The Seven Books of Arnobius Against the Heathen.…
The Seven Books of Arnobius Against the Heathen.
42. You worship, says my opponent , one who was born a mere But the He exhibited
16. But, they say , while we are moving swiftly down towards our mortal bodies, to be all even
35. But, say my opponents , if souls are mortal and One than we anything must who is if into
45. But let this monstrous and impious fancy be put far from us
74. And why, my opponent says , did God, the Ruler and Lord of the universe you ask
25. Unxia, my opponent says , presides over the anointing of door-posts
34. Some of your learned men —men, too, who do not chatter merely
12. But let them be true, as you maintain, yet will you have us also believe deity who are
32. But you err, says my opponent , and are mistaken, and show, even in criticising these gratify
7. But why do I speak of the body story in men’s minds which is of all
36. You say that some of them cause excite and these things these to be
38. If the immortal gods cannot be angry, says my opponent is the meaning of had they if
48. But some one will perhaps say that the care of such a god has been denied being to the city
23. But the true36 The carelessness of some copyist makes the ms. read ve-st-ri, “your,” corrected as above by Ursinus. gods, and those who are worthy to have and to wear the dignity of this name, neither conceive anger nor indulge a grudge, nor do they contrive by insidious devices what may be hurtful to another party. For verily it is profane, and surpasses all acts of sacrilege, to believe that that wise and most blessed nature is uplifted in mind if one prostrates himself before it in humble adoration; and if this adoration be not paid, that it deems itself despised, and regards itself as fallen from the pinnacle of its glory. It is childish, weak, and petty, and scarcely becoming for those whom the experience of learned men has for a long time called demigods and heroes,37 So Ursinus, followed by Heraldus, LB., and Orelli, for the ms. errores, which Stewechius would change into errones—“vagrants”—referring to the spirits wandering over the earth: most other edd., following Gelenius, read, “called demigods, that these indeed”—dæmonas appellat, et hos, etc. not to be versed in heavenly things, and, divesting themselves of their own proper state, to be busied with the coarser matter of earth.
XXIII. Caeterum dii veri, et qui habere, qui ferre nominis hujus autoritatem condigni sunt, neque irascuntur, neque indignantur, neque quod alteri noceat, insidiosis machinationibus construunt. Etenim revera 0743B est impium, et sacrilegia cuncta transcendens, sapientem 0744A illam credere beatissimamque naturam magnum aliquid putare, si se sibi aliquis adulatoria humilitate submittat: et si fuerit non factum, despectam se credere, et ab summi culminis decidisse fastigio. Puerile, pusillum est, et exile, vix et illis conveniens, quos jamdudum experientia doctorum daemonas appellat et heroas, non nosse coelestia, et in hac rerum materia crassiore conditionis suae exortes versari.