SERMONS ON SELECTED LESSONS OF THE NEW TESTAMENT. SERMONS LXXXVII & LXXXVIII.
THE TENTH CHAPTER OF THE GOSPEL OF JOHN. OF THE SHEPHERD, AND THE HIRELING, AND
THE THIEF. AND ON THE WORDS OF THE GOSPEL, JOHN X. 14, "I AM THE GOOD
SHEPHERD," ETC. AGAINST THE DONATISTS.
SERMON LXXXVII.
[CXXXVII. BEN.]
THE TENTH CHAPTER OF THE GOSPEL OF JOHN. OF THE SHEPHERD, AND THE HIRELING,
AND THE THIEF.
1. Your faith, dearly beloved, is not ignorant, and I know that ye have so
learnt by the teaching of that Master from heaven, in whom ye have placed your
hope, that our Lord Jesus Christ, who hath now suffered for us and risen
again, is the Head of the Church, and the Church is His Body, and that in His Body
the unity of the members and the bond of charity is, as it were, its sound
health. But whosoever groweth cold in charity, is become enfeebled in the Body of
Christ. But He who hath already exalted our Head, is able also to make even the
feeble members whole; provided, that is, that they be not cut off by excessive
impiety, but adhere to the Body until they be made whole. For whatsoever yet
adhereth to the body, is not beyond hope of healing; whereas that which hath been
cut off, can neither be in process of curing, nor be healed. Since then He is
the Head of the Church, and the Church is His Body, Whole Christ is both the
Head and the Body. He hath already risen again. We have therefore the Head in
heaven. Our Head intercedeth for us. Our Head without sin and without death, now
propitiateth God for our sins; that we too at the end rising again, and changed
into heavenly glory, may follow our Head. For where the Head is, there are the
rest of the members also. But whilst we are here, we are members; let us not
despair, for we shall follow our Head.
2. For consider, Brethren, the love of this our Head. He is now in heaven,
yet doth He suffer here, as long as His Church suffereth here. Here Christ is
hungered, here He is athirst, is naked, is a stranger, is sick, is in prison.
For whatsoever His Body suffereth here, He hath said that Himself suffereth; and
at the end, severing off this His Body to the right hand, and severing the
rest by whom He is now trodden under foot to the left, He will say to those on the
right hand, "Come, ye blessed of My Father, receive the kingdom which hath
been prepared for you from the beginning of the world." For what deservings? "For
I was an hungred, and ye gave Me meat;" and so He goes over the rest, as if He
had Himself received; to such a degree that they, not understanding it, make
answer and say, "Lord, when saw we Thee an hungred, a stranger, and in prison?"
And He saith to them, "Forasmuch as ye have done it to one of the least of Mine,
ye have done it unto Me. "(4) So also in our own body, the head is above, the
feet are on the earth; yet in any crowding and throng of men, when any one
treads on your foot, does not the head say, "You are treading upon me?" No one has
trodden on your head, or on your tongue; it is above, in safety, no harm has
happened unto it; and yet because by the bond of charity there is unity from the
head even to the feet, the tongue does not separate itself therefrom, but says,
"You are treading upon me;" when no one has touched it. As then the tongue,
which no one has touched, says, "You are treading upon me;" so Christ, the Head,
which no one treadeth on, said, "I was an hungred, and ye gave Me meat." And to
them who did not so, He said, "I was an hungred, and ye gave Me no meat." And
how did He finish? Thus; "These shall go into everlasting burning, but the
righteous into life eternal."
