THE TREATISES OF CYPRIAN: TREATISE VII.--ON THE MORTALITY
TREATISE VII.
ON THE MORTALITY.(1)
ARGUMENT.--THE DEACON PONTIUS IN A FEW WORDS UNFOLDS THE BURTHEN OF THIS
TREATISE IN HIS LIFE OF CYPRIAN.(2) FIRST OF ALL, HAVING POINTED OUT THAT
AFFLICTIONS OF THIS KIND HAD BEEN FORETOLD BY CHRIST, HE TELLS THEM THAT THE MORTALITY OR
PLAGUE WAS NOT TO BE FEARED, IN THAT IT LEADS TO IMMORTALITY, AND THAT
THEREFORE, THAT MAN IS WANTING IN FAITH WHO IS NOT EAGER FOR A BETTER WORLD. NOR IS IT
WONDERFUL THAT THE EVILS OF THIS LIFE ARE COMMON TO THE CHRISTIANS WITH THE
HEATHENS, SINCE THEY HAVE TO SUFFER MORE THAN OTHERS IN THE WORLD, AND THENCE,
AFTER THE EXAMPLE OF JOB AND TOBIAS, THERE IS NEED OF PATIENCE WITHOUT MURMURING.
FOR UNLESS THE STRUGGLE PRECEDED, THE VICTORY COULD NOT ENSUE; AND HOW MUCH
SOEVER DISEASES ARE COMMON TO THE VIRTUOUS AND VICIOUS, YET THAT DEATH IS NOT
COMMON TO THEM, FOR THAT THE RIGHTEOUS ARE TAKEN TO CONSOLATION, WHILE THE
UNRIGHTEOUS ARE TAKEN TO PUNISHMENT.(3)
1. Although in very many of you, dearly beloved brethren, there is a
stedfast mind and a firm faith, and a devoted spirit that is not disturbed at the
frequency of this present mortality, but, like a strong and stable rock, rather
shatters the turbulent onsets of the world and the raging waves of time, while
it is not itself shattered, and is not overcome but tried by these temptations;
yet because I observe that among the people some, either through weakness of
mind, or through decay of faith, or through the sweetness of this worldly life,
or through the softness of their sex, or what is of still greater account,
through error from the truth, are standing less steadily, and are not exerting the
divine and unvanquished vigour of their heart, the matter may not be disguised
nor kept in silence, but as far as my feeble powers suffice with my full
strength, and with a discourse gathered from the Lord's lessons, the slothfulness of a
luxurious disposition must be restrained, and he who has begun to be already a
man of God and of Christ, must be found worthy of God and of Christ.
2. For he who wars for God, dearest brethren, ought to acknowledge himself
as one who, placed in the heavenly camp, already hopes for(4) divine things,
so that we may have no trembling at the storms and whirlwinds of the world, and
no disturbance, since the Lord had foretold that these would come. With the
exhortation of His fore-seeing word, instructing, and teaching, and preparing, and
strengthening the people of His Church for all endurance of things to come, He
predicted and said that wars, and famines, and earthquakes, and pestilences
would arise in each place; and lest an unexpected and new dread of mischiefs
should shake us, He previously warned us that adversity would increase more and
more in the last times. Behold, the very things occur which were spoken; and since
those occur which were foretold before, whatever things were promised will
also follow; as the Lord Himself promises, saying, "But when ye see all these
things come to pass, know ye that the kingdom of God is at hand."(5) The kingdom of
God, beloved brethren, is beginning to be at hand; the reward of life, and the
rejoicing of eternal salvation, and the perpetual gladness(6) and possession
lately lost of paradise, are now coming, with the passing away of the world;
already heavenly things are taking the place of earthly, and great things of
small, and eternal things of things that fade away. What room is there here for
anxiety and solicitude? Who, in the midst of these things, is trembling and sad,
except he who is without hope and faith? For it is for him to fear death who is
not willing to go to Christ. It is for him to be unwilling to go to Christ who
does not believe that he is about to reign(7) with Christ.
