COMMENTARY ON MATTHEW: BOOK XII
BOOK XII.
- CONCERNING THOSE WHO ASKED HIM TO SHOW THEM A SIGN FROM HEAVEN,
"And the Sadducees and Pharisees came, and tempting Him kept asking Him to
shew them a sign from heaven."(6) The Sadducees and Pharisees who disagreed
with each other in regard to the most essential truths,--for the Pharisees
champion the doctrine of the resurrection of the dead, hoping that there will be a
world to come, while the Sadducees know nothing after this life in store for a
man whether he has been advancing towards virtue, or has made no effort at all to
come out from the mountains of wickedness,--these, I say, agree that they may
tempt Jesus. Now, a similar thing, as Luke has narrated,(5) happened in the
case of Herod and Pilate, who became friends with one another that they might kill
Jesus; for, perhaps, their hostility with one another would have prevented
Herod from asking that He should be put to death, in order to please the people,
who said, "Crucify Him, Crucify Him,"(6) and would have influenced Pilate, who
was somewhat inclined against His condemnation, his hostility with Herod giving
fresh impulse to the inclination which he previously cherished to release
Jesus. But their apparent friendship made Herod stronger in his demand against Jesus
with Pilate, who wished, perhaps, also because of the newly-formed friendship
to do something to gratify Herod and all the nation of the Jews. And often even
now you may see in daily life those who hold the most divergent opinions,
whether in the philosophy of the Greeks or in other systems of thought, appearing
to be of one mind that they may scoff at and attack Jesus Christ in the person
of His disciples. And from these things I think you may go on by rational
argument to consider, whether when forces join in opposition which are in
disagreement with one another, as of Pharaoh with Nebuchadnezzar,(1) and of Tirhakah, king
of the Ethiopians, with Sennacherib,(2) a combination then takes place against
Jesus and His people. So perhaps, also, "The kings of the earth set themselves
and the rulers were gathered together,"(3) though not at all before at harmony
with one another, that having taken counsel against the Lord and His Christ.
they might slay the Lord of glory.
- WHY THE PHARISEES ASKED A SIGN FROM HEAVEN.
Now, to this point we have come in our discourse, because of the
Pharisees and Sadducees coming together unto Jesus, who disagreed in matters relating
to the resurrection, but came, as it were, to an agreement for the sake of
tempting our Saviour, and asking Him to show them a sign froth heaven. For, not
satisfied with the wonderful signs shown among the people in the healing of all
forms of disease and sickness, and with the rest of the miracles which our Saviour
had done in the knowledge of many, they wished Him to show to them also a sign
from heaven. And I conjecture that they suspected that the signs upon earth
might possibly not be of God; for they did not hesitate indeed to say, "Jesus
casts out demons by Beelzebub the prince of the demons;"(4) and it seemed to them
that a sign from heaven could not spring from Beelzebub or any other wicked
power. But they erred in regard to both, in regard to signs upon earth as well as
to signs from heaven, not being "approved money-changers,"(5) nor knowing how
to distinguish between the spirits that are working, which kind are from God,
and which have revolted from Him. And they ought to have known that even many of
the portents wrought against Egypt in the time of Moses, though they were not
from heaven, were clearly from God, and that the fire which fell from heaven
upon the sheep of Job was not from God;(1) for that fire belonged to the same one
as he to whom belonged those who carried off, and made three bands of horsemen
against, the cattle of Job. I think, moreover, that in Isaiah--as if signs
could be shown both from the earth and from heaven, the true being from God, but
"with all power and signs and lying wonders"(2) those from the evil one--it was
said to Ahaz, "Ask for thyself a sign from the Lord thy God in the depth or in
the height."(3) For, unless there had been some signs in the depth or in the
height which were not from the Lord God, this would not have been said, "Ask for
thyself a sign from the Lord thy God in the depth or in the height." But I know
well that such an interpretation of the passage, "Ask for thyself a sign from
the Lord thy God," will seem to some one rather forced; but give heed to that
which is said by the Apostle about the man of sin, the son of perdition, that,
"with all power and signs and lying wonders and with all deceit of
unrighteousness,"(4) he shall be manifested to them that are perishing, imitating all kinds
of wonders, to-wit, those of truth. And as the enchanters and magicians of the
Egyptians, as being inferior to the man of sin and the son of perdition,
imitated certain powers, both the signs and wonders of truth, doing lying wonders so
that the true might not be believed; so I think the man of sin will imitate
signs and powers. And perhaps, also, the Pharisees suspected these things because
of the prophecies concerning Him; but I inquire whether also the Sadducees
tempting Him asked Jesus to show them a sign from heaven. For unless we say that
they suspected this, how shall we describe their relation to the portents which
Jesus wrought, who continued hard-hearted and were not put to shame by the
miraculous things that were done? But if any one supposes that we have given an
occasion of defence to the Pharisees and Sadducees, both when they say that the
demons were cast out by Jesus through Beelzebub, and when tempting Him, they ask
Jesus about a heavenly sign, let him know that we plausibly say that they were
drawn away to the end that they might not believe in the miracles of Jesus; but
not as to deserve forgiveness; for they did not look to the words of the
prophets which were being fulfilled in the acts of Jesus, which an evil power was not
at all capable of imitating. But to bring back a soul which had gone out, so
that it came out of the grave when already stinking and passing the fourth
day,(1) was the work of no other than Him who heard the word of the Father, "Let us
make man after our image and likeness."(2) But also to command the winds and to
make the violence of the sea cease at a word, was the work of no other than Him
through whom all things, both the sea itself and the winds, have come into
being. Moreover also as to the teaching which stimulates men to the love of the
Creator, in harmony with the law and the prophets, and which checks passions and
moulds morals according to piety, what else did it indicate to such as were
able to see. than that He was truly the Son of God who wrought works so mighty? In
respect of which things He said also to the disciples of John, "Go your way
and tell John what great things ye see and hear; the blind receive their sight,"
etc.(3)
- THE ANSWER OF JESUS TO THEIR REQUEST.
Next let us remark in what way, when asked in regard to one sign, that He
might show it from heaven, to the Pharisees and Sadducees who put the question,
He swers and says, "An evil and adulterous generation seeketh after a sign,
and there shall be no sign given to it, but the sign of Jonah the prophet," when
also, "He left them and departed."(4) But the sign of Jonah, in truth,
according to their question, was not merely a sign but also a sign from heaven; so that
even to those who tempted Him and sought a sign from heaven He, nevertheless,
out of His own great goodness gave the sign. For if, as Jonah passed three days
and three nights in the whale's belly, so the Son of man did in the heart of
the earth, and after this rose up from it,--whence but from heaven shall we say
that the sign of the resurrection of Christ came? And especially when, at the
time of the passion, He became a sign to the robber who obtained favour from Him
to enter into the paradise of God; after this, I think, descending into Hades
to the dead, "as free among the dead."(5) And the Saviour seems to me to
conjoin the sign which was to come from Himself with the reason of the sign in regard
to Jonah when He says, not merely that a sign like to that is granted by Him
but that very sign; for attend to the words, "And there shall no sign be given
to it but the sign of Jonah the prophet."(1) Accordingly that sign was this
sign, because that became indicative of this, so that the elucidation of that sign,
which was obscure on the face of it, might be found in the fact that the
Saviour suffered, and passed three days and three nights in the heart of the earth.
At the same time also we learn the general principle that, if the sign
signifies something, each of the signs which are recorded, whether as in actual
history, or by way of precept, is indicative of something afterwards fulfilled; as for
example, the sign of Jonah going out after three days from the whale's belly
was indicative of the resurrection of our Saviour, rising after three days and
three nights from the dead; and that which is called circumcision is the sign of
that which is indicated by Paul in the words: "We are the circumcision."(2)
Seek you also every sign in the Old Scriptures as indicative of some passage in
the New Scripture, and that which is named a sign in the New Covenant as
indicative of something either in the age about to be, or even in the subsequent
generations after that the sign has taken place.
- WHY JESUS CALLED THEM AN ADULTEROUS GENERATION, THE LAW AS HUSBAND.
And He called them, indeed, "an evil generation," because of the quality
arising from evil which had been produced in them, for wickedness is voluntary
evil-doing, but "adulterous" because that when the Pharisees and Sadducees left
that which is figuratively called man, the word of truth or the law, they were
debauched by falsehood and the law of sin. For if there are two laws, the law
in our members warring against the law of the mind, and the law of the mind,(3)
we must say that the law of the mind--that is, the spiritual--is man, to whom
the soul was given by God as wife, that is, to the man who is law, according to
what is written, "A wife is married to a man by God;"(4) but the other is a
paramour of the soul which is subject to it, which also on account of it is called
an adulteress. Now that the law is husband of the soul Paul clearly exhibits
in the Epistle to the Romans, saying, "The law hath dominion over a man for so
long time as he liveth; for the woman that hath a husband is bound to the
husband while he liveth, to the husband who is law,"(1) etc. For consider in these
things that the law hath dominion over the man so long time as the law
liveth,--as a husband over a wife. "For the woman that hath a husband," that is, the soul
under the law, "is bound to the husband while he liveth," to the husband who
is the law; but if the husband--that is, the law die--she is discharged from the
law, which is her husband. Now the law dies to him who has gone up to the
condition of blessedness, and no longer lives under the law, but acts like to
Christ, who, though He became under law for the sake of those under law, that He
might gain those under law,' did not continue under law, nor did He leave subject
to law those who had been freed by Him; for He led them up along with Himself
to the divine citizenship which is above the law, which contains, as for the
imperfect and such as are still sinners, sacrifices for the remission of sins. He
then who is without sin, and stands no longer in need of legal sacrifices,
perhaps when he has become perfect has passed beyond even the spiritual law, and
comes to the Word beyond it, who became flesh to those who live in the flesh, but
to those who no longer at all war after the flesh, He is perceived as being
the Word, as(3) He was God in the beginning with God, and reveals the Father.
Three things therefore are to be thought of in connection with this place--the
woman that hath a husband, who is under a husband--the law; and the woman who is
an adulteress, to-wit, the soul, which, while her husband, the law, liveth, has
become joined to another husband, namely, the law of the flesh; and the woman
who is married to the brother of the dead husband, to the Word who is alive and
dies not, who "being raised from the dead dieth no more, for death hath no more
dominion over Him."(4) So far then because of the saying, "But if the husband
die she is discharged from the law, the husband," and because of this, "so
then, while her husband liveth, she shall be called an adulteress, if she be joined
to another man," and because of this, "but if the husband die, she is free
from the law, so that she is no adulteress though she be joined to another
man."(5) But this very saying, "So then while her husband liveth, she shall be called
an adulteress," we have brought forward, wishing clearly to show why in answer
to the Pharisees and Sadducees who were tempting Him and asking Him to show
them a sign from heaven, He said not only "a wicked generation," but an
"adulterous" generation.(1) In a general way, then, the law in the members which wars
against the law of the mind,(2) as a man who is an adulterer, is an adulterer of
the soul. But now also every power that is hostile, which gains the mastery over
the human soul, and has intercourse with it, commits adultery with her who had
a bridegroom given to her by God, namely, the Word. After these things it is
written that "He left them and departed." For how was the bridegroom--the
Word--not going to leave the adulterous generation and depart from it? But you might
say that the Word of God, leaving the synagogue of the Jews as adulterous,
departed from it, and took a wife of fornication,(3) namely, those from the
Gentiles; since those who were "Sion, a faithful city,"(4) have become harlots; but
these have become like the harlot Rahab, who received the spies of Joshua, and
was saved with all her house;(5) after this no longer playing the harlot, but
coming to the feet of Jesus, and wetting them with the tears of repentance, and
anointing them with the fragrance of the ointment of holy conversation, on
account of whom, reproaching Simon the leper,--the former people,--He spoke those
things which are written.(6)
- CONCERNING THE LEAVEN OF THE PHARISEES.
