Chapter IV.—Hermogenes Gives Divine Attributes to Matter, and So Makes Two Gods.
Chapter VIII.—On His Own Principles, Hermogenes Makes Matter, on the Whole, Superior to God.
Chapter IX.—Sundry Inevitable But Intolerable Conclusions from the Principles of Hermogenes.
Chapter XIII.—Another Ground of Hermogenes that Matter Has Some Good in It. Its Absurdity.
Chapter XIV.—Tertullian Pushes His Opponent into a Dilemma.
Chapter XVIII.—An Eulogy on the Wisdom and Word of God, by Which God Made All Things of Nothing.
Chapter XXIV.—Earth Does Not Mean Matter as Hermogenes Would Have It.
Chapter XXVII.—Some Hair-Splitting Use of Words in Which His Opponent Had Indulged.
Chapter XXXV.—Contradictory Propositions Advanced by Hermogenes Respecting Matter and Its Qualities.
Chapter VII.—Hermogenes Held to His Theory in Order that Its Absurdity May Be Exposed on His Own Principles.
When he contends that matter is less than God, and inferior to Him, and therefore diverse from Him, and for the same reason not a fit subject of comparison with Him, who is a greater and superior Being, I meet him with this prescription, that what is eternal and unborn is incapable of any diminution and inferiority, because it is simply this which makes even God to be as great as He is, inferior and subject to none—nay, greater and higher than all. For, just as all things which are born, or which come to an end, and are therefore not eternal, do, by reason of their exposure at once to an end and a beginning, admit of qualities which are repugnant to God—I mean diminution and inferiority, because they are born and made—so likewise God, for this very reason, is unsusceptible of these accidents, because He is absolutely unborn,66 Nec natus omnino. and also unmade. And yet such also is the condition of Matter.67 Of course, according to Hermogenes, whom Tertullian refutes with an argumentum ad hominem. Therefore, of the two Beings which are eternal, as being unborn and unmade—God and Matter—by reason of the identical mode of their common condition (both of them equally possessing that which admits neither of diminution nor subjection—that is, the attribute of eternity), we affirm that neither of them is less or greater than the other, neither of them is inferior or superior to the other; but that they both stand on a par in greatness, on a par in sublimity, and on the same level of that complete and perfect felicity of which eternity is reckoned to consist. Now we must not resemble the heathen in our opinions; for they, when constrained to acknowledge God, insist on having other deities below Him. The Divinity, however, has no degrees, because it is unique; and if it shall be found in Matter—as being equally unborn and unmade and eternal—it must be resident in both alike,68 Aderit utrobique. because in no case can it be inferior to itself. In what way, then, will Hermogenes have the courage to draw distinctions; and thus to subject matter to God, an eternal to the Eternal, an unborn to the Unborn, an author to the Author? seeing that it dares to say, I also am the first; I too am before all things; and I am that from which all things proceed; equal we have been, together we have been—both alike without beginning, without end; both alike without an Author, without a God.69 That is, having no God superior to themselves. What God, then, is He who subjects me to a contemporaneous, co-eternal power? If it be He who is called God, then I myself, too, have my own (divine) name. Either I am God, or He is Matter, because we both are that which neither of us is. Do you suppose, therefore, that he70 Hermogenes. has not made Matter equal with God, although, forsooth, he pretends it to be inferior to Him?
CAPUT VII.
Si minorem et inferiorem materiam Deo, et idcirco incomparabilem illi, contendit, ut majori, ut superiori, praescribo non capere ullam diminutionem et humiliationem, quod sit aeternum et innatum: quia hoc et Deum faciat tantum, quantus est, nullo minorem, neque subjectiorem, imo omnibus majorem et sublimiorem. Sicut enim caetera quae nascuntur, aut 0203C finiunt, et idcirco aeterna non sunt, semel opposita fini, quae et initio admittunt ea quae Deus non capit, diminutionem dico interim et subjectionem, quia nata et facta sunt: ita et Deus ideo ea non capit, quia nec natus omnino, nec factus est. Materiae autem status talis est. Igitur et duobus aeternis, ut innatis, ut infectis, Deo atque materia , ob eamdem rationem communis status, ex aequo habentibus id quod neque diminui, nec subjici admittit, id est aeternitatem: neutrum dicimus altero esse minorem, sive majorem, neutrum altero humiliorem, sive superiorem, sed stare ambo ex pari magna, ex pari sublimia, 0204A ex pari solidae et perfectae felicitatis, quae censetur aeternitas. Neque enim proximi erimus opinionibus nationum, quae si quando coguntur Deum confiteri, tamen et alios infra illum volunt. Divinitas autem gradum non habet, utpote unica; quae si et in materia erit, ut proinde innata et infecta et aeterna, aderit utrobique, quia minor se nusquam poterit esse. Quomodo ergo discernere audebit Hermogenes, atque ita subjicere Deo materiam, aeternam aeterno, innatam innato, auctricem auctori? dicere audentem, et, Ego prima, et, Ego ante omnia, et, Ego a quo omnia: pares fuimus, simul fuimus, ambo sine initio, sine fine: ambo sine auctore, sine Deo? Quis me Deus subjicit contemporali, coaetaneo? Si quia Deus dicitur, habeo et ego meum nomen. Aut ego 0204B sum Deus, aut ille materia : quia ambo sumus quod alter est nostrum. Putas itaque materiam Deo non comparasse, quam scilicet subjiciat illi?