3. For it is written that the just lives by faith.(1) If you are just, and
live by faith, if you truly believe in Christ, why, since you are about to be
with Christ, and are secure of the Lord's promise, do you not embrace the
assurance that you are called to Christ, and rejoice that you are freed from the
devil? Certainly Simeon, that just man, who was truly just, who kept God's
commands with a full faith, when it had been pledged him from heaven that he should
not die before he had seen the Christ, and Christ had come an infant into the
temple with His mother, acknowledged in spirit that Christ was now born,
concerning whom it had before been foretold to him; and when he had seen Him, he knew
that he should soon die. Therefore, rejoicing concerning his now approaching
death, and secure of his immediate summons, he received the child into his arms,
and blessing the Lord, he exclaimed, and said, "Now lettest Thou Thy servant
depart in peace, according to Thy word; for mine eyes have seen Thy salvation;"(2)
assuredly proving and bearing witness that the servants of God then had peace,
then free, then tranquil repose, when, withdrawn from these whirlwinds of the
world, we attain the harbour of our home and eternal security, when having
accomplished this death we come to immortality. For that is our(3) peace, that our
faithful tranquillity, that our stedfast, and abiding, and perpetual security.
4. But for the rest, what else in the world than a battle against the
devil is daily carried on, than a struggle against his darts and weapons in
constant conflicts? Our warfare is with avarice, with immodesty, with anger, with
ambition; our diligent and toilsome wrestle with carnal vices, with enticements of
the world. The mind of man besieged, and in every quarter invested with the
onsets of the devil, scarcely in each point meets the attack, scarcely resists it.
If avarice is prostrated, lust springs up. If lust is overcome, ambition takes
its place. If ambition is despised, anger exasperates, pride puffs up,
wine-bibbing entices, envy breaks concord, jealousy cuts friendship; you are
constrained to curse, which the divine law forbids; you are compelled to swear, which is
not lawful.
5. So many persecutions the soul suffers daily, with so many risks is the
heart wearied, and yet it delights to abide here long among the devil's
weapons, although it should rather be our craving and wish to hasten to Christ by the
aid of a quicker death; as He Himself instructs us, and says, "Verily, verily,
I say unto you, That ye shall weep and lament, but the world shall rejoice; and
ye shall be sorrowful, but your sorrow shall be turned into joy."(4) Who would
not desire to be without sadness? who would not hasten to attain to joy? But
when our sadness shall be turned into joy, the Lord Himself again declares, when
He says, "I will see you again, and your heart shall rejoice; and your joy no
man shall take from you."(5) Since, therefore, to see Christ is to rejoice, and
we cannot have joy unless when we shall see Christ, what blindness of mind or
what folly is it to love the world's afflictions, and punishments, and tears,
and not rather to hasten to the joy which can never be taken away!
6. But, beloved brethren, this is so, because faith is lacking, because no
one believes that the things which God promises are true, although He is true,
whose word to believers is eternal and un- changeable. If a grave and
praiseworthy man should promise you anything, you would assuredly have faith in the
promiser, and would not think that you should be cheated and deceived by him whom
you knew to be stedfast in his words and his deeds. Now God is speaking with
you; and do you faithlessly waver in your unbelieving mind? God promises to you,
on your departure from this world, immortality and eternity; and do you doubt?
This is not to know God at all; this is to offend Christ, the Teacher(6) of
believers, with the sin of incredulity; this is for one established in the Church
not to have faith in the house of faith.
7. How great is the advantage of going out of the world, Christ Himself,
the Teacher of our salvation and of our good works, shows to us, who, when His
disciples were saddened that He said that He was soon to depart, spoke to them,
and said, "If ye loved me, ye would surely rejoice because I go to the
Father;"(7) teaching thereby, and manifesting that when the dear ones whom we love
depart from the world, we should rather rejoice than grieve. Remembering which
truth, the blessed Apostle Paul in his epistle lays it down, saying, "To me to live
is Christ, and to die is gain;"(8) counting it the greatest gain no longer to
be held by the snares of this world, no longer to be liable to the sins and
vices of the flesh, but taken away from smarting troubles, and freed from the
envenomed fangs of the devil, to go at the call of Christ to the joy of eternal
salvation.