"And His disciples came to the other side and forgot to take loaves."(7)
Since the loaves which they had before they came to the other side were no
longer useful to the disciples when they came to the other side,for they needed one
kind of loaves before they crossed and a different kind when they crossed,--on
this account, being careless of taking loaves when going to the other side,
they forgot to take loaves with them. To the other side then came the disciples of
Jesus who had passed over from things material to things spiritual, and from
things sensible to those which are intellectual. And perhaps that He might turn
back those who, by crossing to the other side, "had begun in spirit,"(8) from
running back to carnal things, Jesus said to them when on the other side, "Take
heed and beware."(9) For there was a certain lump of teaching and of truly
ancient leaven,--that according to the bare letter, and on this account not freed
from those things which arise from wickedness,--which the Pharisees and
Sadducees offered, of which Jesus does not wish His own disciples any longer to eat,
having made for them a new and spiritual lump, offering Himself to those who gave
up the leaven of the Pharisees and Sadducees and had come to Him--"the living
bread which came down from heaven and gives life to the world."(1) But since,
to him who is no longer going to use the leaven and the lump and the teaching of
the Pharisees and the Sadducees, the first thing is to "see" and then to
"beware," so that no one, by reason of not seeing and from want of taking heed, may
ever partake of their forbidden leaven,--on this account He says to the
disciples, first, "see," and then, "beware." It is the mark of the clear-sighted and
careful to separate the leaven of the Pharisees and Sadducees and every food
that is not of "the unleavened-bread of sincerity and truth"(2) from the living
bread, even that which came down from heaven, so that no one who eats may adopt
the things of the Pharisees and the Sadducees, but by eating the living and true
bread may strengthen his soul. And we might seasonably apply the saying to
those who, along with the Christian way of life, prefer to live as the Jews,
materially, for these do not see nor beware of the leaven of the Pharisees and
Sadducees, but, contrary to the will of Jesus who forbade it, eat the bread of the
Pharisees. Yea and also all, who do not wish to understand that the law is
spiritual, and has a shadow of the good things to come,(3) and is a shadow of the
things to come,(4) neither inquire of what good thing about to be each of the
laws is a shadow, nor do they see nor beware of the leaven of the Pharisees; and
they also who reject the doctrine of the resurrection of the dead are not on
their guard against the leaven of the Sadducees. And there are many among the
heterodox who, because of their unbelief in regard to the resurrection of the dead,
are imbued with the leaven of the Sadducees. Now, while Jesus said these
things, the disciples reasoned, saying not aloud, but in their own hearts, "We took
no loaves."(5) And something like this was what they said, "If we had loaves we
would not have had to take of the leaven of the Pharisees and the Sadducees;
but since, from want of loaves, we run the risk of taking from their leaven,
while the Saviour does not wish us to run back to their teaching, therefore He
said to us, "Take heed and beware of the leaven of the Pharisees and the
Sadducees."(1) And these things then they reasoned; Jesus, while looking to that which
was in their hearts, and hearing the reasons in them, as the true overseer of
hearts, reproves them because they did not see nor remember the loaves which they
received from Him; on account of which, even when they appeared to be in want
of loaves, they did not need the leaven of the Pharisees and the Sadducees.
- THE MEANING OF LEAVEN. JESUS' KNOWLEDGE OF THE HEART.
Then expounding clearly and representing to them, who were being
distracted because of the equivocal meaning of loaf and leaven, in an undisguised
fashion, that He was not speaking to them about sensible bread but about the leaven
in the teaching, He subjoins, "How is it that ye do not perceive that I spake
not you concerning bread? But beware of the leaven of the Pharisees and the
Sadducees."(2) And though He had not laid bare the interpretation, but still
continued to use metaphorical language, the disciples would have understood that the
discourse of the Saviour was about the teaching, figuratively called leaven,
which the Pharisees and Sadducees were teaching. So long, then, as we have Jesus
with us fulfilling the promise which runs, "Lo, I am with you always unto the
consummation of the age,"(3) we cannot fast nor be in want of food, so that,
because of want of it we should desire to take and eat the forbidden leaven, even
from the Pharisees and Sadducees. Now there may sometimes be a time, when He is
with us, that we are without food, as is spoken of in the passage above, "They
continue with me now three days and have nothing to eat;"(4) but, even though
this should happen, being unwilling to send us away fasting lest we faint on the
way, He gives thanks over the loaves which were with the disciples, and causes
us to have the seven baskets over from the seven loaves, as we have recorded.
And moreover this also is to be observed, in view of those who think that the
divinity of the Saviour is not at all demonstrable from the Gospel of Matthew,
that the fact that, when the disciples were reasoning among themselves and
saying, "We have no loaves," Jesus knew their reasonings and said, "Why reason ye
among yourselves, O ye of little faith, because ye took no loaves,"(1) was beyond
the power of man; for the Lord alone, as Solomon says in the third Book of
Kings, knows the hearts of men.(2) But since the disciples understood, when Jesus
said, "Beware of the leaven,"(3) that He did not tell them to beware of the
loaves but of the teaching of the Pharisees and Sadducees, you will understand
that whenever leaven is named it is put figuratively for teaching, whether in the
law, or in the Scriptures which come after the law; and so perhaps leaven is
not offered upon the altar; for it is not right that prayers should take the form
of teaching, but should only be supplications of good things from God. But one
might inquire, on account of what has been said about disciples who came to
the other side, if any one who has reached the other side can be reproached as
one of little faith, and as not yet understanding nor remembering what was done
by Jesus. But it is not difficult, I think, to say to this, that in relation to
that which is perfect, on the coming of which "that which is in part shall be
done away,"(4) all our faith here is little faith, and in regard to that, we who
know in part do not yet know nor remember; for we are not able to obtain a
memory which is sufficient and able to attain to the magnitude of the nature of
the speculations.
- RELATIVE MAGNITUDE OF SINS OF THE HEART AND ACTUAL SINS.
But we may also learn from this, that in respect of the reasonings only
which we reason within ourselves, we are sometimes convicted and reproached as
being of tittle faith. And I think that just as a man commits adultery in his
heart only, though not proceeding altogether to the overt act, so he commits in
his heart the rest of the things which are forbidden. As then he who has
committed adultery in his heart will be punished proportionately to adultery of this
kind, so also he who has done in his heart any one of the things forbidden, for
example, who has stolen in his heart only, or borne false witness in his heart
only, will not be punished as he who has stolen in fact, or who has completed
the very act of false testimony, but only as he who has done such things in his
heart. There is also the case of the man who while he did not arrive at the evil
action, came short of it in spite of his own will. For if, in addition to
willing it, he has attempted it, but not carried it out, he will be punished not as
one who has sinned in his heart alone but in deed. To questions of this sort
one might ask, whether any one commits adultery in his heart, even if he does
not do the deed of adultery, but lacks self-control in heart only. And the like
also you will say concerning the rest of things which are deserving of praise.
But the passage possibly contains a plausible fallacy which must be cleared
away, I think, in this manner: adultery which takes place in the heart is a less
sin, than if one were also to add to it the act. But it is impossible that there
can be chastity in the heart, hindering the chaste action--unless indeed one
brings forward for an illustration of this the case of the virgin who according
to the law was violated in solitude;(1) for it may be granted that the heart of
any one may be most pure,(2) but that force in a matter of licentiousness has
caused the corruption of the body of her who was chaste. In truth she seems to
me to be altogether chaste in secret heart, hut no longer to be pure in body
such as she was before the act of violence; but though she is not pure outwardly,
is she therefore now also unchaste? I have said these things because of the
words, "They reasoned among themselves saying, We took no loaves," to which is
added, "And Jesus perceiving it, said, O ye of little faith, why reason ye among
yourselves,"(3) etc.; for it was necessary that investigation should be made in
regard to the censure of things in secret and correlatively to the praise of
things in secret.
- THE LEAVEN FIGURATIVE LIKE THE WATER SPOKEN OF BY JESUS TO THE WOMAN OF
SAMARIA.
But I wonder if the disciples thought, before the saying was explained to
them by Jesus, that their Teacher and Lord was forbidding them to beware of the
sensible leaven of the Pharisees or the Sadducees as impure, and on this
account forbidden, lest they might use that leaven because they had not taken
loaves. And we might make a like inquiry in regard to other things; but by-way of
illustration the narrative about the woman of Samaria sufficeth, "Every one that
drinketh of this water shall thirst again; but whosoever drinketh of the water
that I shall give him shall never thirst."(4) For there, also, so far as the
mere form of expression is concerned, the Samaritan woman would seem to have
thought that the Saviour was giving a promise about sensible water, when He said,
"Whosoever drinketh of the water that I shall give him shall never thirst." And
those things then must be figuratively interpreted, and we must examine and
compare the water of the spring of Jacob from which the woman of Samaria drew water
with the water of Jesus; and here the like must be done; for perhaps the
loaves were not baked, but a kind of raw leaven solely, the teaching, namely, of the
Pharisees and Sadducees.
- CONCERNING THE QUESTION OF JESUS IN CAESAREA, WHO DO MEN SAY THAT I AM?
DIFFERENT CONCEPTIONS OF JESUS.
"Now when Jesus came into the parts of Coesarea Philippi, He asked His
disciples."(1) Jesus inquires of the disciples, "Who do men say that I am," that
we may learn from the answer of the Apostles the different conceptions then held
among the Jews in regard to our Saviour; and perhaps also that the disciples
of Jesus might learn to be interested in knowing what is said by men about
them;(2) because that will be an advantage to them who do it, by cutting off in
every way occasions of evil if anything evil is spoken of, and by increasing the
incitements to good, if anything good is spoken of. Only, observe how, on account
of the different movements of opinion among the Jews about Jesus, some, under
the influence of unsound theories, said that He was John the Baptist. like
Herod the tetrarch who said to his servants, "This is John the Baptist, he is risen
from the dead, and therefore do the powers work in him;"(3) but others that He
who was now called Jesus was Elijah, either having been born a second time, or
living from that time in the flesh, and appearing at the present time. But
those who said that Jesus was Jeremiah, and not that Jeremiah was a type of the
Christ, were perhaps influenced by what is said in the beginning of Jeremiah
about Christ, which was not fulfilled in the prophet at that time, but was
beginning to be fulfilled in Jesus, whom "God set up over nations and kingdoms to root
up, and to break down, and to destroy, and to build up, and to transplant,"(4)
having made Him to be a prophet to the Gentiles to whom He proclaimed the word.
Moreover also those who said, "that he was a certain one of the prophets,"(1)
conceived this opinion concerning Him because of those things which had been
said in the prophets as unto them, but which had not been fulfilled in their
case. But also the Jews, as worthy of the veil which was upon their heart, held
false opinions concerning Jesus; while Peter as not a disciple "of flesh and
blood,"(2) but as one fit to receive the revelation of the Father in heaven,
confessed that He was the Christ. The saying of Peter to the Saviour, "Thou art the
Christ," when the Jews did not know that He was Christ, was indeed a great thing,
but greater that he knew Him not only to be Christ, but also "the Son of the
living God,"(3) who had also said through the prophets, "I live,"(4) and "They
have forsaken Me the spring of living water;"(5)--and He is life also, as from
the Father the spring of life, who said, "I am the Life;"(6) And consider
carefully, whether, as the spring of the river is not the same thing as the river,
the spring of life is not the same as life. And these things we have added
because to the saying, "Thou art the Christ, the Son of God," was subjoined the word
"living;"(7) for it was necessary to set forth something noteworthy in regard
to that which is said about God and the Father of all things as living, both in
relation to His absolute life, and in relation to those things which
participate in it. But since we said that they were under the influence of unsound
opinions who declared that Jesus was John the Baptist, or any one of those named, in
saying this let us prove that if they had fallen in with Jesus as He was going
away to John for baptism, or with John when he was baptizing Jesus, or if they
had heard it from any one, they would not have said that Jesus was John. But
also if they had understood the opinions under the influence of which Jesus said,
"If ye are willing to receive it, this is Elijah which is to come."(8) and had
heard what was said, as men having ears, some would not have said that He was
Elijah. And if those who said that He was Jeremiah had perceived that the most
of the prophets took upon themselves certain features that were symbolical of
Him, they would not have said that He was Jeremiah; and in like manner the
others would not have said that He was one of the prophets.
