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Ante-Nicene Fathers, Vol VII:
Lactantius: Chap. XXI.—Of the anger of God and man

Early Church Fathers  Index     

Chap. XXI.—Of the Anger of God and Man.

There remains one question, and that the last. For some one will perhaps say, that God is so far from being angry, that in His precepts He even forbids man to be angry. I might say that the anger of man ought to be curbed, because he is often angry unjustly; and he has immediate emotion, because he is only for a time. 1772 Therefore, lest those things should be done which the low, and those of moderate station, and great kings do in their anger, his rage ought to have been moderated and suppressed, lest, being out of his mind, 1773 he should commit some inexpiable crime. But God is not angry for a short time, 1774 because He is eternal and of perfect virtue, and He is never angry unless deservedly. But, however, the matter is not so; for if He should altogether prohibit anger, He Himself would have been in some measure the censurer of His own workmanship, since He from the beginning had inserted anger in the liver 1775 of man, since it is believed that the cause of this emotion is contained in the moisture of the gall. Therefore He does not altogether prohibit anger, because that affection is necessarily given, but He forbids us to persevere in anger. For the anger of mortals ought to be mortal; for if it is lasting, enmity is strengthened to lasting destruction. Then, again, when He enjoined us to be angry, and yet not to sin, 1776 it is plain that He did not tear up anger by the roots, but restrained it, that in every correction we might preserve moderation and justice. Therefore He who commands us to be angry is manifestly Himself angry; He who enjoins us to be quickly appeased is manifestly Himself easy to be appeased: for He has enjoined those things which are just and useful for the interests of society. 1777  

But because I had said that the anger of God is not for a time 1778 only, as is the case with man, who becomes inflamed with an immediate 1779 excitement, and on account of his frailty is unable easily to govern himself, we ought to understand that because God is eternal, His anger also remains to eternity; but, on the other hand, that because He is endued with the greatest excellence, He controls His anger, and is not ruled by it, but that He regulates it according to His will. And it is plain that this is not opposed to that which has just been said. For if His anger had been altogether immortal, there would be no place after a fault for satisfaction or kind feeling, though He Himself commands men to be reconciled before the setting of the sun. 1780 But the divine anger remains for ever against those who ever sin. Therefore God is appeased not by incense or a victim, not by costly offerings, which things are all corruptible, but by a reformation of the morals: and he who ceases to sin renders the anger of God mortal. For this reason He does not immediately 1781 punish every one who is guilty, that man may have the opportunity of coming to a right mind, 1782 and correcting himself.  


Footnotes

277:1772

Temporalis.  

277:1773

Mentis impos, i.e., not having possession of his mind, opposed to “mentis compos.” Some editions add, “in bile.”  

277:1774

Ad præsens.  

277:1775

As supposed to be the seat of the passions.  

277:1776

[Ps. iv. 4, Vulgate, and Ephes., as below.]  

277:1777

Rebus communibus.  

277:1778

Temporalem.  

277:1779

Præsentaneâ. The word is applied to a remedy which operates instantaneously.  

277:1780

See Eph. iv. 26.  

277:1781

Ad præsens.  

277:1782

Resipiscendi.  


Next: Chap. XXII.—Of sins, and the verses of the Sibyls respecting them recited

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