OUR LORD'S SERMON ON THE MOUNT. BOOK II. ON THE LATTER PART OF OUR LORD'S
SERMON ON THE MOUNT, CONTAINED IN THE SIXTH AND SEVENTH CHAPTERS OF MATTHEW.
BOOK II.
ON THE LATTER PART OF OUR LORD'S SERMON ON THE MOUNT, CONTAINED IN THE
SIXTH AND SEVENTH CHAPTERS OF MATTHEW.
CHAP. I.--I. The subject of mercy, with the treatment of which the first book came to
a close, is followed by that of the cleansing of the heart, with which the
present one begins.(1) The cleansing of the heart, then, is as it were the
cleansing of the eye by which God is seen; and in keeping that single, there ought to
be as great care as the dignity of the object demands, which can be beheld by
such an eye. But even when this eye is in great part cleansed, it is difficult to
prevent certain defilements from creeping insensibly over it, from those
things which are wont to accompany even our good actions,--as, for instance, the
praise of men. If, indeed, not to live uprightly is hurtful; yet to live
uprightly, and not to wish to be praised, what else is this than to be an enemy to the
affairs of men, which are certainly so much the more miserable, the less an
upright life on the part of men gives pleasure? If, therefore, those among whom you
live shall not praise you when living uprightly, they are in error: but if
they shall praise you, you are in danger; unless you have a heart so single and
pure, that in those things in which you act uprightly you do not so act because
of the praises of men; and that you rather congratulate those who praise what is
right, as having pleasure in what is good, than yourself; because you would
live uprightly even if no one were to praise you: and that you understand this
very praise of you to be useful to those who praise you, only when it is not
yourself whom they honour in your good life, but God, whose most holy temple every
man is who lives well; so that what David says finds its fulfilment, "In the
Lord shall my soul be praised; the humble shall hear thereof, and be glad."(2) It
belongs therefore to the pure eye not to look at the praises of men in acting
rightly, nor to have reference to these while you are acting rightly, i.e. to
do anything rightly with the very design of pleasing men. For thus you will be
disposed also to counterfeit what is good, if nothing is kept in view except the
praise of man; who, inasmuch as he cannot see the heart, may also praise
things that are false. And they who do this, i.e. who counterfeit goodness, are of a
double heart. No one therefore has a single, i.e. a pure heart, except the man
who rises above the praises of men; and when he lives well, looks at Him only,
and strives to please Him who is the only Searcher of the conscience. And
whatever proceeds from the purity of that conscience is so much the more
praiseworthy, the less it desires the praises of men.
2. "Take heed,(3) therefore," says He, "that ye do not your
righteousness(4) before men, to be seen of them:" i.e., take heed that ye do not live
righteously with this intent, and that ye do not place your happiness in this, that
men may see you. "Otherwise ye have no reward of your Father who is in heaven:"
not if ye i should be seen by men; but if ye should live righteously with the
intent of being seen by men. For, [were it the former], what would 'become of the
statement made in the beginning of this sermon, "Ye are the light of the
world. A city that is set on an hilt cannot be hid. Neither do men light a candle,
and put it under a bushel, but on a candlestick; and it giveth light unto all
that are in the house. Let your light so shine before men, that they may see your
good works"? But He did not set up this as the end; for He has added, "and
glorify your Father who is in heaven."(5) But here, because he is finding fault
with this, if the end of our right actions is there, i.e. if we act rightly with
this design, only of being seen of men; after He has said, "Take heed that ye
do not your righteousness before men," He has added nothing. And hereby it is
evident that He has said this, not to prevent us from acting rightly before men,
but lest perchance we should act rightly before men for the purpose of being
seen by them, i.e. should fix our eye on this, and make it the end of what we
have set before us.
3. For the apostle also says, "If I yet pleased men, I should not be the
servant of Christ;"(1) while he says in another place, "Please all men in all
things, even as I also please all men in all things."(2) And they who do not
understand this think it a contradiction; while the explanation is, that he has
said he does not please men, because he was accustomed to act rightly, not with
the express design of pleasing men. but of pleasing God, to the love of whom he
wished to turn men's hearts by that very thing in which he was pleasing men.
Therefore he was both right in saying that he did not please men, because in that
very thing he aimed at pleasing God: and right in authoritatively teaching that
we ought to please men, not in order that this should be sought for as the
reward of our good deeds; but because the man who would not offer himself for
imitation to those whom he wished to be saved, could not please God; but no man
possibly can imitate one who has not pleased him. As, therefore, that man would
not speak absurdly who should say, In this work of seeking a ship, it is not a
ship, but my native country, that I seek: so the apostle also might fitly say, In
this work of pleasing men, it is not men, but God, that I please; because I do
not aim at pleasing men, but have it as my object, that those whom I wish to
be saved may imitate me. Just as he says of an offering that is made for the
saints, "Not because I desire a gift, but I desire fruit;"(3) i.e., In seeking
your gift, I seek not it, but your fruit. For by this proof it could appear how
far they had advanced Godward, when they offered that willingly which was sought
from them not for the sake of his own joy over their gifts, but for the sake of
the fellowship of love.
4. Although when He also goes on to say, "Otherwise ye have no reward of
your Father who is in heaven,"(4) He points out nothing else but that we ought
to be on our guard against seeking man's praise as the reward of our deeds, i.e.
against thinking we thereby attain to blessedness.
CHAP. II.--5. "Therefore, when thou doest thine alms," says He, "do not sound a trumpet
before thee, as the hypocrites do in the synagogues and in the streets, that
they may have glory s of men." Do not, says He, desire to become known in the
same way as the hypocrites. Now it is manifest that hypocrites have not that in
their heart also which they hold forth before the eyes of men. For hypocrites
are pretenders, as it were setters forth of other characters, just as in the
plays of the theatre. For be who acts the part of Agamemnon in tragedy, for
example, or of any other person belonging to the history or legend which is acted, is
not really the person himself, but personates him, and is called a hypocrite.
In like manner, in the Church, or in any phase of human life, whoever wishes to
seem what he is not is a hypocrite. For he pretends, but does not show himself,
to be a righteous man; because he places the whole fruit [of his acting] in
the praise of men, which even pretenders may receive, while they deceive those to
whom they seem good, and are praised by them. But such do not receive a reward
from God the Searcher of the heart, unless it be the punishment of their
deceit: from men, however, says He, "They have received their reward;" and most
righteously will it be said to them, Depart from me, ye workers of deceit; ye had
my name, but ye did not my works. Hence they have received their reward, who do
their alms for no other reason than that they may have glory of men; not if
they have glory of men, but if they do them for the express purpose of having this
glory, as has been discussed above. For the praise of men ought not to be
sought by him who acts rightly, but ought to follow him who acts rightly, so that
they may profit who can also imitate what they praise, not that he whom they
praise may think that they are profiling him anything.
6. "But when thou doest alms, let not thy left hand know what thy right
hand doeth." If yon should understand unbelievers to be meant by the left hand,
then it will seem to be no fault to wish to please believers; while nevertheless
we are altogether prohibited from placing the fruit and end of our good deed
in the praise of any men whatever. But as regards this point, that those who
have been pleased with your good deeds should imitate you, we are to act before
the eyes not only of believers, but also of unbelievers, so that by our good
works, which are to be praised, they may honour God, and may come to salvation. But
if you should be of opinion that the left hand means an enemy, so that your
enemy is not to know when you do alms, why did the Lord Himself, when His enemies
the Jews were standing round, mercifully heal men? why did the Apostle Peter,
by healing the lame man whom he pitied at the gate Beautiful, bring also the
wrath of the enemy upon himself, and upon the other disciples of Christ?(5) Then,
further, if it is necessary that the enemy should not know when we do our
alms, how shall we do with the enemy himself so as to fulfiI that precept, "If
thine enemy be hungry, give him bread to eat; and if he be thirsty, give him water
to drink"?(1)
7. A third opinion is wont to be held by carnal people, so absurd and
ridiculous, that I would not mention it had I not found that not a few are
entangled in that error, who say that by the expression left hand a wife is meant; so
that, inasmuch as in family affairs women are wont to be more tenacious of
money, it is to be kept hid from them when their husbands compassionately spend
anything upon the needy, for fear of domestic quarrels. As if, forsooth, men alone
were Christians, and this precept were not addressed to women also! From what
left hand, then, is a woman enjoined to conceal her deed of mercy? Is a husband
also the left hand of his wife? A statement most absurd. Or if any one thinks
that they are left hands to each other; if any part of the family property be
expended by the one party in such a way as to be contrary to the will of the
other party, such a marriage will not be a Christian one; but whichever of them
should choose to do alms according to the command of God, whomsoever he should
find opposed, would inevitably be an enemy to the command of God, and therefore
reckoned among unbelievers,--the command with respect to such parties being, that
a believing husband should win his wife, and a believing wife her husband, by
their good conversation and conduct; and therefore they ought not to conceal
their good works from each other, by which they are to be mutually attracted, so
that the one may be able to attract the other to communion in the Christian
faith. Nor are thefts to be perpetrated in order that God may, be rendered
propitious. But if anything is to be concealed as long as the infirmity of the other
party is unable to bear with equanimity what nevertheless is not done unjustly
and unlawfully; yet, that the left hand is not meant in such a sense on the
present occasion, readily appears from a consideration of the whole section,
whereby it will at the same time be discovered what He calls the left hand.
8. "Take heed," says He, "that ye do not your righteousness before men, to
be seen of them; otherwise ye have no reward of your Father which is in
heaven." Here He has mentioned righteousness generally, then He follows it up in
detail. For a deed which is done in the way of alms is a certain part of
righteousness, and therefore He connects the two by saying, "Therefore, when thou doest
thine alms, do not sound a trumpet before thee, as the hypocrites do in the
synagogues and in the streets, that they may have glory of men." In this there is a
reference to what He says before, "Take heed that ye do not your righteousness
before men, to be seen of them." But what follows, "Verily I say unto you,
They have received their reward," refers to that other statement which He has made
above, "Otherwise ye have no reward of your Father which is in heaven." Then
follows, "But when thou doest alms." When He says, "But thou," what else does He
mean but, Not in the same manner as they? What, then, does He bid me do? "But
when thou doest alms," says He, "let not thy left hand know what thy right hand
doeth." Hence those other parties so act, that their left hand knoweth what
their right hand doeth. What, therefore, is blamed in them, this thou art
forbidden to do. But this is what is blamed in them, that they act in such a way as to
seek the praises of men. And therefore the left hand seems to have no more
suitable meaning than just this delight in praise. But the right hand means the
intention of fulfilling the divine commands. When, therefore, with the
consciousness of him who does alms is mixed up the desire of man's praise, the left hand
becomes conscious of the work of the right hand: "Let not, therefore, thy left
hand know what thy right hand doeth;"(2) i.e. Let there not be mixed up in thy
consciousness the desire of man's praise, when in doing alms thou art striving
to fulfil a divine command.
9. "That thine alms may be in secret."(3) What else is meant by "in
secret," but just in a good conscience, which cannot be shown to human eyes, nor
revealed by words? since, indeed, the mass of men tell many lies. And therefore, if
the right hand acts inwardly in secret, all outward things, which are visible
and temporal, belong to the left hand. Let thine alms, therefore, be in thine
own consciousness, where many do alms by their good intention, even if they have
no money or anything else which is to be bestowed on one who is needy. But
many give alms outwardly, and not inwardly, who either from ambition, or for the
sake of some temporal object, wish to appear merciful, in whom the left hand
only is to be reckoned as working. Others again hold, as it were, a middle place
between the two; so that, with a design which is directed Godward, they do their
alms, and yet there insinuates itself into this excellent wish also some
desire after praise, or after a perishable and temporal object of some sort or
other. But our Lord much more strongly prohibits the left hand alone being at work
in us, when He even forbids its being mixed up with the works of the right hand:
that is to say, that we are not only to beware of doing alms from the desire
of temporal objects alone; but l that in this work we are not even to have
regard to God in such a way as that there should be mingled up or united therewith
the grasping after outward advantages. For the question under discussion is the
cleansing of the heart, which, unless it be single, will not be clean. But how
will it be single, if it serves two masters, and does not purge its vision by
the striving after eternal things alone, but clouds it by the love of mortal and
perishable things as well? "Let thine alms," therefore, "be in secret; and
thy(1) Father, who seeth in secret, shall reward thee." Altogether most
righteously and most truly. For if you expect a reward from Him who is the only Searcher
of the conscience, let conscience itself suffice thee for meriting a reward.
Many Latin copies have it thus, "And thy Father who seeth m secret shall reward
thee openly;" but because we have not found the word "openly" in the Greek
copies, which are earlier,(2) we have not thought that anything was to be said about
it.
CHAP. III.--10. "And when ye pray," says He, "ye shall not be as the hypocrites are; for
they love to pray standing(3) in the synagogues and in the corners of the
streets, that they may be seen of men." And here also it is not the being seen of
men that is wrong, but doing these things for the purpose of being seen of men;
and it is superfluous to make the same remark so often, since there is just one
rule to be kept, from which we learn that what we should dread and avoid is
not that men know these things, but that they be done with this intent, that the
fruit of pleasing men should be sought after in them. Our Lord Himself, too,
preserves the same words, when He adds similarly, "Verily I say unto you, They
have received their reward;" hereby showing that He forbids this,--the striving
after that reward m which fools delight when they are praised by men.
11. "But when ye(4) pray," says He, "enter into your bed-chambers." What
are those bed-chambers but just our hearts themselves, as is meant also in the
Psalm, when it is said, "What ye say in your hearts, have remorse for even m
your beds"?(5) "And when ye have shut(6) the doors," says He, "pray to your Father
who is in secret."(7) It is a small matter to enter into our bed-chambers if
the door stand open to the unmannerly, through which the things that are outside
profanely rush in and assail our inner man. Now we have said that outside are
all temporal and visible things, which make their way through the door, i.e.
through the fleshly sense into our thoughts, and clamorously interrupt those who
are praying by a crowd of vain phantoms. Hence the door is to be shut, i.e. the
fleshly Sense is to be resisted, so that spiritual prayer may be directed to
the Father, which is done in the inmost heart, where prayer is offered to the
Father which is in secret. "And your Father," says He, "who seeth in secret,
shall reward you." And this had to be wound up with a closing statement of such a
kind; for here at the present stage the admonition is not that we should pray,
but as to how we should pray. Nor is what goes before an admonition that we
should give alms, but as to the spirit m which we should do so, inasmuch as He is
giving instructions with regard to the cleansing of the heart, which nothing
cleanses but the undivided and single-minded striving after eternal life from the
pure love of wisdom alone.