- THE ANSWER OF PETER.
And perhaps that which Simon Peter answered and said, "Thou art the
Christ, the Son of the living God,"(1) if we say it as Peter, not by flesh and blood
revealing it unto us, but by the light from the Father in heaven shining in our
heart, we too become as Peter, being pronounced blessed as he was, because
that the grounds on which he was pronounced blessed apply also to us, by reason of
the fact that flesh and blood have not revealed to us with regard to Jesus
that He is Christ, the Son of the living God, but the Father in heaven, from the
very heavens, that our citizenship may be in heaven,(2) revealing to us the
revelation which carries up to heaven those who take away every veil from the
heart, and receive "the spirit of the wisdom and revelation" of God.(3) And if we
too have said like Peter, "Thou art the Christ, the Son of the living God," not
as if flesh and blood had revealed it unto us, but by light from the Father in
heaven having shone in our heart, we become a Peter, and to us there might be
said by the Word, "Thou art Peter," etc.(4) For a rock(5) is every disciple of
Christ of whom those drank who drank of the spiritual rock which followed
them,(6) and upon every such rock is built every word of the church, add the polity in
accordance with it; for in each of the perfect, who have the combination of
words and deeds and thoughts which fill up the blessedness, is the church built
by God.
- THE PROMISE GIVEN TO PETER NOT RESTRICTED TO HIM, BUT APPLICABLE TO ALL
DISCIPLES LIKE HIM.
But if you suppose that upon that one Peter only the whole church is built
by God, what would you say about John the son of thunder or each one of the
Apostles? Shall we otherwise dare to say, that against Peter in particular the
gates of Hades shall not prevail, but that they shall prevail against the other
Apostles and the perfect? Does not the saying previously made, "The gates of
Hades shall not prevail against it,"(7) hold in regard to all and in the case of
each of them? And also the saying, "Upon this rock I will build My church"?(8)
Are the keys of the kingdom of heaven given by the Lord to Peter only, and will
no other of the blessed receive them? But if this promise, "I will give unto
thee the keys of the kingdom of heaven,"(9) be common to the others, how shall
not all the things previously spoken of, and the things which are subjoined as
having been addressed to Peter, be common to them? For in this place these words
seem to be addressed as to Peter only, "Whatsoever thou shalt bind on earth
shall be bound in heaven,"(1) etc; but in the Gospel of John the Saviour having
given the Holy Spirit unto the disciples by breathing upon them said, "Receive ye
the Holy Spirit,"(2) etc. Many then will say to the Saviour, "Thou art the
Christ, the Son of the living God;" but not all who say this will say it to Him,
as not at all having learned it by the revelation of flesh and blood but by the
Father in heaven Himself taking away the veil that lay upon their heart, in
order that after this "with unveiled face reflecting as a mirror the glory of the
Lord"(3) they may speak through the Spirit of God saying concerning Him, "Lord
Jesus," and to Him, "Thou art the Christ, the Son of the living God."(4) And if
any one says this to Him, not by flesh and blood revealing it unto Him but
through the Father in heaven, he will obtain the things that were spoken according
to the letter of the Gospel to that Peter, but, as the spirit of the Gospel
teaches, to every one who becomes such as that Peter was. For all bear the
surname of "rock" who are the imitators of Christ, that is, of the spiritual rock
which followed those who are being saved,(5) that they may drink from it the
spiritual draught. But these bear the surname of the rock just as Christ does. But
also as members of Christ deriving their surname from Him they are called
Christians, and from the rock, Peters. And taking occasion from these things you will
say that the righteous bear the surname of Christ who is Righteousness, and
the wise of Christ who is Wisdom.(6) And so in regard to all His other names, you
will apply them by way of surname to the saints; and to all such the saying of
the Saviour might be spoken, "Thou art Peter," etc., down to the words,
"prevail against it." But what is the "it"? Is it the rock upon which Christ builds
the church, or is it the church? For the phrase is ambiguous. Or is it as if the
rock and the church were one and the same? This I think to be true; for
neither against the rock on which Christ builds the church, nor against the church
will the gates of Hades prevail; just as the way of a serpent upon a rock,
according to what is written in the Proverbs,(7) cannot be found. Now, if the gates
of Hades prevail against any one, such an one cannot be a rock upon which Christ
builds the church, nor the church built by Jesus upon the rock; for the rock
is inaccessible to the serpent, and it is stronger than the gates of Hades which
are opposing it, so that because of its strength the gates of Hades do not
prevail against it; but the church, as a building of Christ who built His own
house wisely upon the rock,(1) is incapable of admitting the gates of Hades which
prevail against every man who is outside the rock and the church, but have no
power against it.
- EVERY SIN--EVERY FALSE DOCTRINE IS A "GATE OF HADES."
But when we have understood how each of the sins through which there is a
way to Hades(2) is a gate of Hades, we shall apprehend that the soul, which has
"spot or wrinkle or any such thing,"(3) and because of wickedness is neither
holy nor blameless, is neither a rock upon which Christ builds, nor a church,
nor part of a church which Christ builds upon the rock. But if any one wishes to
put us(4) to shame in regard to these things because of the great majority of
those of the church who are thought to believe, it must be said to him not only
"Many are called, but few chosen;"(5) but also that which was said by the
Saviour to those who come to Him, as it is recorded in Luke in these words, "Strive
to enter in by the narrow door, for many, I say unto you, shall seek to enter
in through the narrow door and shall not be able;"(6) and also that which is
written in the Gospel of Matthew thus, "For narrow is the gate, and strait is the
way that leadeth unto life, and few be they that find it."(7) Now, if you
attend to the saying, "Many, I say unto you, shall seek to enter in and shall not be
able,"(6) you will understand that this refers to those who boast that they
are of the church, but live weakly and contrary to the word. Of those, then, who
seek to enter in, those who are not able to enter will not be able to do so,
because the gates of Hades prevail against them; but in the case of those against
whom the gates of Hades will not prevail, those seeking to enter in will be
strong, being able to do all things, in Christ Jesus, who strengtheneth them.(8)
And in like manner each one of those who are the authors of any evil opinion
has become the architect of a certain gate of Hades ;but those who co-operate
with the teaching of the architect of such things are servants and stewards, who
are the bond-servants of the evil doctrine which goes to build up impiety. And
though the gates of Hades are many and almost innumerable, no gate of Hades will
prevail against the rock or against the church which Christ builds upon it.
Notwithstanding, these gates have a certain power by which they gain the mastery
over some who do not resist and strive against them; but they are overcome by
others who, because they do not turn aside from Him who said, "I am the
door,"(1) have rased from their soul all the gates of Hades. And this also we must know
that as the gates of cities have each their own names, in the same way the
gates of Hades might be named after the species of sins; so that one gate of Hades
is called "fornication," through which fornicators go, and another "denial,"
through which the deniers of God go down into Hades. And likewise already each
of the heterodox and of those who have begotten any "knowledge which is falsely
so called,"(2) has built a gate of Hades--Marcion one gate, and Basilides
another, and Valentinus another.
- THE "GATES OF HADES" AND THE "GATES OF ZION" CONTRASTED.
In this place, then, the gates of Hades are spoken of; but in the Psalms
the prophet gives thanks saying, "He who lifteth me up from the gates of death
that I may declare all thy praises in the gates of the daughter of Zion."(3) And
from this we learn that it is never possible for any one to be fit to declare
the praises of God, unless he has been lifted up from the gates of death, and
has come to the gates of Zion. Now the gates of Zion may be conceived as opposed
to the gates of death, so that there is one gate of death, dissoluteness, but
a gate of Zion, self-control; and so a gate of death, unrighteousness, but a
gate of Zion, righteousness, which the prophet shows forth saying, "This is the
gate of the Lord, the righteous shall enter into it."(4) And again there is
cowardice, a gate of death, but manly courage, a gate of Zion; and want of
prudence, a gate of death, but its opposite, prudence, a gate of Zion. But to all the
gates of the "knowledge which is falsely so called"(2) one gate is opposed, the
gate of knowledge which is free from falsehood. But consider if, because of the
saying, "our wrestling is not against flesh and blood,"(1) etc., you can say
that each power and world-ruler of this darkness, and each one of the "spiritual
hosts of wickedness in the heavenly places"(2) is a gate of Hades and a gate
of death. Let, then, the principalities and powers with which our wrestling is,
be called gates of Hades, but the "ministering spirits"(3) gates of
righteousness. But as in the case of the better things many gates are first spoken of, and
after the gates, one, in the passage, "Open to me the gates of righteousness,
I will enter into them, and will make full confession to the Lord," and "this
is the gate of the Lord, by it the righteous shall enter;"(4) so also in the
case of those gates which are opposed, many are the gates of Hades and death, each
a power; but over all these the wicked one himself. And let us take heed in
regard to each sin, as if we were descending into some gate of death if we sin;
but when we are lifted up from the gates of death let us declare all the praises
of the Lord in the gates of the daughter of Zion; as, for example, in one gate
of the daughter of Zion--that which is called self-control--we will declare by
our self-control the praises of God; and in another which is called
righteousness, by righteousness we will declare the praises of God; and, generally, in
all things whatsoever of a praiseworthy character with which we are; occupied, in
these we are at some gate of the daughter of Zion, declaring at each gate some
praise of God. But we must make inquiry whether in one of the Twelve(5) it is
said, "They hated him that reproveth in the gates, and they loathed the holy
word."(6) Perhaps, then, he who reproves in the gates is of the gates of the
daughter of Zion, reproving those who are in sins which are opposed to this gate,
even of the gates of Hades or death. But if ye do not so understand the words,
"They hated him that reproveth in the gates," either the expression "in the
gates" will be held to be superfluous, or investigate how that which is said can be
worthy of the prophetic spirit.
- IN WHAT SENSE THE "KEYS" ARE GIVEN TO PETER, AND EVERY PETER. LIMITATIONS OF
THIS POWER.
And after this let us see in what sense it is said to Peter, and to every
Peter, "I will give unto thee the keys of the kingdom of heaven."(7) And, in
the first place, I think that the saying, "I will give unto thee the keys of the
kingdom of heaven," is spoken in consistency with the words, "The gates of
Hades shall not prevail against it."(1) For he is worthy to receive from the same
Word the keys of the kingdom of heaven, who is fortified against the gates of
Hades so that they do not prevail against him, receiving, as it were, for a
prize, the keys of the kingdom of heaven, because the gates of Hades had no power
against him, that he might open for himself the gates that were closed to those
who had been conquered by the gates of Hades. And he enters in, as a temperate
man, through an opened gate--the gate of temperance--by the key which opens
temperance; and, as a righteous man, by another gate--the gate of
righteousness--which is opened by the key of righteousness; and so with the rest of the virtues.
For I think that for every virtue of knowledge certain mysteries of wisdom
corresponding to the species of the virtue are opened up to him who has lived
according to virtue; the Saviour giving to those who are not mastered by the gates
of Hades as many keys as there are virtues, which open gates equal in number,
which correspond to each virtue according to the revelation of the mysteries.
