Letter VII
To Polycarp -- Hierarch:
I, at any rate, am not conscious, when speaking in reply to Greeks or
others, of fancying to assist good men, in case they should be able
to know and speak the very truth, as it really is in itself. For,
when this is correctly demonstrated in its essential nature,
according to a law of truth, and has been established without flaw,
every thing which is otherwise, and simulates the truth, will be
convicted of being other than the reality, and dissimilar, and that
which is seeming rather than real. It is superfluous then, that the
expounder of truth should contend with these or those [i.e. Greeks
or others]. For each affirms himself to have the royal coin, and
perchance has some deceptive image of a certain portion of the true.
And, if you refute this, first the one, and then the other, will
contend concerning the same. But, when the true statement itself
has been correctly laid down, and has remained unrefuted by all the
rest, every thing which is not so in every respect is cast down of
itself, by the impregnable stability of the really true. Having
then as I think well understood this, I have not been over zealous
to speak in reply to Greeks or to others; but it is sufficient for
me (and may God grant this), first to know about truth, then, having
known, to speak as it is fitting to speak.
But you say, the Sophist Apollophanes rails at me, and calls me
parricide, as using, not piously, the writings of Greeks against
the Greeks. Yet, in reply to him, it were more true for us to say,
that Greeks use, not piously, things Divine against things Divine,
attempting through the wisdom of Almighty God to eject the Divine
Worship. And I am not speaking of the opinion of the multitude, who
cling tenaciously to the writings of the poets, with earthly and
impassioned proclivities, and worship the creature rather than the
Creator [1 Cor. 2: 7]; but even Apollophanes himself uses not
piously things Divine against things Divine; for by the knowledge
of things created, well called Philosophy by him and by the divine
Paul named Wisdom of God, the true philosophers ought to have been
elevated to the Cause of the things created and of the knowledge of
them. And in order that he may not improperly impute to me the
opinion of others, or that of himself, Apollophanes, being a wise
man, ought to recognise that nothing could otherwise be removed
from its heavenly course and movement, if it had not the Sustainer
and Cause of its being moving it thereto, who forms all things, and
"transforms them" according to the sacred text [Amos 5:8 LXX].
How then does he not worship Him, known to us even from this, and
verily being God of the whole, admiring Him for His all causative
and super-inexpressible power, when sun and moon together with the
universe, by a power and stability most supernatural, were fixed by
them to entire immobility and, for a measure of a whole day, all
the constellations stood in the same places [Josh. 10:12-14; Ecclus.
46:4; Isaiah 28:21], or (which is greater than even this), if when
the whole and the greater and embracing were thus carried along,
those embraced did not follow in their course; and when a certain
other day was almost tripled in duration, even in twenty whole
hours, either the universe retraced contrary routes for so long a
time, and (was) turned back by the thus very most supernatural
backward revolutions; or the sun, in its own course, having
contracted its five-fold motion in ten hours, retrogressively again
retraced it in the other ten hours, by traversing a sort of new
route. This thing indeed naturally astounded even Babylonians, and,
without battle, brought them into subjection to Hezekiah, as though
he were a somebody equal to God, and superior to ordinary men.
And, by no means do I allege the great works in Egypt, or certain
other Divine portents, which took place elsewhere, but the
well-known and celestial ones, which were renowned in every place
and by all persons [Isaiah 39:1; 4 Kings 20:9-12; 2 Chron. 32:31].
But Apollophanes is ever saying that these things are not true. At
any rate then, this is reported by the Persian sacerdotal legends,
and to this day, Magi celebrate the memorials of the threefold
Mithras. But let him disbelieve these things, by reason of his
ignorance or his inexperience.
Say to him however, "What do you
affirm concerning the eclipse, which took place at the time of the
saving Cross?" For both of us at that time, at Heliopolis, being
present, and standing together, saw the moon approaching the sun,
to our surprise (for it was not appointed time for conjunction);
and again, from the ninth hour to the evening, supernaturally
placed back again into a line opposite the sun. And remind him
also of something further. For he knows that we saw, to our
surprise, the contact itself beginning from the east, and going
towards the edge of the sun's disc, then receding back, and again,
both the contact and the re-clearing, not taking place from the
same point, but from that diametrically opposite. So great are the
supernatural things of that appointed time, and possible to Christ
alone, the Cause of all, Who worketh great things and marvellous,
of which there is not number [Mark 15:33; Luke 23:44].
These things say, if occasion serves, and if possible, O
Apollophanes, refute them, and to me, who was then both present with
thee, and saw and judged and wondered with thee at them all. And in
truth Apollophanes begins prophesying at that time, I know not
whence, and to me he said, as of conjecturing the things taking
place, "these things, O excellent Dionysius, are requitals of Divine
deeds." Let so much be said by us by letter; but you are capable,
both to supply the deficiency, and to bring eventually to God that
distinguished man, who is wise in many things, and who perhaps will
not disdain to meekly learn the truth, which is above wisdom, of our
religion.
Have mercy, O Lord, upon Thy servants
the translator John
and the scribes Mariette, Andrei, Michael, and the Subdeacon Herman. .