THE TREATISES OF CYPRIAN: TREATISE IX.--ON THE ADVANTAGE OF PATIENCE
TREATISE IX.
ON THE ADVANTAGE OF PATIENCE.(2)
ARGUMENT.--CYPRIAN HIMSELF BRIEFLY SETS FORTH THE OCCASION OF THIS TREATISE AT
THE CONCLUSION OF HIS EPISTLE TO JUBAIANUS AS FOLLOWS: "CHARITY OF SPIRIT, THE
HONOUR OF OUR COLLEGE, THE BOND OF FAITH, AND PRIESTLY CONCORD, ARE MAINTAINED
BY US WITH PATIENCE AND GENTLENESS. FOR THIS REASON, MOREOVER, WE HAVE,
WITH THE BEST OF OUR POOR ABILITIES, BY THE PERMISSION AND INSPIRATION OF THE
LORD,WRITTEN A PAMPHLET 'ON THE BENEFIT OF PATIENCE,' WHICH, FOR THE SAKE OF OUR
MUTUAL LOVE, WE HAVE TRANSMITTED TO YOU." A.D. 256.
1. As I am about to speak, beloved brethren, of patience, and to declare
its advantages and benefits, from what point should I rather begin than this,
that I see that even at this time, for your audience of me, patience is needful,
as you cannot even discharge this duty of hearing and learning without
patience? For wholesome discourse and reasoning are then effectually learnt, if what is
said be patiently heard. Nor do I find, beloved brethren, among the rest of
the ways of heavenly discipline wherein the path of our hope and faith is
directed to the attainment of the divine rewards, anything of more advantage, either
as more useful for life or more helpful to glory, than that we who are labouring
in the precepts of the Lord with the obedience of fear and devotion, should
especially, with our whole watchfulness, be careful of patience.(3)
2. Philosophers also profess that they pursue this virtue; but in their
case the patience is as false as their wisdom also is. For whence can he be
either wise or patient, who has neither known the wisdom nor the patience of God?
since He Himself warns us, and says of those who seem to themselves to be wise in
this world, "I will destroy the wisdom of the wise, and I will reprove the
understanding of the prudent."(4) Moreover, the blessed Apostle Paul, filled with
the Holy Spirit, and sent forth for the calling and training of the heathen,
bears witness and instructs us, saying, "See that no man despoil you through
philosophy and vain deceit, after the tradition of men, after the elements of the
world, and not after Christ, because in Him dwelleth all the fulness of
divinity."(5) And in another place he says: "Let no man deceive himself; if any man
among you thinketh himself to be wise, let him become a fool to this world, that
he may become wise. For the wisdom of this world is foolishness with God. For it
is written, I will rebuke the wise in their own craftiness." And again: "The
Lord knoweth the thoughts of the wise, that they are foolish."(6) Wherefore if
the wisdom among them be not true, the patience also cannot be true. For if he
is wise(7) who is lowly and meek--but we do not see that philosophers are either
lowly or meek, but greatly pleasing themselves, and, for the very reason that
they please themselves, displeasing God--it is evident that the patience is not
real among them where there is the insolent audacity of an affected liberty,
and the immodest boastfulness of an exposed and half-naked bosom.
3. But for us, beloved brethren, who are philosophers, not in words, but
in deeds, and do not put forward our wisdom in our garb, but in truth--who are
better acquainted with the consciousness, than with the boast, of virtues--who
do not speak great things, but live them,--let us, as servants and worshippers
of God, show, in our spiritual obedience, the patience which we learn from
heavenly teachings. For we have this virtue in common with God. From Him patience
begins; from Him its glory and its dignity take their rise. The origin and
greatness of patience proceed from God as its author. Man ought to love the thing
which is dear to God; the good which the Divine Majesty loves, it commends. If God
is our Lord and Father, let us imitate the patience of our Lord as well as our
Father; because it behoves servants to be obedient, no less than it becomes
sons not to be degenerate.