3. When our Lord then was speaking on this occasion, He said, that He is
"the Shepherd," He said also that He is "the Door." You find them both in that
place, both "I am the Door" and "I am the Shepherd."(1) In the Head He is the
Door, the Shepherd in the Body. For He saith to Peter, in whom singly He formeth
the Church; "Peter, lovest thou Me?" He answered, "Lord, I do love Thee." "Feed
My sheep." And a third time, 'Peter, lovest thou Me?"(2) "Peter was grieved
because He asked him the third time;" as though He who saw the conscience of the
dealer, saw not the confessor's faith. He had known him always, had known him
even when Peter had not known himself. For he did not know himself at that time
when he said," I will be with Thee even unto death;"(3) and how infirm he was
he knew not. Just as it constantly happens in fact to invalids, that the sick
man knows not what is going on within him, but the physician knows; when yet the
former is suffering from the very sickness, and the physician is not. The
physician can better tell what is going on in another, than he who is sick what is
going on in himself. Peter then was at that time the invalid, and the Lord the
Physician. The former declared that he had strength, when he had not; but the
Lord touching the pulse of his heart, declared that he should deny Him thrice.
And so it came to pass, as the Physician foretold, not as the sick presumed.
Therefore, after His resurrection the Lord questioned him, not as being ignorant
with what a heart he would confess the love of Christ, but that he might by a
threefold confession of love, efface the threefold denial of fear.
4. Therefore doth the Lord require this of Peter, "Peter, lovest thou Me?"
As though, "What wilt thou give Me, what wilt thou do for Me, seeing that thou
lovest Me?" What was Peter to do for his Lord risen again, and going into
heaven, and sitting on the right hand of the Father? As if He had said, "This shalt
thou give Me, this shalt thou do for Me, if thou lovest Me, feed My sheep;
enter in by the Door, not go up by another way." Ye heard when the Gospel was
being read, "He that entereth in by Door, is the shepherd; but he that goeth up
another way, is a thief and a robber; and he seeketh to disperse, and to scatter,
and to spoil."(4) Who is he that entereth in by the Door? He that entereth in
by Christ. Who is he? He who imitateth the Passion of Christ, who acknowledgeth
the Humility of Christ; that whereas God was made Man for us, man may
acknowledge himself to be, not God, but man. For whose wisheth to appear God, when he is
man, doth not imitate Him, who, being God, was made Man. But to thee it is not
said, Be anything less than thou art; but acknowledge what thou art.
Acknowledge thyself feeble, acknowledge thyself man, acknowledge thyself a sinner;
acknowledge that it is He That justifieth, acknowledge that thou art full of
stains. Let the stain of thine heart appear in thy confession, and thou shalt belong
to Christ's flock. For the confession of sins invites the physician's healing;
as in sickness, he that says, "I am well," seeketh not the physician. Did not
the Pharisee and the Publican go up to the temple?(5) The one boasted of his
sound estate, the other showed his wounds to the Physician. For the Pharisee said,
"I thank Thee, O God, that I am not as this publican."(6) He gloried over the
other. So then if that publican had been whole, the Pharisee would have grudged
it him; for that he would not have had any one over whom to extol himself. In
what state then had he come, who had this envious spirit? Surely he was not
whole; and whereas he called himself whole, he went not down cured. But the other
casting his eyes down to the ground, and not daring to lift them up unto
heaven, smote his breast, saying, "God be merciful to me a sinner."(7) And what saith
the Lord? "Verily I say unto you, that the publican went down from the temple
justified rather than the Pharisee. For every one that exalteth himself shall
be abased, and he that humbleth himself shall be exalted."(8) They then who
exalt themselves, would go up into the sheepfold by another way; but they who
humble themselves, enter in by the Door into the sheepfold. Therefore said He of the
one, "he entereth in;" of the other, "he goeth up." He that goeth up, you see,
who seeks exaltation, does not enter in, but falls. Whereas he that abases
himself, that he may enter in by the Door, falls not, but is the shepherd.
