TERTULLIAN -- PART THIRD: ON REPENTANCE
TERTULLIAN.
PART THIRD.
ON REPENTANCE.[1]
[TRANSLATED BY THE REV. S. THELWALL.]
CHAP. I.--OF HEATHEN REPENTANCE.
Repentance, men understand, so far as nature is able, to be an emotion of
the mind arising from disgust' at some previously cherished worse sentiment:
that kind of men I mean which even we ourselves were in days gone by--blind,
without the Lord's light. From the reason of repentance, however, they are just as
far as they are from the Author of reason Himself. Reason, in fact, is a thing
of God, inasmuch as there is nothing which God the Maker of all has not
provided, disposed, ordained by reason--nothing which He has not willed should be
handled and understood by reason. All, therefore, who are ignorant of God, must
necessarily be ignorant also of a thing which is His, because no treasure-house[3]
at all is accessible to strangers. And thus, voyaging all the universal course
of life without the rudder of reason, they know not how to shun the hurricane
which is impending over the world.[4] Moreover, how irrationally they behave in
the practice of repentance, it will be enough briefly to show just by this one
fact, that they! exercise it even in the case of their good deeds. They repent
of good faith, of love, of simple-heartedness, of patience, of mercy, just in
proportion as any deed prompted by these feelings has fallen on thankless soil.
They execrate their own selves for having done good; and that species chiefly
of repentance which is applied to the best works they fix in their heart,
making it their care to remember never again to do a good turn. On repentance for
evil deeds, on the contrary, they lay lighter stress. In short, they make this
same (virtue) a means of sinning more readily than a means of right-doing.
CHAP. II.--TRUE REPENTANCE A THING DIVINE, ORIGINATED BY GOD, AND SUBJECT TO
HIS LAWS.
But if they acted as men who had any part in God, and thereby in reason
also, they would first weigh well the importance of repentance, and would never
apply it in such a way as to make it a ground for convicting themselves of
perverse self-amendment. In short, they would regulate the limit of their repentance,
because they would reach (a limit) in sinning too--by fearing God, I mean. But
where there is no fear, in like manner there is no amendment; where there is
no amendment, repentance is of necessity vain, for it lacks the fruit for which
God sowed it; that is, man's salvation. For God--after so many and so great
sins of human temerity, begun by the first of the race, Adam, after the
condemnation of man, together with the dowry of the world? after his ejection from
paradise and subjection to death--when He had hasted back to His own mercy, did from
that time onward inaugurate repentance in His own self, by rescinding the
sentence of His first wrath, engaging to grant pardon to His own work and image.[6]
And so He gathered together a people for Himself, and fostered them with many
liberal distributions of His bounty, and, after so often finding them most
ungrateful, ever exhorted them to repentance and sent out the voices of the
universal company of the prophets to prophesy. By and by, promising freely the grace
which in the last times He was intending to pour as a flood of light on the
universal world[7] through His Spirit, He bade the baptism of repentance lead the
way, with the view of first preparing,[1] by means of the sign and seal of
repentance, them whom He was calling, through grace, to (inherit) the promise surely
made to Abraham. John holds not his peace, saying, "Enter upon repentance, for
now shall salvation approach the nations"[2]--the Lord, that is, bringing
salvation according to God's promise. To Him John, as His harbinger, directed the
repentance (which he preached), whose province was the purging of men's
minds,that whatever defilement inveterate error had imparted, whatever contamination in
the heart of man ignorance had engendered, that repentance should sweep and
scrape away, and cast out of doors, and thus prepare the home of the heart, by
making it clean, for the Holy Spirit, who was about to supervene, that He might
with pleasure introduce Himself there-into, together with His celestial
blessings. Of these blessings the title is briefly one the salvation of man--the
abolition of former sins being the preliminary step. This[3] is the (final) cause of
repentance, this her work, in taking in hand the business of divine mercy. What
is profitable to man does service to God. The rule of repentance, however,
which we learn when we know the Lord, retains a definite form,--viz., that no
violent hands so to speak, be ever laid on good deeds or thoughts.[4] For God, never
giving His sanction to the reprobation of good deeds, inasmuch as they are His
own (of which, being the author, He must necessarily be the defender too), is
in like manner the acceptor of them, and if the acceptor, likewise the
rewarder. Let, then, the ingratitude of men see to it,[5] if it attaches repentance
even to good works; let their gratitude see to it too, if the desire of earning it
be the incentive to well-doing: earthly and mortal are they each. For how
small is your gain if you do good to a grateful man! or your loss if to an
ungrateful! A good deed has God as its debtor, just as an evil has too; for a judge is
rewarder of every cause. Well, since, God as Judge presides over the exacting
and maintaining[6] of justice, which to Him is most dear; and since it is with
an eye to justice that He appoints all the sum of His discipline, is there room
for doubting that, just as in all our acts universally, so also in the case of
repentance, justice must be rendered to God?--which duty can indeed only be
fulfilled on the condition that repentance be brought to bear only on sins.
Further, no deed but an evil one deserves to be called sin, nor does any one err by
well-doing. But if he does not err, why does he invade (the province of)
repentance, the private ground of such as do err ? Why does he impose on his goodness
a duty proper to wickedness? Thus it comes to pass that, when a thing is called
into play where it ought not, there, where it ought, it is neglected.
