FOUR HOMILIES. ON THE ANNUNCIATION TO THE HOLY VIRGIN MARY & ON THE HOLY
THEOPHANY, OR ON CHRIST'S BAPTISM
FOUR HOMILIES.(1)
THE FIRST HOMILY.
ON THE ANNUNCIATION TO THE HOLY VIRGIN MARY.(2)
To-day are strains of praise sung joyfully by the choir of angels, and the
light of the advent of Christ shines brightly upon the faithful. Today is the
glad spring-time to us, and Christ the Sun of righteousness has beamed with
clear light around us, and has illumined the minds of the faithful. To-day is Adam
made anew,(3) and moves in the choir of angels, having winged his way to
heaven. To-day is the whole circle of the earth filled with joy, since the sojourn
of the Holy Spirit has been realized to men. To-day the grace of God and the
hope of the unseen shine through all wonders transcending imagination, and make
the mystery that was kept hid from eternity plainly discernible to us. To-day are
woven the chaplets of never-fading virtue. To-day, God, willing to crown the
sacred heads of those whose pleasure is to hearken to Him, and who delight in
His festivals, invites the lovers of unswerving faith as His called and His
heirs; and the heavenly kingdom is urgent to summon those who mind celestial things
to join the divine service of the incorporeal choirs. To-day is fulfilled the
word of David, "Let the heavens rejoice, and let the earth be glad. The fields
shall be joyful, and all the trees of the wood before the Lord, because He
cometh."(4) David thus made mention of the trees;(5) and the Lord's forerunner also
spoke of them as trees(6) " that should bring forth fruits meet for
repentance,"(7) or rather for the coming of the Lord. But our Lord Jesus Christ promises
perpetual gladness to all those who believe on Him. For He says, "I will see
you, and ye shall rejoice; and your joy no man taketh from you."(8) To-day is the
illustrious and ineffable mystery of Christians, who have willingly(9) set
their hope like a seal upon Christ, plainly declared to us. To-day did Gabriel, who
stands by God, come to the pure virgin, bearing to her the glad annunciation,
"Hail, thou that art highly favoured!(10) And she cast in her mind what manner
of salutation this might be. And the angel immediately proceeded to say, The
Lord is with thee: fear not, Mary; for thou hast found favour with God.
Behold,(11) thou shalt conceive in thy womb, and bring forth a son, and shalt call(12)
His name Jesus. He shall be great, and shall be called the Son of the Highest;
and the Lord God shall give unto Him the throne of His father David, and He
shall reign over the house of Jacob for ever: and of His kingdom there shall be no
end. Then said Mary unto the angel, How shall this be, seeing I know not a
man?"(13) Shall I still remain a virgin? is the honour of virginity not then lost
by me? And while she was yet in perplexity as to these things, the angel placed
shortly before her the summary of his whole message, and said to the pure
virgin, "The Holy Ghost shall come upon thee, and the power of the Highest shall
overshadow thee; therefore also that holy thing which shall be born of thee shall
be called the Son of God." For what it is, that also shall it be called by all
means. Meekly, then, did grace make election of the pure Mary alone out of all
generations. For she proved herself prudent truly in all things; neither has
any woman been born like her in all generations. She was not like the primeval
virgin Eve, who, keeping holiday(14) alone in paradise, with thoughtless mind,
unguardedly hearkened to the word of the serpent, the author of all evil, and
thus became depraved in the thoughts of her mind;(1) and through her that
deceiver, discharging his poison and refusing death with it, brought it into the whole
world; and in virtue of this has arisen all the trouble of the saints. But in
the holy Virgin alone is the fall of that (first mother) repaired. Yet was not
this holy one competent to receive the gift until she had first learned who it
was that sent it, and what the gift was, and who it was that conveyed it. While
the holy one pondered these things in perplexity with herself, she says to the
angel, "Whence hast thou brought to us the blessing in such wise? Out of what
treasure-stores is the pearl of the word despatched to us? Whence has the gift
acquired its purpose(2) toward us? From heaven art thou come, yet thou walkest
upon earth! Thou dost exhibit the form of man, and (yet) thou art glorious with
dazzling light."(3) These things the holy one considered with herself, and the
archangel solved the difficulty expressed in such reasonings by saying to her:
"The Holy Ghost shall come upon thee, and the power of the Highest shall
overshadow thee. Therefore also that holy thing which shall be born of thee shall be
called the Son of God. And fear not, Mary; for I am not come to overpower thee
with fear, but to repel the subject of fear. Fear not, Mary, for thou hast
found favour with God. Question not grace by the standard of nature. For grace does
not endure to pass under the laws of nature. Thou knowest, O Mary, things kept
hid from the patriarchs and prophets. Thou hast learned, O virgin, things
which were kept concealed till now from the angels. Thou hast heard, O purest one,
things of which even the choir of inspired men(4) was never deemed worthy.
Moses, and David, and Isaiah, and Daniel, and all the prophets, prophesied of Him;
but the manner they knew not. Yet thou alone, O purest virgin, art now made the
recipient of things of which all these were kept in ignorance, and thou dost
learn(5) the origin of them. For where the Holy Spirit is, there are all things
readily ordered. Where divine grace is present, all things are found possible
with God. The Holy Ghost shall come upon thee, and the power of the Highest
shall; overshadow thee. Therefore also that holy thing which shall be born of thee
shall be called the Son of God." And if He is the Son of God, then is He also
God, of one form with the Father, and co-eternal; in Him the Father possesses
all manifestation;(6) He is His image in the person, and through His reflection
the (Father's) glory shines forth. And as from the ever-flowing fountain the
streams proceed, so also from this ever-flowing and ever-living fountain does the
light of the world proceed, the perennial and the true, namely Christ our God.
For it is of this that the prophets have preached: "The streams of the river
make glad the city of God."(7) And not one city only, but all cities; for even as
it makes glad one city, so does it also the whole world. Appropriately,
therefore, did the angel(8) say to Mary the holy virgin first of all, "Hail, thou
that art highly favoured, the Lord is with thee;" inasmuch as with her was laid up
the full treasure of grace. For of all generations she alone has risen as a
virgin pure in body and in spirit; and she alone bears Him who bears all things
on His word. Nor is it only the beauty of this holy one in body that calls forth
our admiration, but also the innate virtue of her soul. Wherefore also the
angels addressed her first with the salutation, "Hail, thou that art highly
favoured,(9) the Lord is with thee, and no spouse of earth;" He Himself is with thee
who is the Lord of sanctification, the Father of purity, the Author of
incorruption, and the Bestower of liberty, the Curator of salvation, and the Steward
and Provider of the true peace, who out of the virgin earth made man, and out of
man's side formed Eve in addition. Even this Lord is with thee, and on the
other hand also is of thee. Come, therefore, beloved brethren, and let us take up
the angelic strain, and to the utmost of our ability return the due meed of
praise, saying, "Hail,(10) thou that art highly favoured, the Lord is with thee!"
