THE TREATISES OF CYPRIAN: TREATISE II.--ON THE DRESS OF VIRGINS
TREATISE II.(1)
ON THE DRESS OF VIRGINS.
ARGUMENT.--CYPRIAN CELEBRATES THE PRAISES OF DISCIPLINE, AND PROVES ITS
USEFULNESS FROM SCRIPTURE. THEN, DESCRIBING THE GLORY, HONOUR, AND MERITS OF
VIRGINITY, AND OF THOSE WHO HAD VOWED AND DEDICATED THEIR VIRGINITY TO CHRIST, HE
TEACHES THAT CONTINENCE NOT ONLY CONSISTS IN FLESHLY PURITY, BUT ALSO IN SEEMLINESS
OF DRESS AND ORNAMENT, AND THAT EVEN WEALTH DID NOT EXCUSE SUPERFLUOUS CARE FOR
DRESS ON THE PART OF THOSE WHO HAD ALREADY RENOUNCED THE WORLD. RATHER, SINCE
THE APOSTLE PRESCRIBES EVEN TO MARRIED WOMEN A DRESS TO BE REGULATED BY
FITTING LIMITS, MODERATION OUGHT EVEN MORE TO BE OBSERVED BY A VIRGIN. THEREFORE,
EVEN IF SHE BE WEALTHY, SHE SHOULD CONSIDER CERTAINLY HOW TO USE WEALTH, BUT FOR
GOOD PURPOSES, FOR THOSE THINGS WHICH GOD HAS COMMANDED, TO WIT, FOR BEING
SPENT ON THE POOR.(2) MOREOVER, ALSO, HE FORBIDS TO VIRGINS THOSE THINGS WHICH HAD
NEGLIGENTLY COME INTO USE, AS BEING PRESENT AT WEDDINGS, AS WELL AS GOING TO
PROMISCUOUS BATHING-PLACES. FINALLY, IN A BRIEF EPILOGUE,(3) DECLARING WHAT
BENEFIT THE VIRTUE OF CONTINENCY AFFORDS, AND WHAT EVIL IT IS WITHOUT, HE
CONCLUDES THE BOOK.
1. Discipline, the safeguard of hope, the bond of faith, the guide of the
way of salvation, the stimulus and nourishment of good dispositions, the
teacher of virtue, causes us to abide always in Christ, and to live continually for
God, and to attain to the heavenly promises and to the divine rewards. To
follow her is wholesome, and to turn away from her and neglect her is deadly. The
Holy Spirit says in the Psalms, "Keep discipline, lest perchance the Lord be
angry, and ye perish from the right way, when His wrath is quickly kindled
against you."(4) And again: "But unto the ungodly saith God, "Why dost thou preach
my laws, and takest my covenant into thy mouth? Whereas thou hatest discipline,
and hast cast my words behind thee."(5) And again we read: "He that casteth
away discipline is miserable."(6) And from Solomon we have received the mandates
of wisdom, warning us: "My son, despise not thou the discipline of the Lord,
nor faint when thou art rebuked of Him: for whom the Lord loveth He
correcteth."(7) But if God rebukes whom He loves, and rebukes him for the very purpose of
amending him, brethren also, and especially priests, do not hate, but love those
whom they rebuke, that they may mend them; since God also before predicted by
Jeremiah, and pointed to our times, when he said, "And I will give you shepherds
according to my heart: and they shall feed you with the food of
discipline.?"(8)
2. But if in Holy Scripture discipline is frequently and everywhere
prescribed, and the whole foundation of religion and of faith proceeds from obedience
and fear; what is more fitting for us urgently to desire, what more to wish
for and to hold fast, than to stand with roots strongly fixed, and with our
houses based with solid mass upon the rock unshaken by the storms and whirlwinds of
the world, so that we may come by the divine precepts to the rewards of God?
