THE INSTRUCTOR: BOOK I
BOOK I
CHAP. I. THE OFFICE OF THE INSTRUCTOR.
AS there are these three things in the case of man, habits, actions, and
passions; habits are the department appropriated by hortatory discourse the
guide to piety, which, like the ship's keel, is laid beneath for the building up of
faith; in which, rejoicing exceedingly, and abjuring our old opinions, through
salvation we renew our youth, singing with the hymning prophecy, "How good is
God to Israel, to such as are upright in heart!"[1] All actions, again, are the
province of preceptive discourse; while persuasive discourse applies itself to
heal the passions. It is, however, one and the self-same word which rescues
man from the custom of this world in which he has been reared, and trains him up
in the one salvation of faith in God.
When, then, the heavenly guide, the Word, was inviting[2] men to
salvation, the appellation of hortatory was properly applied to Him: his same word was
called rousing (the whole from a part). For the whole of piety is hortatory,
engendering in the kindred faculty of reason a yearning after true life now and to
come. But now, being at once curative and preceptive, following in His own
steps, He makes what had been prescribed the subject of persuasion, promising the
cure of the passions within us. Let us then designate this Word appropriately
by the one name Tutor (or Paedagogue, or instructor).
The Instructor being practical, not theoretical, His aim is thus to
improve the soul, not to teach, and to train it up to a virtuous, not to an
intellectual life. Although this same word is didactic, but not in the present instance.
For the word which, in matters of doctrine, explains and reveals, is that
whose province it is to teach. But our Educators being practical, first exhorts to
the attainment of right dispositions and character, and then persuades us to
the energetic practice of our duties, enjoining on us pure commandments, and
exhibiting to such as come after representations of those who formerly wandered in
error. Both are of the highest utility,--that which assumes the form of
counselling to obedience, and that which is presented in the form of example; which
latter is of two kinds, corresponding to the former duality,--the one having for
its purpose that we should choose and imitate the good, and the other that we
should reject and turn away from the opposite.
Hence accordingly ensues the healing of our passions, in consequence of
the assuagements of those examples; the Paedagogue strengthening our souls, and
by His benign commands, as by gentle medicines, guiding the sick to the perfect
knowledge of the truth.
There is a wide difference between health and knowledge; for the latter is
produced by learning, the former by healing. One, who is ill, will not
therefore learn any branch of instruction till he is quite well. For neither to
learners nor to the sick is each injunction invariably expressed similarly; but to
the former in such a way as to lead to knowledge, and to the latter to health.
As, then, for those of us who are diseased in body a physician is required, so
also those who are diseased in soul require a paedagogue to cure our maladies;
and then a teacher, to train and guide the soul to all requisite knowledge when
it is made able to admit the revelation of the Word. Eagerly desiring, then, to
perfect us by a gradation conducive to salvation, suited for efficacious
discipline, a beautiful arrangement is observed by the all-benignant Word, who first
exhorts, then trains, and finally teaches.
CHAP. II.--OUR INSTRUCTOR'S TREATMENT OF OUR SINS.
Now, O you, my children, our Instructor is like His Father God, whose son
He is, sinless, blameless, and with a soul devoid of passion; God in the form
of man, stainless, the minister of His Father's will, the Word who is God, who
is in the Father, who is at the Father's right hand, and with the form of God is
God. He is to us a spotless image; to Him we are to try with all our might to
assimilate our souls. He is wholly free from human passions; wherefore also He
alone is judge, because He alone is sinless. As far, however, as we can, let us
try to sin as little as possible. For nothing is so urgent in the first place
as deliverance from passions and disorders, and then the checking of our
liability to fall into sins that have become habitual. It is best, therefore, not to
sin at all in any way, which we assert to be the prerogative of God alone; next
to keep clear of voluntary transgressions, which is characteristic of the wise
man; thirdly, not to fall into many involuntary offences, which is peculiar to
those who have been excellently trained. Not to continue long in sins, let
that be ranked last. But this also is salutary to those who are called back to
repentance, to renew the contest.
And the Instructor, as I think, very beautifully says, through Moses: "If
any one die suddenly by him, straightway the head of his consecration shall be
polluted, and shall be shaved,"[1] designating involuntary sin as sudden death.
And He says that it pollutes by defiling the soul: wherefore He prescribes the
cure with all speed, advising the head to be instantly shaven; that is,
counselling the locks of ignorance which shade the reason to be shorn clean off, that
reason (whose seat is in the brain), being left bare of the dense stuff of
vice, may speed its way to repentance. Then after a few remarks He adds, "The days
before are not reckoned irrational,"[2] by which manifestly sins are meant
which are contrary to reason. The involuntary act He calls "sudden," the sin He
calls "irrational." Wherefore the Word, the Instructor, has taken the charge of
us, in order to the prevention of sin, which is contrary to reason.
Hence consider the expression of Scripture, "Therefore these things saith
the Lord;" the sin that had been committed before is held up to reprobation by
the succeeding expression "therefore," according to which the righteous
judgment follows. This is shown conspicuously by the prophets, when they said, "Hadst
thou not sinned, He would not have uttered these threatenings." "Therefore thus
saith the Lord; "Because thou hast not heard these words, therefore these
things the Lord;" and, "Therefore, behold, the Lord saith." For prophecy is given
by reason both of obedience and disobedience: for obedience, that we may be
saved; for disobedience, that we may be corrected.
Our Instructor, the Word, therefore cures the unnatural passions of the
soul by means of exhortations. For with the highest propriety the help of bodily
diseases is called the healing art--an art acquired by human skill. But the
paternal Word is the only Paeonian physician of human infirmities, and the holy
charmer of the sick soul. "Save," it is said, "Thy servant, O my God, who
trusteth in Thee. Pity me, O Lord; for I will cry to Thee all the day."[3] For a while
the "physician's art," according to Democritus, "heals the diseases of the
body; wisdom frees the soul from passion." But the good Instructor, the Wisdom,
the Word of the Father, who made man, cares for the whole nature of His creature;
the all-sufficient Physician of humanity, the Saviour, heals both body and
soul. "Rise up," He said to the paralytic; "take the bed on which thou liest, and
go away home;"[4] and straightway the infirm man received strength. And to the
dead He said, "Lazarus, go forth;"[5] and the dead man issued from his coffin
such as he was ere he died, having undergone resurrection. Further, He heals the
soul itself by precepts and gifts--by precepts indeed, in course of time, but
being liberal in His gifts, He says to us sinners, "Thy sins be forgiven
thee."[6]
We, however, as soon as He conceived the thought, became His children,
having had assigned us the best and most secure rank by His orderly arrangement,
which first circles about the world, the heavens, and the sun's circuits, and
occupies itself with the motions of the rest of the stars for man's behoof, and
then busies itself with man himself, on whom all its care is concentrated; and
regarding him as its greatest work, regulated his soul by wisdom and temperance,
and tempered the body with beauty and proportion. And whatever in human
actions is right and regular, is the result of the inspiration of its rectitude and
order.
CHAP. III.--THE PHILANTHROPY OF THE INSTRUCTOR.
The Lord ministers all good and all help, both as man and as God: as God,
forgiving our sins; and as man, training us not to sin. Man is therefore justly
dear to God, since he is His workmanship. The other works of creation He made
by the word of command alone, but man He framed by Himself, by His own hand,
and breathed into him what was peculiar to Himself. What, then, was fashioned by
Him, and after He likeness, either was created by God Himself as being
desirable on its own account, or was formed as being desirable on account of something
else. 'If, then, man is an object desirable for itself, then He who is good
loved what is good, and the love-charm is within even in man, and is that very
thing which is called the inspiration[or breath of God; but if man was a desirable
object on account of something else, God had no other reason for creating him,
than that unless he came into being, it was not possible for God to be a good
Creator, or for man to arrive at the knowledge of God. For God would not have
accomplished that on account of which man was created otherwise than by the
creation of man; and what hidden power in willing God possessed, He carried fully
out by the forth-putting of His might externally in the act of creating,
receiving from man what He made man;[1] and whom He had He saw, and what He wished
that came to pass; and there is nothing which God cannot do. Man, then, whom God
made, is desirable for himself, and that which is desirable on his account is
allied to him to whom it is desirable on his account; and this, too, is
acceptable and liked.
But what is loveable, and is not also loved by Him? And man has been
proved to be loveable; consequently man is loved by God. For how shall he not be
loved for whose sake the only-begotten Son is sent from the Father's bosom, the
Word of faith, the faith which is superabundant; the Lord Himself distinctly
confessing and saying, "For the Father Himself loveth you, because ye have loved
Me;"[2] and again, "And hast loved them as Thou hast loved Me?"[3] What, then,
the Master desires and declares, and how He is disposed in deed and word, how He
commands what is to be done, and forbids the opposite, has already been shown.
Plainly, then, the other kind of discourse, the didactic, is powerful and
spiritual, observing precision, occupied in the contemplation of mysteries. But
let it stand over for the present. Now, it is incumbent on us to return His
love, who lovingly guides us to that life which is best; and to live in
accordance with the injunctions of His will, not only fulfilling what is commanded, or
guarding against what is forbidden, but turning away from some examples, and
imitating others as much as we can, and thus to perform the works of the Master
according to His similitude, and so fulfil what Scripture says as to our being
made in His image and likeness. For, wandering in life as in deep darkness, we
need a guide that cannot stumble or stray; and our guide is the best, not blind,
as the Scripture says, "leading the blind into pits."[4] But the Word is
keen-sighted, and scans the recesses of the heart. As, then, that is not light which
enlightens not, nor motion that moves not, nor loving which loves not, so
neither is that good which profits not, nor guides to salvation. Let us then aim at
the fulfilment of the commandments by the works of the Lord; for the Word
Himself also, having openly become flesh,[5] exhibited the same virtue, both
practical and contemplative. Wherefore let us regard the Word as law, and His commands
and counsels as the short and straight paths to immortality; for His precepts
are full of persuasion, not of fear.
CHAP. IV.--MEN AND WOMEN ALIKE UNDER THE INSTRUCTOR'S CHARGE.