For it is thine truly to rejoice, seeing that the grace of God, as he knows, has
chosen to dwell with thee--the Lord of glory dwelling with the handmaiden; "He
that is fairer than the children of men "(11) with the fair virgin; He who
sanctifies all things with the undefiled. God is with thee, and with thee also is
the perfect man in whom dwells the whole fulness of the Godhead. Hail, thou
that art highly favoured, the fountain of the light that lightens all who believe
upon Him! Hail, thou that art highly favoured, the rising of the rational
Sun,(12) and the undefiled flower of Life! Hail, thou that art highly favoured, the
mead(13) of sweet savour! Hail, thou that art highly favoured, the
ever-blooming vine, that makes glad the souls of those who honour thee? Hail, thou that art
highly favoured!--the soil that, all untilled, bears bounteous fruit: for thou
hast brought forth in accordance with the law of nature indeed, as it goes
with us, and by the set time of practice,(1) and yet in a way beyond nature, or
rather above nature, by reason that God the Word from above took His abode in
thee, and formed the new Adam in thy holy womb, and inasmuch as the Holy Ghost
gave the power of conception to the holy virgin; and the reality of His body was
assumed from her body. And just as the pearl(2) comes of the two natures, namely
lightning and water, the occult signs of the sea; so also our Lord Jesus
Christ proceeds, without fusion and without mutation, from the pure, and chaste, and
undefiled, and holy Virgin Mary; perfect in divinity and perfect in humanity,
in all things equal to the Father, and in all things consubstantial with us,
apart from sin.
Most of the holy fathers, and patriarchs, and prophets desired to see Him,
and to be eye-witnesses of Him, but did not attaint hereto. And some of them
by visions beheld Him in type, and darkly; others, again, were privileged to
hear the divine voice through the medium of the cloud, and were favoured with
sights of holy angels; but to Mary the pure virgin alone did the archangel Gabriel
manifest himself luminously, bringing her the glad address, "Hail, thou that
art highly favoured!" And thus she received the word, and in the due time of the
fulfilment according to the body's course she brought forth the priceless
pearl. Come, then, ye too, dearly beloved, and let us chant the melody which has
been taught us by the inspired harp of David, and say, "Arise, O Lord, into Thy
rest; Thou, and the ark of Thy sanctuary."(3) For the holy Virgin is in truth an
ark, wrought with gold both within and without, that has received the whole
treasury of the sanctuary. "Arise, O Lord, into Thy rest." Arise, O Lord, out of
the bosom of the Father, in order that Thou mayest raise up the fallen race of
the first-formed man. Setting these things forth,(4) David in prophecy said to
the rod that was to spring from himself, and to sprout into the flower of that
beauteous fruit, "Hearken, O daughter, and see, and incline thine ear, and
forget thine own people and thy father's house; so shall the King greatly desire thy
beauty: for He is the Lord thy God, and thou shalt worship Him."(5) Hearken, O
daughter, to the things which were prophesied beforetime of thee, in order
that thou mayest also behold the things themselves with the eyes of understanding.
Hearken to me while I announce things beforehand to thee, and hearken to the
archangel who declares expressly to thee the perfect mysteries. Come then,
dearly beloved, and let us fall back on the memory of what has gone before us; and
let us glorify, and celebrate, and laud, and bless that rod that has sprung so
marvellously from Jesse. For Luke, in the inspired Gospel narratives, delivers a
testimony not to Joseph only, but also to Mary the mother of God, and gives
this account with reference to the very family and house of David: "For Joseph
went up," says he, "from Galilee, unto a city of Judea which is called Bethlehem,
to be taxed with Mary his espoused wife, being great with child, because they
were of the house and family of David. And so it was, that while they were
there, the days were accomplished that she should be delivered; and she brought
forth her son, the first-born of the whole creation,(6) and wrapped him in
swaddling-clothes, and laid him in a manger, because there was no room for them in the
inn."(7) She wrapped in swaddling-clothes Him who is covered with light as
with a garment.(8) She wrapped in swaddling-clothes Him who made every creature.
She laid in a manger Him who sits above the cherubim,(9) and is praised by
myriads of angels. In the manger set apart for dumb brutes did the Word of God
repose, in order that He might impart to men, who are really irrational by free
choice, the perceptions of true reason. In the board from which cattle eat was laid
the heavenly Bread,(10) in order that He might provide participation in
spiritual sustenance for men who live like the beasts of the earth. Nor was there
even room for Him in the inn. He found no place, who by His word established
heaven and earth; "for though He was rich, for our sakes He became poor,"(11) and
chose extreme humiliation on behalf of the salvation of our nature, in His
inherent goodness toward us. He who fulfilled the whole administration(12) of
unutterable mysteries of the economy(13) in heaven in the bosom of the Father, and in
the cave in the arms of the mother, reposed in the manger. Angelic choirs
encircled Him, singing of glory in heaven and of peace upon earth. In heaven He was
seated at the right hand of the Father; and in the manger He rested, as it
were, upon the cherubim. Even there was in truth His cherubic throne; there was His
royal seat. Holy of the holy, and alone glorious upon the earth, and holier
than the holy, was that wherein Christ our God rested. To Him be glory, honour,
and power. together with the Father undefiled, and the altogether holy and
quickening Spirit, now and ever, and unto the ages of the ages. Amen.
THE SECOND HOMILY.
ON THE ANNUNCIATION TO THE HOLY VIRGIN MARY.(1)
DISCOURSE SECOND.
It is our duty to present to God, like sacrifices, all the festivals and
hymnal celebrations; and first of all, the annunciation to the holy mother of
God, to wit, the salutation made to her by the angel, "Hail, thou that art highly
favoured!" For first of all wisdom(2) and saving doctrine in the New Testament
was this salutation, "Hail, thou that art highly favoured!" conveyed to us
from the Father of lights. And this address, "highly favoured,"(3) embraced the
whole nature of men. "Hail, thou that art highly favoured"(3) in the holy
conception and in the glorious pregnancy, "I bring you good tidings of great joy,
which shall be to all people."(4) And again the Lord, who came for the purpose of
accomplishing a saving passion, said, "I will see you, and ye shall rejoice; and
your joy no man taketh from you."(5) And after His resurrection again, by the
hand of the holy women, He gave us first of all the salutation "Hail! "(6) And
again, the apostle made the announcement in similar terms, saying, "Rejoice
evermore: pray without ceasing: in everything give thanks."(7) See, then, dearly
beloved, how the Lord has conferred upon us everywhere, and indivisibly, the joy
that is beyond conception, and perennial. For since the holy Virgin, in the
life of the flesh, was in possession of the incorruptible citizenship, and walked
as such in all manner of virtues, and lived a life more excellent than man's
common standard; therefore the Word that cometh from God the Father thought it
meet to assume the flesh, and endue the perfect man from her, in order that in
the same flesh in which sin entered into the world, and death by sin, sin might
be condemned in the flesh, and that the tempter of sin might be overcome in the
burying(8) of the holy body, and that therewith also the beginning of the
resurrection might be exhibited, and life eternal instituted in the world, and
fellowship established for men with God the Father. And what shall we state, or
what shall we pass by here? or who shall explain what is incomprehensible in the
mystery? But for the present let us fall back upon our subject. Gabriel was sent
to the holy virgin; the incorporeal was despatched to her who in the body
pursued the incorruptible conversation, and lived in purity and in virtues. And
when he came to her, he first addressed her with the salutation, "Hail, thou that
art highly favoured! the Lord is with thee." Hail, thou that art highly
favoured! for thou doest what is worthy of joy indeed, since thou hast put on the
vesture of purity, and art girt with the cincture of prudence. Hail, thou that art
highly favoured! for to thy lot it has fallen to be the vehicle of celestial
joy. Hail, thou that art highly favoured! for through thee joy is decreed for the
whole creation, and the human race receives again by thee its pristine
dignity. Hail, thou that art highly favoured! for in thy arms the Creator of all
things shall be carried. And she was perplexed by this word; for she was
inexperienced in all the addresses of men, and welcomed quiet, as the mother of prudence
and purity; (yet) being a pure, and immaculate, and stainless image(9) herself,
she shrank not in terror from the angelic apparition, like most of the
prophets, as indeed true virginity has a kind of affinity and equality with the angels.