5. But the Lord mentioned three characters,(9) and our duty is to search
them out in the Gospel, that of the shepherd, the hireling, and the thief. I
suppose you took notice when the lesson was being read, that He marked out the
shepherd, the hireling, and the thief. "The Shepherd," said He, "layeth down His
life for the sheep,"(1) and entereth in by the door.(2) The thief and the
robber, said He, go up by another way.(3) "The hireling," He said, if he seeth a wolf
or even a thief, "fleeth; because he careth not for the sheep;"(4) for he is
an hireling, not a shepherd. The one entereth in by the door, because he is the
shepherd; the second goeth up another way, because he is a thief; the third
seeing them who wish to spoil the sheep feareth and fleeth, because he is an
hireling, because he careth not for the sheep; for he is an hireling. If we shall
find these three characters, ye have found, holy brethren, both those whom ye
should love, and those whom ye should tolerate, and those of whom ye must beware.
The Shepherd is to be loved, the hireling is to be tolerated, of the robber
must we beware. There are men in the Church of whom the Apostle speaks, who preach
the Gospel by occasion, seeking of men their own advantage, whether of money,
or of honour, or human praise.(5) They preach the Gospel, wishing to receive
rewards in whatsoever way they can, and seek not so much his salvation to whom
they preach, as their own advantage. But he who heareth the word of salvation
from him who hath not salvation, if he believe Him whom he preacheth, and put not
his hope in him, by whom salvation is preached to him; be that preacheth shall
have loss; he to whom he preacheth shall have gain.
6. You have the Lord saying of the Pharisees, "They sit in Moses'
seat."(6) The Lord did not mean them only; as if He would send those who should believe
on Christ to the school of the Jews, that they might learn there wherein is
the way to the kingdom of heaven. Did not the Lord come for this end, that He
might establish a Church, and separate those Jews who had a good faith, and a good
hope, and a good love, as wheat from the chaff, and might make them one wall
of the circumcision, to which should be joined another wall from the
uncircumcision of the Gentiles, of which two walls coming from different directions,
Himself should be the Corner-Stone? Did not the same Lord therefore say of these two
people who were to be one, "And other sheep I have, which are not of this
fold"? Now He was speaking to the Jews; "Them also," said He, "must I bring, that
there may be one fold, and One Shepherd."(7) Therefore there were two ships(8)
out of which He had called His disciples. They figured these two people, when
they let down their nets, and took up so great a draught(9) and so large a number
of fishes, that the nets were almost broken. "And they laded," it is said,
"both the ships." The two ships figured the One Church, but made out of two
peoples, joined together in Christ, though coming from different parts. Of this too
the two wives, who had one husband Jacob, Leah and Rachel, are a figure.(10) Of
these two, the two blind men also are a figure, who sat by the way side, to
whom the Lord gave sight.(11) And if ye pay attention to the Scriptures, ye will
find the two Churches, which are not two but One, figured out in many places.
For to this end the Corner-Stone serveth, for to make of two One. To this end
serveth That Shepherd, for to make of two flocks One. So then the Lord who was to
teach the Church, and to have a school of His Own beyond the Jews, as we see at
present, would He be likely to send those who believe on Him unto the Jews, to
learn? But under the name of the Scribes and Pharisees He intimated that there
would be some in His Church who would say and not do; but, in the person of
Moses He designated Himself. For Moses represented Him, and for this reason did
he put a vail before him, when he was speaking to the people; because as long as
they were in the law given up to carnal joys and pleasures, and looking for an
earthly kingdom, a vail was put upon their face, that they should not see
Christ in the Scriptures. For when the vail was taken away, after that the Lord had