12. "But when ye pray," says He, "do not speak much,(8) as the heathen do;
for they think(9) that they shall be heard for their much speaking." As it is
characteristic of the hypocrites to exhibit themselves to be gazed at when
praying, and their fruit is to please men, so it is characteristic of the heathen,
i.e of the Gentiles, to think they are heard for their much speaking. And in
reality, every kind of much speaking comes from the Gentiles, who make it their
endeavour to exercise the tongue rather than to cleanse the heart. And this kind
of useless exertion they endeavour to transfer even to the influencing of God
by prayer, supposing that the Judge,just like man, is brought over by words to
a certain way of thinking. "Be not ye, therefore, like unto them," says the
only true Master. "For your Father knoweth what things are necessary(1) for you,
before ye ask Him." For if many words are made use of with the intent that one
who is ignorant may be instructed and taught, what need is there of them for
Him who knows all things, to whom all things which exist, by the very fact of
their existence, speak, and show themselves as having been brought into existence;
and those things which are future do not remain concealed from His knowledge
and wisdom, in which both those things which are past, and those things which
will yet come to pass, are all present and cannot pass away?
13. But since, however few they may be, yet there are words which He
Himself also is about to speak, by which He would teach us to pray; it may be asked
why even these few words are necessary for Him who knows all things before they
take place, and is acquainted, as has been said, with what is necessary for us
before we ask Him? Here, in the first place, the answer is, that we ought to
urge our case with God, in order to obtain what we wish, not by words, but by
the ideas which we cherish in our mind, and by the direction of our thought, with
pure love and sincere desire; but that our Lord has taught us the very ideas
in words, that by committing them to memory we may recollect those ideas at the
time we pray.
14. But again, it may be asked (whether we are to pray in ideas or in
words) what need there is for prayer itself, if God already knows what is necessary
for us; unless it be that the very effort involved in prayer calms and
purifies our heart, and makes it more capacious for receiving the divine gifts, which
are poured into us spiritually.(2) For it is not on account of the urgency of
our prayers that God hears us, who is always ready to give us His light, not of
a material kind, but that which is intellectual and spiritual: but we are not
always ready to receive, since we are inclined towards other things, and are
involved in darkness through our desire for temporal things. Hence there is
brought about in prayer a turning of the heart to Him, who is ever ready to give, if
we will but take what He has given; and in the very act of turning there is
effected a purging of the inner eye, inasmuch as those things of a temporal kind
which were desired are excluded, so that the vision of the pure heart may be
able to bear the pure light, divinely shining, without any setting or change: and
not only to bear it, but also to remain in it; not merely without annoyance,
but also with ineffable joy, in which a life truly and sincerely blessed is
perfected.
CHAP. IV.--15. But now we have to consider what things we are taught to pray for by Him
through whom we both learn what we are to pray for, and obtain what we pray
for. "After this manner, therefore, pray ye,"(3) says He: "Our Father who art in
heaven, Hallowed be Thy name. Thy kingdom come. Thy will be done on earth, as
it is in heaven. Give us this day our daily(4) bread. And forgive us our debts,
as we forgive our debtors. And bring(5) us not into temptation, but deliver us
from evil."(6) Seeing that in all prayer we have to conciliate the goodwill of
him to whom we pray, then to say what we pray for; goodwill is usually
conciliated by our offering praise to him to whom the prayer is directed, and this is
usually put in the beginning of the prayer: and in this particular our Lord has
bidden us say nothing else but "Our Father who art in heaven." For many things
are said in praise of God, which, being scattered variously and widely over all
the Holy Scriptures, every one will be able to consider when he reads them:
yet nowhere is there found a precept for the people of Israel, that they should
say "Our Father," or that they should pray to God as a Father; but as Lord He
was made known to them, as being yet servants, i.e. still living according to the
flesh. I say this, however, inasmuch as they received the commands of the law,
which they were ordered to observe: for the prophets often show that this same
Lord of ours might have been their Father also, if they had not strayed from
His commandments: as, for instance, we have that statement, "I have nourished
and brought up children, and they have rebelled against me;"[1] and that other,"
I have said, Ye are gods; and all of you are children of the Most High;"[2] and
this again, "If then I be a Father, where is mine honour? and if I be a
Master, where is my fear?"[3] and very many other statements, where the Jews are
accused of showing by their sin that they did not wish to become sons: those things
being left out of account which are said in prophecy of a future Christian
people, that they would have God as a Father, according to that gospel statement,"
To them gave He power to become the sons of God."[4] The Apostle Paul, again,
says, "The heir, as long as he is a child, differeth nothing from a servant;"
and mentions that we have received the Spirit of adoption, "whereby we cry,
Abba, Father."[5]
16. And since the fact that we are called to an eternal inheritance, that
we might be fellow-heirs with Christ and attain to the adoption of sons, is not
of our deserts, but of God's grace; we put this very same grace in the
beginning of our prayer, when we say "Our Father." And by that appellation both love
is stirred up--for what ought to be dearer to sons than a father?--and a
suppliant disposition, when men say to God, "Our Father:" and a certain presumption of
obtaining what we are about to ask; since, before we ask anything, we have
received so great a gift as to be allowed to call God "Our Father."[6] For what
would He not now give to sons when they ask, when He has already granted this
very thing, namely, that they might be sons? Lastly, how great solicitude takes
hold of the mind, that he who says "Our Father," should not prove unworthy of so
great a Father! For if any plebeian should be permitted by the party himself to
call a senator of more advanced age father; without doubt he would tremble,
and would not readily venture to do it, reflecting on the humbleness of his
origin, and the scantiness of his resources, and the worthlessness of his plebeian
person: how much more, therefore, ought we to tremble to call God Father, if
there is so great a stain and so much baseness in our character, that God might
much more justly drive forth these from contact with Himself, than that senator
might the poverty of any beggar whatever ! Since, indeed, he (the senator)
despises that in the beggar to which even he himself may be reduced by the
vicissitude of human affairs: but God never falls into baseness of character. And
thanks be to the mercy of Him who requires this of us, that He should be our
Father,--a relationship which can be brought about by no expenditure of ours, but
solely by God's goodwill. Here also there is an admonition to the rich and to
those of noble birth, so far as this world is concerned, that when they have become
Christians they should not comport themselves proudly towards the poor and the
low of birth; since together with them they call God "Our Father,"--an
expression which they cannot truly and piously use, unless they recognise that they
themselves are brethren.
CHAP. V.--17. Let the new people, therefore, who are called to an eternal inheritance,
use the word of the New Testament, and say, "Our Father who art in
heaven,"?[7] i.e. in the holy and the just. For God is not contained in space. For the
heavens are indeed the higher material bodies of the world, but yet material, and
therefore cannot exist except in some definite place; but if God's place is
believed to be in the heavens, as meaning the higher parts of the world, the birds
are of greater value than we, for their life is nearer to God. But it is not
written, The Lord is nigh unto tall men, or unto those who dwell on mountains;
but it is written, "The Lord is nigh unto them that are of a broken heart,"[8]
which refers rather to humility. But as a sinner is called earth, when it is
said to him, "Earth thou art, and unto earth shalt thou return;"[9] so, on the
other hand, a righteous man may be called heaven. For it is said to the righteous,
"For the temple of God is holy, which temple ye are."[10] And therefore, if
God dwells in His temple, and the saints are His temple, the expression "which
art in heaven" is rightly used in the sense, which art in the saints. And most
suitable is such a similitude, so that spiritually there may be seen to be as
great a difference between the righteous and sinners, as there is materially
between heaven and earth.
18. And for the purpose of showing this, when we stand at prayer, we turn
to the east, whence the heaven rises: not as if God also were dwelling there,
in the sense that He who is everywhere present, not as occupying space, but by
the power of His majesty, had forsaken the other parts of the world; but in
order that the mind may be admonished to turn to a more excellent nature, i.e. to
God, when its own body, which is earthly, is turned to a more excellent body,
i.e. to a heavenly one. It is also suitable for the different stages of religion,
and expedient in the highest degree, that in the minds of all, both small and
great, there should be cherished worthy conceptions of God. And therefore, as
regards those who as yet are taken up with the beauties that are seen, and
cannot think of anything incorporeal, inasmuch as they must necessarily prefer
heaven to earth, their opinion is more tolerable, if they believe God, whom as yet
they think of after a corporeal fashion, to be in heaven rather than upon earth:
so that when at any future time they have learned that the dignity of the soul
exceeds even a celestial body, they may seek Him in the soul rather than in a
celestial body even; and when they have learned how great a distance there is
between the souls of sinners and of the righteous, just as they did not venture,
when as yet they were wise only after a carnal fashion, to place Him on earth,
but in heaven, so afterwards with better faith or intelligence they may seek
Him again in the souls of the righteous rather than in those of sinners. Hence,
when it is said, "Our Father which art in heaven," it is rightly understood to
mean in the hearts of the righteous, as it were in His holy temple. And at the
same time, in such a way that he who prays wishes Him whom he invokes to dwell
in himself also; and when he strives after this, practises righteousness,--a
kind of service by which God is attracted to dwell in the soul.
19. Let us see now what things are to be prayed for. For it has been
stated who it is that is prayed to, and where He dwells. First of all, then, of
those things which are prayed for comes this petition, "Hallowed be Thy name." And
this is prayed for, not as if the name of God were not holy already, but that
it may be held holy by men; i.e., that God may so become known to them, that
they shall reckon nothing more holy, and which they are more afraid of offending.
For, because it is said, "In Judah is God known; His name is great in
Israel,"[1] we are not to understand the statement in this way, as if God were less in
one place, greater in another; but there His name is great, where He is named
according to the greatness of His majesty. And so there His name is said to be
holy, where He is named with veneration and the fear of offending Him. And this
is what is now going on, while the gospel, by becoming known everywhere
throughout the different nations, commends the name of the one God by means of the
administration of His Son.
CHAP. VI.--20. In the next place there follows, "Thy kingdom come." Just as the Lord
Himself teaches in the Gospel that the day of judgment will take place at the
very time when the gospel shall have been preached among all nations:[2] a thing
which belongs to the hallowing of God's name. For here also the expression "Thy
kingdom come" is not used in such a way as if God were not now reigning. But
some one perhaps might say the expression "come" meant upon earth; as if, indeed,
He were not even now really reigning upon earth, and had not always reigned
upon it from the foundation of the world. "Come," therefore, is to be understood
in the sense of "manifested to men." For in the same way i also as a light
which is present is absent to the blind, and to those who shut their eyes; so the
kingdom of God, though it never departs from the earth, is yet absent to those
who are ignorant of it. But no one will be allowed to be ignorant of the
kingdom of God, when His Only-begotten shall come from heaven, not only in a way to
be apprehended by the understanding, but also visibly in the person of the
Divine Man, in order to judge the quick and the dead. And after that; judgment, i.e.
when the process of distinguishing and separating the righteous from the
unrighteous has taken place, God will so dwell in the righteous, that there will be
no need for any one being taught by man, but all will be, as it is written,
"taught of God."[3] Then will the blessed life in all its parts be perfected in
the saints unto eternity, just as now the most holy and blessed heavenly angels
are wise and blessed, from the fact that God alone is their light; because the
Lord hath promised this also to His own: "In the resurrection," says He, "they
will be as the angels in heaven."[4]
21. And therefore, after that petition where we say, "Thy kingdom come,"
there follows, "Thy will be done, as in heaven so in earth :" i.e., just as Thy
will is in the angels who are in heaven, so that they wholly cleave to Thee,
and thoroughly enjoy Thee, no error beclouding their wisdom, no misery hindering
their blessedness; so let it be done in Thy saints who are on earth, and made
from the earth, so far as the body is concerned, and who, although it is into a
heavenly habitation and exchange, are yet to be taken from the earth. To this
there is a reference also in that doxology of the angels, "Glory to God in the
highest,[5] and on earth peace to men of goodwill:"[1] so that when our goodwill
has gone before, which follows Him that calleth, the will of God is perfected
in us, as it is in the heavenly angels; so that no antagonism stands in the way
of our blessedness: and this is peace. "Thy will be done" is also rightly
understood in the sense of, Let obedience be rendered to Thy precepts: "as in
heaven so on earth," i.e. as by the angels so by men. For, that the will of God is
done when His precepts are obeyed, the Lord Himself says, when He affirms, "My
meat is to do the will of Him that sent me;"[2] and often, "I came, not to do
mine own will, but the will of Him that sent me;"[3] and when He says, "Behold my
mother and my brethren! For whosoever shall do the will of God,[4] the same is
my brother, and sister, and mother."[5] And therefore, in those at least who
do the will of God, the will of God is accomplished; not because they cause God
to will, but because they do what He wills, i.e. they do according to His will.
22. There is also that other interpretation, "Thy will be done as in
heaven so on earth,"--as in the holy and just, so also in sinners. And this,
besides, may be understood in two ways: either that we should pray even for our
enemies (for what else are they to be reckoned, in spite of whose will the Christian
and Catholic name still spreads?), so that it is said, "Thy will be done as in
heaven so on earth,"--as if the meaning were, As the righteous do Thy will, in
like manner let sinners also do it, so that they may be converted unto Thee; or
in this sense, "Let Thy will be done as in heaven so on earth," so that every
one may get his own; which will take place at the last judgment, the righteous
being requited with a reward, sinners with condemnation--when the sheep shall
be separated from the goats.[6]
23. That other interpretation also is not absurd, may, it is thoroughly
accordant with both our faith and hope, that we are to take heaven and earth in
the sense of spirit and flesh. And since the apostle says, "With the mind I
myself serve the law of God, but with the flesh the law of sin,"[7] we see that
the will of God is done in the mind, i.e. in the spirit. But when death shall
have been swallowed up in victory, and this mortal shall have put on immortality,
which will happen at the resurrection of the flesh, and at that change which is
promised to the righteous, according to the prediction of the same apostle,[8]
let the will of God be done on earth, as it is in heaven; i.e., in such a way
that, in like manner as the spirit does not resist God, but follows and does
His will, so the body also may not resist the spirit or soul, which at present is
harassed by the weakness of the body, and is prone to fleshly habit: and this
will be an element of the perfect peace in the life eternal, that not only will
the will be present with us, but also the performance of that which is good.
"For to will," says he, "is present with me; but how to perform that which is
good I find not:" for not yet in earth as in heaven, i.e. not yet in the flesh as
in the spirit, is the will of God done. For even in our misery the will of God
is done, when we suffer those things through the flesh which are due to us in
virtue of our mortality, which our nature has deserved because of its sin. But
we are to pray for this, that the will of God may be done as in heaven so in
earth; that in like manner as with the heart we delight in the law after the
inward man,[9] so also, when the change in our body has taken place, no part of us
may, on account of earthly griefs or pleasures, stand opposed to this our
delight.