considering as well as knowing that our members, when purged from all the filth
of the old contagion by the sanctification of the layer of life, are God's
temples, and must not be violated nor polluted, since he who does violence to them
is himself injured. We are the worshippers and priests of those temples; let us
obey Him whose we have already begun to be. Paul tells us in his epistles, in
which he has formed us to a course of living by divine teaching, "Ye are not
your own, for ye are bought with a great price; glorify and bear God in your
body."(9) Let us glorify and bear God in a pure and chaste body, and with a more
complete obedience; and since we have been redeemed by the blood of Christ, let
us obey and give furtherance to the empire of our Redeemer by all the
obedience of service, that nothing impure or profane may be brought into the temple
of God, lost He should be offended, and forsake the temple which He inhabits.
The words of the Lord giving health and teaching, as well curing as warning,
are: "Behold, thou art made whole: sin no more, lest a worse thing come unto
thee."(10) He gives the course of life, He gives the law of innocency after He has
conferred health, nor suffers the man afterwards to wander with free and
unchecked reins, but more severely threatens him who is again enslaved by those same
things of which he had been healed, because it is doubtless a smaller fault to
have sinned before, while as yet you had not known God's discipline; but there
is no further pardon for sinning after you have begun to know God. And, indeed,
let as well men as women, as well boys as girls; let each sex and every age
observe this, and take care in this respect, according to the religion and faith
which they owe to God, that what is received holy and pure from the
condescension of the Lord be preserved with a no less anxious fear.(1)
3. My address is now to virgins, whose glory, as it is more eminent,
excites the greater interest. This is the flower of the ecclesiastical seed,(2) the
grace and ornament of spiritual endowment, a joyous disposition, the wholesome
and uncorrupted work of praise and honour, God's image answering to the
holiness of the Lord, the more illustrious portion of Christ's flock. The glorious
fruitfulness of Mother Church rejoices by their means, and in them abundantly
flourishes; and in proportion as a copious virginity is added to her number, so
much the more it increases the joy of the Mother. To these I speak, these I exhort
with affection rather than with power; not that I would claim--last and least,
and very conscious of my lowliness as I am--any right to censure, but because,
being unceasingly careful even to solicitude, I fear more from the onset of
Satan.
4. For that is not an empty carefulness nor a vain fear, which takes
counsel for the way of salvation, which guards the commandments of the Lord and of
life; so that they who have dedicated themselves to Christ, and who depart from
carnal concupiscence, and have vowed themselves to God as well in the flesh as
in the spirit, may consummate their work, destined as it is to a great reward,
and may not study any longer to be adorned or to please anybody but their Lord,
from whom also they expect the reward of virginity; as He Himself says: "All
men cannot receive this word, but they to whom it is given. For there are some
eunuchs, which were so born from their mother's womb; and there are some
eunuchs, which were made eunuchs of men; and there are eunuchs which have made
themselves eunuchs for the kingdom of heaven's sake."(3) Again, also by this word of
the angel the gift of continency is set forth, and virginity is preached: "These
are they which have not defiled themselves with women, for they have remained
virgins; these are they which follow the Lamb whithersoever He goeth."(4) For
not only thus does the Lord promise the grace of continency to men, and pass
over women; but since the woman is a portion of the man, and is taken and formed
from him, God in Scripture almost always speaks to the Protoplast, the first
formed, because they are two in one flesh, and in the male is at the same time
signified the woman also.
