SERMONS ON SELECTED LESSONS OF THE NEW TESTAMENT. SERMON LXXXIII. ON THE WORDS
OF THE GOSPEL OF JOHN VII. 6, ETC., WHERE JESUS SAID THAT HE WAS NOT GOING UP
UNTO THE FEAST, AND NOTWITHSTANDING WENT UP.
SERMON LXXXIII.
[CXXXIII. BEN.]
ON THE WORDS OF THE GOSPEL OF JOHN VII. 6, ETC., WHERE JESUS SAID THAT HE WAS
NOT GOING UP UNTO THE FEAST, AND NOTWITHSTANDING WENT UP.
1. I PURPOSE by the Lord's assistance to treat of this section[2] of the
Gospel which has just been read; nor is there a little difficulty here, lest the
truth be endangered, and falsehood glory. Not that either the truth can
perish, nor falsehood triumph. Now hearken for a while what difficulty this lesson
has; and being made attentive by the propounding of the difficulty, pray that I
may be sufficient for its solution. "'The Jews' feast of tabernacles was at hand
;"[3] these it seems are the days which they observe even to this day, when
they build huts.[4] For this solemnity of theirs is called from the building of
tabernacles; since <greek>skhnh</greek> means a "tabernacle,
"<greek>skhnopha</greek> is the building of a tabernacle. These days were kept as feast days among
the Jews; and it was called one feast day, not because it was over in one day,
but because it was kept up by a continued festivity; just as the feast day of
the Passover, and the feast day of unleavened bread, and notwithstanding, as is
manifest, that feast is kept throughout many days. This anniversary then was
at hand in Judaea, the Lord Jesus was in Galilee, where He had also been brought
up, where too He had relations and kinsfolk, whom Scripture calls "His
brethren." "His brethren, therefore," as we have heard it read, "said unto Him, Pass
from hence, and go into Judaea; that Thy disciples also may see Thy works that
Thou doest. For no man doeth anything in secret, and himself seeketh to be known
openly. If Thou do these things, manifest Thyself to the world."[5] Then the
Evangelist subjoins, "For neither did His brethren believe in Him."[6] If then
they did not believe in Him, the words they threw out were of envy. "Jesus
answered them, My time is not yet come; but your time is alway ready. The world
cannot hate you; but Me it hateth, because I testify of it that the works thereof
are evil. Go ye up to this feast day. I go[7] not up to this feast day, for My
time is not yet accomplished."[8] Then follows the Evangelist; "When He had
said these words, He Himself stayed in Galilee. But when His brethren were gone
up, then went He also up to the feast day, not openly, but as it were in
secret."[9] Thus far is the extent of the difficulty, all the rest is clear.
2. What then is the difficulty? what makes the perplexity? what is in
peril? Lest the Lord, yea, to speak more plainly, lest the Truth Itself should be
thought to have lied. For if we would have it thought that He lied, the weak
will receive an authority for lying. We have heard say that He lied. For those who
think that He lied, speak thus, "He said that He should not go up to the
feast day, and He went up." In the first place then, let us, as far as in the press
of time we can, see whether he does lie, who says a thing and 'does it not.
For example, I have told a friend, "I will see you to-morrow;" some greater
necessity occurs to hinder me; I have not on that account spoken falsely. For when
I made the promise, I meant what I said. But when some greater matter
occurred, which hindered the accomplishment[10] I of my promise, I had no design to
lie, but I was not able to fulfil the promise. Lo, to my thinking I have used no
labour to persuade you, but have merely suggested to your good sense,[11] that
he who promises something, and doeth it not, does not lie, if, that he do it
not, something has occurred to hinder the fulfilment of his promise, not to be
any proof of falsehood.