24. Nor is that view inconsistent with truth, that we are to understand
the words, "Thy will be done as in heaven so in earth," as in our Lord Jesus
Christ Himself, so also in the Church: as if one were to say, As in the man who
fulfilled the will of the Father, so also in the woman who is betrothed to him.
For heaven and earth are suitably understood as if they were man and wife; since
the earth is fruitful from the heaven fertilizing it.
CHAP. VII.--25. The fourth petition is, "Give us this day our daily bread." Daily bread
is put either for all those things which meet the wants of this life, in
reference to which He says in His teaching, "Take no thought for the morrow:" so that
on this account there is added, "Give us this day:" or, it is put for the
sacrament of the body of Christ, which we daily receive: or, for the spiritual
food, of which the same Lord says, "Labour for the meat which perisheth not;"[10]
and again, "I am the bread of life,[11] which came down from heaven."[12] But
which of these three views is the more probable, is a question for consideration.
For perhaps some one may wonder why we should pray that we may obtain the
things which are necessary for this life,--such, for instance, as food and
clothing,--when the Lord Himself says, "Be not anxious what ye shall eat, or what ye
shall put on." Can any one not be anxious for a thing which he prays that he may
obtain; when prayer is to be offered with so great earnestness of mind, that to
this refers all that has been said about shutting our closets, and also the
command, "Seek ye first the kingdom of God, and His righteousness; and all these
things shall be added[1] unto you"? Certainly He does not say, Seek ye first
the kingdom of God, and then seek those other things; but "all these things,"
says He, "shall be added unto you," that is to say, even though ye are not seeking
them. But I know not whether it can be found out, how one is rightly said not
to seek what he most earnestly pleads with God that he may receive.
26. But with respect to the sacrament of the Lord's body (in order that
they may not start a question, who, the most of them being in Eastern parts; do
not partake of the Lord's supper daily, while this bread is called daily bread:
in order, therefore, that they may be silent, and not defend their way of
thinking about this matter even by the very authority of the Church, because they do
such things without scandal, and are not prevented from doing them by those
who preside over their churches, and when they do not obey are not condemned;
whence it is proved that this is not understood as daily bread in these parts:
for, if this were the case, they would be charged with the commission of a great
sin, who do not on that account receive it daily; but, as has been said, not to
argue at all to any extent from the case of such parties), this consideration
at least ought to occur to those who reflect, that we have received a rule for
prayer from the Lord, which we ought not to transgress, either by adding or
omitting anything. And since this is the case, who is there who would venture to
say that we ought only once to use the Lord's Prayer, or at least that, even if
we have used it a second or a third time before the hour at which we partake of
the Lord's body, afterwards we are assuredly not so to pray during the
remaining hours of the day? For we shall no longer be able to say, "Give us this day,
respecting what we have already received; or every one will be able to compel us
to celebrate that sacrament at the very last hour of the day.
27. It remains, therefore, that we should understand the daily bread as
spiritual, that is to say, divine precepts, which we ought daily to meditate and
to labour after. For just with respect to these the Lord says, "Labour for the
meat which perisheth not." That food, moreover, is called daily food at
present, so long as this temporal life is measured off by means of days that depart
and return. And, in truth, so long as the desire of the soul is directed by
turns, now to what is higher, now to what is lower, i.e. now to spiritual things,
now to carnal, as is the case with him who at one time is nourished with food,
at another time suffers hunger; bread is it daily necessary, in order that the
hungry man may be recruited, and he who is falling down may be raised up. As,
therefore, our body in this life, that is to say, before that great change, is
recruited with food, because it feels loss; so may the soul also, since by means
of temporal desires it sustains as it were a loss in its striving after God,
be reinvigorated by the food of the precepts. Moreover, it is said, "Give us
this day," as long as it is called to-day, i.e. in this temporal life. For we
shall be so abundantly provided with spiritual food after this life unto eternity,
that it will not then be called daily bread; because there the flight of time,
which causes days to succeed days, whence it may be called to-day, will not
exist. But as it is said, "To-day, if ye will hear His voice,"[2] which the
apostle interprets in the Epistle to the Hebrews, As long as it is called to-day;[3]
so here also the expression is to be understood, "Give us this day." But if any
one wishes to understand the sentence before us also of food necessary for the
body, or of the sacrament of the Lord's body, we must take all three meanings
conjointly; that is to say, that we are to ask for all at once as daily bread,
both the bread necessary for the body, and the visible hallowed bread, and the
invisible bread of the word of God.[4]
CHAP. VIII.--28. The fifth petition follows: "And forgive us our debts, as we also
forgives our debtors." It is manifest that by debts are meant sins, either from that
statement which the Lord Himself makes, "Thou shall by no means come out
thence, till thou hast paid the uttermost farthing;[6] or from the fact that He
called those men debtors who were reported to Him as having been killed, either
those on whom the tower fell, or those whose blood Herod had mingled with the
sacrifice. For He said that men supposed it was because they were debtors above
measure i.e. sinners, and added "I tell you, Nay: but, except ye repent, ye shall
all likewise die."[7] Here, therefore, it is not a money claim that one is
pressed to remit, but whatever sins another may have committed against him. For we
are enjoined to remit a money claim by that precept rather which has been given
above, "If any man will sue thee at the law, and take away thy coat, let him
have thy cloak also;"[1] nor is it necessary to remit a debt to every money
debtor; but only to him who is unwilling to pay, to such an extent that he wishes
even to go to law. "Now the servant of the Lord," as says the apostle, "must not
go to law."[2] And therefore to him who shall be unwilling, either
spontaneously or when requested, to pay the money which he owes, it is to be remitted. For
his unwillingness to pay will arise from one of two causes, either that he has
it not, or that he is avaricious and covetous of the property of another; and
both of these belong to a state of poverty: for the former is poverty of
substance, the latter poverty of disposition. Whoever, therefore, remits a debt to
such an one, remits it to one who is poor, and performs a Christian work; while
that rule remains in force, that he should be prepared in mind to lose what is
owing to him. For if he has used exertion in every way, quietly and gently, to
have it restored to him, not so much aiming at a money profit, as that he may
bring the man round to what is right, to whom without doubt it is hurtful to have
the means of paying, and yet not to pay; not only will he not sin, but he will
even do a very great service, in trying to prevent that other, who is wishing
to make gain of another's money, from making shipwreck of the faith; which is so
much more serious a thing, that there is no comparison. And hence it is
understood that in this fifth petition also, where we say, "Forgive us our debts "the
words are spoken not indeed in reference to money, but in reference to all
ways in which any one sins against us, and by consequence in reference to money
also. For the man who refuses to pay you the money which he owes, when he has the
means of doing so, sins against you. And if you do not forgive this sin, you
will not be able to say, "Forgive us, as we also forgive;" but if you pardon it,
you see how he who is enjoined to offer such a prayer is admonished also with
respect to forgiving a money debt.
29. That may indeed be construed in this way, that when we say, "Forgive
us our debts, as s we also forgive," then only are we convicted of having acted
contrary to this rule, if we do not forgive them who ask pardon, because we
also wish to be forgiven by our most gracious Father when we ask His pardon. But,
on the other hand, by that precept whereby we are enjoined to pray for our
enemies, it is not for those who ask pardon that we are enjoined to pray. For those
who are already in such a state of mind are no longer enemies. By no
possibility, however, could one truthfully say that he prays for one whom he has not
pardoned. And therefore we must confess that all sins which are committed against
us are to be forgiven, if we wish those to be forgiven by our Father which we
commit against Him. For the subject of revenge has been sufficiently discussed
already, as I think.[4]
CHAP. IX.--30. The sixth petition is, "And brings us not into temptation." Some
manuscripts have the word "lead,"[5] which is, I judge, equivalent in meaning: for
both translations have arisen from the one Greek word which is used. But many
parties in prayer express themselves thus, "Suffer us not to be led into
temptation;" that is to say, explaining in what sense the word "lead" is used. For God
does not Himself lead, but suffers that man to be led into temptation whom He
has deprived of His assistance, in accordance with a most hidden arrangement, and
with his deserts. Often, also, for manifest reasons, He judges him worthy of
being so deprived, and allowed to be led into temptation. But it is one thing to
be led into temptation, another to be tempted. For without temptation no one
can be proved, whether to himself, as it is written, "He that hath not been
tempted, what manner of things doth he know?"[6] or to another, as the apostle
says, "And your temptation in my flesh ye despised not:"[7] for from this
circumstance he learnt that they were stedfast, because they were not turned aside from
charity by those tribulations which had happened to the apostle according to
the flesh. For even before all temptations we are known to God, who knows all
things before they happen.
31. When, therefore, it is said, "The Lord your God tempteth (proveth)
you, that He may know if ye love Him,"[8] the words "that He may know" are
employed for what is the real state of the case, that He may make you know: just as we
speak of a joyful day, because it makes us joyful; of a sluggish frost,
because it makes us sluggish; and of innumerable things of the same sort, which are
found either in ordinary speech, or in the discourse of learned men, or in the
Holy Scriptures. And the heretics who are opposed to the Old Testament, not
understanding this, think that the brand of ignorance, as it were, is to be placed
upon Him of whom it is said, "The Lord your God tempteth you:" as if in the
Gospel it were not written of the Lord, "And this He said to tempt (prove) him,
for He Himself knew what He would do."[1] For if He knew the heart of him whom He
was tempting, what is it that He wished to see by tempting him? But in
reality, that was done in order that he who was tempted might become known to himself,
and that he might condemn his own despair, on the multitudes being filled with
the Lord's bread, while he had thought they had not enough to eat.
32. Here, therefore, the prayer is not, that we should not be tempted, but
that we should not be brought into temptation: as if, were it necessary that
any one should be examined by fire, he should pray, not that he should not be
touched by the fire, but that he should not be consumed. For "the furnace proveth
the potter's vessels. and the trial of tribulation righteous men."[2] Joseph
therefore was tempted with the allurement of debauchery, but he was not brought
into temptation.[3] Susanna was tempted, but she was not led or brought into
temptation;[4] and many others of both sexes: but Job most of all, in regard to
whose admirable stedfastness in the Lord his God, those heretical enemies of the
Old Testament, when they wish to mock at it with sacrilegious mouth, brandish
this above other weapons, that Satan begged that he should be tempted.[5] For
they put the question to unskilful men by no means able to understand such
things, how Satan could speak with God: not understanding (for they cannot, inasmuch
as they are blinded by superstition and controversy) that God does not occupy
space by the mass of His corporeity; and thus exist in one place, and not in
another, or at least have one part here, and another elsewhere: but that He is
everywhere present in His majesty, not divided by parts, but everywhere complete.
But if they take a fleshly view of what is said, "The heaven is my throne, and
the earth is my footstool,"[6]--to which passage our Lord also bears
testimony, when He says, "Swear not at all: neither by heaven, for it is God's throne;
nor by the earth, for it is His footstool,"[7]--what wonder if the devil, being
placed on earth, stood before the feet of God, and spoke something in His
presence ? For when will they be able to understand that there is no soul, however
wicked, which can yet reason in any way, in whose conscience God does not speak
? For who but God has written the law of nature in the hearts of men?--that law
concerning which the apostle says: "For when the Gentiles, which have not the
law, do by nature the things contained in the law, these, having not the law,
are a law unto themselves: which show the work of the law written in their
hearts, their conscience also bearing them witness,[8] and their thoughts[9] the
meanwhile accusing or else excusing one another, in the day when the Lord[10]
shall judge the secrets of men."[11] And therefore, as in the case of every
rational soul, which thinks and reasons, even though blinded by passion, we attribute
whatever in its reasoning is true, not to itself but to the very light of truth
by which, however faintly, it is according to its capacity illuminated, so as
to perceive some measure of truth by its reasoning; what wonder if the depraved
spirit of the devil, perverted though it be by lust, should be represented as
having heard from the voice of God Himself, i.e. from the voice of the very
Truth, whatever true thought it has entertained about a righteous man whom it was
proposing to tempt? But whatever is false is to be attributed to that lust from
which he has received the name of devil. Although it is also the case that God
has often spoken by means of a corporeal and visible creature whether to good
or bad, as being Lord and Governor of all, and Disposer according to the merits
of every deed: as, for instance, by means of angels, who appeared also under
the aspect of men; and by means of the prophets, saying, Thus saith the Lord.
What wonder then, if, though not in mere thought, at least by means of some
creature fitted for such a work, God is said to have spoken with the devil?
33. And let them not imagine it unworthy of His dignity, and as it were of
His righteousness, that God spoke with him: inasmuch as He spoke with an
angelic spirit, although one foolish and lustful, just as if He were speaking with a
foolish and lustful human spirit. Or let such parties themselves tell us how
He spoke with that rich man, whose most foolish covetousness He wished to
censure, saying: "Thou fool, this night thy soul shall be required[12] of thee: then
whose shall those things be which thou hast provided?"[13] Certainly the Lord
Himself says so in the Gospel, to which those heretics, whether they will or no,
bend their necks. But if they are puzzled by this circumstance, that Satan
asks from God that a righteous man should be tempted; I do not explain how it
happened, but I compel them to explain why it is said in the Gospel by the Lord
Himself to the disciples, "Behold, Satan hath desired to have you, that he may
sift you as wheat;"[1] and He says to Peter, "But I have prayed for thee, that thy
faith fail not."[2] And when they explain this to me, they explain to
themselves at the same time that which they question me about. But if they should not
be able to explain this, let them not dare with rashness to blame in any book
what they read in the Gospel without offence.
