Ante-Nicene Fathers/Volume IV/Commodianus/The Instructions of Commodianus/Chapter 30

XXIX.&#8212;To the Wicked and Unbelieving Rich Man.

Thou wilt, O rich man, by insatiably looking too much to all thy wealth, squander those things to which thou art still seeking to cling.&#160; Thou sayest, I do not hope when dead to live after such things as these.&#160; O ungrateful to the great God, who thus judgest thyself to be a god; to Him who, when thou knewest nothing of it, brought thee forth, and then nourished thee.&#160; He governs thy meadows; He, thy vineyards; He, thy herd of cattle; and He, whatever thou possessest.&#160; Nor dost thou give heed to these things; or thou, perchance, rulest all things.&#160; He who made the sky, and the earth, and the salt seas, decreed to give us back again ourselves in a golden age.&#160; And only if thou believest, thou livest in the secret of God.&#160; Learn God, O foolish man, who wishes thee to be immortal, that thou mayest give Him eternal thanks in thy struggle.&#160; His own law teaches thee; but since thou seekest to wander, thou disbelievest all things, and thence thou shalt go into hell.&#160; By and by thou givest up thy life; thou shalt be taken where it grieveth thee to be:&#160; there the spiritual punishment, which is eternal, is undergone; there are always wailings:&#160; nor dost thou absolutely die therein&#8212;there at length too late proclaiming the omnipotent God.