3. These inferior ministers also seemed to Plato to increase the stately grandeur and imperial majesty of the Divine government. They swell the retinue of the Deity in his grand "circuit through the highest arch of heaven." [198] They wait to execute the Divine commands. They are the agents of Divine providence, "the messengers of God" to men.
[Footnote 197: ][ (return) ] "The gods of the Platonic system answer, in office and conception, to the angels of Christian Theology."--Butler, vol. i. p. 225.
[Footnote 198: ][ (return) ] "Phædrus," § 56,7.
4. And, finally, the host of inferior deities interposed between the material sensible world and God seemed to Plato as needful in order to explain the apparent defects and disorders of sublunary affairs. Plato was jealous of the Divine honor. "All good must be ascribed to God, and nothing but good. We must find evil, disorder, suffering, in some other cause." [199] He therefore commits to the junior deities the task of creating animals, and of forming "the mortal part of man," because the mortal part is "possessed of certain dire and necessary passions." [200]
[Footnote 199: ][ (return) ] "Republic," bk. ii. p.18.
[Footnote 200: ][ (return) ] "Timæus," xliv.
Aristotle seems to have regarded the popular polytheism of Greece as a perverted relic of a deeper and purer "Theology" which he conceives to have been, in all probability, perfected in the distant past, and then comparatively lost. He says-- "The tradition has come down from very ancient times, being left in a mythical garb to succeeding generations, that these (the heavenly bodies) are gods, and that the Divinity encompasses the whole of nature. There have been made, however, to these certain fabulous additions for the purpose of winning the belief of the multitude, and thus securing their obedience to the laws, and their co-operation towards advancing the general welfare of the state. These additions have been to the effect that these gods were of the same form as men, and even that some of them were in appearance similar to certain others amongst the rest of the animal creation. The wise course, however, would be for the philosopher to disengage from these traditions the false element, and to embrace that which is true; and the truth lies in that portion of this ancient doctrine which regards the first and deepest ground of all existence to be the Divine, and this he may regard as a divine utterance. In all probability, every art, and science, and philosophy has been over and over again discovered to the farthest extent possible, and then again lost; and we may conceive these opinions to have been preserved to us as a sort of fragment of these lost philosophers. We see, then, to some extent the relation of the popular belief to these ancient opinions." [201] This conception of a deep Divine ground of all existence (for the immateriality and unity of which he elsewhere earnestly contends) [202] is thus regarded by Aristotle as underlying the popular polytheism of Greece.
[Footnote 201: ][ (return) ] "Metaph.," xi. 8.
[Footnote 202: ][ (return) ] Bk. xi. ch. ii. § 4.
The views of the educated and philosophic mind of Greece in regard to the mythological deities may, in conclusion, be thus briefly stated--