suffered, the secrets of the temple were discovered. Accordingly when He was
hanging on the Cross, the vail of the temple was rent from the top even to the
bottom;(12) and the Apostle Paul says expressly, "But when thou shalt turn to
Christ, the vail shall be taken away." (13) Whereas with him who turneth not to
Christ, though he read the law of Moses, the vail is laid upon his heart, as the
Apostle says. When the Lord then would signify beforehand that there would be
some such in His Church, what did He say? "The Scribes and Pharisees sit in
Moses' seat. What they say, do; but do not what they do." (14)
7. When wicked clerics hear this which is said against them, they would
pervert it. For I have heard that some do wish to pervert this sentence. Would
they not, if they might, efface it from the Gospel? But because they cannot
efface it, they go about to pervert it. But the grace and mercy of the Lord is
present, and allows them not to do so; for He hath hedged round all His
declarations(15) with His truth, and in such wise balanced them; that if any one would wish
to cut off anything from them, or to introduce anything by a bad reading or
interpretation, any right hearted man may join to the Scripture what has been cut
off from the Scripture, and read what went above or below, and he will find
the sense which the other wished to interpret wrongly. What then, think ye, do
they say of whom it is said, "Do what they say"? That it is (and in truth it is
so) addressed to laymen. For what does the layman who wishes to live well say to
himself, when he takes notice of a wicked cleric? "The Lord said,' What they
say, do; what they do, do not.' Let me walk in the way of the Lord, not follow
this man's conversation. Let me hear from him not his words, but God's. I will
follow God, let him follow his own lust. For if I should wish to defend myself
in such wise before God as to say, 'Lord, I saw that thy cleric living evilly,
and therefore I lived evilly;' would He not say to me, ' Thou wicked servant,
hadst thou not heard from Me, "What they say, do, but what they do, do not"?' But
a wicked layman, an unbeliever, who belongs not to Christ's flock, who belongs
not to Christ's wheat, who as chaff is only borne with in the floor, what does
he say to himself when the word of God begins to reprove him? "Away; why
talkest thou to me? The very Bishops and Clergy do not do it, and dost thou force me
to do it?" Thus he seeks for himself not a patron for his bad cause, but a
companion for punishment. For will that wicked one whosoever he be that he has
chosen to imitate, will he ever defend him in the day of judgment? For as with all
whom the devil seduces, he seduces them not to be partakers of a kingdom, but
of his damnation; so all who follow the wicked, seek companions for themselves
to hell, not protection unto the kingdom of heaven.
8. How then do they pervert this declaration when it is said to them in
their wicked lives, "With good reason was it said by the Lord,' What they say,
do; what they do, do not'"? "It was well said," say they. "For it was said to
you, that ye should do what we say; but that ye should not do what we do. For we
offer sacrifice, you may not." See the cunning craftiness of these men; what
shall I call them? hirelings. For if they were shepherds, they would not say such
things. Therefore the Lord, that He might shut their mouths, went on, and said,
"They sit in Moses' seat; what they say, do; but what they do, do not; for
they say, and do not."(1) What is it then, Brethren? If He had spoken of offering
sacrifice; would He have said, "For they say, and do not"? For they do offer(2)
sacrifice, they do offer unto God. What is it that they say, and do not? Hear
what follows; "For they bind heavy burdens, and grievous to be borne, and lay
them on men's shoulders, and they themselves will not touch them with one of
their fingers."(3) So openly did He rebuke, describe, and point them out. But
those men when they thus wish to pervert the t passage, show plainly that they seek
nothing in the Church but their own advantage; and that they have not read the
Gospel; for had they known but this very page, and read the whole, they would
never have dared to say this.