And perhaps, also, each virtue is a kingdom of heaven, and all together are a
kingdom of the heavens; so that according to this he is already in the kingdom of
the heavens who lives according to the virtues, so that according to this the
saying, "Repent, for the kingdom of heaven is at hand,"(2) is to be referred,
not to the time, but to deeds and dispositions; for Christ, who is all virtue,
has come, and speaks, and on account of this the kingdom of God is within His
disciples, and not here or there.(3) But consider how great power the rock has
upon which the church is built by Christ, and how great power every one has who
says, "Thou art the Christ, the Son of the living God," so that the judgments of
this man abide sure, as if God were judging in him, that in the very act of
judging the gates of Hades shall not prevail against him. But when one judges
unrighteously, and does not bind upon earth according to the Word of God, nor loose
upon earth according to His will, the gates of Hades prevail against him; but,
in the case of any one against whom the gates of Hades do not prevail, this
man judges righteously. Wherefore he has the keys of the kingdom of heaven,
opening to those who have been loosed on earth that they may be also loosed in
heaven, and free; and shutting to those who by his just judgment have been bound on
earth that they also may be bound in heaven, and condemned. But when those who
maintain the function of the episcopate make use of this word as Peter, and,
having received the keys of the kingdom of heaven from the Saviour, teach that
things bound by them, that is to say, condemned, are also bound in heaven, and
that those which have obtained remission by them are also loosed in heaven, we
must say that they speak wholesomely if they have the way of life on account of
which it was said to that Peter, "Thou art Peter;"(1) and if they are such that
upon them the church is built by Christ, and to them with good reason this
could be referred; and the gates of Hades ought not to prevail against him when he
wishes to bind and loose. But if he is tightly bound with the cords of his
sins,(2) to no purpose does he bind and loose. And perhaps you can say that in the
heavens which are in the wise man--that, is the virtues,--the bad man is bound;
and again in these the virtuous man is loosed, and has received an indemnity
for the sins which he committed before his virtue. But, as the man, who has not
the cords of sins nor iniquities compared to a "long rope or to the strap of
the yoke of a heifer,"(3) not even God could bind, in like manner, no Peter,
whoever he may be; and if any one who is not a Peter, and does not possess the
things here spoken of, imagines as a Peter that he will so bind on earth that the
things bound are bound in heaven, and will so loose on earth that the things
loosed are loosed in heaven, he is puffed up, not understanding the meaning of the
Scriptures, and, being puffed up, has fallen into the ruin of the devil.(4)
- RELATION OF THE FORMER COMMISSION GIVEN BY JESUS TO THE DISCIPLES, TO HIS
PRESENT INJUNCTION OF SILENCE. BELIEF AND KNOWLEDGE CONTRASTED.
"Then enjoined He His disciples that they should tell no man thai He was
the Christ."(5) It is written above that Jesus sent forth these twelve saying
unto them, "Go not into any way of the Gentiles,"(6) and the other words which
are recorded to have been said to them when He sent them to the apostleship. Did
He then wish them when they were already discharging the function of Apostles
to proclaim that He was the Christ? For, if He wished it, it is fitting to
inquire why He now at all commands the disciples that they should not say that He
was the Christ? Or if He did not wish it, how can the things concerning the
apostleship be safely maintained? And these things also one may inquire at this
place,--whether, when He sent away the Twelve, He did not send them away with the
understanding that He was the Christ? But if the Twelve had such understanding,
manifestly Peter had it also; how, then, is he now pronounced blessed? For the
expression here plainly indicates that now for the first time Peter confessed
that Christ was the Son of the living God, Matthew then, according to some of
the manuscripts, has written, "Then He commanded His disciples that they should
tell no man that He was the Christ," but(1) Mark says, "He charged them that
they should tell no man of Him;"(2) and Luke, "He charged them and commanded them
to tell this to no man."(3) But what is the "this"? Was it that also according
to him, Peter answered and said to the question, "Who say ye that I am."--"The
Christ, the Son of the living God?"(4) You must know, however, that some
manuscripts of the Gospel according to Matthew have, "He charged."(5) The difficulty
thus started seems to me a very real difficulty; but let a solution which
cannot be impugned be sought out, and let the finder of it bring it forward before
all, if it be more credible than that which shall be advanced by us as a fairly
temperate view.(6) Consider, then, if you can say, that the belief that Jesus
is the Christ is inferior to the knowledge of that which is believed. And
perhaps also there is a difference in the knowledge of Jesus as the Christ, as every
one who knows does not know Him alike. From the words in John, "If ye abide in
My word, ye shall know the truth, and the truth shall make you free,"(7) it is
plain that belief without knowledge is inferior to knowing; but that there is a
difference in the knowledge of Jesus as the Christ, as all who know Him do not
know Him equally, is a fact self-evident to any one who gives even a very
little consideration to the matter. For who would not acknowledge, for example,
that Timothy, though he knew that Jesus was the Christ, had not been enlightened
to such an extent in the knowledge of Him as the Apostle had been enlightened?
And who would not also admit this--that though many, speaking the truth, say
about God, "He has given to me a true knowledge of things that are," yet they will
not say this with equal insight and apprehension of the things known, nor as
knowing the same number of things? But it is not only in respect of the
difference of knowing that those who know do not know alike, bat also according to that
which is the source of the knowledge; so that according to this he who knows
the Son by the revelation of the Father,(1) as Peter is testified to have known,
has the highest beatitude. Now, if these views of ours are sound, you will
consider whether the Twelve formerly believed but did not know; but, after
believing, they gained also the rudiments of knowledge and knew a few things about
Him; and afterwards they continued to advance in knowledge so that they were able
to receive the knowledge from the Father who reveals the Son; in which position
Peter was, when he was pronounced blessed; for also he is pronounced blessed
not merely because he said, "Thou art the Christ," but with the addition, "the
Son of the living God." Accordingly Mark and Luke who have recorded that Peter
answered and said, "Thou art the Christ," but have not given the addition found
in Matthew, have not recorded that he was declared blessed for what had been
said, nor the blessing which followed the declaration of blessedness, "Thou art
Peter,"(2) etc.
- GRADUAL GROWTH IN KNOWLEDGE OF THE DISCIPLES,
But now we must first investigate the fact that they were declaring other
things about Him as being great and wonderful, but did not yet proclaim that He
was the Christ, lest the Saviour may not appear to take away from them the
authority to announce that He was the Christ, which He had formerly bestowed upon
them. And perhaps some one will support an argument of this kind, saying that
on their introduction into the school of Christ the Jews were taught by the
disciples glorious things about Jesus, so that in due season there might be built
upon these as a foundation the things about Jesus being the Christ; and perhaps
many of the things which were said to them were said to all who virtually
believed; for not to the Apostles alone did the saying apply, "Before governors and
kings also shall ye be brought for My sake for a testimony to them and to the
Gentiles;"(3) and perhaps also not to the Apostles absolutely, but to all who
were about to believe the word, "And brother shall deliver up brother to
death,"(1) etc.; but, "Whosoever shall confess Me,"(2) etc., is said not specially to
the Apostles, but also to all believers. According to this, then, through that
which was said to the Apostles an outline was given beforehand of the teaching
which would afterwards come to be of service both to them and to every teacher.
- REASONS FOR THAT GRADUAL KNOWLEDGE.
And likewise he who holds that the fact that He was Christ had been
formerly proclaimed by the Apostles when they heard the saying, "What I tell you in
the darkness, speak ye in the light, and what ye hear in the ear proclaim on the
housetops,"(3) will say, that He wished first to give catechetical instruction
as it were to those of the Apostles who were to hear the name of Christ, then
to permit this, so to speak, to be digested in the minds of the hearers, that,
after there had been a period of silence in the proclamation of something of
this kind about Him, at a more seasonable time there might be built up upon the
former rudiments "Christ Jesus crucified and raised from the dead," which at the
beginning not even the Apostles knew; for it is written in the passage now
under consideration, "From that time began Jesus to show unto His disciples that
He must go unto Jerusalem"(4) and suffer this and that. But if now, for the
first time, the Apostles learn from Jesus the things that were about to happen unto
Him, namely, that the elders will plot against Him, and that He will be
killed, and that after these things, on the third day, He will rise from the
dead,--what necessity is there for supposing that those who had been taught by the
Apostles concerning Jesus knew them before, or that although Christ was announced
to them He was announced to them by way of an introduction which did not clearly
elucidate the things concerning Him? For our Saviour wished, when He enjoined
the disciples to tell no man that He was the Christ, to reserve the more
perfect teaching about Him to a more fitting time, when to those who had seen Him
crucified, the disciples who had seen Him crucified and risen could testify the
things relating to His resurrection. For it the Apostles. who were always with
Him and had seen all the wonderful things which He did, and who bore testimony to
His words that they were words of eternal life,(1) were offended on the night
on which He was betrayed,--what do you suppose would have been the feelings of
those who had formerly learned that He was the Christ? To spare them, I think,
He gave this command.
- JESUS WAS AT FIRST PROCLAIMED BY THE TWELVE AS A WORKER AND A TEACHER ONLY.
But he who holds that the things spoken to the Twelve refer to the times
subsequent to this, and that the Apostles had not as yet announced to their
hearers that He was the Christ, will say that He wished the conception of the
Christ which was involved in the name of Jesus to be reserved for that preaching
which was more perfect, and which brought salvation, such as Paul knew of when he
said to the Corinthians, "I determined not to know anything among yon save
Jesus Christ and Him crucified."(2) Wherefore, formerly they proclaimed Jesus as
the doer of certain things, and the teacher of certain things; but now when Peter
confesses that He was the Christ, the Son of the living God, as He did not
wish it to be proclaimed already that He was the Christ, in order that He might be
proclaimed at a more suitable time, and that as crucified, He commands His
disciples that they should tell no man that He was the Christ. And that this was
His meaning, when He forbade proclamation to be made that He was the Christ, is
in a measure established by the words, "From that time began Jesus to show unto
His disciples how that He must go unto Jerusalem, and suffer many things of
the elders," and what is annexed;(3) for then, at the fitting time, He proclaims,
so to speak, to the disciples who knew that Jesus was Christ, the Son of the
living God, the Father having revealed it to them, that instead of believing in
Jesus Christ who had been crucified, they were to believe in Jesus Christ who
was about to be crucified. But also, instead of believing in Christ Jesus and
Him risen from the dead, He teaches them to believe in Christ Jesus and Him about
to be risen from the dead. But since "having put off from Himself the
principalities and the powers, He made a show of them openly, triumphing over in the
cross,"(4) if any one is ashamed of the cross of Christ, he is ashamed of the
dispensation on account of which these powers were triumphed over; and it is
fitting that he, who both believes and knows these things, should glory in the cross
of our Lord Jesus Christ, through which, when Christ was crucified, the
principalities--among which, I think, was also the prince of this world--were made a
show of and triumphed over before the believing world. Wherefore, when His
suffering was at hand he said, "Now the prince of this world has been judged,"(1)
and, "Now shall the prince of this world be cast out," and, "I, if I be lifted
from the earth, will draw all men unto Myself;"(2) as he no longer had
sufficient power to prevent those going to Jesus who were being drawn by Him.
- IMPORTANCE OF THE PROCLAMATION OF JESUS AS THE CRUCIFIED.
