SERMONS ON SELECTED LESSONS OF THE NEW TESTAMENT. SERMONS VI TO IX. ON THE
LORD'S PRAYER IN ST. MATTHEW'S GOSPEL, CHAP. VI. 9, ETC. TO THE COMPETENTES.
SERMON VI.
[LVI. BEN.]
ON THE LORD'S PRAYER IN ST. MATTHEW'S GOSPEL, CHAP. VI. 9, ETC. TO THE
COMPETENTES.(4)
1. THE blessed Apostle, to show that those times when it should come to
pass that all the nations should believe in Christ had been foretold by the
Prophets, produced this testimony where it is written, "And it shall be, that
whosoever shall call on the name of the Lord, shall be saved."(5) For before time the
name of the Lord who made heaven and earth was called upon amongst the
Israelites only; the rest of the nations called upon dumb and deaf idols, by whom they
were not heard, or by devils, by whom they were heard to their harm. "But when
the fulness of time came," that was fulfilled which had been foretold, "And it
shall be, that whosoever shall call upon the name of the Lord, shall be
saved." Moreover, because the Jews, even those who believed in Christ, grudged the
Gospel to the Gentiles, and said that the Gospel ought not to be preached to them
who were not circumcised; because against these the Apostle Paul alleged this
testimony, "And it shall be, that whosoever shall call upon the Name of the
Lord, shall be saved;"(6) he immediately subjoined, to convince those who were
unwilling that the Gospel should be preached to the Gentiles, the words, "But how
shall they call upon Him, in whom they have not believed? or how shall they
believe in Him of whom they have not heard? or how shall they hear without a
preacher? or how shall they preach except they be sent?" Because then he said, "how
shall they call upon Him in whom they have not believed?" ye have not first
learnt the Lord's Prayer, and after that the Creed; but first the Creed, where ye
might know what to believe, and afterwards the Prayer, where ye might know whom
to call upon. The Creed then has respect to the faith, the Lord's Prayer to
prayer; because it is he who believeth, that is heard when he calleth.
2. But many ask for what they ought not to ask, not knowing what is
expedient for them. Two things therefore must he that prays beware of; that he ask
not what he ought not; and that he ask not from whom he ought not. From the
devil, from idols, from evil spirits,(7) must nothing be asked. From the Lord our
God Jesus Christ, God the Father of Prophets, and Apostles, and Martyrs, from the
Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, from God who made heaven and earth, the sea,
and all things in them, from Him must we ask whatsoever we have to ask. But we
must beware that we ask not of Him that which we ought not to ask. If because
we ought to ask for life, thou ask it of dumb and deaf idols, what doth it
profit thee? So if from God the Father, who is in heaven, thou dost wish for the
death of thine enemies, what doth it profit thee? Hast thou not heard or read in
the Psalm, in which the damnable end of the traitor Judas is foretold, how the
prophecy spake of him "Let his prayer be turned into sin?"(1) If then thou
risest up, and prayest for evil on thine enemies, thy "prayer will be turned into
sin."
3. You have read in the Holy Psalms, how that he who speaks in them
imprecates, as it would seem, many curses upon his enemies. And surely, one may
say, he who speaks in the Psalms is a righteous man; wherefore then does he so
wish evil upon his enemies? He does not wish, but he foresees, it is a prophecy of
one who is telling things to come, not a vow of malediction; for the prophets
knew by the Spirit to whom evil was appointed to happen, and to whom good; and
by prophecy they spake as if they wished for what they did foresee. But how
canst thou know whether he for whom today thou art asking evil, may not to-morrow
be a better man than thyself? But you will say, I know him to be a wicked man.
Well: thou must know that thou art wicked too. Although it may be thou takest
upon thyself to judge of another's heart what thou dost not know; but as for
thine own self thou knowest that thou art wicked. Hearest thou not the Apostle
saying, "Who was before a blasphemer, and a persecutor, and injurious: but I
obtained mercy, because I did it ingorantly in unbelief?"(2) Now when the Apostle
Paul persecuted. the Christians, binding them wherever he found them, and drew
them to the Chief Priests to be questioned and punished, what think ye, brethren,
did the Church pray against him, or for him? Surely the Church of God which
had learnt instruction from her Lord, who said as He hung upon the Cross,
"Father, forgive them, for they know not what they do,"(3) so prayed for Paul (or
rather as yet Saul), that that might be wrought in him which was wrought. For in
that he says, "But I was unknown by face to the churches of Judaea which are in
Christ: only they heard that he who persecuted us in times past, now preacheth
the faith which once he destroyed; and they magnified God in me;"(4) why did
they magnify God, but because they asked this of God, before it came to pass?
4. Our Lord then first of all cut off "much speaking," that thou mightest
not bring a multitude of words unto God, as though by thy many words thou
wouldest teach Him. Therefore when thou prayest thou hast need of piety, not of
wordiness. "For your Father knoweth what is needful for you, before ye ask Him."(5)
Be ye loth then to use many words, for He knoweth what is needful for you. But
lest peradventure any should say here, If He know what is needful for us, why
should we use so much as a few words? why should we pray at all? He knoweth
Himself; let Him then give what He knoweth to be needful for us. Yes, but it is
His will that thou shouldest pray, that He may give to thy longings, that His
gifts may not be lightly esteemed; seeing He hath Himself formed this longing
desire in us. The words therefore which our Lord Jesus Christ hath taught us in His
prayer, are the rule and standard of our desires. Thou mayest not ask for
anything but what is written there.
5. "Do ye therefore say," saith he, "Our Father, which art in heaven."
Where ye see ye have begun to have God for your Father. Ye will have Him, when ye
are new born. Although even now before ye are born, ye have been conceived of
His seed, as being on the eve of being brought forth in the font, the womb as it
were of the Church. "Our Father, which art in heaven." Remember then, that ye
have a Father in heaven. Remember that ye were born of your father Adam unto
death, that ye are to be born anew of God the Father unto life. And what ye say,
say in your hearts. Only let there be the earnest affection of prayer, and
there will be the effectual(6) answer of Him who heareth prayer. "Hallowed be thy
Name." Why dost thou ask, that God's Name may be hallowed? It is holy. Why then
askest thou for that which is already holy? And then when thou dost ask that
His Name may be hallowed, dost thou not as it were pray to Him for Him, and not
for thyself? No. Understand it aright, and it is for thine own self thou
askest. For this thou askest, that what is always in itself holy, may be hallowed in
thee. What is "be hallowed?" "Be accounted holy," be not despised. So then you
see, that the good thou dost wish, thou wishest for thine own self. For if thou
despise the Name of God, for thyself it will be ill, and not for God.
6. "Thy kingdom come."(7) To whom do we speak? and will not God's kingdom
come, if we ask it not. For of that kingdom do we speak which will be after the
end of the world. For God hath a kingdom always; neither is He ever without a
kingdom, whom the whole creation serveth. But what kingdom then dost thou wish
for? That of which it is written in the Gospel, "Come, ye blessed of My Father,
receive the kingdom which is prepared for you from the beginning of the
world."(1) Lo here is the kingdom whereof we say, "Thy kingdom come." We pray that it
may come in us; we pray that; we may be found in it. For come it certainly
will; but what will it profit thee, if it shall find thee at the left hand?
Therefore, here again it is for thine own self that thou wishest well; for thyself
thou prayest. This it is that thou dost long for; this desire in thy prayer, that
thou mayest so live, that thou mayest have a part in the kingdom of God, which
is to be given to all saints. Therefore when thou dost say, "Thy kingdom
come," thou dost pray for thyself, that thou mayest live well. Let us have part in
Thy kingdom: let that come even to us, which is to come to Thy saints and
righteous ones.
7. "Thy will be done."(2) What! if thou say not this, will not God do His
will? Remember what thou hast repeated in the Creed, "I believe in God the
Father Almighty." If He be Almighty, why prayest thou that His will may be done?
What is this then, "Thy will be done"? May it be done in me, that I may not
resist Thy will. Therefore here again it is for thyself thou prayest, and not for
God. For the will of God will be done in thee, though it be not done by thee. For
both in them to whom He shall say, "Come, ye blessed of My Father, receive the
kingdom prepared for you from the beginning of the world;"(1) shall the will
of God be done, that the saints and righteous may receive the kingdom; and in
them to whom He shall say, "Depart ye into everlasting fire, prepared for the
devil and his angels,"(3) shall the will of God be done, that the wicked may be
condemned to everlasting fire. That His will may be done by thee is another
thing. It is not then without a cause, but that it may be well with thee, that thou
dost pray that His will may be done in thee. But whether it be well or ill with
thee, it will still be done in thee: but O that it may be done by thee also.