For the holy Virgin guarded carefully the torch of virginity, and gave
diligent heed that it should not be extinguished or defiled. And as one who is clad in
a brilliant robe deems it a matter of great moment that no impurity or filth
be suffered to touch it anywhere, so did the holy Mary consider with herself,
and said: Does this act of attention imply any deep design or seductive purpose?
Shall this word "Hail" prove the cause of trouble to me, as of old the fair
promise of being made like God, which was given her by the serpent-devil, proved
to our first mother Eve? Has the devil, who is the author of all evil, become
transformed again into an angel of light; and bearing a grudge against my
espoused husband for his admirable temperance, and having assailed him with some
fair-seeming address, and finding himself powerless to overcome a mind so firm, and
to deceive the man, has he turned his attack upon me, as one endowed with a
more susceptible mind; and is this word "Hail" (Grace be with thee) spoken as the
sign of gracelessness hereafter? Is this benediction and salutation uttered in
irony? Is there not some poison concealed in the honey? Is it not the address
of one who brings good tidings, while the end of the same is to make me the
designer's prey? And how is it that he can thus salute one whom he knows not? These
things she pondered in perplexity with herself, and expressed in words. Then
again the archangel addressed her with the announcement of a joy which all may
believe in, and which shall not be taken away, and said to her, "Fear not, Mary,
for thou hast found favour with God." Shortly hast thou the proof of what has
been said. For I not only give yon to understand that there is nothing to fear,
but I show you the very key to the absence of all cause for fear. For through
me all the heavenly powers hail thee, the holy virgin: yea rather, He Himself,
who is Lord of all the heavenly powers and of all creation, has selected thee
as the holy one and the wholly fair; and through thy holy, and chaste, and pure,
and undefiled womb the enlightening Pearl comes forth for the salvation of all
the world: since of all the race of man thou art by birth the holy one, and
the more honourable, and the purer, and the more pious than any other: and thou
hast a mind whiter than the snow, and a body made purer than any gold, however
fine, and a womb such as the object which Ezekiel saw, and which he has
described in these terms: "And the likeness of the living creatures upon the head was
as the firmament, and as the appearance of the terrible crystal, and the
likeness of the throne above them was as the appearance of a sapphire-stone: and above
the throne it was as the likeness of a man, and as the appearance of amber;
and within it there was, as it were, the likeness of fire round about."(1)
Clearly, then, did the prophet behold in type Him who was born of the holy virgin,
whom thou, O holy virgin, wouldest have had no strength to bear, hadst thou not
beamed forth for that time(2) with all that is glorious and virtuous. And with
what words of laudation, then, shall we describe her virgin-dignity? With what
indications and proclamations of praise shall we celebrate her stainless figure?
With what spiritual song or word shall we honour her who is most glorious
among the angels? She is planted in the house of God like a fruitful olive that the
Holy Spirit overshadowed; and by her means are we called sons and heirs of the
kingdom of Christ. She is the ever-blooming paradise of incorruptibility,
wherein is planted the tree that giveth life, and that furnisheth to all the fruits
of immortality. She is the boast and glory of virgins, and the exultation of
mothers. She is the sure support of the believing, and the succourer(3) of the
pious. She is the vesture of light, and the domicile of virtue.(4) She is the
ever-flowing fountain, wherein the water of life sprang and produced the Lord's
incarnate manifestation. She is the monument of righteousness; and all who
become lovers of her, and set their affections on virgin-like ingenuousness and
purity, shall enjoy the grace of angels. All who keep themselves from wine and
intoxication, and from the wanton enjoyments of strong drink, shall be made glad
with the products of the life-bearing plant. All who have preserved the lamp of
virginity unextinguished shall be privileged to receive the amaranthine crown of
immortality. All who have possessed themselves of the stainless robe of
temperance shall be received into the mystical bride-chamber of righteousness. All
who have come nearer the angelic degree than others shall also enter into the
more real enjoyment of their Lord's beatitude. All who have possessed the
illuminating oil of understanding, and the pure incense of conscience, shall inherit
the promise of spiritual favour and the spiritual adoption. All who worthily
observe the festival of the Annunciation of the Virgin Mary, the mother of God,
acquire as their meet recompense the fuller interest in the message, "Hail, thou
that art highly favoured!" It is our duty, therefore, to keep this feast, seeing
that it has tilled the whole world with joy and gladness. And let us keep it
with psalms, and hymns, and spiritual songs. Of old did Israel also keep their
festival, but then it was with unleavened bread and bitter herbs, of which the
prophet says: "I will turn their feasts into afflictions and lamentation, and
their joy into shame."(5) But our afflictions our Lord has assured us He will
turn into joy by the fruits of penitence.(6) And again, the first covenant
maintained the righteous requirements(7) of a divine service, as in the case of our
forefather Abraham; but these stood in the inflictions of pain in the flesh by
circumcision, until the time of the fulfilment. "The law was given to them
through Moses" for their discipline; "but grace and truth" have been given to us by
Jesus Christ.(8) The beginning of all these blessings to us appeared in the
annunciation to Mary, the highly-favoured, in the economy of the Saviour which is
worthy of all praise, and in His divine and supra-mundane instruction. Thence
rise the rays of the light of understanding upon us. Thence spring for us the
fruits of wisdom and immortality, sending forth the clear pure streams of piety.
Thence come to us the brilliant splendours of the treasures of divine knowledge.
