Relevant
books
available at Amazon
Studies
Eric Francis Osborn
Tertullian, First Theologian of the West --------------
Tertullian: A Historical and Literary Study
Timothy David Barnes --------------
Early Christian Thinkers: The Lives and Legacies of Twelve Key Figures
Paul Foster
(A helpful chapter) --------------
The Early Christian World
P.F. Esler, with a helpful chapter by David Wright
--------------
Tertullian and the Church
David Rankin -------------- Ancient Rhetoric and the Art of Tertullian (Oxford theological monographs)
Robert D. Sider --------------
David E. Wilhite -------------- Translations Tertullian (The Early Church Fathers)
Geoffrey D. Dunn -------------- Disciplinary, Moral And Ascetical Works
R. Arbesmann, E.J. Daly, and E. A. Quain, eds. -------------- Tertullian: Apologetical Works, & Minucius Felix: Octavius
Emily J. Daly, trans. -------------- 28. Tertullian: Treatises on Penance: On Penitence and On Purity (Ancient Christian Writers)
W.P. Le Saint, trans. -------------- 13. Tertullian: Treatises on Marriage and Remarriage: To His Wife, An Exhortation to Chastity, Monogamy (Ancient Christian Writers)
W.P. Le Saint, trans. -------------- Christian and Pagan in the Roman Empire: The Witness of Tertullian (Selections from the Fathers of the Church)
Robert D. Sider, ed. -------------- Tertullian, Cyprian, And Origen On The Lord's Prayer (St. Vladimir's Seminary Press Popular Patristics Series)
Alistair Stewart-Sykes, ed. -------------- 24. Tertullian: The Treatise against Hermogenes (Ancient Christian Writers)
J.H. Waszink, trans.
|
Chapter I.—Design of the Treatise.
Disavowal of Personal Motives in Writing It. |
I HAVE thought it meet, my best beloved
fellow-servant in the Lord, even from this early period, to provide for the
course which you must pursue after my departure from the world, if I shall
be called before you; (and) to entrust to your honour the observance of the
provision. For in things worldly we are active enough, and we wish the good
of each of us to be consulted. If we draw up wills for such matters,
why ought we not much more to take forethought for our posterity in things
divine and heavenly, and in a sense to bequeath a legacy to be received
before the inheritance be divided,—(the legacy, I mean, of) admonition and
demonstration touching those (bequests) which are allotted out of (our)
immortal goods, and from the heritage of the heavens? Only, that you may be
able to receive in its entirety this feoffment in trust of my admonition,
may God grant; to whom be honour, glory, renown, dignity, and power, now and
to the ages of the ages! The precept, therefore, which I give you is, that,
with all the constancy you may, you do, after our departure, renounce
nuptials; not that you will on that score confer any benefit on me, except
in that you will profit yourself. But to Christians, after their departure
from the world, no restoration of marriage is promised in the day of the
resurrection, translated as they will be into the condition and sanctity of
angels. Therefore no solicitude arising from carnal jealousy will, in the
day of the resurrection, even in the case of her whom they chose to
represent as having been married to seven brothers successively, wound any
one of her so many husbands; nor is any (husband) awaiting her to put her to
confusion. The question raised by the Sadducees has yielded to the Lord’s
sentence. Think not that it is for the sake of preserving to the end for
myself the entire devotion of your flesh, that I, suspicious of the pain of
(anticipated) slight, am even at this early period instilling into you the
counsel of (perpetual) widowhood. There will at that day be no resumption of
voluptuous disgrace between us. No such frivolities, no such impurities,
does God promise to His (servants). But whether to you, or to any other
woman whatever who pertains to God, the advice which we are giving shall be
profitable, we take leave to treat of at large. |
Chapter II.—Marriage Lawful, But Not
Polygamy. |
We do not indeed forbid the union of man
