ORIGEN'S COMMENTARY ON THE GOSPEL OF JOHN: FRAGMENTS OF THE FOURTH BOOK / FROM
THE FIFTH BOOK
FRAGMENTS OF THE FOURTH BOOK(1)
(Three Leaves from the Beginning.)
1. He who distinguishes in himself voice and meaning and things for which
the meaning stands, will not be offended at rudeness of language if, on
enquiry, he finds the things spoken of to be sound. The more may this be so when we
remember how the holy men acknowledge their speech and their preaching to be not
in persuasion of the wisdom of words, but in demonstration of the Spirit and of
power....
[Then, after speaking of the rudeness of style of the Gospel, he proceeds:
]
2. The Apostles are not unaware that in some things they give offence, and
that in some respects their culture is defective, and they confess
themselves(2) accordingly to be rude in speech but not in knowledge; for we must consider
that the other Apostles would have said this, too, as well as Paul. As for the
text,(3) "But we have this treasure in earthen vessels, that the excellency of
the power may be of God and not of us," we interpret it in this way. By
"treasures" we understand here, as in other passages, the treasure of knowledge
(gnosis) and of hidden wisdom. By "earthen vessels" we understand the humble diction
of the Scriptures, which the Greek might so readily be led to despise, and in
which the excellency of God's power appears so clearly. The mystery of the truth
and the power of the things said were not hindered by the humble diction from
travelling to the ends of the earth, nor from subduing to the word of Christ,
not only the foolish things of the world, but sometimes its wise things, too.
For we see our calling,(1) not that no wise man according to the flesh, but that
not many wise according to the flesh. But Paul, in his preaching of the Gospel,
is a debtor(2) to deliver the word not to Barbarians only, but also to Greeks,
and not only to the unwise, who would easily agree with him, but also to the
wise. For he was made sufficient a by God to be a minister of the New Covenant,
wielding the demonstration of the spirit and of power, so that when the
believers agreed with him their belief should not be in the wisdom of men, but in the
power of God. For, perhaps, if the Scripture possessed, like the works the
Greeks admire, elegance and command of diction, then it would be open to suppose
that not the truth of them had laid hold of men, but that the apparent sequence
and splendour of language had carried off the hearers, and had carried them off
by guile.
FROM THE FIFTH BOOK.
(From the Preface.)(1)
You are not content to fulfil the office, when I am present with you, of a
taskmaster to drive me to labour at theology; even when I am absent you demand
that I should spend most of my time on you and on the task I have to do for
you.(2) I, for my part, am inclined to shrink from toil, and to avoid that danger
which threatens from God those who give themselves to writing on divinity;
thus I would take shelter in Scripture in refraining from making many books. For
Solomon says in Ecclesiastes,(3) "My son, beware of making many books; there is
no end of it, and much study is a weariness of the flesh." For we, except that
text have some hidden meaning which we do not yet perceive, have directly
transgressed the injunction, we have not guarded ourselves against making many books.
[Then, after saying that this discussion of but a few sentences of the
Gospel have run to four volumes, he goes on:]
2. HOW SCRIPTURE WARNS US AGAINST MAKING MANY BOOKS.
For, to judge by the words of the phrase, "My son, beware of making many
books," two things appear to be indicated by it: first, that we ought not to
possess many books, and then that we ought not to compose many books. If the first
is not the meaning the second must be, and if the second is the meaning the
first does not necessarily follow. In either case we appear to be told that we
ought not to make many books. I might take my stand on this dictum which now
confronts us, and send you the text as an excuse, and I might appeal in support of
this position to the fact that not even the saints found leisure to compose
many books; and thus I might cry off from the bargain we made with each other, and
give up writing what I was to send to you. You, on your side, would no doubt
feel the force of the text I have cited, and might, for the future, excuse me.
But we must treat Scripture conscientiously, and must not congratulate ourselves
because we see the primary meaning of a text, that we understand it
altogether. I do not, therefore, shrink from bringing forward what excuse I think I am
able to offer for myself, and to point out the arguments, which you would
certainly use against me, if I acted contrary to our agreement. And in the first
place. the Sacred History seems to agree with the text in question, inasmuch as none
of the saints composed several works, or set forth his views in a number of
books. I will take up this point: when I proceed to write a number of books, the
critic will remind me that even such a one as Moses left behind him only five
books.