5. But if continency follows Christ, and virginity is destined for the
kingdom of God, what have they to do with earthly dress, and with ornaments,
wherewith while they are striving to please men they offend God? Not considering
that it is declared, "They who please men are put to confusion, because God hath
despised them;"(5) and that Paul also has gloriously and sublimely uttered, "If
I yet pleased men, I should not be the servant of Christ."(6) But continence
and modesty consist not alone in purity of the flesh, but also in seemliness, as
well as in modesty of dress and adornment; so that, according to the apostle,
she who is unmarried may be holy both in body and in spirit. Paul instructs and
teaches us, saying, "He that is unmarried careth for the things of the Lord,
how he may please God: but he who has contracted marriage careth for the things
which are of this world, how he may please his wife. So both the virgin and the
unmarried woman consider those things which are the Lord's, that they may be
holy both in body and spirit."(7) A virgin ought not only to be so, but also to
be perceived and believed to be so: no one on seeing a virgin should be in any
doubt as to whether she is one. Perfectness should show itself equal in all
things; nor should the dress of the body discredit the good of the mind. Why should
she walk out adorned? Why with dressed hair, as if she either had or sought
for a husband? Rather let her dread to please if she is a virgin; and let her not
invite her own risk, if she is keeping herself for better and divine things.
They who have not a husband whom they profess that they please, should
persevere, sound and pure not only in body, but also in spirit. For it is not right that
a virgin should have her hair braided for the appearance of her beauty, or
boast of her flesh and of its beauty, when she has no struggle greater than that
against her flesh, and no contest more obstinate than that of conquering and
subduing the body.
6. Paul proclaims in a loud and lofty voice, "But God forbid that I should
glory, save in the cross of our Lord Jesus Christ, by whom the world is
crucified unto me, and I unto the world."(8) And yet a virgin in the Church glories
concerning her fleshly appearance and the beauty of her body! Paul adds, and
says, "For they that are Christ's have crucified their flesh, with its faults and
lusts."(9) And she who professes to have renounced the lusts and vices of the
flesh, is found in the midst of those very things which she has renounced!
Virgin, thou art taken, thou art exposed, thou boastest one thing and affectest
another. You sprinkle yourself with the stains of carnal concupiscence, although
you are a candidate of purity and modesty. "Cry," says the Lord to Isaiah, "All
flesh is grass, and all the glory of it as the flower of the grass: the grass
withereth, and the flower fadeth; but the word of the Lord endureth for ever."(1)
It is becoming for no Christian, and especially it is not becoming for a
virgin, to regard any glory and honour of the flesh, but only to desire the word of
God, to embrace benefits which shall endure for ever. Or, if she must glory in
the flesh, then assuredly let her glory when she is tortured in confession of
the name; when a woman is found to be stronger than the tortures; when she
suffers fire, or the cross, or the sword, or the wild beasts, that she may be
crowned. These are the precious jewels of the flesh, these are the better ornaments
of the body.
7. But there are some rich women, and wealthy in the fertility of means,
who prefer their own wealth, and contend that they ought to use these blessings.
Let them know first of all that she is rich who is rich in God; that she is
wealthy who is wealthy in Christ; that those are blessings which are spiritual,
divine, heavenly, which lead us to God, which abide with us in perpetual
possession with God. But whatever things are earthly, and have been received in this
world, and will remain here with the world, ought so to be contemned even as the
world itself is contemned, whose pomps and delights we have already renounced
when by a blessed passage we came to God, John stimulates and exhorts us,
witnessing with a spiritual and heavenly voice. "Love not the world," says he,
"neither the things that are in the world. If any man love the world, the love of
the Father is not in him. For all that is in the world, is lust of the flesh, and
the lust of the eyes, and the pride of life, which is not from the Father, but
is of the lust of the world. And the world passeth away, and the lust thereof:
but he that doeth the will of God abideth for ever, even as God also abideth
for ever."(2) Therefore eternal and divine things are to be followed, and all
things must be done after the will of God, that we may follow the divine
footsteps and teachings of our Lord, who warned us, and said, "I came down from heaven,
not to do my own will, but the will of Him that sent me."(3) But if the
servant is not greater than his lord, and he that is freed owes obedience to his
deliverer, we who desire to be Christians ought to imitate what Christ said and
did. It is written, and it is read and heard, and is celebrated for our example by
the Church's mouth, "He that saith he abideth in Christ. ought himself also so
to walk even as He walked."(4) Therefore we must walk with equal steps; we
must strive with emulous walk. Then the following of truth answers to the faith of
our name, and a reward is given to the believer, if what is believed is also
done.