and woman, blest by God as the seminary of the human race, and devised for
the replenishment of the earth and the furnishing of the world, and
therefore permitted, yet singly. For Adam was the one husband of Eve, and
Eve his one wife, one woman, one rib. We grant, that among our ancestors,
and the patriarchs themselves, it was lawful not only to marry, but even to
multiply wives. There were concubines, too, (in those days.) But although
the Church did come in figuratively in the synagogue, yet (to interpret
simply) it was necessary to institute (certain things) which should
afterward deserve to be either lopped off or modified. For the Law was (in
due time) to supervene. (Nor was that enough:) for it was meet that causes
for making up the deficiencies of the Law should have forerun (Him who was
to supply those deficiencies). And so to the Law presently had to succeed
the Word of God introducing the spiritual circumcision. Therefore, by means
of the wide licence of those days, materials for subsequent emendations were
furnished beforehand, of which materials the Lord by His Gospel, and then
the apostle in the last days of the (Jewish) age, either cut off the
redundancies or regulated the disorders. |
Chapter III.—Marriage Good: Celibacy
Preferable. |
But let it not be thought that my reason
for premising thus much concerning the liberty granted to the old, and the
restraint imposed on the later time, is that I may lay a foundation for
teaching that Christ’s advent was intended to dissolve wedlock, (and) to
abolish marriage talons; as if from this period onward I were prescribing an
end to marrying. Let them see to that, who, among the rest of their
perversities, teach the disjoining of the “one flesh in twain;” denying Him
who, after borrowing the female from the male, recombined between
themselves, in the matrimonial computation, the two bodies taken out of the
consortship of the self-same material substance. In short, there is no place
at all where we read that nuptials are prohibited; of course on the ground
that they are “a good thing.” What, however, is better than this
“good,” we learn from the apostle, who permits marrying indeed, but
prefers abstinence; the former on account of the insidiousnesses of
temptations, the latter on account of the straits of the times. Now, by
looking into the reason thus given for each proposition, it is easily
discerned that the ground on which the power of marrying is conceded is
necessity; but whatever necessity grants, she by her very nature
depreciates. In fact, in that it is written, “To marry is better than to
burn,” what, pray, is the nature of this “good” which is (only) commended by
comparison with “evil,” so that the reason why “marrying” is more
good is (merely) that “burning” is less? Nay, but how far better is
it neither to marry nor to burn? Why, even in persecutions it is better
to take advantage of the permission granted, and “flee from town to town,”
than, when apprehended and racked, to deny (the faith). And therefore more
blessed are they who have strength to depart (this life) in blessed
confession of their testimony. I may say, What is permitted is not
good. For how stands the case? I must of necessity die (if I be
apprehended and confess my faith.) If I think (that fate) deplorable, (then
flight) is good; but if I have a fear of the thing which is permitted, (the
permitted thing) has some suspicion attaching to the cause of its
permission. But that which is “better” no one (ever) “permitted,” as being
undoubted, and manifest by its own inherent purity. There are some things
which are not to be desired merely because they are not forbidden,
albeit they are in a certain sense forbidden when other things
are preferred to them; for the preference given to the higher things is a
dissuasion from the lowest. A thing is not “good” merely because it is not
“evil,” nor is it not “evil” merely because
it is not “harmful.” Further: that which is fully “good” excels on this
ground, that it is not only not harmful, but profitable into the bargain.