8. But nevertheless it disturbs some that the power of this Disease
attacks our people equally with the heathens, as if the Christian believed for this
purpose, that he might have the enjoyment of the world and this life free from
the contact of ills; and not as one who undergoes all adverse things here and is
reserved for future joy. It disturbs some that this mortality is common to us
with others; and yet what is there in this world which is not common to us with
others, so long as this flesh of ours still remains, according to the law of
our first birth, common to us with them? So long as we are here in the world, we
are associated with the human race in fleshly equality,(1) but are separated
in spirit. Therefore until this corruptible shall put on incorruption, and this
mortal receive immortality, and the Spirit(2) lead us to God the Father,
whatsoever are the disadvantages of the flesh are common to us with the human race.
Thus, when the earth is barren with an unproductive harvest, famine makes no
distinction; thus, when with the invasion of an enemy any city is taken,
captivity at once desolates all; and when the serene clouds withhold the rain, the
drought is alike to all; and when the jagged rocks rend the ship, the shipwreck
is common without exception to all that sail in her; and the disease of the
eyes, and the attack of fevers, and the feebleness of all the limbs is common to us
with others, so long as this common flesh of ours is borne by us in the world.
9. Moreover, if the Christian know and keep fast under what condition and
what law he has believed, he will be aware that he must suffer more than others
in the world, since he must struggle more with the attacks of the devil. Holy
Scripture teaches and forewarns, saying, "My son, when thou comest to the
service of God, stand in righteousness and fear, and prepare thy soul for
temptation."(3) And again: "In pain endure, and in thy humility have patience; for gold
and silver is tried in the fire, but acceptable men in the furnace of
humiliation."(4)
10. Thus Job, after the loss of his wealth, after the death of his
children, grievously afflicted, moreover, with sores and worms, was not overcome, but
proved; since in his very struggles and anguish, showing forth the patience of
a religious mind, he says, "Naked came I out of my mother's womb, naked also I
shall go under the earth: the Lord gave, the Lord hath taken away; as it seemed
fit to the Lord, so it hath been done. Blessed be the name of the Lord."(5)
And when his wife also urged him, in his impatience at the acuteness of his pain,
to speak something against God with a complaining and envious voice, he
answered and said, "Thou speakest as one of the foolish women. If we have received
good from the hand of the Lord, why shall we not suffer evil? In all these things
which befell him, Job sinned not with his lips in the sight of the Lord."(6)
Therefore the Lord God gives him a testimony, saying, "Hast thou considered my
servant Job? for there is none like him in all the earth, a man without
complaint, a true worshipper of God."(7) And Tobias, after his excellent works, after
the many and glorious illustrations of his merciful spirit, having suffered the
loss of his sight, fearing and blessing God in his adversity, by his very
bodily affliction increased in praise; and even him also his wife tried to pervert,
saying, "Where are thy righteousnesses? Behold what thou sufferest!"(8) But he,
stedfast and firm in respect of the fear of God, and armed by the faith of his
religion to all endurance of suffering, yielded not to the temptation of his
weak wife in his trouble, but rather deserved better from God by his greater
patience; and afterwards Raphael the angel praises him, saying, "It is honourable
to show forth and to confess the works of God. For when thou didst pray, and
Sara thy daughter-in-law, I did offer the remembrance of your prayer in the
presence of the glory of God. And when thou didst bury the dead in singleness of
heart, and because thou didst not delay to rise up and leave thy dinner, and
wentest and didst bury the dead, I was sent to make proof of thee. And God again
hath sent me to heal thee and Sara thy daughter-in-law. For I am Raphael, one of
the seven holy angels, who are present, and go in and out before the glory of
God."(9)
11. Righteous men have ever possessed this endurance. The apostles
maintained this discipline from the law of the Lord, not to murmur in adversity, but
to accept bravely and patiently whatever things happen in the world; since the
people of the Jews in this matter always offended, that they constantly murmured
against God, as the Lord God bears witness in the book of Numbers, saying,
"Let their murmuring cease from me, and they shall not die."(10) We must not