CHAP. III.--SINS MAY BE DIVIDED INTO CORPOREAL AND SPIRITUAL. BOTH EQUALLY
SUBJECT, IF NOT TO HUMAN, YET TO DIVINE INVESTIGATION AND PUNISHMENT[7]
What things, then, they be for which repentance seems just and due--that
is, what things are to be set down under the head of sin--the occasion indeed
demands that I should note down; but (to do so) may seem to be unnecessary. For
when the Lord is known, our spirit, having been" looked back upon"[8] by its own
Author, emerges unbidden into the knowledge of the truth; and being admitted
to (an acquaintance with) the divine precepts, is by them forthwith instructed
that "that from which God bids us abstain is to be accounted sin:" inasmuch as,
since it is generally agreed that God is some great essence of good, of course
nothing but evil would be displeasing to good; in that, between things mutually
contrary, friendship there is none. Still it will not be irksome briefly to
touch upon the fact[9] that, of sins, some are carnal, that is, corporeal; some
spiritual. For since man is composed of this combination of a two-fold
substance, the sources of his sins are no other than the sources of his composition. But
it is not the fact that body and spirit are two things that constitute the
sins mutually different--otherwise they are on this account rather equal, because
the two make up one--lest any make the distinction between their sins
proportionate to the difference between their substances, so as to esteem the one
lighter, or else heavier, than the other: if it be true,(as it is,) that both flesh
and spirit are creatures of God; one wrought by His hand, one consummated by His
afflatus. Since, then, they equally pertain to the Lord, whichever of them
sins equally offends the Lord. Is it for you to distinguish the acts of the flesh
and the spirit, whose communion and conjunction in life, in death, and in
resurrection, are so intimate, that "at that time"[1] they are equally raised up
either for life or else for judgment; because, to wit, they have equally either
sinned or lived innocently? This we would (once for all) premise, in order that
we may understand that no less necessity for repentance is incumbent on either
part of man, if in anything it have sinned, than on both. The guilt of both is
common; common, too, is the Judge--God to wit; common, therefore, is withal the
healing medicine of repentance. The source whence sins are named "spiritual"
and "corporeal" is the fact that every sin is matter either of act or else of
thought: so that what is in deed is "corporeal," because a deed, like a body, is
capable of being seen and touched; what is in the mind is "spiritual," because
spirit is neither seen nor handled:: by which consideration is shown that sins
not of deed only, but of will too, are to be shunned, and by repentance purged.
For if human finitude[2] judges only sins of deed, because it is not equal to
(piercing) the lurking-places of the will, let us not on that account make light
of crimes of the will in God's sight. God is all-sufficient. Nothing from
whence any sin whatsoever proceeds is remote from His sight; because He is neither
ignorant, nor does He omit to decree it to judgment. He is no dissembler of,
nor double-dealer with,[3] His own clear-sightedness. What (shall we say of the
fact) that will is the origin of deed? For if any sins are imputed to chance, or
to necessity, or to ignorance, let them see to themselves: if these be
excepted, there is no sinning save by will. Since, then, will is the origin of deed,
is it not so much the rather amenable to penalty as it is first in guilt? Nor,
if some difficulty interferes with its full accomplishment, is it even in that
ease exonerated; for it is itself imputed to itself: nor; having done the work
which lay in its own power, will it be excusable by reason of that miscarriage
of its accomplishment. In fact, how does the Lord demonstrate Himself as adding
a superstructure to the Law, except by interdicting sins of the will as well
(as other sins); while He defines not only the man who had actually invaded
another's wedlock to be an adulterer, but likewise him who had contaminated (a
woman) by the concupiscence of his gaze?[4] Accordingly it is dangerous enough for
the mind to set before itself what it is forbidden to perform, and rashly
through the will to perfect its execution. And since the power of this will is such
that, even without fully sating its self-gratification, it stands for a deed; as
a deed, therefore, it shall be punished. It is utterly vain to say, "I willed,
but yet I did not." Rather you ought to carry the thing through, because you
will; or else not to will, because you do not carry it through. But, by the
confession of your consciousness, you pronounce your own condemnation. For if you
eagerly desired a good thing, you would have been anxious to carry it through;
in like manner, as you do not carry an evil thing through, you ought not to have
eagerly desired it. Wherever you take your stand, you are fast bound by guilt;
because you have either willed evil, or else have not fulfilled good.
CHAP. IV.--REPENTANCE APPLICABLE TO ALL THE KINDS OF SIN. TO BE PRACTISED NOT
ONLY, NOR CHIEFLY, FOR THE GOOD IT BRINGS, BUT BECAUSE GOD COMMANDS IT.
To all sins, then, committed whether by flesh or spirit, whether by deed
or will, the same God who has destined penalty by means of judgment, has withal
engaged to grant pardon by means of repentance, saying to the people, "Repent
thee, and I will save thee;"[5] and again, "I live, saith the Lord, and I will
(have) repentance rather than death."[6] Repentance, then, is "life," since it
is preferred to "death." That repentance, O sinner, like myself (nay, rather,
less than myself, for pre-eminence in sins I acknowledge to be mine[7]), do you
so hasten to, so embrace, as a shipwrecked man the protection[8] of some plank.
