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- Chapter 21. -Popular Renown And Inquisitiveness Are Condemned In The Sacred Scriptures.
Chapter 21. --Popular Renown and Inquisitiveness are Condemned in the Sacred Scriptures.
39. To this New Testament authority, requiring us not to love anything in this world, [105] especially in that passage where it is said, "Be not conformed to this world," [106] -- for the point is to show that a man is conformed to whatever he loves, -- to this authority, then, if I seek for a parallel passage in the Old Testament, I find several; but there is one book of Solomon, called Ecclesiastes, which at great length brings all earthly things into utter contempt. The book begins thus: "Vanity of the vain, saith the Preacher, vanity of the vain; all is vanity. What profit hath a man of all his labor which he taketh under the sun?" [107] If all these words are considered, weighed, and thoroughly examined, many things are found of essential importance to those who seek to flee from the world and to take shelter in God; but this requires time and our discourse hastens on to other topics. But, after this beginning, he goes on to show in detail that the vain [108] are those who are deceived by things of this sort; and he calls this which deceives them vanity, -- not that God did not create those things, but because men choose to subject themselves by their sins to those things, which the divine law has made subject to them in well-doing. For when you consider things beneath yourself to be admirable and desirable, what is this but to be cheated and misled by unreal goods? The man, then, who is temperate in such mortal and transient things has his rule of life confirmed by both Testaments, that he should love none of these things, nor think them desirable for their own sakes, but should use them as far as is required for the purposes and duties of life, with the moderation of an employer instead of the ardor of a lover. These remarks on temperance are few in proportion to the greatness of the theme, but perhaps too many in view of the task on hand.