murmur in adversity, beloved brethren, but we must bear with patience and courage
whatever happens, since it is written, "The sacrifice to God is a broken spirit;
a contrite and humbled heart God does not despise;"(11) since also in
Deuteronomy the Holy Spirit warns by Moses. and says, "The Lord thy God will vex thee,
and will bring hunger upon thee; and it shall be known in thine heart if thou
hast well kept His commandments or no."(12) And again: "The Lord your God proveth
you, that He may know whether ye love the Lord your God with all your heart,
and with all your soul."(1)
12. Thus Abraham pleased God, who, that he might please God, did not
shrink even from losing his son, or from doing an act of parricide. You, who cannot
endure to lose your son by the law and lot of mortality, what would you do if
you were bidden to slay your son? The fear and faith of God ought to make you
prepared for everything, although it should be the loss of private estate,
although the constant and cruel harassment of your limbs by agonizing disorders,
although the deadly and mournful wrench from wife, from children, from departing
dear ones; Let not these things be offences to you, but battles: nor let them
weaken nor break the Christian's faith, but rather show forth his strength in the
struggle, since all the injury inflicted by present troubles is to be despised
in the assurance of future blessings. Unless the battle has preceded, there
cannot be a victory: when there shall have been, in the onset of battle, the
victory, then also the crown is given to the victors. For the helmsman(2) is
recognised in the tempest; in the warfare the soldier is proved. It is a wanton
display when there is no danger. Struggle in adversity is the trial of the truth.(3)
The tree which is deeply founded in its root is not moved by the onset of
winds, and the ship which is compacted of solid timbers is beaten by the waves and
is not shattered; and when the threshing-floor brings out the corn, the strong
and robust grains despise the winds, while the empty chaff is carried away by
the blast that falls upon it.
13. Thus, moreover, the Apostle Paul, after shipwrecks, after scourgings,
after many and grievous tortures of the flesh and body, says that he is not
grieved, but benefited by his adversity, in order that while he is sorely
afflicted he might more truly be proved. "There was given to me," he says, "a thorn in
the flesh, the messenger of Satan to buffet me, that I should not be lifted up:
for which thing I besought the Lord thrice, that it might depart from me; and
He said unto me, My grace is sufficient for thee, for strength is made perfect
in weakness."(4) When, therefore, weakness and inefficiency and any destruction
seize us, then our strength is made perfect; then our faith, if when tried it
shall stand fast, is crowned; as it is written, "The furnace trieth the vessels
of the potter, and the trial of tribulation just men."(5) This, in short, is
the difference between us and others who know not God, that in misfortune they
complain and murmur, while adversity does not call us away from the truth of
virtue and faith, but strengthens us by its suffering.
14. This trial, that now the bowels, relaxed into a constant flux,
discharge the bodily strength; that a fire originated in the marrow ferments into
wounds of the fauces; that the intestines are shaken with a continual vomiting;
that the eyes are on fire with the injected blood; that in some cases the feet or
some parts of the limbs are taken off by the contagion of diseased
putrefaction; that from the weakness arising by the maiming and loss of the body, either
the gait is enfeebled, or the hearing is obstructed, or the sight darkened;--is
profitable as a proof of faith. What a grandeur of spirit it is to struggle with
all the powers of an unshaken mind against so many onsets of devastation and
death! what sublimity, to stand erect amid the desolation of the human race, and
not to lie prostrate with those who have no hope in God; but rather to
rejoice,(6) and to embrace the benefit of the occasion; that in thus bravely showing
forth our faith, and by suffering endured, going forward to Christ by the narrow
way that Christ trod, we may receive the reward of His life(7) and faith
according to His own judgment! Assuredly he may fear to die, who, not being
regenerated of water and the Spirit, is delivered over to the fires of Gehenna; he may
fear to die who is not enrolled in the cross and passion of Christ; he may fear
to die, who from this death shall pass over to a second death; he may fear to
die, whom on his departure from this world eternal flame shall torment with
never-ending punishments; he may fear to die who has this advantage in a
lengthened delay, that in the meanwhile his groanings and his anguish are being
postponed.