"For this is life eternal, that we may know the true God, and Jesus Christ
whom He hath sent."(9) And again, "Search the Scriptures, for in them ye think ye
have eternal life."(10) For on this account the treasure of the knowledge of
God is revealed to them who search the divine oracles. That treasure of the
inspired Scriptures the Paraclete has unfolded to us this day. And let the tongue of
prophecy and the doctrine of apostles be the treasure of wisdom to us; for
without the law and the prophets, or the evangelists and the apostles, it is not
possible to have the certain hope of salvation. For by the tongue of the holy
prophets and apostles our Lord speaks, and God takes pleasure in the words of the
saints; not that He requires the spoken address, but that He delights in the
good disposition; not that He receives any profit from men, but that He finds a
restful satisfaction in the rightly-affected soul of the righteous. For it is
not that Christ is magnified by what we say; but as we receive benefits from
Him, we proclaim with grateful mind His beneficence to us; not that we can attain
to what is worthy therein, but that we give the meet return to the best of our
ability. And when the Gospels or the Epistles, therefore, are read, let not
your attention centre on the book or on the reader, but on the God who speaks to
you from heaven. For the book is but that which is seen, while Christ is the
divine subject spoken of. It brings us then the glad tidings of that economy of
the Saviour, which is worthy of all praise, to wit, that, though He was God, He
became man through kindness toward man, and did not lay aside, indeed, the
dignity which was His from all eternity, but assumed the economy that should work
salvation. It brings us the glad tidings of that economy of the Saviour worthy of
all praise, to wit, that He sojourned with us as a physician for the sick, who
did not heal them with potions, but restored them by the inclination of His
philanthropy. It brings us the glad tidings of this economy of the Saviour
altogether to be praised, to wit, that to them who had wandered astray the way of
salvation was shown, and that to the despairing the grace of salvation was made
known, which blesses all in different modes; searching after the erring,
enlightening the blinded, giving life to the dead, setting free the slaves, redeeming
the captives, and becoming all things to all of us in order to be the true way
of salvation to us: and all this He does, not by reason of our goodwill toward
Him, but in virtue of a benignity that is proper to our Benefactor Himself. For
the Saviour did all, not in order that He might acquire virtue Himself, but
that He might put us in possession of eternal life. He made man, indeed, after the
image of God, and appointed him to live in a paradise of pleasure. But the man
being deceived by the devil, and having become a transgressor of the divine
commandment, was made subject to the doom of death. Whence, also, those born of
him were involved in their father's liability in virtue of their succession, and
had the reckoning of condemnation required of them. "For death reigned from
Adam to Moses."(1) But the Lord. in His benignity toward man, when He saw the
creature He Himself had formed now held by the power of death, did not turn away
finally from him whom He had made in His own image, but visited him in each
generation, and forsook him not; and manifesting Himself first of all among the
patriarchs, and then proclaiming Himself in the law, and presenting the likeness
of Himself(2) in the prophets, He presignified the economy of salvation. When,
moreover, the fulness of the times came for His glorious appearing, He sent
beforehand the archangel Gabriel to bear the glad tidings to the Virgin Mary. And
he came down from the ineffable powers above to the holy Virgin, and addressed
her first of all with the salutation, 'Hail, thou that art highly favoured." And
when this word," Hail, thou that art highly favoured," reached her, in the
very moment of her hearing it, the Holy Spirit entered into the undefiled temple
of the Virgin, and her mind and her members were sanctified together. And nature
stood opposite, and natural intercourse at a distance, beholding with
amazement the Lord of nature, in a manner contrary to nature, or rather above nature,
doing a miraculous work in the body; and by the very weapons by which the devil
strove against us, Christ also saved us, taking to Himself our passible body in
order that He might impart the greater grace(3) to the being who was deficient
in it. And "where sin abounded, grace did much more abound." And appropriately
was grace sent to the holy Virgin. For this word also is contained in the
oracle of the evangelic history: "And in the sixth month the angel Gabriel was sent
to a virgin espoused to a man whose name was Joseph, of the house and lineage
of David; and the virgin's name was Mary;"(4) and so forth. And this was the
first month to the holy Virgin. Even as Scripture says in the book of the law:
"This month shall be unto you the beginning of months: it shall be the first
month among the months of the year to you."(5) "Keep ye the feast of the holy
passover to the Lord in all your generations." it was also the sixth month to
Zacharias. And rightly, then, did the holy Virgin prove to be of the family of David,
and she had her home in Bethlehem, and was betrothed rightfully to Joseph, in
accordance with the laws of relationship. And her espoused husband was her
guardian, and possessor also of the untarnished incorruption which was hers. And
the name given to the holy Virgin was one that became her exceedingly. For she
was called Mary, and that, by interpretation, means illumination. And what shines
more brightly that the light of virginity? For this reason also the virtues
are called virgins by those who strive rightly to get at their true nature. But
if it is so great a blessing to have a virgin heart, how great a boon will it be
to have the flesh that cherishes virginity along with the soul! Thus the holy
Virgin, while still in the flesh, maintained the incorruptible life, and
received in faith the things which were announced by the archangel. And thereafter
she journeyed diligently to her relation Elisabeth in the hill-country. "And she
entered into the house of Zacharias, and saluted Elisabeth,"(1) in imitation of
the angel. "And it came to pass, that, when Elisabeth heard the salutation of
Mary, the babe leapt with joy in her womb; and Elisabeth was filled with the
Holy Ghost."(1) Thus the voice of Mary wrought with power, and filled Elisabeth
with the Holy Ghost. And by her tongue, as from an ever-flowing fountain, she
sent forth a stream of gracious gifts in the way of prophecy to her relation; and
while the feet of her child were bound in the womb,(2) she prepared to dance
and leap. And that was the sign of a marvellous jubilation. For wherever she was
who was highly favoured, there she filled all things with joy. "And Elisabeth
spake out with a loud voice, and said, Blessed art thou among women, and
blessed is the fruit of thy womb. And whence is this to me, that the mother of my
Lord should come to me? Blessed art thou among women."(3) For thou hast become to
women the beginning of the new creation.(4) Thou hast given to us boldness of
access into paradise, and thou hast put to flight our ancient woe. For after
thee the race of woman shall no more be made the subject of reproach. No more do
the successors of Eve fear the ancient curse, or the pangs of childbirth. For
Christ, the Redeemer of our race, the Saviour of all nature, the spiritual Adam
who has healed the hurt of the creature of earth, cometh forth from thy holy
womb. "Blessed art thou among women, and blessed is the fruit of thy womb." For He
who bears all blessings for us is manifested as thy fruit. This we read in the
clear words of her who was barren; but yet more clearly did the holy Virgin
herself express this again when she presented to God the song replete with
thanksgiving, and acceptance, and divine knowledge; announcing ancient things
together with what was new; proclaiming along with things which were of old, things
also which belong to the consummation of the ages; and summing up in a short
discourse the mysteries of Christ. "And Mary said, My soul doth magnify the Lord,
and my spirit hath rejoiced in God my Saviour," and so forth. "He hath holpen
His servant Israel in remembrance of His mercy, and of the covenant which He
established with Abraham and with his seed for ever."(5) Thou seest how the holy
Virgin has surpassed even the perfection of the patriarchs, and how she confirms
the covenant which was made with Abraham by God, when He said, "This is the
covenant which I shall establish between me and thee."(6) Wherefore He has come
and confirmed the covenant with Abraham, having received mystically in Himself
the sign of circumcision, and having proved Himself the fulfilment of the law and
the prophets. This song of prophecy, therefore, did the holy mother of God
render to God, saying, "My soul doth magnify the Lord, and my spirit hath rejoiced
in God my Saviour: for He that is mighty hath done to me great things, and
holy is His name." For having made me the mother of God, He has also preserved me
a virgin; and by my womb the fulness of all generations is headed up together
for sanctification. For He hath blessed every age, both men and women, both
young men and youths, and old men. "He hath made strength with His arm,"(7) on our
behalf, against death and against the devil, having torn the handwriting of our
sins. "He hath scattered the proud in the imagination of their hearts;" yea,
He hath scattered the devil himself, and all the demons that serve under him.
For he was overweeningly haughty in his heart, seeing that he dared to say, "I
will set my throne above the clouds, and I will be like the Most High."(8) And
now, how He scattered him the prophet has indicated in what follows, where he
says, "Yet now thou shalt be brought down to hell,"(9) and all thy hosts with
thee. For He has overthrown everywhere his altars and the worship of vain gods, and
He has prepared for Himself a peculiar people out of the heathen nations. "He
hath put down the mighty from their seats, and exalted them of low degree." In
these terms is intimated in brief the extrusion of the Jews and the admission
of the Gentiles. For the elders of the Jews and the scribes in the law, and
those who were richly privileged with other prerogatives, because they used their
riches ill and their power lawlessly, were cast down by Him from every seat,
whether of prophecy or of priesthood, whether of legislature or of doctrine, and
were stripped of all their ancestral wealth, and of their sacrifices and
multitudinous festivals, and of all the honourable privileges of the kingdom. Spoiled
of all these boons, as naked fugitives they were cast out into captivity. And
in their stead the humble were exalted, namely, the Gentile peoples who hungered
after righteousness. For, discovering their own lowliness, and the hunger that
pressed upon them for the knowledge of God, they pleaded for the divine word,
though it were but for crumbs of the same, like the woman of Canaan;(1) and for
this reason they were filled with the riches of the divine mysteries. For the
Christ who was born of the Virgin, and who is our God, has given over the whole
inheritance of divine blessings to the Gentiles. "He hath holpen His servant
Israel."(2) Not any Israel in general, indeed, but His servant, who in very deed
maintains the true nobility of Israel. And on this account also did the mother
of God call Him servant (Son) and heir. For when He had found the same
labouring painfully in the letter and the law, He called him by grace. It is such an
Israel, therefore, that He called and hath holpen in remembrance of His mercy.
