Page:Ante-Nicene Christian Library Vol 5.djvu/493

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Book iv.]
IRENÆUS AGAINST HERESIES.
467

"Will God, whom the heavens cannot contain, really dwell with men upon the earth?"[1] And he pleased God, and was the admiration of all; and all kings of the earth sought an interview with him (quærebant faciem ejus), that they might hear the wisdom which God had conferred upon him.[2] The queen of the south, too, came to him from the ends of the earth, to ascertain the wisdom that was in him;[3] she whom the Lord also referred to as one who should rise up in the judgment with the nations of those men who do hear His words, and do not believe in Him, and should condemn them, inasmuch as she submitted herself to the wisdom announced by the servant of God, while these men despised that wisdom which proceeded directly from the Son of God. For Solomon was a servant, but Christ is indeed the Son of God, and the Lord of Solomon. While, therefore, he served God without blame, and ministered to His dispensations, then was he glorified: but when he took wives from all nations, and permitted them to set up idols in Israel, the Scripture spake thus concerning him: "And King Solomon was a lover of women, and he took to himself foreign women; and it came to pass, when Solomon was old, his heart was not perfect with the Lord his God. And the foreign women turned away his heart after strange gods. And Solomon did evil in the sight of the Lord: he did not walk after the Lord, as did David his father. And the Lord was angry with Solomon; for his heart was not perfect with the Lord, as was the heart of David his father."[4] The Scripture has thus sufficiently reproved him, as the presbyter remarked, in order that no flesh may glory in the sight of the Lord.

2. It was for this reason, too, that the Lord descended into the regions beneath the earth, preaching His advent there also, and [declaring] the remission of sins received by those who believe in Him. Now all those believed in Him who had hope towards Him, that is, those who proclaimed His advent, and submitted to His dispensations, the righteous men, the prophets, and the patriarchs, to whom He remitted sins in the same way as He did to us, which sins we should

  1. 1 Kings viii. 27.
  2. 1 Kings iv. 34.
  3. 1 Kings x. 1.
  4. 1 Kings xi. 1.