15. Many of our people die in this mortality, that is, many of our people
are liberated from this world. This mortality, as it is a plague to Jews and
Gentiles, and enemies of Christ, so it is a departure to salvation to God's
servants. The fact that, without any difference made between one ant another, the
righteous die as well as the unrighteous, is no reason for you to suppose that it
is a common death for the good and evil alike. The righteous are called to
their place of refreshing, the unrighteous are snatched away to punishment; safety
is the more speedily given to the faithful, penalty to the unbelieving. We are
thoughtless and ungrateful, beloved brethren, for the divine benefits, and do
not acknowledge what is conferred upon us. Lo, virgins depart in peace, safe
with their glory, not fearing the threats of the coming Antichrist, and his
corruptions and his brothels. Boys escape the peril of their unstable age, and in
happiness attain the reward of continence and innocence. Now the delicate matron
does not fear the tortures; for she has escaped by a rapid death the fear of
persecution, and the hands and the torments of the executioner. By the dread of
the mortality and of the time the lukewarm are inflamed, the slack are nerved
up, the slothful are stimulated, the deserters are compelled to return, the
heathens are constrained to believe, the ancient congregation of the faithful is
called to rest, the new and abundant army is gathered to the battle with a braver
vigour, to fight without fear of death when the battle shall come, because it
comes to the warfare in the time of the mortality.
16. And further, beloved brethren, what is it, what a great thing is it,
how pertinent, how necessary, that pestilence and plague which seems horrible
and deadly, searches out the righteousness of each one, and examines the minds of
the human race, to see whether they who are in health tend the sick; whether
relations affectionately love their kindred; whether masters pity their
languishing servants; whether physicians do not forsake the beseeching patients;
whether the fierce suppress their violence; whether the rapacious can quench the ever
insatiable ardour of their raging avarice even by the fear of death; whether
the haughty bend their neck; whether the wicked soften their boldness; whether,
when their dear ones perish, the rich, even then bestow anything,(1) and give,
when they are to die without heirs. Even although this mortality conferred
nothing else, it has done this benefit to Christians and to God's servants that we
begin gladly to desire martyrdom as we learn not to fear death. These are
trainings for us, not deaths: they give the mind the glory of fortitude; by contempt
of death they prepare for the crown.
17. But perchance some one may object, and say, "It is this, then, that
saddens me in the present mortality, that I, who had been prepared for
confession, and had devoted myself to the endurance of suffering with my whole heart and
with abundant courage, am deprived of martyrdom, in that I am anticipated by
death." In the first place, martyrdom is not in your power, but in the
condescension of God; neither can you say that you have lost what you do not know whether
you would deserve to receive. Then, besides, God the searcher of the reins and
heart, and the investigator and knower of secret things, sees you, and praises
and approves you; and He who sees that your virtue was ready in you, will give
you a reward for your virtue. Had Cain, when he offered his gift to God,
already slain his brother? And yet God, foreseeing the fratricide conceived in his
mind, anticipated its condemnation. As in that case the evil thought and
mischievous intention were foreseen(2) by a foreseeing God, so also in God's servants,
among whom confession is purposed and martyrdom conceived in the mind, the
intention dedicated to good is crowned by God the judge. It is one thing for the
spirit to be wanting for martyrdom, and another for martyrdom to have been
wanting for the spirit. Such as the Lord finds you when He calls you, such also He
judges you; since He Himself bears witness, and says, "And all the churches
shall know that I am the searcher of the reins and heart."(3) For God does not ask
for our blood, but for our faith.(4) For neither Abraham, nor Isaac, nor Jacob
were slain; and yet, being honoured by the deserts of faith and righteousness,
they deserved to be first among the patriarchs, to whose feast is collected
every one that is found faithful, and righteous, and praiseworthy.
18. We ought to remember that we should do not our own will, but God's, in
accordance with what our Lord has bidden us daily to pray. How preposterous
and absurd it is, that while we ask that the will of God should be done, yet when
God calls and summons us from this world, we should not at once obey the
command of His will! We struggle and resist, and after the manner of froward
servants we are dragged to the presence of the Lord with sadness and grief, departing
hence under the bondage of necessity, not with the obedience of free will; and
we wish to be honoured with heavenly rewards by Him to whom we come
unwillingly. Why, then, do we pray and ask that the kingdom of heaven may come, if the
captivity of earth delights us? Why with frequently repeated prayers do we entreat
and beg that the day of His kingdom may hasten, if our greater desires and
stronger wishes are to obey the devil here, rather than to reign with Christ?