"As He spake to our fathers, I to Abraham and to his seed for ever." In these
few words is comprehended the whole mystery of the economy. For, with the purpose
of saving the race of men, and fulfilling the covenant that was made with our
fathers, Christ has once "bowed the heavens and come down."(3) And thus He
shows Himself to us as we are capable of receiving Him, in order that we might have
power to see Him, and handle Him, and hear Him when the speaketh. And on this
account did God the Word deem it meet to take to Himself the flesh and the
perfect humanity by a woman, the holy Virgin; and He was born a man, in order that
He might discharge our debt, and fulfil even in Himself(4) the ordinances of
the covenant made with Abraham, in its rite of circumcision, and all the other
legal appointments connected with it. And after she had spoken these words the
holy Virgin went to Nazareth; and from that a decree of Caesar led her to come
again to Bethlehem; and so, as proceeding herself from the royal house, she was
brought to the royal house of David along with Joseph her espoused husband. And
there ensued there the mystery which transcends all wonders,--the Virgin
brought forth and bore in her hand Him who bears the whole creation by His word. "And
there was no room for them in the inn."(5) He found no room who founded the
whole earth by His word. She nourished with her milk Him who imparts sustenance
and life to everything that hath breath. She wrapped Him in swaddling-clothes
who binds the whole creation fast with His word. She laid Him in a manger who
rides seated upon the cherubim.(6) A light from heaven shone round about Him who
lighteneth the whole creation. The hosts of heaven attended Him with their
doxologies who is glorified in heaven from before all ages. A star with its torch
guided them who had come from the distant parts of earth toward Him who is the
true Orient. From the East came those who brought gifts to Him who for our sakes
became poor. And the holy mother of God kept these words, and pondered them in
her heart, like one who was the receptacle of all the mysteries. Thy praise, O
most holy Virgin, surpasses all laudation, by reason of the God who received
the flesh and was born man of thee. To thee every creature, of things in heaven,
and things on earth, and things under the earth, offers the meet offering of
honour. For thou hast been indeed set forth as the true cherubic throne. Thou
shinest as the very brightness of light in the high places of the kingdoms of
intelligence; where the Father, who is without beginning,, and whose power thou
hadst overshadowing thee, is glorified; where also the Son is worshipped, whom
thou didst bear according to the flesh; and where the Holy Spirit is praised, who
effected in thy womb the generation of the mighty King. Through thee, O thou
that art highly favoured, is the holy and consubstantial Trinity known in the
world. Together with thyself, deem us also worthy to be made partakers of thy
perfect grace in Jesus Christ our Lord: with whom, and with the Holy Spirit, be
glory to the Father, now and ever, and unto the ages of the ages. Amen.(8)
THE THIRD HOMILY.
ON THE ANNUNCIATION TO THE HOLY VIRGIN MARY.(9)
Again have we the glad tidings of joy, again the announcements of liberty,
again the restoration, again the return, again the promise of gladness, again
the release from slavery. An angel talks with the Virgin, in order that the
serpent may no more have converse with the woman. In the sixth month, it is said,
the angel Gabriel was sent from God to a virgin espoused to a man.(10) Gabriel
was sent to declare the world-wide salvation: Gabriel was sent to bear to Adam
the signature of his restoration; Gabriel was sent to a virgin, in order to
transform the dishonour of the female sex into honour; Gabriel was sent to prepare
the worthy chamber for the pure spouse; Gabriel was sent to wed the creature
with the Creator; Gabriel was sent to the animate palace of the King of the
angels; Gabriel was sent to a virgin espoused to Joseph, but preserved for Jesus
the Son of God. The incorporeal servant was sent to the virgin undefiled. One
free from sin was sent to one that admitted no corruption. The light was sent that
should announce the Sun of righteousness. The dawn was sent that should
precede the light of the day. Gabriel was sent to proclaim Him who is in the bosom of
the Father, and who yet was to be in the arms of the mother. Gabriel was sent
to declare Him who is upon the throne, and yet also in the cavern. The
subaltern was sent to utter aloud the mystery of the great King; the mystery, I mean,
which is discerned by faith, and which cannot be searched out by officious
curiosity; the mystery which is to be adored, not weighed; the mystery which is to
be taken as a thing divine, and not measured. "In the sixth month Gabriel was
sent to a virgin." What is meant by this sixth month? What? It is the sixth month
from the time when Elisabeth received the glad tidings, from the time that she
conceived John. And how is this made plain? The archangel himself gives us the
interpretation, when he says to the virgin: "Behold, thy relation Elisabeth,
she hath also conceived a son in her old age: and this is now the sixth month
with her, who was called barren."(1) In the sixth month--that is evidently,
therefore, the sixth month of the conception of John. For it was meet that the
subaltern should go before; it was meet thai: the attendant should precede; it was
meet that the herald of the Lord's coming should prepare the way for Him. In the
sixth month the angel Gabriel was sent to a virgin espoused to a man;
espoused, not united; espoused, yet kept intact. And for what purpose was she espoused?
In order that the spoiler might not learn the mystery prematurely. For that
the King was to come by a virgin, was a fact known to the wicked one. For he too
heard these words of Isaiah: 4, Behold, a virgin shall conceive, and bear a
son."(2 )And on every occasion, consequently, he kept watch upon the virgin's
words, in order that, whenever this mystery should be fulfilled, he might prepare
her dishonour. Wherefore the Lord came by an I espoused virgin, in order to
elude the notice of the wicked one; for one who was espoused was pledged in fine to
be her husband's. "In the sixth month the angel Gabriel was sent to a virgin
espoused to a man whose name was Joseph." Hear what the prophet says about this
man and the virgin: "This book that is sealed shall be delivered to a man that
is learned."(3) What is meant by this sealed book, but just the virgin
undefiled? From whom is this to be given? From the priests evidently. And to whom? To
the artisan Joseph. As, then, the priests espoused Mary to Joseph as to a
prudent husband, and committed her to his care in expectation of the time of
marriage, and as it behoved him then on obtaining her to keep the virgin untouched,
this was announced by the prophet long before, when he said: "This book that is
sealed shall be delivered to a man that is learned." And that man will say, I
cannot read it. But why canst thou not read it, O Joseph? I cannot read it, he
says, because the book is sealed. For whom, then, is it preserved? It is preserved
as a place of sojourn for the Maker of the universe. But let us return to our
immediate subject. In the sixth month Gabriel was sent to a virgin -- he who
received, indeed, such injunctions as these: "Come hither now, archangel, and
become the minister of a dread mystery which has been kept hid, and be thou the
agent in the miracle. I am moved by my compassions to descend to earth in order
to recover the lost Adam. Sin hath made him decay who was made in my image, and
hath corrupted the work of my hands, and hath obscured the beauty which I
formed. The wolf devours my nursling, the home of paradise is desolate, the tree of
life is guarded by the flaming sword, the location of enjoyments is closed. My
pity is evoked for the object of this enmity, and I desire to seize the enemy.