4. But what and how great is the patience in God, that, most patiently
enduring the profane temples and the images of earth, and the sacrilegious rites
instituted by men, in contempt of His majesty and honour, He makes the day to
begin and the light of the sun to arise alike upon the good and the evil; and
while He waters the earth with showers, no one is excluded from His benefits, but
upon the righteous equally with the unrighteous He bestows His undiscriminating
rains. We see that with undistinguishing(1) equality of patience, at God's
behest, the seasons minister to the guilty and the guiltless, the religious and
the impious--those who give thanks and the unthankful; that the elements wait on
them; the winds blow, the fountains flow, the abundance of the harvests
increases, the fruits of the vineyards ripen,(2) the trees are loaded with apples, the
groves put on their leaves, the meadows their verdure; and while God is
provoked with frequent, yea, with continual offences, He softens His indignation, and
in patience waits for the day of retribution, once for all determined; and
although He has revenge in His power, He prefers to keep patience for a long
while, bearing, that is to say, mercifully, and putting off, so that, if it might be
possible, the long protracted mischief may at some time be changed, and man,
involved in the contagion of errors and crimes, may even though late be
converted to God, as He Himself warns and says, "I do not will the death of him that
dieth, so much as that he may return and live."(3) And again," Return unto me,
saith the Lord."(4) And again: "Return to the Lord your God; for He is merciful,
and gracious, and patient, and of great pity, and who inclines His judgment
towards the evils inflicted."(5) Which, moreover, the blessed apostle referring
to, and recalling the sinner to repentance, sets forward, and says: "Or despisest
thou the riches of His goodness, and forbearance, and long-suffering, not
knowing that the patience and goodness of God leadeth thee to repentance? But after
thy hardness and impenitent heart thou treasurest up unto thyself wrath in the
day of wrath and of revelation of the righteous judgment of God, who shall
render to every one according to his works."(6) He says that God's judgment is
just, because it is tardy, because it is long and greatly, deferred, so that by
the long patience of God man may be benefited for life eternal.(7) Punishment is
then executed on the impious and the sinner, when repentance for the sin can no
longer avail.
5. And that we may more fully understand, beloved brethren, that patience
is a thing of God, and that whoever is gentle, and patient, and meek, is an
imitator of God the Father; when the Lord in His Gospel was giving precepts for
salvation, and, bringing forth divine warnings, was instructing His disciples to
perfection, He laid it down, and said, "Ye have heard that it is said, Thou
shalt love thy neighbour, and have thine enemy in hatred. But I say unto you, Love
your enemies, and pray for them which persecute you; that ye may be the
children of your Father which is in heaven, who maketh His sun to rise on the good
and on the evil, and raineth upon the just and on the unjust. For if ye love them
which love you, what reward shall ye have? do not even the publicans the same?
And if ye shall salute your brethren only, what do ye more (than others)? do
not even the heathens the same thing? Be ye therefore perfect, even as your
Father in heaven is perfect."(8) He said that the children of God would thus become
perfect. He showed that they were thus completed, and taught that they were
restored by a heavenly birth, if the patience of God our Father dwell in us--if
the divine likeness, which Adam had lost by sin, be manifested and shine in our
actions. What a glory is it to become like to God! what and how great a
felicity, to possess among our virtues, that which may be placed on the level of
divine praises!