It is necessary, therefore, to the proclamation of Jesus as Christ, that
He should be proclaimed as crucified; and the proclamation that Jesus was the
Christ does not seem to me so defective when any of His other miracles is passed
over in silence, as when the fact of His crucifixion is passed over. Wherefore,
reserving the more perfect proclamation of the things concerning Him by the
Apostles, He commanded His disciples that they should tell no man that He was the
Christ; and He prepared them to say that He was the Christ crucified and risen
from the dead, "when He began "not only to say, nor even to advance to the
point of teaching merely, but "to show"(3) to His disciples that He must go to
Jerusalem, etc.; for attend to the expression "show"; because just as sensible
things are said to be shown so the things spoken by Him to His disciples are said
to be shown by Jesus. And i do not think that each of the things seen was shown
to those who saw Him suffering many things in body from the elders of the
people, with such clearness as was the rational demonstration about Him to the
disciples.
- WHY JESUS HAD TO GO TO JERUSALEM.
"Then began He to show;"(4) and probably afterwards when they were able to
receive it He shewed more clearly, no longer beginning to show as to those who
were learning the introduction, but already also advancing in the showing; and
if it is reasonable to conceive that Jesus altogether completed what He began,
then, some time, He altogether completed that which He began to show to His
disciples about the necessity of His suffering the things which are written. For,
when any one apprehends from the Word the perfect knowledge of these things,
then it must be said that, from a rational exhibition (the mind seeing the
things which are shown,) the exhibition becomes complete for him who has the will
and the power to contemplate these things, and does contemplate them. But since
"it cannot be that a prophet perish out of Jerusalem,"(1)--a perishing which
corresponds to the words, "He that loseth his life for My sake shall find
it."(2)--on this account it was necessary for Him to go to Jerusalem, that having
suffered many things in that Jerusalem, He might make "the first-fruits"(3) of the
resurrection from the dead in the Jerusalem above, doing away with and breaking
up the city upon the earth with all the worship which was maintained in it. For
so long as Christ "had not been raised from the dead. the first-fruits of them
that are asleep,"(3) and those who become conformed to His death and
resurrection had not yet been raised along with Him, the city of God was sought for
below, and the temple, and the purifications, and the rest; but when this took
place, no longer were the things below sought for, but the things above; and, in
order that these might be set up, it was necessary that He should go unto the
Jerusalem below, and there suffer many things from the elders in it, and the chief
priests and scribes of the people, in order that He might be glorified by the
heavenly elders who could receive his bounties, and by diviner high-priests who
are ordained under the one High-Priest, and that He might be glorified by the
scribes of the people who are occupied with letters "not written with ink"(4)
but made clear by the Spirit of the living God, and might be killed in the
Jerusalem below, and having risen from the dead might reign in Mount Zion, and the
city of the living God--the heavenly Jerusalem.(5) But on the third day He rose
from the dead.(6) in order that having delivered them from the wicked one, and
his son,(7) in whom was falsehood and unrighteousness and war and everything
opposed to that which Christ is, and also from the profane spirit who transforms
himself into the Holy Spirit, He might gain for those who had been delivered
the right to be baptized in spirit and soul and body, into the name of the Father
and the Son and the Holy Spirit, which represent the three days eternally
present at the same time to those who by means of them are sons of light.
- THE REBUKE OF PETER AND THE ANSWER OF JESUS.
"And Peter took Him and began to rebuke Him, saying, God be propitious to
Thee. Lord, this shall never be unto thee."(1) To whom He said, "Get thee
behind Me, Satan; thou art a stumbling-block unto Me; for thou mindest not the
things of God but the things of men."(2) Since Jesus had begun to show unto His
disciples that He must go unto Jerusalem, and suffer many things, Peter up to this
point learned the beginnings of those things which were shown.(3) But since he
thought that the sufferings were unworthy of Christ the Son of the living God,
and below the dignity of the Father who had revealed to him so great things
about Christ,--for the things that concerned His coming suffering had not been
revealed to him,--on this account he took Him, and as one forgetful of the honour
due to the Christ, and that the Son of the living God neither does nor says
anything worthy of rebuke, he began to rebuke Him; and as to one who needed
propitiation,--for he did not yet know that "God had set Him forth to be a
propitiation through faith in His blood,"(4) he said, "God be propitious to thee, O
Lord."(5) Approving his purpose, indeed, but rebuking his ignorance, because of the
purpose being right. He says to him, "Get thee behind Me,"(6) as to one who, by
reason of the things of which he was ignorant and spake not rightly, had
abandoned the following of Jesus; but because of his ignorance, as to one who had
something antagonistic to the things of God, He said, "Satan," which in the
Hebrew means "adversary." But, if Peter had not spoken from ignorance, nor rebuked
the Son of the living God, saying unto Him, "God be propitious to thee, Lord,
this shall never be unto Thee," Christ would not have said to him, "Get thee
behind Me," as to one who had given up being behind Him and following Him; nor
would He have said as to one who had spoken things adverse to what He had said,
"Satan." But now Satan prevailed over him who had followed Jesus and was going
behind Him, to turn aside from following Him and from being behind the Son of God,
and to make him, by reason of the words which he spoke in ignorance, worthy of
being called "Satan" and a stumbling-block to the Son of God, and "as not
minding the things of God but the things of men." But that Peter was formerly
behind the Son of God, before he committed this sin, is manifest from the words,
"Come ye behind Me, and I will make you fishers of men."(1)
- IMPORTANCE OF THE EXPRESSIONS "BEHIND" AND "TURNED."
But you will compare together His saying to Peter, "Get thee behind me,
Satan,"(2) with that said to the devil (who said to Him, "All these things will I
give Thee if Thou wilt fall down and worship me"),(3) "get thee hence,"(4)
without the addition, "behind Me;" for to be behind Jesus is a good tiling.
Wherefore it was said, "Come ye behind Me and I will make you fishers of men."(1) And
to the same effect is the saying, "He that doth not take his cross and follow
behind Me is not worthy of Me."(5) And as a general principle observe the
expression "behind"; because it is a good thing when any one goes behind the Lord
God and is behind the Christ; but it is the opposite when any one casts the words
of God behind him, or when he transgresses the commandment which says, "Do not
walk behind thy lusts."(6) And Elijah also, in the third Book of Kings, says
to the people, "How long halt ye on both your knees? If God is the Lord, go
behind Him, but if Baal is the Lord, go behind him."(7) And Jesus says this to
Peter when He "turned," and He does so by way of conferring a favour. And if
therefore you will collect more illustrations of the "having turned," and especially
those which are ascribed to Jesus, and compare them with one another, you would
find that the expression is not superfluous. But it is sufficient at present
to bring forward this from the Gospel according to John, "Jesus turned and
beheld them--" clearly, Peter and Andrew--"following, and saith unto them, What seek
ye?"(8) For observe that, when He "turned," it is for the advantage of those
to whom He turned.
- PETER AS A STUMBLING-BLOCK TO JESUS.
Next we must inquire how He said to Peter, "Thou art a stumbling-block
unto Me,"(9) especially when David says, "Great peace have they that love Thy law,
and there is no stumbling-block to them."(10) For some one will say, if this
is said in the prophet, because of the steadfastness of those who have love, and
are incapable of being offended, for "love beareth all things, believeth all
things, hopeth all things, endureth all things, love never faileth,"(1) how did
the Lord Himself, "who upholdeth all that fall, and raiseth up all that be
bowed down,"(2) say to Peter, "Thou art a stumbling-block unto Me"? But it must be
said that not only the Saviour, but also he who is perfected in love, cannot be
offended. But, so far as it depends on himself, he who says or does such
things is a stumbling-block even to him who will not be offended; unless perhaps
Jesus calls the disciple who sinned a stumbling-block even to Himself, as much
more than Paul He would have said from love, "Who is weak, and I am not weak? Who
is made to stumble, and I burn not?"(3) In harmony with which we may put, "Who
is made to stumble, and I am not made to stumble?" But if Peter, at that time
because of the saying. "God be propitious to Thee, Lord, this shall not be unto
Thee,"(4) was called a stumbling-block by Jesus, as not minding the things of
God in what he said but the things of men, what is to be said about all those
who profess to be made disciples of Jesus, but do not mind the things of God, and
do not look to things unseen and eternal, but mind the things of man, and look
to things seen and temporal,(5) but that such still more would be stigmatized
by Jesus as a stumbling-block to Him, and because stumbling-blocks to Him, as
stumbling-blocks to His brethren also? As in regard to them He says, "I was
thirsty and ye gave Me no drink,"(6) etc., so also He might say, "When I was
running ye caused Me to stumble." Let us not therefore suppose that it is a trivial
sin to mind the things of men, since we ought in everything to mind the things
of God. And it will be appropriate also to say this to every one that has fallen
away from the doctrines of God and the words of the church and a true mind;
as, for example, to him who minds as true the teaching of Basilides, or
Valentinus, or Marcion, or any one of those who teach the things of men as the things of
God.
- SELF-DENIAL AND CROSS-BEARING.
"Then Jesus said to His disciples, If any man wills to follow after Me,"
etc.(7) He shows by these words that, to will to come after Jesus and to follow
Him, springs from no ordinary manly courage, and that no one who has not denied
himself can come after Jesus. And the man denies himself who wipes out by a
striking revolution his own former life which had been spent in wickedness; as by
way of illustration he who was once licentious denies his licentious self,
having become self-controlled even abidingly. But it is probable that some one may
put the objection, whether as he denied himself i so he also confesses
himself, when he denied himself, the unjust, and confesses himself, the righteous one.
But, if Christ i is righteousness, he who has received righteousness confesses
not himself but Christ; so also he who has found wisdom, by the very
possession of wisdom, confesses Christ. And such a one indeed as, "with the heart
believes unto righteousness, and with the mouth maketh confession unto salvation,"(1)
arid bears testimony to the works of Christ, as making confession by all these
things of Christ before men, will be confessed by Him before His Father in
heaven.(2) So also he who has not denied himself but denied the Christ will
experience the saying, "I also will deny him."(3) On this account let every thought
and every purpose and every word and every action become a denial of ourselves,
but a testimony about Christ and in Christ; for I am persuaded that every
action of the perfect man is a testimony to Christ Jesus, and that abstinence from
every sin is a denial of self, leading him after Christ. And such an one is
crucified with Christ, and taking up his own cross follows Him who for our sakes
bears His own cross, according to that which is said in John: "They took Jesus
therefore and put it on Him," etc., down to the words, "Where they crucified
Him."(4) But the Jesus according to John, so to speak, bears the cross for Himself,
and bearing it went out; but the Jesus according to Matthew and Mark and Luke,
does not bear it for Himself, for Simon of Cyrene bears it.(5) And perhaps
this man refers to us, who because of Jesus take up the cross of Jesus, but Jesus
Himself takes it upon Himself; for there are, as it were, two conceptions of
the cross, the one which Simon of Cyrene bears, and the other which Jesus Himself
bears for Himself.
- REFERENCE TO THE SAYING OF PAUL ABOUT CRUCIFIXION WITH CHRIST,
Moreover in regard to the saying, "Let him deny himself,"(1) the following
saying of Paul who denied himself seems appropriate, "Yet I live, and yet no
longer I but Christ liveth in me;"(2) for the expression, "I live, yet no longer
I," was the voice of one denying himself, as of one who had laid aside his own
life and taken on himself the Christ, in order that He might live in him as
Righteousness, and as Wisdom, and as Sanctification, and as our Peace,(3) and as
the Power of God, who worketh all things in him. But further also, attend to
this, that while there are many forms of dying, the Son of God was crucified,
being hanged on a tree, in order that all who die unto sin may die to it, in no
other way than by the way of the cross. Wherefore they will say, "I have been
crucified with Christ," and, "Far be it from me to glory save hi the cross of the
Lord, through which the world has been crucified unto me and I unto the
world."(4) For perhaps also each of those who have been crucified with Christ puts off
from himself the principalities and the powers, and makes a show of them and
triumphs over them in the cross;(5) or rather, Christ does these things in them.
- THE LESS OF LIFE; AND THE SAVING OF IT.