Yet I wish to keep this mystery, which I confide to thee alone, still hid from
all the powers of heaven. Go thou, therefore, to the Virgin Mary. Pass thou on
to that animate city whereof the prophet spake in these words: 'Glorious things
were spoken of thee, O city of God.'(4) Proceed, then, to my rational
paradise; proceed to the gate of the east; proceed to the place of sojourn that is
worthy of my word; proceed to that second heaven on earth; proceed to the light
cloud, and announce to it the shower of my coming; proceed to the sanctuary
prepared for me; proceed to the hall of the incarnation; proceed to the pure chamber
of my generation after the flesh. Speak in the ears of my rational ark, so as
to prepare for me the accesses of hearing. But neither disturb nor vex the soul
of the virgin. Manifest thyself in a manner befitting that sanctuary, and hail
her first with the voice of gladness. And address Mary with the saturation,
'Hail, thou that art highly favoured,' that I may show compassion for Eve in her
depravation." The archangel heard these things, and considered them within
himself, as was reasonable, and said: "Strange is this matter; passing comprehension
is this thing that is spoken. He who is the object of dread to the cherubim,
He who cannot be looked upon by the seraphim, He who is incomprehensible to all
the heavenly(1) powers, does He give the assurance of His connection with a
maiden? does He announce His own personal coming? yea more, does He hold out an
access by hearing? and is He who condemned Eve, urgent to put such honour upon
her daughter? For He says: 'So as to prepare for me the accesses of hearing.' But
can the womb contain Him who cannot be contained in space? Truly this is a
dread mystery." While the angel is indulging such reflections, the Lord says to
Him: "Why art thou troubled and perplexed, O Gabriel? Hast thou not already been
sent by me to Zacharias the priest? Hast thou not conveyed to him the glad
tidings of the nativity of John? Didst thou not inflict upon the incredulous priest
the penalty of speechlessness? Didst thou not punish the aged man with
dumbness? Didst thou not make thy declaration, and I confirmed it? And has not the
actual fact followed upon thy announcement of good? Did not the barren woman
conceive? Did not the womb obey the word? Did not the malady of sterility depart?
Did not the inert disposition of nature take to flight? Is not she now one that
shows fruitfulness, who before was never pregnant? Can anything be impossible
with me, the Creator of all? Wherefore, then, art thou tossed with doubt?" What
is the angel's answer to this? "O Lord," he says, "to remedy the defects of
nature, to do away with the blast of evils, to recall the dead members to the power
of life, to enjoin on nature the potency of generation, to remove barrenness
in the case of members that have passed the common limit,(2) to change the old
and withered stalk into the appearance of verdant vigour, to set forth the
fruitless soil suddenly as the producer of sheaves of corn,--to do all this is a
work which, as it is ever the case, demands Thy power. And Sarah is a witness
thereto, and along with her(3) also Rebecca, and again Anna, who all, though bound
by the dread ill of barrenness, were afterwards gifted by Thee with deliverance
from that malady. But that a virgin should bring forth, without knowledge of a
man, is something that goes beyond all the laws of nature; and dost Thou yet
announce Thy coming to the maiden? The bounds of heaven and earth do not contain
Thee, and how shall the womb of a virgin contain Thee?" And the Lord says:
"How did the tent of Abraham contain me?"(4) And the angel says: "As there were
there the deeps of hospitality, O Lord, Thou didst show Thyself there to Abraham
at the door of the tent, and didst pass quickly by it, as He who filleth all
things. But how can Mary sustain the fire of the divinity? Thy throne blazes with
the illumination of its splendour, and can the virgin receive Thee without
being consumed?" Then the Lord says: "Yea surely, if the fire in the wilderness
injured the bush, my coming will indeed also injure Mary; but if that fire which
served as the adumbration of the advent of the fire of divinity from heaven
fertilized the bush, and did not burn it, what wilt thou say of the Truth that
descends not in a flame of fire, but in the form of rain?"(5) Thereupon the angel
set himself to carry out the commission given him, and repaired to the Virgin,
and addressed her with a loud voice, saying: "Hail, thou that are highly
favoured! the Lord is with thee. No longer shalt the devil be against thee; for where
of old that adversary inflicted the wound, there now first of all does the
Physician apply the salve of deliverance. Where death came forth, there has life
now prepared its entrance. By a woman came the flood of our ills, and by a woman
also our blessings have their spring. Hail, thou that are highly favoured! Be
not thou ashamed, as if thou wert the cause of our condemnation. For thou art
made the mother of Him who is at once Judge and Redeemer. Hail, thou stainless
mother of the Bridegroom(6) of a world bereft! Hail, thou that hast sunk in thy
womb the death (that came) of the mother (Eve)! Hail, thou animate temple of
temple of God! Hail, thou equal(7) home of heaven and earth alike! Hail, thou
amplest receptacle of the illimitable nature!" But as these things are so, through
her has come for the sick the Physician; for them that sit in darkness, the
Sun of righteousness; for all that are tossed and tempest-beaten, the Anchor and
the Port undisturbed by storm. For the servants in irreconcilable enmity has
been born the Lord; and One has sojourned with us to be the bond of peace and the
Redeemer of those led captive, and to be the peace for those involved in
hostility. For He is our peace;(8) and of that peace may it be granted that all we
may receive the enjoyment, by the grace and kindness of our Lord Jesus Christ;
to whom be the glory, honour, and power, now and ever, and unto all the ages of
the ages. Amen.
THE FOURTH HOMILY.
ON THE HOLY THEOPHANY, OR ON CHRIST'S BAPTISM.(1)
O ye who are the friends of Christ, and the friends of the stranger, and
the friends of the brethren, receive in kindness my speech to-day, and open your
ears like the doors of hearing, and admit within them my discourse, and accept
from me this saving proclamation of the baptism(2) of Christ, which took place
in the river Jordan, in order that your loving desires may be quickened after
the Lord, who has done so much for us in the way of condescension. For even
though the festival of the Epiphany of the Saviour is past, the grace of the same
yet abides with us through all. Let us therefore enjoy it with insatiable
minds; for insatiate desire is a good thing in the case of what pertains to
salvation--yea, it is a good thing. Come therefore, all of us, from Galilee to Judea,
and let us go forth with Christ; for blessed is he who journeys in such company
on the way of life. Come, and with the feet of thought let us make for the
Jordan, and see John the Baptist as he baptizes One who needs no baptism, and yet
submits to the rite in order that He may bestow freely upon us the grace of
baptism. Come, let us view the image of our regeneration, as it is emblematically
presented in these waters. "Then cometh Jesus from Galilee to Jordan unto John,
to be baptized of him."(3) O how vast is the humility of the Lord! O how vast
His condescension! The King of the heavens hastened to John, His own forerunner,
without setting in motion the camps(4) of His angels, without despatching
beforehand the incorporeal powers as His precursors; but presenting Himself in
utmost simplicity, in soldier-like form,(5) He comes tip to His own subaltern. And
He approached him as one of the multitude, and humbled Himself among the
captives though He was the Redeemer, and ranged Himself with those under judgment
though He was the Judge, and joined Himself with the lost sheep though He was the
Good Shepherd who on account of the straying sheep came down from heaven, and
yet did not forsake His heavens, and Was mingled with the tares though He was
that heavenly grain that springs unsown. And when the Baptist John then saw Him,
recognising Him whom before in his mother's womb he had recognised and
worshipped, and discerning clearly that this was He on whose account, in a manner
surpassing the natural time, the had leaped in the womb of his mother. in violation
of the limits of nature, he drew his right hand within his double cloak, and
bowing his head like a servant full of love to his master, addressed Him in these
words: I have need to be baptized of Thee, and comest Thou to me?(6) What is
this Thou doest, my Lord? Why dost Thou reverse the order of things? Why seekest
Thou along with the servants, at the hand of Thy servant, the things that are
proper to servants? Why dost Thou desire to receive what Thou requirest not?