This will draw you forth when sunk in the waves of sins, and will bear you
forward into the port of the divine clemency. Seize the opportunity of unexpected
felicity: that you, who sometime were in God's sight nothing but "a drop of a
bucket,"[9] and "dust of the threshing-floor,"[10] and "a potter's vessel,"[11]
may thenceforward become that "tree which is sown beside[12] the waters, is
perennial in leaves, bears fruit at its own time,"[13] and shall not see fire,"[14]
nor "axe."[15] Having found "the truth,"[16] repent of errors; repent of
having loved what God loves not: even we ourselves do not permit our slave-lads not
to hate the things which are offensive to us; for the principle of voluntary
obedience[1] consists in similarity of minds.
To reckon up the good, of repentance, the subject-matter is copious, and
therefore should be committed to great eloquence. Let us, however, in proportion
to our narrow abilities, inculcate one point,--that what God enjoins is good
and best. I hold it audacity to dispute about the "good" of a divine precept;
for, indeed, it is not the fact that it is good which binds us to obey, but the
fact that God has enjoined it. To exact the rendering of obedience the majesty
of divine power has the prior[2] right; the authority of Him who commands is
prior to the utility of him who serves. "Is it good to repent, or no?" Why do you
ponder? God enjoins; nay, He not merely enjoins, but likewise exhorts. He
invites by (offering) reward--salvation, to wit; even by an oath, saying "I
live,"[3] He desires that credence may be given Him. Oh blessed we, for whose Sake God
swears! Oh most miserable, if we believe not the Lord even when He swears!
What, therefore, God so highly commends, what He even (after human fashion) attests
on oath, we are bound of course to approach, and to guard with the utmost
seriousness; that, abiding permanently in (the faith of) the solemn pledge[4] of
divine grace, we may be able also to persevere in like manner in its fruit[5] and
its benefit.
CHAP. V.--SIN NEVER TO BE RETURNED TO AFTER REPENTANCE.[6]
For what I say is this, that the repentance which, being shown us and
commanded us through God's grace, recalls us to grace[7] with the Lord, when once
learned and undertaken by us ought never afterward to be cancelled by repetition
of sin. No pretext of ignorance now remains to plead on your behalf; in that,
after acknowledging the Lord, and accepting His precepts[8]--in short, after
engaging in repentance of (past) sins--you again betake you self to sins. Thus,
in as far as you are removed from ignorance, in so far are you cemented[9] to
contumacy. For if the ground on which you had repented of having sinned was that
you had begun to fear the Lord, why have you preferred to rescind what you did
for fear's sake, except because you have ceased to fear? For there is no other
thing but contumacy which subverts fear. Since there is no exception which
defends from liability to penalty even such as are ignorant of the Lord--because
ignorance of God, openly as He is set before men, and comprehensible as He is
even on the score of His heavenly benefits, is not possible[10]--how perilous is
it for Him to be despised when known? Now, that man does despise Him, who, after
attaining by His help to an understanding of things good and evil, often an
affront to his own understanding--that is, to God's gift--by resuming what he
understands ought to be shunned, and what he has already shunned: he rejects the
Giver in abandoning the gift; he denies the Benefactor in not honouring the
benefit. How can he be pleasing to Him, whose gift is displeasing to himself? Thus
he is shown to be not only contumacious toward the Lord, but likewise
ungrateful. Besides, that man commits no light sin against the Lord, who, after he had
by repentance renounced His rival the devil, and had under this appellation
subjected him to the Lord, again upraises him by his own return (to the enemy), and
makes himself a ground of exultation to him; so that the Evil One, with his
prey recovered, rejoices anew against the Lord. Does he not--what is perilous
even to say, but must be put forward with a view to edification--place the devil
before the Lord? For he seems to have made the comparison who has known each;
and to have judicially pronounced him to be the better whose (servant) he has
preferred again to be. Thus he who, through repentance for sins, had begun to make
satisfaction to the Lord, will, through another repentance of his repentance,
make satisfaction to the devil, and will be the more hateful to God in
proportion as he will be the more acceptable to His rival. But some say that "God is
satisfied if He be looked up to with the heart and the mind, even if this be not
done in outward act, and that thus they sin without damage to their fear and
their faith:" that is, that they violate wedlock without damage to their
chastity; they mingle poison for their parent without damage to their filial duty!
Thus, then, they will themselves withal be thrust down into hell without damage to
their pardon, while they sin without damage to their fear! Here is a primary
example of perversity: they sin, because they fear![11] I suppose, if they feared
not, they would not sin! Let him, therefore, who would not have God offended
not revere Him at all, if fear[1] is the plea for offending But these
dispositions have been wont to sprout from the seed of hypocrites, whose friendship with
the devil is indivisible, whose repentance never faithful.
CHAP. VI.--BAPTISM NOT TO BE PRESUMPTOUSLY RECEIVED, IT REQUIRES PRECEDING
REPENTANCE, MANIFESTED BY AMENDMENT OF LIFE.