8. You call yourself wealthy and rich; but Paul meets your riches, and
with his own voice prescribes for the moderating of your dress and ornament within
a just limit. "Let women," said he, "adorn themselves with shamefacedness and
sobriety, not with broidered hair, nor gold, nor pearls, nor costly array, but
as becometh women professing chastity, with a good conversation."(5) Also Peter
consents to these same precepts, and says, "Let there be in the woman not the
outward adorning of array, or gold, or apparel, but the adorning of the
heart."(6) But if these also warn us that the women who are accustomed to make an
excuse for their dress by reference to their husband, should be restrained and
limited by religious observance to the Church's discipline, how much more is it
right that the virgin should keep that observance, who has no excuse for adorning
herself, nor can the deceitfulness of her fault be laid upon another, but she
herself remains in its guilt!
9. You say that you are wealthy and rich. But not everything that can be
done ought also to be done; nor ought the broad desires that arise out of the
pride of the world to be extended beyond the honour and modesty of virginity;
since it is written, "All things are lawful, but all things are not expedient: all
things are lawful, but all things edify not."(7) For the rest, if you dress
your hair sumptuously, and walk so as to draw attention in public, and attract
the eyes of youth upon you, and draw the sighs of young men after you, nourish
the lust of concupiscence, and inflame the fuel of sighs, so that, although you
yourself perish not, yet you cause others to perish, and offer yourself, as it
were, a sword or poison to the spectators; you cannot be excused on the pretence
that you are chaste and modest in mind. Your shameful dress and immodest
ornament accuse you; nor can yon be counted now among Christ's maidens and virgins,
since yon live in such a manner as to make yourselves objects of desire.
10. You say that you are wealthy and rich; but it becomes not a virgin to
boast of her riches, since Holy Scripture says, "What hath pride profited us?
or what benefit hath the vaunting of riches conferred upon us? And all these
things have passed away like a shadow."(1) And the apostle again warns us, and
says, "And they that buy, as though they bought not; and they that possess, as
though they possessed not; and they that use this world, as though they used it
not. For the fashion of this world passeth away."(2) Peter also, to whom the Lord
commends His sheep to be fed and guarded, on whom He placed and founded the
Church, says indeed that he has no silver and gold, but says that he is rich in
the grace of Christ--that he is wealthy in his faith and virtue--wherewith he
performed many great works with miracle, wherewith he abounded in spiritual
blessings to the grace of glory. These riches, this wealth, she cannot possess, who
had rather be rich to this world than to Christ.
11. You say that you are wealthy and rich, and you think that you should
use those things which God has willed you to possess. Use them, certainly, but
for the things of salvation; use them, but for good purposes; use them, but for
those things which God has commanded, and which the Lord has set forth. Let the
poor feel that you are wealthy; let the needy feel that you are rich. Lend
your estate to God; give food to Christ. Move Him by the prayers of many(3) to
grant you to carry out the glory of virginity, and to succeed in coming to the
Lord's rewards. There entrust your treasures, where no thief digs through, where
no insidious plunderer breaks in. Prepare for yourself possessions; but let them
rather be heavenly ones, where neither rust wears out, nor hail bruises, nor
sun burns, nor rain spoils your fruits constant and perennial, and free from all
contact of worldly injury. For in this very matter you are sinning against
God, if you think that riches were given you by Him for this purpose, to enjoy
them thoroughly, without a view to salvation. For God gave man also a voice; and
yet love-songs and indecent things are not on that account to be sung. And God
willed iron to be for the culture of the earth, but not on that account must
murders be committed. Or because God ordained incense, and wine, and fire, are we
thence to sacrifice to idols? Or because the flocks of cattle abound in your
fields, ought you to immolate victims and offerings to the gods? Otherwise a
large estate is a temptation, unless the wealth minister to good uses; so that
every man, in proportion to his wealth, ought by his patrimony rather to redeem his
transgressions than to increase them.
