SERMONS ON SELECTED LESSONS OF THE NEW TESTAMENT. SERMON XLVI. ON THE WORDS OF
THE GOSPEL, MARK VIII. 34, "IF ANY MAN WOULD COMEAFTER ME, LET HIM DENY
HIMSELF," ETC. AND ON THE WORDS I JOHN II. 15, "IF ANY MAN LOVE THE WORLD, THE LOVE
OF THE FATHER IS NOT IN HIM."
SERMON XLVI.
[XCVI. BEN.]
ON THE WORDS OF THE GOSPEL, MARK VIII. 34, "IF ANY MAN WOULD COMEAFTER ME, LET
HIM DENY HIMSELF," ETC. AND ON THE WORDS I JOHN II. 15, "IF ANY MAN LOVE THE
WORLD, THE LOVE OF THE FATHER IS NOT IN HIM."
1. HARD and grievous does that appear which the Lord hath enjoined, that
"whosoever will come after Him, must deny himself."(4) But what He enjoineth is
not hard or grievous, who aideth us that what He enjoineth may be done. For
both is that true which is said to Him in the Psalm, "Because of the words of Thy
lips I have kept hard ways."(5) And that is true which He said Himself, "My
yoke is easy, and My burden is light."(6) For whatsoever is hard in what is
enjoined us, charity makes easy. We know what great things love itself can do. Very
often is this love even abominable and impure; but how great hardships have men
suffered, what indignities and intolerable things have they endured, to attain
to the object of their love? whether it be a lover of money who is called
covetous; or a lover of honour, who is called ambitious; or a lover of beautiful
women, who is called voluptuous. And who could enumerate all sorts of loves? Yet
consider what labour all lovers undergo, and are not conscious of their labours;
and then does any such one most feel labour, when he is hindered from labour.
Since then the majority of men are such as their loves are, and that there
ought to be no other care for the regulation of our lives, than the choice of that
which we ought to love; why dost thou wonder, if he who loves Christ, and who
wishes to follow Christ, for the love of Him denies himself? For if by loving
himself man is lost, surely by denying himself be is found.
2. The first destruction of man, was the love of himself. For if he had
not loved himself, if he had preferred God to himself, he would have been willing
to be ever subject unto God; and would not have been turned to the neglect of
His will, and the doing his own will. For this is to love one's self, to wish
to do one's own will. Prefer to this God's will; learn to love thyself by not
loving thyself. For that ye may know that it is a vice to love one's self, the
Apostle speaks thus, "For men shall be lovers of their own selves." (7) And can
he who loves himself have any sure trust in himself? No; for he begins to love
himself by forsaking God, and is driven away from himself to love those things
which are beyond himself; to such a degree that when the aforesaid Apostle had
said," Men shall be lovers of their own selves," he subjoined immediately,
"lovers of money." Already thou seest that thou art without. Thou hast begun to love
thyself: stand in thyself if thou canst. Why goest thou without? Hast thou, as
being rich in money, become a lover of money? Thou hast begun to love what is
without thee, thou hast lost thyself. When a man's love then goes even away
froth himself to those things which are without, he begins to share the vanity of
his vain desires, and prodigal as it were to spend his strength. He is
dissipated, exhausted, without resource or strength, he feeds swine; and wearied with
this office of feeding swine, he at last remembers what he was, and says, "How
many hired servants of my Father's are eating bread, and I here perish with
hunger!"(1) But when the son in the parable says this, what is said of him, who
had squandered all he had on harlots, who wished to have in his own power what
was being well kept for him with his father; he wished to have it at his own
disposal, he squandered all, he was reduced to indigence: what is said of him? "And
when he returned to himself." If "he returned to himself," he had gone away
from himself. Because he had fallen from himself, had gone away from himself, he
returns first to himself, that he may return to that state from which he had
fallen away by falling from himself. For as by falling away from himself, he
remained in himself; so by returning to himself, he ought not to remain in
himself, lest he again go away from himself. Returning then to himself, that he might
not remain in himself, what did he say? "I will arise and go to my Father."(2)
See, whence he had fallen away from himself, he had fallen away from his
Father; he had fallen away from himself, he had gone away from himself to those
things which are without. He returns to himself, and goes to his Father, where he
may keep. himself in all security. If then he had gone away from himself, let
him also in returning to himself, from whom he had gone away, that he may "go
to his Father," deny himself. What is "deny himself"? Let him not trust in
himself, let him feel that he is a man, and have respect to the words of the
prophet, "Cursed is every one that putteth his hope in than."(3) Let him withdraw
himself from himself, but not towards things below. Let him withdraw himself from
himself, that he may cleave unto God. Whatever of good he has, let him commit to
Him by whom he was made; whatever of evil he has, he has made it for himself.