Why do I say then, "Thy will be done in heaven and in earth," and do not say,
"Thy will be done by heaven and earth?" Because what is done by thee, He Himself
doeth in thee. Never is anything done by thee which He Himself doeth not in
thee. Sometimes, indeed, He doeth in thee what is not done by thee; but never is
anything done by thee, if He do it not in thee.
8. But what is "in heaven and in earth," or, "as in heaven so in earth?"
The Angels do Thy will; may we do it also. "Thy will be done as in heaven so in
earth." The mind is heaven, the flesh is earth. When thou dost say (if so be
thou do say it) with the Apostle, "With my mind I serve the law of God, but with
the flesh the law of sin;"(4) the will of God is done in heaven, but not yet in
earth. But when the flesh shall be in harmony with the mind, and "death shall
be swallowed up in victory,"(5) so that no carnal desires shall remain for the
mind to be in conflict with, when strife in the earth shall have passed away,
the war of the heart be over, and that be gone by which is spoken, "the flesh
lusteth against the Spirit, and the Spirit against the flesh; for these are
contrary the one to the other; so that ye cannot do the things that ye would; "(6)
when this war, I say, shall be over, and all concupiscence shall have been
changed into charity, nothing shall remain in the body to oppose the spirit, nothing
to be tamed, nothing to be bridled, nothing to be trodden down; but the whole
shall go on through concord unto righteousness, and the will of God will be
done in heaven and in earth. "Thy will be done in heaven and in earth." We wish
for perfection, when we pray for this. "Thy will be done as in heaven so in
earth." In the Church the spiritual are heaven, the carnal are earth. So then, "Thy
will be done as in heaven so in earth;". that as the spiritual do serve Thee,
so the carnal being reformed may serve Thee also. "Thy will be done as in heaven
so in earth." There is yet another very spiritual(7) meaning of it. For we are
admonished to pray for our enemies. The Church is heaven, the enemies of the
Church are earth. What then is, "Thy will be done as n heaven so in earth"? May
our enemies believe, as we also believe in Thee! may they become friends, and
end their enmities! They are earth, therefore are they against us; may they
become heaven, and they will be with us.
9. "Give us this day our daily bread."(8) Now here it is manifest, that it
is for ourselves we pray. When thou sayest, "Hallowed be Thy Name," it
requires explanation how it is that it is for thyself thou prayest, not for God. When
thou sayest, "Thy will be done;" here again is there need of explanation, lest
thou think that thou art wishing well to God in this prayer, that His will may
be done, and not rather that thou art praying for thyself. When thou sayest,
"Thy kingdom come;" this again must be explained, lest thou think that thou art
wishing well to God in this prayer that He may reign. But from this place and
onwards to the end of the Prayer, it is plain that we are praying to God for our
own selves. "When thou sayest," Give us this day our daily bread," thou dost
profess thyself to be God's beggar. But be not ashamed at this; how rich soever
any man be on earth, he is still God's beggar. The beggar takes his stand before
the rich man's house; but the rich man himself stands before the door of the
great rich One. Petition is made to him, and he maketh his petition. If he were
not in need, he would not knock at the ears of God in prayer. And what doth the
rich man need? I am bold to say, the rich man needeth even daily bread. For
how is it that he hath abundance of all things? whence but because God hath given
it him? What should he have, if God withdrew His hand? Have not many laid down
to sleep in wealth, and risen up in beggary? And that he doth not want, is due
to God's mercy, not to his own power.
10. But this bread, Dearly beloved, by which our body is filled, by which
the flesh is recruited day by day; this bread, I say, God giveth not to those
only who praise, but to those also who blaspheme Him; "Who maketh His sun to
rise upon the evil and on the good, and sendeth rain upon the just and on the
unjust."(1) Thou praisest Him, and He feedeth thee; thou dost blaspheme Him, He
feedeth thee. He waiteth for thee to repent; but if thou wilt not change thyself,
He will condemn thee. Because then both good and bad receive this bread from
God, thinkest thou there is no other bread for which the children ask, of which
the Lord said in the Gospel, "It is not meet to take the children's bread, and
to cast it to dogs?"(2) Yes, surely there is. What then is that bread? and why
is it called daily? Because this is necessary as the other; for without it we
cannot live; without bread we cannot live. It is shamelessness to ask for
wealth from God; it is no shamelessness to ask for daily bread. That which
ministereth to pride is one thing, that which ministereth to life another.
Nevertheless, because this bread which may be seen and handled, is given both to the
good and bad; there is a daily bread, for which the children pray. That is the
word of God, which is dealt out to us day by day. Our bread is daily bread; and by
it live not our bodies, but our souls. It is necessary for us who are even now
labourers in the vineyard,--it is our food, not our hire. For he that hires
the labourer into the vineyard owes him two things; food, that he faint not, and
his hire, wherewith he may rejoice. Our daily food then in this earth is the
word of God, which is dealt out always in the Churches: our hire after labour is
called eternal life. Again, if by this our daily bread thou understand what the
faithful(3) receive, what ye shall receive, when ye have been baptized, it is
with good reason that we ask and say, "Give us this day our daily bread;" that
we may live in such sort, as that we be not separated from the Holy Altar.
11. "And forgive us our debts, as we forgive our debtors."(4) Touching
this petition again we need no explanation, that it is for ourselves that we
pray. For we beg that our debts may be for given us. For debtors are we, not in
money, but in sins. Thou art saying perchance at this moment, And you too. We
answer, Yes, we too. What, ye Holy Bishops, are ye debtors? Yes, we are debtors
too. What you! My Lord. (5) Be it far from thee, do not thyself this wrong. I do
myself no wrong, but I say the truth; we are debtors: "If we say we have no sin,
we deceive ourselves, and the truth is not in us."(6) We have been baptized,
and yet are we debtors. Not that anything then remained, which was not remitted
to us in Baptism, but because in our lives we are contracting ever what needs
daily forgiveness. They who are baptized, and forthwith depart out of this life,
come up from the font(7) without any debt; without any debt they leave the
world. But they who are baptized and are still kept in this life, contract
defilements by reason of their mortal frailty, by which though the ship be not sunk,
yet have they need of recourse to the pump. For otherwise by little and little
will that enter in by which the whole ship will be sunk. And to offer this
prayer, is to have recourse to the pump. But we ought not only to pray, but to do
alms also, because when the pump is used to prevent the ship from sinking, both
the voices and hands are at work. Now we are at work with our voices, when we
say, "Forgive us our debts, as we also forgive our debtors." And we are at work
with our hands when we do this, "Break thy bread to the hungry, and bring the
houseless poor into thine house.(8) Shut up alms in the heart of a poor(9) man,
and it shall intercede for thee unto the Lord."(10)
12. Although therefore all our sins were forgiven in the "layer of
regeneration," we should be driven into great straits, if there were not given to us
the daily cleansing of the Holy Prayer. Alms and prayers purge away sins; only
let not such sins be committed, for which we must necessarily be separated from
our daily Bread; avoid we all such debts to which a severe and certain
condemnation is due. Call not yourselves righteous, as though ye had no cause to say,
"Forgive us our debts, as we also forgive our debtors." Though ye abstain from
idolatry, from the consolations(1) of astrologers, from the cures of enchanters,
though ye abstain from the seductions of heretics, from the divisions of
schismatics; though ye abstain from murders, from adulteries and fornications, from
thefts and plunderings, from false witnessings, and all such other sins which I
do not name, as have a ruinous consequence, for which it is necessary that the
sinner be cut off from the altar, and be so bound in earth, as to be bound in
heaven, to his great and deadly danger, unless again he be so loosed in earth,
as to be loosed in heaven; yet after all these are excepted, still there is no
want of occasions whereby a man may sin. A man sins in seeing with pleasure
what he ought not to see. Yet who can hold in the quickness of the eye? For from
this the eye is said to have received its very name, from its quickness.(2) Who
can restrain the ear or eye? The eyes may be shut when thou wilt, and are shut
in a moment, but the ears thou canst only with an effort close: thou must raise
the hand and reach them, and if any one hold thy hand, they are kept open, nor
canst thou close them against reviling, impure, or flattering, and seducing
words. And when thou hearest any things thou oughtest not to hear, though thou do
it not, dost thou not sin with the ear? for thou hearest something that is bad
with pleasure? How great sins doth the deadly tongue commit! Yea, sometimes
sins of such a nature, that a man is separated from the altar for them. To the
tongue pertains the whole matter of blasphemies, and many idle words again are
spoken, which are not convenient. But let the hand do nothing wrong, let the feet
run not to any evil, nor the eye be directed to immodesty; let not the ear be
open with pleasure to filthy talk; nor the tongue move to indecent speech; yet
tell me, who can restrain the thoughts? How often do we pray, my brethren, and
our thoughts are elsewhere, as though we forgot Before whom we are standing, or
before whom we are prostrating ourselves! If all these things be collected
together against us, will they not therefore not overwhelm us, because they are
small faults? What matter is it whether lead or sand overwhelm us? The lead is
all one mass, the sand is small grains, but by their great number they overwhelm
thee. So thy sins are small. Seest thou not how the rivers are filled, and the
lands are wasted by small drops? They are small, but they are many.