12. The characteristics of ornaments, and of garments, and the allurements
of beauty, are not fitting for any but prostitutes and immodest women; and the
dress of none is more precious than of those whose modesty is lowly.(4) Thus
in the Holy Scriptures, by which the Lord wished us to be both instructed and
admonished, the harlot city is described more beautifully arrayed and adorned,
and with her ornaments; and the rather on account of those very ornaments about
to perish. "And there came," it is said, "one of the seven angels, which had the
seven phials, and talked with me, saying, Come hither, I will show thee the
judgment of the great whore, that sitteth upon many waters, with whom the kings
of the earth have committed fornication. And he carried me away in spirit; and I
saw a woman sit upon a beast, and that woman was arrayed in a purple and
scarlet mantle, and was adorned with gold, and precious stones, and pearls, having a
golden cup in her hand, full of curses, and filthiness, and fornication of the
whole earth."(5) Let chaste and modest virgins avoid the dress of the
unchaste, the manners of the immodest, the ensigns of brothels, the ornaments of
harlots.
13. Moreover Isaiah, full of the Holy Spirit, cries out and chides the
daughters of Sion, corrupted with gold, and silver, and raiment, and rebukes them,
affluent as they were in pernicious wealth, and departing from God for the
sake of the world's delights. "The daughters of Sion," says he, "are haughty, and
walk with stretched-out neck and beckoning of the eyes, trailing their gowns as
they go, and mincing with their feet. And God will humble the princely
daughters of Sion, and the Lord will unveil their dress; and the Lord will take away
the glory of their apparel, and their ornaments, and their hair, and their
curls, and their round tires like the moon, and their crisping-pins, and their
bracelets, and their clusters of pearls, and their armlets and rings, and earrings,
and silks woven with gold and hyacinth. And instead of a sweet smell there
shall be dust; and thou shall be girt with a rope instead of with a girdle; and for
a golden ornament of thy head thou shalt have baldness."(6) This God blames,
this He marks out: hence He declares that virgins are corrupted; hence, that
they have departed from the true and divine worship. Lifted up, they have fallen;
with their heads adorned, they merited dishonour and disgrace. Having put on
silk and purple, they cannot put on Christ; adorned with gold, and pearls, and
necklaces, they have lost the ornaments of the heart and spirit. Who would not
execrate and avoid that which has been the destruction of another? Who would
desire and take up that which has served as the sword and weapon for the death of
another? If he who had drunk should die by draining the cup, you would know that
what he had drunk was poison; if, on taking food, he who had taken it were to
perish, you would know that what, when taken could kill, was deadly; nor would
you eat or drink of that whence you had before seen that others had perished.
Now what ignorance of truth is it, what madness of mind, to wish for that which
both has hurt and always will hurt and to think that you yourself will not
perish by those means whereby you know that others have perished!
14. For God neither made the sheep scarlet or purple, nor taught the
juices of herbs and shell-fish to dye and colour wool, nor arranged necklaces with
stones set in gold, and with pearls distributed in a woven series or numerous
cluster, wherewith you would hide the neck which He made; that what God formed in
man may be covered, and that may be seen upon it which the devil has invented
in addition. Has God willed that wounds should be made in the ears, wherewith
infancy, as yet innocent, and unconscious of worldly evil, may be put to pain,
that subsequently from the scars and holes of the ears precious beads may hang,
heavy, if not by their weight, still by the amount of their cost? All which
things sinning and apostate angels put forth by their arts, when, lowered to the
contagious of earth, they forsook their heavenly vigour. They taught them also
to paint the eyes with blackness drawn round them in a circle, and to stain the
cheeks with a deceitful red, and to change the hair with false colours, and to
drive out all truth, both of face and head, by the assault of their own
corruption.