Whatever, then, our poor ability has attempted to suggest with reference
to laying hold of repentance once for all, and perpetually retaining it, does
indeed bear upon all who are given up to the Lord, as being all competitors for
salvation in earning the favour of God; but is chiefly urgent in the case of
those young novices who are only just beginning to bedew[2] their ears with divine
discourses, and who, as whelps in yet early infancy, and with eyes not yet
perfect, creep about uncertainly, and say indeed that they renounce their former
deed, and assume (the profession of) repentance, but neglect to complete it.[3]
For the very end of desiring importunes them to desire somewhat of their
former deeds; just as fruits, when they are already beginning to turn into the
sourness or bitterness of age, do yet still in some part flatter[4] their own
loveliness. Moreover, a presumptuous confidence in baptism introduces all kind of
vicious delay and tergiversation with regard to repentance; for, feeling sure of
undoubted pardon of their sins, men meanwhile steal the intervening time, and
make it for themselves into a holiday-time[5] for sinning, rather than a time for
learning not to sin. Further, how inconsistent is it to expect pardon of sins
(to be granted) to a repentance which they have not fulfilled! This is to hold
out your hand for merchandise, but not produce the price. For repentance is the
price at which the Lord has determined to award pardon: He proposes the
redemption[6] of release from penalty at this compensating exchange of repentance.
If, then, sellers first examine the coin with which they make their bargains, to
see whether it be cut, or scraped, or adulterated,[7] we believe likewise that
the Lord, when about to make us the grant of so costly merchandise, even of
eternal life, first institutes a probation of our repentance. "But meanwhile let
us defer the reality of our repentance: it will then, I suppose, be clear that
we are amended when we are absolved."[8] By no means; (but our amendment should
be manifested) while, pardon being in abeyance, there is still a prospect of
penalty; while the penitent does not yet merit--so far as merit we can--his
liberation; while God is threatening, not while He is forgiving. For what slave,
after his position has been changed by reception of freedom, charges himself with
his (past) thefts and desertions? What soldier, after his discharge, makes
satisfaction for his (former) brands? A sinner is bound to bemoan himself before
receiving pardon, because the time of repentance is coincident with that of peril
and of fear. Not that I deny that the divine benefit--the putting away of
sins, I mean--is in every way sure to such as are on the point of entering the
(baptismal) water; but what we have to labour for is, that it may be granted us to
attain that blessing. For who will grant to you, a man of so faithless
repentance, one single sprinkling of any water whatever? To approach it by stealth,
indeed, and to get the minister appointed over this business misled by your
asseverations, is easy; but God takes foresight for His own treasure, and suffers not
the unworthy to steal a march upon it. What, in fact, does He say? "Nothing
hid which shall not be revealed."[9] Draw whatever (veil of) darkness you please
over your deeds, "God is light."[10] But some think as if God were under a
necessity of bestowing even on the unworthy, what He has engaged (to give); and
they turn His liberality into slavery. But if it is of necessity that God grants
us the symbol of death,[11] then He does so unwilling. But who permits a gift to
be permanently retained which he has granted unwillingly? For do not many
afterward fall out of (grace)? is not this gift taken away from many? These, no
doubt, are they who do steal a march upon (the treasure), who, after approaching
to the faith of repentance, set up on the sands a house doomed to ruin. Let no
one, then, flatter himself on the ground of being assigned to the
"recruit-classes" of learners, as if on that account he have a licence even now to sin. As
soon as you "know the Lord,[12] you should fear Him; as soon as you have gazed on
Him, you should reverence Him. But what difference does your "knowing" Him
make, while you rest in the same practises as in days bygone, when you knew Him
not? What, moreover, is it which distinguishes you from a perfected[1] servant of
God? Is there one Christ for the baptized, another for the learners? Have they
some different hope or reward? some different dread of judgment? some
different necessity for repentance? That baptismal washing is a sealing of faith, which
faith is begun and is commended by the faith of repentance. We are not washed
in order that we may cease sinning, but because we have ceased, since in heart
we have been bathed[2] already. For the first baptism of a learner is this, a
perfect fear;[3] thenceforward, in so far as you have understanding of the Lord
faith is sound, the conscience having once for all embraced repentance.
Otherwise, if it is (only) after the baptismal waters that we cease sinning, it is of
necessity, not of free-will, that we put on innocence. Who, then, is
pro-eminent in goodness? he who is not allowed, or he whom it displeases, to be evil? he
who is bidden, or he whose pleasure it is, to be free from crime? Let us, then,
neither keep our hands from theft unless the hardness of bars withstand us,
nor refrain our eyes from the concupiscence of fornication unless we be withdrawn
by guardians of our persons, if no one who has surrendered himself to the Lord
is to cease sinning unless he be bound thereto by baptism. But if any
entertain this sentiment, I know not whether he, after baptism, do not feel more
sadness to think that he has teased from sinning, than gladness that he hath escaped
from it. And so it is becoming that learners desire baptism, but do not hastily
receive it: for he who desires it, honours it; he who hastily receives it,
disdains it: in the one appears modesty, in the other arrogance; the former
satisfies, the latter neglects it; the former covets to merit it, but the latter
promises it to himself as a due return; the former takes, the latter usurps it.
Whom would you judge worthier, except one who is more amended? whom more amended,
except one who is more timid, and on that account has fulfilled the duty of
true repentance? for he has feared to continue still in sin, lest he should not
merit the reception of baptism. But the hasty receiver, inasmuch as he promised
it himself (as his due), being forsooth secure (of obtaining it), could not
fear: thus he fulfilled not repentance either, because he lacked the instrumental
agent of repentance, that is, fear.[4] Hasty reception is the portion of
irreverence; it inflates the seeker, it despises the Giver. And thus it sometimes
deceives,[5] for it promises to itself the gift before it be due; whereby He who is
to furnish the gift is ever offended.
