SERMONS ON SELECTED LESSONS OF THE NEW TESTAMENT. SERMON LI. ON THE WORDS OF
THE GOSPEL, LUKE X. 2, "THE HARVEST TRULY IS PLENTEOUS," ETC.
SERMON LI.
[CI. BEN.]
ON THE WORDS OF THE GOSPEL, LUKE X. 2, "THE HARVEST TRULY IS PLENTEOUS," ETC.
1. By the lesson of the Gospel which has just been read, we are reminded
to search what that harvest is of which the Lord says, "The harvest truly is
great, but the labourers are few. Pray ye the Lord of the harvest, that He would
send forth labourers into His harvest."(1) Then to His twelve disciples, whom He
also named Apostles, He added other seventy-two, and sent them all, as appears
from His words, to the harvest then ready. What then was that harvest? For
that harvest was not among these Gentiles, among whom there had been nothing sown.
It remains therefore that we understand that this harvest was among the people
of the Jews. It was to that harvest that the Lord of the harvest came, to that
harvest He sent reapers; but to the Gentiles He sent not reapers, but sowers.
Understand we then that it was harvest among the people of the Jews, sowing
time among the peoples of the Gentiles. For out of that harvest were the Apostles
chosen, where now that the harvest was, the corn was already ripe; for there
had the Prophets sown. Delightful it is to take a view of God's husbandry, and to
feel delight in His gifts, and the labourers in His field. For in this
husbandry did he labour, who said, "I laboured more than they all."(2) But the
strength to labour was given him by the Lord of the harvest. Therefore he added, "Yet
it is not I, but the grace of God which is with me." For that he was employed
in this husbandry he clearly enough shows, where he says, "I have planted,
Apollos watered."(3) But this Apostle, from Saul, becoming Paul, that is, from being
proud, the least of all (for the name of Saul is derived from Saul; but Paul
is little; whence in a way interpreting his own name, he says, "I am the least
of the Apostles"(4): this Paul I say, the little, and the least, sent unto the
Gentiles, says that he was sent particularly to the Gentiles. He himself so
writes, we read, believe, preach it. He then in his Epistle to the Galatians says,
that having been now called by the Lord Jesus, he came to Jerusalem, and
"communicated the Gospel"(5) unto the Apostles, that their right hands were given to
him, the sign of harmony, the sign of agreement, that what they had learnt from
him differed in no respect from them. Afterwards he says that it was agreed
between him and them, that he should go to the Gentiles, and they unto the
circumcision, he as a sower, they as reapers. So also with good reason, though they
knew it not, did the Athenians give him his name. For as they heard the word
from him, they said, "Who is this sower of words?"(6)
2. Attend then and be it your delight with me to take a view of the
husbandry of God and the two harvests in it, the one already past, the other yet to
come; the one already past among the people of the Jews, the one yet to come
among the peoples of the Gentiles. Let us prove this; and whereby, but by the
Scripture of God, the Lord of the harvest? See we have it said there in this
present lesson, "The harvest is great, but the labourers are few. Pray ye the Lord of
the harvest, that He would send forth labourers into His harvest."(1) But
because in that harvest there were to be gainsaying and persecuting Jews, He says,
"Behold, I send you forth as lambs among wolves."(7) Let us show something
clearer still touching this harvest in the Gospel according to John, where the Lord
sat as He was wearied at the well, great mysteries s indeed were transacted,
but the time is too short to treat of them all. But give ye ear to that which
relates to the present subject. For we have undertaken to show a harvest among
the people, among whom the Prophets preached; for therefore were they sowers,
that the Apostles might be reapers. A woman of Samaria talks with the Lord Jesus,
and when the Lord among other things had told her how God ought to be
worshipped, she says, "We know that Messias cometh who is called Christ, and He will
teach us all things. And the Lord saith to her, I that speak with thee am He."(9)
Believe what thou hearest; why dost thou make search for what thou seest? "I
that speak with thee am He." But as to what she had said, "We know that the
Messias will come," whom Moses and the Prophets have announced, "who is called
Christ." The harvest was already in the ear. When it had yet to grow it had received
the Prophets as sowers, now that it was come to ripeness it waited for the
Apostles as reapers. Presently as she heard this she believed and left her
water-pot, and ran in haste, and began to announce the Lord. The disciples at that
time had gone to buy bread; who on their return found the Lord talking with the
woman, and they marvelled. Yet did they not dare to say to Him, "What or why
talkest Thou with her?"(1) They had astonishment in themselves, they repressed
their boldness in their heart. To this Samaritan woman then the Name. of Christ was
nothing new, she was already waiting for His coming, already did she believe
that He would come. Whence had she believed it, if Moses had not sown? But hear
this more expressly noted. The Lord then said to His disciples, "Ye say that
the summer is yet far distant, lift up your eyes, and see the fields white
already to harvest"(2) And then He adds, "Others have laboured, and ye are entered
into their labours."(3) Abraham laboured, Isaac, Jacob, Moses, the Prophets
laboured in sowing; at the Lord's coming the harvest was found ripe. The reapers
sent with the scythe of the Gospel, carried the sheaves into the Lord's floor,
where Stephen was to be threshed.