34. Temptations, therefore, take place by means of Satan not by his power,
but by the Lord's permission, either for the purpose of punishing men for
their sins, or of proving and exercising them in accordance with the Lord's
compassion. And there is a very great difference in the nature of the temptations
into which each one may fall. For Judas, who sold his Lord, did not fall into one
of the same nature as Peter fell into, when, under the influence of terror, he
denied his Lord. There are also temptations common to man, I believe, when
every one, though well disposed, yet yielding to human frailty, falls into error in
some plan, or is irritated against a brother, in the earnest endeavour to
bring him round to what is right, yet a little more than Christian calmness
demands: concerning which temptations the apostle says, "There hath no temptation
taken you but such as is common to man;" while he says at the same time, "But God
is faithful, who will not suffer[3] you to be tempted above that ye are able;
but will with the temptation also make a way to escape, that ye may be able to
bear[4] it."[5] And in that sentence he makes it sufficiently evident that we are
not to pray that we may not be tempted, but that we may not be led into
temptation. For we are led into temptation, if such temptations have happened to us
as we are not able to bear. But when dangerous temptations, into which it is
ruinous for us to be brought and led, arise either from prosperous or adverse
temporal circumstances, no one is broken down by the irksomeness of adversity, who
is not led captive by the delight of prosperity.[6]
35. The seventh and last petition is, "But deliver us from evil."[7] For
we are to pray not! only that we may not be led into the evil from which we are
free, which is asked in the sixth place; but that we may also be delivered from
that into which we have been already led. And when this has been done, nothing
will remain terrible, nor will any temptation at all have to be feared. And
yet in this life, so long as we carry about our present mortality, into which we
were led by the persuasion of the serpent, it is not to be hoped that this can
be the case; but yet we are to hope that at some future time it will take
place: and this is the hope which is not seen, of which the apostle, when speaking,
said, "But hope which is seen is not hope."[8] But yet the wisdom which is
granted in this life also, is not to be despaired of by the faithful servants of
God. And it is this, that we should with the most wary vigilance shun what we
have understood, from the Lord's revealing it, is to be shunned; and that we
should with the most ardent love seek after what we have understood, from the Lord's
revealing it, is to be sought after. For thus, after the remaining burden of
this mortality has been laid down in the act of dying, there shall be perfected
in every, part of man at the fit time, the blessedness which has been begun in
this life, and which we have from time to time strained every nerve to lay
hold of and secure.
CHAP. X.--36. But the distinction among these seven petitions is to be considered and
commended. For inasmuch as our temporal life is being spent now, and that
which is eternal hoped for, and inasmuch as eternal things are superior in point
of dignity, albeit it is only when we have done with temporal things that we
pass to the other; although the three first petitions begin to be answered in
this life, which is being spent in the present world (for both the hallowing of
God's name begins to be carried on just with the coming of the lord of
humility; and the coming of His kingdom, to which He will come in splendour, will be
manifested, not after the end of the world, but in the end of the world; and the
perfect doing of His will in earth as in heaven, whether you understand by
heaven and earth the righteous and sinners, or spirit and flesh, or the Lord and
the Church, or all these things together, will be brought to completion just
with the perfecting of our blessedness, and therefore at the close of the world),
yet all three will remain to eternity. For both the hallowing of God's name
will go on for ever, and there is no end of His kingdom, and eternal life is
promised to our perfected blessedness. Hence those three things will remain
consummated and thoroughly completed in that life which is promised us.
37. But the other four things which we ask seem to me to belong to this
temporal life.[9] And the first of them is, "Give us this day our daily bread."
For whether by this same thing which is called daily bread be meant spiritual
bread, or that which is visible in the sacrament or in this sustenance of ours,
it belongs to the present time, which He has called "to-day," not because
spiritual food is not everlasting, but because that which is called daily food in the
Scriptures is represented to the soul either by the sound of tim expression or
by temporal signs of any kind: things all of which will certainly no more have
existence when all shall be taught of God,[1] and thus shall no longer be
making known to others by movement of their bodies, but drinking in each one for
himself by the purity of his mind the ineffable light of truth itself. For
perhaps for this reason also it is called bread, not drink, because bread is
converted into aliment by breaking and masticating it, just as the Scriptures feed the
soul by being opened up and made the subject of discourse; but drink, when
prepared, passes as it is into the body: so that at present the truth is bread,
when it is called daily, bread; but then it will be drink, when there will be no
need of the labour of discussing and discoursing, as it were of breaking and
masticating, but merely of drinking unmingled and transparent truth. And sins are
at present forgiven us, and at present we forgive them; which is the second
petition of these four that remain: but then there will be no pardon of sins,
because there will be no sins. And temptations molest this temporal life; but they
will have no existence when these words shall be fully realized, "Thou shall
hide them in the secret of Thy presence."[2] And the evil from which we wish to
be delivered, and the deliverance from evil itself, belong certainly to this
life, which as being mortal we have deserved at the hand of God's justice, and
from which we are delivered by His mercy.
CHAP. XI.--38. The sevenfold number of these petitions also seems to me to correspond
to that sevenfold number out of which the whole sermon before us has had its
rise.[3] For if it is the fear of God through which the poor in spirit are
blessed, inasmuch as theirs is the kingdom of heaven; let us ask that the name of God
may be hallowed among men through that "fear which is clean, enduring for
ever."[4] If it is piety through which the meek are blessed, inasmuch as they shall
inherit the earth; let us ask that His kingdom may come, whether it be over
ourselves, that we may become meek, and not resist Him, or whether it be from
heaven to earth in the splendour of the Lord's advent, in which we shall rejoice,
and shall be praised, when He says, "Come, ye blessed of my Father, inherit[5]
the kingdom prepared for you from the foundation[6] of the world."[7] For "in
the Lord," says the prophet, "shall my soul be praised; the meek shall hear
thereof, and be glad."[8] If it is knowledge through which those who mourn are
blessed, inasmuch as they shall be comforted; let us pray that His will may be done
as in heaven so in earth, because when the body, which is as it were the
earth, shall agree in a final and complete peace with the soul, which is as it were
heaven, we shall not mourn: for there is no other mourning belonging to this
present time, except when these contend against each other, and compel us to say,
"I see another law in my members, warring against the law of my mind;" and to
testify our grief with tearful voice, "O wretched[9] man that I am ! who shall
deliver me from the body of this death?[10] If it is fortitude through which
those are blessed who hunger and thirst after righteousness, inasmuch as they
shall be filled; let us pray that our daily bread may be given to us to-day, by
which, supported and sustained, we may be able to reach that most abundant
fulness. If it is prudence through which the merciful are blessed, inasmuch as they
shall obtain mercy; let us forgive their debts to our debtors, and let us pray
that ours may be forgiven to us. If it is understanding through which the pure
in heart are blessed, inasmuch as they shall see God; let us pray not to be led
into temptation, lest we should have a double heart, in not seeking after a
single good, to which we may refer all our actings, but at the same time pursuing
things temporal and earthly. For temptations arising from those things which
seem to men burdensome and calamitous, have no power over us, if those other
temptations have no power which befall us through the enticements of such things as
men count good and cause for rejoicing. If it is wisdom through which the
peacemakers are blessed, inasmuch as they shall be called the children of God;[11]
let us pray that we may be freed from evil, for that very freedom will make us
free, i.e. sons of God, so that we may cry in the spirit of adoption, "Abba,
Father."[12]
39. Nor are we indeed carelessly to pass by the circumstance, that of all
those sentences in which the Lord has taught us to pray, He has judged that
that one is chiefly to be commended which has reference to the forgiveness of
sins: in which He would have us to be merciful, because it is the only wisdom for
escaping misery. For in no other sentence do we pray in such a way that we, as
it were, enter into a compact with God: for we say, "Forgive us, as we also
forgive." And if we lie in that compact, the whole prayer is fruitless. For He
speaks thus: "For if ye forgive men their trespasses, your heavenly Father will
also forgive you: But if ye forgive not men their trespasses, neither will your
Father forgive your trespasses."
CHAP. XII.--40. There follows a precept concerning fasting, having reference to that
same purification of heart which is at present under discussion. For in this work
also we must be on our guard, lest there should creep in a certain ostentation
and hankering after the praise of man, which would make the heart double, and
not allow it to be pure and single for apprehending God. "Moreover, when ye
fast," says He, "be not, as the hypocrites, of a sad countenance: for they
disfigure their faces,[1] that they may appear[1] unto men to fast. Verily I say unto
you, they have their reward. But ye,[2] when ye fast, anoint your head, and wash
your face; that ye appear not unto men to fast, but unto your Father which is
in secret: and your Father, which seeth in secret, shall reward you." It is
manifest from these precepts that all our effort is to be directed towards inward
joys, lest, seeking a reward from without, we should be conformed to this
world, and should lose the promise of a blessedness so much the more solid and firm,
as it is inward, in which God has chosen that we should become conformed to
the image of His Son.[3]
41. But in this section it is chiefly to be noticed, that there may be
ostentatious display not merely in the splendour and pomp of things pertaining to
the booty, but also in doleful squalor itself; and the more dangerous on this
account, that it deceives under the name of serving God. And therefore he who is
very conspicuous by immoderate attention to the body, and by the splendour of
his clothing or other things, is easily convicted by the things themselves of
being a follower of the pomps of the world, and misleads no one by a cunning
semblance of sanctity;I but in regard to him who under a profession of
Christianity, fixes the eyes of men upon himself by unusual squalor and filth, when he
does it voluntarily, and not under the pressure of necessity, it may be
conjectured from the rest of his actings whether he does this from contempt of
superfluous attention to the body, or from a certain ambition: for the Lord has enjoined
us to beware of wolves under a sheep's skin; but "by their fruits," says He,
"shall ye know them." For when by temptations of any kind those very things
begin to be withdrawn from them or refused to them, which under that veil they
either have obtained or desire to obtain, then of necessity it appears whether it
is a wolf in a sheep's skin or a sheep in its own. For a Christian ought not to
delight the eyes of men by superfluous ornament on this account, because
pretenders also too often assume that frugal and merely necessary dress, that they
may deceive those who are not on their guard: for those sheep also ought not to
lay aside their own skins, if at any time wolves cover themselves there with.
42. It is usual, therefore, to ask what He means, when He says: "But ye,
when ye fast, anoint your head, and wash your faces, that ye appear not unto men
to fast." For it would not be right in any one to teach (although we may wash
our face according to daily custom) that we ought also to have our heads
anointed when we fast. If, then, all admit this to be most unseemly, we must
understand this precept with respect to anointing the head and washing the face as
referring to the inner man. [4] Hence, to anoint the head refers to joy; to wash
the face, on the other hand, refers to purity: and therefore that man anoints his
head who rejoices inwardly in his mind and reason. For we rightly understand
that as being the head which has the pre-eminence in the soul, and by which it
is evident that the other parts of man are ruled and governed. And this is done
by him who does not seek his joy from without, so as to draw his delight in a
fleshly way from the praises of men. For the flesh, which ought to be subject,
is in no way the head of the whole nature of man. "No man," indeed, "ever yet
hated his own flesh," as the apostle says, when giving the precept as to loving
one's wife;[5] but the man is the head of the woman, and Christ is the head of
the man.[6] Let him, therefore, rejoice inwardly in his fasting[7] in this very
circumstance, that by his fasting he so turns away from the pleasure of the
world as to be subject to Christ, who according to this precept desires to have
the head anointed. For thus also he will wash his face, i.e. cleanse his heart,
with which he shall see God, no veil being interposed on account of the
infirmity contracted from squalor; but being firm and stedfast, inasmuch as he is pure
and guileless. "Wash you," says He, "make you clean; put away the evil of your
doings from before mine eyes."[1] From the squalor, therefore, by which the
eye of God is offended, our face is to be washed. For we, with open face
beholding as in a glass the glory of the Lord, are changed into the same image.[2]
43. Often also the thought of things necessary belonging to this life
wounds and defiles our inner eye; and frequently it makes the heart double, so that
in regard to those things in which we seem to act rightly with our fellowmen,
we do not act with that heart wherewith the Lord enjoins us; i.e., it is not
because we love them, but because we wish to obtain some advantage from them for
the necessity of the present life. But we ought to do them good for their
eternal salvation, not for our own temporal advantage. May God, therefore, incline
our heart to His testimonies, and not to covetousness.[3] For "the end of the
commandment is charity out of a pure heart, and of a good conscience, and of
faith unfeigned."[4] But he who looks after his brother from a regard to his own
necessities in this life, does not certainly do so from love, because he does not
look after him whom he ought to love as himself, but after himself; or rather
not even after himself, seeing that in this way he makes his own heart double,
i by which he is hindered from seeing God, in the vision of whom alone there is
certain and lasting blessedness.
CHAP. XIII.--44. Rightly, therefore, does he who is intent on cleansing our heart follow
up s what He has said with a precept, where He says: "Lay not up[6] for
yourselves treasures upon earth, where moth and rust[7] doth corrupt,[6] and where
thieves break through and steal: but lay up for yourselves treasures in heaven,
where neither moth nor rust doth corrupt, and where thieves do not break through
nor steal. For where your treasure is, there will your heart be[8] also." If,
therefore, the heart be on earth, i.e. if one perform anything with a heart bent
on obtaining earthly advantage, how will that heart be clean which wallows on
earth? But if it be in heaven, it will be clean, because whatever things are
heavenly are clean. For anything becomes polluted when it is mixed with a nature
that is inferior, although not polluted of its kind; for gold is polluted even
by pure silver, if it be mixed with it: so also our mind becomes polluted by
the desire after earthly things, although the earth itself be pure of its kind
and order. But we would not understand heaven in this passage as anything
corporeal, because everything corporeal is to be reckoned as earth. For he who lays up
treasure for himself in heaven ought to despise the whole world. Hence it is
in that heaven of which it is said, "The heaven of heavens is the Lord's[9] i.e.
