SERMONS ON SELECTED LESSONS OF THE NEW TESTAMENT. SERMON X. ON THE WORDS OF
THE GOSPEL, MATT. VI. 19, "LAY NOT UP FOR YOURSELVES TREASURES UPON EARTH," ETC.
SERMON X.
[LX. BEN.]
ON THE WORDS OF THE GOSPEL, MATT. VI. 19, "LAY NOT UP FOR YOURSELVES TREASURES
UPON EARTH," ETC. AN EXHORTATION TO ALMS-DEEDS.
1. EVERY man who is in any trouble, and his own resources fail him, looks
out for some prudent person from whom he may take counsel, and so know what to
do. Let us suppose then the whole world to be as it were one single man. He
seeks to escape evil, yet is slow in doing good; and as in this way tribulations
thicken, and his own resources fail, whom can he find more prudent to receive
counsel from than Christ? By all means, at least, let him find a better, and do
what he will. But if he cannot find a better, let him come to Him whom he may
find everywhere: let him consult, and take advice from Him, keep the good
commandment, escape the great evil. For present temporal ills of which men are so sore
afraid, under which they murmur exceedingly, and by their murmuring offend Him
who is correcting them, so that they find not His saving Help;(1) present
ills I say without a doubt are but passing; either they pass through us, or we
pass through them; either they pass away whilst we live, or they are left behind
us when we die. Now that is not in the matter of tribulation great, which in
duration is short. Whosoever thou art that art thinking of to-morrow, thou dost
not recall the remembrance of yesterday. When the day after to-morrow comes, this
to-morrow also will be yesterday; But now if men are so disquieted with
anxiety to escape temporal tribulations which pass, or rather fly over, what thought
ought they to take that they may escape those which abide and endure without
end?
2. A hard condition is the life of man. What else is it to be born, but to
enter on a life of toil? Of our toil that is to be, the infant's very cry is
witness. From this cup(2) of sorrow no one may be excused. The cup that Adam
hath pledged, must be drunk. We were made, it is true, by the hands of Truth, but
because of sin we were cast forth upon days of vanity. "We were made after the
image of God,"(3) but we(4) disfigured it by sinful transgression. Therefore
does the Psalm remind us how we were made, and to what a state we have come. For
it says "Though a man walk in the image (5) of God." See, what he was made.
Whither hath he come? Hearken to what follows, "Yet will he be disquieted in
vain."(6) He walks in the image of truth, and will be disquieted in the counsel of
vanity. Finally, see his disquiet, see it, and as it were in a glass, be
displeased with thyself. "Though," he says, "man walk in the image of God," and
therefore be something great, "yet will he be disquieted in vain;" and as though we
might ask, How: I pray thee, how is man disquieted in vain? "He heapeth up
treasure," saith he, "and knoweth not for whom he doth gather it." See then, this
man, that is the whole human race represented as one man, who is without resource
in his own case, and hath lost counsel and wandered out of the way of a sound
mind; "Heapeth up treasure, and knoweth not for whom he doth gather it." What
is more mad, what more unhappy? But surely he is doing it for himself? Not so.
Why not for himself? Because he must die, because the life of man is short,
because the treasure lasts, but he who gathereth it, quickly passeth away. As
pitying therefore the man who "walketh in the image of God," who confesseth things
that are true, yet followeth after vain things, he saith, "He will be disquieted
in vain." I grieve for him; "he heapeth up treasure, and knoweth not for whom
he doth gather it." Doth he gather it for himself? No. Because the man dies
whilst the treasure endures. For whom then? If thou hast any good counsel, give it
to me. But counsel hast thou none to give me, and so thou hast none for
thyself. Wherefore if we are both without it, let us both seek it, let us both
receive it, and both consider the matter together. He is disquieted, he heapeth up
treasure, he thinks, and toils, and is kept awake by anxiety. All day long art
thou harassed by labour, all night agitated by fear. That thy coffer may be
filled with money, thy soul is in a fever of anxiety.