3. THE APOSTLES WROTE LITTLE.(1)
But he who was made fit to be a minister of the New Covenant, not of the
letter, but of the spirit, Paul, who fulfilled the Gospel from Jerusalem round
about to Illyricum,(2) did not write epistles to all the churches he taught, and
to those to whom he did write he sent no more than a few lines. And Peter, on
whom the Church of Christ is built, against which the gates of hell shall not
prevail(3) left only one epistle of acknowledged genuineness. Suppose we allow
that he left a second; for this is doubtful. What are we to say of him who
leaned on Jesus' breast, namely, John, who left one Gospel, though confessing(4)
that he could make so many that the world would not contain them? But he wrote
also the Apocalypse, being commanded to be silent and not to write the voices of
the seven thunders.(5) But he also left an epistle of very few lines.
Suppose also a second and a third, since not all pronounce these to be
genuine; but the two together do not amount to a hundred lines.
[Then, after enumerating the prophets and Apostles, and showing how each
wrote only a little, or not even a little, he goes
on:](1)
4. I feel myself growing dizzy with all this, and wonder whether, in obeying
you, I have not been obeying God, nor walking in the footsteps of the saints,
unless it be that my too great love to you, and my unwillingness to cause you any
pain, has led me astray and caused me to think of all these excuses. We started
from the words of the preacher, where he says: "My son, beware of making many
books." With this I compare a saying from the Proverbs of the same Solomon,(2)
"In the multitude of words thou shall not escape sin; but in sparing thy lips
thou shalt be wise." Here I ask whether speaking many words of whatever kind is a
multitude of words (in the sense of the preacher), even if the many words a
man speaks are sacred and connected with salvation. If this be the case, and if
he who makes use of many salutary words is guilty of "multitude of words," then
Solomon himself did not escape this sin, for "he spoke(3) three thousand
proverbs, and five thousand songs, and he spoke of trees from the cedar that is in
Lebanon even unto the hyssop that springeth out of the wall, he spoke also of
beasts and of fowl, and of creeping things and of fishes." How, I may ask, can any
one give any course of instruction, without a multitude of words, using the
phrase in its simplest sense? Does not Wisdom herself say to those who are
perishing,(4) "I stretched out my words, and ye heeded not"? Do we not find Paul,
too, extending his discourse from morning to midnight,(5) when Eutychus was borne
down with sleep and fell down, to the dismay of the hearers. who thought he was
killed? If, then, the words are true, "In much speaking thou wilt not escape
sin," and if Solomon was yet not guilty of great sin when he discoursed on the
subjects above mentioned, nor Paul when he prolonged his discourse till
midnight, then the question arises, What is that much speaking which is referred to?
and then we may pass on to consider what are the many books. Now the entire Word
of God, who was in the beginning with God, is not much speaking, is not words;
for the Word is one, being composed of the many speculations (theoremata), each
of which is a part of the Word in its entirety. Whatever words there be
outside of this one, which promise to give any description and exposition, even
though they be words about truth, none of these, to put it in a somewhat paradoxical
way, is Word or Reason, they are all words or reasons. They are not the monad,
far from it; they are not that which agrees and is one in itself, by their
inner divisions and conflicts unity has departed from them, they have become
numbers, perhaps infinite numbers. We are obliged, therefore, to say that whoever
speaks that which is foreign to religion is using many words, while he who speaks
the words of truth, even should he go over the whole field and omit nothing,
is always speaking the one word. Nor are the saints guilty of much speaking,
since they always have the aim in view which is connected with the one word. It
appears, then, that the much speaking which is condemned is judged to be so
rather from the nature of the views propounded, than from the number of the words
pronounced. Let us see if we cannot conclude in the same way that all the sacred
books are one book, but that those outside are the "many books" of the
preacher. The proof of this must be drawn from Holy Scripture, and it will be most
satisfactorily established if I am able to show that it is not only one book,
taking the word now in its commoner meaning, that we find to be written about
Christ. Christ is written about even in the Pentateuch; He is spoken of in each of
the Prophets, and in the Psalms, and, in a word, as the Saviour Himself says, in
all the Scriptures. He refers us to them all, when He says:(1) "Search the
Scriptures, for in them ye think ye have eternal life, and these are they which
testify of Me." And if He refers us to the Scriptures as testifying of Him, it is
not to one that He sends us, to the exclusion of another, but to all that speak
of Him, those which, in the Psalms, He calls the chapter of the book,
saying,(2) "In the chapter of the book it is written of Me." If any one proposes to
take these words, "In the chapter of the book it is written of Me," literally, and
to apply them to this or that special passage where Christ is spoken of, let
