WHO IS THE HEIR OF DIVINE THINGS

 I. (1) In the treatise preceding the present one, we discussed the question of rewards to the best of our ability. Our present purpose is to examine w

 II. (6) When then has a slave freedom of speech towards his master? Is it not when he is conscious that he has not wronged him, but that he has done a

 III. (10) There are persons, then, to whom it is becoming to listen but not to speak, with respect to whom it is said, Be silent and Hear,[De 27:9.]

 IV. (14) Silence, then, is a desirable thing for those who are ignorant, but for those who desire knowledge, and who have at the same time a love for

 V. (16) But the man who appeared to be endued with a thin voice, and with slowness of speech, and to be almost dumb, is nevertheless found to be talka

 VI. (22) But consider again that confidence is tempered with prudent caution for the question, What wilt thou give Me?[De 33:1.] displays confidenc

 VII. (30) Now such a disposition of the soul, Abraham, the inspector, has deeply engraved on my memory. For, says the scripture, Abraham came near an

 VIII. (40) But who Meshech is, and who her son is, must be examined in no superficial manner. Now the interpretation of the name Meshech is, out of a

 IX. (45) But there are three kinds of life. The first life, to God the second, with respect to the creature the third, is on the borders of both, be

 X. (49) But Moses thinks those things which, though younger in point of time are nevertheless honourable by nature, worthy of the first honours of the

 XI. (52) Each individual then among us is the son of life according to the outward sense, which he calls Meshech, honouring and admiring the foster-mo

 XII. (57) So that the race of mankind also is twofold, the one being the race of those who live by the divine Spirit and reason the other of those wh

 XIII. (63) We have now explained what it was necessary for you to be apprised of as a preliminary. For the first part of the argument had a sort of en

 XIV. (68) Who, then, shall be the heir? Not that reasoning which remains in the prison of the body according to its own voluntary intentions, but that

 XV. (75) But it is holier of the all-sacred places in the temple which receives this offering for it appears that there are two the one discernible

 XVI. (81) And the statement, He led him Out[Ge 15:5.] (exe�gagen auton exo�), has a bearing also on moral considerations, though some persons, throu

 XVII. (86) And after he has conducted him out, he says to him, Look up to heaven, and count the stars, if thou art able to number them thus shall be

 XVIII. (90) Therefore it is a necessary addition which is subjoined, Abraham believed in God,[Ge 15:6.] to the praise of him who did thus believe. A

 XIX. (94) And it is well added in the scripture, And it was counted to him for righteousness: for nothing is so righteous as to have an unalloyed an

 XX. (96) The scripture proceeds: And he said unto him I am God, who brought thee out of the land of the Chaldaeans, so as to give thee this land to i

 XXI. (100) But it is not sufficient for the lover of wisdom to have a hope of good things, and to expect all kinds of admirable things, because of the

 XXII. (105) For many men have become wicked in respect of such sacred deposits, having, through their immoderate covetousness improperly used the prop

 XXIII. (112) I think then that this is what was intimated in the words, Take for me God, intending to send down the perfection of his divine virtue

 XXIV. (117) Very appropriately therefore does the sacred scripture command the first-fruits to be offered up to the all-ruling God. And in another pas

 XXV. (125) Having now, therefore, said as much as is proper on these subjects, let us proceed onwards to what comes next for we have postponed the co

 XXVI. (128) Moses appears to me to have intended figuratively to represent these virtues when he calls the midwives of the Egyptians, Shiphrah and Pua

 XXVII. (133) But as the discussion on the subject of a division into equal portions, and on that of opposite contrarieties, is of great extent and of

 XXVIII. (141) But since Moses not only uses the expression, he divided, but says further, he divided in the midst, it is necessary to say a few wo

 XXIX. (146) These things being thus previously sketched out, see now how God, dividing things in the middle, has divided them into equal portions acco

 XXX. (151) And a very similar effect is seen in the different parts of animals and especially of men. For hand is equal to hand, and foot to foot, and

 XXXI. (154) But any one who examines all these things might add an interminable list of arguments and instances to this one present discussion. If he

 XXXII. (157) For, as Moses says, He judged according to the little and according to the Great,[De 1:17.] engendering and fashioning everything, and

 XXXIII. (161) And if there is any one in the world who is a praiser of equality, that man is Moses. In the first place composing hymns in its honour,

 XXXIV. (165) And he apportioned cold and heat, and summer and spring, the different seasons of the year, divided by the same dividing Word. And the th

 XXXV. (167) But what are the pillars of the ten generic laws which he calls tables? They are two equal in number to the parts of the soul, the ration

 XXXVI. (174) But you see also that the regularly occurring daily sacrifices are divided into equal portions one portion being the sacrifice which the

 XXXVII. (179) A great impression is made upon me by the selection and division of the two goats which are brought as an offering for the purpose of at

 XXXVIII. (182) Moreover, the equal division of the sacrifices of blood is certainly calculated to excite our admiration: which division the chief prie

 XXXIX. (189) Very naturally therefore does Moses say, He who is rich will not add anything, and he who is poor will not diminish anything of the half

 XL. (192) And we may find something very much resembling this equality, according to analogy in the case of the festival which is called the passover