Let us, then, embracing more and more this good obedience, give ourselves
to the Lord; clinging to what is surest, the cable of faith in Him, and
understanding that the virtue of man and woman is the same. For if the God of both is
one, the master of both is also one; one church, one temperance, one modesty;
their food is common, marriage an equal yoke; respiration, sight, hearing,
knowledge, hope, obedience, love all alike. And those whose life is common, have
common graces and a common salvation; common to them are love and training. "For
in this world," he says, "they marry, and are given in marriage,"[6] in which
alone the female is distinguished from the male; "but in that world it is so no
more." There the rewards of this social and holy life, which is based on
conjugal union, are laid up, not for male and female, but for man, the sexual desire
which divides humanity being removed. Common therefore, too, to men and women,
is the name of man. For this reason I think the Attics called, not boys only,
but girls, <greek>paidarion</greek>, using it as a word of common gender; if
Menander the comic poet, in Rhapizomena, appears to any one a sufficient authority,
who thus speaks:--
"My little daughter; for by nature
The child (<greek>paidarion</greek>) is most loving.
A<greek>rnes</greek>, too, the word for lambs, is a common name of simplicity
for the male and female animal.
Now the Lord Himself will feed us as His flock forever. Amen. But without
a sheperd, neither can sheep nor any other animal live, nor children without a
tutor, nor domestics without a master.
CHAP. V.--ALL WHO WALK ACCORDING TO TRUTH ARE CHILDREN OF GOD.
That, then, Paedagogy is the training of children (<greek>paidwn</greek>
<greek>agwgh</greek>), is clear from the word itself. It remains for us to
consider the children whom Scripture points to; then to give the paedagogue charge
of them. We are the children. In many ways Scripture celebrates us, and
describes us in manifold figures of speech, giving variety to the simplicity of the
faith by diverse names Accordingly, in the Gospel, "the Lord, standing on the
shore, says to the disciples"--they happened to be fishing--"and called aloud,
Children, have ye any meat?"[1]--addressing those that were already in the position
of disciples as children. "And they brought to Him," it is said, "children,
that He might put His hands on them and bless them; and when His disciples
hindered them, Jesus said, Suffer the children, and forbid them not to come to Me,
for of such is the kingdom of heaven."[2] What the expression means the Lord
Himself shall declare, saying, "Except ye be converted, and become as little
chidren, ye shall not enter into the kingdom of heaven; "[3] not in that place
speaking figuratively of regeneration, but setting before us, for our imitation, the
simplicity that is in children.[4]
The prophetic spirit also distinguishes us as children. "Plucking," it is
said, "branches of olives or palms, the children went forth to meet the Lord,
and cried, saying, Hosanna to the Son of David! Blessed is He that cometh in the
name of the Lord; "[5] light, and glory, and praise, with supplication to the
Lord: for this is the meaning of the expression Hosanna when rendered in Greek.
And the Scripture appears to me, in allusion to the prophecy just mentioned,
reproachfully to upbraid the thoughtless: "Have ye never read, Out of the mouths
of babes and sucklings Thou hast perfected praise?"[6] In this way the Lord in
the Gospels spurs on His disciples, urging them to attend to Him, hastening as
He was to the Father; rendering His hearers more eager by the intimation that
after a little He was to depart, and showing them that it was requisite that
they should take more unsparing advantage of the truth than ever before, as the
Word was to ascend to heaven. Again, therefore, He calls them children; for He
says, "Children, a little while I am with you."[7] And, again, He likens the
kingdom of heaven to children sitting in the market-places and saying, "We have
piped unto you, and ye have not danced; we have mourned, and ye have not
lamented;"[8] and whatever else He added agreeably thereto. And it is not alone the
Gospel that holds these sentiments. Prophecy also agrees with it. David
accordingly says, "Praise, O children, the LORD; praise the name of the LORD."[9] It says
also by Esaias, "Here am I, and the children that God hath given me."[10] Are
you amazed, then, to hear that men who belong to the nations are sons in the
Lord's sight? You do not in that case appear to give ear to the Attic dialect,
from which you may learn that beautiful, comely, and freeborn young maidens are
still called <greek>paidiskai</greek>, and servant-girls
<greek>paidiskaria</greek>; and that those last also are, on account of the bloom of youth, called by
the flattering name of young maidens.
And when He says, "Let my lambs stand on my right,"" He alludes to the
simple children, as if they were sheep and lambs in nature, not men; and the lambs
He counts worthy of preference, from the superior regard He has to that
tenderness and simplicity of disposition in men which constitutes innocence. Again,
when He says, "as suckling calves," He again alludes figuratively to us; and "as
an innocent and gentle dove,"[12] the reference is again to us. Again, by
Moses, He commands "two young pigeons or a pair of turtles to be offered for
sin;"[13] thus saying, that the harmlessness and innocence and placable nature of
these tender young birds are acceptable to God, and explaining that like is an
expiation for like. Further, the timorousness of the turtle-doves typifies fear in
reference to sin.
And that He calls us chickens the Scripture testifies: "As a hen gathereth
her chickens under her wings."[14] Thus are we the Lord's chickens; the Word
thus marvellously and mystically describing the simplicity of childhood. For
sometimes He calls us children, sometimes chickens, sometimes infants, and at
other times sons, and "a new people," and "a recent people." "And my servants shall
be called by a new name"[15] (a new name, He says, fresh and eternal, pure and
simple, and childlike and true), which shall be blessed on the earth. And
again, He figuratively calls us colts unyoked to vice, not broken in by wickedness;
but simple, and bounding joyously to the Father alone; not such horses "as
neigh after their neighbours' wives, that are under the yoke, and are
female-mad;"[1] but free and new-born, jubilant by means of faith, ready to run to the
truth, swift to speed to salvation, that tread and stamp under foot the things of
the world.
"Rejoice greatly, O daughter of Sion; tell aloud, O daughter of Jerusalem:
behold, thy King cometh, just, meek, and bringing salvation; meek truly is He,
and riding on a beast of burden, and a young colt."[2] It was not enough to
have said colt alone, but He added to it also young, to show the youth of
humanity in Christ, and the eternity of simplicity, which shall know no old age. And
we who are little ones being such colts, are reared up by our divine colt-tamer.
But if the new man in Scripture is represented by the ass, this ass is also a
colt. "And he bound," it is said, "the colt to the vine," having bound this
simple and childlike people to the word, whom He figuratively represents as a
vine. For the vine produces wine, as the Word, produces blood, and both drink for
health to men--wine for the body, blood for the spirit.
And that He also calls us lambs, the Spirit by the mouth of Isaiah is an
unimpeachable witness: "He will feed His flock like a shepherd, He will gather
the lambs with His arm,"[2]--using the figurative appellation of lambs, which
are still more tender than sheep, to express simplicity. And we also in truth,
honouring the fairest and most perfect objects in life with an appellation
derived from the word child, have named training <greek>paideia</greek>, and
discipline <greek>paidagwgia</greek>. Discipline (<greek>paidagwgia</greek>) we declare
to be right guiding from childhood to virtue. Accordingly, our Lord revealed
more distinctly to us what is signified by the appellation of children. On the
question arising among the apostles, "which of them should be the greater,"
Jesus placed a little child in the midst, saying, "Whosoever, shall humble himself
as this little child, the same shall be the greater in the kingdom of
heaven."[4] He does not then use the appellation of children on account of their very
limited amount of understanding from their age, as some have thought. Nor, if He
says, "Except ye become as these children, ye shall not enter into the kingdom
of God," are His words to be understood as meaning "without learning." We,
then, who are infants, no longer roll on the ground, nor creep on the earth like
serpents as before, crawling with the whole body about senseless lusts; but,
stretching upwards in soul, loosed from the world and our sins, touching the earth
on tiptoe so as to appear to be in the world, we pursue holy wisdom, although
this seems folly to those whose wits are whetted for wickedness. Rightly, then,
are those called children who know Him who is God alone as their Father, who
are simple, and infants, and guileless, who are lovers of the horns of the
unicorns.[5]
To those, therefore, that have made progress in the word, He has
proclaimed this utterance, bidding them dismiss anxious care of the things of this
world, and exhorting them to adhere to the Father alone, in imitation of children.
Wherefore also in what follows He says: "Take no anxious thought for the morrow;
sufficient unto the day is the evil thereof."[6] Thus He enjoins them to lay
aside the cares of this life, and depend on the Father alone. And he who fulfils
this commandment is in reality a child and a son to God and to the world,--to
the one as deceived, to the other as beloved. And if we have one Master in
heaven, as the Scripture says, then by common consent those on the earth will be
rightly called disciples. For so is the truth, that perfection is with the Lord,
who is always teaching, and infancy and childishness with us, who are always
learning. Thus prophecy hath honoured perfection, by applying to it the
appellation man. For instance, by David, He says of the devil: "The LORD abhors the man
of blood;"[7] he calls him man, as perfect in wickedness. And the Lord is
called man, because He is perfect in righteousness. Directly in point is the
instance of the apostle, who says, writing the Corinthians: "For I have espoused you
to one man, that I may present you as a chaste virgin to Christ,"[8] whether as
children or saints, but to the Lord alone. And writing to the Ephesians, he has
unfolded in the clearest manner the point in question, speaking to the
following effect: "Till we all attain to the unity of the faith, and of the knowledge
of God, to a perfect man, to the measure of the stature of the fulness of
Christ: that we be no longer children, tossed to and fro by every wind of doctrine,
by the craft of men, by their cunning in stratagems of deceit; but, speaking
the truth in love, may grow up to Him in all things,"[9]--saying these things in
order to the edification of the body of Christ, who is the head and man, the
only one perfect in righteousness; and we who are children guarding against the
blasts of heresies, which blow to our inflation; and not putting our trust in
fathers who teach us otherwise, are then made perfect when we are the church,
having received Christ the head. Then it is right to notice, with respect to the
appellation of infant (<greek>nhpios</greek>), that <greek>no</greek>
<greek>nhpion</greek> is not predicated of the silly: for the silly man is called
<greek>nhputios</greek>: and <greek>nhpios</greek> is <greek>nehpios</greek> (since he
that is tender-hearted is called <greek>hpios</greek>), as being one that has
newly become gentle and meek in Conduct. This the blessed Paul most clearly
pointed out when he said, "When we might have been burdensome as the apostles of
Christ, we were gentle (<greek>hpioi</greek>) among you, as a nurse cherisheth
her children."[1] The child (<greek>nhpios</greek>) is therefore gentle
(<greek>hpios</greek>), and therefore more tender, delicate, and simple, guileless, and
destitute of hypocrisy, straightforward and upright in mind, which is the
basis of simplicity and truth. For He says, "Upon whom shall I look, but upon him
who is gentle and quiet? "[2] For such is the virgin speech, tender, and free of
fraud; whence also a virgin is wont to be called "a tender bride," and a child
"tender-hearted." And we are tender who are pliant to the power of persuasion,
and are easily drawn to goodness, and are mild, and free of the stain of
malice and perverseness, for the ancient race was perverse and hard-hearted; but the
band of infants, the new people which we are, i.s delicate as a child. On
account of the hearts of the innocent, the apostle, in the Epistle to the Romans,
owns that he rejoices, and furnishes a kind of definition of children, so to
speak, when he says, "I would have you wise toward good, but simple towards
evil."[3] For the name of child, <greek>nhpios</greek>, is not understood by us
privatively, though the sons of the grammarians make the <greek>nh</greek> a
privative particle. For if they call us who follow after childhood foolish, see how
they utter blasphemy against the Lord, in regarding those as foolish who have
betaken themselves to God. But if, which is rather the true sense, they themselves
understand the designation children of simple ones, we glory in the name. For
the new minds, which have newly become wise, which have sprung into being
according to the new covenant, are infantile in the old folly. Of late, then, God
was known by the coming of Christ: "For no man knoweth God but the Son, and he to
whom the Son shall reveal Him."[4]
In contradistinction, therefore, to the older people, the new people are
called young, having learned the new blessings; and we have the exuberance of
life's morning prime in this youth which knows no old age, in which we are always
growing to maturity in intelligence, are always young, always mild, always
new: for those must necessarily be new, who have become partakers of the new Word.