6. Nor, beloved brethren, did Jesus Christ, our God and Lord, teach this
in words only; but He fulfilled it also in deeds. And because He had said that
He had come down for this purpose, that He might do the will of His Father;
among the other marvels of His virtues, whereby He showed forth the marks of a
divine majesty, He also maintained the patience of His Father in the constancy of
His endurance. Finally, all His actions, even from His very advent, are
characterized by patience as their associate; in that, first of all, coming down from
that heavenly sublimity to earthly things, the Son of God did not scorn to put
on the flesh of man, and although He Himself was not a sinner, to bear the sins
of others. His immortality being in the meantime laid aside, He suffers Himself
to become mortal, so that the guiltless may be put to death for the salvation
of the guilty. The Lord is baptized by the servant; and He who is about to
bestow remission of sins, does not Himself disdain to wash His body in the layer of
regeneration. For forty Clays He fasts, by whom others are feasted. He is
hungry, and suffers famine, that they who had been in hunger of the word and of
grace may be satisfied with heavenly bread. He wrestles with the devil tempting
Him; and, content only to have overcome the enemy, He strives no farther than by
words. He ruled over His disciples not as servants in the power of a master;
but, kind and gentle, He loved them with a brotherly love. He deigned even to
wash the apostles' feet, that since the Lord is such among His servants, He might
teach, by His example, what a fellow-servant ought to be among his peers and
equals. Nor is it to be wondered at, that among the obedient(1) He showed Himself
such, since He could bear Judas even to the last with a long patience--could
take meat with His enemy--could know the household foe, and not openly point him
out, nor refuse the kiss of the traitor. Moreover, in bearing with the Jews,
how great equanimity and how great patience, in turning the unbelieving to the
faith by persuasion, in soothing the unthankful by concession, in answering
gently to the contradictors, in bearing the proud with clemency, in yielding with
humility to the persecutors, in wishing to gather together the slayers of the
prophets, and those who were always rebellious against God, even to the very hour
of His cross and passion!
7. And moreover, in His very passion and cross, before they had reached
the cruelty of death and the effusion of blood, what infamies of reproach were
patiently heard, what mockings of contumely were suffered, so that He received(2)
the spittings of insulters, who with His spittle had a little before made eyes
for a blind man; and He in whose name the devil and his angels is now scourged
by His servants, Himself suffered scourgings! He was crowned with thorns, who
crowns martyrs with eternal flowers. He was smitten on the face with palms, who
gives the true palms to those who overcome. He was despoiled of His earthly
garment, who clothes others in the vesture of immortality. He was fed with gall,
who gave heavenly food. He was given to drink of vinegar, who appointed the
cup of salvation. That guiltless, that just One,--nay, He who is innocency itself
and justice itself,--is counted among transgressors, and truth is oppressed
with false witnesses. He who shall judge is judged; and the Word of God is led
silently to the slaughter. And when at the cross, of the Lord the stars are
confounded, the elements are disturbed, the earth quakes, night shuts out the day,
the sun, that he may not be compelled to look on the crime of the Jews,
withdraws both his rays and his eyes, He speaks not, nor is moved, nor declares His
majesty even in His very passion itself. Even to the end, all things are borne
perseveringly and constantly, in order that in Christ a full and perfect patience
may be consummated.(3)
8. And after all these things, He still receives His murderers, if they
will be converted and come to Him; and with a saving patience, He who is
benignant(4) to preserve, closes His Church to none. Those adversaries, those
blasphemers, those who were always enemies to His name, if they repent of their sin, if
they acknowledge the crime committed, He receives, not only to the pardon of
their sin, but to the reward of the heavenly kingdom. What can be said more
patient, what more merciful? Even he is made alive by Christ's blood who has shed
Christ's blood. Such and so great is the patience of Christ; and had it not been
such and so great, the Church would never have possessed Paul as an apostle.(5)
9. But if we also, beloved brethren, are in Christ; if we put Him on, if
He is the way of our salvation, who follow Christ in the footsteps of salvation,
let us walk by the example of Christ, as the Apostle John instructs us,
saying, "He who saith he abideth in Christ, ought himself also to walk even as He
walked."(6) Peter also, upon whom by the Lord's condescension the Church was
founded,(7) lays it down in his epistle, and says, "Christ suffered for us, leaving
you an example, that ye should follow His steps, who did no sin, neither was