13. Let us therefore say every day; and say it in sincerity of heart, and
do what we say, "Forgive us our debts, as we also forgive our debtors." It is
an engagement, a covenant, an agreement that we make with God. The Lord thy God
saith to thee, Forgive, and I will forgive. Thou hast not forgiven; thou
retainest thy sins against thyself, not I. I pray thee, my dearly beloved children,
since I know what is expedient for you in the Lord's Prayer, and most of all in
that sentence of it, "Forgive us our debts, as we also forgive our debtors;"
hear me. Ye are about to be baptized, forgive everything; whatsoever any man have
in his heart against any other, let him from his heart forgive it. So enter
in, and be sure, that all your sins which ye have contracted, whether from your
birth of your parents after Adam with original sin, for which sins' sake ye run
with babes to the Saviour's grace, or whatever after sins ye have contracted in
your lives, by word, or deed, or thought, all are forgiven; and you will go
out of the water as from before the presence of your Lord, with the sure
discharge of all debts.
14. Now because by reason of those daily sins of which I have spoken, it
is necessary for you to say, in that $ daily prayer of cleansing as it were,
"Forgive us our debts, as we also forgive our debtors;" what will ye do? Ye have
enemies. For who can live on this earth without them? Take heed to yourselves,
love them. In no way can thine enemy so hurt thee by his violence, as thou dost
hurt thyself if thou love him not. For he may injure thy estate, or flocks, or
house, or thy man-servant, or thy maid-servant, or thy son, or thy wife; or at
most, if such power be given him, thy body. But can he injure thy soul, as thou
canst thyself? Reach forward, dearly beloved, I beseech you, to this
perfection. But have I given you this power? He only hath given it to whom ye say, "Thy
will be done as in heaven so in earth. Yet let it not seem impossible to you. I
know, I have known by experience, that there are Christian men who do love
their enemies. If it seem to you impossible, ye will not do it. Believe then first
that it can be done, and pray that the will of God may be done in you. For
what good can thy neighbour's ill do thee? If he had no ill, he would not even be
thine enemy. Wish him well then, that he may end his ill, and he will be thine
enemy no longer. For it is not the human nature in him that is at enmity with
thee, but his sin. Is he therefore thine enemy, because he hath a soul and body?
In this he is as thou art: thou hast a soul, and so hath he: thou hast a body,
and so hath he. He is of the same substance as thou art; ye were made both out
of the same earth, and quickened by the same Lord. In all this he is as thou
art. Acknowledge in him then thy brother. The first pair, Adam and Eve, were our
parents; the one our father, the other our mother; and therefore we are
brethren. But let us leave the consideration of our first origin. God is our Father,
the Church our Mother, and therefore are we brethren. But you will say, my
enemy is a heathen, a Jew, a heretic, of whom I spake some time ago on the words,
"Thy will be done as in heaven so in earth." O Church, thy enemy is the heathen,
the Jew, the heretic; he is the earth. If thou art heaven, call on thy Father
which is in heaven, and pray for thine enemies: for so was Saul an enemy of the
Church; thus was prayer made for him, and he became her friend. He not only
ceased from being her persecutor, but he laboured to be her helper. And yet, to
say the truth, prayer(1) was made against him; but against his malice, not
against his nature. So let thy prayer be against the malice of thine enemy, that it
may die, and he may live. For if thine enemy were dead, thou hast lost it might
seem an enemy, yet hast thou not found a friend. But if his malice die, thou
hast at once lost an enemy and found a friend.
15. But still ye are saying, Who can do, who has ever done this? May God
bring it to effect in your hearts! I know as well as you, there are but few who
do it; great men are they and spiritual who do so. Are all the faithful in the
Church who approach the altar, and take the Body and Blood of Christ, are they
all such? And yet they all say, "Forgive us our debts, as we also forgive our
debtors." What, if God should answer them, "Why do ye ask me to do what I have
promised, when ye do not what I have commanded?" What have I promised? "To
forgive your debts." What have I commanded? "That ye also forgive your debtors."
How can ye do this, if ye do not love your enemies? What then must we do,
brethren? Is the flock of Christ reduced to such a scanty number? If they only ought
to say, "Forgive us our debts, as we also forgive our debtors," who love their
enemies; I know not what to do, I know not what to say. For must I say to you,
If ye do not love your enemies, do not pray; I dare not say so; yea, pray
rather that ye may love them. But must I say to you, If ye do not love your enemies,
say not in the Lord's Prayer, "Forgive us our debts, as we also forgive our
debtors"? Suppose that I were to say, Do not use these words. If ye do not, your
debts are not forgiven; and if ye do use them, and do not act thereafter, they
are not forgiven. In order therefore that they may be forgiven, ye must both
use the prayer, and do thereafter.
16. I see some ground on which I may comfort not some few only, but the
multitude of Christians: and I know that ye are longing to hear it. Christ hath
said," Forgive, that ye may be forgiven."(2) And what do ye say in the Prayer
which we have now been discussing? "Forgive us our debts, as we also forgive our
debtors." So, Lord, forgive, as we forgive. This thou sayest, "O Father, which
art in heaven, so forgive our debts, as we also forgive our debtors." For this
ye ought to do, and if ye do it not, ye will perish. When your enemy asks
pardon, at once forgive him. And is this much for you to do? Though it were much for
thee to love thine enemy when violent against thee, is it much to love a man
who is a supplicant before thee? What hast thou to say? He was before violent,
and then thou hatedst him. I had rather thou hadst not hated him even then: I
had rather then when thou weft suffering from his violence, thou hadst remembered
the Lord, saying, "Father, forgive them, for they know not what they do."(3) I
would have then much wished that even at that time when thine enemy was
violent against thee, thou hadst had regard to the Lord thy God speaking thus. But
perhaps you will say, He did it, but then He did it as being the Lord, as the
Christ, as the Son of God, as the Only-Begotten, as the Word made flesh. But what
can I, an infirm and sinful man, do? If thy Lord be too high an example for
thee, turn thy thoughts upon thy fellow-servant. The holy Stephen was being
stoned, and as they stoned him, on bended knees did he pray for his enemies, and say,
"Lord, lay not this sin to their charge."(4) They were casting stones, not
asking pardon, yet did he pray for them. I would thou wert like him; reach forth.
Why art thou for ever trailing thy heart along the earth? Hear, "Lift up thy
heart," reach forward, love thine enemies. If thou canst not love him in his
violence, love him at least when he asks pardon. Love the man who saith to thee,
"Brother, I have sinned, forgive me." If thou then forgive him not, I say not
merely, that thou dost blot this prayer out of thine heart, but thou shall be
blotted thyself out of the book of God.
17. But if thou then at least forgive him, or let go hatred from thy
heart, it is hatred from the heart I bid thee forego, and not proper discipline.
What if one who asks my pardon, be one who ought to be chastised by me! Do what
thou wilt, for I suppose that thou dost love thy child even when thou dost
chastise him. Thou regardest not his cries under the rod, because thou art reserving
for him his inheritance. This I say then, that thou forego from thy heart all
hatred, when thine enemy asks pardon of thee. But perhaps you will say, "he is
playing false, he is pretending." O thou judge of another's heart, tell me thine
own father's thoughts, tell me thine own thoughts yesterday. He asks and
petitions for pardon; forgive, by all means forgive him. If thou wilt not forgive
him, it is thyself thou dost hurt, not him, for he knows what he has to do. Thou
art not willing to forgive thine own fellow-servant; he will go then to thy
Lord, and say to Him, "Lord, I have prayed my fellow-servant to forgive me, and he
would not; do Thou forgive me." Hath not the Lord power to release his
servant's debts? So he, having obtained pardon from his Lord, returns loosed, whilst
thou remainest bound. How bound? The time of prayer will come, the time must
come for thee to say, "Forgive us our debts, as we also forgive our debtors;" and
the Lord will answer thee, Thou wicked servant, when thou didst owe Me so great
a debt, thou didst ask Me, and I forgave thee; "shouldest not thou also have
had compassion on thy fellow-servant, even as I had pity on thee?"(1) These
words are out of the Gospel, not of my own heart. But if on being asked, thou shall
forgive him who begs for pardon, then thou canst say this prayer. And if thou
hast not as yet the strength to love him in his violence, still thou mayest
offer this prayer, "Forgive us our debts, as we also forgive our debtors." Let us
pass on to the rest.
