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 XXV.—The Assumption that There are Two Earths Mentioned in the History of the Creation, Refuted.
He accordingly maintains that there are two earths set before us in the passage in question: one, which God made in the beginning; the other being the Matter of which God made the world, and concerning which it is said, “And the earth was without form, and void.”232 Gen. i. 2. Of course, if I were to ask, to which of the two earths the name earth is best suited,233 Quæ cui nomen terræ accommodare debeat. This is literally a double question, asking about the fitness of the name, and to which earth it is best adapted. I shall be told that the earth which was made derived the appellation from that of which it was made, on the ground that it is more likely that the offspring should get its name from the original, than the original from the offspring. This being the case, another question presents itself to us, whether it is right and proper that this earth which God made should have derived its name from that out of which He made it? For I find from Hermogenes and the rest of the Materialist heretics,234 He means those who have gone wrong on the eternity of matter. that while the one earth was indeed “without form, and void,” this one of ours obtained from God in an equal degree235 Proinde. both form, and beauty, and symmetry; and therefore that the earth which was created was a different thing from that out of which it was created. Now, having become a different thing, it could not possibly have shared with the other in its name, after it had declined from its condition. If earth was the proper name of the (original) Matter, this world of ours, which is not Matter, because it has become another thing, is unfit to bear the name of earth, seeing that that name belongs to something else, and is a stranger to its nature. But (you will tell me) Matter which has undergone creation, that is, our earth, had with its original a community of name no less than of kind. By no means. For although the pitcher is formed out of the clay, I shall no longer call it clay, but a pitcher; so likewise, although electrum236 A mixed metal, of the colour of amber. is compounded of gold and silver, I shall yet not call it either gold or silver, but electrum. When there is a departure from the nature of any thing, there is likewise a relinquishment of its name—with a propriety which is alike demanded by the designation and the condition. How great a change indeed from the condition of that earth, which is Matter, has come over this earth of ours, is plain even from the fact that the latter has received this testimony to its goodness in Genesis, “And God saw that it was good;”237 Gen. i. 31. while the former, according to Hermogenes, is regarded as the origin and cause of all evils. Lastly, if the one is Earth because the other is, why also is the one not Matter as the other is? Indeed, by this rule both the heaven and all creatures ought to have had the names of Earth and Matter, since they all consist of Matter. I have said enough touching the designation Earth, by which he will have it that Matter is understood. This, as everybody knows, is the name of one of the elements; for so we are taught by nature first, and afterwards by Scripture, except it be that credence must be given to that Silenus who talked so confidently in the presence of king Midas of another world, according to the account of Theopompus. But the same author informs us that there are also several gods.
CAPUT XXV.
Vult igitur duas proponi terras in ista scriptura: unam, quam in principio Deus fecit; aliam, materiam, ex qua fecit, de qua dictum sit: Terra autem erat invisibilis et rudis. Utique si quaeram ex duabus quae, cui nomen terrae accommodare debeat , dicetur, hanc quae facta sit ex illa ex qua facta est, vocabulum derivasse, quia verisimilius sit ab origine sobolem potius, quam originem a sobole vocitari. 0219C Hoc si ita est, alia nobis obvolvitur quaestio, an competat terram hanc quam Deus fecit, ex illa ex qua fecit, cognomentum derivasse. Audio enim apud Hermogenem caeterosque materiarios haereticos, terram quidem illam informem et invisibilem et rudem fuisse: 0220A hanc vero nostram proinde et formam, et conspectum, et cultum, a Deo consecutam. Aliud ergo factam quam erat ea ex qua facta est. Porro aliud facta, non potuit cum ea denominatione sociari, a cujus conditione desciverat. Si nomen proprium materiae illius fuit terra, haec quae non est materia, aliud scilicet facta, terrae quoque non capit nomen alienum, et statu suo extraneum. Sed materia facta, id est terra , habuit cum sua origine consortium nominis, sicut et generis. Non adeo . Nam et testam, licet ex argilla confectam , jam non argillam vocabo, sed testam: et electrum, licet ex auro et argento foederatum, nec argentum tamen nec aurum appellabo, sed electrum: a cujus habitu quid divertit, pariter et a vocatu ejus recedit, 0220B appellationis, sicut et conditionis proprietate. Quam autem transierit de statu terrae illius, id est materiae, ista terra, vel eo palam est, quod haec apud Genesim testimonium boni accipit: Et vidit Deus quia bonum: illa autem apud Hermogenem in originem et caussam malorum deputatur. Postremo, si ideo haec terra, quia et illa, cur non et materia haec quoque, quia illa? Imo jam et coelum et omnia, si ex materia constant, et terrae et materiae vocari debuerunt. Satis ista de terrae nomine (in quo materia intelligi voluit) quod nomen unius elementi omnes sciunt, natura primum, deinde Scriptura docente, nisi et Sileno illi apud Midam regem adseveranti de alio orbe, credendum est, auctore Theopompo. Sed et deos multos idem refert.