deceit found in His mouth; who, when He was reviled, reviled not again; when He
suffered, threatened not, but gave Himself up to him that judged Him
unjustly."(8)
10. Finally, we find that both patriarchs and prophets, and all the
righteous men who in their preceding likeness wore the figure of Christ, in the
praise of their virtues were watchful over nothing more than that they should
preserve patience with a strong and stedfast equanimity. Thus Abel, who first
initiated and consecrated the origin of martyrdom, and the passion of the righteous
man, makes no resistance nor struggles against his fratricidal(9) brother, but
with lowliness and meekness he is patiently slain. Thus Abraham, believing God,
and first of all instituting the root and foundation of faith, when tried in
respect of his son, does not hesitate nor delay, but obeys the commands of God
with all the patience of devotion. And Isaac, prefigured as the likeness of the
Lord's victim, when he is presented by his father for immolation, is found
patient. And Jacob, driven forth by his brother from his country, departs with
patience; and afterwards with greater patience, he suppliantly brings him back to
concord with peaceful gifts, when he is even more impious and persecuting. Joseph,
sold by his brethren and sent away, not only with patience pardons them, but
even bountifully and mercifully bestows gratuitous supplies of corn on them when
they come to him. Moses is frequently contemned by an ungrateful and faithless
people, and almost stoned; and yet with gentleness and patience he entreats
the Lord for those people. But in David, from whom, according to the flesh, the
nativity of Christ springs, how great and marvellous and Christian is the
patience, that he often had it in his power to be able to kill king Saul, who was
persecuting him and desiring to slay him; and yet, chose rather to save him when
placed in his hand, and delivered up to him, not repaying his enemy in turn, but
rather, on the contrary, even avenging him when slain! In fine, so many
prophets were slain, so many martyrs were honoured with glorious deaths, who all have
attained to the heavenly crowns by the praise of patience. For the crown of
sorrows and sufferings cannot be received unless patience in sorrow and suffering
precede it.
11. But that it may be more manifestly and fully known how useful and
necessary patience is, beloved brethren; let the judgment of God be pondered, which
even in the beginning of the world and of the human race, Adam, forgetful of
the commandment, and a transgressor of the given law, received. Then we shall
know how patient in this life we ought to be who are born in such a state, that
we labour here with afflictions and contests. "Because," says He, "thou hast
hearkened to the voice of thy wife, and hast eaten of the tree of which alone I
had charged thee that thou shouldest not eat, cursed shall be, the ground in all
thy works: in sorrow and in groaning shalt thou eat of it all the days of thy
life. Thorns and thistles shall it give forth to thee, and thou shalt eat the
food of the field. In the sweat of thy face shalt thou eat thy bread, till thou
return into the ground from which thou wast taken: for dust thou art, and to
dust shall thou go."(1) We are all tied and bound with the chain of this
sentence, until, death being expunged, we depart from this life. In sorrow and
groaning we must of necessity be all the days of our life: it is necessary that we eat
our bread with sweat and labour.
12. Whence every one of us, when he is born and received in the inn of
this world, takes his beginning from tears; and, although still unconscious and
ignorant of all things, he knows nothing else in that very earliest birth except
to weep. By a natural foresight, the untrained soul laments the anxieties and
labours of the mortal life, and even in the beginning bears witness by its
wails and groans to the storms of the world which it is entering. For the sweat of
the brow and labour is the condition of life so long as it lasts. Nor can there
be supplied any consolations to those that sweat and toil other than patience;
which consolations, while in this world they are fit and necessary for all
men, are especially so for us who are more shaken by the siege of the devil, who,
daily standing in the battle-field, are wearied with the wrestlings of an
inveterate and skilful enemy; for us who, besides the various and continual battles
of temptations, must also in the contest of persecutions(2) forsake our
patrimonies, undergo imprisonment, bear chains, spend our lives, endure the sword, the
wild beasts, fires, crucifixions--in fine, all kinds of torments and
penalties, to be endured in the faith and courage of patience; as the Lord Himself
instructs us, and says, "These things have I spoken unto you, that in me ye might
have peace. But in the world ye shall have tribulation; yet be confident, for I
have overcome the world."(3) And if we who have renounced the devil and the
world, suffer the tribulations and mischiefs of the devil and the world with more
frequency and violence, how much more ought we to keep patience, wherewith as
our helper and ally, we may bear all mischievous things!