3. But here comes in that Paul, and he is sent to the Gentiles. And this
he does not conceal in setting forth the grace, which he had specially and
peculiarly received. For he says in his Scriptures, that he was sent to preach the
Gospel where Christ had not been named.(4) But because that first harvest was
past already, and all the Jews who remained are no harvest, let us consider that
harvest which we ourselves are. For it has been sown by Apostles and Prophets.
The Lord Himself sowed it. For He was in the Apostles, seeing that Christ also
Himself reaped it. For they are nothing without Him; He is perfect without
them. For He saith Himself to them, "For without Me, ye can do nothing."(5) What
then doth Christ from henceforth sowing among the Gentiles say? "A sower went out
to sow."(6) "There" are reapers "sent out "to reap," here "an unwearied sower
"went out" to sow. For what fear did it cause him, that "some seed fell on the
way side, and some on rocky places, and some among thorns"? If he had been
afraid of these unmanageable(7) grounds, he would never have got to the good
ground. What is it to us, what affair of ours is it to be disputing now of the Jews,
and talking of the chaff? this only concerns us, that we be not "the way side,"
nor "the rock," nor "the thorns," but "the good ground." Be our heart
well-prepared, that from it may come the "thirty," or the "sixty fold," or the
thousand, and the "hundred fold;" some more, some less; but all is wheat. Let it not be
"the way side," where the enemy as a bird may take away the seed trodden down
by the passers by. Let it not be "the rock," where the shallow soil makes it
spring up immediately, so that it cannot bear the sun. Let it not be the
"thorns," the lusts of this world, the anxieties of an ill-ordered(8) life. For what is
worse than that anxiety of life, which doth not suffer one to attain unto
Life? What more miserable, than by caring for life, to lose Life? What more
unhappy, than by fearing death, to fall into death? Let the thorns be rooted up, the
field prepared, the seeds put in, let them grow unto the harvest, let the barn
be longed for, not the fire feared.
4. My place accordingly it is, whom with all my unworthiness the Lord hath
appointed to be a labourer in His field, to say these things to you, to sow,
to plant, to water, yea to dig round about some trees, and to apply the basket
of(9) dung; belongeth it to me to do these things faithfully; to you to receive
them faithfully; to the Lord to aid me in my labour, and you in your belief,
all of us labouring, but in Him overcoming the world. What then belongs to your
place I have already said; now I wish to say what belongs to ours. But
peradventure it seems to some of you, that it is something superfluous which I have
declared that I wish to say, and speaking within themselves they are saying in
thought, "O that he would now let us go! He has said already what belongs to our
place, as to that which belongs to his, what is that to us?" I think it is better
that in a reciprocal and mutual love, we should belong to you. Ye are now
indeed of one family, we of the same family are dispensers, it is true, but we all
belong to one Lord. Nor what I give, do I give of mine own; but of His from
whom I also receive. For if I should give of mine own, I shall give a lie. "For he
that speaketh a lie, speaketh of his own."(10) So then ye ought to give ear to
that which belongs to the duty of the dispenser, whether it be that ye may
have joy in yourselves, if ye find yourselves to be such, or whether it be that ye
may be even in this very thing instructed. For how many are there among this
people who shall some day be dispensers! I too was once where ye now are; and I
who am seen now to be measuring out to my fellowservants their food from this
higher place, a few years since in a lower place was receiving food with my
fellow-servants. I am speaking now a Bishop to lay-men; but I know that in speaking
to them I am speaking to many who will some day be bishops also.