in the spiritual firmament: for it is not in that which is to pass away that
we ought to fix and place our treasure and our heart, but in that which ever
abideth; but heaven and earth shall pass away.[10]
45. And here He makes it manifest that He gives all these precepts with a
view to the cleansing of the heart, when He says: "The candle" of the body is
the eye: if therefore thine eye be single, thy whole body shall be full of
light. But if thine eye be evil, thy whole body shall be full of darkness. If,
therefore, the light [lamp][11] that is in thee be darkness, how great is that
darkness!" And this passage we are to understand in such a way as to learn from it
that all our works are pure and well-pleasing in the sight of God, when they
are done with a single heart, i.e. with a heavenly intent, having that end of
love in view; for love is also the fulfilling of the law.[12] Hence we ought to
take the eye here in the sense of the intent itself, wherewith we do whatever we
are doing; and if this be pure and right, and looking at that which ought to be
looked at, all our works which we perform in accordance therewith are
necessarily good. And all those works He has called the whole body; for the apostle
also speaks of certain works of which he disapproves as our members, and teaches
that they are to be mortified, saying, "Mortify therefore your members which are
upon the earth; fornication, uncleanness, covetousness,"[13] and all other
such things.[14]
46. It is not, therefore, what one does, but the intent with which he does
it, that is to be considered. For this is the light in us, because it is a
thing manifest to ourselves that we do with a good intent what we are doing; for
everything which is made manifest is light.[15] For the deeds themselves which
go forth from us to human society, have an uncertain issue; and therefore He has
called them darkness. For I do not know, when I present money to a poor man
who asks it, either what he is to do with it, or what he is to suffer from it;
and it may happen that he does some evil with it, or suffers some evil on account
of it, a thing I did not wish to happen when I gave it to him, nor would I
have given it with such an intention. If, therefore, I did it with a good
intention,--a thing which was known to me when I was doing it, and is therefore called
light,--my deed also is lighted up, whatever issue it shall have; but that
issue, inasmuch as it is uncertain and unknown, is called darkness. But if I have
done it with a bad intent, the light itself even is darkness. For it is spoken
of as light, because every one knows with what intent he acts, even when he acts
with a bad intent; but the light itself is darkness, because the aim is not
directed singly to things above, but is turned downwards to things beneath, and
makes, as it were, a shadow by means of a double heart. "If, therefore, the
light that is in thee be darkness, how great is that darkness!" i.e., if the very
intent of the heart with which you do what you are doing (which is known to you)
is polluted by the hunger after earthly and temporal things, and blinded, how
much more is the deed itself, whose issue is uncertain, polluted and full of
darkness! Because, although what you do with an intent which is neither upright
nor pure, may turn out for some one's good, it is the way in which you have done
it, not how it has turned out for him, that is reckoned to you.[1]
CHAP. XIV.--47. Then, further, the statement which follows, "No man can serve two
masters," is to be referred to this very intent, as He goes on to explain, saying:
"For either he will hate the one, and love the other; or else he will[2] submit
to the one, and despise the other." And these words are to be carefully
considered; for who the two masters are he forthwith shows, when He says, "Ye cannot
serve God and mammon." Riches are said to be called mammon among the Hebrews. The
Punic name also corresponds: for gain is called mammon in Punic.[3] But he who
serves mammon certainly serves him who, as being set over those earthly things
in virtue of his perversity, is called by our Lord the prince of this
world.[4] A man will therefore "either hate" this one, "and love the other," i.e. God;
"or he will submit to the one, and despise the other. For whoever serves mammon
submits to a hard and ruinous master: for, being entangled by his own lust, he
becomes a subject of the devil, and he does not love him; for who is there who
loves the devil? But yet he submits to him; as in any large house he who is
connected with another man's maid servant submits to hard bondage on account of
his passion. even though he does not love him whose maid-servant he loves.
48. But "he will despise the other," He has said; not, he will hate. For
almost no one's conscience can hate God; but he despises, i.e. he does not fear
Him, as if feeling himself secure in consideration of His goodness. From this
carelessness and ruinous security the Holy Spirit recalls us, when He says by
the prophet, "My son, do not add sin upon sin, and say, The mercy of God is great
;"[5] and, "Knowest thou not that the patience[6] of God inviteth[6] thee to
repentance?"[7] For whose mercy can be mentioned as being so great as His, who
pardons all the sins of those who return, and makes the wild olive a partaker of
the fatness of the olive? and whose severity as being so great as His, who
spared not the natural branches, but broke them off because of unbelief?[8] But
let not any one who wishes to love God, and to beware of offending Him, suppose
that he can serve two masters;[9] and let him disentangle the upright intention
of his heart from all doubleness: for thus he will think of the Lord with a
good heart, and in simplicity of heart will seek Him.[10]
CHAP. XV.--49. "Therefore," says He, "I say unto you, Have not anxiety" for your life,
what ye shall eat;[12] nor yet for your body, what ye shall put on." Lest
perchance, although it is not now superfluities that are sought after, the heart
should be made double by reason of necessaries themselves, and the aim should be
wrenched aside to seek after those things of our own, when we are doing
something as it were from compassion; i.e. so that when we wish to appear to be
consulting for some one's good, we are in that matter looking after our own profit
rather than his advantage: and we do not seem to ourselves to be sinning for this
reason, that it is not superfluities, but necessaries, which we wish to obtain.
But the Lord admonishes us that we should remember that God, when He made and
compounded us of body and soul, gave us much more than food and clothing,
through care for which He would not have us make our heart, double. "Is not," says
He, "the soul more than the meat ?" So that you are to understand that He who
gave the soul will much more easily give meat. "And the body than the raiment,"
I.e. is more than raiment: so that similarly you are to understand, that He who
gave the body will much more easily give raiment.
50. And in this passage the question is wont to be raised, whether the
food spoken of has reference to the soul, since the soul is incorporeal, and the
food in question is corporeal food. But let us admit that the soul in this
passage stands for the present life, whose support is that corporeal nourishment. In
accordance with this signification we have also that statement: "He that
loveth his soul shall lose it."[1] And here, unless we understand the expression of
this present life, which we ought to lose for the kingdom of God, as it is
clear the martyrs were able to do, this precept will be in contradiction to that
sentence where it is said: "What is a man profited, if he shall gain the whole
world, and lose[2] his own soul?"[3]
51. "Behold," says He, "the fowls of the air: for they sow not, neither
do they reap, nor gather into barns; yet your heavenly Father feedeth them: are
ye not much better than they?" i.e. ye are of more value. For surely a rational
being such as man has a higher rank in the nature of things than irrational
ones, such as birds. "Which of you, by taking thought,[4] can add one cubit unto
his stature?[5] And why take ye thought for raiment?" That is to say, the
providence of Him by whose power and sovereignty it has come about that your body
was brought up to its present stature, can also clothe you; but that it is not by
your care that it has come about that your body should arrive at this stature,
may be understood from this circumstance, that if you should take thought, and
should wish to add one cubit to this stature, you cannot. Leave, therefore,
the care of protecting the body to Him by whose care you see it has come about
that you have a body of such a statute.
52. But an example was to be given for the clothing too, just as one is
given for the food. Hence He goes on to say, "Consider the lilies of the field,
how they grow; they toil not, neither do they spin: and yet I say unto you, that
even Solomon[6] in all his glory was not arrayed[7] like one of these.
Wherefore, if God so clothe the grass of the field, which to-day is, and to-morrow is
cast into the oven; shall He not much more clothe you, O ye of little faith ?"
But these examples are not to be treated as allegories, so that we should
inquire what the fowls of heaven or the lilies of the field mean: for they stand
here, in order that from smaller matters we may be persuaded respecting greater
ones;[8] just as is the case in regard to the judge who neither feared God nor
regarded man, and yet yielded to the widow who often importuned him to consider
her case, not from piety or humanity, but that he might be saved annoyance. For
that unjust judge does not in any way allegorically represent the person of
God; but yet as to how far God, who is good and just, cares for those who
supplicate Him, our Lord wished the inference to be drawn from this circumstance,
that not even an unjust man can despise those who assail him with unceasing
petitions, even were his motive merely to avoid annoyance [9].
CHAP. XVI.--53. "Therefore be not anxious," says He," saying, What shall we eat?[10] or,
What shall we drink ? or, Wherewithal shall we be clothed?[10] (For after all
these things do the Gentiles seek:) for your Father knoweth that ye have need
of all these things. But seek ye first the kingdom of God and His
righteousness; and all these things shall be added[11] unto you." Here He shows most
manifestly that these things are not to be sought as if they were our blessings in
such sort, that on account of them we ought to do well in all our actings, but yet
that they are necessary. For what the difference is between a blessing which
is to be sought, and a necessary which is to be taken for use, He has made plain
by this sentence, when He says, "Seek ye first the kingdom of God and His
righteousness, and all these things shall be added unto you."[12] The kingdom and
the righteousness of God therefore are our good; and this is to be sought, and
there the end is to be set up, on account of which we are to do everything which
we do. But because we serve as soldiers in this life, in order that we may be
able to reach that kingdom, and because our life cannot be spent without these
necessaries, "These things shall be added unto you," says He; "but seek ye
first the kingdom of God and His righteousness." For in using that word "first," He
has indicated that this is to be sought later, not in point of time, but in
point of importance: the one as being our good, the other as being something
necessary for us; but the necessary on account of that good.
54. For neither ought we, for example, to preach the gospel with this
object, that we may eat; but to eat with this object, that we may preach the
gospel: for if we preach the gospel for this cause, that we may eat, we reckon the
gospel of less value than food; and in that case our good will be in eating, but
that which is necessary for us in preaching the gospel. And this the apostle
also forbids, when he says it is lawful for himself even, and permitted by the
Lord, that they who preach the gospel should live of the gospel, i.e. should have
from the gospel the necessaries of this life; but yet that he has not made use
of this power. For there were many who were desirous of having an occasion for
getting and selling the gospel, from whom the apostle wished to cut off this
occasion, and therefore he submitted to a way of living by his own hands.[1] For
concerning these parties he says in another passage, "That I may cut off
occasion from them which seek[2] occasion."[3] Although even if, like the rest of
the good apostles, by the permission of the Lord he should live of tim gospel, he
would not on that account place the end of preaching the gospel in that
living, but would rather make the gospel the end of his living; i.e., as I have said
above, he would not preach the gospel with this object, that he might get his
food and all other necessaries; but he would take such things for this purpose,
in order that he might carry out that other object, viz. that willingly, and
not of necessity, he should preach the gospel. For this he disapproves of when he
says, "Do ye not know, that they which minister in the temple[4] eat the
things which are of the temple? and they which wait at the altar are partakers with
the altar? Even so hath the Lord ordained that they which preach the gospel
should live of the gospel. But I have used none of these things." Hence he shows
that it was permitted, not commanded; otherwise he will be held to have acted
contrary to the precept of the Lord. Then he goes on to say: '" Neither have I
written these things, that it should be so done unto me: for it were better for
me to die, than that any man should make my glorying void."[5] This he said, as
he had already resolved, because of some who were seeking occasion, to gain a
living by his own hands. "For if I preach the gospel," says he, "I have nothing
to glory of:" i.e., if I preach the gospel in order that such things may be
done in my case, or, if I preach with this object, in order that I may obtain
those things, and if I thus place the end of the gospel in meat and drink and
clothing. But wherefore has he nothing to glory of? "Necessity," says he," is laid
upon me;" i.e. so that I should preach the gospel for this reason, because I
have not the means of living, or so that I should acquire temporal fruit from the
preaching of eternal things; for thus, consequently, the preaching of the
gospel will be a matter of necessity, not of free choice "For woe is unto me" says
he, "if I preach not the gospel! But how ought he to preach the gospel?
Evidently in such a way as to place the reward in the gospel itself, and in the kingdom
of God: for thus he can preach the gospel, not of constraint, but willingly.
"For if I do this thing willingly," says he, "I have a reward: but if against my
will, a dispensation of the gospel is committed unto me; "[6] if, constrained
by the want of those things which are necessary for temporal life, I preach the
gospel, others will have through me the reward of the gospel, who love the
gospel itself when I preach it; but I shall not have it, because it is not the
gospel itself I love, but its price lying in those temporal things. And this is
something sinful, that any one should minister the gospel not as a son, but as a
servant to whom a stewardship of it has been committed; that he should, as it
were, pay out what belongs to another, but should himself receive nothing from
it except victuals, which are given not in consideration of his sharing in the
kingdom, but from without, for the support of a miserable bondage. Although in
another passage he calls himself also a steward. For a servant also, when
adopted into the number of the children, is able faithfully to dispense to those who
share with him that property in which he has acquired the lot of a fellow-heir.
But in the present case, where he says, "But if against my will, a
dispensation (stewardship) is committed unto me," he wished such a steward to be
understood as dispenses what belongs to another, and from it gets nothing himself.
55. Hence anything whatever that is sought for the sake of something else,
is doubtless inferior to that for the sake of which it is sought; and
therefore that is first for the sake of which you seek such a thing, not the thing
which you seek for the sake of that other. And for this reason, if we seek the
gospel and the kingdom of God for the sake of food, we place food first, and the
kingdom of God last; so that if food were not to fail us, we would not seek the
kingdom of God: this is to seek food first, and then the kingdom of God. But if
we seek food for this end, that we may gain the kingdom of God, we do what is
said, "Seek ye first the kingdom of God and His righteousness; and all these
things shall be added unto you."[1]
CHAP. XVII.--56. For in the case of those who are seeking first the kingdom of God and
His righteousness, i.e. who are preferring this to all other things, so that for
its sake they are seeking the other things, there ought not to remain behind
the anxiety lest those things should fail which are necessary to this life for
the sake of the kingdom of God. For He has said above, I "Your Father knoweth
that ye have need of all these things." And therefore, when He had said, "Seek
ye first the kingdom of God and His righteousness," He did not say, Then seek
such things (although they are necessary), but He affirms "all these things
shall be added unto you," [1] i.e. will follow, if ye seek the former, without any
hindrance on your part: lest while ye seek such things, ye should be turned
away from the other; or lest ye should set up two things to be aimed at, so as to
seek both the kingdom of God for its own sake, and such necessaries: but these
rather for the sake of that other; so shall they not be wanting to you. For ye
cannot serve two masters. But the man is attempting to serve two masters, who
seeks both the kingdom of God as a great good, and these temporal things. He
will not, however, be able to have a single eye, and to serve the Lord God alone,
unless he take all other things, so far as they are necessary, for the sake of
this one thing, i.e. for the sake of the kingdom of God. But as all who serve
as soldiers receive provisions and pay, so all who preach the gospel receive
food and clothing. But all do not serve as soldiers for the welfare of the
republic, but some do so for what they get: so also all do not minister to God for the
welfare of the Church, but some do so for the sake of these temporal things,
which they are to obtain in the shape as it were of provisions and pay; or both
for the one thing and for the other. But it has been already said above, "Ye
cannot serve two masters." Hence it is with a single heart and only for the sake
of the kingdom of God that we ought to do good to all; and we ought not in
doing so to think either of the temporal reward alone, or of that along with the
kingdom of God: all which temporal things He has placed under the category of
to-morrow, saying, "Take no thought for to-morrow."[2] For to-morrow is not spoken
of except in time, where the future succeeds the past. Therefore, when we do
anything good, let us not think of what is temporal, but of what is eternal;
then will that be a good and perfect work. "For the morrow," says He, "will be
anxious for the things of itself; "[3] i.e., so that, when you ought, you will
take food, or drink, or clothing, that is to say, when necessity itself begins to
urge you. For these things will be within reach, because our Father knoweth
that we have need of all these things. For "sufficient unto the day," says He, "is
the evil thereof; "[4] i.e. it is sufficient that necessity itself will urge
us to take such things. And for this reason, I suppose, it is called evil,
because for us it is penal: for it belongs to this frailty and mortality which we
have earned by sinning. Do not add, therefore, to this punishment of temporal
necessity anything more burdensome, so that you should not only suffer the what of
such things, but should also for the purpose of satisfying this want enlist as
a soldier for God.