3. But some one who hears me will say, "Canst thou then say this of
Christ, that He either was not able to fulfil what He would, or that He did not know
things to come?" Thou doest well, good is thy suggestion, right thy hint; but,
O man, share with me my anxiety. Dare we to say that He lies, Who we do not
dare to say is weak in power? I for my part, to the best of my thinking, as far as
according to my infirmity I am able to judge, would choose that a man should
be deceived in any matter rather than lie in any. For to be deceived is the
portion of infirmity, to lie of iniquity. "Thou hatest, O Lord," saith he, "all
them that work iniquity."[1] And immediately after, "Thou shalt destroy all them
that speak a lie."[2] Either "iniquity" and "a lie" are upon a level; or, "Thou
shalt destroy," is more than "Thou hatest." For he who is held in hatred, is
not immediately punished by destruction. But let that question be, whether there
be ever a necessity to lie; for I am not now discussing that; it is a dark
question, and has many lappings;[3] I have not time to cut them, and to come to the
quick.[4] Therefore let the treatment of it be deferred to some other time;
for peradventure it will be cured by the Divine assistance without any words of
mine. But attend and distinguish between what I have deferred, and what I wish
to treat of to-day. Whether on any occasion one may lie, this difficult and most
obscure question I defer. But whether Christ lied, whether the Truth spake
anything false, this, being reminded of it by the Gospel lesson, have I undertaken
to-day.
4. Now what the difference is between being deceived, and lying, I will
briefly state. He is deceived who thinks what he says to be true, and therefore
says it, because he thinks it true. Now if this which he that is deceived says,
were true, he would not be deceived; if it were not only true, but he also knew
it to be true, he would not lie. He is deceived then, in that it is false,
and he thinks it true; but he only says it because he thinks it true. The error
lies in human infirmity, not in the soundness of the conscience. But whosoever
thinks it to be false, and asserts it as true, he lies. See, my Brethren, draw
the distinction, ye who have been brought up in the Church, instructed in the
Lord's Scriptures, not uninformed, nor simple,[5] nor ignorant[6] men. For there
are among you men learned and erudite, and not indifferently instructed in all
kinds of literature; and with those of you who have not learnt that literature
which is called liberal, it is more that ye have been nourished up in the word
of God. If I labour in explaining what I mean, do ye aid me both by the
attention of your hearing, and the thoughtfulness[7] of your meditations. Nor will ye
aid, unless ye are aided. Wherefore pray we mutually for one another, and look
equally for our common Succour. He is deceived, who whereas what he says is
false, thinks it to be true; but he lies, who thinks a thing to be false, and
gives it out as true, whether it be true or false. Observe what I have added,
"whether it be true or false;" yet he who thinks it to be false, and asserts it as
true, lies; he aims to deceive. For what good is it to him, that it is true? He
all the while thinks it false, and says it as if it were true. What he says is
true in itself, it is in itself true; with regard to him it is false, his
conscience does not hold that which he is saying; he thinks in himself one thing to
be true, he gives out another for truth. His is a double heart, not single; he
does not bring out that which he has in it. The double heart has long since
been condemned. "With deceitful lips in a heart and a heart have they spoken evil
things."[8] Had it been enough to say, "in the heart have they spoken evil
things," where is the "deceitful lips"?[9] What is deceit? When one thing is done,
another pretended. Deceitful lips are not a single heart; and because not a
single heart, therefore" in a heart and a heart;" therefore "in a heart" twice,
because the heart is double.
5. How then think we of the Lord Jesus Christ, that He lied? If it is a
less evil to be deceived than to lie, dare we to say that He lies who we dare not
to say is deceived? But He is neither deceived, nor doth He lie; but in very
deed as it is written (for of Him is it understood, of Him ought it to be
understood)," Nothing false is said unto the King, and nothing false shall proceed
out of His mouth." If by King here he meant any man, let us prefer Christ the
King, to a man-king. But if, which is the truer understanding of it, it is Christ
of whom he spake, if I say, as is the truer understanding of it, it is Christ
of whom he spake (for to Him indeed nothing false is said, in that He is not
deceived; from His Mouth nothing false proceedeth, in that He doth not lie); let
us look how we are to understand the section of the Gospel, and let us not make
the[10] pitfall of a lie, as it were, on heavenly authority. But it is most
absurd to be seeking to explain the truth, and to prepare a place for a lie. What
art thou teaching me, I ask thee, who art explaining this text to me, what
wouldest thou teach me? I do not know whether you would dare to say, "Falsehood."
For if you should dare to say this, I turn away mine ears, and fasten them up
with thorns, that if you should try to force your way, I might through their
very pricking make away without the explanation of the Gospel. Tell me what thou
wouldest wish to teach me, and thou hast resolved the difficulty. Tell me, I
pray thee; lo, here I am; mine ears are open, my heart is ready, teach me. But I
ask, what? I will not travel through many things. What art thou going to teach
me? Whatsoever learning thou art about to bring forward, whatsoever strength to
show in disputation, tell me this one thing only, one of two things I ask; art
thou going to teach me truth or falsehood? What do we suppose he will answer
lest one depart; lest while he is open-mouthed and making an effort to bring out
his words, I forthwith leave him: what will he promise but truth? I am
listening, standing, expecting, most earnestly expecting. See here, he who promised
that he will teach me truth, insinuates falsehood concerning Christ. How then
shall he teach truth, who would say that Christ is false? If Christ is false, can I
hope that thou wilt tell me the truth?