For you are bound to prefer what is profitable to what is (merely) not
harmful. For the first place is what every struggle aims at; the
second has consolation attaching to it, but not victory. But if we
listen to the apostle, forgetting what is behind, let us both strain after
what is before, and be followers after the better rewards. Thus, albeit he
does not “cast a snare upon us,” he points out what tends to utility when he
says, “The unmarried woman thinks on the things of the Lord, that both in
body and spirit she may be holy; but the married is solicitous how to please
her husband.” But he nowhere permits marriage in such a way as not rather to
wish us to do our utmost in imitation of his own example. Happy the man who
shall prove like Paul! |
Chapter IV.—Of the Infirmity of the Flesh,
and Similar Pleas. |
But we read “that the flesh is weak;” and
hence we soothe ourselves in some cases. Yet we read, too, that “the spirit
is strong;” for each clause occurs in one and the same sentence. Flesh is an
earthly, spirit a heavenly, material. Why, then, do we, too prone to
self-excuse, put forward (in our defence) the weak part of us, but not look
at the strong? Why should not the earthly yield to the heavenly? If the
spirit is stronger than the flesh, because it is withal of nobler origin, it
is our own fault if we follow the weaker. Now there are two phases of human
weakness which make marriages necessary to such as are disjoined from
matrimony. The first and most powerful is that which arises from fleshly
concupiscence; the second, from worldly concupiscence. But by us, who
are servants of God, who renounce both voluptuousness and ambition, each is
to be repudiated. Fleshly concupiscence claims the functions of adult age,
craves after beauty’s harvest, rejoices in its own shame, pleads the
necessity of a husband to the female sex, as a source of authority and of
comfort, or to render it safe from evil rumours. To meet these its counsels,
do you apply the examples of sisters of ours whose names are with the Lord,
—who, when their husbands have preceded them (to glory), give to no
opportunity of beauty or of age the precedence over holiness. They prefer to
be wedded to God. To God their beauty, to God their youth (is dedicated).
With Him they live; with Him they converse; Him they “handle” by day and by
night; to the Lord they assign their prayers as dowries; from
Him, as oft as they desire it, they receive His approbation as dotal gifts.
Thus they have laid hold for themselves of an eternal gift of the Lord; and
while on earth, by abstaining from marriage, are already counted as
belonging to the angelic family. Training yourself to an emulation of
(their) constancy by the examples of such women, you will by spiritual
affection bury that fleshly concupiscence, in abolishing the temporal and
fleeting desires of beauty and youth by the compensating gain of immortal
blessings. On the other hand, this worldly concupiscence (to which I
referred) has, as its causes, glory, cupidity, ambition, want of
sufficiency; through which causes it trumps up the “necessity” for
marrying,—promising itself, forsooth, heavenly things in return—to lord it,
(namely,) in another’s family; to roost on another’s wealth; to extort
splendour from another’s store; to lavish expenditure which you do not feel!
Far be all this from believers, who have no care about maintenance, unless
it be that we distrust the promises of God, and (His) care and providence,
who clothes with such grace the lilies of the field; who, without any labour
on their part, feeds the fowls of the heaven; who prohibits care to be taken
about to-morrow’s food and clothing, promising that He knows what is needful
for each of His servants—not indeed ponderous necklaces, not burdensome
garments, not Gallic mules nor German bearers, which all add lustre to the
glory of nuptials; but “sufficiency,” which is suitable to moderation and
modesty. Presume, I pray you, that you have need of nothing if you “attend
upon the Lord;” nay, that you have all things, if you have the Lord, whose
are all things. Think often on things heavenly, and you will despise things
earthly. To widowhood signed and sealed before the Lord nought is necessary
but perseverance. |
Chapter V.—Of the Love of Offspring as a
Plea for Marriage. |
Further reasons for marriage which men
allege for themselves arise from anxiety for posterity, and the bitter,
bitter pleasure of children. To us this is idle. For why should we be
eager to bear children, whom, when we have them, we desire to send before us
(to glory) (in respect, I mean, of the distresses that are now imminent);
desirous as we are ourselves, too, to be taken out of this most wicked
world, and received into the Lord’s presence, which was the desire even of
an apostle? To the servant of God, forsooth, offspring is necessary! For of
our own salvation we are secure enough, so that we have leisure for
children! Burdens must be sought by us for ourselves which are avoided even
by the majority of the Gentiles, who are compelled by laws, who are
decimated by abortions; burdens which, finally, are to us most of all
unsuitable, as being perilous to faith! For why did the Lord foretell a “woe
to them that are with child, and them that give suck,” except because He
testifies that in that day of disencumbrance the encumbrances of children