18. "And lead us not into temptation. Forgive us our debts, as we also
forgive our debtors,"(2) we say because of past sins, which we cannot undo, that
they should not have been done. Thou canst labour not to do what thou hast done
before, but how canst thou bring about, that that which thou hast done should
not be done? As regards those things which have been done already, that sentence
of the prayer is thy help, "Forgive us our debts, as we also forgive our
debtors." As regards those into which thou mayest fall, what wilt thou do? "Lead us
not into temptation, but deliver us from evil." "Lead us not into temptation,
but deliver us from evil," that is, from temptation itself.
19. Now these three first petitions, "Hallowed be Thy Name, Thy kingdom
come, Thy will be done as in heaven so in earth," these three regard the life
eternal, for God's Name ought to be hallowed in us always, we ought to be in His
kingdom always, we ought to do His will always. This will be to all eternity.
But "daily bread" is necessary now. All the rest that we pray for from this
article, regards the necessities of the present life. Daily bread is necessary in
this life; the forgiveness of our debts is necessary in this life. For when we
shall arrive at the other life, there will be an end of all debts. In this life
there is temptation, in this life the sailing is dangerous, in this life
something is ever stealing its way in through the chinks of our frailties, which must
be pumped out. But when we shall be made equal to the Angels of God; no more
need to say and pray to God to forgive us our debts, when there will be none.
Here then is the "daily bread;" here the prayer that our "debts may be forgiven;"
here that we "enter not into temptation;" for in that life temptation does not
enter; here that we may be "delivered from evil;" for in that life there will
be no evil, but eternal and abiding good.
SERMON VII.
[LVII. BEN.]
AGAIN, ON MATT. VI. ON THE LORD'S PRAYER. TO THE COMPETENTES.
1. The order established for your edification requires that ye learn first
what to believe, and afterwards what to ask. For so saith the Apostle,
"Whosoever shall call upon the Name of the Lord, shall be saved."(3) This testimony
blessed Paul cited out of the Prophet; for by the Prophet were those times
foretold, when all men should call upon God; "Whosoever shall call upon the Name of
the Lord, shall be saved." And he added, "How then shall they call on Him in
whom they have not believed? And how shall they believe in Him of whom they have
not heard? Or how shall they hear without a preacher? Or how shall they preach
except they be sent?"(4) Therefore were preachers sent. They preached Christ. As
they preached, the people heard, by hearing they believed, and by believing
called upon Him. Because then it was most rightly and most truly said, "How shall
they call on Him in whom they have not believed?" therefore have ye first
learned what to believe: and to-day have learnt to call on Him in whom ye have
believed.
2. The Son of God, our Lord Jesus Christ, hath taught us a Prayer; and
though He be the Lord Himself, as ye have heard and repeated in the Creed, the
Only Son of God, yet He would not be alone. He is the Only Son, and yet would not
be alone; He hath vouchsafed to have brethren. For to whom doth He say, "Say,
Our Father, which art in heaven?"(5) Whom did He wish us to call our Father,
save His own Father? Did He grudge us this? Parents sometimes when they have
gotten one, or two, or three children, fear to give birth to any more, lest they
reduce the rest to beggary. But because the inheritance which He promiseth us is
such as many may possess, and no one be straitened; therefore hath He called
into His brotherhood the numberless brethren; who say, "Our Father, which art in
heaven." So said they who have been before us; and so shall say those who will
come after us. See how many brethren the Only Son hath in His grace, sharing His
inheritance with those for whom He suffered death. We had a father and mother
on earth, that we might be born to labours and to death: but we have found
other parents, God our Father, and the Church our Mother, by whom we are born unto
life eternal. Let us then consider, beloved, whose children we have begun to
be; and let us live so as becomes those who have such a Father. See, how that our
Creator hath condescended to be our Father!
3. We have heard whom we ought to call upon, and with what hope of an
eternal inheritance we have begun to have a Father in heaven; let us now hear what
we must ask of Him. Of such a Father what shall we ask? Do we not ask rain of
Him, to-day, and yesterday, and the day before? This is no great thing to have
asked of such a Father, and yet ye see with what sighings, and with what great
desire we ask for rain, when death is feared, when that is feared which none can
escape. For sooner or later every man must die, and we groan, and pray, and
travail in pain, and cry to God, that we may die a little later. How much more
ought we to cry to Him, that we may come to that place where we shall never die!
4. Therefore is it said, "Hallowed be Thy Name." This we also ask of Him
that his Name may be hallowed in us; for Holy is it always. And how is His Name
hallowed in us, except while it makes us holy. For once we were not holy, and
we are made holy by His Name; but He is always Holy, and His Name always Holy.
It is for ourselves, not for God, that we pray. For we do not wish well to God,
to whom no ill can ever happen. But we wish what is good for ourselves, that
His Holy Name may be hallowed, that that which is always Holy, may be hallowed in
us.
5. "Thy kingdom come."(1) Come it surely will, whether we ask or no.
Indeed, God hath an eternal kingdom. For when did He not reign? When did He begin to
reign? For His kingdom hath no beginning, neither shall it have any end. But
that we may know that in this prayer also we pray for ourselves, and not for God
(for we do not say, "Thy kingdom come," as though we were asking that God may
reign); we shall be ourselves His kingdom, if believing in Him we make progress
in this filth. All the faithful, redeemed by the Blood of His Only Son, will
be His kingdom. And this His kingdom will come, when the resurrection of the
dead shall have taken place; for then He will come Himself. And when the dead are
risen, He will divide them, as He Himself saith, "and He shall set some on the
right hand, and some on the left."(2) To those who shall be on the right hand
He will say, "Come, ye blessed of My Father, receive the kingdom." This is what
we wish and pray for when we say, "Thy kingdom come;" that it may come to us.
For if we shall be reprobates, that kingdom will come to others, but not to us.
But if we shall be of that number, who belong to the members of His
Only-begotten Son, His kingdom will come to us, and will not tarry. For are there as many
ages yet remaining, as have already passed away? The Apostle John hath said,
"My little children, it is the last hour."(3) But it is a long hour proportioned
to this long day; and see how many years this last hour lasteth. But
nevertheless, be ye as those who watch, and so sleep, and rise again, and reign. Let us
watch now, let us sleep in death; at the end we shall rise again, and shall
reign without end.
6. "Thy will be done as in heaven, so in earth."(1) The third thing we
pray for is, that His will may be done as in heaven so in earth. And in this too
we wish well for ourselves. For the will of God must necessarily be done. It is
the will of God that the good should reign, and the wicked be damned. Is it
possible that this will should not be done? But what good do we wish for
ourselves, when we say, "Thy will be done as in heaven, so in earth"? Give ear. For this
petition may be understood in many ways, and many things are to be in our
thoughts in this petition, when we pray God, "Thy will be done as in heaven, so in
earth." As Thy Angels offend Thee not, so may we also not offend Thee. Again,
how is "Thy will be done, as in heaven, so in earth," understood? All the holy
Patriarchs, all the Prophets, all the Apostles, all the spiritual are as it were
God's heaven; and we in comparison of them are earth. "Thy will be done, as in
heaven, so in earth;" as in them, so in us also. Again, "Thy will be done, as
in heaven, so in earth;" the Church of God is heaven, His enemies are earth. So
we wish well for our enemies, that they too may believe and become Christians,
and so the will of God be done, as in heaven, so also in earth. Again, "Thy
will be done, as in heaven, so in earth." Our spirit is heaven, and the flesh
earth. As our spirit is renewed by believing, so may our flesh be renewed by
rising again; and "the will of God be done, as in heaven, so in earth." Again, our
mind whereby we see truth, and delight in this truth, is heaven; as, "I delight
in the law of God, after the inward man." What is the earth? "I see another law
in my members, warring against the law of my mind?"(1) When this strife shall
have passed away, and a full concord brought about of the flesh and spirit, the
will of God will be done as in heaven, so also in earth. When we repeat this
petition, let us think of all these things, and ask them all of the Father. Now
all these things which we have mentioned, these three petitions, beloved, have
respect to the life eternal. For if the Name of our God is sanctified in us, it
will be for eternity. If His kingdom come, where we shall live for ever, it
will be for eternity. If His will be done as in heaven, so in earth, in all the
ways which I have explained, it will be for eternity.