9. But attend to a more clear proof that the Church hath such as these.
Lest any one should say to us, "He spake entirely of the Pharisees, He spake of
the Scribes, He spake of the Jews; for the Church hath none such." Who then are
they of whom the Lord saith, "Not every one that saith unto Me, Lord, Lord,
shall enter into the kingdom of heaven"?(4) And He added, "Many shall say to Me in
that day, Lord, Lord, have we not prophesied in Thy Name, and in Thy Name done
many mighty(5) works,(6) and in Thy Name have eaten and drunken?" What! do the
Jews do these things in Christ's name? Assuredly it is manifest, that He
speaks of them who have the Name of Christ. But what follows? "Then will I say to
them, I never knew you; depart from Me, all ye that work iniquity."(7) Hear the
Apostle sighing concerning such as these. He says that some preach the Gospel
"through charity," others "by occasion;" of whom he says, "They do not preach the
Gospel rightly."(8) A right thing, but themselves not right. What they preach
is right; but they who preach it are not right. Why is he not right? Because he
seeketh something else in the Church, seeketh not God. If he sought God, he
would be chaste; for the soul hath in God her lawful husband. Whosoever seeketh
from God ought besides God, doth not seek God chastely. Consider, Brethren; if
a wife love her husband because he is rich, she is not chaste. For she loves
not her husband, but her husband's gold. Whereas if she love her husband, she
loves him both in nakedness and poverty. For if she love him because he is rich;
what if (as human chances are) he be(9) outlawed and all on a sudden be reduced
to need? She gives him up, mayhap; because what she loved was not her husband,
but his property. But if she love her husband indeed, she loves him even more
when poor; for that she loves with pity too.
10. And yet, Brethren, our God never can be poor. He is rich, He made all
things, heaven and earth, the sea and Angels. In the heaven, whatsoever we see,
whatsoever we see not, He made it. But notwithstanding, we ought not to love
these riches, but Him who made them. For He hath promised thee nothing but
Himself. Find anything more precious, and He will give thee this. Beauteous is the
earth, the heaven, and the Angels; but more beauteous is He who made them. They
then who preach God, as loving God; who preach God, for God's sake, feed the
sheep, and are no hirelings. This chastity did our Lord Jesus Christ require of
the soul, when He said to Peter, "Peter, lovest thou Me"?(1) What is "Lovest
thou Me"? Art thou chaste? Is not thine heart adulterous? Dost thou seek not thine
own things in the Church, but Mine? If then thou be such an one, and lovest
Me, "feed My sheep." For thou shalt be no hireling, but thou shalt be a shepherd.
11. But they did not preach chastely, concerning whom the Apostle sighs.
But what doth he say? "What then? Notwithstanding every way, whether by occasion
or in truth, Christ is preached."(2) He suffers then that hirelings there
should be. The shepherd preacheth Christ in truth, the hireling by occasion
preacheth Christ, seeking something else. Notwithstanding, both the one and the other
preacheth Christ. Hear the voice of the shepherd Paul; "Whether by occasion or
in truth, Christ is preached." Himself a shepherd, he was pleased to have the
hireling. For they act where they, are able, they are useful as far as they are
able. But when the Apostle for other uses sought for those whose ways the weak
ones might imitate; he saith, "I have sent unto you Timotheus, who shall bring
you into remembrance of my ways."(3) And what doth he say? "I have sent unto
you a shepherd, to bring you into remembrance of my ways;" that is, who himself
also walketh as I walk. And in sending this shepherd, what doth he say? "For
have no one so likeminded, who with sincere affection is anxious for you." Were
there not many with him? But what follows? "For all seek their own, not the
things which are Jesus Christ's;"(4) that is, "I have wished to send unto you a
shepherd; for there are many hirelings; but it were not meet for an hireling to be
sent." An hireling is sent for the transaction of other affairs and business;
but for those which Paul then desired, a shepherd was necessary. And he
scarcely found one shepherd among many hirelings; for the shepherds are few, the
hirelings many. But what is said of the hirelings? "Verily I say unto you, they have
received their reward."(5) Of the shepherd, what saith the Apostle? "But
whosoever shall cleanse himself from such as these shall be a vessel unto honour,
sanctified, and useful to the Lord, prepared always unto every good work."(6) Not
unto certain things prepared, and unto certain not prepared, but" unto every
good work prepared." So much have I said, concerning the shepherds.
