20027. We may give
yet another illustration, if it seems good to you. A certain man,
the head of a household, and possessed of great riches, was minded to
journey abroad for a time, and promised to his sons that he would send
them some one who would take his place, and divide among them equally
the substance falling to them. And, in truth, not long after
that, he did despatch to them a certain trustworthy and righteous and
true man. And on his arrival, this man took charge of the whole
substance, and first of all exerted himself to arrange it and
administer it, giving himself great labour in journeying, and
even16761676 working
diligently with his own hands, and toiling like a servant for the good
of the estate. Afterwards feeling that his end was at
hand,16771677 the man wrote
out a will, demitting the inheritance to the relations and all the next
of kin; and he gave them his seals, and called them together one by one
by name, and charged them to preserve the inheritance, and to take care
of the substance, and to administer it rightly, even as they had
received it, and to take their use of its goods and fruits, as they
were themselves left its owners and heirs. If, moreover, any
person were to ask to be allowed to benefit by the fruits of this
field, they were to show themselves indulgent to such. But if, on
the other hand, any one were to declare himself partner in the heirship
with them, and were to make his demands on that ground,16781678 they were to
keep aloof from him, and pronounce him an alien; and further, they
were to hold that the individual who desired to be received among
them ought all the more on that account to do work.16791679 Well, then, granting that all
these things have been well and rightly disposed of and settled, and
that they have continued in that condition for a very long time, how
shall we deal with one who presents himself well-nigh three hundred
years after, and sets up his claim to the heirship? Shall we not
cast him off from us? Shall we not justly pronounce such a one an
alien—one who cannot prove himself to have belonged to those
related to our Master, who never was with our departed Lord in
the hour of His sickness, who never walked in the funeral procession of
the Crucified, who never stood by the sepulchre, who has no knowledge
whatsoever of the manner or the character of His departure, and who, in
fine, is now desirous of getting access to the storehouse of corn
without presenting any token from him who placed it under lock and
seal? Shall we not cast him off from us like a robber and a
thief, and thrust him out of our number by all possible means?
Yet this man is now in our presence, and fails to produce any of the
credentials which we have summarized in what we have already said, and
declares that he is the Paraclete whose mission was presignified by
Jesus. And by this assertion, in his ignorance perchance, he will
make out Jesus Himself to be a liar;16801680 for thus He who once said that He would
send the Paraclete no long time after, will be proved only to have sent
this person, if we accept the testimony which he bears to himself,
after an interval of three hundred years and more.16811681 In the day of judgment, then, what
will those say to Jesus who have departed this life from that time on
to the present period? Will they not meet Him with words like
these: “Do not punish us rigorously if we have failed to do
Thy works. For why, when Thou didst promise to send the Paraclete
under Tiberius Cæsar, to convince us of sin and of
righteousness,16821682 didst Thou
send Him only under Probus the Roman emperor, and didst leave us
orphaned, not withstanding that Thou didst say, ‘I will not leave
you comfortless (orphaned),’16831683 and after Thou hadst also assured us
that Thou wouldest send the Paraclete presently after Thy
departure? What could we orphans do, having no guardian? We
have committed no fault; it is Thou that hast deceived us.”
But away with such a supposition in the case of our Lord Jesus Christ,
the Saviour of every soul.16841684 For He did not confine Himself to
mere promises;16851685 but when He
had once said, “I go to my Father, and I send the Paraclete to
you,”16861686 straightway He
sent (that gift of the Paraclete), dividing and imparting the same to
His disciples,—bestowing it, however, in greater fulness upon
Paul.16871687