CHAP. VII.--OF REPENTANCE, IN THE CASE OF SUCH AS HAVE LAPSED AFTER BAPTISM.
So long, Lord Christ, may the blessing of learning or hearing concerning
the discipline of repentance be granted to Thy servants, as is likewise behoves
them, while learners,[6] not to sin; in other words, may they thereafter know
nothing of repentance, and require nothing of it. It is irksome to append
mention of a second--nay, in that case, the last--hope;[7] lest, by treating of a
remedial repenting yet in reserve, we seem to be pointing to a yet further space
for sinning. Far be it that any one so interpret our meaning, as if, because
there is an opening for repenting, there were even now, on that account, an
opening for sinning; and as if the redundance of celestial clemency constituted a
licence for human temerity. Let no one be less good because God is more so, by
repeating his sin as often as he is forgiven. Otherwise be sure he will find an
end of escaping, when he shall not find one of sinning. We have escaped once:
thus far and no farther let us commit ourselves to perils, even if we seem likely
to escape a second time.[8] Men in general, after escaping shipwreck,
thenceforward declare divorce with ship and sea; and by cherishing the memory of the
danger, honour the benefit conferred by God,--their deliverance, namely. I praise
their fear, I love their reverence; they are unwilling a second time to be a
burden to the divine mercy; they fear to seem to trample on the benefit which
they have attained; they shun, with a solicitude which at all events is good, to
make trial a second time of that which they have once learned to fear. Thus the
limit of their temerity is the evidence of their fear. Moreover, man's
fear[9] is an honour to God. But however, that most stubborn foe (of ours) never
gives his malice leisure; indeed, he is then most savage when he fully feels that
a man is freed from his clutches; he then flames fiercest while he is fast
becoming extinguished. Grieve and groan he must of necessity over the fact that, by
the grant of pardon, so many works of death[10] in man have been overthrown,
so many marks of the condemnation which formerly was his own erased. He grieves
that that sinner, (now) Christ's servant, is destined to judge him and his
angels.[1] And so he observes, assaults, besieges him, in the hope that he may be
able in some way either to strike his eyes with carnal concupiscence, or else to
entangle his mind with worldly enticements, or else to subvert his faith by
fear of earthly power, or else to wrest him from the sure way by perverse
traditions: he is never deficient in stumbling-blocks nor in temptations. These
poisons of his, therefore, God foreseeing, although the gate of forgiveness has been
shut and fastened up with the bar of baptism, has permitted it still to stand
somewhat open.[2] In the vestibule He has stationed the second repentance for
opening to such as knock: but now once far all, because now for the second
time;[3] but never more because the last time it had been in vain. For is not even
this once enough? You have what you now deserved not, for you had lost what you
had received. If the Lord's indulgence grants you the means of restoring what
you had lost, be thankful for the benefit renewed, not to say amplified; for
restoring is a greater thing than giving, inasmuch as having lost is more miserable
than never having received at all. However, if any do incur the debt of a
second repentance, his spirit is not to be forthwith cut down and undermined by
despair. Let it by all means be irksome to sin again, but let not to repent again
be irksome: irksome to imperil one's self again, but not to be again set free.
Let none be ashamed. Repeated sickness must have repeated medicine. You will
show your gratitude to the Lord by not refusing what the Lord offers you. You
have offended, but can still be reconciled. You have One whom you may satisfy, and
Him willing.[4]
CHAP. VIII.--EXAMPLES FROM SCRIPTURE TO PROVE THE LORD'S WILLINGNESS TO PARDON.
This if you doubt, unravels the meaning of "what the Spirit saith to the
churches."[6] He imputes to the Ephesians "forsaken love;"[7] reproaches the
Thyatirenes with "fornication," and "eating of things sacrificed to idols;"[8]
accuses the Sardians of "works not full; "[9] censures the Pergamenes for teaching
perverse things;[10] upbraids the Laodiceans for trusting to their riches;[11]
and yet gives them all general monitions to repentance--under comminations, it
is true; but He would not utter comminations to one un-repentant if He did not
forgive the repentant. The matter were doubtful if He had not withal elsewhere
demonstrated this profusion of His clemency. Saith He not,[12] "He who hath
fallen shall rise again, and he who hath been averted shall be converted?" He it
is, indeed, who "would have mercy rather than sacrifices."[13] The heavens, and
the angels who are there, are glad at a man's repentance.[14] Ho! you sinner,
be of good cheer! you see where it is that there is joy at your return. What
meaning for us have those themes of the Lord's parables? Is not the fact that a
woman has lost a drachma, and seeks it and finds it, and invites her female
friends to share her joy, an example of a restored sinner?[15] There strays,
withal, one little ewe of the shepherd's; but the flock was not more dear than the
one: that one is earnestly sought; the one is longed for instead of all; and at
length she is found, and is borne back on the shoulders of the shepherd himself;
for much had she toiled[16] in straying.[17] That most gentle father,
likewise, I will not pass over in silence, who calls his prodigal son home, and
willingly receives him repentant after his indigence, slays his best fatted calf, and
graces his joy with a banquet.[18] Why not? He had found the son whom he had
lost; he had felt him to be all the dearer of whom he had made a gain. Who is
that father to be understood by us to be? God, surely: no one is so truly a
Father;[19] no one so rich in paternal love. He, then, will receive you, His own
son,[20] back, even if you have squandered what you had received from Him, even if
you return naked--just because you have returned; and will joy more over your
return than over the sobriety of the other;[21] but only if you heartily
repent--if you compare your own hunger with the plenty of your Father's "hired
servants"--if you leave behind you the swine, that unclean herd--if you again seek
your Father, offended though He be, saying, "I have sinned, nor am worthy any
longer to be called Thine." Confession of sins lightens, as much as dissimulation
aggravates them; for confession is counselled by (a desire to make)
satisfaction, dissimulation by contumacy.