7. There remain now the petitions for this life of our pilgrimage;
therefore follows, "Give us this day our daily bread."(2) Give us eternal things, give
us things temporal. Thou hast promised a kingdom, deny us not the means of
subsistence. Thou wilt give everlasting glory with Thyself hereafter, give us in
this earth temporal support. Therefore is it "day by day," and "to-day," that
is, in this present time. For when this life shall have passed away, shall we ask
for daily bread then? For then it will not be called, "day by day," but
"to-day." Now it is called, "day by day," when one day passes away, and another day
succeeds. Will it be called "day by day," when there will be one eternal day?
This petition for daily bread is doubtless to be understood in two ways, both for
the necessary supply of our bodily food, and for the necessities of our
spiritual support. There is a necessary supply of bodily food, for the preservation
of our daily life, without which we cannot live. This is food and clothing, but
the whole is understood in a part. When we ask for bread, we thereby understand
all things. There is a spiritual(3) food also which the faithful know, which
ye too will know, when ye shall receive it at the altar of God. This also is
"daily Bread," necessary only for this life. For shall we receive the Eucharist
when we shall have come to Christ Himself, and begun to reign with Him for ever?
So then the Eucharist is our daily bread; but let us in such wise receive it,
that we be not refreshed in our bodies only, but in our souls. For the virtue
which is apprehended there, is unity, that gathered together into His body, and
made His members, we may be what we receive. Then will it be indeed our daily
bread. Again, what I am handling before you now is "daily bread;" and the daily
lessons which ye hear in church, are daily bread, and the hymns ye hear and
repeat are daily bread. For all these are necessary in our state of pilgrimage. But
when we shall have got to heaven, shall we hear the word,(4) we who shall see
the Word Himself, and hear the Word Himself, and eat and drink Him as the
angels do now? Do the angels need books, and interpreters, and readers? Surely not.
They read in seeing, for the Truth Itself they see, and are abundantly
satisfied from that fountain, from which we obtain some few s drops. Therefore has it
been said touching our daily bread, that this petition is necessary for us in
this life.
8. "Forgive us our debts, as we forgive our debtors."(6) Is this necessary
except in this life? For in the other we shall have no debts. For what are
debts, but sins? See, ye are on the point of being baptized, then all your sins
will be blotted out, none whatever will remain. Whatever evil ye have ever done,
in deed, or word, or desire, or thought, all will be blotted out. And yet if in
the life which is after Baptism there were security from sin, we should not
learn such a prayer as this, "Forgive us our debts." Only let us by all means do
what comes next, "As we forgive our debtors." Do ye then who are about to enter
in to receive a plenary and entire remission of your debts, do ye above all
things see that ye have nothing in your hearts against any other, so as to come
forth from Baptism secure, as it were free and discharged of all debts, and then
begin to purpose to avenge yourselves on your enemies, who in time past have
done you wrong. Forgive, as ye are forgiven. God can do no one wrong, and yet He
forgiveth who oweth nothing. How then ought he to forgive, who is himself
forgiven, when He forgiveth all, who oweth nothing that can be forgiven Him?
9. "Lead us not into temptation, but deliver us from evil."(7) Will this
again be necessary in the life to come? "Lead us not into temptation," will not
be said, except where there can be temptation. We read in the book of holy Job,
"Is not the life of man upon earth a temptation?"(8) What then do we pray for?
Hear what. The Apostle James saith, "Let no man say when he is tempted, I am
tempted of God."(9) He spoke of those evil temptations, whereby men are
deceived, and brought under the yoke of the devil. This is the kind of temptation he
spoke of. For there is another sort of temptation which is called a proving; of
this kind of temptation it is written, "The Lord your God tempteth (proveth) you
to know whether ye love Him."(10) What means "to know"? "To make you know,"
for He knoweth already. With that kind of temptation, whereby we are deceived and
seduced, God tempteth no man. But undoubtedly in His deep and hidden judgment
He abandons some. And when He hath abandoned them, the tempter finds his
opportunity. For he finds in him no resistance against his power, but forthwith
presents himself to him as his possessor, if God abandon him. Therefore that He may
not abandon us, do we say, "Lead us not into temptation." "For every one is
tempted," says the same Apostle James, "when he is drawn away of his own lust and
enticed. Then lust, when it hath conceived, bringeth forth sin; and sin, when
it is finished, bringeth forth death."(1) What then has he hereby taught us? To
fight against our lusts. For ye are about to put away your sins in Holy
Baptism; but lusts will still remain, wherewith ye must fight after that ye are
regenerate. For a conflict with your own selves still remains. Let no enemy from
without be feared: conquer thine own self, and the whole world is conquered. What
can any tempter from without, whether the devil or the devil's minister, do
against thee? Whosoever sets the hope of gain before thee to seduce thee, let him
only find no covetousness in thee; and what can he who would tempt thee by gain
effect? Whereas if covetousness be found in thee, thou takest fire at the sight
of gain, and art taken by the bait of this corrupt food.(2) But if he find no
covetousness in thee, the trap remains spread in vain. Or should the tempter
set before thee some woman of surpassing beauty; if chastity be within, iniquity
from without is overcome. Therefore that he may not take thee with the bait of
a strange woman's beauty, fight with thine own lust within; thou hast no
sensible perception of thine enemy, but of thine own concupiscence thou hast. Thou
dost not see the devil, but the object that engageth thee thou dost see. Get the
mastery then over that of which thou art sensible within. Fight valiantly, for
He who hath regenerated thee is thy Judge; He hath arranged the lists, He is
making ready the crown. But because thou wilt without doubt be conquered, if thou
have not Him to aid thee, if He abandon thee: therefore dost thou say in the
prayer, "Lead us not into temptation." The Judge's wrath hath given over some to
their own lusts; and the Apostle says, "God gave them over to the lusts of
their hearts."(3) How did He give them up? Not by forcing, but by forsaking them.
10. "Deliver us from evil," may belong to the same sentence. Therefore,
that thou mayest understand it to be all one sentence, it runs thus, "Lead us not
into temptation, but deliver us from evil." Therefore he added "but," to show
that all this belongs to one sentence, "Lead us not into temptation, but
deliver us from evil." How is this? I will propose them singly. "Lead By delivering
us from evil, He leadeth us not into temptation; by not leading us into
temptation, He delivereth us from evil.
11. And truly it is a great temptation, dearly beloved, it is a great
temptation in this life, when that in us is the subject of temptation, whereby we
attain(4) pardon, if in any of our temptations we have fallen. It is a frightful
temptation, when that is taken from us, whereby we may be healed from the
wounds of other temptations. I know that ye have not yet understood me. Give me
your attention, that ye may understand. Suppose avarice tempts a man, and he is
conquered in any single temptation (for sometimes even a good wrestler and
fighter may get roughly handled(5)): avarice then has got the better of a man, good
wrestler though he be, and he has done some avaricious act. Or there has been a
passing lust; it has not brought the man to fornication, nor reached unto
adultery, for when this does take place, the man must at all events be kept back
from the criminal act. But he "hath seen a woman to lust after her;"(6) he has let
his thoughts dwell on her with more pleasure than was right; he has admitted
the attack; excellent combatant though he be, he has been wounded, but he has
not consented to it; he has beaten back the motion of his lust, has chastised it
with the bitterness of grief, he has beaten it back; and has prevailed. Still
in the very fact that he had slipped, has he ground for saying, "Forgive us our
debts." And so of all other temptations, it is a hard matter that in them all
there should not be occasion for saying, "Forgive us our debts." What then is
that frightful temptation which I have mentioned, that grievous, that tremendous
temptation, which must be avoided with all our strength, with all our
resolution; what is it? When we go about to avenge ourselves. Anger is kindled, and the
man burns to be avenged. O frightful temptation! Thou art losing that, whereby
thou hadst to attain pardon for other faults. If thou hadst committed any sin
as to other senses, and other lusts, hence mightest thou have had thy cure, in
that thou mightest say, "Forgive us our debts, as we also forgive our debtors."
But whoso instigateth thee to take vengeance, will lose for thee the power thou
hadst to say, "As we also forgive our debtors." When that power is lost, all
sins will be retained; nothing at all is remitted.
12. Our Lord and Master, and Saviour, knowing this dangerous temptation in
this life, when He taught us six or seven petitions in this Prayer, took none
of them for Himself to treat of, and to commend to us with greater earnestness,
than this one. Have we not said, "Our Father, which art in heaven;" and the
rest which follows? Why after the conclusion of the Prayer, did He not enlarge
upon it to us, either as to what He had laid down in the beginning, or concluded
with at the end, or placed in the middle? For why said He not, if the Name of
God be not hallowed in you, or if ye have no part in the kingdom of God, or if
the will of God be not done in you, as in heaven, or if God guard you not, that
ye enter not into temptation; why none of all these? but what saith He? "Verily
I say unto you, that if ye forgive men their trespasses;"(1) in reference to
that petition, "Forgive us our debts, as we also forgive our debtors." Having
passed over all the other petitions which He taught us, this He taught us with an
especial force. There was no need of insisting(2) so much upon those sins in
which if a man offend, he may know the means whereby he may be cured: need of it
there was, with regard to that sin in which if thou sin, there is no means
whereby the rest can be cured. For this thou oughtest to be ever saying, "Forgive
us our debts." What debts? There is no lack of them; for we are but men; I have
talked somewhat more than I ought, have said something I ought not, have
laughed more than I ought, have eaten more than I ought, have listened with pleasure
to what I ought not, have drunk more than I ought, have seen with pleasure
what I ought not, have thought with pleasure on what I ought not; "Forgive us our
debts, as we also forgive our debtors." This if thou hast lost, thou art lost
thyself.