15. And indeed in that very matter, for the sake of the fear which faith
suggests to me, for the sake of the love which brotherhood requires, I think
that not virgins only and widows, but married women also, and all of the sex
alike, should be admonished, that the work of God and His fashioning and formation
ought in no manner to be adulterated, either with the application of yellow
colour, or with black dust or rouge, or with any kind of medicament which can
corrupt the native lineaments. God says, "Let us make man in our image and likeness;
and does any one dare to alter and to change what God has made? They are
laying hands on God when they try to re-form that which He formed, and to
transfigure it, not knowing that everything which comes into being is God's work,
everything that is changed is the devil's If any artist, in painting, were to
delineate in envious colouring the countenance and likeness and bodily appearance of
any one; and the likeness being now painted and completed, another person were to
lay hands on it, as if, when it was already formed and already painted, he,
being more skilled, could amend it, a serious wrong and a just cause of
indignation would seem natural to the former artist. And do you think yourself likely
with impunity to commit a boldness of such wicked temerity, an offence to God the
artificer? For although you may not be immodest among men, and are not
unchaste with your seducing dyes, yet when those things which belong to God are
corrupted and violated, you are engaged in a worse adultery. That you think yourself
to be adorned, that you think your hair to be dressed, is an assault upon the
divine work, is a prevarication of the truth.
16. The voice of the warning apostle is, "Purge out the old leaven, that
ye may be a new lump, as ye are unleavened; for even Christ our passover is
sacrificed. Therefore let us keep the feast, not with old leaven, neither with the
leaven of malice and wickedness, but with the unleavened bread of sincerity and
truth."(2) But are sincerity and truth preserved, when what is sincere is
polluted by adulterous colours, and what is true is changed into a lie by the
deceitful dyes of medicaments? Your Lord says, "Thou canst not make one hair white
or black;"(3) and you, in order to overcome the word of your Lord, will be more
mighty than He, and stain your hair with a daring endeavour and with profane
contempt. With evil presage of the future, you make a beginning to yourself
already of flame-coloured hair; and sin (oh, wickedness!) with your head--that is,
with the nobler part of your body! And although it is written of the Lord, "His
head and His hair were white like wool or snow,"(4) you curse that whiteness
and hate that hoariness which is like to the Lord's head.
17. Are you not afraid, I entreat you, being such as you are, that when
the day of resurrection comes, your Maker may not recognise you again, and may
turn you away when you come to His rewards and promises, and may exclude you,
rebuking you with the vigour of a Censor and Judge, and say: "This is not my work,
nor is this our image. You have polluted your skin with a false medicament,
you have changed your hair with an adulterous colour, your face is violently
taken possession of by a lie, your figure is corrupted, your countenance is
another's. You cannot see God, since your eyes are not those which God made, but those
which the devil has spoiled. You have followed him, you have imitated the red
and painted eyes of the serpent. As you are adorned in the fashion of your
enemy, with him also you shall burn by and by." Are not these, I beg, matters to be
reflected on by God's servants? Are they not always to be dreaded day and
night? Let married women see to it, in what respect they are flattering themselves
concerning the solace of their husbands with the desire of pleasing them, and
while they put them forward indeed as their excuse, they make them partners in
the association of guilty, consent. Virgins, assuredly, to whom this address is
intended to appeal, who have adorned themselves with arts of this kind, I
should think ought not to be counted among virgins, but, like infected sheep and
diseased cattle, to be driven from the holy and pure flock of virginity, lest by
living together they should pollute the rest with their contagion; lest they
ruin others even as they have perished themselves.