19. Besides, that the indications of the divine providence may be more
evidently manifest, proving that the Lord, prescient of the future, takes counsel
for the true salvation of His people, when one of our colleagues and
fellow-priests, wearied out with infirmity, and anxious about the present approach of
death, prayed for a respite to himself; there stood by him as he prayed, and when
he was now at the point of death, a youth, venerable in honour and majesty,
lofty in stature and shining in aspect, and on whom, as he stood by him, the human
glance could scarcely look with fleshly eyes, except that he who was about to
depart from the world could already behold such a one. And he, not without a
certain indignation of mind and voice, rebuked him, and said, You fear to suffer,
you do not wish to depart; what shall t do to you? It was the word of one
rebuking and warning, one who, when men are anxious about persecution, and
indifferent concerning their summons, consents not to their present desire, but
consults for the future. Our dying brother and colleague heard what he was to say to
others. For he who heard when he was dying, heard for the very purpose that he
might tell it; he heard not for himself, but for us. For what could he, who was
already on the eve of departure, learn for himself? Yea, doubtless, he learnt
it for us who remain, in order that, when we find the priest who sought for
delay rebuked, we might acknowledge what is beneficial for all.
20. To myself also, the very least and last, how often has it been
revealed, how frequently and manifestly has it been commanded by the condescension of
God, that I should diligently bear witness and publicly declare that our
brethren who are freed from this world by the Lord's summons are not to be lamented,
since we know that they are not lost, but sent before;(1) that, departing from
us, they precede us as travellers, as navigators are accustomed to do; that
they should be desired, but not bewailed; that the black garments should not be
taken upon us here,(2) when they have already taken upon them white raiment
there; that occasion should not be given to the Gentiles for them deservedly and
rightly to reprehend us, that we mourn for those, who, we say, are alive with God,
as if they were extinct and lost; and that we do not approve wills the
testimony of the heart and breast the faith which we express with speech and word. We
are prevaricators of our hope and faith: what we say appears to be simulated,
feigned, counterfeit. There is no advantage in setting forth virtue by our
words, and destroying the truth by our deeds.
21. Finally, the Apostle Paul reproaches, and rebukes, and blames any who
are in sorrow at the departure of their friends. "I would not," says he, have
you ignorant, brethren, concerning them which are asleep, that ye sorrow not,
even as others which have no hope. For if we believe that Jesus died and rose
again, even so them which are asleep in Jesus Will God bring with Him."(3) He says
that those have sorrow in the departure of their friends who have no hope. But
we who live in hope, and believe in God, and trust that Christ suffered for us
and rose again, abiding in Christ, and through Him and in Him rising again,
why either are we ourselves unwilling to depart hence from this life, or do we
bewail and grieve for our friends when they depart as if they were lost, when
Christ Himself, our Lord and God, encourages us and says, "I am the resurrection
and the life: he that believeth in me, though he die, yet shall live; and
whosoever liveth and believeth in me shall not die eternally?"(4) If we believe in
Christ, let us have faith in His words and promises; and since we shall not die
eternally, let us come with a glad security unto Christ, with whom we are both
to conquer and to reign for ever.
22. That in the meantime we die, we are passing over to immortality by
death; nor can eternal life follow, unless it should befall us to depart from this
life. That is not an ending, but a transit, and, this journey of time being
traversed, a passage to eternity. Who would not hasten to better things? Who
would not crave to be changed and renewed(5) into the likeness of Christ, and to
arrive more quickly to the dignity of heavenly glory, since Paul the apostle
announces and says, "For our conversation is in heaven, from whence also we look
for the Lord Jesus Christ; who shall change the body of our humiliation, and
conform it to the body of His glory?"(6) Christ the Lord also promises that we
shall be such, when, that we may be with Him, and that we may live with Him in
eternal mansions, and may rejoice in heavenly kingdoms, He prays the Father for us,
saying, "Father, I will that they also whom Thou hast given me be with me
where I am, and may see the glory which Thou hast given me before the world was
made."(7) He who is to attain to the throne of Christ, to the glory of the
heavenly kingdoms, ought not to mourn nor lament, but rather, in accordance with the
Lord's promise, in accordance with his faith in the truth, to rejoice in this
his departure and translation.