13. It is the wholesome precept of our Lord and Master: "He that
endureth," saith He, "unto the end, the same shall be saved;"(4) and again, "If ye
continue," saith He, "in my word, ye shall be truly my disciples; and ye shall know
the truth, and the truth shall make you free."(5) We must endure and persevere,
beloved brethren, in order that, being admitted to the hope of truth and
liberty, we may attain to the truth and liberty itself; for that very fact that we
are Christians is the substance of faith and hope. But that hope and faith may
attain to their result, there is need of patience. For we are not following
after present glory, but future, according to what Paul the apostle also warns us,
and says, "We are saved by hope; but hope that is seen is not hope: for what a
man seeth, why doth he hope for? But if we hope for that which we see not, then
do we by patience wait for it."(6) Therefore, waiting and patience are
needful, that we may fulfil that which we have begun to be, and may receive that which
we believe and hope for, according to God's own showing.(7) Moreover, in
another place, the same apostle instructs the righteous and the doers of good works,
and them who lay up for themselves treasures in heaven with the increase of
the divine usury, that they also should be patient; and teaches them, saying,
"Therefore, while we have time, let us labour in that which is good unto all men,
but especially to them who are of the household of faith. But let us not faint
in well-doing, for in its season we shall reap."(1) He admonishes that no man
should impatiently faint in his labour, that none should be either called off or
overcome by temptations and desist in the midst of the praise and in the way
of glory; and the things that are past perish, while those which have begun
cease to be perfect; as it is written, "The righteousness of the righteous shall
not deliver him in whatever clay he shall transgress;"(2) and again, "Hold that
which thou hast, that another take not thy crown."(3) Which word exhorts us to
persevere with patience and courage, so that he who strives towards the crown
with the praise now near at hand, may be crowned by the continuance of patience.
14. But patience, beloved brethren, not only, keeps watch over what is
good, but it also repels what is evil. In harmony with the Holy Spirit, and
associated with what is heavenly and divine, it struggles with the defence of its
strength against the deeds of the flesh and the body, wherewith the soul is
assaulted and taken. Let us look briefly into a few things out of many, that from a
few the rest also may be understood. Adultery, fraud, manslaughter, are mortal
crimes. Let patience be strong and stedfast in the heart; and neither is the
sanctified body and temple of God polluted by adultery, nor is the innocence
dedicated to righteousness stained with the contagion of fraud; nor, after the
Eucharist carried in it,(4) is the hand spotted with the sword and blood.
15. Charity is the bond of brotherhood, the foundation of peace, the
holdfast and security of unity, which is greater than both hope and faith, which
excels both good works and martyrdoms, which will abide with us always, eternal
with God in the kingdom of heaven. Take from it patience; and deprived of it, it
does not endure. Take from it the substance of bearing and of enduring, and it
continues with no roots nor strength. The apostle, finally, when he would speak
of charity, joined to it endurance and patience. "Charity," he says, "is
large-souled; charity is kind; charity envieth not, is not puffed up, is not
provoked, thinketh not evil; loveth all things, believeth all things, hopeth all
things, beareth all things."(5) Thence he shows that it can tenaciously persevere,
because it knows how to endure all things. And in another place: "Forbearing one
another," he says, "in love, using every effort to keep the unity of the
spirit in the bond of peace."(6) He proved that neither unity nor peace could be
kept unless brethren should cherish one another with mutual toleration, and should
keep the bond of concord by the intervention of patience.