will be an inconvenience? It is to marriage, of course, that those
encumbrances appertain; but that (“woe”) will not pertain to widows. (They)
at the first trump of the angel will spring forth disencumbered—will freely
bear to the end whatsoever pressure and persecution, with no burdensome
fruit of marriage heaving in the womb, none in the bosom. Therefore, whether
it be for the sake of the flesh, or of the world, or of posterity, that
marriage is undertaken, nothing of all these “necessities” affects the
servants of God, so as to prevent my deeming it enough to have once for all
yielded to some one of them, and by one marriage appeased all concupiscence
of this kind. Let us marry daily, and in the midst of our marrying let us be
overtaken, like Sodom and Gomorrah, by that day of fear! For there it
was not only, of course, that they were dealing in marriage and merchandise;
but when He says, “They were marrying and buying,” He sets a brand upon the
very leading vices of the flesh and of the world, which call men off the
most from divine disciplines—the one through the pleasure of rioting, the
other though the greed of acquiring. And yet that “blindness” then
was felt long before “the ends of the world.” What, then, will the case be
if God now keep us from the vices which of old were detestable
before Him? “The time,” says (the apostle), “is compressed. It remaineth
that they who have wives act as if they had them not.” |
Chapter VI.—Examples of Heathens Urged as
Commendatory of Widowhood and Celibacy. |
But if they who have (wives) are
(thus) bound to consign to oblivion what they have, how much more are they
who have not, prohibited from seeking a second time what they no
longer have; so that she whose husband has departed from the world should
thenceforward impose rest on her sex by abstinence from marriage—abstinence
which numbers of Gentile women devote to the memory of beloved husbands!
When anything seems difficult, let us survey others who cope with still
greater difficulties. How many are there who from the moment of their
baptism set the seal (of virginity) upon their flesh? How many, again, who
by equal mutual consent cancel the debt of matrimony—voluntary eunuchs for
the sake of their desire after the celestial kingdom! But if, while the
marriage-tie is still intact, abstinence is endured, how much more when it
has been undone! For I believe it to be harder for what is intact to be
quite forsaken, than for what has been lost not to be yearned after. A hard
and arduous thing enough, surely, is the continence for God’s sake of a holy
woman after her husband’s decease, when Gentiles, in honour of their own
Satan, endure sacerdotal offices which involve both virginity and widowhood!
At Rome, for instance, they who have to do with the type of that
“inextinguishable fire,” keeping watch over the omens of their own (future)
penalty, in company with the (old) dragon himself, are appointed on the
ground of virginity. To the Achæan Juno, at the town Ægium, a virgin
is allotted; and the (priestesses) who rave at Delphi know not marriage.
Moreover, we know that widows minister to the African Ceres; enticed
away, indeed, from matrimony by a most stem oblivion: for not only do they
withdraw from their still living husbands, but they even introduce other
wives to them in their own room—the husbands, of course, smiling on it—all
contact (with males), even as far as the kiss of their sons, being forbidden
them; and yet, with enduring practice, they persevere in such a discipline
of widowhood, which excludes the solace even of holy affection. These
precepts has the devil given to his servants, and he is heard! He
challenges, forsooth, God’s servants, by the continence of his own, as if on
equal terms! Continent are even the priests of hell! For he has found a way
to ruin men even in good pursuits; and with him it makes no difference to
slay some by voluptuousness, some by continence. |
Chapter VII.—The Death of a Husband is
God’s Call to the Widow to Continence. Further Evidences from Scripture and
from Heathenism. |
To us continence has been pointed out by
the Lord of salvation as an instrument for attaining eternity, and as a
testimony of (our) faith; as a commendation of this flesh of ours, which is
to be sustained for the “garment of immortality,” which is one day to
supervene; for enduring, in fine, the will of God. Besides, reflect, I
advise you, that there is no one who is taken out of the world but by the
will of God, if, (as is the case,) not even a leaf falls from off a tree
without it. The same who brings us into the world must of necessity take us
out of it too. Therefore when, through the will of God, the husband is
deceased, the marriage likewise, by the will of God, deceases. Why should
you restore what GOD has put an end to? Why do you, by repeating the
servitude of matrimony, spurn the liberty which is offered you? “You have
been bound to a wife,” says the apostle; “seek not loosing. You have been
loosed from a wife; seek not binding.” For even if you do not “sin”
in re-marrying, still he says “pressure of the flesh ensues.” Wherefore, so
far as we can, let us love the opportunity of continence; as soon as it
offers itself, let us resolve to accept it, that what we have not had
strength (to follow) in matrimony we may follow in widowhood. The occasion
must be embraced which puts an end to that which necessity commanded.
