METHODIUS. THREE FRAGMENTS FROM THE HOMILY ON THE CROSS AND PASSION OF CHRIST
AND OTHER FRAGMENTS
THREE FRAGMENTS FROM THE HOMILY ON THE CROSS AND PASSION OF CHRIST.
I.(1)
METHODIUS, Bishop, to those who say: What doth it profit us that the Son
of God was crucified upon earth, and made man? And wherefore did He endure to
suffer in the manner of the cross, and not by some other punishment? And what was
the advantage of the cross?
Christ, the Son of God, by the command of the Father, became conversant
with the visible creature, in order that, by overturning the dominion of the
tyrants, the demons, that is, He might deliver our souls from their dreadful
bondage, by reason of which our whole nature, intoxicated by the draughts of
iniquity, had become full of tumult and disorder, and could by no means return to the
remembrance of good and useful things. Wherefore, also, it was the more easily
carried away to idols, inasmuch as evil had overwhelmed it entirely, and had
spread over all generations, on account of the change which had come over our
fleshy tabernacles in consequence of disobedience; until Christ, the Lord, by the
flesh in which He lived and appeared, weakened the force of Pleasure's
onslaughts, by means of which the infernal powers that were in arms against us reduced
our minds to slavery, and freed mankind from all their evils. For with this end
the Lord Jesus both wore our flesh, and became man, and by the divine
dispensation was nailed to the cross; in order that by the flesh in which the demons had
proudly and falsely feigned themselves gods, having carried our souls captive
unto death by deceitful wiles, even by this they might be overturned, and
discovered to be no gods. For he prevented their arrogance from raising itself
higher, by becoming man; in order that by the body in which the race possessed of
reason had become estranged from the worship of the true God, and had suffered
injury, even by the same receiving into itself in an ineffable manner the Word of
Wisdom, the enemy might be discovered to be the destroyers and not the
benefactors of our souls. For it had not been wonderful if Christ, by the terror of
His divinity, and the greatness of His invincible power, had reduced to weakness
the adverse nature of the demons. But since this was to cause them greater
grief and torment, for they would have preferred to be overcome by one stronger
than themselves, therefore it was that by a man He procured the safety of the
race; in order that men, after that very Life and Truth had entered into them in
bodily form, might be able to return to the form and light of the Word,
overcoming the power of the enticements of sin; and that the demons, being conquered by
one weaker than they, and thus brought into contempt, might desist from their
over-bold confidence, their hellish wrath being repressed. It was for this
mainly that the cross was brought in, being erected as a trophy against iniquity,
and a deterrent from it, that henceforth man might be no longer subject to wrath,
after that he had made up for the defeat which, by his disobedience, be had
received, and had lawfully conquered the infernal powers, and by the gift of God
had been set free from every debt. Since, therefore, the first-born Word of God
thus fortified the manhood in which He tabernacled with the armour of
righteousness, He overcame, as has been said, the powers that enslaved us by the figure
of the cross, and showed forth man, who had been oppressed by corruption, as
by a tyrant power, to be free, with unfettered hands. For the cross, if you wish
to define it, is the confirmation of the victory, the way by which God to man
descended, the trophy against material spirits, the repulsion of death, the
foundation of the ascent to the true day; and the ladder for those who are
hastening to enjoy the light that is there, the engine by which those who are fitted
for the edifice of the Church are raised up from below, like a stone four
square, to be compacted on to the divine Word. Hence it is that our kings, perceiving
that the figure of the cross is used for the dissipating of every evil, have
made vexillas, as they are called in the Latin language. Hence the sea, yielding
to this figure, makes itself navigable to men. For every creature, so to
speak, has, for the sake of liberty, been marked with this sign; for the birds which
fly aloft, form the figure of the cross by the expansion of their wings; and
man himself, also, with his hands outstretched, represents the same. Hence, when
the Lord had fashioned him in this form, in which He had from the beginning
flamed him, He joined on his body to the Deity, in order that it might be
henceforth an instrument consecrated to God, freed from all discord and want of
harmony. For man cannot, after that he has been formed for the worship of God, and
hath sung, as it were, the incorruptible song of truth, and by this hath been
made capable of holding the Deity, being fitted to the lyre of life as the chords
and strings, he cannot, I say, return to discord and corruption.
II.(1) THE SAME METHODIUS TO THOSE WHO ARE ASHAMED OF THE CROSS OF CHRIST.