13. Take heed, my brethren, my sons, sons of God, take heed, I beseech
you, in that I am saying to you. Fight to the uttermost of your powers with your
own hearts. And if ye shall see your anger making a stand against you, pray to
God against it, that God may make thee conqueror of thyself, that God may make
thee conqueror, I say, not of thine enemy without, but of thine own soul within.
For He will give thee His present help, and will do it. He would rather that
we ask this of Him, than rain. For ye see, beloved, how many petitions the Lord
Christ hath taught us; and there is scarce found among them one which speaks of
daily bread, that all our thoughts may be moulded after the life to come? For
what can we fear that He will not give us, who hath promised and said, "Seek ye
first the kingdom of God and His righteousness, and all these things shall be
added unto you; for your Father knoweth that ye have need of these things
before ye ask Him. Seek ye first the kingdom of God and His righteousness, and all
these things shall be added unto you."(3) For many have been tried even with
hunger, and have been found gold, and have not been forsaken by God. They would
have perished with hunger, if the daily inward bread were to leave their heart.
After this let us chiefly hunger. For, "Blessed are they who hunger and thirst
after righteousness, for they shall be filled."(4) But He can in mercy look upon
our infirmity, and see us, as it is said, "Remember that we are dust."(5) He
who from the dust made and quickened man, for that His work of clay's sake, gave
His Only Son to death. Who can explain, who can worthily so much as conceive,
how much He loveth us?
SERMON VIII.
[LVIII. BEN.]
AGAIN ON THE LORD'S PRAYER, MATT. VI. TO THE COMPETENTES.
1. You have just repeated the Creed, where in brief summary is contained
the Faith. I have already before now told you what the Apostle Paul says, "How
shall they call on Him in whom they have not believed?"(6) Because then you have
both heard, and learnt, and repeated how you must believe in God; hear to-day
how He must be called upon. The Son Himself, as you heard when the Gospel was
read, taught His disciples and His faithful ones this Prayer. Good hope have we
of obtaining our cause, when such an Advocate(7) hath dictated our suit. The
Assessor of the Father, as you have confessed, who sitteth on the right hand of
the Father; He is our Advocate who is to be our Judge. For from thence will He
come to judge the quick and dead. Learn then, this Prayer also which you will
have to repeat in eight days time. But whosoever of you have not repeated the
Creed well, have yet time enough, let them learn it; because on the Sabbath day(8)
in the hearing of all who shall be present, you will have to repeat it: on the
last(9) Sabbath day, when you will be here to be baptized. But in eight days
from to-day will you have to repeat this Prayer, which you have heard to-day.
2. Of which the first clause is, "Our Father, which art in heaven."(10) We
have found then a Father in heaven; let us take good heed how we live on
earth. For he who hath found such a Father, ought so to live that he may be worthy
to come to his inheritance. But we say all in common, "Our Father." How great a
condescension! This the emperor says, and this says the beggar: this says the
slave, and this his lord. They say all together, "Our Father, which art in
heaven." Therefore do they understand that they are brethren, seeing they have one
Father. Now let not the lord disdain to have his slave for a brother, seeing the
Lord Christ has vouch-safed to have him for a brother.
3. "Hallowed be Thy Name, Thy kingdom come."(1) This hallowing of God's
Name is that whereby we are made holy. For His Name is always Holy. We wish also
for His kingdom to come; come it will, though we wish it not; but to wish and
pray that His kingdom may come, is nothing else than to wish of Him, that He
would make us worthy of His kingdom, lest haply, which God forbid, it should
come, and not come to us. For to many that will never come, which nevertheless must
come. For to them will it come, to whom it shall be said, "Come, ye blessed of
My Father, receive the kingdom prepared for you from the foundation of the
world."(2) But it will not come to them to whom it shall be said, "Depart from
Me, ye cursed, into everlasting fire."(3) Therefore when we say, "Thy kingdom
come," we pray that it may come to us. What is, "may come to us"? May find us
good. This we pray for then, that He would make us good; for then to us will His
kingdom come.
4. We go on, "Thy will be done as in heaven so in earth."(4) The Angels
serve Thee in heaven, may we serve Thee in earth! The Angels do not offend Thee
in heaven, may we not offend Thee in earth! As they do Thy will, so may we do it
also! And here what do we pray for, but that we may be good? For when we do
God's will (for He without doubt doeth His own will), then is His will done in
us. And we may understand in another and a right sense these words, "Thy will be
done as in heaven, so in earth." We receive the commandment of God, and it is
well-pleasing to us, well-pleasing to our mind. "For we delight in the law of
God after the inward man."(5) Then is His will done in heaven. For our spirit is
compared to heaven, but to the earth our flesh. What then is "Thy will be done
as in heaven, so in earth"? That as Thy command is well-pleasing to our mind,
so may our flesh consent thereto; and so that strife be ended which is described
by the Apostle, "for the flesh lusteth against the Spirit, and the Spirit
against the flesh."(6) When the Spirit lusteth against the flesh, His will is even
now done in heaven; when the flesh lusteth not against the Spirit, His will is
now done in earth. There will be harmony complete when He will; be then the
contest now, that there may be victory hereafter. Thus again, "Thy will be done as
in heaven, so in earth," may be well understood, by making "heaven" to be the
Church, because it is the throne(7) of God; and "earth" the unbelievers, to
whom it is said, "Earth thou art, and unto earth shall thou go."(8) When therefore
we pray for our enemies, for the enemies of the Church, the enemies of the
Christian name, we pray that His will may be done "as in heaven, so in earth,"
that is, as in Thy faithful ones, so in Thy blasphemers also, that they all may
become "heaven."
5. There follows next, "Give us this day our daily bread."(9) It may be
understood simply that we pour forth this prayer for daily sustenance, that we
may have abundance: or if not that, that we may have no want. Now he said
"daily," for as long as it is called "to-day."(10) Daily we live, and daily rise, and
are daily fed, and daily hunger. May He then give us daily bread. Why did He
not say "covering" too, for the support of our life is in meat and drink, our
covering in raiment and lodging. Man should desire nothing more than these.
Forasmuch as the Apostle saith, "We brought nothing into this world, neither can we
carry anything out: having food and covering," let us be therewith content."(12)
Perish covetousness, and nature is rich. Therefore if this prayer have
reference to our daily sustenance, since this is a good understanding of the words,
"Give us this day our daily bread;" let us not marvel, if under the name of bread
other necessary things are also understood. As when Joseph invited his
brethren, "These men," saith he, "will eat bread with me to-day."(13) Why, were they
to eat bread only? No, but in the mention of bread only, all the rest was
understood. So when we pray for daily bread, we ask for whatever is necessary for us
in earth for our bodies' sake. But what saith the Lord Jesus? "Seek ye first
the kingdom of God and His righteousness, and all these things shall be added
unto you."(14) Again, this is a very good sense of, "Give us this day our daily
bread," thy Eucharist, our daily food. For the faithful know what they receive,
and good for them it is to receive that daily bread which is necessary for this
time present. They pray then for themselves, that they may become good, that
they may persevere in goodness, and faith, and a holy life. This do they wish,
this they pray for; for if they persevere not in this good life, they will be
separated from that Bread. Therefore, "Give us this day our daily bread." What is
this? Let us live so, that we be not separated from Thy altar. Again, the
Word of God which is laid open to us, and m a manner broken day by day, is "daily
bread." And as our bodies hunger after that other, so do our souls after this
bread. And so we both ask for this bread simply, and whatsoever is in this life
needful both for our souls and bodies, is included in "daily bread."