57. In the use of this passage, however, we must be very specially on our
guard, lest perchance, when we see any servant of God making provision that
such necessaries shall not be wanting either to himself or to those with whose
care he has been entrusted, we should decide that he is acting contrary to the
Lord's precept, and is anxious for the morrow.[5] For the Lord Himself also,
although angels ministered to Him,[6] yet for the sake of example, that no one might
afterwards be scandalized when he observed any of His servants procuring such
necessaries, condescended to have money bags, out of which whatever might be
required for necessary uses might be provided; of which bags, as it is written,
Judas, who betrayed Him, was the keeper and the thief.[7] In like manner, the
Apostle Paul also may seem to have taken thought for the morrow, when he said:
"Now concerning the collection for the saints, as I have given order to the
saints of Galatia, even so do ye: upon the first day of the week let every one of
you lay by him in store[1] what shall seem good unto him, that there be no
gatherings when I conic. And when I come[2] whomsoever ye shall approve by your
letters, them will I send to bring your liberality unto Jerusalem. And if it be meet
that I go also, they shall go with me. Now I will come unto you when I shall
pass through Macedonia: for I shall pass through Macedonia. And it may be that I
will abide, yea, and winter with you, that ye may bring me on my journey
whithersoever I go. For I will not see you now by the way; but I trust to tarry a
while with you, if the Lord permit. But I will tarry at Ephesus until
Pentecost."[3] In the Acts of the Apostles also it is written, that such things as are
necessary for food were provided for the future, on account of an impending
famine. For we thus read: "And in these days came prophets down from Jerusalem to
Antioch,[4] and there was great rejoicing. And when we were gathered together,[4]
there stood up one of them named Agabus, and signified by the Spirit that there
should be great dearth throughout all the world: which came to pass in the
days of Claudius Caesar. Then the disciples, every one according to his ability,
determined to send relief to the elders for the brethren which dwelt in Judaea,
which also they did by the hands of Barnabas and Saul."[5] And in the case of
the necessaries presented to him, wherewith the same Apostle Paul when setting
sail was laden,[6] food seems to have been furnished for more than a single day.
And when the same apostle writes, "Let him that stole steal no more: but
rather let him labour, working[7] with his hands the thing which is good, that he
may have to give to him that needeth;"[8] to those who misunderstand him he does
not seem to keep the Lord's precept, which runs, "Behold the fowls of the air;
for they sow not, neither do they reap, nor gather into barns;" and, "Consider
the lilies of the field, how they grow; they toil not, neither do they spin;"
while he enjoins the parties in question to labour, working with their hands,
that they may have something which they may be able to give to others also. And
in what he often says of himself, that he wrought with his hands that he might
not be burdensome;[9] and in what is written of him, that he joined himself to
Aquila on account of the similarity of their occupation, in order that they
might work together at that from which they might make a living;[10] he does not
seem to have imitated the birds of the air and the lilies of the field. From
these and such like passages of Scripture, it is sufficiently apparent that our
Lord does not disapprove of it, when one looks after such things in the ordinary
way that men do; but only when one enlists as a soldier of God for the sake of
such things, so that in what he does he fixes his eye not on the kingdom of God,
but on the acquisition of such things.
58. Hence this whole precept is reduced to the following rule, that even
in looking after such things we should think of the kingdom of God, but in the
service of the kingdom of God we should not think of such things. For in this
way, although they should sometimes be wanting (a thing which God often permits
for the purpose of exercising us), they not only do not weaken our proposition,
but even strengthen it, when it is examined and tested. For, says He, "we glory
in tribulations also; knowing that tribulation worketh patience, and patience
experience, and experience hope: And hope maketh not ashamed, because the love
of God is shed abroad in our hearts by the Holy Ghost which is given unto
us."[11] Now, in the mention of his tribulations and labours, the same apostle
mentions that he has had to endure not only prisons and shipwrecks and many such
like annoyances, but also hunger and thirst, cold and nakedness.[12] But when we
read this, let us not imagine that the promises of God have wavered, so that the
apostle suffered hunger and thirst and nakedness while seeking the kingdom and
righteousness of God, although it is said to us, "Seek ye first the kingdom of
God and His righteousness; and all these things shall be added unto you :"
since that Physician to whom we have once for all entrusted ourselves wholly, and
from whom we have the promise of life present and future, knows such things
just as helps, when He sets them before us, when He takes them away, just as He
judges it expedient for us; whom He rules and directs as parties who require both
to be comforted and exercised in this life, and after this life to be
established and confirmed in perpetual rest. For man also, when he frequently takes
away the fodder from his beast of burden, is not depriving it of his care, but
rather does what he is doing in the exercise of care.
CHAP. XVIII.--59. And inasmuch as when such things are either provided against the time to
come, or reserved, if there is no cause wherefore you should expend them, it
is uncertain with what intention it is done, since it may be done with a single
heart, and also with a double one, He has seasonably added in this passage:
"Judge not,[1] that ye be not judged.[2] For with what judgment ye judge, ye shall
be judged,[2] and with what measure ye mete, it shall be measured to you
again." In this passage, I am of opinion that we are taught nothing else, but that
in the case of those actions respecting which it is doubtful with what intention
they are done, we are to put the better construction on them. For when it is
written, "By their fruits ye shall know them," the statement has reference to
things which manifestly cannot be done with a good intention; such as
debaucheries, or blasphemies, or thefts, or drunkenness, and all such things, of which we
are permitted to judge, according to the apostle's statement: "For what have I
to do to judge them also that are without? do not ye judge them that are
within? "[3] But concerning the kind of food, because every kind of human food can be
taken indiscriminately with a good intention and a single heart, without the
vice of concupiscence, the same apostle forbids that they who ate flesh and
drank wine be judged by those who abstained from such kinds of sustenance: "Let not
him that eateth," says he, "despise him that eateth not; and let not him which
eateth not, judge him that eateth." There also he says: "Who art thou that
judges another man's servant? to his own master he standeth or falleth."[4] For in
reference to such matters as can be done with a good and single and noble
intention, although they may also be done with an intention the reverse of good,
those parties wished, howbeit they were [mere] men, to pronounce judgment upon
the secrets of the heart, of which God alone is Judge.
60. To this category belongs also what he says in another passage:
"Therefore judge nothing before the time, until the Lord come, who both will bring to
light the hidden things of darkness, and will make manifest the thoughts[5] of
the hearts: and then shall every man have praise of God."[6] There are
therefore certain ambiguous actions, respecting which we are ignorant with what
intention they are performed, because they may be done both with a good or with an
evil one, of which it is rash to judge, especially for the purpose of condemning.
Now the time will come for these to be judged, when the Lord "will bring to
light the hidden things of darkness, and will make manifest the counsels of the
hearts." In another passage also the same apostle says: "Some men's aims are
manifest beforehand, going before to judgment; and some men they follow after." He
calls those sins manifest, with regard to which it is clear with what
intention they are done; these go before to judgment, because if a judgment shall
follow, it is not rash. But those which are concealed follow, because neither shall
they remain hid in their own time. So we must understand with respect to good
works also. For he adds to this effect: "Likewise also the good works of some
are manifest beforehand; and they that are otherwise cannot be hid."[7] Let us
judge, therefore, with respect to those which are manifest; but respecting those
which are concealed, let us leave the judgment to God: for they also cannot be
hid, whether they be good or evil, when the time shall come for them to be
manifested.
61. There are two things, moreover, in which we ought to beware of rash
judgment; when it is uncertain with what intention any thing is done; or when it
is uncertain what sort of a person he is going to be, who at preset is
manifestly either good or bad. If, therefore, any one, for example, complaining of his
stomach, would not fast, and you, not believing this, were to attribute it to
the vice of gluttony, you would judge rashly. Likewise, if you were to come to
know the gluttony and drunkenness as being manifest, and were so to administer
reproof as if the man could never be amended and changed, you would nevertheless
judge rashly. Let us not therefore reprove those things about which we do not
know with what intention they are done; nor let us so reprove those things
which are manifest, as that we should despair of a return to a right state of mind;
and thus we shad avoid the judgment of which in the present instance it is
said, "Judge not, that ye be not judged."
62. But what He says may cause perplexity: "For with what judgment ye
judge, ye shall be judged; and with what measure ye mete, it shall be measured to
you again." Is it the case, then, that if we shall judge any thing with a rash
judgment, God will also judge rashly with respect to us? or if we shall measure
any thing with an unjust measure, is there with God also an unjust measure,
according to which it shall be measured to us again? (for by the expression
measure also, I suppose the judgment itself is meant.) By no means does God either
judge rashly, or recompense to any one with an unjust measure; but it is so
expressed, inasmuch as that very same rashness wherewith you punish another must
necessarily punish yourself. Unless, perchance, it is to be imagined that
injustice does harm in some way to him against whom it goes forth, but in no way to him
from whom it goes forth; but nay, it often does no harm to him who suffers the
injury, but it must necessarily do harm to him who inflicts it. For what harm
did the injustice of the persecutors do to the martyrs ? None; but very much to
the persecutors themselves. For although some of them were turned from the
error of their ways, yet at the time at which they were acting as persecutors,
their wickedness was blinding them. So also a rash judgment frequently does no
harm to him who is the object of the rash judgment; but to him who judges rashly,
the rashness itself must necessarily do harm. According to such a rule, I judge
of that saying also: "Every one that strikes[1] with the sword shall perish
with the sword."[2] For how many take the sword, and yet do not perish with the
sword, Peter himself being an instance! But lest any should think that he
escaped such punishment by the pardon of his sins (although nothing could be more
absurd than to think that the punishment of the sword, which did not befall Peter,
could have been greater than that of the cross, which actually befell him),
yet what would they say of the malefactors who were crucified with our Lord; for
both he who got pardon, got it after he was crucified, and the other did not
get it at all?[3] Or had they perhaps crucified all whom they had slain; and did
they therefore themselves too deserve to suffer the same thing? It is
ridiculous to think so. For what else is meant by the statement, "For all they that take
the sword shall perish with the sword," but that the soul dies by that very
sin, whatever it may be, which it has committed ?
CHAP. XIX.--63. And inasmuch as the Lord is admonishing us in this passage with respect
to rash and unjust judgment,--for He wishes that whatever we do, we should do
it with a heart that is single and directed toward God alone; and inasmuch as,
with respect to many things, it is uncertain with what intention they are done,
regarding which it is rash to judge; inasmuch, moreover, as those parties
especially judge rashly respecting things that are uncertain, and readily find
fault, who love rather to censure and to condemn than to amend and to improve,
which is a fault arising either from pride or from envy; therefore He has
subjoined the statement: "And why beholdest thou the mote that is in thy brother's eye,
but considerest not the beam that is in thine own eye?" So that if perchance,
for example, he has transgressed in anger, you should find fault in hatred;
there being, as it were, as much difference between anger and hatred as between a
mote and a beam. For hatred is inveterate anger, which, as it were simply by
its long duration, has acquired so great strength as to be justly called a beam.
Now, it may happen that, though you are angry with a man, you wish him to be
turned from his error; but if you hate a man, you cannot wish to convert him.
64. "Or how wilt[4] thou say to thy brother, Let me pull out the mote out
of thine eye; and, behold, a beam is in thine own eye ? Thou hypocrite, first
cast out the beam out of thine own eye; and then shalt thou see clearly to cast
out the mote out of thy brother's eye;" i.e., first cast the hatred away from
thee, and then, but not before, shalt thou be able to amend him whom thou
lovest.s And He well says, "Thou hypocrite." For to make complaint against vices is
the duty of good and benevolent men; and when bad men do it, they are acting a
part which does not belong to them; just like hypocrites, who conceal under a
mask what they are, and show themselves off in a mask what they are not. Under
the designation hypocrites, therefore, you are to understand pretenders. And
there is, in fact, a class of pretenders much to be guarded against, and
troublesome, who, while they take up complaints against all kinds of faults from hatred
and spite, also wish to appear counsellors. And therefore we must piously and
cautiously watch, so that when necessity shall compel us to find fault with or
rebuke any one, we may reflect first whether the fault is such as we have never
had, or one from which we have now become free; and if we have never had it, let
us reflect that we are men, and might have had it; but if we have had it, and
are now free from it, let the common infirmity touch the memory, that not
hatred but pity may go before that fault-finding or administering of rebuke: so that
whether it shall serve for the conversion of him on whose account we do it, or
for his perversion (for the issue is uncertain), we at least from the
singleness of our eye may be free from care. If, however, on reflection, we find
ourselves involved in the same fault as he is whom we were preparing to censure, let
us not censure nor rebuke; but yet let us mourn deeply over the case, and let
us invite him not to obey us, but to join us in a common effort.
65. For in regard also to what the apostle says,--"Unto the Jews I became
as a Jew, that I might gain the Jews; to them that are under the law, as under
the law (not being under the law), that I might gain them that are under the
law; to them that are without law, as without law (being not without law to God,
but under the law to Christ), that I might gain them that are without law. To
the weak became I as weak, that I might gain the weak: I am made all things to
all men, that I might gain all,"--he did not certainly so act in the way of
pretence, as some wish it to be understood, in order that their detestable pretence
may be fortified by the authority of so great an example; but he did so from
love, under the influence of which he thought of the infirmity of him whom he
wished to help as if it were his own. For this he also lays as the foundation
beforehand, when he says: "For although I be free from all men, yet have I made
myself servant unto all, that I might gain[1] the more."[2] And that you may
understand this as being done not in pretence, but in love, under the influence of
which we have compassion for men who are weak as if we were they, he thus
admonishes us in another passage, saying, "Brethren, ye have been called unto
liberty; only use not liberty for an occasion to the flesh, but by love serve one
another."[3] And this cannot be done, unless each one reckon the infirmity of
another as his own, so as to bear it with equanimity, until the party for whose
welfare he is solicitous is freed from it.
66. Rarely, therefore, and in a case of great necessity, are rebukes to be
administered; yet in such a way that even in these very rebukes we may make it
our earnest endeavour, not that we, but that God, should be served. For He,
and none else, is the end: so that we are to do nothing with a double heart,
removing from our own eye the beam of envy, or malice, or pretence, in order that
we may see to cast the mote out of a brother's eye. For we shall see it with the
dove's eyes,--such eyes as are declared to belong to the spouse of Christ,[4]
whom God hath chosen for Himself a glorious Church, not having spot or
wrinkle,[5] i.e. pure and guileless.