CHAP. IX.--CONCERNING THE OUTWARD MANIFESTATIONS BY WHICH THIS SECOND
REPENTANCE IS TO BE ACCOMPANIED.
The narrower, then, the sphere of action of this second and only
(remaining) repentance, the more laborious is its probation; in order that it may not be
exhibited in the conscience alone, but may likewise be carried out in some
(external) act. This act, which is more usually expressed and commonly spoken of
under a Greek name, is <greek>exomologhsis</greek>,[1] whereby we confess our
sins to the Lord, not indeed as if He were ignorant of them, but inasmuch as by
confession satisfaction is settled,[2] of confession repentance is born; by
repentance God is appeased. And thus exomologesis is a discipline for man's
prostration and humiliation, enjoining a demeanor calculated to move mercy. With
regard also to the very dress and food, it commands (the penitent) to lie in
sackcloth and ashes, to cover his body in mourning,[3] to lay his spirit low in
sorrows, to exchange for severe treatment the sins which he has committed; moreover,
to know no food and drink but such as is plain,--not for the stomach's sake, to
wit, but the soul's; for the most part, however, to feed prayers on fastings,
to groan, to weep and make outcries[4] unto the Lord your[5] God; to bow before
the feet of the presbyters, and kneel to God's dear ones; to enjoin on all the
brethren to be ambassadors to bear his[6] deprecatory supplication (before
God). All this exomologesis (does), that it may enhance repentance; may honour God
by its fear of the (incurred) danger; may, by itself pronouncing against the
sinner, stand in the stead of God's indignation, and by temporal mortification
(I will not say frustrate, but) expunge eternal punishments. Therefore, while it
abases the man, it raises him; while it covers him with squalor, it renders
him more clean; while it accuses, it excuses; while it condemns, it absolves. The
less quarter you give yourself, the more (believe me) will God give you.
CHAP. X.--OF MEN'S SHRINKING FROM THIS SECOND REPENTANCE AND EXOMOLOGESIS, AND
OF THE UNREASONABLENESS OF SUCH SHRINKING.
Yet most men either shun this work, as being a public exposure[7] of
themselves, or else defer it from day to day. I presume (as being) more mindful of
modesty than of salvation; just like men who, having contracted some malady in
the more private parts of the body, avoid the privity of physicians, and so
perish with their own bashfulness. It is intolerable, forsooth, to modesty to make
satisfaction to the offended Lord! to be restored to its forfeited[8]
salvation! Truly you are honourable in your modesty; bearing an open forehead for
sinning, but an abashed one for deprecating! I give no place to bashfulness when I am
a gainer by its loss; when itself in some son exhorts the man, saying,
"Respect not me; it is better that I perish through[9] you, i.e. than you through me."
At all events, the time when (if ever) its danger is serious, is when it is a
butt for jeering speech in the presence of insulters, where one man raises
himself on his neighbour's ruin, where there is upward clambering over the
prostrate. But among. brethren and fellow-servants, where there is common hope,
fear,[10] joy, grief, suffering, because there is a common Spirit from a common Lord
and Father, why do you think these brothers to be anything other than yourself?
Why flee from the partners of your own mischances, as from such as will
derisively cheer them? The body cannot feel gladness at the trouble of any one
member,[11] it must necessarily join with one consent in the grief, and in labouring
for the remedy. In a company of two[12] is the church;[13] but the church is
Christ.[14] When, then, you cast yourself at the brethren's knees, you are
handling Christ, you are entreating Christ. In like manner, when they shed tears over
you, it is Christ who suffers, Christ who prays the Father for mercy. What a
son[15] asks is ever easily obtained. Grand indeed is the reward of modesty,
which the concealment of our fault promises us! to wit, if we do hide somewhat from
the knowledge of man, shall we equally conceal it from God? Are the judgment
of men and the knowledge of God so put upon a par? Is it better to be damned in
secret than absolved in public? But you say, "It is a miserable thing thus to
come to exomologesis:" yes, for evil does bring to misery; but where repentance
is to be made, the misery ceases, because it is turned into something salutary.
Miserable it is to be cut, and cauterized, and racked with the pungency of
some (medicinal) powder: still, the things which heal by unpleasant means do, by
the benefit of the cure, excuse their own offensiveness, and make present injury
bearable for the sake[1] of the advantage to supervene.
CHAP. XI.--FURTHER STRICTURES ON THE SAME SUBJECT.
