书城公版The City of God
37730200000403

第403章

For with fire of the Lord shall all the earth be judged, and all flesh with His sword: many shall be wounded by the Lord."(2) In His promise to the good he says that He will flow down as a river of peace, that is to say, in the greatest possible abundance of peace.With this peace we shall in the end be refreshed; but of this we have spoken abundantly in the preceding book.It is this river in which he says He shall flow down upon those to whom He promises so great happiness, that we may understand that in the region of that felicity, which is in heaven, all things are satisfied from this river.But because there shall thence flow, even upon earthly bodies, the peace of incorruption and immortality, therefore he says that He shall flow down as this river, that He may as it were pour Himself from things above to things beneath, and make men the equals of the angels.By "Jerusalem," too, we should understand not that which serves with her children, but that which, according to the apostle, is our free mother, eternal in the heavens.(3) In her we shall be comforted as we pass toilworn from earth's cards and calamities, and be taken up as her children on her knees and shoulders.Inexperienced and new to such blandishments, we shall be received into unwonted bliss.There we shall see, and our heart shall rejoice.He does not say what we shall see; but what but God, that the promise in the Gospel may be fulfilled in us, "Blessed are the pure in heart, for they shall see God ?"(4) What shall we see but all those things which now we see not, but believe in, and of which the idea we form, according to our feeble capacity, is incomparably less than the reality? "And ye shall see," he says, "and your heart shall rejoice." Here ye believe, there ye shall see.

But because he said, "Your heart shall rejoice," lest we should suppose that the blessings of that Jerusalem are only spiritual he adds, "And your bones shall rise up like a herb," alluding to the resurrection of the body, and as it were supplying an omission he had made.For it will not take place when we have seen; but we shall see when it has taken place.For he had already spoken of the new heavens and the new earth, speaking repeatedly, and under many figures, of the things promised to the saints, and saying, "There shall be new heavens, and a new earth: and the former shall not be remembered nor come into mind;but they shall find in it gladness and exultation.Behold, I will make Jerusalem an exultation, and my people a joy.And I will exult in Jerusalem, and joy in my people; and the voice of weeping shall be no more heard in her;"(1) and other promises, which some endeavor to refer to carnal enjoyment during the thousand years.For, in the manner of prophecy, figurative and literal expressions are mingled, so that a serious mind may, by useful and salutary effort, reach the spiritual sense; but carnal sluggishness, or the slowness of an uneducated and undisciplined mind, rests in the superficial letter, and thinks there is nothing beneath to be looked for.But let this be enough regarding the style of those prophetic expressions just quoted.And now, to return to their interpretation.When he had said, "And your bones shall rise up like a herb," in order to show that it was the resurrection of the good, though a bodily resurrection, to which he alluded, he added, "And the hand of the Lord shall be known by His worshippers." What is this but the hand of Him who distinguishes those who worship from those who despise Him? Regarding these the context immediately adds, "And He shall threaten the contumacious," or, as another translator has it, "the unbelieving." He shall not actually threaten then, but the threats which are now uttered shall then be fulfilled in effect."For behold," he says, "the Lord shall come as a fire, and as a whirlwind His chariots, to execute vengeance with indignation, and wasting with a flame of fire.For with fire of the Lord shall all the earth be judged, and all flesh with His sword: many shall be wounded by the Lord." By fire, whirlwind, sword, he means the judicial punishment of God.For he says that the Lord Himself shall come as a fire, to those, that is to say, to whom His coming shall be penal.By His chariots (for the word is plural)we suitably understand the ministration of angels.And when he says that all flesh and all the earth shall be judged with His fire and sword, we do not understand the spiritual and holy to be included, but the earthly and carnal, of whom it is said that they "mind earthly things,"(2) and "to be carnally minded is death,"(3) and whom the Lord calls simply flesh when He says, "My Spirit shall not always remain in these men, for they are flesh."(4) As to the words, "Many shall be wounded by the Lord," this wounding shall produce the second death.It is possible, indeed, to understand fire, sword, and wound in a good sense.For the Lord said that He wished to send fire on the earth.(5) And the cloven tongues appeared to them as fire when the Holy Spirit came.(6)And our Lord says, "I am not come to send peace on earth, but a sword."(7)And Scripture says that the word of God is a doubly sharp sword,(8) on account of the two edges, the two Testaments.

And in the Song of Songs the holy Church says that she is wounded with love,(9)--pierced, as it were, with the arrow of love.But here, where we read or hear that the Lord shall come to execute vengeance, it is obvious in what sense we are to understand these expressions.