16. What beyond;--that you should not swear nor curse; that you should not
seek again your goods when taken from you; that, when you receive a buffet,
you should give your other cheek to the smiter; that you should forgive a brother
who sins against you, not only seven times,(7) but seventy times seven times?
but, moreover, all his sins altogether; that you should love your enemies; that
you should offer prayer for your adversaries and persecutors? Can you
accomplish these things unless you maintain(8) the stedfastness of patience and
endurance? And this we see done in the case of Stephen, who, when he was slain by the
Jews with violence and stoning, did not ask for vengeance for himself, but for
pardon for his murderers, saying, "Lord, lay not this sin to their charge."(9)
It behoved the first martyr of Christ thus to be, who, fore-running the martyrs
that should follow him in a glorious death, was not only the preacher of the
Lord's passion, but also the imitator of His most patient gentleness. What shall
I say of anger, of discord, of strife, which things ought not to be found in a
Christian? Let there be patience in the breast, and these things cannot have
place there; or should they try to enter, they are quickly excluded and depart,
that a peaceful abode may continue in the heart, where it delights the God of
peace to dwell. Finally, the apostle warns us, and teaches, saying: "Grieve not
the Holy Spirit of God, in whom ye are sealed unto the day of redemption. Let
all bitterness, and anger, and wrath, and clamour, and blasphemy, be put away
from you."(10) For if the Christian have departed from rage and carnal contention
as if from the hurricanes of the sea, and have already begun to be tranquil
and meek in the harbour of Christ, he ought to admit neither anger nor discord
within his breast, since he must neither return evil for evil, nor bear hatred.
17. And moreover, also, for the varied ills of the flesh, and the frequent
and severe torments of the body, wherewith the human race is daily wearied and
harassed, patience is necessary. For since in that first transgression of the
commandment strength of body departed with immortality, and weakness came on
with death-and strength cannot be received unless when immortality also has been
received--it behoves us, in this bodily frailty and weakness, always to
struggle and to fight. And this struggle and encounter cannot be sustained but by the
strength of patience. But as we are to be examined and searched out, diverse
sufferings are introduced; and a manifold kind of temptations is inflicted by the
losses of property, by the heats of fevers, by the torments of wounds, by the
loss of those dear to us. Nor does anything distinguish between the unrighteous
and the righteous more, than that in affliction the unrighteous man
impatiently complains and blasphemes, while the righteous is proved by his patience, as
it is written: "In pain endure, and in thy low estate have patience; for gold
and silver are tried in the fire."(1)
18. Thus Job was searched out and proved, and was raised up to the very
highest pinnacle of praise by the virtue of patience. What darts of the devil
were sent forth against him! what tortures were put in use! The loss of his estate
is inflicted, the privation of a numerous offspring is ordained for him. The
master, rich in estate, and the father, richer in children, is on a sudden
neither master nor father! The wasting of wounds is added; and, moreover, an eating
pest of worms consumes his festering and wasting limbs. And that nothing at all
should remain that Job did not experience in his trials, the devil arms his
wife also, making use of that old device of his wickedness, as if he could
deceive and mislead all by women, even as he did in the beginning of the world. And
yet Job is not broken down by his severe and repeated conflicts, nor the
blessing of God withheld from being declared in the midst of those difficulties and
trials of his, by the victory of patience. Tobias also, who, after the sublime
works of his justice and mercy, was tried with the loss of his eyes, in
proportion as he patiently endured his blindness, in that proportion deserved greatly of
God by the praise of patience.