18. And since we are seeking the advantage of continency, let us also
avoid everything that is pernicious and hostile to it. And I will not pass over
those things, which while by negligence they come into use, have made for
themselves a usurped licence, contrary to modest and sober manners. Some are not
ashamed to be present at marriage parties, and in that freedom of lascivious
discourse to mingle in unchaste conversation, to hear what is not becoming, to say what
is not lawful, to expose themselves, to be present in the midst of disgraceful
words and drunken banquets, by which the ardour of lust is kindled, and the
bride is animated to bear, and the bridegroom to dare lewdness.(1) What place is
there at weddings for her whose mind is not towards marriage? Or what can there
be pleasant or joyous in those engagements for her, where both desires and
wishes are different from her own? What is learnt there--what is seen? How greatly
a virgin falls short of her resolution, when she who had come there modest
goes away immodest! Although she may remain a virgin in body and mind, yet in
eyes, in ears, in tongue, she has diminished the virtues that she possessed.
19. But what of those who frequent promiscuous baths; who prostitute to
eyes that are curious to lust, bodies that are dedicated to chastity and modesty?
They who disgracefully behold naked men, and are seen naked by men, do they
not themselves afford enticement to vice, do they not solicit and invite the
desires of those present to their own corruption and wrong? "Let every one," say
you, "look to the disposition with which he comes thither: my care is only that
of refreshing and washing my poor body." That kind of defence does not clear
you, nor does it excuse the crime of lasciviousness and wantonness. Such a washing
defiles; it does not purify nor cleanse the limbs, but stains them. You behold
no one immodestly, but you yourself are gazed upon immodestly. You do not
pollute your eyes with disgraceful delight, but in delighting others you yourself
are polluted. You make a show of the bathing-place; the places where you
assemble are fouler than a theatre. There all modesty is put; off together with the
clothing of garments, the honour and modesty of the body is laid aside; virginity
is exposed, to be pointed at and to be handled. And now, then, consider
whether when you are clothed you are modest among men, when the boldness of nakedness
has conduced to immodesty.
20. For this reason, therefore, the Church frequently mourns over her
virgins; hence she groans at their scandalous and detestable stories; hence the
flower of her virgins is extinguished, the honour and modesty of continency are
injured, and all its glory and dignity are profaned. Thus the hostile besieger
insinuates himself by his arts; thus by snares that deceive, by secret ways, the
devil creeps in. Thus, while virgins wish to be more carefully adorned, and to
wander with more liberty, they cease to be virgins, corrupted by a furtive
dishonour; widows before they are married, adulterous, not to their husband, but to
Christ. In proportion as they had been as virgins destined to great rewards,
so will they experience great punishments for the loss of their virginity.
21. Therefore hear me, O virgins, as a parent; hear, I beseech you, one
who fears while he warns; hear one who is faithfully consulting for your
advantage and your profit. Be such as God the Creator made you; be such as the hand of
your Father ordained you. Let your countenance remain in you incorrupt, your
neck unadorned, your figure simple; let not wounds be made in your ears, nor let
the precious chain of bracelets and necklaces circle your arms or your neck;
let your feet be free from golden bands, your hair stained with no dye, your eyes
worthy of beholding God. Let your baths be performed with women, among whom
your bathing is modest.(2) Let the shameless feasts and lascivious banquets of
marriages be avoided, the contagion of which is perilous. Overcome dress, since
you are a virgin; overcome gold, since you overcome the flesh and the world. It
is not consistent to be unable to be conquered by the greater, and to be found
no match for the less. Strait and narrow is the way which leadeth to life; hard
and difficult is the track which tends to glory. By this pathway the martyrs
progress, the virgins pass, the just of all kinds advance. Avoid the broad and
roomy ways. There are deadly snares and death-bringing pleasures; there the
devil flatters, that he may deceive; smiles, that he may do mischief; entices, that
he may slay. The first fruit for the martyrs is a hundred-fold; the second is
yours, sixty-fold. As with the martyrs there is no thought of the flesh and of
the world, no small, and trifling, and delicate encounter; so also in you,
whose reward is second in grace, let there be the strength in endurance next to
theirs. The ascent to great things is not easy. What toil we suffer, what labour,
when we endeavour to ascend the hills and the tops of mountains! What, then,
that we may ascend to heaven? If you look to the reward of the promise, your
labour is less. Immortality is given to the persevering, eternal life is set before
them; the Lord promises a kingdom.
