Jump to content

Ante-Nicene Fathers/Volume III/Anti-Marcion/Against the Valentinians/XXI

From Wikisource
Ante-Nicene Fathers Vol. III, Anti-Marcion, Against the Valentinians
by Tertullian, translated by Peter Holmes
XXI
155439Ante-Nicene Fathers Vol. III, Anti-Marcion, Against the Valentinians — XXIPeter HolmesTertullian

Chapter XXI.—The Vanity as Well as Ignorance of the Demiurge. Absurd Results from So Imperfect a Condition.

Meanwhile you must believe[1] that Sophia has the surnames of earth and of Mother—“Mother-Earth,” of course—and (what may excite your laughter still more heartily) even Holy Spirit. In this way they have conferred all honour on that female, I suppose even a beard, not to say other things. Besides,[2] the Demiurge had so little mastery over things,[3] on the score,[4] you must know,[5] of his inability to approach spiritual essences, (constituted as he was) of animal elements, that, imagining himself to be the only being, he uttered this soliloquy: “I am God, and beside me there is none else.”[6] But for all that, he at least was aware that he had not himself existed before. He understood, therefore, that he had been created, and that there must be a creator of a creature of some sort or other.  How happens it, then, that he seemed to himself to be the only being, notwithstanding his uncertainty, and although he had, at any rate, some suspicion of the existence of some creator?


Footnotes

[edit]
  1. Tenendum.
  2. Alioquin.
  3. Adeo rerum non erat compos.
  4. Censu.
  5. Scilicet.
  6. Isa. xlv. 5; xlvi. 9.