6. Consider again. What does he say? Hath Christ spoken falsely? Where, I
ask thee? "Where He says, `I go not up to the feast day;' and went up." For my
part, I should wish thoroughly to examine this place, if so be we may see that
Christ did not speak falsely. Yea rather, seeing that I have no doubt that
Christ did not speak falsely, I will either thoroughly examine this passage and
understand it, or, not understanding it, I will defer it. Yet that Christ spoke
falsely will I never say. Grant that I have not understood it; I will depart in
my ignorance. For better is it with piety to be ignorant, than with madness to
pronounce judgment. Notwithstanding we are trying to examine, if so be by His
assistance, who is the Truth, we may find something, and be found something
ourselves, and this something will not be in the Truth a lie. For if in searching I
find a lie, I find not a something but a nothing. Let us then look where it is
thou sayest that Christ lied. He will say, "In that He said, ' I go not up to
this feast,' and went up." Whence dost thou know that He said so? What if I were
to say, nay, not I, but any one, for God forbid that I should say it; what if
another were to say, "Christ did not say this;" whereby dost thou refute him,
whereby wilt thou prove it? Thou wouldest open the book, find the passage, point
it out to the man, yea with great confidence force the book upon him if he
resisted, "Hold it, mark, read, it is the Gospel you have in your hands." But why,
I ask thee, why dost thou so rudely accost[1] this feeble one? Do not be so
eager; speak more composedly, more tranquilly. See, it is the Gospel I have in my
hands; and what is there in it? He answers: "The Gospel declares that Christ
said what thou deniest." And wilt thou believe that Christ said it, because the
Gospel declares it? "Decidedly for that reason," says he. I marvel exceedingly
how thou shouldest say that Christ lieth, anti the Gospel doth not lie. But
test haply when I speak of the Gospel, thou shouldest think of the book itself,
and imagine the parchment and ink to be the Gospel, see what the Greek word
means; Gospel is "a good messenger," or "a good message." The messenger then doth
not lie, and doth He who sent him, lie? This messenger, the Evangelist to wit,
to give his name also, this John who wrote this, did he lie concerning Christ,
or say the truth? Choose which you will, I am ready to hear you on either side.
If he spake falsely, you have no means of proving that Christ spake those
words. If he said the truth, truth cannot flow from the fountain of falsehood. Who
is the Fountain? Christ: let John be the stream. The stream comes to me, and you
say to me, "Drink securely;" yea, whereas you alarm me as to the Fountain
Himself, whereas you tell me there is falsehood in the Fountain, you say to me,
"Drink securely." What do I drink? What said John, that Christ spake falsely?
Whence came John? From Christ. Is he who came from Him, to tell me truth, when He
from whom he came lied? I have read in the Gospel plainly, "John lay on the
Lord's Breast;"[2] but I conclude that he drank in truth. What saw he as he lay on
the Lord's Breast? What drank he in? what, but that which he poured forth? "In
the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God.
The Same was in the beginning with God. All things were made by Him, and without
Him was nothing made. That which was made in Him was life, and the Life was
the Light of men; And the Light shineth in darkness, and the darkness
comprehended It not;"[3] nevertheless It shineth, and though I chance to have some
obscurity, and cannot thoroughly comprehend It, still It shineth. "There was a man
sent from God, whose name was John; he came to bear witness of the Light, that all
men through him might believe. He was not the Light:" who? John: who? John the
Baptist. For of him saith John the Evangelist, "He was not the Light;" of whom
the Lord saith, "He was a burning, and a shining lamp."[4] But a lamp can be
lighted, and extinguished. What then? whence drawest thou the distinction? of
what place art thou enquiring? He to whom the lamp bare witness, "was the True
Light."[5] Where John added, "the True," there art thou looking out for a lie.
But hear still the same Evangelist John pouring forth what he had drunk in; "And
we beheld," saith he, "His glory." What did he behold? what glory beheld he?