19. And, beloved brethren, that the benefit of patience may still more
shine forth, let us consider, on the contrary, what mischief impatience may
cause. For as patience is the benefit of Christ, so, on the other hand, impatience
is the mischief of the devil; and as one in whom Christ dwells and abides is
found patient, so he appears always impatient whose mind the wickedness of the
devil possesses. Briefly let us look at the very beginnings. The devil suffered
with impatience that man was made in the image of God.(2) Hence he was the first
to perish and to ruin others. Adam, contrary to the heavenly command with
respect to the deadly food, by impatience fell into death; nor did he keep the grace
received from God under the guardianship of patience. And in order that Cain
should put his brother to death, he was impatient of his sacrifice and gift; and
in that Esau descended from the rights of the first-born to those of the
younger, he lost his priority by impatience for the pottage. Why was the Jewish
people faithless and ungrateful in respect of the divine benefits? Was it not the
crime of impatience, that they first departed from God? Not being able to bear
the delays of Moses conferring with God, they dared to ask for profane gods,
that they might call the head of an ox and an earthen image leaders of their
march; nor did they ever desist from their impatience, until, impatient always of
docility and of divine admonition, they put to death their prophets and all the
righteous men, and plunged even into the crime of the crucifixion and
bloodshedding of the Lord. Moreover, impatience makes heretics in the Church, and, after
the likeness of the Jews, drives them in opposition to the peace and charity of
Christ as rebels, to hostile and raging hatred.(3) And, not at length to
enumerate single cases, absolutely everything which patience, by its works, builds
up to glory, impatience casts down into ruin.
20. Wherefore, beloved brethren, having diligently pondered both the
benefits of patience and the evils of impatience, let us hold fast with full
watchfulness the patience whereby we abide in Christ, that with Christ we may attain
to God; which patience, copious and manifold, is not restrained by narrow
limits, nor confined by strait boundaries. The virtue of patience is widely
manifest, and its fertility and liberality proceed indeed from a source of one name,
but are diffused by overflowing streams through many ways of glory; nor can
anything in our actions avail for the perfection of praise, unless from this it
receives the substance of its perfection. It is patience which both commends and
keeps us to God. It is patience, too, which assuages anger, which bridles the
tongue, governs the mind, guards peace, rules discipline, breaks the force of
lust, represses the violence of pride, extinguishes the fire of enmity, checks the
power of the rich, soothes the want of the poor, protects a blessed integrity
in virgins, a careful purity in widows, in those who are united and married a
single affection. It makes men humble in prosperity, brave in adversity, gentle
towards wrongs and contempts. It teaches us quickly to pardon those who wrong
us; and if you yourself do wrong, to entreat long and earnestly. It resists
temptations, suffers persecutions, perfects passions and martyrdoms. It is patience
which firmly fortifies the foundations of our faith. It is this which lifts up
on high the increase of our hope. It is this which directs our doing, that we
may hold fast the way of Christ while we walk by His patience. It is this that
makes us to persevere as sons of God, while we imitate our Father's patience.
21. But since I know, beloved brethren, that very many are eager, either
on account of the burden or the pain of smarting wrongs, to be quickly avenged
of those who act harshly and rage against them,(1) we must not withhold the fact
in the furthest particular, that placed as we are in the midst of these storms
of a jarring world, and, moreover, the persecutions both of Jews or Gentiles,
and heretics, we may patiently wait for the day of (God's) vengeance, and not
hurry to revenge our suffering with a querulous(2) haste, since it is written,
"Wait ye upon me, saith the Lord, in the day of my rising up for a testimony;
for my judgment is to the congregations of the nations, that I may take hold on
the kings, and pour out upon them my fury."(3) The Lord commands us to wait,(4)
and to bear with brave patience the day of future vengeance; and He also speaks
in the Apocalypse, saying, "Seal not the sayings of the prophecy of this book:
for now the time is at hand for them that persevere in injuring to injure, and
for him that is filthy to be filthy still; but for him that is righteous to do
things still more righteous, and likewise for him that is holy to do things
still more holy. Behold, I come quickly; and my reward is with me, to render to
every man according to his deeds."(5) Whence also the martyrs, crying out and
hastening with grief breaking forth to their revenge, are bidden still to wait,
and to give patience for the times to be fulfilled and the martyrs to be
completed. "And when He had opened," says he, "the fifth seal, I saw under the altar
of God the souls of them that were slain for the word of God, and for their
testimony; and they cried with a loud voice, saying, How long, O Lord, holy and
true, dost Thou not judge and avenge our blood on them that dwell on the earth?