And that which participates in eternity is wont to be assimilated to the
incorruptible: so that to us appertains the designation of the age of childhood, a
lifelong spring-time, because the truth that is in us, and our habits saturated
with the truth, cannot be touched by old age; but Wisdom is ever blooming, ever
remains consistent and the same, and never changes. "Their children," it is
said, "shall be borne upon their shoulders, and fondled on their knees; as one
whom his mother comforteth, so also shall I comfort you."[5] The mother draws the
children to herself; and we seek our mother the Church. Whatever is feeble and
tender, as needing help on account of its feebleness, is kindly looked on, and
is sweet and pleasant, anger changing into help in the case of such: for thus
horses' colts, and the little calves of cows, and the lion's whelp, and the
stag's fawn, and the child of man, are looked upon with pleasure by their fathers
and mothers. Thus also the Father of the universe cherishes affection towards
those who have fled to Him; and having begotten them again by His Spirit to the
adoption of children, knows them as gentle, and loves those alone, and aids and
fights for them; and therefore He bestows on them the name of child. The word
Isaac I also connect with child. Isaac means laughter. He was seen sporting
with his wife and helpmeet Rebecca by the prying king.[6] The king, whose name was
Abimelech, appears to me to represent a supramundane wisdom contemplating the
mystery of sport. They interpret Rebecca to mean endurance. O wise sport,
laughter also assisted by endurance, and the king as spectator! The spirit of those
that are children in Christ, whose lives are ordered in endurance, rejoice. And
this is the divine sport. "Such a sport, of his own, Jove sports," says
Heraclitus. For what other employment is seemly for a wise and perfect man, than to
sport and be glad in the endurance of what is good-and, in the administration of
what is good, hold, ing festival with God? That which is signified by the
prophet may be interpreted differently,namely, of our rejoicing for salvation, as
Isaac. He also, delivered from death, laughed, sporting and rejoicing with his
spouse, who was the type of the Helper of our salvation, the Church, to whom the
stable name of endurance is given; for this cause surely, because she alone
remains to all generations, rejoicing ever, subsisting as she does by the
endurance of us believers, who are the members of Christ. And the witness of those
that have endured to the end, and the rejoicing on their account, is the mystic
sport, and the salvation accompanied with decorous solace which brings us aid.
The King, then, who is Christ, beholds from above our laughter, and
looking through the window, as the Scripture says, views the thanksgiving, and the
blessing, and the rejoicing, and the gladness, and furthermore the endurance
which works together with them and their embrace: views His Church, showing only
His face, which was wanting to the Church, which is made perfect by her royal
Head. And where, then, was the door by which the Lord showed Himself? The flesh by
which He was manifested. He is Isaac (for the narrative may be interpreted
otherwise), who is a type of the Lord, a child as a son; for he was the son of
Abraham, as Christ the Son of God, and a sacrifice as the Lord, but he was not
immolated as the Lord. Isaac only bore the wood of the sacrifice, as the Lord the
wood of the cross. And he laughed mystically, prophesying that the Lord should
fill us with joy, who have been redeemed from corruption by the blood of the
Lord. Isaac did everything but suffer, as was right, yielding the precedence in
suffering to the Word. Furthermore, there is an intimation of the divinity of
the Lord in His not being slain. For Jesus rose again after His burial, having
suffered no harm, like Isaac released from sacrifice. And in defence of the point
to be established, I shall adduce another consideration of the greatest
weight. The Spirit calls the Lord Himself a child, thus prophesying by Esaias: "Lo,
to us a child has been born, to us a son has been given, on whose own shoulder
the government shall be; and His name has been called the Angel of great
Counsel." Who, then, is this infant child? He according to whose image we are made
little children. By the same prophet is declared His greatness: "Wonderful,
Counsellor, Mighty God, Everlasting Father, Prince of Peace; that He might fulfil His
discipline: and of His peace there shall be no end."[1] O the great God! O the
perfect child! The Son in the Father, and the Father in the Son. And how shall
not the discipline of this child be perfect, which extends to all, leading as
a schoolmaster us as children who are His little ones? He has stretched forth
to us those hands of His that are conspicuously worthy of trust. To this child
additional testimony is borne by John, "the greatest prophet among those born of
women:"[2] Behold the Lamb of God!"[3] For since Scripture calls the infant
children lambs, it has also called Him--God the Word--who became man for our
sakes, and who wished in all points to be made like to us--"the Lamb of God"--Him,
namely, that is the Son of God, the child of the Father.
CHAP. VI.--THE NAME CHILDREN DOES NOT IMPLY INSTRUCTION IN ELEMENTARY
PRINCIPLES.
We have ample means of encountering those who are given to carping. For we
are not termed children and infants with reference to the childish and
contemptible character of our education, as those who are inflated on account of
knowledge have calumniously alleged. Straightway, on our regeneration, we attained
that perfection after which we aspired. For we were illuminated, which is to
know God. He is not then imperfect who knows what is perfect. And do not reprehend
me when I profess to know God; for so it was deemed right to speak to the
Word, and He is free.[4] For at the moment of the Lord's baptism there sounded a
voice from heaven, as a testimony to the Beloved, "Thou art My beloved Son,
to-day have I begotten Thee." Let us then ask the wise, Is Christ, begotten to-day,
already perfect, or--what were most monstrous--imperfect? If the latter, there
is some addition He requires yet to make. But for Him to make any addition to
His knowledge is absurd, since He is God. For none can be superior to the Word,
or the teacher of the only Teacher. Will they not then own, though reluctant,
that the perfect Word born of the perfect Father was begotten in perfection,
according to oeconomic fore-ordination? And if He was perfect, why was He, the
perfect one, baptized? It was necessary, they say, to fulfil the profession that
pertained to humanity. Most excellent. Well, I assert, simultaneously with His
baptism by John, He becomes perfect? Manifestly. He did not then learn anything
more from him? Certainly not. But He is perfected by the washing--of
baptism--alone, and is sanctified by the descent of the Spirit? Such is the case. The
same also takes place in our case, whose exemplar Christ became. Being baptized,
we are illuminated; illuminated, we become sons; being made sons, we are made
perfect; being made perfect, we are made immortal. "I," says He, "have said that
ye are gods, and all sons of the Highest."[5] This work is variously called
grace,[6] and illumination, and perfection, and washing: washing, by which we
cleanse away our sins; grace, by which the penalties accruing to transgressions are
remitted; and illumination, by which that holy light of salvation is beheld,
that is, by which we see God clearly. Now we call that perfect which wants
nothing. For what is yet wanting to him who knows God? For it were truly monstrous
that that which is not complete should be called a gift (or act) of God's grace.
Being perfect, He consequently bestows perfect gifts. As at His command all
things were made, so on His bare wishing to bestow grace, ensues the perfecting
of His grace. For the future of time is anticipated by the power of His volition.
Further release from evils is the beginning of salvation. We then alone,
who first have touched the confines of life, are already perfect; and we already
live who are separated from death. Salvation, accordingly, is the following of
Christ: "For that which is in Him is life.[1]" Verily, verily, I say unto you,
He that heareth My words, and believeth on Him that sent Me, hath eternal
life, and cometh not into condemnation, but hath passed from death to life."[2]
Thus believing alone, and regeneration, is perfection in life; for God is never
weak. For as His will is work, and this s is named the world; so also His counsel
is the salvation of men, and this has been called the church. He knows,
therefore, whom He has called, and whom He has saved; and at one and the same time He
called and saved them. "For ye are," says the apostle, "taught of God."[4] It
is not then allowable to think of what is taught by Him as imperfect; and what
is learned from Him is the eternal salvation of the eternal Saviour, to whom be
thanks for ever and ever. Amen. And he who is only regenerated--as the name
necessarily indicates--and is enlightened, is delivered forthwith from darkness,
and on the instant receives the light.
As, then, those who have shaken off sleep forthwith become all awake
within; or rather, as those who try to remove a film that is over the eyes, do not
supply to them from without the light which they do not possess, but removing
the obstacle from the eyes, leave the pupil free; thus also we who are baptized,
having wiped off the sins which obscure the light of the Divine Spirit, have
the eye of the spirit free, unimpeded, and full of light, by which alone we
contemplate the Divine, the Holy Spirit flowing down to us from above. This is the
eternal adjustment of the vision, which is able to see the eternal light, since
like loves like; and that which is holy, loves that from which holiness
proceeds, which has appropriately been termed light. "Once ye were darkness, now are
ye light in the Lord."[5] Hence I am of opinion man was called by the ancients
<greek>fws</greek>.[6] But he has not yet received, say they, the perfect gift.