12. But we will now speak of the hirelings. "The hireling when he seeth
the wolf lying in wait for the sheep, fleeth." This the Lord said. Why? "Because
he careth not for the sheep."(7) So long then is the hireling of use, as the
seeth not the wolf coming, as he seeth not the thief and the robber; but when he
seeth them, he fleeth. And who is there of the hirelings, who fleeth not from
the Church, when he seeth the wolf and the robber? And wolves and robbers
abound. They are they who go up by another way. Who are these who go up? They who of
Donatus' way(8) wish to make havoc of Christ's sheep, they go up by another
way. They do not enter in by Christ, because they, are not humble. Because they
are proud, they go up. What is, "they go up"? They are lifted up. Whereby do
they go up? By another way: whence they wish to be named from their way. They
who are not in unity are of another way, and by this way they go up, that is,
are lifted up, and wish to spoil the sheep. Now mark how they go up. "It is we,"
they say, "who sanctify we justify we make righteous" See whither they havegot
up."But he that exalteth himself, shall be abased."(9) Our Lord God is able to
abase them. Now the wolf is the devil, he lieth in wait to deceive, and they
that follow him; for it is said that "they are clothed indeed with the skins of
sleep, but inwardly they are ravening wolves."(10)If the hireling observe anyone
indulging in wicked talking, or in sentiments to the deadly hurt of his soul,
or doing ought that is abominable and unclean, and notwithstanding that he
seems to bear a character of some importance in the Church (from which if he hopes
for advantage he is an hireling); says nothing, and when he sees the man
perishing in his sin, sees the wolf following him, sees his throat dragged by his
teeth to punishment; says not to him, "Thou sinnest;" does not chide him, lest he
lose his own advantage. This I say is, "When he seeth the wolf, he fleeth;" he
does not say to him, "Thou art doing wickedly." This is no flight of the body,
but of the soul. He whom thou seest standing still in body flies in heart, when
he sees a sinner, and does not say to him, "Thou sinnest;" yea when he even is
in concert with him.
13. My Brethren, does ever either Presbyter or Bishop come up here, and
say anything from this higher place, but that the property of others must not be
plundered, that there must be no fraud committed, no wickedness done? They
cannot say ought else who sit in Moses' seat,(11) and it is it that speaks by them,
not they themselves. What then is, "Do men gather grapes of thorns, or figs of
thistles?" and, "Every tree is known by his fruit"?(12) Can a Pharisee speak
good things? A Pharisee is a thorn; how from a thorn do I gather grapes? Because
Thou, Lord, hast said, "What they say, do; but what they do, do not."(1) Dost
Thou bid me gather grapes of thorns when Thou sayest, "Do men gather grapes of
thorns"? The Lord answereth thee, "I have not bidden thee gather grapes of
thorns: but look, mark well, if haply, as is often the case, the vine when it
trails all along upon the ground, be not entangled in thorns." For we sometimes find
this, my Brethren, a vine planted over sedge, how it has there a thorny hedge,
and throws out its branches, and entangles them in the thorny hedge, and the
grape hangs among the thorns; and he that sees it plucks the grape, yet not from
the thorns, but from the vine which is entangled in the thorns. In like manner
then the Pharisees are thorny; but by sitting in Moses' seat, the vine wraps
them round, and grapes, that is, good words, good precepts, hang from them. Do
thou pick the grape, the thorn will not prick thee, when thou readest, "What
they say, do; but what they do, do not." But the thorn will prick thee, if thou do
what they do. So then that thou mayest gather the grape, and not be caught in
the thorns, "What they say, do; but what they do, do not." Their deeds are the
thorns, their words are the grapes, but from the vine, that is, from Moses'
seat.