CHAP. XX.--67. But inasmuch as the word "guileless" may mislead some who are desirous
of obeying God's precepts, so that they may think it wrong, at times, to conceal
the truth, just as it is wrong at times to speak a falsehood, and inasmuch as
in this way,--by disclosing things which the parties to whom they are disclosed
are unable to bear,--they may do more harm than if they were to conceal them
altogether and always, He very rightly adds: "Give not that which is holy to the
dogs, neither cast ye your pearls before swine, lest they trample them under
their feet, and turn again and rend you." For the Lord Himself, although He
never told a lie, yet showed :hat He was concealing certain truths, when He said,
"I have yet many things to say unto you, but ye cannot bear them now."[6] And
the Apostle Paul, too, says: "And I, brethren, could not speak unto you as unto
spiritual, but as unto carnal, even as unto babes in Christ. I have fed you with
milk, and not with meat: for hitherto ye were not able to bear it, neither yet
now are ye able. For ye are yet carnal."[7]
68. Now, in this precept by which we are forbidden to give what is holy to
the dogs, and to cast our pearls before swine, we must carefully require what
is meant by holy, what by pearls, what by dogs, what by swine. A holy thing is
something which it is impious to violate and to corrupt; and the very attempt
and wish to commit that crime is held to be criminal, although that holy thing
should remain in its nature inviolable and incorruptible. By pearls, again, are
meant whatever spiritual things we ought to set a high value upon, both because
they lie hid in a secret place, are as it were brought up out of the deep, and
are found in wrappings of allegory, as it were in shells that have been
opened. We may therefore legitimately understand that one and the same thing may be
called both holy and a pearl: but it gets the name of holy for this reason, that
it ought not to be corrupted; of a pearl for this reason, that it ought not to
be despised. Every one, however, endeavours to corrupt what he does not wish
to remain uninjured: but he despises what he thinks worthless, and reckons to be
as it were beneath himself; and therefore whatever is despised is said to be
trampled on. And hence, inasmuch as dogs spring at a thing in order to tear it
in pieces, and do not allow what they are tearing in pieces to remain in its
original condition, "Give not," says He, "that which is holy unto the dogs:" for
although it cannot be torn in pieces and corrupted, and remains unharmed and
inviolable, yet we must think of what is the wish of those parties who bitterly
and in a most unfriendly spirit resist, and, as far as in them lies, endeavour,
if it were possible, to destroy the truth. But swine, although they do not, like
dogs, fall upon an object with their teeth, yet by recklessly trampling on it
defile it: "Do not therefore cast your pearls before swine, test they trample
them under their feet, and turn again and rend you." We may therefore not
unsuitably understand dogs as used to designate the assailants of the truth, swine
the despisers of it.
69. But when He says," they turn again and rend you," He does not say,
they rend the pearls themselves. For by trampling on them, just when they turn in
order that they may hear something more, they yet rend him by whom the pearls
have just been cast before them which they have trampled on. For you would not
easily find out what pleasure the man could have who has trampled pearls under
foot, i.e. has despised divine things whose discovery is the result of great
labour. But in regard to him who teaches such parties, I do not see how he would
escape being rent in pieces through their anger and wrathfulness. Moreover, both
animals are unclean, the dog as well as the swine. We must therefore be on our
guard, lest anything should be opened up to him who does not receive it: for
it is better that he should seek for what is hidden, than that he should either
attack or slight at what is open. Neither, in fact, is any other cause found
why they do not receive those things which are manifest and of importance, except
hatred and contempt, the one of which gets them the name of dogs, the other
that of swine. And all this impurity is generated by the love of temporal things,
i.e. by the love of this world, which we are commanded to renounce, in order
that we may be able to be pure. The man, therefore, who desires to have a pure
and single heart, ought not to appear to himself blameworthy, if he conceals
anything from him who is unable to receive it. Nor is it to be supposed from this
that it is allowable to lie: for it does not follow that when truth is
concealed, falsehood is uttered. Hence, steps are to be taken first, that the
hindrances which prevent his receiving it may be removed; for certainly if pollution is
the reason he does not receive it, he is to be cleansed either by word or by
deed, as far as we can possibly do it.
70. Then, further, when our Lord is found to have made certain statements
which many who were present did not accept, but either resisted or despised, He
is not to be thought to have given that which is holy to the dogs, or to have
cast pearls before swine: for He did not give such things to those who were not
able to receive them, but to those who were able, and were at the same time
present; whom it was not meet that He should neglect on account of the impurity
of others. And when tempters put questions to Him, and He answered them, so that
they might have nothing to gainsay, although they might pine away from the
effects of their own poisons, rather than be filled with His food, yet others, who
were able to receive His teaching, heard to their profit many things in
consequence of the opportunity created by these parties. I have said this, lest any
one, perhaps, when he is not able to reply to one who puts a question to him,
should seem to himself excused, if he should say that he is unwilling to give
that which is holy to the dogs, or to cast pearls before swine. For he who knows
what to answer ought to do it, even for the sake of others, in whose minds
despair arises, if they believe that the question proposed cannot be answered: and
this in reference to matters that are useful, and that belong to saving
instruction. For many things which may be the subject of inquiry on the part of idle
people are needless and vain, and often hurtful, respecting which, however,
something must be said; but this very point is to be opened up and explained, viz.
why such things ought not to form the subject of inquiry. In reference,
therefore, to things that are useful, we ought sometimes to give a reply to what is
asked of us: just as the Lord did, when the Sadducees had asked Him about the
woman who had seven husbands, to which of them she would belong in the
resurrection. For He answered that in the resurrection they will neither marry, nor be
given in marriage, but will be as the angels in heaven. But sometimes, he who asks
is to be asked something else, by telling which he would answer himself as to
the matter he asked about; but if he should refuse to make a statement, it would
not seem to those who are present unfair, if he himself should not hear
anything as to the matter he inquired about. For those who put the question, tempting
Him, whether tribute was to be paid, were asked another question, viz. whose
image the money bore which was brought forward by themselves; and because they
told what they had been asked, i.e. that the money bore the image of Caesar,
they gave a kind of answer to themselves in reference to the question they had
asked the Lord: and accordingly from their answer He drew this inference, "Render
therefore unto Caesar the things which are Caesar's, and unto God the things
that are God's."(1) When, however, the chief priests and elders of the people had
asked by what authority He was doing those things, He asked them about the
baptism of John: and when they would not make a statement which they saw to be
against themselves, and yet would not venture to say anything bad about John, on
account of the bystanders, "Neither tell I you," says He, "by what authority I
do these things;"(2) a refusal which appeared most just to the bystanders. For
they said they were ignorant of that which they really knew, but did not wish to
tell. And, in truth, it was right that they who wished to have an answer to
what they asked, should themselves first do what they required to be done toward
them; and if they had done this, they would certainly have answered themselves.
For they themselves had sent to John, asking who he was; or rather they
themselves, being priests and Levites, had been sent, supposing that he was the very
Christ, but he said that he was not, and gave forth a testimony concerning the
Lord:(1) a testimony respecting which if they chose to make a confession, they
would teach themselves by what authority as the Christ He was doing those
things; which as if ignorant of they had asked, in order that they might find an
avenue for calumny.
CHAP. XXI.--71. Since, therefore, a command had been given that what is holy should not
be given to dogs, and pearls should not be cast before swine, a hearer might
object and say, conscious of his own ignorance and weakness, and hearing a
command addressed to him, that he should not give what he felt that he himself had
not yet received,--might (I say) object and say, What holy thing do you forbid me
to give to the dogs, and what pearls do you forbid me to cast before swine,
while as yet I do not see that I possess such things? Most opportunely He has
added the statement: "Ask, and it shall be given you; seek, and ye shall find;
knock, and it shall be opened unto you. For every one that asketh receiveth; and
he that seeketh findeth; and to him that knocketh it shall be opened." The
asking refers to the obtaining by request soundness and strength of mind, so that we
may be able to discharge those duties which are commanded; the seeking, on the
other hand, refers to the finding of the truth. For inasmuch as the blessed
life is summed up in action and knowledge, action wishes for itself a supply of
strength, contemplation desiderates that matters should be made clear: of these
therefore the first is to be asked, the second is to be sought; so that the one
may be given, the other found. But knowledge in this life belongs rather to
the way than to the possession itself: but whoever has found the true way, will
arrive at the possession itself which, however, is opened to him that knocks.
72. In order, therefore, that these three things--viz. asking, seeking,
knocking--may be made clear, let us suppose, for example, the case of one weak in
his limbs, who cannot walk: in the first place, he is to be healed and
strengthened so as to be able to walk; and to this refers the expression He has used,
"Ask." But what advantage is it that he is now able to walk, or even run, if he
should go astray by devious paths? A second thing therefore is, that he should
find the road that leads to the place at which he wishes to arrive; and when
he has kept that road, and arrived at the very place where he wishes to dwell,
if he find it closed, it will be of no use either that he has been able to walk,
or that he has walked and arrived, unless it be opened to him; to this,
therefore, the expression refers which has been used, "Knock."
73. Moreover, great hope has been given, and is given, by Him who does not
deceive when He promises: for He says, "Every one that asketh, receiveth; and
he that seeketh, findeth; and to him that knocketh, it shall be opened." Hence
there is need of perseverance, in order that we may receive what we ask, and
find what we seek, and that what we knock at may be opened.(2) Now, just as He
talked of the fowls of heaven and of the lilies of the field, that we might not
despair of food and clothing being provided for us, so that our hopes might rise
from lesser things to greater; so also in this passage, "Or what man is there
of you," says He, "whom if his son ask bread, will he give him a stone? Or if
he ask a fish, will he give him a serpent? If ye then, being evil, know how to
give good gifts unto your children, how much more shall your Father which is in
heaven give good things to them that ask Him?" How do the evil give good
things? Now, He has called those evil(3) who are as yet the lovers of this world and
sinners. And, in fact, the good things are to he called good according to their
feeling, because they reckon these to be good things. Although in the nature
of things also such things are good, but temporal, and pertaining to this feeble
life: and whoever that is evil gives them, does not give of his own; for the
earth is the Lord's, and the fulness thereof,(4) who made heaven, and earth, the
sea, and all that therein is.(5) How much reason, therefore, there is for the
hope that God will give us good things when we ask Him, and that we cannot be
deceived, so that we should get one thing instead of another, when we ask Him;
since we even, although we are evil, know how to give that for which we are
asked? For we do not deceive our children; and whatever good things we give are not
given of our own, but of what is His.
CHAP. XXII.--74. Moreover, a certain strength and vigour in walking along the path of
wisdom ties in good morals, which are made to extend as far as to purification and
singleness of heart,--a subject on which He has now been speaking long, and
thus concludes: "Therefore all good(6) things whatsoever ye would that men should
do to you, do ye even so to them: for this is the law and the prophets." In
the Greek copies we find the passage runs thus: "Therefore all things whatsoever
ye would that men should do to you, do ye even so to them." But I think the
word "good" has been added by the Latins to make the sentence clear. For the
thought occurred, that if any one should wish something wicked to be done to him,
and should refer this clause to that,--as, for instance, if one should wish to be
challenged to drink immoderately, and to get drunk over his cups, and should
first do this to the party by whom he wishes it to be done to himself,--it would
be ridiculous to imagine that he had fulfilled this clause. Inasmuch,
therefore, as they were influenced by this consideration, as I suppose, one word was
added to make the matter clear; so that in the statement, "Therefore all things
whatsoever ye would that men should do to you," there was inserted the word
"good." But if this is wanting in the Greek copies, they also ought to be
corrected: but who would venture to do this? It is to be understood, therefore, that the
clause is complete and altogether perfect, even if this word be not added. For
the expression used, "whatsoever ye would," ought to be understood as used not
in a customary and random, but in a strict sense. For there is no will except
in the good: for in the case of bad and wicked deeds, desire is strictly spoken
of, not will. Not that the Scriptures always speak in a strict sense; but
where it is necessary, they so keep a word to its perfectly strict meaning, that
they do not allow anything else to be understood.
75. Moreover, this precept seems to refer to the love of our neighbour,
and not to the love of God also, seeing that in another passage He says that
there are two precepts on which "hang all the law and the prophets." For if He had
said, All things whatsoever ye would should be done to you, do ye even so; in
this one sentence He would have embraced both those precepts: for it would soon
be said that every one wishes that he himself should be loved both by God and
by men; and so, when this precept was given to him, that what he wished done to
himself he should himself do, that certainly would be equivalent to the precept
that he should love God and men. But when it is said more expressly of men,
"Therefore all things whatsoever ye would that men should do to you, do ye even
so to them," nothing else seems to be meant than, "Thou shall love thy neighbour
as thyself."(1) But we must carefully attend to what He has added here: "for
this is the law and the prophets." Now, in the case of these two precepts, He
not merely says, The law and the prophets hang; but He has also added, "all the
law and the prophets,"(2) which is the same as the whole of prophecy: and in not
making the same addition here, He has kept a place for the other precept,
which refers to the love of God. Here, then, inasmuch as He is following out the
precepts with respect to a single heart, and it is to be dreaded test any one
should have a double heart toward those from whom the heart can be hid, i.e.
toward men, a precept with respect to that very thing was to be given. For there is
almost nobody that would wish that any one of double heart should have dealings
with himself. But no one can bestow anything upon a fellowman with a single
heart, unless he so bestow it that he expects no temporal advantage from him, and
does it with the intention which we have sufficiently discussed above, when we
were speaking of the single eye.
76. The eye, therefore, being cleansed and rendered single, will be
adapted and suited to behold and contemplate its own inner light. For the eye in
question is the eye of the heart. Now, such an eye is possessed by him who, in
order that his works may be truly good, does not make it the aim of his good works
that he should please men; but even if it should turn out that he pleases them,
he makes this tend rather to their salvation and to the glory of God, not to
his own empty boasting; nor does he do anything that is good tending to his
neighbour's salvation for the purpose of gaining by it those things that are
necessary for getting through this present life; nor does he rashly condemn a man's
intention and wish in that action in which it is not apparent with what
intention and wish it has been done; and whatever kindnesses he shows to a man, he
shows them with the same intention with which he wishes them shown to himself, viz.
as not expecting any temporal advantage from him: thus will the heart be
single and pure in which God is sought. "Blessed," therefore, "are the pure in
heart: for they shall see God."(3)
CHAP. XXIII.--77. But because this belongs to few, He now begins to speak of Searching for
and possessing wisdom, which is a tree of life; and certainly, in searching
for and possessing, i.e. contemplating this wisdom, such an eye is led through
all that precedes to a point where there may now be seen the narrow way and the
strait gate. When, therefore, He says in continuation, "Enter ye(4) in at the
strait gate: for wide is the gate, and broad is the way, that leadeth to
destruction, and many there be which go in thereat: because strait is the gate, and
narrow is the way, which leadeth unto life, and few there be that find it;(1) He
does not say so for this reason, that the Lord's yoke is rough, or His burden
heavy; but because few are willing to bring their labours to an end, giving too
little credit to Him who cries, "Come unto me, all ye that labour, and I will
give you rest. Take my yoke upon you, and learn of me; for I am meek and lowly in
heart: for my yoke is easy,(2) and my burden(2) is light"(3) (hence, moreover,
the sermon before us took as its starting-point the lowly and meek in heart):
and this easy yoke and light burden which many spurn, few submit to; and on
that account the way becomes narrow which leadeth unto life, and the gate strait
by which it is entered.