3. I see it, I am grieved for thee; thou art disquieted, and as He who
cannot deceive, assures us, "Thou art disquieted in vain." For thou art heaping up
treasures: supposing that all thy undertakings succeed, to say nothing of
losses, of so great perils and deaths in the prosecution of every several kind of
gain (I speak not of deaths of the body, but of evil thoughts, for that gold may
come in, uprightness(7) goeth out; that thou mayest be clothed outwardly, thou
art made naked within), but to pass over these, and other such things in
silence, to pass by all the things that are against thee, let us think only of the
favourable circumstances. See, thou art laying up treasures, gains flow into
thee from every quarter, and thy money runs like fountains; everywhere where want
presseth, there doth abundance flow. Hast thou not heard, "If riches increase,
set not your heart upon them?"(8) Lo, thou art getting, thou art disquieted,
not fruitlessly indeed, still in vain. "How," thou wilt ask "am I disquieted in
vain? I am filling my coffers, my walls will scarce hold what I get, how then am
I disquieted in vain?" "Thou art heaping up treasure, and dost not know for
whom thou gatherest it." Or if thou dost know, I pray thee tell me. I will listen
to thee. For whom is it? If thou art not disquieted in vain, tell me for whom
thou art heaping up thy treasure? "For myself," thou sayest, Dost thou dare say
so, who must so soon die? "For my children." Dost thou dare say this of them
who must so soon die? It is a great duty of natural affection(1) (it will be
said) for a father to lay up for his sons; rather it is a great vanity, one who
must soon die is laying up for those who must soon die also. If it is for
thyself, why dost thou gather, seeing thou leavest all when thou diest. This is the
case also with thy children; they will succeed thee, but not to abide long. I say
nothing about what sort of children they may be, whether haply debauchery may
not waste what covetousness hath amassed. So another by dissoluteness(2)
squanders what thou by much toil hast gathered together. But I pass over this. It may
be they will be good children, they will not be dissolute, they will keep what
thou hast left, will increase what thou hast kept, and will not dissipate what
thou hast heaped together. Then will thy children be equally vain with
thyself, if they do so, if in this they imitate thee their father. I would say to them
what I said just now to thee. I would say to thy son, to him for whom thou art
saving I would say, "Thou art heaping up treasure, and knowest not for whom
thou dost gather it." For as thou knewest not, so neither doth he know. If the
vanity hath continued in him, hath the truth lost its power with respect to him?
4. I forbear to urge, that it may be even during thy life thou art but
laying up for thieves. In one night may they come and find all ready the gathering
of so many days and nights. It may be thou art laying up for a robber, or a
highwayman. I will say no more on this, lest I call to mind and re-open the wound
of past sufferings. How many things which an empty vanity hath heaped
together, hath the cruelty of an enemy found ready to its hand. It is not my place to
wish for this: but it is the concern of all to fear it. May God avert it! May
His own scourges be sufficient. May He to whom we pray, spare us! But if He ask
thee for whom are we laying by, what shall we answer? How then, O man, whosoever
thou art, that are heaping up treasure in vain, how wilt thou answer me, as I
handle this matter with thee, and with thee seek counsel in a common cause? For
thou didst speak and make answer, "I am laying up for myself, for my children,
for my posterity." I have said already how many grounds of fear there are,
even as to those children themselves. But I pass over the consideration, that thy
children may so live as to be a curse(3) to thee, and as thine enemy would wish
them; grant that they live as the father himself would have them. Yet how many
have fallen into those mischances, I have declared, and reminded you of
already. Thou didst shudder at them, though thou didst not amend thyself. For what
hast thou to answer but this, "Perhaps it may not be so"? Well, I said so too;
perhaps I say thou art but laying up for the thief, or robber, or highwayman. I
did not say certainly, but perhaps. Where there is a perhaps, there is a
perhaps-not; so then thou knowest not what will be, and therefore thou "art disquieted
in vain." Thou seest now how truly spake the Truth, how vainly vanity is
disquieted. Thou hast heard and at length learnt wisdom, because when thou sayest,
"Perhaps it is for my children," but dost not dare to say, "I am sure that it is
for my children," thou dost not in fact know for whom thou art gathering
riches. So then, as I see, and have said already, thou art thyself without resource;
thou findest nothing wherewith to answer me, nor can I to answer thee.
5. Let us both therefore seek and ask for counsel. We have opportunity of
consulting not any wise man, but Wisdom Herself. Let us then both give ear to
Jesus Christ, "to the Jews a stumbling stone, and to the Gentiles foolishness,
but to them who are called, both Jews and Greeks, Christ the Power of God and
the Wisdom of God."(4) Why art thou preparing a strong defence for thy riches?