5. Let us see then how we must understand what the Lord enjoined on them
whom He sent to preach the Gospel, and let us consider in our mind this prepared
harvest. "Carry," He saith, "neither purse, nor scrip, nor shoes; and salute
no man by the way. And into whatsoever house ye enter, say, Peace be to this
house. If the Son of peace be there, your peace shall rest upon it; if not, it
shall return to you again."(1) If it hath "rested," hath the other lost it? This
be far from the mind of Saints! So then this is not to be taken in a carnal
sense; and hence it may be neither are the "purse," nor "shoes," nor "scrip;" nor
above all that, where if we take it simply without examination, pride seems to
be enjoined us, that we "salute no man by the way."
6. Let us give heed to our Lord, our True Example and Succour. Let us
prove that He is our Succour; "Without Me ye can do nothing."(2) Let us prove that
He is our Example; "Christ," says Peter, "suffered for us, leaving us an
example that we should follow His steps."(3) Our Lord Himself had bags in the way,
and these bags He entrusted to Judas. It is true He suffered from the thief; but
I as desiring to learn of my Lord say, "O Lord, Thou didst suffer from the
thief, whence hadst Thou that of which he could take away? Me, a wretched and
infirm man Thou hast admonished not even to carry a purse; Thou didst carry bags,
and hadst that in which Thou couldest suffer from the thief. If Thou hadst not
carried them, neither could he have found anything to take away." What remains,
but that he here saith to me, "Understand what that thou hearest, 'Carry no
purse,' means? What is a purse? Money shut up, that is, concealed wisdom. What is,
'Carry no purse ? Be not wise within your own selves only.(4) Receive ye the
Holy Ghost.' It should be a fountain in thee, not a purse; from whence
distribution is made to others, not where it is itself shut in." And the scrip is the
same as the purse.
7. What are "the shoes"? The shoes which we use, are the skins of dead
beasts, the coverings of our feet. By this then are we bidden to renounce dead
works. This Moses was admonished of in a figure, when the Lord speaking to him
said, "Loose thy shoes from off thy feet; for the place wherein thou standest is
holy ground."(5) What ground is so holy as the Church of God? In it therefore
let us stand, let us loose our shoes, let us, that is, renounce dead works. For
as touching these shoes, wherewith we walk, the same my Lord again assures me.
For if He had not been shod Himself, John would not have said of Him, "I am not
worthy to unloose the latchet of His shoes."(6) Be there obedience then, let
not a haughty severity steal over us. "I," says one, "fulfil the Gospel, because
I walk with naked feet." Well, thou canst do it, I cannot. But let us both
keep that which we both receive together. How? Let us glow with charity, let us
love one another; and so it shall be, that I will love your strength, and thou
shall bear my weakness.
8. But what thinkest thou, who dost not choose to understand in what sense
these words are used, and who art forced by thy(7) perverse interpretation to
slander even the Lord Himself as to the "bags" and "shoes;" what thinkest thou?
Does it please thee then, that as we meet our friends in the way, we should
neither pay them our salutations if they are our betters, nor return the
salutations of our inferiors? What, dost thou fulfil the Gospel, because thou art
saluted, and art silent? But thus thou wilt not be like to the traveller going on
the way, but to the milestone pointing out the way. Let us then lay aside this
coarse s interpretation, and understand aright the words of the Lord, "and salute
no man by the way." For it is not without a cause that we are enjoined this,
nor would He mislike us to do what He enjoined. What then is, "Salute no man by
the way"? It might indeed be even simply taken thus, that He has commanded us
to do what He enjoins with all speed; and that His words "Salute no man by the
way," are as though He bad said, "Put all other things by, till ye accomplish
what has been enjoined you;" according to that style of speaking by which
expressions are wont to be exaggerated in the custom of conversation. Nor need we go
far; in the same discourse a little while afterwards He says, "And thou,
Capernaum, which art exalted to heaven, shall be thrust down to hell."(9) What is,
"exalted to heaven"? Did the walls of that city touch the clouds, or reach to the
stars? But what is " exalted to heaven"? Thou seemest thyself to be surpassing
happy, surpassing powerful, thou art exceeding proud. As then for the sake of
exaggeration this was said, "Thou art exalted unto heaven" to that city, which
was not exalted, nor rose up unto heaven; so to express haste hyperbolically was
it said, "So run, so do what I have enjoined you, that travellers by the way
may not n the least retard you; but disregarding all things else, hasten to the
end set before you."