And there were given to them each white robes; and it was said unto them that
they should rest yet for a little season, until the number of their
fellow-servants and brethren is fulfilled, who afterwards shall be slain after their
example."(6)
22. But when shall come the divine vengeance for the righteous blood, the
Holy Spirit declares by Malachi the prophet, saying, "Behold, the day of the
Lord cometh, burning as an oven; and all the aliens and all the wicked shall be
stubble; and the day that cometh shall burn them up, saith the Lord."(7) And
this we read also in the Psalms, where the approach of God the Judge is announced
as worthy to be reverenced for the majesty of His judgment: "God shall come
manifest, our God, and shall not keep I silence; a fire shall burn before Him, and
round about Him a great tempest. He shall call the heaven above, and the earth
beneath, that He may separate His people. Gather His saints together unto Him,
who establish His covenant in sacrifices; and the heavens shall declare His
righteousness, for God is the Judge."(8) And Isaiah foretells the same things,
saying: "For, behold, the Lord shall come like a fire, and His chariot as a
storm, to render vengeance in anger; for in the fire of the Lord they shall be
judged, and with His sword shall they be wounded."(9) And again: "The Lord God of
hosts shall go forth, and shall crumble the war to pieces; He shall stir up the
battle, and shall cry out against His enemies with strength, I have held my
peace; shall I always hold my peace?"(10)
23. But who is this that says that he has held his peace before, and will
not hold his peace for ever? Surely it is He who was led as a sheep to the
slaughter; and as a lamb before its shearer is without voice, so He opened not His
mouth. Surely it is He who did not cry, nor was His voice heard in the streets.
Surely He who was not rebellious, neither contradicted, when He offered His
back to stripes, and His cheeks to the palms of the hands; neither turned away
His face from the foulness of spitting. Surely it is He who, when He was accused
by the priests and elders, answered nothing, and, to the wonder of Pilate, kept
a most patient silence. This is He who, although He was silent in His passion,
yet by and by will not be silent in His vengeance. This is our God, that is,
not the God of all, but of the faithfull and believing; and He, when He shall
come manifest in His second advent, will not be silent.(11) For although He came
first shrouded in humility, yet He shall come manifest in power.
24. Let us wait for Him, beloved brethren, our Judge and Avenger, who
shall equally avenge with Himself the congregation of His Church, and the number of
all the righteous from the beginning of the world. Let him who hurries, and is
too impatient for his revenge, consider that even He Himself is not yet
avenged who is the Avenger. God the Father ordained His Son to be adored; and the
Apostle Paul, mindful of the divine command, lays it down, and says: "God hath
exalted Him, and given Him a name which is above every name, that in the name of
Jesus every knee should bow, of things heavenly, and things earthly, and things
beneath."(1) And in the Apocalypse the angel withstands John, who wishes to
worship him,(2) and says: "See thou do it not; for I am thy fellow-servant, and of
thy brethren. Worship Jesus the Lord."(3) How great is the Lord Jesus, and how
great is His patience, that He who is adored in heaven is not yet avenged on
earth! Let us, beloved brethren, consider His patience in our persecutions and
sufferings; let us give an obedience full of expectation to His advent; and let
us not hasten, servants as we are, to be defended before our Lord with
irreligious and immodest eagerness. Let us rather press onward and labour, and,
watching with our whole heart, and stedfast to all endurance, let us keep the Lord's
precepts; so that when that day of anger and vengeance shall come, we may not be
punished with the impious and sinners, but may be honoured with the righteous
and those that fear God.