Hear the Power of God, nothing is more strong than He. Why art thou preparing
wise counsels to protect thy riches? Hear the Wisdom of God, nothing is more Wise
than He. Peradventure when I say what I have to say, thou wilt be offended, and
so thou wilt be a Jew, "because to the Jews is Christ an offence." Or
peradventure, when I have spoken, it will appear foolish to thee, and so wilt thou be a
Gentile, "for to the Gentiles is Christ foolishness." Yet thou art a
Christian, thou hast been called. "But to them who are called, both Jews and Greeks,
Christ is the Power of God and the Wisdom of God." Be not sad then when I have
said what I have to say; be not offended; mock not my folly, as you deem it, with
an air of disdain.(6) Let us give ear. For what I am about to say, Christ hath
said. If thou despise the herald, yet fear the Judge. What shall I say then?
The reader of the Gospel has but just now relieved me from this embarrassment. I
will not read anything fresh, but will recall only to your recollection what
has just been read. Thou wast seeking counsel, as failing in thine own resources;
see then what the Fountain of right counsel saith, the Fountain from whose
streams is no fear of poison, fill from It what thou mayest.
6. "Lay not up for yourselves treasures on earth, where moth and rust doth
destroy, and where thieves break through and steal: But lay up for yourselves
treasures in heaven, where no thief approacheth, nor moth corrupteth: For where
your treasure is, there will your heart be also."(1) What more dost thou wait
for? The thing is plain. The counsel is open, but evil desire lies hid; nay,
not so, but what is worse, it too lies open. For plunder does not cease its
ravages; avarice does not cease to defraud; maliciousness does not cease to swear
falsely. And all for what? that treasure may be heaped together. To be laid up
where? In the earth, and rightly indeed, by earth for earth. For to the man who
sinned and who pledged us, as I have said, our cup of toil, was it said, "Earth
thou art, and to earth shalt thou return."(2) With good reason is the treasure
in earth, because the heart is there. Where then is that, "we lift them up unto
the Lord?" Sorrow for your case, ye who have understood me; and if ye sorrow
truly, amend yourselves. How long will ye be applauding and not doing? What ye
have heard is true, nothing truer. Let that then which is true be done. One God
we praise, yet we change not, that we may not in this very praise be disquieted
in vain.
7. Therefore, "Lay not up for yourselves treasures on earth;" whether ye
have found by experience how what is laid up in the earth is lost, or whether ye
have not so experienced it, yet do ye too fear lest ye should do so. Let
experience reform him whom words will not reform. One cannot rise up now, one cannot
go out, but all together with one voice are crying, "Woe to us, the world is
falling."(3) If it be falling, why dost thou not remove? If an architect were to
tell thee, that thy house would soon fall, wouldest thou not remove before
thou didst indulge in thy vain lamentations? The Builder of the world telleth thee
the world will soon fall, and wilt thou not believe it? Hear the voice of Him
who foretelleth it, hear the counsel of Him who giveth thee warning. The voice
of prediction is, "Heaven and earth shall pass away."(4) The voice of warning
is, "Lay not up for yourselves treasure on earth."(5) If then thou dost believe
God in His prediction; if thou despise not His warning, let what He says be
done. He who has given thee such counsel doth not deceive thee. Thou shalt not
lose what thou hast given away, but shalt follow what thou hast only sent before
thee. Therefore my counsel is, "Give to the poor, and thou shalt have treasure
in heaven."(6) Thou shalt not remain without treasure; but what thou hast on
earth with anxiety, thou shall possess in heaven free from care. Transport thy
goods then. I am giving thee counsel for keeping, not for losing. "Thou shall
have," saith He, "treasure in heaven, and come, follow Me," that I may bring thee
to thy treasure. This is not a wasting, but a saving. Why do men keep silence?
Let them hear, and having at last by experience found what to fear, let them do
that which will give them no cause of fear, let them transport their goods to
heaven. Thou puttest wheat in the low ground; (7) and thy friend comes, who
knows the nature of the corn and the land, and instructs thy unskilfulness, and
says to thee, "What hast thou done?" Thou hast put the corn in the flat soil, in
the lower land; the soil is moist; it will all rot, and thou wilt lose thy
labour. Thou answerest, What then must I do? Remove it, he says, into the higher
ground. Dost thou then give ear to a friend who gives thee counsel about thy
corn, and despisest thou God who gives thee counsel about thine heart? Thou fearest
to put thy corn in the low earth, and wilt thou lose thy heart in the earth?
Behold the Lord thy God when He giveth thee counsel touching thine heart, saith,
"Where thy treasure is, there will thy heart be also."(8) Lift up, saith He,
thine heart to heaven, that it rot not in the earth. It is His counsel, who
wisheth to preserve thy heart, not to destroy it.