Why dost Thou burden me, Thy servitor, with Thy mighty condescension? I have need
to be baptized of Thee, but Thou hast no need to be baptized of me. The less
is blessed by the greater, and the greater is not blessed and sanctified by the
less. The light is kindled by the sun, and the sun is not made to shine by the
rush-lamp. The clay is wrought by the potter, and the potter is not moulded by
the clay. The creature is made anew by the Creator, and the Creator is not
restored by the creature. The infirm is healed by the physician, and the physician
is not cured by the infirm. The poor man receives contributions from the rich,
and the rich borrow not from the poor. I have need to be baptized of Thee, and
comest Thou to me? Can I be ignorant who Thou art, and from what source Thou
hast Thy light, and whence Thou art come? Or, because Thou hast been born even as
I have been,(7) am I, then, to deny the greatness of Thy divinity? Or, because
Thou hast condescended so far to me as to have approached my body, and dost
bear me wholly in Thyself in order to effect the salvation of the whole man, am
I, on account of that body of Thine which is seen, to overlook that divinity of
Thine which is only apprehended? Or, because on behalf of my salvation Thou
hast taken to Thyself the offering of my first-fruits, am I to ignore the fact
that Thou "coverest Thyself with light as with a garment? "(8) Or, because Thou
wearest the flesh that is related to me, and dost show Thyself to men as they are
able to see Thee, am I to forget the brightness of Thy glorious divinity? Or,
because I see my own form in Thee, am I to reason against Thy divine substance,
which is invisible and incomprehensible? I know Thee, O Lord; I know Thee
clearly. I know Thee, since I have been taught by Thee; for no one can recognise
Thee, unless He enjoys Thine illumination. I know Thee, O Lord, clearly; for I
saw Thee spiritually before I beheld this light. When Thou wert altogether in the
incorporeal bosom of the heavenly Father, Thou wert also altogether in the
womb of Thy handmaid and mother; and I though held in the womb of Elisabeth by
nature as in a prison, and bound with the indissoluble bonds of the children
unborn, leaped and celebrated Thy birth with anticipative rejoicings. Shall I then,
who gave intimation of Thy sojourn on earth before Thy birth, fail to apprehend
Thy coming after Thy birth? Shall I, who in the womb was a teacher of Thy
coming, be now a child in understanding in view of perfect knowledge? But I cannot
but worship Thee, who art adored by the whole creation; I cannot but proclaim
Thee, of whom heaven gave the indication by the star, and for whom earth offered
a kind reception by the wise men, while the choirs of angels also praised Thee
in joy over Thy condescension to us, and the shepherds who kept watch by night
hymned Thee as the Chief Shepherd of the rational sheep. I cannot keep silence
while Thou art present, for I am a voice; yea, I am the voice, as it is said,
of one crying in the wilderness, Prepare ye the way of the Lord.(1) I have need
to be baptized of Thee, and comest Thou to me? I was born, and thereby removed
the barrenness of the mother that bore me; and while still a babe I became the
healer of my father's speechlessness, having received of Thee from my
childhood the gift of the miraculous. But Thou, being born of the Virgin Mary, as Thou
didst will, and as Thou alone dost know, didst not do away with her virginity;
but Thou didst keep it, and didst simply gift her with the name of mother: and
neither did her virginity preclude Thy birth, nor did Thy birth injure her
virginity. But these two things, so utterly opposite--bearing and
virginity--harmonized with one intent; for such a thing abides, possible with Thee, the Framer
of nature. I am, but a man, and am a partaker of the divine grace; but Thou art
God, and also man to the same effect: for Thou art by nature man's friend. I
have need to be baptized of Thee, and comest Thou to me? Thou who wast in the
beginning, and wast with God, and wast God;(2) Thou who art the brightness of the
Father's glory;(3) Thou who art the perfect image of the perfect Father;(4)
Thou who art the true light that lighteneth every man that cometh into the
world;(5) Thou who wast in the world, and didst come where Thou wast; Thou who wast
made flesh, and yet wast not changed into the flesh; Thou who didst dwell among
us, and didst manifest Thyself to Thy servants in the form of a servant; Thou
who didst bridge earth and heaven together by Thy holy name,--comest Thou to me?
One so great to such a one as I am? The King to the forerunner? The Lord to the
servant? But though Thou wast not ashamed to be born in the lowly measures of
humanity, yet I have no ability to pass the measures of nature. I know how
great is the measure of difference between earth and the Creator. I know how great
is the distinction between the clay and the potter. I know how vast is the
superiority possessed by Thee, who art the Sun of righteousness, over me who am but
the torch of Thy grace. Even though Thou art compassed with the pure cloud of
the body, I can still recognise Thy lordship. I acknowledge my own servitude, I
proclaim Thy glorious greatness, I recognise Thy perfect lordship, I recognise
my own perfect insignificance, I am not worthy to unloose the latchets of Thy
shoes;(6) and how shall I dare to touch Thy stainless head? How can I stretch
out the right hand upon Thee, who didst stretch out the heavens like a
curtain,(7) and didst set the earth above the waters?(8) How shall I spread those menial
hands of mine upon Thy head? How shall I wash Thee, who art undefiled and
sinless? How shall I enlighten the light? What manner of prayer shall I offer up
over Thee, who dost receive the prayers even of those who are ignorant of Thee?
When I baptize others, I baptize into Thy name, in order that they may
believe on Thee, who comest with glory; but when I baptize Thee, of whom shall I
make mention? and into whose name shall I baptize Thee? Into that of the Father?
But Thou hast the Father altogether in Thyself, and Thou art altogether in the
Father. Or into that of the Son? But beside Thee there is no other Son of God
by nature. Or into that of the Holy Spirit? But He is ever together with Thee,
as being of one substance, and of one will, and of one judgment, and of one
power, and of one honour with Thee; and He receives, l along with Thee, the same
adoration from all. Wherefore, O Lord, baptize Thou me, if Thou pleasest;
baptize me, the Baptist. Regenerate one whom Thou didst cause to be generated. I
Extend Thy dread right hand, which Thou hast prepared for Thyself, and crown my
head by Thy touch, in order that I may run the course before Thy kingdom, crowned
like a forerunner, and diligently announce the good tidings to the sinners,
addressing them with this earnest call: "Behold the Lamb of God, that taketh away
the sin of the world!"(9) O river Jordan, accompany me in the joyous choir, and
leap with me, and stir thy waters rhythmically, as in the movements of the
dance; for thy Maker stands by thee in the body. Once of old didst thou see Israel
pass through thee, and thou didst divide thy floods, and didst wait in
expectation of the passage of the people; but now divide thyself more decidedly, and
flow more easily, and embrace the stainless limbs of Him who at that ancient
time did convey the Jews(1) through thee. Ye mountains and hills, ye valleys and
torrents, ye seas and rivers, bless the Lord, who has come upon the river
Jordan; for through these streams He transmits sanctification to all streams. And
Jesus answered and said to him: Suffer it to be so now, for thus it becometh us to
fulfil all righteousness.(2) Suffer it to be so now; grant the favour of
silence, O Baptist, to the season of my economy. Learn to will whatever is my will.