6. "Forgive us our debts,"(1) we say, and we may well say so; for we say
the truth. For who is he that lives here in the flesh, and hath no debts? What
man is there that lives so, that this prayer is not necessary for him? He may
puff himself up, justify himself he cannot. It were well for him to imitate the
Publican, and not swell as the Pharisee, "who went up into the temple,"(2) and
boasted of his deserts, and covered up his wounds. Whereas he who said, "Lord,
be merciful to me a sinner,"(3) knew wherefore he went up. This prayer the Lord
Jesus, consider, my brethren, this prayer the Lord Jesus taught His disciples
to offer, those great first Apostles of His, the leaders of our flock.(4) If the
leaders of the flock then pray for the remission of their sins, what ought the
lambs to do, of whom it is said, "Bring young rams unto the Lord"?(5) You knew
then that you have repeated this in the Creed, because amongst the rest you
have mentioned there "the remission of sins." There is one remission of sins
which is given once for all; another which is given day by day. There is one
remission of sins which is given once for all in Holy Baptism; another which is given
as long as we live here in the Lord's Prayer. Wherefore we say, "Forgive us
our debts."
7. And God has brought us into a covenant, and agreement, and a firm
bond(6) with Him, in that we say, "as we also forgive our debtors." He who would say
it effectually, "Forgive us our debts," must say truly, "as we also forgive
our debtors."(1) If this which is last he either say not, or say deceitfully, the
other which is first he says in vain. We say to you then especially who are
approaching to Holy Baptism, from your hearts forgive everything. And ye
faithful, who taking advantage of this occasion are listening to this prayer, and our
exposition of it, do ye wholly and from your hearts forgive whatsoever ye have
against any. Forgive it there where God seeth. For sometimes a man remitteth
with the mouth, and in the heart retaineth; he remitteth with the mouth for men's
sake, and retaineth in the heart, as not fearing the eyes of God. But do ye
remit entirely. Whatever ye have retained up to these holy days,(7) in these holy
days at least remit. "The sun ought not to go down upon your wrath,"(8) yet
many suns have passed. Let then your wrath at length pass away also, now that we
are celebrating the days of the great Sun, of that Sun of which Scripture
saith, "Unto you shall the Sun of righteousness arise with healing in His wings."(9)
What is, "in His wings"? In His protection. Whence it is said in the Psalms,"
Keep me under the shadow of Thy wings."(10) But as to others who in the day of
judgment shall repent, but all too late, and who shall mourn, yet unavailingly,
it hath been foretold by Wisdom what they shall then say as they repent and
groan for anguish of spirit, "What hath pride profited us, or what good hath
riches with our vaunting brought us? All these things are passed away like a
shadow." And, "Therefore have we erred from the way of truth, and the light of
righteousness hath not shined unto us, and the Sun of righteousness rose not upon
us."(11) That Sun riseth upon the righteous only; but this sun which we see, God
"maketh," daily "to rise upon the good and evil."(12) The righteous attain to
the seeing of that Sun; and that Sun dwelleth now in our hearts by faith. If then
thou art angry, let not this sun go down in thine heart upon thy wrath; "Let
not the sun go down upon thy wrath;" lest haply thou be angry, and so the Sun of
righteousness go down upon thee, and thou abide in darkness.
8. Now do not think that anger is nothing. "Mine eye was disordered
because of anger,"(13) saith the Prophet. Surely he whose eye is disordered cannot
see the sun; and if he should try. to see it, it were pain, and no pleasure to
him. And what is anger? The lust of vengeance. A man lusteth to be avenged, and
Christ is not yet avenged, the holy martyrs are not yet avenged. Still doth the
patience of God wait, that the enemies of Christ, the enemies of the martyrs,
may be converted. And who are we, that we should seek for vengeance? If God
should seek it at our hands, where should we abide? He who hath never in any
matter done us harm, doth not wish to avenge Himself of us; and do we seek to be
avenged, who are almost daily offending God? Forgive therefore; from the heart
forgive. If thou art angry, yet sin not. "Be ye angry, and sin not."(14) Be ye
angry as being but men, if so be ye are overcome by it; yet sin not, so as to
retain anger in your heart (for if ye do retain it, ye retain it against
yourselves), lest ye enter not into that Light. Therefore forgive. What then is anger?
The lust of vengeance. And what is hatred? Inveterate anger. If anger become
inveterate, it is then called hatred. And this he seems to acknowledge, who when
he had said, "Mine eye is disordered because of anger;" added, "I have become
inveterate among all mine enemies."(13) What was anger when it was new, became
hatred when it was turned into long continuance.(1) Anger is a "mote," hatred, a
"beam." We sometimes find fault with one who is angry, yet we retain hatred in
our own hearts; and so Christ saith to us, "Thou seest the mote in thy
brother's eye, and seest not (he beam in thine own eye."(2) How grew the mote into a
beam? Because it was not at once plucked out. Because thou didst suffer the sun
to rise and go down so often upon thy wrath, and madest it inveterate, because
thou contractedst evil suspicions, and wateredst the mote, and by watering hast
nourished it, and by nourishing it, hast made it a beam. Tremble then at least
when it is said, "Whosoever hateth his brother is a murderer."(3) Thou hast
not drawn the sword, nor inflicted any bodily wound, nor by any blow killed
another; the thought only of hatred is in thy heart, and hereby art thou held to be
a murderer, guilty art thou before the eyes of God. The other man is alive, and
yet thou hast killed him. As far as thou art concerned, thou hast killed the
man whom thou hatest. Reform then, and amend thyself, If scorpions or adders
were in your houses, how would ye toil to purify them, that ye might be able to
dwell in safety? Yet are ye angry, yea inveterate anger is in your hearts, and
there grow so many hatreds, so many beams, so many scorpions, so many vipers, and
will ye not then purify the house of God, your heart? Do then what is said,
"As we also forgive our debtors;" and so say securely," Forgive us our debts."
For without debts in this earth ye cannot live; but those great crimes which it
is your blessing to have been forgiven in Baptism, and from which we ought to be
ever free, are of one sort, and of another are those daily sins, without which
a man cannot live in this world, by reason of which this daily prayer with its
covenant and agreement is necessary; that as we say with all cheerfulness,
"Forgive us our debts;" so we may say with all truth, "As we also forgive our
debtors." So much then have we said as touching past sins; what now for the future?
9. "Lead us not into temptation:"(4) forgive what we have done already,
and grant that we may not commit any more sins. For whosoever is overcome by
temptation, committeth sin. Thus the Apostle James saith, "Let no man say when he
is tempted, he is tempted of God, for God cannot be tempted with evil, neither
tempteth He any man. But every man is tempted, when he is drawn away of his own
lust, and enticed. Then lust, when it hath conceived, bringeth forth sin: and
sin, when it is finished, bringeth forth death."(5) Therefore that thou be not
drawn away by thy lust; consent not to it. It hath no means of conceiving, but
by thee. Thou hast consented, hast as it were in thine heart admitted(6) her
embrace. Lust has risen up, deny thyself to her, follow her not. It is a lust
unlawful, impure, and shameful, it will alienate thee from God. Give it not then
the embrace of thy consent, lest thou have to bewail the birth; for if thou
consent, that is, when thou hast embraced her, she conceives, "and when lust hath
conceived, it bringeth forth sin." Dost thou not yet fear? "Sin bringeth forth
death;" at least, fear death. If thou fear not sin, yet fear that whereunto it
leads. Sin is sweet; but death is bitter. This is the infelicity of men; that
for which they sin, they leave here when they die, and the sin themselves they
carry with them. Thou dost sin for money, it must be left here: or for a
country seat; it must be left here: or for some woman's sake; she must be left here;
and whatsoever it be for which thou dost sin, when thou shalt have closed thine
eyes in death, thou must leave it here; yet the sin itself which thou
committest, thou carriest with thee.
10. May sins then be forgiven; the past forgiven, and the future cease.
But without them there below thou canst not live; be they either lesser sins, or
small, or trivial. Yet let not even these small and trivial sins be despised.
With little drops is the river filled. Let not even the lesser sins be
despised. Through narrow chinks in the ship the water oozes in,(7) the hold keeps
filling, and if it be disregarded the ship is sunk. But the sailors are not idle;
their hands are active,(8)--active that the water may be drained off from day to
day. So be thy hands active, that thou mayest pump from day to day. What is the
meaning of" be thy hands active"? Let them give, do good works, so be thy
hands engaged "Break thy bread to the hungry, and bring the poor and houseless into
thine house; if thou seest the naked, clothe him."(9) Do all thou canst, do it
with the means thou canst command, do it cheerfully, and so put up thy prayer
with confidence. It will have two wings, a double alms. What is "a double
alms"? "Forgive, and ye shall be forgiven. Give, and it shall be given unto
you."(10) The one alms is that which is done from the heart, when thou forgivest thy
brother his sin. The other alms is that which is done out of thy substance, when
thou dealest bread to the poor. Offer both, lest without either wing thy prayer
remain motionless.