8. If then this be so, what must be their repentance who have not done
thereafter? How must they now reproach themselves! We might have had in heaven
what we have now lost in earth. The enemy has broken up our house; but could he
break heaven open? He has killed the servant who was set to guard; but could he
kill the Lord who would have kept them, "where no thief approacheth, neither
moth corrupteth." How many now are saying, "There we might have had, and hid our
treasures safe, where after a little while we might, have followed them
securely. Why have we not hearkened to our Lord? Why have we despised the admonitions
of the Father, and so have experienced the invasion of the enemy?" If then this
be good counsel, let us not be slow in taking heed to it; and if what we have
must be transported, let us transfer it into that place, from whence we cannot
lose it. What are the poor to whom we give, but our(1) carriers,(2) by whom we
convey our goods from earth to heaven ? Give then: thou art but giving to thy
carrier, he carrieth what thou givest to heaven. How, sayest thou, does he carry
it to heaven? For I see that he makes an end of it by eating. No doubt, he
carries it, not by keeping it, but by making it his food. What? Hast thou
forgotten, " Come, ye blessed of My Father, receive the kingdom; for I was an hungred,
and ye gave Me meat:" and," Inasmuch as ye did it to one of the least of Mine,
ye did it to Me."(3) If thou hast not despised the beggar that standeth before
thee, consider to Whom what thou gavest him hath come. "Inasmuch," saith he,
"as ye did it to one of the least of Mine, ye did it to Me." He hath received it,
who gave thee wherewith to give. He hath received it, who in the end will give
His Own Self to thee.
9. For this have I at divers times called to your remembrance, Beloved,
and I confess to you it astonishes me much in the Scriptures of God, and I ought
repeatedly to call your attention to it. I pray you to think of what our Lord
Jesus Christ Himself saith, that at the end of the world, when He shall come to
judgment, He will gather together all nations before Him, and will divide men
into two parts; that He will place some at His right hand, and others on His
left; and will say to those on the right hand, "Come, ye blessed of My Father,
receive the kingdom prepared for you from the foundation of the world." But to
those on the left, "Depart ye into everlasting fire, prepared for the devil and
his angels." Search out the reasons either for so great a reward, or so great a
punishment. "Receive the kingdom," and "Go into everlasting fire." Why shall the
first receive the kingdom? "For I was an hungred, and ye gave Me meat." Why
shall the other depart into everlasting fire? "For I was hungry, and ye gave Me
no meat." What meaneth this, I ask? I see touching those who are to receive the
kingdom, that they gave as good and faithful Christians, not despising the
words of the Lord, and with sure trust hoping for the promises they did
accordingly; because had they not done so, this very barrenness would not surely have
accorded with their good life. For it may be they were chaste, no cheats, nor
drunkards, and kept themselves from evil works. Yet if they had not added good
works, they would have remained barren. For they would have kept, "Depart from
evil," but they would not have kept, "and do good."(4) Notwithstanding, even to them
He doth not say, "Come, receive the kingdom," for ye have lived in chastity;
ye have defrauded no man, ye have not oppressed any poor man, ye have invaded
no one's landmark, ye have deceived no one by oath. He said not this, but,
"Receive the kingdom, because I was an hungred, and ye gave Me meat." How excellent
is this above all, when the Lord made no mention of the rest, but named this
only! And again to the others, "Depart ye into everlasting fire, prepared for the
devil and his angels. How many things could He urge against the ungodly, were
they to ask, "Why are we going into ever lasting fire!" Why? Do ye ask, ye
adulterers, menslayers, cheats, sacrilegious blasphemers, unbelievers. Yet none of
these did He name, but, "Because I was hungry, and ye gave Me no meat.