 XLI. (195) But the most manifest instance of equality in respect of number, is exhibited in the sacred offerings of the twelve princes, and again in t

 XLII. (201) And I marvel also at that sacred word which runs on with zeal, in one continued course, without taking breath, In order to stand in the m

 XLIII. (207) Therefore the sacred Word, having given us instruction respecting the division into equal parts, leads us also to the knowledge of opposi

 XLVI. (215) These matters then we will examine into accurately on another occasion but there is this other point also, which does not deserve to be p

 XLV. (221) But the long discussion which some people start with respect to each of these, must be postponed to a subsequent opportunity. This much alo

 XLVI. (226) This other point also is too important to deserve to be passed over in silence: that, as there are three vessels among the sacred furnitur

 XLVII. (227) And it is worth while to consider why, after having explained the measures of the table and of the altar of incense, he has given no such

 XLVIII. (230) Therefore, after he has said what is becoming on this subject, he proceeds to add, But the birds he did not Divide [Ge 15:10.] meaning

 XLIX. (237) Therefore, after Moses has mentioned the facts of birds not being cut in two pieces or divided, he proceeds to say, And the birds came do

 L. (243) Moreover, Moses introduces a very true opinion when he teaches us that justice and every virtue loves the soul, but that wickedness and every

 LI. (249) And about the setting of the sun a trance fell upon Abraham, and, behold, fear with great darkness fell upon Him.[Ge 15:12.] Now there is

 LII. (258) An instance of the fourth kind of trance is the one which we are now considering: And about the setting of the sun a trance fell upon Abra

 LIII. And under the symbol of the sun he intimates our mind: for what reasoning is in us, that the sun is in the world. Since each of them gives light

 LIV. (267) And it is well to hear what the things are which are thus said to have been predicted to Abraham. In the first place, that God does not gra

 LV. (271) But the supremacy of these different passions before mentioned inflicts terrible slavery on those who are ruled over by them, until God, the

 LVI. (275) Having said this much on these subjects, the historian proceeds: And thou shalt depart to thy fathers, having lived in peace, in a good ol

 LVII. (280) Therefore, when he says fathers, he means not those whose souls have departed from them, and who are buried in the tombs of the land of

 LVIII. (284) And the expression, After having lived in peace, is used with much propriety because nearly all or the greater portion of the human ra

 LIX. (293) In the next verses it is said, And in the fourth generation they shall return hither, not merely in order that the time may be exactly ma

 LXI. (307) In the next verse the historian proceeds to say, and when the sun approached its setting, there was a Flame [Ge 15:17.] showing that virt

 LXII. (313) Therefore, the wise man has now been sufficiently proved to be the inheritor of the knowledge of the subjects above mentioned. For, says

XLVIII. (230) Therefore, after he has said what is becoming on this subject, he proceeds to add, "But the birds he did not Divide;"[Ge 15:10.] meaning, by the term birds, the two reasonings which are winged and inclined by nature to soar to the investigation of sublime subjects; one of them being the archetypal pattern and above us, and the other being the copy of the former and abiding among us. (231) And Moses calls the one which is above us the image of God, and the one which abides among us as the impression of that image, "For," says he, "God made man," not an image, "but after that Image."[Ge 1:27.] So that the mind which is in each of us, which is in reality and truth the man, is a third image proceeding from the Creator. But the intermediate one is a model of the one and a copy of the other. (232) But by nature our mind is indivisible; for the Creator, having divided the irrational part of the soul into six portions, has made six divisions of it, namely, sight, taste, hearing, smelling, touch, and voice; but the rational part, which is called the mind he has left undivided, according to the likeness of the entire heaven. (233) For in this, also, there is a report that the outermost sphere, which is destitute of motion, is preserved without being divided, but that the inner one is divided into six portions, and thus completes the seven circles of what are called the planets; for I imagine the heaven is in the world the same thing that the soul is in the human being. They say, therefore, that these two natures, full of reason and comprehension--that, I mean, which exists in man and that which exists in the world--are both at all times entire and indivisible. On this account, therefore, it is that the scriptures tell us, "He did not divide the birds." (234) For our own mind is here compared to a dove, since that is a creature which is tame and domesticated among us; and the turtle dove is compared to the model presented by the other, that is to say, by the mind of the world, the heaven; for the word of God is fond of retirement, and solitude, and privacy; not mixing itself up with the crowd of things which have been created and will be destroyed, but being at all times accustomed to roam on high, and being anxious to be an attendant only on the one supreme Being. Therefore, the two natures are indivisible; the nature, I mean, of the reasoning power in us, and of the divine Word above us; but though they are indivisible themselves, they divide an innumerable multitude of other things. (235) For it is the divine Word which divided and distributed every thing in nature; and it is our own mind which divides every thing and every body which it comprehends, by the exertion of its intellect in an infinite manner, into an infinite number of parts, and which, in fact, never ceased from dividing. (236) And this happens by reason of its resemblance to the Creator and Father of the universe; for the divine nature, being unmingled, uncombined with any thing else, and most completely destitute of parts, has been to the whole world the cause of mixture, and combination, and of an infinite variety of parts: so that, very naturally, the two things which thus resemble each other, both the mind which is in us and that which is above us, being without parts and indivisible, will still be able in a powerful manner to divide and distribute all existing things.