9. But there is another more recondite meaning in these words which it is
not difficult to understand, which respects more particularly myself and all
dispensers, and you too who are hearers. He that salutes, wishes salvation.(10)
For so the ancients in their letters wrote thus, "Such a one sends salvation to
another." Salutation derives its name from this salvation. What then is,
"Salute no man by the way"? They who "salute by the way," do so "by occasion." I see
that ye have quickly understood me, yet for all that I must not finish yet. For
ye have not all understood so quickly. I have seen that some understand by
their voice, I see more asking for something further by their silence. But seeing
that we are talking of the way, let us walk as it were in the way: ye quick
ones, wait for the slow, and walk evenly. What then did I say, He "who salutes by
the way," salutes only by occasion? He was not going to him whom he salutes. He
was about one thing, another came in his way; he was seeking one thing, he
found across his path some other thing to do. What then is it to "salute by
occasion"? "By occasion" to announce salvation. Now what else is it to announce
salvation, but to preach the Gospel? If then thou dost preach, do it by love, and
not "by occasion." There are men then, who though "they seek their own things,"
yet preach no other Gospel; of whom the Apostle says with sighing, "For all seek
their own, not the things which are Jesus Christ's."(1) And these "saluted,"
that is announced salvation, they preached the Gospel; but they sought some
other thing, and therefore they saluted only "by occasion." And what is this? If
thou art such an one, whosoever thou art, thou doest it; nay not all of you who
do it are such, but it may be that some of you who do it are. But if thou art
such, it is not that thou doest it, but it is done by thee.
10. For such as these did the Apostle suffer; yet did he not enjoin them
so to be. And these do something, or something is done by them; they seek
something else, yet they preach the word. Care not what the preacher seeks after; be
it thy will to hold fast what he preaches; but let his intention be no concern
of thine. Hear the word of salvation from his mouth, from his mouth hold fast
this salvation. Be not thou the judge of his heart. If thou seest that he is i
seeking after other things, what is that to thee? Hear Him who is Salvation;(2)
"What they say, do." (3) He has given thee assurance who hath said, "What they
say, do." Do they evil? "Do not what they do." Do they good. They do not
"salute by the way," they do not preach the Gospel by occasion; "be ye followers of
them, even as they also are of Christ."(4) A good man preaches to thee; pluck
the grape from the vine. A bad man preaches to thee, pluck the grape as it hangs
in the hedge. The cluster has grown on the vine-branch entangled among the
thorns, but it has not grown from the thorns. By all means when thou seest any
such thing as this and art hungry, be careful as thou pluckest it, lest when thou
puttest forth thy hand to the grape, thou be torn by the thorns. This is what I
say; in such wise hear what is good, as that thou imitate not the evil of the
character. Let him preach "by occasion," salute by the way; it will injure him
because he has not given ear to the precept of Christ, "Salute no than by the
way;" it will not injure thee, who, whether thou dost hear of salvation(2) from
a passer by, or from one who comes direct to thee, dost hold fast that
salvation. Hear the Apostle, who as I have said already gives us to understand this.
"What then?" "So that in every way, whether by occasion or in truth, Christ is
preached; and herein I do rejoice, yea, and will rejoice. For I know that this
shall turn to my salvation through your prayer."(5)
11. Let then such as these, the Apostles of Christ, the preachers of the
Gospel, who "salute not by the way," that is, who do not seek or do any other
thing, but who in genuine charity preach the Gospel, let them come into the
house, and say, "Peace to this house." They speak not with the mouth only; they pour
out that of which they are full; they preach peace, and they have peace. They
are not as those of whom it was said, "Peace, Peace, and there is no peace."(6)
What is, "Peace, Peace, and there is no peace"? They preach it, but they have
it not; they praise it and they love it not; they say, and do not. But yet do
thou receive the peace, "whether by occasion or in truth Christ be preached."
Whoso then is full of peace, and salutes, saying, "Peace to this house, if the
son of peace be there, his peace shall rest upon him; if not," for peradventure
there is no one of peace there, yet he who saluted has lost nothing, "it shall
return," says he, "to you again." It shall return to thee, though it never
departed from thee. For this He would mean to say, It profiteth thee that thou hast
declared it, it hath not profited him at all who hath not received it; thou
hast not lost thy reward, because he hath remained empty; it is rendered thee for
thy good will, it is rendered thee for the charity which thou hast bestowed, He
will render it to thee who hath given thee assurance of it by that Angelic
voice, "Peace on earth to then of good will."(7)