"For whosoever would save his own life shall lose it."(6) The first
expression is ambiguous; for it may be understood. in one way thus. If any one as
being a lover of life, and thinking that the present life is good, tends carefully
his own life with a view to living in the flesh, being afraid to die, as
through death going to lose it, this man, by the very willing to save in this way
his own life will lose it, placing it outside of the borders of blessedness. But
if any one despising the present life because of my word, which has persuaded
him to strive in regard to eternal life even unto death for truth, loses his own
life, surrendering it for the sake of piety to that which is commonly called
death, this man, as for my sake he has lost his life, will save it rather, and
keep it in possession. And according to a second way we might interpret the
saying as follows. If any one, who has grasped what salvation really is, wishes to
procure the salvation of his own life, let this man having taken farewell of
this life, and denied himself and taken up his own cross, and following me, lose
his own life to the world; for having lost it for my sake and for the sake of
all my teaching, he will gain the end of loss of this kind--salvation.
- LIFE LOST TO THE WORLD IS SAVED.
But at the same time also observe that at the beginning it is said,
"Whosoever wills," but afterwards, "Whoso shall lose."(1) If we then wish it to be
saved let us lose it to the world, as those who have been crucified with Christ
and have for our glorying that which is in the cross of our Lord Jesus Christ,
through which the world is to be crucified unto us and we unto the world,(2)
that we may gain our end, even the salvation of our lives, which begins from the
time when we lose it for the sake of the word. But if we think that the
salvation of our life is a blessed thing, with reference to the salvation which is in
God and the blessednesses with Him, then any loss of life ought to be a good
thing, and, for the sake of Christ must prove to be the prelude to the blessed
salvation. It seems to me, therefore, following the analogy of self-denial,
according to what has been said, that each ought to lose his own life. Let each one
therefore lose his own sinning life, that having lost that which is sinful, he
may receive that which is saved by right actions; but a man will in no way be
profited if he shall gain the whole world. Now he gains the world, I think, to
whom the world is not crucified; and to whom the world is not crucified, to that
man shall be the loss of his own life. But when two things are put before us,
either by gaining one's life to forfeit the world, or by gaining the world to
forfeit one's life, much more desirable is the choice, that we should forfeit the
world and gain our life by losing it on account of Christ.
- THE EXCHANGE FOR ONE'S LIFE.
But the saying, "What shall a man give in exchange for his own life,"(3)
if spoken by way of interrogation, will seem to be able to indicate that an
exchange for his own life is given by the man who after his sins has given up his
whole substance, that his property may feed the poor, as if he were going by
that to obtain salvation; but, if spoken affirmatively, I think, to indicate that
there is not anything in man by the giving of which in exchange for his own
life which has been overcome by death. he will ransom it out of its hand. A man,
therefore, could not give anything as an exchange for his own life, but God gave
an exchange for the life of us all, "the precious blood of Christ Jesus,"(4)
according as "we were bought with a price,"(1) "having been redeemed, not with
corruptible things as silver or gold, but with precious blood, as of a lamb
without blemish and without spot," even of Christ.(2) And in Isaiah it is said to
Israel. "I gave Ethiopia in exchange for thee, and Egypt and Syene for thee;
from what time thou hast become honourable before Me thou wast glorified."(3) For
the exchange, for example, of the first-born of Israel was the first-born of
the Egyptians, and the exchange for Israel was the Egyptians who died in the last
plagues that came upon Egypt, and in the drowning which took place after the
plagues. But, from these things, let him who is able inquire whether the
exchange of the true Israel given by God, "who redeems Israel from all his
transgressions,"(4) is the true Ethiopia, and, so to speak, spiritual Egypt. and Syene of
Egypt; and to inquire with more boldness, perhaps Syene is the exchange for
Jerusalem, and Egypt for Judaea, and Ethiopia for those who fear, who are
different from Israel, and the house of Levi, and the house of Aaron.
- THE COMING OF THE SON OF MAN IN GLORY.
"For the Son of man shall come in the glory of His own Father with His
angels."(5) Now, indeed, the Son of man has not come in His glory; "for we saw
Him, and He had no form nor beauty; but His form was dishonoured and defective
compared with the sons of men; He was a man in affliction and toil, and acquainted
with the enduring of sickness, because His face was turned away, He was
dishonoured and not esteemed."(6) And it was necessary that He should come in such
form that He might bear our sins(7) and suffer pain for us; for it did not become
Him in glory to bear our sins and suffer pain for us. But He also comes in
glory, having prepared(8) the disciples through that epiphany of His which has no
form nor beauty; and, having become as they that they might become as He,
"conformed to the image of His glory,"(9) since He formerly became conformed to "the
body of our humiliation,"(10) when He "emptied Himself and took upon Him the
form of a servant,"(11) He is restored to the image of God and also makes them
conformed unto it.
- THE WORD APPEARS IN DIFFERENT FORMS. THE TIME OF HIS COMING IN GLORY.
But if you will understand the differences of the Word which by "the
foolishness of preaching"(1) is proclaimed to those who believe, and spoken in
wisdom to them that are perfect, you will see in what way the Word has the form of a
slave to those who are learning the rudiments, so that they say, "We saw Him
and He had no form or beauty."(2) But to the perfect He comes "in the glory of
His own Father,"(3) who might say, "and we beheld His glory, the glory as of the
only-begotten from the Father, full of grace and truth."(4) For indeed to the
perfect appears the glory of the Word, and the only-begotten of God His Father,
add the fulness of grace and likewise of truth, which that man cannot perceive
who requires the "foolishness of the preaching," in order to believe. But "the
Son of man shall come in the glory of His own Father" not alone, but "with His
own angels." And if you can conceive of all those who are fellow-helpers in
the glory of the Word, and in the revelation of the Wisdom which is Christ,
coming along with Him, you will see in what way the Son of man comes in the glory of
His own Father with His own angels. And consider whether you cad in this
connection say that the prophets who formerly suffered in virtue of their word
having "no form or beauty" had an analogous position to the Word who had "no form or
beauty." And, as the Son of man comes in the glory of His own Father, so the
angels, who are the words in the prophets, are present with Him preserving the
measure of their own glory. But when the Word comes in such form with His own
angels, He will give to each a part of His own glory and of the brightness of His
own angels, according to the action of each. But we say these things not
rejecting even the second coming of the Son of God understood in its simpler form.
But when shall these things happen? Shall it be when that apostolic oracle is
fulfilled which says, "For we must all stand before the judgment-seat of Christ,
that each one may receive the things dope in the body, according to what he has
done, whether it be good or bad?"(5) But if He will render to each according
to his deed, not the good deed only, nor the evil apart from the good, it is
manifest that He will render to each according to every evil, and according to
every good, deed. But I suppose--in this also following the Apostle, but comparing
also the sayings of Ezekiel, in which the sins of him who is a perfect convert
are wiped out, and the former uprightness of him who has utterly fallen away
is not held of account--that in the case of him who is perfected, and has
altogether laid aside wickedness, the sins are wiped out, but that, in the case of
him who has altogether revolted from piety, if anything good was formerly done by
him, it is not taken into account.(1) But to us, who occupy a middle position
between the perfect man add the apostate, when we stand before the
judgment-seat of Christ,(2) there is rendered what we have done, whether good or bad; for
we have not been so pure that our evil deeds are not at all imputed unto us, nor
have we fallen away to such an extent that our better actions are forgotten.
- THE SIMPLER INTERPRETATION OF THE PROMISE ABOUT NOT TASTING OF DEATH.
"Verily I say unto you there be some of them that stand here that shall
not taste of death."(3) Some refer these things to the going up--six days after,
or, as Luke says,(4) eight days--of the three disciples into the high mountain
with Jesus apart; and those who adopt this interpretation say that Peter and
the remaining two did not taste of death before they saw the Son of man coining
in His own kingdom and in His own glory. For when they saw Jesus transfigured
before them so that "His face shone," etc., "they saw the kingdom of God coming
with power."(5) For even as some spear-bearers stand around a king, so Moses and
Elijah appeared to those who had gone up into the mountains, talking with
Jesus. But it is worth while considering whether the sitting on the right hand and
on the left band of the Saviour in His kingdom refers to them, so that the
words, "But for whom it is prepared," were(6) spoken because of them. Now this
interpretation about the three Apostles not tasting of death until they have seen
Jesus transfigured, is adapted to those who are designated by Peter as "new-born
babes longing for the reasonable milk which is without guile,"(7) to whom Paul
says, "I have fed you with milk, not with meat,"(8) etc. Now, too, every
interpretation of a text which is able to build up those who cannot receive greater
truths might reasonably be called milk, flowing from the holy ground of the
Scriptures, which flows with milk and honey. But he who has been weaned, like
Isaac,(1) worthy of the good cheer and reception which Abraham gave at the weaning
of his son, would seek here and in every Scripture food which is different, I
think, from that which is meat, indeed, but is not solid food, and from what are
figuratively called herbs, which are food to one who has been weaned and is
not yet strong but weak, according to the saying, "He that is weak eateth
herbs."(2) In like manner also he who has been weaned, like Samuel, and dedicated by
his mother to God,(3)--she was Hannah, which is, by interpretation, grace,-would
be also a son of grace, seeking, like one nurtured in the temple, flesh of
God, the holy food of those who are at once perfect and priests.
- STANDING BY THE SAVIOUR.
The reflections in regard to the passage before us that occur to us at the
present time are these: Some were standing where Jesus was, having the
footsteps of the soul firmly planted with Jesus, and the standing of their feet was
akin to the standing of which Moses said in the passage, "And I stood on the
mountain forty days and forty nights,"(4) who was deemed worthy to have it said to
him by God who asked him to stand by Him, "But stand thou here with Me."(5)
Those who really stand by Jesus--that is, by the Word of God--do not all stand
equally; for among those who stand by Jesus are differences from each other.
Wherefore, not all who stand by the Saviour, but some of them as standing better, do
not taste of death until they shall have seen the Word who dwelt with men, and
on that account called Son of man, coming in His own kingdom; for Jesus does
not always come in His own kingdom when He comes, since to the newly initiated
He is such that they might say, beholding the Word Himself not glorious nor
great, but inferior to many among them, "We saw Him, and He had no form or beauty,
but His form was dishonoured, defective compared with all the sons of men."(6)
And these things will be said by those who beheld His glory in connection with
their own former times, when at first the Word as understood in the synagogue
had no form nor beauty to them. To the Word, therefore, who has assumed most
manifestly the power above all words. there belongs a royal dignity which is
visible to some of those who stand by Jesus, when they have been able to follow Him
as He goes before them and ascends to the lofty mountain of His own
manifestation. And of this honour some of those who stand by Jesus are deemed worthy if
they be either a Peter against whom the gates of Hades do not prevail, or the
sons of thunder,(1) and are begotten of the mighty voice of God who thunders and
cries aloud from heaven great things to those who have ears and are wise. Such
at least do not taste death.
- INTERPRETATION OF "TASTING OF DEATH."
