Index [<< | >>]
Second Part of the Second Part [<< | >>]
Question: 165 [<< | >>]
We must now consider our first parents' temptation, concerning which
there are two points of inquiry:
(1) Whether it was fitting for man to be tempted by the devil?
(2) Of the manner and order of that temptation.
Index [<< | >>]
Second Part of the Second Part [<< | >>]
Question: 165 [<< | >>]
Article: 1 [<< | >>]
Objection 1: It would seem that it was not fitting for man to be tempted by
the devil. For the same final punishment is appointed to the angels' sin
and to man's, according to Mt. 25:41, "Go [Vulg.: 'Depart from Me'] you
cursed into everlasting fire, which was prepared for the devil and his
angels." Now the angels' first sin did not follow a temptation from
without. Therefore neither should man's first sin have resulted from an
outward temptation.
Objection 2: Further, God, Who foreknows the future, knew that through the
demon's temptation man would fall into sin, and thus He knew full well
that it was not expedient for man to be tempted. Therefore it would seem
unfitting for God to allow him to be tempted.
Objection 3: Further, it seems to savor of punishment that anyone should have
an assailant, just as on the other hand the cessation of an assault is
akin to a reward. Now punishment should not precede fault. Therefore it
was unfitting for man to be tempted before he sinned.
On the contrary, It is written (Ecclus. 34:11): "He that hath not been
tempted [Douay: 'tried'], what manner of things doth he know?"
I answer that, God's wisdom "orders all things sweetly" (Wis. 8:1),
inasmuch as His providence appoints to each one that which is befitting
it according to its nature. For as Dionysius says (Div. Nom. iv), "it
belongs to providence not to destroy, but to maintain, nature." Now it is
a condition attaching to human nature that one creature can be helped or
impeded by another. Wherefore it was fitting that God should both allow
man in the state of innocence to be tempted by evil angels, and should
cause him to be helped by good angels. And by a special favor of grace,
it was granted him that no creature outside himself could harm him
against his own will, whereby he was able even to resist the temptation
of the demon.
Reply to Objection 1: Above the human nature there is another that admits of the
possibility of the evil of fault: but there is not above the angelic
nature. Now only one that is already become evil through sin can tempt by
leading another into evil. Hence it was fitting that by an evil angel man
should be tempted to sin, even as according to the order of nature he is
moved forward to perfection by means of a good angel. An angel could be
perfected in good by something above him, namely by God, but he could not
thus be led into sin, because according to James 1:13, "God is not a
tempter of evils."
Reply to Objection 2: Just as God knew that man, through being tempted, would
fall into sin, so too He knew that man was able, by his free will, to
resist the tempter. Now the condition attaching to man's nature required
that he should be left to his own will, according to Ecclus. 15:14, "God
left" man "in the hand of his own counsel." Hence Augustine says (Gen. ad
lit. xi, 4): "It seems to me that man would have had no prospect of any
special praise, if he were able to lead a good life simply because there
was none to persuade him to lead an evil life; since both by nature he
had the power, and in his power he had the will, not to consent to the
persuader."
Reply to Objection 3: An assault is penal if it be difficult to resist it: but,
in the state of innocence, man was able, without any difficulty, to
resist temptation. Consequently the tempter's assault was not a
punishment to man.
Index [<< | >>]
Second Part of the Second Part [<< | >>]
Question: 165 [<< | >>]
Article: 2 [<< | >>]
Objection 1: It would seem that the manner and order of the first temptation
was not fitting. For just as in the order of nature the angel was above
man, so was the man above the woman. Now sin came upon man through an
angel: therefore in like manner it should have come upon the woman
through the man; in other words the woman should have been tempted by the
man, and not the other way about.
Objection 2: Further, the temptation of our first parents was by suggestion.
Now the devil is able to make suggestions to man without making use of an
outward sensible creature. Since then our first parents were endowed with
a spiritual mind, and adhered less to sensible than to intelligible
things, it would have been more fitting for man to be tempted with a
merely spiritual, instead of an outward, temptation.
Objection 3: Further, one cannot fittingly suggest an evil except through some
apparent good. But many other animals have a greater appearance of good
than the serpent has. Therefore man was unfittingly tempted by the devil
through a serpent.
Objection 4: Further, the serpent is an irrational animal. Now wisdom, speech,
and punishment are not befitting an irrational animal. Therefore the
serpent is unfittingly described (Gn. 3:1) as "more subtle than any of
the beasts of the earth," or as "the most prudent of all beasts"
according to another version [*The Septuagint]: and likewise is
unfittingly stated to have spoken to the woman, and to have been punished
by God.