Some think that God also, whom they measure with the measure of their own
feelings, judges the same thing that wicked and foolish men judge to be
subjects of praise and blame, and that He uses the opinions of men as His rule and
measure, not taking into account the fact that, by reason of the ignorance that is
in them, every creature falls short of the beauty of God. For He draws all
things to life by His Word, from their universal substance and nature. For whether
He would have good, He Himself is the Very Good, and remains in Himself; or,
whether the beautiful is pleasing to Him, since He Himself is the Only
Beautiful, He beholds Himself, holding in no estimation the things which move the
admiration of men. That, verily, is to be accounted as in reality the most beautiful
and praiseworthy, which God Himself esteems to be beautiful, even though it be
contemned and despised by all else--not that which men fancy to be beautiful.
Whence it is, that although by this figure He hath willed to deliver the soul
from corrupt affections, to the signal putting to shame of the demons, we ought
to receive it, and not to speak evil of it, as being that which was given us to
deliver us, and set us free from the chains which for our disobedience we
incurred. For the Word suffered, being in the flesh affixed to the cross, that He
might bring man, who had been deceived by error, to His supreme and godlike
majesty, restoring him to that divine life from which he had become alienated. By
this figure, in truth, the passions are blunted; the passion of the passions
having taken place by the Passion, and the death of death by the death of Christ,
He not having been subdued by death, nor overcome by the pains of the Passion.
For neither did the Passion cast Him down from His equanimity, nor did death
hurt Him, but He was in the passible remaining impassible, and in the mortal
remaining immortal, comprehending all that the air, and this middle state, and the
heaven above contained, and attempering the mortal to the immortal divinity.
Death was vanquished entirely; the flesh being crucified to draw forth its
immortality.
III.(2) THE SAME METHODIUS: HOW CHRIST THE SON OF GOD, IN A BRIEF AND DEFINITE
TIME, BEING ENCLOSED BY THE BODY, AND EXISTING IMPASSIBLE, BECAME OBNOXIOUS TO
THE PASSION.
For since this virtue was in Him, now it is of the essence of power to be
contracted in a small space, and to be diminished, and again to be expanded in
a large space, and to be increased. But if it is possible for Him to be with
the larger extended, and to be made equal, and yet not with the smaller to be
contracted and diminished, then power is not in Him. For if you say that this is
possible to power, and that impossible, you deny it to be power; as being infirm
and incapable with regard to the things which it cannot do. Nor again,
further, will it ever contain any excellence of divinity with respect to those things
which suffer change. For both man and the other animals, with respect to those
things which they can effect, energise; but with respect to those things which
they cannot perform, are weak, and fade away. Wherefore for this cause the Son
of God was in the manhood enclosed, because this was not impossible to Him. For
with power He suffered, remaining impassible; and He died, bestowing the gift
of immortality upon mortals. Since the body, when struck or cut by a body, is
just so far struck or cut as the striker strikes it, or he that cuts it cut it.
For according to the rebound of the thing struck, the blow reflects upon the
striker, since it is necessary that the two must suffer equally, both the agent
and the sufferer. If, in truth, that which is cut, from its small size, does not
correspond to that which cuts it, it will not be able to cut it at all. For if
the subject body does not resist the blow of the sword, but rather yields to
it, the operation will be void of effect, even as one sees in the thin and
subtle bodies of fire and air; for in such cases the impetus of the more solid
bodies is relaxed, and remains without effect. But if fire, or air, or stone, or
iron, or anything which men use against themselves for the purposes of mutual
destruction--if it is not possible to pierce or divide these, because of the subtle
nature which they possess, why should not rather Wisdom remain invulnerable
and impassible, in nothing injured by anything, even though it were conjoined to
the body which was pierced and transfixed with nails, inasmuch as it is purer
and more excellent than any other nature, if you except only that of God who
begat Him?
SOME OTHER FRAGMENTS OF THE SAME METHODIUS.