But we must seek to understand what is meant by "tasting of death." And He
is life who says, "I am the life,"(2) and this life assuredly has been hidden
with Christ in God; and. "when Christ our life shall be manifested, then along
with Him"(3) shall be manifested those who are worthy of being manifested with
Him in glory. But the enemy of this life, who is also the last enemy of all His
enemies that shall be destroyed, is death,(4) of which the soul that sinneth
dies, having the opposite disposition to that which takes place in the soul that
lives uprightly, and in consequence of living uprightly lives. And when it is
said in the law, "I have placed life before thy face,"(5) the Scripture says
this about Him who said, "I am the Life," and about His enemy, death; the one or
other of which each of us by his deeds is always choosing. And when we sin with
life before our face, the curse is fulfilled against us which says, "And thy
life shall be hanging up before thee," etc., down to the words, "and for the
sights of thine eyes which thou shall see."(6) As, therefore, the Life is also the
living bread which came down from heaven and gave life to the world,(7) so His
enemy death is dead bread. Now every rational soul is fed either on living
bread or dead bread, by the opinions good or bad which it receives. As then in the
case of more common foods it is the practice at one time only to taste them,
and at another to eat of them more largely; so also, in the case of these
loaves, one eats insufficiently only tasting them, but another is satiated,--he that
is good or is on the way to being good with the living bread which came down
from heaven, but he that is wicked with the dead bread, which is death; and some
perhaps sparingly, and sinning a little, only taste of death; but those who
have attained to virtue do not even taste of it, but are always fed on the living
bread. It naturally followed then in the case of Peter, against whom the gates
of Hades will not prevail, that he did not taste of death, since any one tastes
of death and eats death at the time when the gates of Hades prevail against
him; and one eats or tastes of death in proportion as the gates of Hades to a
greater or less extent, more or fewer in number, prevail against him. But also for
the sons of thunder who were begotten of thunder, which is a heavenly thing,
it was impossible to taste of death, which is extremely far removed from
thunder, their mother. But these things the Word prophesies to those who shall be
perfected, and who by standing with the Word advanced so far that they did not
taste of death, until they saw the manifestation and the glory and the kingdom and
the excellency of the Word of God in virtue of which He excels every word,
which by an appearance of truth draws away and drags about those who are not able
to break through the bonds of distraction, and go up to the height of the
excellency of the Word of truth.
- MEANING OF "UNTIL." NO LIMITATION OF PROMISE.
But since some one may think that the promise of the Saviour prescribes a
limit of time to their not tasting of death, namely, that they will not taste
of death "until"(1) they see the Son of man coming in His own kingdom. but after
this will taste of it, let us show that according to the scriptural usage the
word "until" signifies that the time concerning the thing signified is
pressing, but is not so defined that after the "until," that which is contrary to the
thing signified should at all take place. Now, the Saviour says to the eleven
disciples when He rose from the dead, this among other things, "Lo, I am with you
all the days, even until the consummation of the age."(2) When He said this,
did He promise that He was going to be with them until the consummation of the
age, but that after the consummation of the age, when another age was at hand,
which is "called the age to come," He would be no longer with them?--so that
according to this, the condition of the disciples would be better before the
consummation of the age than after the consummation of the age? But I do not think
that any one will dare to say, that after the consummation of the age the Son of
God will be no longer with the disciples, because the expression declares that
He will be with them for so long, until the consummation of the age is at
hand; for it is clear that the matter under inquiry was, whether the Son of God was
forthwith going to be with His disciples before the age to come and the hoped
for promises of God which were given as a recompense. But there might have been
a question--it being granted that He would be with them--whether sometimes He
was present with them, and sometimes not present. Wherefore setting us free
from the suspicion that might have arisen from doubt, He declared that now and
even all the days He would be with the disciples, and that He would not leave
those who had become His disciples until the consummation of the age; (because He
said "all the days" He did not deny that by night, when the sun set, He would be
present with them.) But if such is the force of the words, "until the
consummation of the age," plainly we shall not be compelled to admit that those who see
the Son of man coming in His own kingdom shall taste of death, after being
deemed worthy of beholding Him in such guise. But as in the case of the passage we
brought forward, the urgent necessity was to teach us that "until the
consummation of the age" He would not leave us but be with us all the days; so also in
this case I think that it is clear to those who know how to look at the logical
coherence of things that He who has seen once for all "the Son of man coming
in His own kingdom," and seen Him "in His own glory," and seen "the kingdom of
God come with power," could not possibly taste of death after the contemplation
of things so good and great. But apart from the word of the promise of Jesus,
we have conjectured not without reason that we would taste of death, so long as
we were not yet held worthy to see "the kingdom of God come with power," and
"the Son of man coming in His own glory and in His own kingdom."
- SCRIPTURAL REFERENCES TO DEATH.
But since here it is written in the three Evangelists, "They shall not
taste of death,"(1) but in other writers different things are written concerning
death, it may not be out of place to bring forward and examine these passages
along with the "taste." In the Psalms, then, it is said, "What man is he that
shall live and not see death?"(1) And again, in another place, "Let death come
upon them and let them go down into Hades alive;"(2) but in one of the prophets,
"Death becoming mighty has swallowed them up;"(3) and in the Apocalypse, "Death
and Hades follow some."(4) Now in these passages it appears to me that it is
one thing to taste of death, but another thing to see death, and another thing
for it to come upon some, and that a fourth thing, different from the aforesaid,
is signified by the words, "Death becoming mighty has swallowed them up," and a
fifth thing, different from these, by the words, Death and Hades follow them."
And if yon were to collect them, you would perhaps find also other differences
than those which we have mentioned, by a comparison of which with one another
and right investigation, you would find the things signified in each place. But
here I inquire whether it is a less evil to see death, but a greater evil than
seeing to taste of it, but still worse than this that death should follow any
one, and not only follow him, but also now come upon him and seize him whom it
formerly followed; but to be swallowed up seems to be more grievous than all
the things spoken of. But giving heed to what is said, and to the differences of
sins committed, you will not I think, be slow to admit that things of this kind
were intended by the Spirit who caused these things to be written in the
oracles of God. But, if it be necessary to give an exposition clearer than what has
been said of what is signified by seeing the Son of man coming in His own
kingdom, or in His own glory, and what is signified by seeing the kingdom of God
come with power, these things--whether those that are made to shine in our hearts,
or that are found by those who seek, or that enter gradually into our
thoughts.--let each one judge as he wills--we will set forth. He who beholds and
apprehends the excellency of the Word, as tie breaks down and refutes all the
plausible forms of things which are truly lies but profess to be truths, sees the Son
of man, (according to the word of John, "the Word of God,") coming in His own
kingdom; but if such an one were to behold the Word, not only breaking down
plausible oppositions, but also representing His own truths with perfect clearness,
he would behold His glory in addition to His kingdom. And such an one indeed
would see in Him the kingdom of God come with power; and he would see this, as
one who is no longer now under the reign of "sin which reigns in the mortal body
of those who sin,"(1) but is ever under the orders of the king, who is God of
all, whose kingdom is indeed potentially "within us,"(2) but actually, and, as
Mark has called it, "with power," and not at all in weakness within the perfect
alone. These things, then, Jesus promised to the disciples who were standing,
prophesying not about all of them, but about some.
- CONCERNING THE TRANSFIGURATION OF THE SAVIOUR.
"Now after six days," according to Matthew and Mark,(3) "He taketh with
him Peter and James and John his brother, and leads them up into a high mountain
apart, and was transfigured before them." Now, also, let it be granted, before
the exposition that occurs to us in relation to these things, that this took
place long ago, and according to the letter. But it seems to me, that those who
are led up by Jesus into the high mountain, and are deemed worthy of beholding
His transfiguration apart, are not without purpose led up six days after the
discourses previously spoken. For since in six days--the perfect number--the whole
world,--this perfect work of art,--was made, on this account I think that he
who transcends all the things of the world by beholding no longer the things
which are seen, for they are temporal, but already the things which not seen, and
only the things which are not seen, because that they are eternal, is
represented in the words, "After six days days Jesus took up with Him" certain persons.
If therefore any one of us wishes to be taken by Jesus, and led up by Him into
the high mountain, and be deemed worthy of beholding His transfiguration apart,
let him pass beyond the six days, because he no longer beholds the things
which are seen, nor longer loves the world, nor the things in the world,(4) nor
lusts after any worldly lust, which is the lust of bodies, and of the riches of
the body, and of the glory which is after the flesh, and whatever things whose
nature it is to distract and drag away the soul from the things which are better
and diviner, and bring it down and fix it fast to the deceit of this age, in
wealth and glory, and the rest of the lusts which are the foes of truth. For when
he has passed through the six days, as we have said, he will keep a new
Sabbath, rejoicing in the lofty mountain, because he sees Jesus transfigured before
him; for the Word has different forms, as He appears to each as is expedient for
the beholder, and is manifested to no one beyond the capacity of the beholder.
- FORCE OF THE WORDS "BEFORE THEM,"
But you will ask if, when He was trans-figured before those who were led
up by Him into the lofty mountain, He appeared to them in the form of God, in
which He formerly was, so that He had to those below the form of a servant, but
to those who had followed Him after the six days to the lofty mountain, He had
not that form, but the form of God. But hear these things, if you can, at the
same time giving heed spiritually, that it is not said simply, "He was
trans-figured," but with a certain necessary addition, which Matthew and Mark have
recorded; for, according to both, "He was transfigured before them."(1) And according
to this, indeed, you will say that it is possible for Jesus to be transfigured
before some with this transfiguration, but before others at the same time not
to be transfigured. But if you wish to see the transfiguration of Jesus before
those who went up into the lofty mountain apart long with Him, behold with me
the Jesus in the Gospels, as more simply apprehended, and as one might say,
known "according to the flesh," by those who do not go up, through works and words
which are uplifting, to the lofty mountain of wisdom, but known no longer after
the flesh, but known in His divinity by menus of all the Gospels, and beholden
in the form of God according to their knowledge; for before them is Jesus
transfigured, and not to any one of those below. But when He is transfigured, His
face also shines as the sun, that He may be manifested to the children of light,
who have put off the works of darkness, and put on the armour of light,(2) and
are no longer the children of darkness or night, but have become the sons of
day, and walk honestly as in the day;(3) and being manifested, He will shine
unto them not simply as the sun, but as demonstrated to be the sun of
righteousness.
- THE GARMENTS WHITE AS THE LIGHT.
And not only is He transfigured before such disciples, nor does He only
add to the transfiguration the shining of His face as the sun; but further also
to those who were led up by Him into the high mountain apart, His garments
appear white as the light.(1) But the garments of Jesus are the expressions and
letters of the Gospels with which He invested Himself. But I think that even the
words in the Apostles which indicate the truths concerning Him are garments of
Jesus, which become white to those who go up into the high mountain along with
Jesus. But since there are differences also of things white, His garments become
white as the brightest and purest of all white things; and that is light. When
therefore you see any one not only with a thorough understanding of the
theology concerning Jesus, but also making clear every expression of the Gospels, do
not hesitate to say that to Him the garments of Jesus have become white as the
light. But when the Son of God in His transfiguration is so understood and
beheld, that His face is a sun, and His garments white as the light, straightway
there will appear to him who beholds Jesus in such form Moses,--the law--and
Elijah,--in the way of synecdoche, not one prophet only, but all the
prophets--holding converse with Jesus; for such is the force of the words "talking with
Him;"(2) but, according to Luke, "Moses and Elijah appeared in glory," down to the
words, "in Jerusalem."(3) But if any one sees the glory of Moses, having
understood the spiritual law as a discourse in harmony with Jesus, and the wisdom in
the prophets which is hidden in a mystery,(4) he sees Moses and Elijah in glory
when he sees them with Jesus.
- JESUS WAS TRANSFIGURED--"AS HE WAS PRAYING."
Then, since it will be necessary to expound the passage as given in Mark,
"And as He was praying He was transfigured before them,"(5) we must say that
perhaps it is possible especially to see the Word transfigured before us if we
have done the things aforesaid, and gone up into the mountain, and seen the
absolute Word holding converse with the Father, and praying to Him for such things
as the true High-Priest might pray for to the only true God. But in order that
He may thus hold fellowship with God and pray to the Father, He goes up into the
mountain; and then, according to Mark, "His garments become white and
glistening as the light, so as no fuller on earth can whiten them."(6) And perhaps the
fullers upon the earth are the wise men of this world who are careful about the
diction which they consider to be bright and pure, so that even their base
thoughts and false dogmas seem to be beautified by their fulling, so to speak; but
He who shows His own garments glistering to those who have ascended and
brighter than their fulling can make them, is the Word, who exhibits in the
expressions of the Scriptures which are despised by many the glistering of the thoughts,
when the raiment of Jesus, according to Luke, becomes white and dazzling.(1)
- DISCUSSION OF THE SAYING OF PETER.