On the contrary, That which is first in any genus should be
proportionate to all that follow it in that genus. Now in every kind of
sin we find the same order as in the first temptation. For, according to
Augustine (De Trin. xii, 12), it begins with the concupiscence of sin in
the sensuality, signified by the serpent; extends to the lower reason, by
pleasure, signified by the woman; and reaches to the higher reason by
consent in the sin, signified by the man. Therefore the order of the
first temptation was fitting.
I answer that, Man is composed of a twofold nature, intellective and
sensitive. Hence the devil, in tempting man, made use of a twofold
incentive to sin: one on the part of the intellect, by promising the
Divine likeness through the acquisition of knowledge which man naturally
desires to have; the other on the part of sense. This he did by having
recourse to those sensible things, which are most akin to man, partly by
tempting the man through the woman who was akin to him in the same
species; partly by tempting the woman through the serpent, who was akin
to them in the same genus; partly by suggesting to them to eat of the
forbidden fruit, which was akin to them in the proximate genus.
Reply to Objection 1: In the act of tempting the devil was by way of principal
agent; whereas the woman was employed as an instrument of temptation in
bringing about the downfall of the man, both because the woman was weaker
than the man, and consequently more liable to be deceived, and because,
on account of her union with man, the devil was able to deceive the man
especially through her. Now there is no parity between principal agent
and instrument, because the principal agent must exceed in power, which
is not requisite in the instrumental agent.
Reply to Objection 2: A suggestion whereby the devil suggests something to man
spiritually, shows the devil to have more power against man than outward
suggestion has, since by an inward suggestion, at least, man's
imagination is changed by the devil [*Cf. FP, Question [91], Article [3]]; whereas by an
outward suggestion, a change is wrought merely on an outward creature.
Now the devil had a minimum of power against man before sin, wherefore he
was unable to tempt him by inward suggestion, but only by outward
suggestion.
Reply to Objection 3: According to Augustine (Gen. ad lit. xi, 3), "we are not to
suppose that the devil chose the serpent as his means of temptation; but
as he was possessed of the lust of deceit, he could only do so by the
animal he was allowed to use for that purpose."
Reply to Objection 4: According to Augustine (Gen. ad lit. xi, 29), "the serpent
is described as most prudent or subtle, on account of the cunning of the
devil, who wrought his wiles in it: thus, we speak of a prudent or
cunning tongue, because it is the instrument of a prudent or cunning man
in advising something prudently or cunningly. Nor indeed (Gen. ad lit.
xi, 28) did the serpent understand the sounds which were conveyed through
it to the woman; nor again are we to believe that its soul was changed
into a rational nature, since not even men, who are rational by nature,
know what they say when a demon speaks in them. Accordingly (Gen. ad lit.
xi, 29) the serpent spoke to man, even as the ass on which Balaam sat
spoke to him, except that the former was the work of a devil, whereas the
latter was the work of an angel. Hence (Gen. ad lit. xi, 36) the serpent
was not asked why it had done this, because it had not done this in its
own nature, but the devil in it, who was already condemned to everlasting
fire on account of his sin: and the words addressed to the serpent were
directed to him who wrought through the serpent."
Moreover, as again Augustine says (Super Gen. contra Manich. ii, 17,18),
"his, that is, the devil's, punishment mentioned here is that for which
we must be on our guard against him, not that which is reserved till the
last judgment. For when it was said to him: 'Thou art cursed among all
cattle and beasts of the earth,' the cattle are set above him, not in
power, but in the preservation of their nature, since the cattle lost no
heavenly bliss, seeing that they never had it, but they continue to live
in the nature which they received." It is also said to him: "'Upon thy
breast and belly shalt thou creep,'" according to another version [*The
Septuagint] "Here the breast signifies pride, because it is there that
the impulse of the soul dominates, while the belly denotes carnal desire,
because this part of the body is softest to the touch: and on these he
creeps to those whom he wishes to deceive." The words, "'Earth shalt thou
eat all the days of thy life' may be understood in two ways. Either
'Those shall belong to thee, whom thou shalt deceive by earthly lust,'
namely sinners who are signified under the name of earth, or a third kind
of temptation, namely curiosity, is signified by these words: for to eat
earth is to look into things deep and dark." The putting of enmities
between him and the woman "means that we cannot be tempted by the devil,
except through that part of the soul which bears or reflects the likeness
of a woman. The seed of the devil is the temptation to evil, the seed of
the woman is the fruit of good works, whereby the temptation to evil is
resisted. Wherefore the serpent lies in wait for the woman's heel, that
if at any time she fall away towards what is unlawful, pleasure may seize
hold of her: and she watches his head that she may shut him out at the
very outset of the evil temptation."