What if, besides the shame which they make the most account of, men dread
likewise the bodily inconveniences; in that, unwashen, sordidly attired,
estranged from gladness, they must spend their time in the roughness of sackcloth,
and the horridness of ashes, and the sunkenness of face caused by fasting? Is it
then becoming for us to supplicate for our sins in scarlet and purple? Hasten
hither with the pin for panning the hair, and the powder for polishing the
teeth, and some forked implement of steel or brass for cleaning the nails. Whatever
of false brilliance, whatever of feigned redness, is to be had, let him
diligently apply it to his lips or cheeks. Let him furthermore seek out baths of more
genial temperature in some gardened or seaside retreat; let him enlarge his
expenses; let him carefully seek the rarest delicacy of fatted fowls; let him
refine his old wine: and when any shall ask him, "On whom are you lavishing all
this?" let him say, "I have sinned against God, and am in peril of eternally
perishing: and so now I am drooping, and wasting and torturing myself, that I may
reconcile God to myself, whom by sinning I have offended." Why, they who go
about canvassing for the obtaining of civil office, feel it neither degrading nor
irksome to struggle, in behalf of such their desires, with annoyances to soul
and body; and not annoyances merely, but likewise contumelies of all kinds. What
meannesses of dress do they not affect ? what houses do they not beset with
early and late visits?--bowing whenever they meet any high personage, frequenting
no banquets, associating in no entertainments, but voluntarily exiled from the
felicity of freedom and festivity: and all that for the sake of the fleeting
joy of a single year ! Do we hesitate, when eternity is at stake, to endure what
the competitor for consulship or praetorship puts up with ?[2] and shall we be
tardy in offering to the offended Lord a self-chastisement in food and raiment,
which[3] Gentiles lay upon themselves when they have offended no one at all ?
Such are they of whom Scripture makes mention: "Woe to them who bind their own
sins as it were with a long rope."[4]
CHAP. XII.--FINAL CONSIDERATIONS TO INDUCE TO EXOMOLOGESIS.
If you shrink back from exomologesis, consider in your heart the hell, [5]
which exomologesis will extinguish for you; and imagine first the magnitude of
the penalty, that you may not hesitate about the adoption of the remedy. What
do we esteem that treasure-house of eternal fire to be, when small
vent-holes[6] of it rouse such blasts of flames that neighbouring cities either are already
no more, or are in daily expectation of the same fate ? The haughtiest[7]
mountains start asunder in the birth-throes of their inly-gendered fire; and--which
proves to us the perpetuity of the judgment--though they start asunder, though
they be devoured, yet come they never to an end. Who will not account these
occasional punishments inflicted on the mountains as examples of the judgment
which menaces the impenitent? Who will not agree that such sparks are but some few
missiles and sportive darts of some inestimably vast centre of fire?
Therefore, since you know that after the first bulwarks of the Lord's baptism[8] there
still remains for you, in exomologesis a second reserve of aid against hell, why
do you desert your own salvation ? Why are you tardy to approach what you know
heals you ? Even dumb irrational animals recognise in their time of need the
medicines which have been divinely assigned them. The stag, transfixed by the
arrow, knows that, to force out the steel, and its inextricable lingerings, he
must heal himself with dittany. The swallow, if she blinds her young, knows how
to give them eyes again by means of her own swallow-wort.[9] Shall the sinner,
knowing that exomologesis has been instituted by the Lord for his restoration,
pass that by which restored the Babylonian king[10] to his realms ? Long time
had he offered to the Lord his repentance, working out his exomologesis by a
seven years' squalor, with his nails wildly growing after the eagle's fashion, and
his unkempt hair wearing the shagginess of a lion. Hard handling! Him whom men
were shuddering at, God was receiving back. But, on the other hand, the
Egyptian emperor--who, after pursuing the once afflicted people of God, long denied to
their Lord, rushed into the battle[1]--did, after so many warning plagues,
perish in the parted sea, (which was permitted to be passable to "the People"
alone,) by the backward roll of the waves:[2] for repentance and her handmaid[3]
exomologesis he had cast away.
Why should I add more touching these two planks[4] (as it were) of human
salvation, caring more for the business of the pen[5] than the duty of my
conscience? For, sinner as I am of every dye,[6] and born for nothing save repentance,
I cannot easily be silent about that concerning which also the very head and
fount of the human race, and of human offence, Adam, restored by exomologesis to
his own paradise,[7] is not silent.
ELUCIDATIONS.
I. (Such as have lapsed, cap. vii., p. 660.)
The pentitential system of the Primitive days, referred to in our author,
began to be changed when less public confessions were authorized, on account of
the scandals which publicity generated. Changes were as follows:
I. A grave presbyter was appointed to receive and examine voluntary
penitents as the Penitentiary of a diocese, and to suspend or reconcile them with due
solemnities---circa A.D. 250.
2. This plan also became encumbered with difficulties and was abolished in
the East, circa A.D. 400.
3. A discipline similar to that of the Anglican Church (which is but
loosely maintained therein) succeeded, under St. Chrysostom; who frequently
maintains the sufficiency of confession according to St. Matt. vi. 6. A Gallican
author[1] says--" this is the period regarded by historians as the most brilliant in
Church history. At the close of the fourth century, in the great churches of
the Orient, sixty thousand Christians received the Eucharistic communion, in one
day, in both kinds, with no other than their private confessions to Almighty
God. The scandalous evil-liver alone was repelled from the Eucharistic Table."
This continued till circa A.D. 700.