Learn to minister to me in those things on which I am bent, and do not pry
curiously into all that I wish to do. Suffer it to be so now: do not yet proclaim
my divinity; do not yet herald my kingdom with thy lips, in order that the
tyrant may not learn the fact and give up the counsel he has formed with respect to
me. Permit the devil to come upon me, and enter the conflict with me as though
I were but a common man, and receive thus his mortal wound. Permit me to fulfil
the object for which I have come to earth. It is a mystery that is being gone
through this day in the Jordan. My mysteries are for myself and my own. There
is a mystery here, not for the fulfilling of my own need, but for the designing
of a remedy for those who have been wounded. There is a mystery, which gives in
these waters the representation of the heavenly streams of the regeneration of
men. Suffer it to be so now: when thou seest me doing what seemeth to me good
among the works of my hands, in a manner befitting divinity, then attune thy
praises to the acts accomplished. When thou seest me cleansing the lepers, then
proclaim me as the framer of nature. When thou seest me make the lame ready
runners, then with quickened pace do thou also prepare thy tongue to praise me.
When thou seest me cast out demons, then hail my kingdom with adoration. When thou
seest me raise the dead from their graves by my word, then, in concert with
those thus raised, glorify me as the Prince of Life. When thou seest me on the
Father's right hand, then acknowledge me to be divine, as the equal of the Father
and the Holy Spirit, on the throne, and in eternity, and in honour. Suffer it
to be so now; for thus it becometh us to fulfil all righteousness. I am the
Lawgiver, and the Son of the Lawgiver; and it becometh me first to pass through
all that is established, and then to set forth everywhere the intimations of my
free gift. It becometh me to fulfil the law, and then to bestow grace. It
becometh me to adduce the shadow, and then the reality. It becometh me to finish the
old covenant, and then to dictate the new, and to write it on the hearts of
men, and to subscribe it with my blood,(3) and to seal it with my Spirit. It
becometh me to ascend the cross, and to be pierced with its nails, and to suffer
after the manner of that nature which is capable of suffering, and to heal
sufferings by my suffering, and by the tree to cure the wound that was inflicted upon
men by the medium of a tree. It becometh me to descend even into the very
depths of the grave, on behalf of the dead who are detained there. It becometh me,
by my three days' dissolution in the flesh, to destroy the power of the ancient
enemy, death. It becometh me to kindle the torch of my body for those who sit
in darkness and in the shadow of death. It becometh me to ascend in the flesh to
that place where I am in my divinity. It becometh me to introduce to the
Father the Adam reigning in me. It becometh me to accomplish these things, for on
account of these things I have taken my position with the works of my hands. It
becometh me to be baptized with this baptism for the present, and afterwards to
bestow the baptism of the consubstantial Trinity upon all men. Lend me,
therefore, O Baptist, thy right hand for the present economy, even as Mary lent her
womb for my birth. Immerse me in the streams of Jordan, even as she who bore me
wrapped me m children's swaddling-clothes. Grant me thy baptism even as the
Virgin granted me her milk. Lay hold of this head of mine, which the seraphim
revere. With thy right hand lay hold of this head, that is related to thyself in
kinship. Lay hold of this head, which nature has made to be touched. Lay hold of
this head, which for this very purpose has been formed by myself and my Father.
Lay hold of this head of mine, which, if one does lay hold of it in piety, will
save him from ever suffering shipwreck. Baptize me, who am destined to baptize
those who believe on me with water, and with the Spirit, and with fire: with
water, capable of washing away the defilement of sins; with the Spirit, capable
of making the earthly spiritual; with fire, naturally fitted to consume the
thorns of transgressions. On hearing these words, the Baptist directed his mind to
the object of the salvation,(4) and comprehended the mystery which he had
received, and discharged the divine command; for he was at once pious and ready to
obey. And stretching forth slowly his right hand, which seemed both to tremble
and to rejoice, he baptized the Lord. Then the Jews who were present, with
those in the vicinity and those from a distance, reasoned together, and spake thus
with themselves and with each other: Was it, then, without cause that we
imagined John to be superior to Jesus? Was it without cause that we considered the
former to be greater than the latter? Does not this very baptism attest the
Baptist's pre-eminence? Is not he who baptizeth presented as the superior, and he
who is baptized as the inferior? But while they, in their ignorance of the
mystery of the economy, babbled in such wise with each other, He who alone is Lord,
and by nature the Father of the Only-begotten, He who alone knoweth perfectly
Him whom He alone in passionless fashion begat, to correct the erroneous
imaginations of the Jews, opened the gates of the heavens, and sent down the Holy
Spirit in the form of a dove, lighting upon the head of Jesus, pointing out thereby
the new Noah, yea the maker of Noah, and the good pilot of the nature which is
in shipwreck. And He Himself calls with clear voice out of heaven, and says:
"This is my beloved Son,"(1) -- the Jesus there, namely, and not the John; the
one baptized, and not the one baptizing; He who was begotten of me before all
periods of time and not he who was begotten of Zacharias; He who was born of Mary
after the flesh, and not he who was brought forth by Elisabeth beyond all
expectation; He who was the fruit of the virginity yet preserved intact, and not he
who was the shoot from a sterility removed; He who has had His conversation
with you, and not he who was brought up in the wilderness. This is my beloved Son,
in whom I am well pleased: my Son, of the same substance with myself, and not
of a different; of one substance with me according to what is unseen, and of
one substance with you according to what is seen, yet without sin. This is He who
along with me made man. This is my beloved Son, in whom I am well pleased.
This Son of mine and this son of Mary are not two distinct persons; but this is my
beloved Son, -- this one who is both seen with the eye and apprehended with
the mind. This is my beloved Son, in whom I am well pleased; hear Him. If He
shall say, I and my Father are one,(2) hear Him. If He shall say, He that hath seen
me hath seen the Father,(3) hear Him. If He shall say, He that hath sent me is
greater than I,(4) adapt the voice to the economy. If He shall say, Whom do
men say that I the Son of man am?(5) answer ye Him thus: Thou art the Christ, the
Son of the living God.(6) By these words, as they were sent from the Father
out of heaven in thunder-form, the race of men was enlightened: they apprehended
the difference between the Creator and the creature, between the King and the
soldier (subject), between the Worker and the work; and being strengthened in
faith, they drew near through the baptism of John to Christ, our true God, who
baptizeth with the Spirit and with fire. To Him be glory, and to the Father, and
to the most holy and quickening Spirit, now and ever, and unto the ages of the
ages. Amen.
ELUCIDATION.
I CAN do no better than follow Dupin as to the authorship of these
Homilies. He thinks the style of Proclus (of Constantinople) may be detected in them,
though the fourth is beyond him for eloquence, and has even been thought worthy
of St. Chrysostom. It was produced after Nicaea, and probably after Ephesus,
its somewhat exaggerated praises of the <greek>qeotokos</greek> being unusual at
an earlier period. The titles of these Homilies are the work of much later
editors; and interpolations probably occur frequently, by the same hands.