14. These then flee, when they see the wolf, when they see the robber. Now
this it was that I had began to say, that from this higher place they can say
nothing, but, "Do well," "do not forswear yourselves," "defraud not," "cheat
not any." But sometimes men's lives are so bad, that counsel is asked of a Bishop
on the taking away of another man's estate, and from him is such counsel
sought. It has sometimes happened to ourselves, we speak from experience: for we
should not have believed it. Many men require from us evil counsels, counsels of
lying, of fraud; thinking that they please us thereby. But by the Name of
Christ, if what we are saying is pleasing to the Lord, no such man has tempted us,
and found what he wished in us. For with the good pleasure of Him who hath called
us, we are shepherds, not hirelings. But as saith the Apostle, "But with me it
is a very small thing that I should be judged of you, or of man's day; yea, I
judge not even mine own self. For I am conscious of nothing by myself, but I am
not hereby justified. But He That judgeth me is the Lord."(2) My conscience is
not therefore good, because ye praise it. For how praise ye what ye do not
see? Let Him praise, who seeth; yea let Him correct, if He seeth ought there which
offendeth His Eyes. For I too do not say that I am perfectly whole; but I beat
my breast, and say to God, "Be merciful, that I sin not." Yet I do think, for
I speak in His Presence, that I seek nothing from you, 'but your salvation; and
constantly do I groan over the sins of my brethren, and I suffer distress,(3)
and am tormented in mind, and often do I reprove them; yea, I never cease
reproving them. All who remember what I say are witnesses, how often my brethren who
sin have been reproved, and earnestly reproved, by me.
15. I am now treating of my counsel with you, holy Brethren. In Christ's
Name ye are the people of God, ye are a Catholic people, ye are members of
Christ; ye are not divided from unity. Ye are in communion with the members of the
Apostles, ye are in communion with the memories of the Holy Martyrs, who are
spread over the whole world, and ye belong to my cure, that I may render a good
account of you. Now my whole account, what it is ye know. "Lord, Thou knowest
that I have spoken, Thou knowest that I have not kept silence, Thou knowest in
what spirit I have spoken, Thou knowest that I have wept before Thee, when I
spake, and was not heard." This I imagine is my whole account, For the Holy Spirit
by the prophet Ezekiel hath given me sure hope. Ye know this passage concerning
the watchman; "0 son of man," saith He, "I have set thee a watchman unto the
house of Israel; if when I say unto the wicked, O wicked man, thou shalt die the
death, thou dost not speak;" that is (for I speak to thee that thou mayest
speak), "if thou dost not announce it, and the sword," that is, what I have
threatened on the sinner, "come, and take him away; that wicked man indeed shall die
in his iniquity; but his blood will I require at the watchman's hand."(4) Why?
Because he did not speak. "But if the watchman see the sword coming, and blow
the trumpet," that he may fly, and he took not to himself, that is, amend not
himself, that it find him not in the punishment which God threateneth, and "the
sword shall come and take any one away; that wicked man indeed shall die in his
iniquity; but thou," saith He, "hast delivered thine own soul." And in that
place of the Gospel, what else saith He to the servant? when he said, "Lord, I knew
Thee to be a" difficult(5) or "hard Man, in that Thou reapest where Thou hast
not sowed, and gatherest where Thou hast not strawed; and I was afraid, and
went and hid Thy talent in the earth, lo, Thou hast that is Thine." And He said,
"'Thou wicked and slothful servant,' because thou knewest Me to be a difficult
and hard Man, to reap where I have not sown, and to gather where I have not
strawed, My very covetousness ought the more to teach thee, that I look for profit
from My money. ' Thou oughtest therefore to have given My money to the
exchangers, and at My coming I should have required Mine own with usury.' "(1) Did He
say, "Thou oughtest to give, and require"? It is we then, Brethren, who give, He
will come to require. Pray ye, that He may find us prepared.
SERMON LXXXVIII.
[CXXXVIII. BEN.]
ON THE WORDS OF THE GOSPEL, JOHN X. 14, "I AM THE GOOD SHEPHERD," ETC. AGAINST
THE DONATISTS.