The evil that is in him God made not; let him destroy what himself has done,
who has been thereby undone. "Let him deny himself," He saith, "and take up his
cross, and follow Me."
3. And whither must the Lord be followed? Whither He is gone, we know; but
a very few days since we celebrated the solemn memorial of it. For He has
risen again, and ascended into heaven; thither must He be followed. Undoubtedly we
must not despair of it, because He hath Himself promised us, not because man
can do anything. Heaven was far away from us, before that our Head had gone into
heaven. But now why should we despair, if we are members of that Head? Thither
then must He be followed. And who would be unwilling to follow Him to such an
abode? Especially seeing that we are in so great travail on earth with fears and
pains. Who would be unwilling to follow Christ thither, where is supreme
felicity, supreme peace, perpetual security? Good is it to follow Him thither: but
we must see by what way we are to follow. For the Lord Jesus did not say the
words we are engaged in, when He had now risen from the dead. He had not yet
suffered, He had still to come to the Cross, had to come to His dishonouring, to the
outrages, the scourging, the thorns, the wounds, the mockeries, the insults,
Death. Rough as it were is the way; it makes thee to be slow; thou hast no mind
to follow. But follow on. Rough is the way which man has made for himself, but
what Christ hath trodden in His passage is worn smooth. For who would not wish
to go to exaltation? Elevation is pleasing to all; but humility is the step to
it. Why dost thou put out thy foot beyond thee? Thou hast a mind to fall, not
to ascend. Begin by the step, and so thou hast ascended. This step of humility
those two disciples were loth to have an eye to, who said, "Lord, bid that one
of us may sit at Thy right hand, and the other at the left in Thy kingdom."(4)
They sought for exaltation, they did not see the step. But the Lord showed them
the step. For what did He answer them? "Ye who seek the hill of exaltation, can
ye drink the cup of humiliation?" And therefore He does not say simply, "Let
him deny himself, and follow Me" howsoever: but He said more, "Let him take up
his cross, and follow Me."
4. What is, "Let him take up his cross "? Let him bear whatever trouble he
has; so let him follow Me. For when he shall begin to follow Me in conformity
to My life and precepts, he will have many to contradict him, he will have many
to hinder him, he will have many to dissuade him, and that from among those
who are even as it were Christ's companions. They who hindered the blind men from
crying out were walking with Christ.(5) Whether therefore they be threats or
caresses, or whatsoever hindrances there be, if thou wish to follow, turn them
into thy cross, bear it, carry it, do not give way beneath it. There seems to
be an exhortation to martyrdom in these words of the Lord. If there be
persecution, ought not all things to be despised in consideration of Christ? The world
is loved; but let Him be preferred by whom the world was made. Great is the
world; but greater is He by whom the world was made. Fair is the world; but fairer
is He by whom the world was made. Sweet is the world; but sweeter is He by whom
the world was made. Evil is the world; and good is He by whom the world was
made. How shall I be able to explain and unravel what I have said? May God help
me? For what have I said? what have ye applauded? See, it is but a question, and
yet ye have already applauded. How is the world evil, if He by whom the world
was made is good? Did not God make all things, "and behold they were very good
"? Does not Scripture at each several work of creation testify that God made
it good, by saying, "And God saw that it was good," and at the end summed them
all up together thus how that God had made them, "And behold they were very
good"?(1)
5. How then is the world evil, and He good by whom the world was made?
How? "Since the world was made by Him, and the world knew Him not."(2) The world
was made by Him, the heaven and earth and all things that are in them: "the
world knew Him not," the lovers of the world; the lovers of the world and the
despisers of God; this "world knew Him not." So then the world is evil, because they
are evil who prefer the world to God. And He is good who made the world, the
heaven, and earth, and sea, and themselves who love the world. For this only,
that they love the world and do not love God, He made not in them. But
themselves, all that appertains to their nature He made; what appertains to guiltiness,
He made not. This is that I said a little while ago, "Let man efface what he
has made, and so will he be well-pleasing to Him who made Him."
6. For there is among men themselves a good world also; but one that has
been made good from being evil. For the whole world if you take the word "world"
for men, putting aside (what we call the world) the heaven and earth and all
things that in them are; if you take the world for men, the whole world did he
who first sinned make evil. The whole mass was corrupted in the root. God made
man good; so runs the Scripture, "God made man upright; and men themselves found
out many cogitations."(3) Run from these "many" to One, gather up thy
scattered things into one: flow on together, fence thyself in, abide with One; go not
to many things. There is blessedness. But we have flowed away, have gone on to
perdition: we were all born with sin, and to that sin wherein we were born
have we too added by our evil living, and the whole world has become evil. But
Christ came, and He chose that which He made, not what He found; for He found all
evil, and by His grace He made them good. And so was made another "world;" and
the "world" now persecutes the "world."