I also assent to this; but he is in the light, and the darkness comprehendeth
him not. There is nothing intermediate between light and darkness. But the end
is reserved till the resurrection of those who believe; and it is not the
reception of some other thing, but the obtaining of the promise previously made. For
we do not say that both take place together at the same time--both the arrival
at the end, and the anticipation of that arrival. For eternity and time are not
the same, neither is the attempt and the final result; but both have reference
to the same thing, and one and the same person is concerned in both. Faith, so
to speak, is the attempt generated in time; the final result is the attainment
of the promise, secured for eternity. Now the Lord Himself has most clearly
revealed the equality of salvation, when He said: "For this is the will of my
Father, that every one that seeth the Son, and believeth on Him, should have
everlasting life; and I will raise him up in the last day."[7] As far as possible in
this world, which is what he means by the last day, and which is preserved
till the time that it shall end, we believe that we are made perfect. Wherefore He
says, "He that believeth on the Son hath everlasting life."[8] If, then, those
who have believed have life, what remains beyond the possession of eternal
life? Nothing is wanting to faith, as it is perfect and complete in itself. If
aught is wanting to it, it is not wholly perfect. But faith is not lame in any
respect; nor after our departure from this world does it make us who have
believed, and received without distinction the earnest of future good, wait; but having
in anticipation grasped by faith that which is future, after the resurrection
we receive it as present, in order that that may be fulfilled which was spoken,
"Be it according to thy faith."[9] And where faith is, there is the promise;
and the consummation of the promise is rest. So that in illumination what we
receive is knowledge, and the end of knowledge is rest--the last thing conceived
as the object of aspiration. As, then, inexperience comes to an end by
experience, and perplexity by finding a clear outlet, so by illumination must darkness
disappear. The darkness is ignorance, through which we fall into sins, purblind
as to the truth. Knowledge, then, is the illumination we receive, which makes
ignorance disappear, and endows us with clear vision. Further, the abandonment
of what is bad is the adopting[10] of what is better. For what ignorance has
bound ill, is by knowledge loosed well; those bonds are with all speed slackened
by human faith and divine grace, our transgressions being taken away by one
Poeonian[11] medicine, the baptism of the Word. We are washed from all our sins,
and are no longer entangled in evil. This is the one grace of illumination, that
our characters are not the same as before our washing. And since knowledge
springs up with illumination, shedding its beams around the mind, the moment we
hear, we who were untaught become disciples. Does this, I ask, take place on the
advent of this instruction? You cannot tell the time. For instruction leads to
faith, and faith with baptism is trained by the Holy Spirit. For that faith is
the one universal salvation of humanity, and that there is the same equality
before the righteous and loving God, and the same fellowship between Him and all,
the apostle most clearly showed, speaking to the following effect: "Before
faith came, we were kept under the law, shut up unto the faith which should
afterwards be revealed, so that the law became our schoolmaster to bring us to Christ,
that we might be justified by faith; but after that faith is come, we are no
longer under a schoolmaster."[1] Do you not hear that we are no longer under
that law which was accompanied with fear, but under the Word, the master of free
choice? Then he subjoined the utterance, clear of all partiality: "For ye are
all the children of God through faith in Christ Jesus. For as many as were
baptized into Christ have put on Christ. There is neither Jew nor Greek, there is
neither bond nor free, there is neither male nor female: for ye are all one in
Christ Jesus."[2] There are not, then, in the same Word some "illuminated
(gnostics); and some animal (or natural) men;" but all who have abandoned the desires
of the flesh are equal and spiritual before the Lord. And again he writes in
another place: "For by one spirit are we all baptized into one body, whether Jews
or Greeks, whether bond or free, and we have all drunk of one cup."[3] Nor were
it absurd to employ the expressions of those who call the reminiscence of
better things the filtration of the spirit, understanding by filtration the
separation of what is baser, that results from the reminiscence of what is better.
There follows of necessity, in him who has come to the recollection of what is
better, repentance for what is worse. Accordingly, they confess that the spirit in
repentance retraces its steps. In the same way, therefore, we also, repenting
of our sins, renouncing our iniquities, purified by baptism, speed back to the
eternal light, children to the Father. Jesus therefore, rejoicing in the
spirit, said: "I thank Thee, O Father, God of heaven and earth, that Thou hast hid
these things from the wise and prudent, and hast revealed them to babes; "[4] the
Master and Teacher applying the name babes to us, who are readier to embrace
salvation than the wise in the world, who, thinking themselves wise, are
inflated with pride. And He exclaims in exultation and exceeding joy, as if lisping
with the children, "Even so, Father; for so it seemed good in Thy sight."[5]
Wherefore those things which have been concealed from the wise and prudent of this
present world have been revealed to babes. Truly, then, are we the children of
God, who have put aside the old man, and stripped off the garment of
wickedness, and put on the immortality of Christ; that we may become a new, holy people
by regeneration, and may keep the man undefiled. And a babe, as God's little
one,[6] is cleansed from fornication and wickedness. With the greatest clearness
the blessed Paul has solved for us this question in his First Epistle to the
Corinthians, writing thus: "Brethren, be not children in understanding; howbeit in
malice be children, but in understanding be men."[7] And the expression, "When
I was a child, I thought as a child, I spoke as a child,"[8] points out his
mode of life according to the law, according to which, thinking childish things,
he persecuted, and speaking childish things he blasphemed the Word, not as
having yet attained to the simplicity of childhood, but as being in its folly; for
the word <greek>nhpion</greek> has two meanings.[9] "When I became a man,"
again Paul says, "I put away childish things."[10] It is not incomplete size of
stature, nor a definite measure of time, nor additional secret teachings in things
that are manly and more perfect, that the apostle, who himself professes to be
a preacher of childishness, alludes to when he sends it, as it were, into
banishment; but he applies the name "children" to those who are under the law, who
are terrified by fear as children are by bugbears; and "men" to us who are
obedient to the Word and masters of ourselves, who have believed, and are saved by
voluntary choice, and are rationally, not irrationally, frightened by terror.
Of this the apostle himself shall testify, calling as he does the Jews heirs
according to the first covenant, and us heirs according to promise: "Now I say, as
long as the heir is a child, he differeth nothing from a servant, though he be
lord of all; but is under tutors and governors, till the time appointed by the
father. So also we, when we were children, were in bondage under the rudiments
of the world: but when the fulness of the time was came, God sent forth His
Son, made of a woman, made under the law, to redeem them that were under the law,
that we might receive the adoption of sons "[1] by Him. See how He has
admitted those to be children who are under fear and sins; but has conferred manhood
on those who are under faith, by calling them sons, in contradistinction from
the children that are under the law: "For thou art no more a servant," he says,
"but a son; and if a son, then an heir through God."[2] What, then, is lacking
to the son after inheritance? Wherefore the expression, "When I was a child,"
may be elegantly expounded thus: that is, when I was a Jew (for he was a Hebrew
by extraction) I thought as a child, when I followed the law; but after becoming
a man, I no longer entertain the sentiments of a child, that is, of the law,
but of a man, that is, of Christ, whom alone the Scripture calls man, as we have
said before. "I put away childish things." But the childhood which is in
Christ is maturity, as compared with the law. Having reached this point, we must
defend our childhood. And we have still to explain what is said by the apostle: "I
have fed you with milk (as children in Christ), not with meat; for ye were not
able, neither yet are ye now able."[3] For it does not appear to me that the
expression is to be taken in a Jewish sense; for I shall oppose to it also that
Scripture, "I will bring you into that good land which flows with milk and
honey."[4] A very great difficulty arises in reference to the comparison of these
Scriptures, when we consider. For if the infancy which is characterized by the
milk is the beginning of faith in Christ, then it is disparaged as childish and
imperfect. How is the rest that comes after the meat, the rest of the man who
is perfect and endowed with knowledge, again distinguished by infant milk? Does
not this, as explaining a parable, mean something like this, and is not the
expression to be read somewhat to the following effect: "I have fed you with milk
in Christ; " and after a slight stop, let us add, "as children," that by
separating the words in reading we may make out some such sense as this: I have
instructed you in Christ with simple, true, and natural nourishment,--namely, that
which is spiritual: for such is the nourishing substance of milk swelling out
from breasts of love. So that the whole matter may be conceived thus: As nurses
nourish new-born children on milk, so do I also by the Word, the milk of Christ,
instilling into you spiritual nutriment.
Thus, then, the milk which is perfect is perfect nourishment, and brings
to that consummation which cannot cease. Wherefore also the same milk and honey
were promised in the rest. Rightly, therefore, the Lord again promises milk to
the righteous, that the Word may be clearly shown to be both, "the Alpha and
Omega, beginning and end;"[5] the Word being figuratively represented as milk.
Something like this Homer oracularly declares against his will, when he calls
righteous men milk-fed (<greek>galaktofagoi</greek>).[6] So also may we take the
Scripture: "And I, brethren, could not speak unto you as unto spiritual, but as
unto carnal, even as unto babes in Christ; "[7] so that the carnal may be
understood as those recently instructed, and still babes in Christ. For he called
those who had already believed on the Holy Spirit spiritual, and those newly
instructed and not yet purified carnal; whom with justice he calls still carnal, as
minding equally with the heathen the things of the flesh: "For whereas there
is among you envy and strife, are ye not carnal, and walk as men?"[8] "Wherefore
also I have given you milk to drink," he says; meaning, I have instilled into
you the knowledge which, from instruction, nourishes up to life eternal. But
the expression, "I have given you to drink" (<greek>epotisa</greek>), is the
symbol of perfect appropriation. For those who are full-grown are said to drink,
babes to suck. "For my blood," says the Lord, "is true drink."[9] In saying,
therefore, "I have given you milk to drink," has he not indicated the knowledge of
the truth, the perfect gladness in the Word, who is the milk? And what follows
next, "not meat, for ye were not able," may indicate the clear revelation in
the future world, like food, face to face. "For now we see as through a glass,"
the same apostle says, "but then face to face."[10] Wherefore also he has added,
"neither yet are ye now able, for ye are still carnal," minding the things of
the flesh,--desiring, loving, feeling jealousy, wrath, envy. "For we are no
more in the flesh,"[11] as some suppose. For with it [they say], having the face
which is like an angel's, we shall see the promise face to face. How then, if
that is truly the promise after our departure hence, say they that they know
"what eye hath not known, nor hath entered into the mind of man," who have not
perceived by the Spirit, but received from instruction "what ear hath not
heard,"[12] or that ear alone which "was rapt up into the third heaven?"[13] But it even
then was commanded to preserve it unspoken.