How detrimental to faith, how obstructive to holiness, second marriages are,
the discipline of the Church and the prescription of the apostle declare,
when he suffers not men twice married to preside (over a Church), when he
would not grant a widow admittance into the order unless she had been “the
wife of one man;” for it behoves God’s altar to be set forth pure. That
whole halo which encircles the Church is represented (as consisting) of
holiness. Priesthood is (a function) of widowhood and of celibacies among
the nations. Of course (this is) in conformity with the devil’s principle of
rivalry. For the king of heathendom, the chief pontiff, to marry a second
time is unlawful. How pleasing must holiness be to God, when even His enemy
affects it!—not, of course, as having any affinity with anything good, but
as contumeliously affecting what is pleasing to God the Lord. |
Chapter VIII.—Conclusion. |
For, concerning the honours which widowhood
enjoys in the sight of God, there is a brief summary in one saying of His
through the prophet: “Do thou justly to the widow and to the orphan; and
come ye, let us reason, saith the LORD.” These two names, left to the care
of the divine mercy, in proportion as they are destitute of human aid, the
Father of all undertakes to defend. Look how the widow’s benefactor is put
on a level with the widow herself, whose champion shall “reason with the
LORD!” Not to virgins, I take it, is so great a gift given. Although in
their case perfect integrity and entire sanctity shall have the nearest
vision of the face of God, yet the widow has a task more toilsome,
because it is easy not to crave after that which you know not, and to turn
away from what you have never had to regret. More glorious is the continence
which is aware of its own right, which knows what it has seen. The virgin
may possibly be held the happier, but the widow the more hardly tasked; the
former in that she has always kept “the good,” the latter in that she has
found “the good for herself.” In the former it is grace, in the latter
virtue, that is crowned. For some things there are which are of the divine
liberality, some of our own working. The indulgences granted by the Lord are
regulated by their own grace; the things which are objects of man’s striving
are attained by earnest pursuit. Pursue earnestly, therefore, the virtue of
continence, which is modesty’s agent; industry, which allows not women to be
“wanderers;” frugality, which scorns the world. Follow companies and
conversations worthy of God, mindful of that short verse, sanctified by the
apostle’s quotation of it, “Ill interviews good morals do corrupt.”
|
|
Talkative, idle, winebibbing, curious
tent-fellows, do the very greatest hurt to the purpose of widow-hood.
Through talkativeness there creep in words unfriendly to modesty; through
idleness they seduce one from strictness; through winebibbing they insinuate
any and every evil; through curiosity they convey a spirit of rivalry in
lust. Not one of such women knows how to speak of the good of single-husbandhood;
for their “god,” as the apostle says, “is their belly;” and so, too, what is
neighbour to the belly. These considerations, dearest fellow-servant, I
commend to you thus early, handled throughout superfluously indeed, after
the apostle, but likely to prove a solace to you, in that (if so it shall
turn out) you will cherish my memory in them. |
|