22. Hold fast, O virgins! hold fast what you have begun to be; hold fast
what you shall be. A great reward awaits you, a great recompense of virtue, the
immense advantage of chastity. Do you wish to know what ill the virtue of
continence avoids, what good it possesses? "I will multiply," says God to the woman,
"thy sorrows and thy groanings; and in sorrow shalt thou bring forth children;
and thy desire shall be to thy husband, and he shall rule over thee."(1) You
are free from this sentence. You do not fear, the sorrows and the groans of
women. You have no fear of child-bearing; nor is your husband lord over you; but
your Lord and Head is Christ, after the likeness and in the place of the man;
with that of men your lot and your condition is equal. It is the word of the Lord
which says, "The children of this world beget and are begotten; but they who
are counted worthy of that world, and of the resurrection from the dead, neither
marry nor are given in marriage: neither shall they die any more: for they are
equal to the angels of God, being the children of the resurrection."(2) That
which we shall be, you have already begun to be. You possess already in this
world the glory of the resurrection. You pass through the world without the
contagion of the world; in that you continue chaste and virgins, you are equal to the
angels of God. Only let your virginity remain and endure substantial and
uninjured; and as it began bravely, let it persevere continuously, and not seek the
ornaments of necklaces nor garments, but of conduct. Let it look towards God and
heaven, and not lower to the lust of the flesh and of the world, the eyes
uplifted to things above, or set them upon earthly things.
23. The first decree commanded to increase and to multiply; the second
enjoined continency. While the world is still rough and void, we are propagated by
the fruitful begetting of numbers, and we increase to the enlargement of the
human race. Now, when the world is filled and the earth supplied, they who can
receive continency, living after the manner of eunuchs, are made eunuchs unto
the kingdom. Nor does the Lord command this, but He exhorts it; nor does He
impose the yoke of necessity, since the free choice of the will is left. But when He
says that in His Father's house are many mansions, He points out the dwellings
of the better habitation. Those better habitations you are seeking; cutting
away the desires of the flesh, you obtain the reward of a greater grace in the
heavenly home. All indeed who attain to the divine gift and inheritance by the
sanctification of baptism, therein put off the old man by the grace of the saving
layer, and, renewed by the Holy Spirit from the filth of the old contagion,
are purged by a second nativity. But the greater holiness and truth of that
repeated birth belongs to you, who have no longer any desires of the flesh and of
the body. Only the things which belong to virtue and the Spirit have remained in
you to glory. It is the apostle's word whom the Lord called His chosen vessel,
whom God sent to proclaim the heavenly command: "The first man," says he, "is
from the earth, of earth; the second man is from heaven. Such as is the earthy,
such are they also who are earthy; and such as is the heavenly, such also are
the heavenly. As we have borne the image of him who is earthy, let us also bear
the image of Him who is heavenly."(3) Virginity bears this image, integrity
bears it, holiness bears it, and truth. Disciplines which are mindful of God bear
it, retaining righteousness with religion, stedfast in faith, humble in fear,
brave to all suffering, meek to sustain wrong, easy to show mercy, of one mind
and one heart in fraternal peace.
24. Every one of which things, O good virgins, you ought to observe, to
love, to fulfil, who, giving yourselves to God and Christ, are advancing in both
the higher and better part to the Lord, to whom you have dedicated yourselves.
You that are advanced in years, suggest a teaching to the younger. You that are
younger, give a stimulus to your coevals. Stir one another up with mutual
exhortations; provoke to glory by rival proofs of virtue. Endure bravely, go on
spiritually, attain happily. Only remember us at that time, when virginity shall
begin to be rewarded in you.