But if human wisdom, as it remains to understand, is the glorying in
knowledge, hear the law of Scripture: "Let not the wise man glory in his wisdom, and
let not the mighty man glory in his might; but let him that glorieth glory in
the Lord."[1] But we are God-taught, and glory in the name of Christ. How then
are we not to regard the apostle as attaching this sense to the milk of the
babes? And if we who preside over the Churches are shepherds after the image of
the good Shepherd, and you the sheep, are we not to regard the Lord as preserving
consistency in the use of figurative speech, when He speaks also of the milk
of the flock? And to this meaning we may secondly accommodate the expression, "I
have given you milk to drink, and not given you food, for ye are not yet
able," regarding the meat not as something different from the milk, but the same in
substance. For the very same Word is fluid and mild as milk, or solid and
compact as meat. And entertaining this view, we may regard the proclamation of the
Gospel, which is universally diffused, as milk; and as meat, faith, which from
instruction is compacted into a foundation, which, being more substantial than
hearing, is likened to meat, and assimilates to the soul itself nourishment of
this kind. Elsewhere the Lord, in the Gospel according to John, brought this out
by symbols, when He said: "Eat ye my flesh, and drink my blood; "[2]
describing distinctly by metaphor the drinkable properties of faith and the promise, by
means of which the Church, like a human being consisting of many members, is
refreshed and grows, is welded together and compacted of both,--of faith, which
is the body, and of hope, which is the soul; as also the Lord of flesh and
blood. For in reality the blood of faith is hope, in which faith is held as by a
vital principle. And when hope expires, it is as if blood flowed forth; and the
vitality of faith is destroyed. If, then, some would oppose, saying that by milk
is meant the first lessons--as it were, the first food--and that by meat is
meant those spiritual cognitions to which they attain by raising themselves to
knowledge, let them understand that, in saying that meat is solid food, and the
flesh and blood of Jesus, they are brought by their own vainglorious wisdom to
the true simplicity. For the blood is found to be an original product in man, and
some have consequently ventured to call it the substance of the soul. And this
blood, transmuted by a natural process of assimilation in the pregnancy of the
mother, through the sympathy of parental affection, effloresces and grows old,
in order that there may be no fear for the child. Blood, too, is the moister
part of flesh, being a kind of liquid flesh; and milk is the sweeter and finer
part of blood. For whether it be the blood supplied to the foetus, and sent
through the navel of the mother, or whether it be the menses themselves shut out
from their proper passage, and by a natural diffusion, bidden by the
all-nourishing and creating God, proceed to the already swelling breasts, and by the heat
of the spirits transmuted, [whether it be the one or the other] that is formed,
into food desirable for the babe, that which is changed is the blood. For of
all the members, the breasts have the most sympathy with the womb. When there is
parturition, the vessel by which blood was conveyed to the foetus is cut off:
there is an obstruction Of the flow, and the blood receives an impulse towards
the breasts; and on a considerable rush taking place, they are distended, and
change the blood to milk in a manner analogous to the change of blood into pus in
ulceration. Or if, on the other hand, the blood from the veins in the vicinity
of the breasts, which have been opened in pregnancy, is poured into the
natural hollows of the breasts; and the spirit discharged from the neighbouring
arteries being mixed with it, the substance of the blood, still remaining pure, it
becomes white by being agitated like a wave; and by an interruption such as this
is changed by frothing it, like what takes place with the sea, which at the
assaults of the winds, the poets say, "spits forth briny foam." Yet still the
essence is supplied by the blood.
In this way also the rivers, borne on with rushing motion, and fretted by
contact with the surrounding air, murmur forth foam. The moisture in our mouth,
too, is whitened by the breath. What an absurdity[3] is it, then, not to
acknowledge that the blood is converted into that very bright and white substance by
the breath! The change it suffers is in quality, not in essence. You will
certainly find nothing else more nourishing, or sweeter, or whiter than milk. In
every respect, accordingly, it is like spiritual nourishment, which is sweet
through grace, nourishing as life, bright as the day of Christ.
The blood of the Word has been also exhibited as milk. Milk being thus
provided in parturition, is supplied to the infant; and the breasts, which till
then looked straight towards the husband, now bend down towards the child, being
taught to furnish the substance elaborated by nature in a way easily received
for salutary nourishment. For the breasts are not like fountains full of milk,
flowing in ready prepared; but, by effecting a change in the nutriment, form the
milk in themselves, and discharge it. And the nutriment suitable and wholesome
for the new-formed and new-born babe is elaborated by God, the nourisher and
the Father of all that are generated and regenerated,--as manna, the celestial
food of angels, flowed down from heaven on the ancient Hebrews. Even now, in
fact, nurses call the first-poured drink of milk by the same name as that
food--manna. Further, pregnant women, on becoming mothers, discharge milk. But the Lord
Christ, the fruit of the Virgin, did not pronounce the breasts of women
blessed, nor selected them to give nourishment; but when the kind and loving Father
had rained down the Word, Himself became spiritual nourishment to the good. O
mystic marvel! The universal Father is one, and one the universal Word; and the
Holy Spirit is one and the same everywhere, and one is the only virgin mother. I
love to call her the Church. This mother, when alone, had not milk, because
alone she was not a woman. But she is once virgin and mother--pure as a virgin,
loving as a mother. And calling her children to her, she nurses them with holy
milk, viz., with the Word for childhood. Therefore she had not milk; for the
milk was this child fair and comely, the body of Christ, which nourishes by the
Word the young brood, which the Lord Himself brought forth in throes of the
flesh, which the Lord Himself swathed in His precious blood. O amazing birth! O holy
swaddling bands! The Word is all to the child, both father and mother and
tutor and nurse. "Eat ye my flesh," He says, "and drink my blood."[1] Such is the
suitable food which the Lord ministers, and He offers His flesh and pours forth
His blood, and nothing is wanting for the children's growth. O amazing mystery
l We are enjoined to cast off the old and carnal corruption, as also the old
nutriment, receiving in exchange another new regimen, that of Christ, receiving
Him if we can, to hide Him within; and that, enshrining the Saviour in our
souls, we may correct the affections of our flesh.
But you are not inclined to understand it thus, but perchance more
generally. Hear it also in the following way. The flesh figuratively represents to us
the Holy Spirit; for the flesh was created by Him. The blood points out to us
the Word, for as rich blood the Word has been infused into life; and the union
of both is the Lord, the food of the babes--the Lord who is Spirit and Word. The
food- that is, the Lord Jesus--that is, the Word of God, the Spirit made
flesh, the heavenly flesh sanctified. The nutriment is the milk of the Father, by
which alone we infants are nourished. The Word Himself, then, the beloved One,
and our nourisher, hath shed His own blood for us, to save humanity; and by Him,
we, believing on God, flee to the Word, "the care-soothing breast" of the
Father. And He alone, as is befitting, supplies us children with the milk of love,
and those only are truly Messed who suck this breast. Wherefore also Peter says:
"Laying therefore aside all malice, and all guile, and hypocrisy, and envy,
and evil speaking, as new-born babes, desire the milk of the word, that ye may
grow by it to salvation; if ye have tasted that the Lord is Christ."[2] And were
one to concede to them that the meat was something different from the milk,
then how shall they avoid being transfixed on their own spit, through want of
consideration of nature?[3] For in winter, when the air is condensed, and prevents
the escape of the heat enclosed within, the food, transmuted and digested and
changed into blood, passes into the veins, and these, in the absence of
exhalation, are greatly distended, and exhibit strong pulsations; consequently also
nurses are then fullest of milk. And we have shown a little above, that on
pregnancy blood passes into milk by a change which does not affect its substance, just
as in old people yellow hair changes to grey. But again in summer, the body,
having its pores more open, affords greater facility for diaphoretic action in
the case of the food, and the milk is least abundant, since neither is the blood
full, nor is the whole nutriment retained. If, then, the digestion of the food
results in the production of blood, and the blood becomes milk, then blood is
a preparation for milk, as blood is for a human being, and the grape for the
vine. With milk, then, the Lord's nutriment, we are nursed directly we are born;
and as soon as we are regenerated, we are honoured by receiving the good news
of the hope of rest, even the Jerusalem above, in which it is written that milk
and honey fall in showers, receiving through what is material the pledge of the
sacred food. "For meats are done away with,"[4] as the apostle himself says;
but this nourishment on milk leads to the heavens, rearing up citizens of
heaven, and members of the angelic choirs. And since the Word is the gushing fountain
of life, and has been called a river of olive oil, Paul, using appropriate
figurative language, and calling Him milk, adds: "I have given you to drink;"[5]
for we drink in the word, the nutriment of the truth. In truth, also liquid food
is called drink; and the same thing may somehow be both meat and drink,
according to the different aspects in which it is considered, just as cheese is the
solidification of milk or milk solidified; for I am not concerned here to make a
nice selection of an expression, only to say that one substance supplies both
articles of food. Besides, for children at the breast, milk alone suffices; it
serves both for meat and drink. "I," says the Lord, "have meat to eat that ye
know not of. My meat is to do the will of Him that sent Me."[1] You see another
kind of food which, similarly with milk, represents figuratively the will of
God. Besides, also, the completion of His own passion He called catachrestically
"a cup,"[2] when He alone had to drink and drain it. Thus to Christ the
fulfilling of His Father's will was food; and to us infants, who drink the milk of the
word of the heavens, Christ Himself is food. Hence seeking is called sucking;
for to those babes that seek the Word, the Father's breasts of love supply milk.
Further, the Word declares Himself to be the bread of heaven. "For Moses,"
He says, "gave you not that bread from heaven, but My Father giveth you the
true bread from heaven. For the bread of God is He that cometh down from heaven,
and giveth life to the world. And the bread which I will give is My flesh,
which I will give for the life of the world."[3] Here is to be noted the mystery of
the bread, inasmuch as He speaks of it as flesh, and as flesh, consequently,
that has risen through fire, as the wheat springs up from decay and germination;
and, in truth, it has risen through fire for the joy of the Church, as bread
baked. But this will be shown by and by more clearly in the chapter on the
resurrection. But since He said, "And the bread which I will give is My flesh," and
since flesh is moistened with blood, and blood is figuratively termed wine, we
are bidden to know that, as bread, crumbled into a mixture of wine and water,
seizes on the wine and leaves the watery portion, so also the flesh of Christ,
the bread of heaven absorbs the blood; that is, those among men who are
heavenly, nourishing them up to immortality, and leaving only to destruction the lusts
of the flesh.