7. What is the "world" which persecutes? That of which it is said to us,
"Love not the world, neither the things that are in the world. If any man love
the world, the love of the Father is not in him. For all that is in the world,
is the lust of the flesh, and the lust of the eyes, and the pride of life, which
is not of the Father, but of the world. And the world passeth away, and the
lust thereof: but he that doeth the will of God abideth for ever,"(4) even as God
abideth for ever. Lo! have spoken of two "worlds," the "world" which
persecutes, and that which it persecutes. What is the "world" which persecutes? "All
that is the world, the lust of the flesh, and the lust of the eyes, and the pride
of life, which is not of the Father, but of the world;" and "the world passeth
away." Lo, this is the "world" which persecutes. What is the "world" which it
persecutes? "He that doeth the will of God abideth for ever," even as God
abideth for ever.
8. But see, that which persecutes is called the "world;" let us prove
whether that also which suffers persecution is called "the world." What ! Art thou
deaf to the voice of Christ who speaketh, or rather to Holy Scripture which
testifieth, "God was in Christ reconciling the world unto Himself."(5) "If the
world hate you, know ye that it first hated Me."(6) See, the "world" hates. What
does it hate but the "world"? What "world"? "God was in Christ reconciling the
world unto Himself." The condemned "world" persecutes; the reconciled "world"
suffers persecution. The condemned "world" is all that is without the Church; the
reconciled "world" is the Church. For He says, "The Son of Man came not to
judge the world, but that the world through Him may be saved."(7)
9. Now in this world, holy, good, reconciled, saved, or rather to be
saved, and now saved in hope, "for we are saved in hope;"(8) in this world, I say,
that is in the Church which wholly follows Christ, He hath said as of universal
application, "Whosoever will follow Me, let him deny himself." For it is not
that the virgins ought to give ear to this, and the married women ought not; or
that the widows ought, and the women who still have their husbands ought not; or
that monks ought, and the married men ought not; or that the clergy ought, and
the laymen ought not: but let the whole Church, the whole body, all the
members, distinguished and distributed throughout their several offices, follow
Christ. Let the whole Church follow Him, that only Church, let the dove follow Him,
let the spouse follow Him, let her who has been redeemed and endowed with the
Bridegroom's blood, follow Him. There virgin purity hath its place; there
widowed continence hath its place; married chastity there hath its place; but
adultery hath no place of its own there; and no place there hath lasciviousness,
unlawful and meet for punishment. But let these several members which have their
place there, in their kind and place and measure, "follow Christ;" let them "deny
themselves;" that is, let them presume nothing of themselves: let them "take up
their cross," that is, let them in the world endure for Christ's sake whatever
the world may bring upon them. Let them love Him, who Alone doth not deceive,
who Alone is not deceived, Alone deceiveth not; let them love Him, for that is
true which He doth promise. But because He doth not give at once, faith wavers.
Hold on, persevere, endure, bear delay and thou hast borne the cross.
10. Let not the virgin say, "I shall alone be there." For Mary shall not
be there alone but the widow Anna shall be there also. Let not the woman which
hath an husband say, "The widow will be there, not I;" for it is not that Anna
will be there, and Susanna not be there. But by all means let them who would be
there prove themselves hereby, that they who have here a lower place envy not,
but love in others the better place. For, for instance, my Brethren, that ye
may understand me; one man has chosen a married life, another a life of
continence; if he who has chosen the married life, has adulterous lusts, he has "looked
back;" he has lusted after that which is unlawful. He too who would wish
afterwards to return from continence to a married life, has "looked back;" he has
chosen what is in itself lawful, yet he has "looked back." Is marriage then to be
condemned? No. Marriage is not to be condemned; but see whither he had come
who has chosen it. He had already got before it. When he was living as a young
man in voluptuousness, marriage was before him; he was making his way towards
it; but when he had chosen continence, marriage was behind him. "Remember," saith
the Lord, "Lot's wife."(1) Lot's wife, by looking behind, remained motionless.
To whatever point then any one has been able to reach, let him fear to "look
back" from thence; and let him walk in the way, let him "follow Christ."
"Forgetting those things which are behind, and stretching forth unto those things
which are before, let him by an earnest inward intention press on toward the prize
of the calling of God in Christ Jesus."(2) Let those that are married regard
the unmarried as above themselves; let them acknowledge that they are better; let
them in them love what themselves have not; and let them in them love Christ.