4. Particular, but voluntary confessions were now made in the East and
West, but with widely various acceptance under local systems of discipline. The
absolutions were precatory: "may God absolve Thee." This lasted, even in the
West, till the compulsory system of the Lateran Council, A.D. 1215.
5. Since this date, so far as the West is concerned, the whole system of
corrupt casuistry and enforced confession adopted in the West has utterly
destroyed the Primitive doctrine and discipline as to sin and its remedy wherever it
prevails. In the East, private confession exists in a system wholly different
and one which maintains the Primitive Theology and the Scriptural principle. (I)
It is voluntary; (2) it is free from the corrupt system of the casuists; (3)
it distinguishes between Ecclesiastical Absolution and that of Him who alone
"seeth in secret;" (4) it admits no compromise with attrition, but exacts the
contrite heart and the firm resolve to go and sin no more, and (5) finally, it
employs a most guarded and Evangelical formula of remission, of which see
Elucidation IV.
II. (The last hope, cap. vii. p. 662.)
How absolutely the Lateran Council has overthrown the Primitive discipline
is here made manifest. The spirit of the latter is expressed by our author in
language which almost prompts to despair. It makes sin "exceeding sinful" and
even Ecclesiastical forgiveness the reverse of easy. The Lateran System of
enforced Confession makes sin easy and restoration to a sinless state equally so: a
perpetual resort to the confessor being the only condition for evil living, and
a chronic state of pardon and peace. But, let the Greek Church be heard in
this matter, rather than an Anglican Catholic. I refer to Macarius, Bishop of
Vinnitza and Rector of the Theological Academy of St. Petersburg, as follows:[1]
"It is requisite (for the effective reception of Absolution) at least according
to the teaching of the Orthodox Church of the Orient, that the following
conditions be observed: (I) Contrition for sins, is in the very nature of Penitence,
indispensable; (2), consequently, there must be a firm resolution to reform the
life; (3) also, faith in Christ and hope in his mercy, with (4) auricular
confession before the priest." He allows that this latter condition was not
primitive, but was a maternal concession to penitents of later date: this, however, is
voluntary, and of a widely different form from that of the Latin, as will
appear below in Elucidation IV.
Now, he contrasts with this the system of Rome, and condemns it, on
overwhelming considerations.
1. It makes penances compensations[2] or "satisfaction," offered for sins
to divine Justice, this (he says) "is in contradiction with the Christian
doctrine of justification, the Scripture teaching one full and entire satisfaction
for the sins of the whole human race, once for all presented by our Lord Jesus
Christ. This doctrine is equally in conflict with the entire teaching of the
Primitive Church."
2. It introduces a false system of indulgences, as the consequence of its
false premisses.
3. He demonstrates the insufficiency of attrition, which respects the fear
of punishment, and not sin itself. But the Council of Trent affirms the
sufficiency of attrition, and permits the confessor to absolve the attrite. Needless
to say, the masses accept this wide gate and broad way to salvation rather than
the strait gate and narrow way of hating sin and reforming the life, in
obedience to the Gospel.
III. (Among brethren, cap. x., p. 662.)
A controversial writer has lately complained that Bp. Kaye speaks of the
public confession treated of by our author in this work, and adds--" Tertullian
nowhere used the word public." The answer is that he speaks of the discipline
of Exomologesis, which was, in its own nature, as public as preaching. A
Gallican writer, less inclined to Jesuitism in the use of words, says frankly: "When
one studies this question, with the documents before his eyes, it is impossible
not to confess that the Primitive discipline of the Church exhibits not a
vestige of the auricular confession afterwards introduced." See Irenaeus, Adv.
Hares. Vol. I. p. 335, this Series. The Lii. of the canons called Apostolical,
reflects a very simple view of the matter, in these words: "If any Bishop or
Presbyter will not receive one who turns from his sins, but casts him out, let him be
deposed: for he grieves Christ, who said, There shall be joy in heaven over one
sinner that repenteth." The ascetic spirit of our author seems at war with
that of this Canon.
IV. (Exomologesis, cap. xii., p. 663.)
To this day, in the Oriental Churches, the examination of the presbyter
who hears the voluntary confession of penitents, is often very primitive in its
forms and confined to general inquiries under the Decalogue. The Casuistry of
(Dens and Liguori) the Western Schemata Practica has not defiled our Eastern
brethren to any great extent.
In the office[1] (A<greek>kolouqia</greek> <greek>twn</greek>
<greek>exomolougoumenwn</greek>) we have a simple and beautiful form of prayer and
supplication in which the following is the formula of Absolution: "My Spiritual child,
who hast confessed to my humility, I, unworthy and a sinner, have not the power
to forgive sins on Earth; God only can: and through that Divine voice which
came to the Apostles, after the Resurrection of our Lord Jesus Christ, saying--'
Whosesoever sins, etc.,' we, therein confiding, say--Whatsoever thou hast
confessed to my extreme humility, and whatsoever thou hast ommitted to say, either
through ignorance or forgetfulness, God forgive thee in this present world and
in that which is to come."
The plural (We therein confiding) is significant and a token of Primitive
doctrine: i.e. of confession before the whole Church, (II. Cor. ii. 10.): and
note the precatory form--"God forgive thee." The perilous form Ego te absolvo is
not Catholic: it dates from the thirteenth century and is used in the West
only. It is not wholly dropped from the Anglican Office, but has been omitted from
the American Prayer-Book.