Thus in many ways the Word is figuratively described, as meat, and flesh,
and food, and bread, and blood, and milk. The Lord is all these, to give
enjoyment to us who have believed on Him. Let no one then think it strange, when we
say that the Lord's blood is figuratively represented as milk. For is it not
figuratively represented as wine? "Who washes," it is said, "His garment in wine,
His robe in the blood of the grape."[4] In His Own Spirit He says He will deck
the body of the Word; as certainly by His own Spirit He will nourish those who
hunger for the Word.
And that the blood is the Word, is testified by the blood of Abel,[5] the
righteous interceding with God. For the blood would never have uttered a voice,
had it not been regarded as the Word: for the righteous man of old is the type
of the new righteous one; and the blood of old that interceded, intercedes in
the place of the new blood. And the blood that is the Word cries to God, since
it intimated that the Word was to suffer.
Further, this flesh, and the blood in it, are by a mutual sympathy
moistened and increased by the milk. And the process of formation of the seed in
conception ensues when it has mingled with the pure residue of the menses, which
remains. For the force that is in the seed coagulating the substances of the
blood, as the rennet curdles milk, effects the essential part of the formative
process. For a suitable blending conduces to fruitfulness; but extremes are adverse,
and tend to sterility. For when the earth itself is flooded by excessive rain,
the seed is swept away, while in consequence of scarcity it is dried up; but
when the sap is viscous, it retains the seed, and makes it germinate. Some also
hold the hypothesis, that the seed of an animal is in substance the foam of the
blood, which being by the natural heat of the male agitated and shaken out is
turned into foam, and deposited in the seminal veins. For Diogenes Apollionates
will have it, that hence is derived the word aphrodisia.[6]
From all this it is therefore evident, that the essential principle of the
human body is blood. The contents of the stomach, too, at first are milky, a
coagulation of fluid; then the same coagulated substance is changed into blood;
but when it is formed into a compact consistency in the womb, by the natural
and warm spirit by which the embryo is fashioned, it becomes a living creature.
Further also, the child after birth is nourished by the same blood. For the flow
of milk is the product of the blood; and the source of nourishment is the
milk; by which a woman is shown to have brought forth a child, and to be truly a
mother, by which also she receives a potent charm of affection. Wherefore the
Holy Spirit in the apostle, using the voice of the Lord, says mystically, "I have
given you milk to drink."[7] For if we have been regenerated unto Christ, He
who has regenerated us nourishes us with His own milk, the Word; for it is proper
that what has procreated should forthwith supply nourishment to that which has
been procreated. And as the regeneration was conformably spiritual, so also
was the nutriment of man spiritual. In all respects, therefore, and in all
things, we are brought into union with Christ, into relationship through His blood,
by which we are redeemed; and into sympathy, in consequence of the nourishment
which flows from the Word; and into immortality, through His guidance:--
"Among men the bringing up of children
Often produces stronger impulses to love than the
procreating of them."
The same blood and milk of the Lord is therefore the symbol of the Lord's
passion and teaching. Wherefore each of us babes is permitted to make our boast in
the Lord, while we proclaim:--
"Yet of a noble sire and noble blood I boast me sprung."[1]
And that milk is produced from blood by a change, is already clear; yet we may
learn it from the flocks and herds. For these animals, in the time of the year
which we call spring, when the air has more humidity, and the grass and
meadows are juicy. and moist, are first filled with blood, as is shown by the
distension of the veins of the swollen vessels; and from the blood the milk flows more
copiously. But in summer again, the blood being burnt and dried up by the
heat, prevents the change, and so they have less milk.
Further, milk has a most natural affinity for water, as assuredly the
spiritual washing has for the spiritual nutriment. Those, therefore, that swallow a
little cold water, in addition to the above-mentioned milk, straightway feel
benefit; for the milk is prevented from souring by its combination with water,
not in consequence of any antipathy between them, but in consequence of the
water taking kindly to the milk while it is undergoing digestion.
And such as is the union of the Word with baptism, is the agreement of
milk with water; for it receives it alone of all liquids, and admits of mixture
with water, for the purpose of cleansing, as baptism for the remission of sins.
And it is mixed naturally with honey also, and this for cleansing along with
sweet nutriment. For the Word blended with love at once cures our passions and
cleanses our sins; and the saying,
"Sweeter than honey flowed the stream of speech,"[2]
seems to me to have been spoken of the Word, who is honey. And prophecy oft
extols Him "above honey and the honeycomb."[3]
Furthermore, milk is mixed with sweet wine; and the mixture is beneficial,
as when suffering is mixed in the cup in order to immortality. For the milk is
curdled by the wine, and separated, and whatever adulteration is in it is
drained off. And in the same way, the spiritual communion of faith with suffering
man, drawing off as serous matter the lusts of the flesh, commits man to
eternity, along with those who are divine, immortalizing him.
Further, many also use the fat of milk, called butter, for the lamp,
plainly indicating by this enigma the abundant unction of the Word, since He alone
it is who nourishes the infants, makes them grow, and enlightens them. Wherefore
also the Scripture says respecting the Lord," He fed them with the produce of
the fields; they sucked honey from the rock, and oil from the solid rock,
butter of kine, and milk of sheep, with fat of lambs;"[4] and what follows He gave
them. But he that prophesies the birth of the child says: "Butter and honey
shall He eat."[5] And it occurs to me to wonder how some dare call themselves
perfect and gnostics, with ideas of themselves above the apostle, inflated and
boastful, when Paul even owned respecting himself, "Not that I have already
attained, or am already perfect; but I follow after, if that I may apprehend that for
which I am apprehended of Christ. Brethren, I count not myself to have
apprehended: but this one thing I do, forgetting the things which are behind, and
stretching forth to those that are before, I press toward the mark, for the prize of
the high calling in Christ Jesus."[6] And yet he reckons himself perfect,
because he has been emancipated from his former life, and strives after the better
life, not as perfect in knowledge, but as aspiring after perfection. Wherefore
also he adds, "As many of us as are perfect, are thus minded,"[7] manifestly
describing perfection as the renunciation of sin, and regeneration into the faith
of the only perfect One, and forgetting our former sins.
CHAP. VII.--WHO THE INSTRUCTOR IS, AND RESPECTING HIS INSTRUCTION.
Since, then, we have shown that all of us are by Scripture called
children; and not only so, but that we who have followed Christ are figuratively called
babes; and that the Father of all alone is perfect, for the Son is in Him, and
the Father is in the Son; it is time for us in due course to say who our
Instructor is.
He is called Jesus: Sometimes He calls Himself a shepherd, and says, "I am
the good Shepherd."[8] According to a metaphor drawn from shepherdS, who lead
the sheep, is hereby understood the Instructor, who leads the children--the
Shepherd who tends the babes. For the babes are simple, being figuratively
described as sheep. "And they shall all," it is said, "be one flock, and one
shepherd."[9] The Word, then, who leads the children to salvation, is appropriately
called the Instructor[1] (Paedagogue).
With the greatest clearness, accordingly, the Word has spoken respecting
Himself by Hosea: "I am your Instructor."[2] Now piety is instruction, being the
learning of the service of God, and training in the knowledge of the truth,
and right guidance which leads to heaven. And the word "instruction"[3] is
employed variously. For there is the instruction of him who is led and learns, and
that of him who leads and teaches; and there is, thirdly, the guidance itself;
and fourthly, what is taught, as the commandments enjoined.
Now the instruction which is of God is the right direction of truth to the
contemplation of God, and the exhibition of holy deeds in everlasting
perseverance.
As therefore the general directs the phalanx, consulting the safety of his
soldiers, and the pilot steers the vessel, desiring to save the passengers; so
also the Instructor guides the children to a saving course of conduct, through
solicitude for us; and, in general, whatever we ask in accordance with reason
from God to be done for us, will happen to those who believe in the Instructor.
And just as the helmsman does not always yield to the winds, but sometimes,
turning the prow towards them, opposes the whole force of the hurricanes; so the
Instructor never yields to the blasts that blow in this world, nor commits the
child to them like a vessel to make shipwreck on a wild and licentious course
of life; but, wafted on by the favouring breeze of the Spirit of truth, stoutly
holds on to the child's helm,--his ears, I mean,--until He bring him safe to
anchor in the haven of heaven.
What is called by men an ancestral custom passes away in a moment, but the
divine guidance is a possession which abides for ever.
They say that Phoenix was the instructor of Achilles, and Adrastus of the
children of Croesus; and Leonides of Alexander, and Nausithous of Philip. But
Phoenix was women-mad Adrastus was a fugitive. Leonides did not curtail the
pride of Alexander, nor Nausithous reform the drunken Pellaean. No more was the
Thracian Zopyrus able to check the fornication of Alcibiades; but Zopyrus was a
bought slave, and Sicinnus, the tutor of the children of Themistocles, was a lazy
domestic. They say also that he invented the Sicinnian dance. Those have not
escaped our attention who are called royal instructors among the Persians; whom,
in number four, the kings of the Persians select with the greatest care from
all the Persians and set over their sons. But the children only learn the use of
the bow, and on reaching maturity have sexual intercourse with sisters, and
mothers, and women, wives and courtesans innumerable, practised in intercourse
like the wild boars.
But our Instructor is the holy God Jesus, the Word, who is the guide of
all humanity. The loving God Himself is our Instructor. Somewhere in song the
Holy Spirit says with regard to Him, "He provided sufficiently for the people in
the wilderness. He led him about in the thirst of summer heat in a dry land, and
instructed him, and kept him as the apple of His eye, as an eagle protects her
nest, and shows her fond solicitude for her young, spreads abroad her wings,
takes them, and bears them on her back. The Lord alone led them, and there was
no strange god with them."[4] Clearly, I trow, has the Scripture exhibited the
Instructor in the account it gives of His guidance.
Again, when He speaks in His own person, He confesses Himself to be the
Instructor: "I am the Lord thy God, who brought thee out of the land of
Egypt."[5] Who, then, has the power of leading in and out? Is it not the Instructor?