11. Therefore when we have said, "Lead us not into temptation," there
follows, "But deliver us from evil." Now whoso wishes to be delivered from evil,
bears witness that he is in evil. And thus saith the Apostle, "Redeeming the
time, because the days are evil."(1) But who is there "that wisheth for life, and
loveth to see good days"?(2) Seeing that all men in this flesh have only evil
days; who doth not wish it? Do thou what follows, "Keep thy tongue from evil, and
thy lips that they speak no guile: depart from evil, and do good, seek peace,
and ensue it;"(3) and then thou hast got rid of evil days, and thy prayer,
"deliver us from evil," is fulfilled.
12. Therefore the three first petitions, "Hallowed be Thy Name, Thy
kingdom come, Thy will be done as in heaven, so in earth," are for eternity. But the
four following relate to this life, "Give us this day our daily bread." Shall
we ask day by day for daily bread, when we shall have come to that fulness of
blessing? "Forgive us our debts." Shall we say this in that kingdom, when we
shall have no debts? "Lead us not into temptation." Shall we be able to say this
then, when there will be no temptation? "Deliver us from evil." Shall we say
this, when there shall be nothing from which to be delivered? Therefore these four
are necessary, because of our daily life, but the three first in reference to
the life eternal. But all things let us ask, with a view of attaining to that
life, and let us pray here, that we be not separated from it. Every day must this
prayer be said by you, when you are baptized. For the Lord's Prayer is said
daily in the Church before the Altar of God, and the faithful hear it. We have no
fear therefore as to your not learning it carefully, because even if any of
you should be unable to get it perfectly, he will learn it by hearing it day by
day.
13. Therefore on the Saturday(4) when by the grace of God you will keep
the Vigil, you will have to repeat not the Prayer, but the Creed. For if you do
not know the Creed now, you will not hear that every day in the Church, grad
among the people. But when you have learnt it, that you may not forget it, say
it every day when you rise; when you are preparing for sleep, rehearse your
Creed, to the Lord rehearse it, remind yourselves of it, and be not weary of
repeating it. For repetition is useful, lest forgetfulness steal over you. Do not
say, "I said it yesterday, I have said it today, I say it every day, I know it
perfectly well." Call thy faith to mind, look into thyself, let thy Creed be as it
were a mirror to thee. Therein see thyself, whether thou dost believe all
which thou professest to believe, and so rejoice day by day in thy faith. Let it be
thy wealth, let it be in a sort the daily clothing of thy soul. Dost thou not
always dress thyself when thou risest? So by the daily repetition of thy Creed
dress thy soul, lest haply forgetfulness make it bare, and thou remain naked,
and that take place which the Apostle saith, (may it be far from thee!) "If so
be that being unclothed,(5) we shall not be found naked."(6) For we shall be
clothed by our faith: and this faith is at once a garment and a breastplate; a
garment against shame, a breastplate against adversity. But when we shall have
arrived at that place where we shall reign, no need will there be to say the
Creed. We shall see God; God Himself will be our vision; the vision of God will be
the reward of our present faith.
SERMON IX.
[LIX. BEN.]
AGAIN, ON THE LORD'S PRAYER, MATT. VI. TO THE COMPETENTES.
1. You have rehearsed what you believe, hear now what you are to pray for.
Forasmuch as you would not be able to call on Him, in whom you should not
first have believed; as saith the Apostle, "How shall they call on Him, in whom
they have not believed?"(7) Therefore have you first learned the Creed, where is a
brief and sublime rule of your faith; brief in the number of its words,
sublime in the weight of its contents.(8) But the prayer which you receive to-day to
be learned by heart, and to be repeated eight days hence, was dictated (as you
heard when the Gospel was being read) by the Lord Himself to His disciples, and
came from them unto us, since "their sound went into all the earth."(9)
2. Ye then who have found a Father in heaven, be loth to cleave to the
things of earth. For ye are about to say, "Our Father, which art in heaven."(10)
You have begun to belong to a great family. Under this Father the lord and the
slave are brethren; under this Father the general and the common soldier are
brethren; under this Father the rich man and the poor are brethren. All Christian
believers have divers fathers in earth, some noble, some obscure; but they all
call upon one Father which is in heaven. If our Father be there, there is the
inheritance prepared for us. But He is such a Father, that we can possess with
Him what He giveth. For He giveth an inheritance; but He doth not leave it to us
by dying. For He doth not depart Himself, but He abideth ever, that we may
come to Him. Seeing then we have heard of Whom we are to ask, let us know also
what to ask for, test haply we offend such a Father by asking amiss.
3. What then hath the Lord Jesus Christ taught us to ask of the Father
which is in heaven? "Hallowed be Thy Name."(1) What kind of blessing is this that
we ask of God, that His Name may be hallowed? The Name of God is always Holy;
why then do we pray that it may be hallowed, except that we may be hallowed by
it? We pray then that that which is Holy always, may be hallowed in us. The
Name of God is hallowed in you when ye are baptized. Why will ye offer this
prayer after ye have been baptized, but that that which ye shall then receive may
abide ever in you?
4. Another petition follows, "Thy kingdom come."(2) God's kingdom will
come, whether we ask it or not. Why then do we ask it, but that that which will
come to all saints may also come to us; that God may count us also in the number
of His saints, to whom His kingdom is to come?
5. We say in the third petition, "Thy will be done as in heaven, so in
earth."(2) What is this? That as the Angels serve Thee in heaven, so we may serve
Thee in earth. For His holy Angels obey Him; they do not offend Him; they do
His commands through the love of Him. This we pray for then, that we too may do
the commands of God in love. Again, these words are understood in another way,
"Thy will be done as in heaven, so in earth." Heaven in us is the soul, earth
in us is the body. What then is, "Thy will be done as in heaven, so in earth"?
As we hear Thy precepts, so may our flesh consent unto us; lest, whilst flesh
and spirit strive together, we be not able to fulfil the commands of God.
6. "Give us this day our daily bread,"(3) comes next in the Prayer.
Whether we ask here of the Father support(4) necessary for the body, by "bread"
signifying whatever is needful for us; or whether we understand that daily Bread,
which ye are soon to receive from the Altar; well it is that we pray that He
would give it us. For what is it we pray for, but that we may commit no evil, for
which we should be separated from that holy Bread. And the word of God which is
preached daily is daily bread. For because it is not bread for the body, it is
not on that account not bread for the soul. But when this life shall have
passed away, we shall neither seek that bread which hunger seeks; nor shall we have
to receive the Sacrament of the Altar, because we shall be there with Christ,
whose Body we do now receive; nor will those words which we are now speaking,
need to be said to you, nor the sacred volume to be read,when we shall see Him
who is Himself the Word of God, by whom all things were made, by whom the Angels
are fed, by whom the Angels are enlightened, by whom the Angels become wise;
not requiring words of circuitous discourse; but drinking in the Only Word,
filled with whom they burst forth s and never fail in praise. For, "Blessed," saith
the Psalm, "are they who dwell in Thy house; they will be always praising
Thee."(6)
7. Therefore in this present life, do we ask what comes next, "Forgive us
our debts, as we also forgive our debtors."(7) In Baptism, all debts, that is,
all sins, are entirely forgiven us. But because no one can live without sin
here below, and if without any great crime which entails separation from the
Altar, yet altogether without sins can no one live on this earth, and we can only
receive the one Baptism once for all; in this Prayer we hear how we may day by
day be washed, that our sins may day by day be forgiven us; but only if we do
what follows, "As we also forgive our debtors." Accordingly, my Brethren, I advise
you, who are in the grace of God my sons, yet my Brethren under that heavenly
Father; I advise you, whenever any one offends and sins against you, and comes,
and confesses, and asks your pardon, that ye do pardon him, and forthwith from
the heart forgive him; lest ye keep off from your own selves that pardon,
which comes from God. For if ye forgive not, neither will He forgive you. Therefore
it is in this life that we make this petition, for that it is in this life
that sins can be forgiven, where they can be done. But in the life to come they
are not forgiven, because they are not done.
8. Next after this we pray, saying, "Lead us not into temptation, but
deliver us from evil."(8) This also, that we be not led into temptation, it is
necessary for us to ask in this life, because in this life there are temptations;
and that "we may be delivered from evil," because there is evil here. And thus
of all these seven petitions, three have respect to the life eternal, and four
to the resent life "Hallowed be Thy name." This will be for ever. "Thy kingdom
come." This kingdom will be for ever. "Thy will be done as in heaven, so in
earth." This will be for ever. "Give us this day our daily bread." This will not be
for ever. "Forgive us our debts." This will not be for ever. "Lead us not into
temptation." This will not be for ever. "But deliver us from evil." This will
not be for ever: but where there is temptation, and where there is evil, there
is it necessary that we make this petition.