But let us next see what was the thought of Peter when he answered and
said to Jesus, "Lord, it is good for us to be here; let us make three
tabernacles,"(1) etc. And on this account these words call for very special examination,
because Mark, in his own person, has added, "For he wist not what to answer,"(3)
but Luke, "not knowing," he says, "what he spake."(4) You will consider,
therefore, if he spake these things as in a trance, being filled with the spirit
which moved him to say these things, which could not be a Holy Spirit; for John
taught in the Gospel that, before the resurrection of the Saviour, no one had the
Holy Spirit, saying, "For the Spirit was not yet, because Jesus was not yet
glorified."(5) But if the Spirit was not yet, and he, not knowing what he said,
spoke under the influence of some spirit, the spirit which caused these things to
be said was some one of the spirits which had not yet been triumphed over in
the cross, nor made a show of along with them, about whom it is written, "Having
put off from Himself the principalities and the powers, He made a show of them
openly, triumphing over them in the cross.(6)" But this spirit was perhaps
that which is called a stumbling-block by Jesus, and which is spoken of as Satan
in the passage, "Get thee behind Me, Satan; thou art a stumbling-block unto
me.'(7) But I know well that such things will offend many who meet with them,
because they think thai it is opposed to sound reason that he should be spoken ill
of who a little before had been pronounced blessed by Jesus, on the ground that
the Father in heaven had revealed to him the things concerning the Saviour,
to-wit, that He was verily Jesus, and the Christ, and the Son of the living God.
But let such an one attend more exactly to the statements about Peter and the
rest of the Apostles, how even they made requests as if they were yet alien from
Him who was to redeem them from the enemy and purchase them with His own
precious blood; or let them also, who will have it that even before the passion of
Jesus the Apostles were perfect, tell us whence it came about that "Peter and
they that were with him were heavy with sleep."(1) But to anticipate something
else of what follows and apply it to the subject in hand, I would raise in turn
these questions,--whether it is possible for any one to find occasion of
stumbling in Jesus apart from the working of the devil who caused him to stumble; and
whether it is possible for any one to deny Jesus, and that in presence of a
little maid and a doorkeeper and men most worthless, unless a spirit had been with
him in his denial hostile to the Spirit which is given and the wisdom, (which
is given) to those who are assisted by God to make confession, according to a
certain desert of theirs. But he who has learned to refer the roots of sin to the
father of sin, the devil, will not say that apart from him either the Apostles
were caused to stumble, or that Peter denied Christ thrice before that
well-known cock-crowing. But if this be so, consider whether perhaps with a view to
make Jesus stumble, so far as was in his power, and to turn Him aside from the
dispensation whose characteristic was suffering that brought salvation to men,
which He undertook with great willingness, seeking to effect these things which
seemed to contribute to this end, he himself also here wishes as it were, by
deceit, to draw away Jesus, as if calling upon Him no longer to condescend to men,
and come to them, and undergo death for them, but to abide on the high
mountain with Moses and Elijah. But he promised also to build three tabernacles, one
apart for Jesus, and one for Moses, and one for Elijah, as if one tabernacle
would not have sufficed for the three, if it had been necessary for them to be in
tabernacles and in the high mountain. And perhaps also in this he acted with
evil intent, when he incited him "who did not know what he said," not desiring
that Jesus and Moses and Elijah should be together, but desiring to separate them
from one another, under pretext of the three tabernacles." And likewise it was
a lie, "It is good for us to be here;"(2) for if it had been a good thing they
would also have remained there. But if it were a lie, you will seek to know
who caused the lie to be spoken; and especially since according to John, "When he
speaketh a lie he speaketh of his own; for he is a liar and the father
thereof;"(1) and as there is no truth apart from the working of Him who says, "I am
the Truth,"(2) so there is no lie apart from him who is the enemy of truth. These
contrary qualities, accordingly, were still in Peter truth and falsehood; and
from truth he said, "Thou art the Christ, the son of the living God,"(3) but
from falsehood he said, "May God be propitious to Thee, Lord, this shall not be
unto Thee,"(4) and also, "It is good for us to be here."(5) But if any one will
not admit that Peter spoke these things from any evil inspiration, but that his
words were of his own mere choice, and it is demanded of him how he will
interpret, "not knowing what he said," and,(6) "for he did not know what to
answer,"(7) he will say, that in the former case Peter held it to be a shameful thing
and unworthy of Jesus to admit that the Son of the living God, the Christ, whom
already the Father had revealed to him, should be killed; and in the: present
case that, as having seen the two forms of Jesus and the one at the
transfiguration which was much more excellent, being well pleased with that, he said that
it was good to make their sojourning in that mountain, in order that he himself
and those with him might rejoice as they beheld the transfiguration of Jesus
and His face shining as the sun. and His garments white as the light, and, in
addition to these things, might always behold in glory those whom they had once
seen in glory, Moses and Elijah; and that they might rejoice at the things which
they might hear, as they talked and held intercourse with each other, Moses and
Elijah with Jesus, and Jesus with them.
- FIGURATIVE INTERPRETATION OF THE SAME.
But since we have not yet spent our energy in interpreting the things in
the place figuratively, but have said these things by way of searching into the
mere letter, let us in conformity with these things, consider whether the
aforesaid Peter and the sons of thunder who were taken up into the mountain of the
dogmas of the truth, and who saw the transfiguration of Jesus and of Moses and
Elijah, who appeared in glory with Him. might wish to make tabernacles in
themselves for the Word of God who was going to dwell in them, and for His law which
had been beholden in glory, and for the prophecy which spake of the decease of
Jesus, which He was about to accomplish;(1) and Peter, as one loving the
contemplative life, and having preferred that which was delightsome in it to the life
among the crowd with its turmoil, said, with the design of benefiting those
who desired it, "It is good for us to be here."(2) But since "love seeketh not
its own,"(3) Jesus did not do that which Peter thought good; wherefore He
descended from the mountain to those who were not able to ascend to it and behold His
transfiguration, that they might behold Him in such form as they were able to
see Him. It is, therefore, the part of a righteous man who possesses "the love
which seeketh not its own"(4) to be free from all, but to bring himself under
bondage to all those below that He might gain the more of them.(5) But some one,
with reference to what we have alleged about the trance and the working of an
evil spirit in Peter, concerning the words, "not knowing what he said,"(6) not
accepting that interpretation of ours, may say that there were certain mentioned
by Paul "desiring to be teachers of the law,"(7) who do not know about what
they speak, but who, though they do not clearly expound the nature of what is
said, nor understand their meaning, make confident affirmations of things which
they do not know. Of such a nature was the affection of Peter also, for not
apprehending what was good with reference to the dispensation of Jesus and of those
who appeared in the mountain,--Moses and Elijah,--he says, "It is good for us
to be here," etc., "not knowing what he said," "for he wist not what to say,"
for if "a wise man will understand the things from his own mouth, and carries
prudence in his lips,"(8) he who is not so does not understand the things from his
own mouth, nor comprehend the nature of the things spoken by him.
- THE MEANING OF THE "BRIGHT CLOUD."
Next to these come the words, "While He was yet speaking, behold, also, a
bright cloud overshadowed them,"(9) etc. Now, I think that God, wishing to
dissuade Peter from making three tabernacles, under which so far as it depended on
his choice he was going to dwell, shows a tabernacle better, so to speak, and
much more excellent, the cloud. For since it is the function of a tabernacle to
overshadow him who is in it, and to shelter him, and the bright cloud
overshadowed them, God made, as it were, a diviner tabernacle, inasmuch as it was
bright, that it might be to them a pattern of the resurrection to come; for a bright
cloud overshadows the just, who are at once protected and illuminated and shone
Upon by it. But what might the bright cloud, which overshadows the just, be?
Is it, perhaps, the fatherly power, from which comes the voice of the Father
bearing testimony to the Son as beloved and well-pleasing, and exhorting those who
were under its shadow to hear Him and no other one? But as He speaks of old,
so also always does He speak through what He wills. And perhaps, too, the Holy
Spirit is the bright cloud which overshadows the just, and prophesies of the
things of God, who works in it, and says, "This is My beloved Son in whom I am
well-pleased;" but I would venture also to say that our Saviour is a bright cloud.
When, therefore, Peter said, "Let us make here three tabernacles,"(1) ... one
from the Father Himself, and from the Son, and one from the Holy Spirit. For a
bright cloud of the Father, Son and Holy Spirit overshadows the genuine
disciples of Jesus; or a cloud overshadows the Gospel and the law and the prophets,
which is bright to him who is able to see the light of it in the Gospel, and the
law, and the prophets. But perhaps the voice from the cloud says to Moses and
Elijah, "This is My beloved Son in whom I am well-pleased, hear Him," as they
were desirous to see the Son of man, and to hear Him, and to behold Him as He was
in glory. And perhaps it teaches the disciples that He who was, in a literal
sense, the Son of God, and His beloved in whom He was well-pleased, whom it
behoved them especially to hear, was He who was then beheld, and transfigured, and
whose face shone as the sun, and who was clothed with garments white as the
light.
- RELATION OF MOSES AND ELIJAH TO JESUS. THE INJUNCTION OF SILENCE.
But after these things it is written that, when they heard the voice from
the cloud bearing testimony to the Son, the three Apostles, not being able to
bear the glory of the voice and power resting upon it, "fell on their face,"(2)
and besought God; for they were sore afraid at the supernatural sight, and the
things which were spoken from the sight. But consider if you can also say this
with reference to the details in the passage, that the disciples, having
understood that the Son of God had been holding conference with Moses, and that it
was He who said, "A man shall not see My face and live,"(1) and taking further
the testimony of God about Him, as not being able to endure the radiance of the
Word, humbled themselves under the mighty hand of God;(2) but, after the touch
of the Word, lifting up their eyes they saw Jesus only and no other.(3) Moses,
the law, and Elijah, the prophet, became one only with the Gospel of Jesus; and
not, as they were formerly three, did they so abide, but the three became one,
But consider these things with me in relation to mystical matters; for in
regard to the bare meaning of the letter, Moses and Elijah, having appeared in glory
and talked with Jesus, went away to the place from which they had come,
perhaps to communicate the words which Jesus spake with them, to those who were to be
benefited by Him, almost immediately, namely, at the time of the passion, when
many bodies of the saints that had fallen asleep, their tombs being opened,
were to go to the city which is truly holy--not the Jerusalem which Jesus wept
over--and there appear unto many.(4) But after the dispensation in the mountain,
when the disciples were coming down from the mountain in order that, when they
had come to the multitude, they might serve the Son of God concerning the
salvation of the people, Jesus commanded the disciples saying, "Tell the vision to
no man until the Son of man rise from the dead."(5) But that saying, "Tell the
vision to no man," is like that which was investigated in the passage above,
when "He enjoined the disciples to tell no man that He was the Christ."(6)
Wherefore the things that were said at that passage may be useful to us also for the
passage before us; since Jesus wishes also, in accordance with these, that the
things of His glory should not be spoken of, before His glory after the passion;
for those who heard, and in particular the multitudes, would have been injured
when they saw Him crucified, who had been so glorified. Wherefore since His
being glorified in the resurrection was akin to His transfiguration, and to the
vision of His face as the sun, on this account He wishes that these things
should then be spoken of by the Apostles, when He rose from the dead.