This was He who appeared to Abraham, and said to him, "I am thy God, be accepted
before Me;"[6] and in a way most befitting an instructor, forms him into a
faithful child, saying, "And be blameless; and I will make My covenant between Me
and thee, and try seed." There is the communication of the Instructor's
friendship. And He most manifestly appears as Jacob's instructor. He says accordingly to
him, "Lo, I am with thee, to keep thee in all the way in which thou shalt go;
and I will bring thee back into this land: for I will not leave thee till I do
what I have told thee."[7] He is said, too, to have wrestled with Him. "And
Jacob was left alone, and there wrestled with him a man (the Instructor) till the
morning."[8] This was the man who led, and brought, and wrestled with, and
anointed the athlete Jacob against evil.[9] Now that the Word was at once Jacob's
trainer and the Instructor of humanity [appears from this]--"He asked," it is
said, "His name, and said to him, Tell me what is Try name." And he said, "Why is
it that thou askest My name?" For He reserved the new name for the new
people--the babe; and was as yet unnamed, the Lord God not having yet become man. Yet
Jacob called the name of the place, "Face of God." "For I have seen," he says,
"God face to face; and my life is preserved."[10] The face of God is the Word
by whom God is manifested and made known. Then also was he named Israel, because
he saw God the Lord. It was God, the Word, the Instructor, who said to him
again afterwards, "Fear not to go down into Egypt."[1] See how the Instructor
follows the righteous man, and how He anoints the athlete, teaching him to trip up
his antagonist.
It is He also who teaches Moses to act as instructor. For the Lord says,
"If any one sin before Me, him will I blot out of My book; but now, go and lead
this people into the place which I told thee."[2] Here He is the teacher of the
art of instruction. For it was really the Lord that was the instructor of the
ancient people by Moses; but He is the instructor of the new people by Himself,
face to face. "For behold," He says to Moses, "My angel shall go before thee,"
representing the evangelical and commanding power of the Word, but guarding
the Lord's prerogative. "In the day on which I will visit them,"[3] He says, "I
will bring their sins on them; that is, on the day on which I will sit as judge
I will render the recompense of their sins." For the same who is Instructor is
judge, and judges those who disobey Him; and the loving Word will not pass over
their transgression in silence. He reproves, that they may repent. For "the
Lord willeth the repentance of the sinner rather than his death."[4] And let us
as babes, hearing of the sins of others, keep from similar transgressions,
through dread of the threatening, that we may not have to undergo like sufferings.
What, then, was the sin which they committed? "For in their wrath they slew men,
and in their impetuosity they hamstrung bulls. Cursed be their anger."[5] Who,
then, would train us more lovingly than He? Formerly the older people had an
old covenant, and the law disciplined the people with fear, and the Word was an
angel; but to the fresh and new people has also been given a new covenant, and
the Word has appeared, and fear is turned to love, and that mystic angel is
born--Jesus. For this same Instructor said then, "Thou shalt fear the Lord
God;"[6] but to us He has addressed the exhortation, "Thou shalt love the Lord thy
God."[7] Wherefore also this is enjoined on us: "Cease from your own works, from
your old sins;" "Learn to do well;" "Depart from evil, and do good;" "Thou hast
loved righteousness, and hated iniquity." This is my new covenant written in
the old letter. The newness of the word must not, then, be made ground of
reproach. But the Lord hath also said in Jeremiah: "Say not that I am a youth: before
I formed thee in the belly I knew thee, and before I brought thee out of the
womb I sanctified thee."[8] Such allusions prophecy can make to us, destined in
the eye of God to faith before the foundation of the world; but now babes,
through the recent fulfilment of the will of God, according to which we are born now
to calling and salvation. Wherefore also He adds, "I have set thee for a
prophet to the nations,"[9] saying that he must prophesy, so that the appellation of
"youth" should not become a reproach to those who are called babes.
Now the law is ancient grace given through Moses by the Word. Wherefore
also the Scripture says, "The law was given through Moses,"[10] not by Moses, but
by the Word, and through Moses His servant. Wherefore it was only temporary;
but eternal grace and truth were by Jesus Christ. Mark the expressions of
Scripture: of the law only is it said "was given;" but truth being the grace of the
Father, is the eternal work of the Word; and it is not said to be given, but to
be by Jesus, without whom nothing was.[11] Presently, therefore, Moses
prophetically, giving place to the perfect Instructor the Word, predicts both the name
and the office of Instructor, and committing to the people the commands of
obedience, sets before them the Instructor. "A prophet," says he, "like Me shall
God raise up to you of your brethren," pointing out Jesus the Son of God, by an
allusion to Jesus the son of Nun; for the name of Jesus predicted in the law was
a shadow of Christ. He adds, therefore, consulting the advantage of the
people, "Him shall ye hear;"[12] and, "The man who will not hear that Prophet,"[13]
him He threatens. Such a name, then, he predicts as that of the Instructor, who
is the author of salvation. Wherefore prophecy invests Him with a rod, a rod of
discipline, of rule, of authority; that those whom the persuasive word heals
not, the threatening may heal; and whom the threatening heals not, the rod may
heal; and whom the rod heals not, the fire may devour. "There shall come forth,"
it is said, "a rod out of the root of Jesse."[14]
See the care, and wisdom, and power of the Instructor: "He shall not judge
according to opinion, nor according to report; but He shall dispense judgment
to the humble, and reprove the sinners of the earth." And by David: "The Lord
instructing, hath instructed me, and not given me over to death."[15] For to be
chastised of the Lord, and instructed, is deliverance from death. And by the
same prophet He says: "Thou shalt rule them with a rod of iron."[1] Thus also the
apostle, in the Epistle to the Corinthians, being moved, says, "What will ye?
Shall I come unto you with a rod, or in love, in the spirit of meekness?"[2]
Also, "The Lord shall send the rod of strength out of Sion,"[3] He says by
another prophet. And this same rod of instruction, "Thy rod and staff have comforted
me,"[4] said some one else. Such is the power of the Instructor--sacred,
soothing, saving.
CHAP. VIII.--AGAINST THOSE WHO THINK THAT WHAT IS JUST IS NOT GOOD.
At this stage some rise up, saying that the Lord, by reason of the rod,
and threatening, and fear, is not good; misapprehending, as appears, the
Scripture which says, "And he that feareth the Lord will turn to his heart;"[5] and
most of all, oblivious of His love, in that for us He became man. For more
suitably to Him, the prophet prays in these words: "Remember us, for we are dust;"[6]
that: is, Sympathize with us; for Thou knowest from personal experience of
suffering the weakness of the flesh. In this respect, therefore, the Lord the
Instructor is most good and unimpeachable, sympathizing as He does from the
exceeding greatness of His love with the nature of each man. "For there is nothing
which the Lord hates."[7] For assuredly He does not hate anything, and yet wish
that which He hates to exist Nor does He wish anything not to exist, and yet
become the cause of existence to that which He wishes not to exist. Nor does He wish
anything not to exist which yet exists. If, then, the Word hates anything, He
does not wish it to exist. But nothing exists, the cause of whose existence is
not supplied by God. Nothing, then, is hated by God, nor yet by the Word. For
both are one--that is, God. For He has said, "In the beginning the Word was in
God, and the Word was God."[8] If then He hates none of the things which He has
made, it follows that He loves them. Much more than the rest, and with reason,
will He love man, the noblest of all objects created by Him, and a God-loving
being. Therefore God is loving; consequently the Word is loving.
But he who loves anything wishes to do it good. And that which does good
must be every way better than that which does not good. But nothing is better
than the Good. The Good, then, does good. And God is admitted to be good. God
therefore does good. And the Good, in virtue of its being good, does nothing else
than do good. Consequently God does all good. And He does no good to man
without caring for him, and He does not care far him without taking care of him. For
that which does good purposely, is better than what does not good purposely.
But nothing is better than God. And to do good purposely, is nothing else than to
take care of man. God therefore cares for man, and takes care of him. And He
shows this practically, in instructing him by the Word, who is the true
coadjutor of God's love to man. But the good is not said to be good, on account of its
being possessed of virtue; as also righteousness is not said to be good on
account of its possessing virtue--for it is itself virtue.--but on account of its
being in itself and by itself good.
In another way the useful is called good, not on account of its pleasing,
but of its doing good. All which, therefore, is righteousness, being a good
thing, both as virtue and as desirable for its own sake, and not as giving
pleasure; for it does not judge in order to win favour, but dispenses to each
according to his merits. And the beneficial follows the useful. Righteousness,
therefore, has characteristics corresponding to all the aspects in which goodness is
examined, both possessing equal properties equally. And things which are
characterized by equal properties are equal and similar to each other. Righteousness is
therefore a good thing.
"How then," say they, "if the Lord loves man, and is good, is He angry and
punishes?" We must therefore treat of this point with all possible brevity;
for this mode of treatment is advantageous to the right training of the children,
occupying the place of a necessary help. For many of the passions are cured by
punishment, and by the inculcation of the sterner precepts, as also by
instruction in certain principles. For reproof is, as it were, the surgery of the
passions of the soul; and the passions are, as it were, an abscess of the truth,[9]
which must be cut open by an incision of the lancet of reproof.
Reproach is like the application of medicines, dissolving the callosities
of the passions, and purging the impurities of the lewdness of the life; and in
addition, reducing the excrescences of pride, restoring the patient to the
healthy and true state of humanity.
Admonition. is, as it were, the regimen of the diseased soul, prescribing
what it must take, and forbidding what it must not. And all these tend to
salvation and eternal health.
Furthermore, the general of an army, by inflicting fines and corporeal
punishments with chains and the extremest disgrace on offenders, and sometimes
even by punishing individuals with death, aims at good, doing so for the
admonition of the officers under him.
Thus also He who is our great General, the Word, the Commander-in-chief of
the universe by admonishing those who throw off the restraints of His law,
that He may effect their release from the slavery, error, and captivity of the
adversary, brings them peacefully to the sacred concord of citizenship.
As, therefore in addition to persuasive discourse, there is the hortatory
and the consolatory form; so also, in addition to the laudatory, there is the
inculpatory and reproachful. And this latter constitutes the art of censure. Now
censure is a mark of good-will, not of ill-will. For both he who is a friend
and he who is not, reproach; but the enemy does so in scorn, the friend in
kindness. It is not, then, from hatred that the Lord chides men; for He Himself
suffered for us, whom He might have destroyed for our faults. For the Instructor
also, in virtue of His being good, with consummate art glides into censure by
rebuke; rousing the sluggishness of the mind by His sharp words as by a scourge.
