

 12. Look what that very matter is of which is chiefly our discourse—that you molest us, although innocent that, in contempt of God, you attack and op

 13. What is this insatiable madness for blood-shedding, what this interminable lust of cruelty? Rather make your election of one of two alternatives.

 14. Why do you turn your attention to the weakness of our body? why do you strive with the feebleness of this earthly flesh? Contend rather with the s

 15. Oh, would you but hear and see them when they are adjured by us, and tortured with spiritual scourges, and are ejected from the possessed bodies w

 16. What, then, is that sluggishness of mind yea, what blind and stupid madness of fools, to be unwilling to come out of darkness into light, and to

 17. For this reason it is that none of us, when he is apprehended, makes resistance, nor avenges himself against your unrighteous violence, although o

 18. Nor let anybody think that Christians are not avenged by those things that are happening, for the reason that they also themselves seem to be affe

 19. Do you think that we suffer adversity equally with yourselves, when you see that the same adverse things are not borne equally by us and by you? A

 20. There flourishes with us the strength of hope and the firmness of faith. Among these very ruins of a decaying world our soul is lifted up, and our

 21. Let no one, however, flatter himself, because there is for the present to us and to the profane, to God’s worshippers and to God’s opponents, by r

 22. And how great, too, are those things which in the meantime are happening in that respect on our behalf! Something is given for an example, that th

 23. Look, therefore, while there is time, to the true and eternal salvation and since now the end of the world is at hand, turn your minds to God, in

 24. What will then be the glory of faith? what the punishment of faithlessness? When the day of judgment shall come, what joy of believers, what sorro

 25. Provide, therefore, while you may, for your safety and your life. We offer you the wholesome help of our mind and advice. And because we may not h

22. And how great, too, are those things which in the meantime are happening in that respect on our behalf! Something is given for an example, that the anger of an avenging God may be known. But the day of judgment is still future which the Holy Scripture denounces, saying, “Howl ye, for the day of the Lord is at hand, and destruction from God shall come; for, lo, the day of the Lord cometh, cruel with wrath and anger, to lay the earth desolate, and to destroy the sinners out of it.”34    Isa. xiii. 6–9. And again: “Behold, the day of the Lord cometh, burning as an oven; and all the aliens and all that do wickedly shall be as stubble, and the day that cometh shall burn them up, saith the Lord.”35    Mal. iv. 1. The Lord prophesies that the aliens shall be burnt up and consumed; that is, aliens from the divine race, and the profane, those who are not spiritually new-born, nor made children of God. For that those only can escape who have been new-born and signed with the sign of Christ, God says in another place, when, sending forth His angels to the destruction of the world and the death of the human race, He threatens more terribly in the last time, saying, “Go ye, and smite, and let not your eye spare. Have no pity upon old or young, and slay the virgins and the little ones and the women, that they may be utterly destroyed. But touch not any man upon whom is written the mark.”36    Ezek. ix. 5. Moreover, what this mark is, and in what part of the body it is placed, God sets forth in another place, saying, “Go through the midst of Jerusalem, and set a mark upon the foreheads of the men that sigh and that cry for all the abominations that be done in the midst thereof.”37    Ezek. ix. 4. And that the sign pertains to the passion and blood of Christ, and that whoever is found in this sign is kept safe and unharmed, is also proved by God’s testimony, saying, “And the blood shall be to you for a token upon the houses in which ye shall be; and I will see the blood, and will protect you, and the plague of diminution shall not be upon you when I smite the land of Egypt.”38    Ex. xii. 13. What previously preceded by a figure in the slain lamb is fulfilled in Christ, the truth which followed afterwards. As, then, when Egypt was smitten, the Jewish people could not escape except by the blood and the sign of the lamb; so also, when the world shall begin to be desolated and smitten, whoever is found in the blood and the sign of Christ alone shall escape.39    [Ezek. ix. 4; Rev. vii. 3; ix. 4.]

XXII. Et quanta sunt quae istic pro nobis interim fiunt? In exemplum aliquid datur, ut Dei vindicis ira noscatur. Caeterum retro est judicii dies, quem Scriptura sancta denuntiat dicens: Ululate, proximus est 0560Benim dies Domini, et obtritioa Deo aderit. Ecce enim dies Domini venit insanabilis indignationis et irae, ponere orbem terrae desertum, et peccatores perdere ex eo (Isa. XIII, 6). Et iterum: Ecce dies Domini venit ardens velut clibanus , eruntque omnes alienigenae et omnes iniqui stipula ; et succendet illos adveniens dies, dicit Dominus (Malach. IV, 1). Succendi et cremari alienigenas praecinit Dominus, id est alienos a divino genere et profanos, spiritaliter non renatos nec Dei filios factos. Evadere enim eos solos posse qui renati et signo Christi signati fuerint alio in loco Deus loquitur, quando, ad vastationem mundi et interitum generis humani Angelos suos mittens, gravius in ultimo comminatur dicens: Vadite et caedite, et nolite parcere oculis vestris. Nolite misereri senioris aut juvenis, 0560Cet virgines et parvulos et mulieres interficite, ut perdeleantur. Omnem autem super quem signum scriptum est ne tetigeritis (Ezech. IX, 5, 6). Quod autem sit hoc signum, et qua in parte corporis positum, manifestat alio in loco Deus dicens: Transi per mediamHierusalem, et notabis signum super frontes virorum qui ingemunt et maerent ob iniquitates quae fiunt in medio 0561Aipsorum (Ezech. IX, 4). Et quod ad passionem et sanguinem Christi pertineat hoc signum, et ille salvus atque incolumis reservetur quisquis in hoc signo invenitur, item Dei testimonio comprobatur dicentis: Et erit sanguis in signovobis super domos in quibus voseritis; et videbo sanguinem, et protegam vos, et non erit in vobis plaga diminutionis cum percutiam terram Aegypti (Exod. XII, 13). Quod ante occiso agno praecedit in imagine, impletur in Christo, secuta postmodum veritate. Ut illic, percussa Aegypto, Judaicus populus evadere non nisi sanguine et signo agni potuit, ita et, cum vastari coeperit mundus et percuti, quisquis in sanguine et signo Christi inventus fuerit, solus evadet.