I.(1)
BUT, perhaps, since the friends of Job imagined, that they understood the
reason why he suffered such things, that just man, using a long speech to them,
confesses that the wisdom of the divine judgment is incomprehensible, not only
to him, but also to every man, and declares that this earthly region is not
the fitting place for understanding the knowledge of the divine counsels. One
might say, that perfect and absolute piety--a thing plainly divine, and of God
alone given to man, is in this place called wisdom. But the sense of the words is
as follows: God, he says, hath given great things unto men, sowing, as it were,
in their nature the power of discovery, together with wisdom, and the faculty
of art. And men having received this, dig metals out of the earth, and
cultivate it; but that wisdom which is conjoined with piety, it is not possible in any
place to discover. Man cannot obtain it from his own resources, nor can he give
it unto others. Hence it was that the wise men of the Greeks, who in their own
strength sought to search out piety, and the worship of the Deity, did not
attain their end. For it is a thing, as we have said, which exceeds human
strength, the gift and the grace of God; and therefore from the beginning, partly by
visions, partly by the intervention of angels, partly by the discourses of the
divinely-inspired prophets, God instructed man in the principles of true
religion. Nay, moreover, that contemplative wisdom by which we are impelled to the
arts, and to other pursuits, and with which we are all in common, just and unjust,
alike endued, is the gift of God: if we have been made rational creatures, we
have received this. Wherefore, also, in a former place it was said, as of a
thing that is of God bestowed, "Is it not the Lord who teacheth understanding and
knowledge?"(2)
II.(3)
Observe that the Lord was not wont from the beginning to speak with man;
but after that the soul was prepared, and exercised in many ways, and had
ascended into the height by contemplation, so far as it is possible for human nature
to ascend, then is it His wont to speak, and to reveal His Word unto those who
have attained unto this elevation. But since the whirlwind is the producer of
the tempests, and Job, in the tempest of his afflictions, had not made shipwreck
of his faith, but his constancy shone forth the rather; therefore it was that
He who gave him an answer answered him by the whirlwind, to signify the tempest
of calamity which had befallen him; but, because He changed the stormy
condition of his affairs into one of serene tranquillity, He spoke to him not only by
the whirlwind, but in clouds also.
III.(4)
Many have descended into the deep, not so as to walk on it, but so as to
be by its bonds restrained. Jesus alone walked on the deep, where there are no
traces of walkers, as a free man. For He chose death, to which He was not
subject, that He might deliver those who were the bondslaves of death; saying to the
prisoners, "Go forth; and to them that are in darkness, show yourselves."(5)
With which, also, the things which follow are consistent.
IV.(6)
Seest thou how, at the end of the contest, with a loud proclamation he
declares the praises of the combatant, and discovers that which was in his
afflictions hidden. in the words: "Thinkest thou that I had else answered thee, but
that thou shouldest appear just?"(7) This is the salve of his wounds, this the
reward of his patience. For as to what followed, although he received double his
former possessions, these may seem to have been given him by divine providence
as small indeed, and for trifling causes, even though to some they may appear
great.
FRAGMENT, UNCERTAIN.
Thou contendest with Me, and settest thyself against Me, and opposest
those who combat for Me. But where weft thou when I made the world? What wert thou
then? Hadst thou yet, says He, fallen from thy mother? for there was darkness,
in the beginning of the world's creation, He says, upon the face of the deep.
Now this darkness was no created darkness, but one which of set purpose had
place, by reason of the absence of light.
V.(1)
But Methodius: The Holy Spirit, who of God is given to all men, and of
whom Solomon said, "For Thine incorruptible Spirit is in all things,"(2) He
receives for the conscience, which condemns the offending soul.
VI.(3) THE SAME METHODIUS.
I account it a greater good to be reproved than to reprove, inasmuch as it
is more excellent to free oneself from evil than to free another.
VII.(4) THE SAME METHODIUS.
Human nature cannot clearly perceive pure justice in the soul, since, as
to many of its thoughts, it is but dim-sighted.
VIII. THE SAME METHODIUS.
Wickedness never could recognise virtue or its own self.
IX. THE SAME METHODIUS.
Justice, as it seems, is four square, on all sides equal and like.
The just judgment of God is accommodated to our affections; and such as
our estate is, proportionate and similar shall the retribution be which is
allotted us.
TWO FRAGMENTS, UNCERTAIN.
I.
The beginning of every good action has its foundation in our wills, but
the conclusion is of God.
II.
Perhaps these three persons of our ancestors, being in an image the
consubstantial representatives of humanity, are, as also Methodius thinks, types of
the Holy and Consubstantial Trinity,(1) the innocent and unbegotten Adam being
the type and resemblance of God the Father Almighty, who is uncaused, and the
cause of all; his begotten son(2) shadowing forth the image of the begotten Son
and Word of God; whilst Eve, that proceedeth forth from Adam,(3) signifies the
person and procession of the Holy Spirit.(4)
GENERAL NOTE.
(Vexillas,--as they are called, p. 399.)
IT is very curious to note how certain ideas are inherited from the
earliest Fathers, and travel down, as here, to find a new expression in a distant
age. Here our author reflects Justin Martyr,(1) and the Labarum (2) itself is the
outcrop of what Justin wrote to Antoninus Pius.