Again in turn He endeavours to exhort the same persons. For those who are not
induced by praise are spurred on by censure; and those whom censure calls not
forth to salvation being as dead, are by denunciation roused to the truth. "For
the stripes and correction of wisdom are in all time." "For teaching a fool is
gluing a potsherd; and sharpening to sense a hopeless blockhead is bringing earth
to sensation."' Wherefore He adds plainly, "rousing the sleeper from deep
sleep," which of all things else is likest death.
Further, the Lord shows very clearly of HimSelf, when, describing
figuratively His manifold and in many ways serviceable culture,--He says, "I am the
true vine, and my Father is the husbandman." Then He adds, "Every branch in me
that beareth not fruit He taketh away; and every branch that beareth fruit He
pruneth, that it may bring forth more fruit."[2] For the vine that is not pruned
grows to wood. So also man. The Word--the knife--clears away the wanton shoots;
compelling the impulses of the soul to fructify, not to indulge in lust. Now,
reproof addressed to sinners has their salvation for its aim, the word being
harmoniously adjusted to each one's conduct; now with tightened, now. with relaxed
cords. Accordingly it was very plainly said by Moses," Be of good courage: God
has drawn near to try you, that His fear may be among you, that ye sin not."[3]
And Plato, who had learned from this source, says beautifully: "For all who
suffer punishment are in reality treated well, for they are benefited; since the
spirit of those who are justly punished is improved." And if those who are
corrected receive good at the hands of justice, and, according to Plato, what is
just is acknowledged to be good, fear itself does good, and has been found to be
for men's good. "For the soul that feareth the Lord shall live, for their hope
is in Him who saveth them."[4] And this same Word who inflicts punishment is
judge; regarding whom Esaias also says, "The Lord has assigned Him to our
sins,"[5] plainly as a corrector and reformer of sins. Wherefore He alone is able to
forgive our iniquities, who has been appointed by the Father, Instructor of us
all; He alone it is who is able to distinguish between disobedience and
obedience. And while He threatens, He manifestly is unwilling to inflict evil to
execute His threatenings; but by inspiring men with fear, He cuts off the approach to
sin, and shows His love to man, still delaying, and declaring what they shall
suffer if they continue sinners, and is not as a serpent, which the moment it
fastens on its prey devours it.
God, then, is good. And the Lord speaks many a time and oft before He
proceeds to act. "For my arrows," He says, "will make an end of them; they shall be
consumed with hunger, and be eaten by birds; and there shall be incurable
tetanic incurvature. I will send the teeth of wild beasts upon them, with the rage
of serpents creeping on the earth. Without, the sword shall make them
childless; and out of their chambers shall be fear."[6] For the Divine Being is not
angry in the way that some think; but often restrains, and always exhorts humanity,
and shows what ought to be done. And this is a good device, to terrify lest we
sin. "For the fear of the Lord drives away sins, and he that is without fear
cannot be justified,"[7] says the Scripture. And God does not inflict punishment
from wrath, but for the ends of justice; since it is not expedient that
justice should be neglected on our account. Each one of us, who sins, with his own
free-will chooses punishment, and the blame lies with him who chooses.[8] God is
without blame. "But if our unrighteousness commend the righteousness of God,
what shall we say? Is God unrighteous, who taketh vengeance? God forbid."[9] He
says, therefore, threatening," I will sharpen my sword, and my hand shall lay
hold on judgment; and I will render justice to mine enemies, and requite those
who hate me. I will make mine arrows drunk with blood, and my sword shall devour
flesh from the blood of the wounded."[1] It is clear, then, that those who are
not at enmity with the truth, and do not hate the Word, will not hate their own
salvation, but will escape the punishment of enmity. "The crown of wisdom,"
then as the book of Wisdom says, "is the fear of the Lord."[2] Very clearly,
therefore, by the prophet Amos has the Lord unfolded His method of dealing, saying,
"I have overthrown you, as God overthrew Sodom and Gomorrah; and ye shall be
as a brand plucked from the fire: and yet ye have not returned unto me, saith
the LORD."[3]
See how God, through His love of goodness, seeks repentance; and by means
of the plan He pursues of threatening silently, shows His own love for man. "I
will avert," He says, "My face from them, and show what shall happen to
them."[4] For where the face of the Lord looks, there is peace and rejoicing; but
where it is averted, there is the introduction of evil. The Lord, accordingly, does
not wish to look on evil things; for He is good. But on His looking away, evil
arises spontaneously through human unbelief. "Behold, therefore," says Paul,
"the goodness and severity of God: on them that fell severity; but upon thee,
goodness, if thou continue in His goodness,"[5] that is, in faith in Christ.
Now hatred of evil attends the good man, in virtue of His being in nature
good. Wherefore I will grant that He punishes the disobedient (for punishment
is for the good and advantage of him who is punished, for it is the correction
of a refractory subject); but I will not grant that He wishes to take vengeance.
Revenge is retribution for evil, imposed for the advantage of him who takes
the revenge. He will not desire us to take revenge, who teaches us "to pray for
those that despitefully use us."[6] But that God is good, all willingly admit;
and that the same God is just, I require not many more words to prove, after
adducing the evangelical utterance of the Lord; He speaks of Him as one, "That
they all may be one; as Thou, Father, art in Me, and I in Thee, that they also may
be one in Us: that the world also may believe that Thou hast sent Me. And the
glory which Thou hast given Me I have given them; that they may be one, as We
are one: I in them, and Thou in Me, that they may be made perfect in one."[7]
God is one, and beyond the one and above the Monad itself. Wherefore also the
particle "Thou," having a demonstrative emphasis, points out God, who alone truly
is, "who was, and is, and is to come," in which three divisions of time the one
name (<greek>o</greek> <greek>wn</greek>); "who is,"[8] has its place. And
that He who alone is God is also alone and truly righteous, our Lord in the Gospel
itself shall testify, saying "Father, I will that they also whom Thou hast
given Me be with Me where I am; that they may behold My glory, which Thou hast
given Me: For Thou lovedst Me before the foundation of the world. O righteous
Father, the world hath not known Thee: but I have known Thee, and these have known
that Thou hast sent Me. And I have declared to them Thy name, and will declare
it."[9] This is He "that visits the iniquities of the fathers upon the
children, to them that hate Him, and shows mercy to those that love Him."[10] For He
who placed some "on the right hand, and others on the left,"[11] conceived as
Father, being good, is called that which alone He is--" good;"[12] but as He is
the Son in the Father, being his Word, from their mutual relation, the name of
power being measured by equality of love, He is called righteous. "He will
judge," He says, "a man according to his works,"[13]--a good balance, even God having
made known to us the face of righteousness in the person of Jesus, by whom
also, as by even scales, we know God. Of this also the book of Wisdom plainly
says, "For mercy and wrath are with Him, for He alone is Lord of both," Lord of
propitiations, and pouring forth wrath according to the abundance of His mercy.
"So also is His reproof."[14] For the aim of mercy and of reproof is the
salvation of those who are reproved.
Now, that the God and Father of our Lord Jesus is good, the Word Himself
will again avouch: "For He is kind to the unthankful and the evil;" and further,
when He says," Be merciful, as your Father is merciful."[15] Still further
also He plainly says, "None is good, but My Father, who is in heaven."[16] In
addition to these, again He says, "My Father makes His sun to shine on all."[17]
Here it is to be noted that He proclaims His Father to be good, and to be the
Creator. And that the Creator is just, is not disputed: And again he says," My
Father sends rain on the just, and on the unjust." In respect of His sending rain,
He is the Creator of the waters, and of the clouds. And in respect of His
doing so on all, He holds an even balance justly and rightly. And as being good, He
does so on just and unjust alike.
Very clearly, then, we conclude Him to be one and the same God, thus. For
the Holy Spirit has sung, "I will look to the heavens, the works of Thy
hands;"[1] and, "He who created the heavens dwells in the heavens;" and, "Heaven is
Thy throne."[2] And the Lord says in His prayer, "Our Father, who art in
heaven."[3] And the heavens belong to Him, who created the world. It is indisputable,
then, that the Lord is the Son of the Creator. And if, the Creator above all is
confessed to be just, and the Lord to be the Son of the Creator; then the Lord
is the Son of Him who is just. Wherefore also Paul says, "But now the
righteousness of God without the law is manifested;"[4] and again, that you may better
conceive of God, "even the righteousness of God by the faith of Jesus Christ
upon all that believe; for there is no difference."[5] And, witnessing further to
the truth, he adds after a little, "through the forbearance of God, in order to
show that He is just, and that Jesus is the justifier of him who is of faith."
And that he knows that what is just is good, appears by his saying, "So that
the law is holy, and the commandment holy, and just, and good,"[6] using both
names to denote the same power. But "no one is good," except His Father. It is
this same Father of His, then who being one is manifested by many powers And this
was the import of the utterance, "No man knew the Father,"[7] who was Himself
everything before the coming of the Son. So that it is veritably clear that the
God of all is only one good, just Creator, and the Son in the Father, to whom
be glory for ever and ever, Amen. But it is not inconsistent with the saving
Word, to administer rebuke dictated by solicitude. For this is the medicine of
the divine love to man, by which the blush of modesty breaks forth, and shame at
sin supervenes. For if one must censure, it is necessary also to rebuke; when
it is the time to wound the apathetic soul not mortally, but salutarily,
securing exemption from everlasting death by a little pain.
Great is the wisdom displayed in His instruction, and manifold the modes
of His dealing in order to salvation. For the Instructor testifies to the good,
and summons forth to better things those that are called; dissuades those that
are hastening to do wrong from the attempt, and exhorts them to turn to a
better life. For the one is not without testimony, when the other has been testified
to; and the grace which proceeds from the testimony is very great. Besides,
the feeling of anger (if it is proper to call His admonition anger) is full of
love to man, God condescending to emotion on man's account; for whose sake also
the Word of God became man.
CHAP. IX.--THAT IT IS THE PREROGATIVE OF THE SAME POWER TO BE BENEFICENT AND
TO PUNISH JUSTLY. ALSO THE MANNER OF THE INSTRUCTION OF THE LOGOS.
With all His power, therefore, the Instructor of humanity, the Divine
Word, using all the resources of wisdom, devotes Himself to the saving of the
children, admonishing, upbraiding, blaming, chiding, reproving, threatening,
healing, promising, favouring; and as it were, by many reins, curbing the irrational
impulses of humanity. To speak briefly, therefore, the Lord acts towards us as
we do towards our children. "Hast thou children? correct them," is the
ex