23. Thus, moreover, we find that Enoch also was translated, who pleased
God, as in Genesis the Holy Scripture bears witness, and says, "And Enoch pleased
God; and afterwards he was not found, because God translated him."(8) To have
been pleasing in the sight of God was thus to have merited to be translated
from this contagion of the world. And moreover, also, the Holy Spirit teaches by
Solomon, that they who please God are more early taken hence, and are more
quickly set free, lest while they are delaying longer in this world they should be
polluted with the contagions of the world. "He was taken away," says he, "lest
wickedness should change his understanding. For his soul was pleasing to God;
wherefore hasted He to take him away from the midst of wickedness."(1) So also
in the Psalms, the soul that is devoted to its God in spiritual faith hastens to
the Lord, saying, "How amiable are thy dwellings, O God of hosts! My soul
longeth, and hasteth unto the courts of God."(2)
24. It is for him to wish to remain long in the world whom the world
delights, whom this life, flattering and deceiving, invites by the enticements of
earthly pleasure. Again, since the world hates the Christian, why do you love
that which hates you? and why do you not rather follow Christ, who both redeemed
you and loves you? John in his epistle cries and says, exhorting that we
should not follow carnal desires and love the world. "Love not the world," says he,
"neither the things which 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 the lust of the
flesh, and the lust of the eyes, and the pride of life, which is not of the
Father, but of the lust of the world. And the world shall pass away, and the lust
thereof; but he who doeth the will of God abideth for ever, even as God abideth
for ever."(3) Rather, beloved brethren, with a sound mind, with a firm faith,
with a robust virtue, let us be prepared for the whole will of God: laying
aside the fear of death, let us think on the immortality which follows. By this let
us show ourselves to be what we believe, that we do not grieve over the
departure of those dear to us, and that when the day of our summons shall arrive, we
come without delay and without resistance to the Lord when He Himself calls us.
25. And this, as it ought always to be done by God's servants, much more
ought to be done now--now that the world is collapsing and is oppressed with the
tempests of mischievous ills; in order that we who see that terrible things
have begun, and know that still more terrible things are imminent, may regard it
as the greatest advantage to depart from it as quickly as possible. If in your
dwelling the walls were shaking with age, the roofs above you were trembling,
and the house, now worn out and wearied, were threatening an immediate
destruction to its structure crumbling with age, would you not with all speed depart?
If, when you were on a voyage, an angry and raging tempest, by the waves
violently aroused, foretold the coming shipwreck, would you not quickly seek the
harbour? Lo, the world is changing and passing away, and witnesses to its ruin not
now by its age, but by the end of things. And do you not give God thanks, do
you not congratulate yourself, that by an earlier departure you are taken away,
and delivered from the shipwrecks and disasters that are imminent?
26. We should consider, dearly beloved brethren--we should ever and anon
reflect that we have renounced the world, and are in the meantime living here as
guests and strangers. Let us greet the day which assigns each of us to his own
home, which snatches us hence, and sets us free from the snares of the world,
and restores us to paradise and the(4) kingdom. Who that has been placed in
foreign lands would not hasten to return to his own country? Who that is hastening
to return to his friends would not eagerly desire a prosperous gale, that he
might the sooner embrace those dear to him? We regard paradise as our
country--we already begin to consider the patriarchs as our parents: why do we not hasten
and run, that we may behold our country, that we may greet our parents? There
a great number of our dear ones is awaiting us, and a dense crowd of parents,
brothers, children, is longing for us, already assured of their own safety, and
still solicitous for our salvation. To attain to their presence and their
embrace, what a gladness both for them and for us in common! What a pleasure is
there in the heavenly kingdom, without fear of death; and how lofty and perpetual a
happiness with eternity of living! There the glorious company of the
apostles(5)--there the host of the rejoicing prophets--there the innumerable multitude
of martyrs, crowned for the victory of their struggle and passion--there the
triumphant virgins, who subdued the lust of the flesh and of the body by the
strength of their continency--there are merciful men rewarded, who by feeding and
helping the poor have done the works of righteousness--who, keeping the Lord's
precepts, have transferred their earthly patrimonies to the heavenly treasuries.
To these, beloved brethren, let us hasten with an eager desire; let us crave
quickly to be with them, and quickly to come to Christ. May God behold this
our eager desire; may the Lord Christ look upon this purpose of our mind and
faith, He who will give the larger rewards of His glory to those whose desires in
respect of Himself were greater!