Of the Manichæans.

 Chapter I.—The Excellence of the Christian Philosophy The Origin of Heresies Amongst Christians.

 Chapter II.—The Age of Manichæus, or Manes His First Disciples The Two Principles Manichæan Matter.

 Chapter III.—The Fancies of Manichæus Concerning Matter.

 Chapter IV.—The Moon’s Increase and Wane The Manichæan Trifling Respecting It Their Dreams About Man and Christ Their Foolish System of Abstinence.

 Chapter V.—The Worship of the Sun and Moon Under God Support Sought for the Manichæans in the Grecian Fables The Authority of the Scriptures and Fai

 Chapter VI.—The Two Principles of the Manichæans Themselves Controverted The Pythagorean Opinion Respecting First Principles Good and Evil Contrary

 Chapter VII.—Motion Vindicated from the Charge of Irregularity Circular Straight Of Generation and Corruption Of Alteration, and Quality Affecting

 Chapter VIII.—Is Matter Wicked? Of God and Matter.

 Chapter IX.—The Ridiculous Fancies of the Manichæans About the Motion of Matter Towards God God the Author of the Rebellion of Matter in the Manichæa

 Chapter X.—The Mythology Respecting the Gods The Dogmas of the Manichæans Resemble This: the Homeric Allegory of the Battle of the Gods Envy and Emu

 Chapter XI.—The Transmitted Virtue of the Manichæans The Virtues of Matter Mixed with Equal or Less Amount of Evil.

 Chapter XII.—The Destruction of Evil by the Immission of Virtue Rejected Because from It Arises No Diminution of Evil Zeno’s Opinion Discarded, that

 Chapter XIII.—Evil by No Means Found in the Stars and Constellations All the Evils of Life Vain in the Manichæan Opinion, Which Bring on the Extincti

 Chapter XIV.—Noxious Animals Worshipped by the Egyptians Man by Arts an Evil-Doer Lust and Injustice Corrected by Laws and Discipline Contingent an

 Chapter XV.—The Lust and Desire of Sentient Things Demons Animals Sentient So Also the Sun and the Moon and Stars The Platonic Doctrine, Not the C

 Chapter XVI.—Because Some are Wise, Nothing Prevents Others from Being So Virtue is to Be Acquired by Diligence and Study By a Sounder Philosophy Me

 Chapter XVII.—The Manichæan Idea of Virtue in Matter Scouted If One Virtue Has Been Created Immaterial, the Rest are Also Immaterial Material Virtue

 Chapter XVIII.—Dissolution and Inherence According to the Manichæans This is Well Put, Ad Hominem, with Respect to Manes, Who is Himself in Matter.

 Chapter XIX.—The Second Virtue of the Manichæans Beset with the Former, and with New Absurdities Virtue, Active and Passive, the Fashioner of Matter,

 Chapter XX.—The Divine Virtue in the View of the Same Manichæus Corporeal and Divisible The Divine Virtue Itself Matter Which Becomes Everything Thi

 Chapter XXI.—Some Portions of the Virtue Have Good in Them, Others More Good In the Sun and the Moon It is Incorrupt, in Other Things Depraved An Im

 Chapter XXII.—The Light of the Moon from the Sun The Inconvenience of the Opinion that Souls are Received in It The Two Deluges of the Greeks.

 Chapter XXIII.—The Image of Matter in the Sun, After Which Man is Formed Trifling Fancies It is a Mere Fancy, Too, that Man Is Formed from Matter M

 Chapter XXIV.—Christ is Mind, According to the Manichæans What is He in the View of the Church? Incongruity in Their Idea of Christ That He Suffered

 Chapter XXV.—The Manichæan Abstinence from Living Things Ridiculous Their Madness in Abhorring Marriage The Mythology of the Giants Too Allegorical

 Chapter XXVI.—The Much-Talked-of Fire of the Manichæans That Fire Matter Itself.

Chapter II.—The Age of Manichæus, or Manes; His First Disciples; The Two Principles; Manichæan Matter.

So in these matters also, whilst in novelty of opinion each endeavours to show himself first and superior, they brought this philosophy, which is simple, almost to a nullity. Such was he whom they call Manichæus,4 Manes, or Manichæus, lived about a.d. 240. He was a Persian by birth, and this accounts for the Parseeism which can be detected in his teaching. He was probably ordained a priest, but was afterwards expelled from the Christian community, and put to death by the Persian government. His tenets spread considerably, and were in early youth embraced by St. Augustine. [See Confess., iii. 6.] a Persian by race, my instructor in whose doctrine was one Papus by name, and after him Thomas, and some others followed them. They say that the man lived when Valerian was emperor, and that he served under Sapor, the king of the Persians, and having offended him in some way, was put to death. Some such report of his character and reputation has come to me from those who were intimately acquainted with him. He laid down two principles, God and Matter. God he called good, and matter he affirmed to be evil. But God excelled more in good than matter in evil. But he calls matter not that which Plato calls it,5 Plato, Timæus, 51. which becomes everything when it has received quality and figure, whence he terms it all-embracing—the mother and nurse of all things; nor what Aristotle6 In substance, but not in words, Aristotle, Met., Book Λ 4 (1070´ b). calls an element, with which form and privation have to do, but something beside these. For the motion which in individual things is incomposite, this he calls matter. On the side of God are ranged powers, like handmaids, all good; and likewise, on the side of matter are ranged other powers, all evil. Moreover, the bright shining, the light, and the superior, all these are with God; while the obscure, and the darkness, and the inferior are with matter. God, too, has desires, but they are all good; and matter, likewise, which are all evil.