"The glory as of the Only-Begotten of the Father, full of grace and truth."[6]
See then, see, if we ought not haply to restrain weak or rash disputings, and to
presume nothing false of the truth, to give to the Lord what is His due; let us
give glory to the Fountain, that we may fill ourselves securely. "Now God is
true, but every man a liar."[1] What is this ? God is fill; every man is empty;
if he will be filled, let him come to Him That is full. "Come unto Him, and be
enlightened."[2] Moreover, if man is empty, in that he is a liar, and he seeks
to be filled, and with haste and eagerness runs to the fountain, he wishes to
be filled, he is empty. But thou sayest, "Beware of the fountain, there is
falsehood there." What else sayest thou, but "there is poison there"?
7. "You have already," he says, "said all, already have you checked,
already chastened me. But tell me how He did not speak falsely who said, 'I go not
up,' and went up?" will tell you, if I can; but think it no little matter, that
if I have not established you in the truth, I have yet kept you back from
rashness. I will nevertheless tell you, what I imagine you know even already, if you
remember the words which I have set forth to you. The words themselves solve
the difficulty. That feast was kept for many days. On this, that is this present
feast day, saith He, this day, that is when they hoped, He went not up; but
when He Himself resolved to go. Now mark what follows, "When He had said these
words, He Himself stayed in Galilee." So then He did not go up on that feast day.
For His brethren wished that He should go first; therefore had they said,
"Pass from hence into Judaea." They did not say, "Let us pass," as though they
would be His companions; or, "Follow us into Judaea," as though they would go
first; but as though they would send Him before them. He wished that they should go
before; He avoided this snare, impressing His infirmity as Man, hiding the
Divinity; this He avoided, as when He fled into Egypt.[3] For this was no effect of
want of power, but even of truth, that He might give an example of caution;
that no servant of His might say, "I do not fly, because it is disgraceful;" when
haply it might be expedient to fly. As He was going to say to His disciples,
"When they have persecuted you in this city, flee ye into another;"[4] He gave
them Himself this example. For He was apprehended, when He willed; He was born,
when He willed. That they might not anticipate Him then, and announce that He
was coming, and plots be prepared; He said, "I go not up to this feast day."[5]
He said, "I go not up," that He might be hid; He added "this," that He might
not lie. Something He expressed,[6] something He suppressed, something He
repressed; yet said He nothing false, for "nothing false proceedeth out of His Mouth."
Finally, after He had said these words, "When His brethren were gone up;"[7]
the Gospel declares it, attend, read what you have objected to me; see if the
passage itself do not solve the difficulty, see if I have taken from anywhere
else what to say. This then the Lord was waiting for, that they should go up
first, that they might not announce beforehand that He was coming, "When His
brethren were gone up, then went He also up to the feast day, not openly, but as it
were in secret." What is," as it were in secret "? He acts there as if in secret.
What is, "as it were in secret"? Because neither was this really in secret.
For He did not really make an effort to be concealed, who had it in His Own power
when He would be taken. But in that concealment, as I have said, He gave His
weak disciples, who had not the power to prevent being taken when they would
not, an example of being on their guard against the snares of enemies. For He went
up afterwards even openly, and taught them in the temple; and some said, "'
Lo, this is He; lo, He is teaching.' Certainly our rulers said that they wished
to apprehend Him: ' Lo, He speaketh openly, and no one layeth hands on Him.'"[8]
8. But now if we turn our attention to ourselves, if we think of His Body,
how that we are even He. For if we were not He, "Forasmuch as ye have done it
unto one of the least of Mine, ye have done it unto Me,"[9] would not be true.
If we were not He, "Saul, Saul, why persecutest thou Me?"[10] would not be
true. So then we are He, in that we are His members, in that we are His Body, in
that He is our Head, in that Whole Christ is both Head and Body.[11] Peradventure
then He foresaw us that we were not to keep the feast days of the Jews, and
this is, "I go not up to this feast day." See neither Christ nor the Evangelist
lied; of the which two if one must needs choose one, the Evangelist would pardon
me, I would by no means put him that is true before the Truth Himself; I would
not prefer him that was sent to Him by whom he was sent. But God be thanked,
in my judgment what was obscure has been laid open. Your piety will aid me
before God. Behold, I have, as I was best able, resolved the question, both
concerning Christ and the Evangelist. Hold fast the truth with me as men who love it,
embrace charity without contention.