him tell us on what principle he warrants his preference for one book over
another. If any one supposes that we are doing something of this kind ourselves. and
applying the words in question to the book of Psalms, we deny that we do so,
and we would urge that in that case the words should have been, "In this book it
is written of Me." But He speaks of all the books as one chapter, thus
sum-ruing up in one all that is spoken of Christ for our instruction. In fact the book
was seen by John,(1) "written within and without, and sealed; and no one could
open it to read it, and to loose the seals thereof, but the Lion of the tribe
of Judah, the root of David, who has the key of David,(2) he that openeth and
none shall shut, and that shutteth and none shall open." For the book here
spoken of means the whole of Scripture; and it is written within (lit. in front), on
account of the meaning which is obvious, and on the back, on account of its
remoter and spiritual sense. Observe, in addition to this, if a proof that the
sacred writings are one book, and those of an opposite character many. may not be
found in the fact that there is one book of the living from which those who
have proved unworthy to be in it are blotted out, as it is written:(3) "Let them
be blotter out of the book of the living," while of those who are to undergo
the judgment, there are books in the plural, as Daniel says:(4) "The judgment was
set, and the books were opened." But Moses also bears witness to the unity of
the sacred book, when he says:(5) "If Thou forgive the people their sins,
forgive, but if not, then wipe me out of the book which Thou hast written." The
passage in Isaiah,(6) too, I read in the same way. It is not peculiar to his
prophecy that the words of the book should be sealed, and should neither be read by
him who does not know letters, because he is ignorant of letters, nor by him
who is learned, because the book is sealed. This is true of every writing, for
every written work needs the reason (Logos) which closed it to open it. "He shall
shut, and none shall open,"(7) and when He opens no one can cast doubt on the
interpretation He brings. Hence it is said that He shall open and no man shall
shut. I infer a similar lesson from the book spoken of in Ezekiel,(8) in which
was written lamentation, and a song, and woe. For the whole book is full of the
woe of the lost, and the song of the saved, and the lamentation of those
between these two. And John, too, when he speaks of his eating the one roll, (1) in
which both front and back were written on, means the whole of Scripture, one
book which is, at first, most sweet when one begins, as it were, to chew it, but
bitter in the revelation of himself which it makes to the conscience of each
one who knows it. I will add to the proof of this an apostolic saying which has
been quite misunderstood by the disciples of Marcion, who, therefore, set the
Gospels at naught. The Apostle says:(2) "According to my Gospel in Christ Jesus;"
he does not speak of Gospels in the plural, and, hence, they argue that as the
Apostle only speaks of one Gospel in the singular, there was only one in
existence. But they fail to see that, as He is one of whom all the evangelists
write, so the Gospel, though written by several hands, is, in effect, one. And, in
fact, the Gospel, though written by four, is one. From these considerations,
then, we learn what the one book is, and what the many books, and what I am now
concerned about is, not the quantity I may write, but the effect of what I say,
lest, if I fail in this point, and set forth anything against the truth itself,
even in one of my writings, I should prove to have transgressed the
commandment, and to be a writer of "many books." Yet I see the heterodox assailing the
holy Church of God in these days, under the pretence of higher wisdom, and
bringing forward works in many volumes in which they offer expositions of the
evangelical and apostolic writings, and I fear that if I should be silent and should
not put before our members the saving and true doctrines, these teachers might
get a hold of curious souls, which, in the absence of wholesome nourishment,
might go after food that is forbidden, and, in fact, unclean and horrible. It
appears to me, therefore, to be necessary that one who is able to represent in a
genuine manner the doctrine of the Church, and to refute those dealers in
knowledge, falsely so-called, should take his stand against historical fictions, and
oppose to them the true and lofty evangelical message in which the agreement of
the doctrines, found both in the so-called Old Testament and in the so-called
New, appears so plainly and fully. You yourself felt at one time the lack of good
representatives of the better cause, and were impatient of a faith which was
at issue with reason and absurd, and you then, for the love you bore to the
Lord, gave yourself to composition from which, however, in the exercise of the
judgment with which you are endowed, you afterwards desisted. This is the defence
which I think admits of being made for those who have the faculty of speaking
and writing. But I am also pleading my own cause, as I now devote myself with
what boldness I may to the work of exposition; for it may be that I am not endowed
with that habit and disposition which he ought to have who is fitted by God to
be a minister of the New Covenant, not of the letter but of the spirit.