CHAP. XXIV.--78. Here, therefore, those who promise a wisdom and a knowledge of the truth
which they do not possess, are especially to be guarded against; as, for
instance, heretics, who frequently commend themselves on account of their fewness.
And hence, when He had said that there are few who find the strait gate and the
narrow way, lest they [the heretics] should falsely substitute themselves under
the pretext of their fewness, He immediately added, "Beware of false
prophets,(4) which come to you in sheep's clothing, but inwardly they are ravening
wolves." But such parties do not deceive the single eye, which knows how to
distinguish a tree by its fruits. For He says: "Ye shall know them by their fruits."
Then He adds the similitudes: "Do men gather grapes of thorns, or figs of
thistles? Even so, every good tree bringeth forth good fruit; but a corrupt tree
bringeth forth evil fruit. A good tree cannot bring forth evil fruit, neither can a
corrupt tree bring forth good fruit. Every tree that bringeth not forth good
fruit s is hewn down, and cast into the fire. Wherefore by their fruits ye shall
know them."
79. And in [the interpretation of] this passage we must be very much on
our guard against the error of those who judge from these same two trees that
there are two original natures, the one of which belongs to God, but the other
neither belongs to God nor springs from Him. And this error has both been already
discussed in other books [of ours](6) very copiously, and if that is still too
little, will be discussed again; but at present we have merely to show that the
two trees before us do not help them. In the first place, because it is so
clear that He is speaking of men, that whoever reads what goes before and what
follows will wonder at their blindness. Secondly, they fix their attention on what
is said, "A good tree cannot bring forth evil fruit, neither can a corrupt
tree bring forth good fruit," and therefore think that neither can it happen that
an evil soul should be changed into something better, nor a good one into
something worse; as if it were said, A good tree cannot become evil, nor an evil
tree good. But it is said, "A good tree cannot bring forth evil fruit, neither can
a corrupt tree bring forth good fruit." For the tree is certainly the soul
itself, i.e. the man himself, but the fruits are the works of the man; an evil
man, therefore, cannot perform good works, nor a good man evil works. If an evil
man, therefore, wishes to perform good works, let him first become good. So the
Lord Himself says in another passage more plainly: "Either make the tree good,
or make the tree bad." But if He were figuratively representing the two natures
of such parties by these two trees, He would not say, "Make:" for who of the
sons of men can make a nature? Then also in that passage, when He had made
mention of these two trees, He added, "Ye hypocrites, how can ye, being evil, speak
good things?"(7) As long, therefore, as any one is evil, he cannot bring forth
good fruits; for if he were to bring forth good fruits, he would no longer be
evil. So it might most truly have been said, snow cannot be warm; for when it
begins to be warm, we no longer call it snow, but water. It may therefore come
about, that what was snow is no longer so; but it cannot happen that snow should
be warm. So it may come about, that he who was evil is no longer evil; it
cannot, however, happen that an evil man should do good. And although he is
sometimes useful, this is not the man's own doing; but it is done through him, in
virtue of the arrangements of divine providence: as, for instance, it is said of the
Pharisees, "What they bid you, do; but what they do, do not consent to do."
This very circumstance, that they spoke things that were good, and that the
things which they spoke were usefully listened to and done, was not a matter
belonging to them: for, says He, "they sit in Moses' seat."(8) It was, therefore, when
engaged through divine providence in preaching the law of God, that they were
able to be useful to their hearers, although they were not so to themselves.
Respecting such it is said in another place by the prophet, "They have sown
wheat, but shall reap thorns;"(1) because they teach what is good, and do what is
evil. Those, therefore, who listened to them, and did what was said by them, did
not gather grapes of thorns, but through the thorns gathered grapes of the
vine: just as, were any one to thrust his hand through a hedge, or were at least to
gather a grape from a vine which was entangled in a hedge, that would not be
the fruit of the thorns, but of the vine.
80. The question, indeed, is most rightly put, What are the fruits He
would wish us to attend to, whereby we might know the tree? For many reckon among
the fruits certain things which belong to the sheep's clothing, and in this way
are deceived by wolves: as, for instance, either fastings, or prayers, or
almsgivings; but unless all of these things could be done even by hypocrites, He
would not say above, "Take heed that ye do not your righteousness before men, to
be seen of them." And after prefixing this sentence, He goes on to speak of
those very three things, almsgiving, prayer, fasting. For many give largely to the
poor, not from compassion, but from vanity; and many pray, or rather seem to
pray, while not keeping God in view, but desiring to please men; and many fast,
and make a wonderful show of abstinence before those to whom such things appear
difficult, and by whom they are reckoned worthy of honour: and catch them with
artifices of this sort, while they hold up to, view one thing for the purpose
of deceiving, and put forth another for the purpose of preying upon or killing
those who cannot see the wolves under that sheep's clothing, These, therefore,
are not the fruits by which He admonishes us that the tree is known. For such
things, when they are done with a good intention in sincerity, are the
appropriate clothing of sheep; but when they are done in wicked deception, they cover
nothing else but wolves. But the sheep ought not on this account to hate their own
clothing, because the wolves often conceal themselves therein.
81. What the fruits are by the finding of which we may know an evil tree,
the apostle tells us: "Now the works of the flesh are manifest, which are
these; adulteries, fornications, uncleanness, lasciviousness, idolatry, witchcraft,
hatreds, variances, emulations, wrath, strife, seditions, heresies, envyings,
murders, drunkenness, revellings, and such like: of the which I tell you before,
as I have also told you in time past, that they which do such things shall not
inherit the kingdom of God." And what the fruits are by which we may know a
good tree,the very same apostle goes on to tell us: "But the fruit of the Spirit
is love, joy, peace, long-suffering, gentleness, goodness, faith, meekness,
temperance."(2) It must be known, indeed, that "joy" stands here in a strict and
proper sense; for bad men are, strictly speaking, not said to rejoice, but to
make extravagant demonstrations of joy: just as we have said above, that "will"
which the wicked do not possess, stands in a strict sense where it is said, "All
things whatsoever ye would that men should do to you, do ye even so to them."
In accordance with that strict sense of the word, in virtue of which joy is
spoken of only in the good, the prophet also speaks, saying: "Rejoicing is not for
the wicked, saith the Lord."(3) So also "faith" stands, not certainly as
meaning any kind of it, but true faith: and the other things which find a place here
have certain resemblances of their own in bad men and deceivers; so that they
entirely mislead, unless one has the pure and single eye by which he may know
such things. It is accordingly the best arrangement, that the cleansing of the
eye is first discussed, and then mention is made of what things were to be
guarded against.
CHAP. XXV.--82. But seeing that, however pure an eye one may have, i.e. with however
single and sincere a heart one may live, he yet cannot look into the heart of
another: whatever things could not have become apparent in deeds or words, are
disclosed by trials. Now trial is twofold; either in the hope of obtaining some
temporal advantage, or in the terror of losing it. And especially must we be on
our guard, lest, when striving after wisdom, which can be found in Christ alone,
in whom are hid all the treasures of wisdom and knowledge;(4)--we must be on
our guard, I say, lest, under the very name of Christ, we be deceived by
heretics, or by any parties whatever defective in intelligence, and lovers of this
world. For on this account He adds a warning, saying, "Not every one that saith
unto Me, Lord, Lord,(5) shall enter into the kingdom of heaven; but he that doeth
the will of My Father which is in heaven, he shall enter into the kingdom of
heaven:" lest we should think that the mere fact of one saying to our Lord,
"Lord, Lord," belongs to those fruits; and from that he should seem to us to be a
good tree. But those are the fruits, to do the will of the Father who is in
heaven, in the doing of which He has condescended to exhibit Himself as an example.
83. But the question may fairly be started, how with this sentence the
statement of the apostle is to be reconciled, where he says, "No man speaking by
the Spirit of God calleth Jesus accursed; and no man can say that Jesus is the
Lord, but by the Holy Ghost:"(1) for neither can we say that any who have the
Holy Spirit will not enter into the kingdom of heaven, if they persevere onwards
to the end; nor can we affirm that those who say, "Lord, Lord," and yet do not
enter into the kingdom of heaven, have the Holy Spirit. How then does no one
say "that Jesus is the Lord, but by the Holy Ghost," unless it is because the
apostle has used the word "say" here in a strict and proper sense, so that it
implies the will and understanding of him who says? But the Lord has used the word
which He employs in a general sense: "Not every one that saith unto Me, Lord,
Lord, shall enter into the kingdom of heaven." For he also who neither wishes
nor understands what he says, seems to say it; but he properly says it, who gives
expression to his will and mind by the sound of his voice: just as, a little
before, what is called "joy" among the fruits of the Spirit is called so in a
strict and proper sense, not in the way in which the same apostle elsewhere uses
the expression, "Rejoiceth not in iniquity:"(2) as if any one could rejoice in
iniquity: for that transport of a mind making confused and boisterous
demonstrations of joy is not joy; for this latter is possessed by the good alone. Hence
those also seem to say it, who neither perceive with the understanding nor
engage with the deliberate consent of the will in this which they utter, but utter
it with the voice merely; and after this manner the Lord says, "Not every one
that saith unto Me, Lord, Lord, shall enter into the kingdom of heaven." But
truly and properly those parties say it whose utterance in speech really
represents their will and intention; and it is in accordance with this signification
that the apostle has said, "No one can say that Jesus is the Lord, but by the Holy
Ghost."
84. And besides, it belongs especially to the matter in hand, that, in
striving after the contemplation of the truth, we should not only not be deceived
by the name of Christ, by means of those who have the name and have not the
deeds; but also not by certain deeds and miracles, for when the Lord performed of
the same kind for the sake of unbelievers, He has warned us not to be deceived
by such things, thinking that an invisible wisdom is present where we see a
visible miracle. Hence He annexes the statement: "Many will say to Me on that day,
Lord, Lord, have we not prophesied in Thy name, and in Thy name have cast out
devils, and in Thy name done many wonderful works? And then will I say(3) unto
them, I never knew you: depart from Me, ye that work iniquity." He will not,
therefore, recognise any but the man that worketh righteousness. For He forbade
also His own disciples themselves to rejoice in such things, viz. that the
spirits were subject unto them: "But rejoice," says He, "because your names are
written in heaven;"(4) I suppose, in that city of Jerusalem which is in heaven, in
which only the righteous and holy shall reign. "Know ye not," says the apostle,
"that the unrighteous shall not inherit the kingdom of God?"(5)
85. But perhaps some one may say that the unrighteous cannot perform those
visible miracles, and may believe rather that those parties are telling a lie,
who will be found saying, "We have prophesied in Thy name, and have cast out
devils in Thy name, and have done many wonderful works." Let him therefore read
what great things the magi of the Egyptians did who resisted Moses, the servant
of God;(6) or if he will not read this, because they did not do them in the
name of Christ, let him read what the Lord Himself says of the false prophets,
speaking thus: "Then, if any man shall say unto you, Lo, here is Christ, or
there; believe it not. For there shall arise false Christs, and false prophets, and
shall show great signs and wonders, insomuch that the very elect shall be
deceived.(7) Behold, I have told you before."(8)
86. How much need, therefore, is there of the pure and single eye, in
order that the way of wisdom may be found, against which there is the clamour of so
great deceptions and errors on the part of wicked and perverse men, to escape
from all of which is indeed to arrive at the most certain peace, and the
immoveable stability of wisdom! For it is greatly to be feared, lest, by eagerness in
quarrelling and controversy, one should not see what can be seen by few, that
small is the disturbance of gainsayers, unless one also disturbs himself. And
in this direction, too, runs that statement of the apostle: "And the servant of
the Lord must not strive; but be gentle(9) unto all men, apt to teach, patient,
in meekness instructing those that think differently;(9) if God peradventure
will give them repentance to the acknowledging of the truth."(10) "Blessed,"
therefore, "are the peacemakers: for they shall be called the children of
God."(11))
87. Hence we must take special notice how terribly the conclusion of the
whole sermon is introduced: "Therefore, whosoever heareth these sayings of Mine,
and doeth them, is like(1) unto a wise man, which built his house upon the
rock." For no one confirms what he hears or understands, unless by doing. And if
Christ is the rock, as many Scripture testimonies proclaim(2) that man builds in
Christ who does what he hears from Him. "The rain descended, and the floods
came, and the winds blew, and beat(3) upon that house; and it fell not: for it
was founded upon a rock." Such an one, therefore, is not afraid of any gloomy
superstitions (for what else is understood by rain, when it is put in the sense of
anything bad?), or of turnouts of men, which I think are compared to winds; or
of the river of this life, as it were flowing over the earth in carnal lusts.
For it is the man who is seduced by the prosperity that is broken down by the
adversities arising from these three things; none of which is feared by him who
has his house founder upon a rock, i.e. who not only hears, but also does, the
Lord's commands. And the man who hears and does them not is in dangerous
proximity to all these, for he has no stable foundation; but by hearing and not
doing, he builds a ruin. For He goes on to say: "And every one that heareth these
sayings of Mine, and doeth them not, shall be like unto a foolish man, which
built his house upon the sand:(4) and the rain descended, and the floods came, and
the winds blew, and beat(3) upon that house; and it fell: and great was(5) the
fall of it. And it came to pass, when Jesus hid ended these sayings, the people
were astonished at His doctrine: for He taught them as one having authority,
and not as their scribes."(6) This is what I said before was meant by the
prophet in the Psalms, when he says: "I will act confidently in regard of him. The
words of the Lord are pure words: as silver tried and proved in a furnace of
earth, purified seven times."(7) And from this number, I am admonished to trace
back those precepts also to the seven sentences which He has placed in the
beginning of this sermon, when He was speaking of those who are blessed; and to those
seven operations of the Holy Spirit, which the prophet Isaiah mentions;(8) but
whether the order before us, or some other, is to be considered in these, the
things we have heard from the Lord are to be done, if we wish to build upon a
rock.