10. I see that you are surprised as I am. And indeed it is a marvellous
thing. But I gather as best I can the reason of this thing so strange, and I will
not conceal it from you. It is written, " As water quencheth fire, so alms
quencheth sin."(5) Again it is written, "Shut up alms in the heart of a poor man,
and it shall make supplication for thee before the Lord."(6) Again it is
written, "Hear, O king, my counsel, and redeem thy sins by alms."(7) And many other
testimonies of the Divine oracles are there, whereby it is shown that alms
avail much to the quenching and effacing of sins. Wherefore to those whom He is
about to condemn, yea, rather to those whom He is about to crown, He will impute
alms only, as though He would say, "It were a hard matter for me not to find
occasion to condemn you, were I to examine and weigh you accurately and with much
exactness to scrutinize your deeds; but, "Go into the kingdom, for I was
hungry, and ye gave Me meat." Ye shall therefore go into the kingdom, not because ye
have not sinned, but because ye have redeemed your sins by alms. And again to
the others, "Go ye into everlasting fire, prepared for the devil and his
angels." They too, guilty as they are, old in their sins, late in their fear for them,
in what respect, when they turn their sins over in their mind, could they dare
to say that they are undeservedly condemned, that this sentence is pronounced
against them undeservedly by so righteous a Judge? In considering their
consciences, and all the wounds of their souls, in what respect could they dare to
say, We are unjustly condemned. Of whom it was said before in Wisdom, "Their own
iniquities shall convince them to their face."(8) Without doubt they will see
that they are justly condemned for their sins and wickednesses; yet it will be as
though He said to them, "It is not in consequence of this that ye think, but
'because I was hungry, and ye gave Me no meat.'" For if turning away from all
these your deeds, and turning to Me, ye had redeemed all those crimes and sins by
alms, those alms would now deliver you, and absolve you from the guilt of so
great offences; for, "Blessed are the merciful, for to them shall be shown
mercy." (1) But now go away into everlasting fire. "He shall have judgment without
mercy, who hath showed no mercy."(2)
11. O that I may have induced you, my brethren, to give away your earthly
bread, and to knock for the heavenly! The Lord is that Bread. He saith, "I am
the Bread of life."(3) But how shall He give to thee, who givest not to him that
is in need? One is in need before thee, and thou art in need before Another,
and since thou art in need before Another, and another is in need before thee,
that other is in need before him who is in need himself. For He before whom
thou art in need, needeth nothing. Do then to others as thou wouldest have done to
thee. For it is not in this case as with those friends who are wont to upbraid
in a way one another with their kindnesses; as, "I did this for thee," and the
other answers, "and I this for thee," that He wishes us to do Him some good
office, because He has first done such an office for us. He is in want of
nothing, and therefore is He the very Lord. I said unto the Lord, "Thou art my God,
for Thou needest not my goods."(4) Notwithstanding though He be the Lord, and the
Very Lord, and needeth not our goods, yet that we might do something even for
Him, hath He vouchsafed to be hungry in His poor. "I was hungry," saith He,
"and ye gave Me meat. Lord, when saw we Thee hungry? Forasmuch as ye did it to one
of the least of Mine, ye did it to Me."(5) To be brief then, let men hear, and
consider as they ought, how great a merit it is to have fed Christ when He
hungereth, and how great a crime it is to have despised Christ when He hungereth.
12. Repentance for sins changes men, it is true, for the better; but it
does not appear as if even it would profit ought, if it should be barren of works
of mercy. This the Truth testifieth by the mouth of John, who said to them
that came to him, "O generation of vipers, who hath warned you to flee from the
wrath to come? Bring forth therefore fruits worthy of repentance; And say not we
have Abraham to our father; for I say unto you, that God is able of these
stones to raise up children unto Abraham. For now is the axe laid unto the root of
the trees. Every tree therefore that bringeth not forth good fruit shall be cut
down, and cast into the fire."(6) Touching this fruit he said above, "Bring
forth fruits worthy of repentance." Whoso then bringeth not forth these fruits,
hath no cause to think that he shall attain(7) pardon for his sins by a barren
repentance. Now what these fruits are, he showeth afterwards himself. For after
these his words the multitude asked him, saying, "What shall we do then?" That
is, what are these fruits, which thou exhortest us with such alarming force to
bring forth? "But he answering said unto them, he that hath two coats, let him
give to him that hath none; and he that hath meat, let him do likewise." My
brethren, what is more plain, what more certain, or express than this? What other
meaning then can that have which he said above, "Every tree that bringeth not
forth good fruit, shall be cut down, and cast into the fire;" but that same
which they on the left shall hear, "Go ye into everlasting fire, for I was hungry,
and ye gave Me no meat." So then it is but a small matter to depart from sins,
if thou shalt neglect to cure what is past, as it is written, "Son, thou hast
sinned, do so no more." And that he might not think to be secure by this only,
he saith, "And for thy former sins pray that they may be forgiven thee."(8) But
what will it profit thee to pray for forgiveness, if thou shall not make
thyself meet to be heard, by not bringing forth fruits meet for repentance, that thou
shouldest be cut down as a barren tree, and be cast into the fire? If then ye
will be heard when ye pray for pardon of your sins, "Forgive, and it shall be
forgiven you; Give, and it shall be given you."(9)