1. We have heard the Lord Jesus setting forth to us the office of a good
shepherd. And herein He hath doubtless given us to know, as we may understand
it, that there are good shepherds. And yet that the multitude of shepherds might
not be understood in a wrong sense; He saith, "I am the good Shepherd."(2) And
wherein He is the good Shepherd, He showeth in the words following; "The good
Shepherd," saith He, "layeth down His life for the sheep. But he that is an
hireling, and not the shepherd, seeth the wolf coming, and fleeth; because he
careth not for the sheep, for he is an hireling.(3) Christ then is the good
Shepherd. What was Peter? was he not a good shepherd? Did not he too lay down his life
for the sheep? What was Paul? what the rest of the Apostles? what the blessed
Bishops, Martyrs, who followed close upon their times? What again our holy
Cyprian? Were they not all good shepherds, not hirelings, of whom it is said,
"Verily I say unto you, they have received their reward"?(4) All these then were good
shepherds, not simply for that they shed their blood, but that they shed it
for the sheep.For not in pride, but in charity they shed it.
2. For even among the heretics, they who for their iniquities and errors
have suffered any trouble, vaunt themselves in the name of martyrdom, that with
this fair covering disguised(5) they may plunder the more easily, for wolves
they are. Now if ye would know in what rank they are to be held, hear that good
shepherd, the Apostle Paul, that not all who even give up their bodies in
suffering to the flames, are to be accounted to have shed their blood for the sheep,
but rather against the sheep. "If," saith he, "I speak with the tongues of men,
and angels, but have not charity, I am become as sounding brass, or a tinkling
cymbal. If I should know all mysteries, and have all prophecy, and all faith,
so that I could remove mountains, but have not charity, I am nothing."(6) Now a
great thing truly is this faith that removes mountains. They are indeed all
great things; but if I have them without charity, saith he, not they, but I am
nothing. But up to this point he haft not touched them, who glory in sufferings
under the false name of martyrdom. Hear how he toucheth, yea rather pierceth
them through anti through. "If I should distribute," saith he, "all my goods to
the poor, and deliver my body to be burned." Now here they are. But mark what
follows; "but have not charity, it profiteth me nothing." Lo, they have come to
suffering, come even to the shedding of blood, yea come to the burning of the
body; and yet it profiteth them nothing, because charity is lacking. Add charity,
they all profit; take charity away, all the rest profit nothing.
3. What a good is this charity, Brethren! What more precious? what
yieldeth greater light? or strength? or profit? or security? Many are the gifts of
God, which even the wicked have, who shall say, "Lord, we have prophesied in Thy
Name, in Thy Name have cast out devils, in Thy Name done many mighty works."(7)
And He will not answer, "Ye have not done them." For in the Presence of so
great a Judge, they will not dare to lie or boast of things they have not done. But
for that they had not charity, He answereth them all, "I know you not." Now
how can he have so much as the smallest charity, who when even(8) convicted,
loves not unity? It was then as impressing on good shepherds this unity, that our
Lord was unwilling to mention many shepherds. For it is not, as I have said
already, that Peter was not a good shepherd, and Paul, the rest of the Apostles,
and the holy Bishops who were after them, and blessed Cyprian. All these were
good shepherds; and notwithstanding to good shepherds, He commended not good
shepherds, but a good Shepherd. "I," saith He," am the good Shepherd."
4. Let us question the Lord with such little understanding as we have, and
in most humble discourse hold converse with so great a Master. What sayest
Thou, 0 Lord, Thou good Shepherd? For Thou art the good Shepherd, who art also the
good Lamb; at once Pastor and Pasturage, at once Lamb and Lion. What sayest
Thou? Let us give ear and aid us, that we may understand. "I," saith He, "am the
good Shepherd." What is Peter? is he either not a shepherd, or a bad one? Let
us see, if he be not a shepherd. "Lovest thou Me ?"(9) Thou saidst to Him Lord,
"Lovest thou Me?" And he answered, "I do love Thee." And Thou to him, "Feed My
sheep." Thou, Thou, Lord, by Thine Own questioning, by the strong assurance of
Thine Own words, madest of the lover a shepherd. He is a shepherd then to whom
Thou didst commit Thy sheep to be fed. Thou didst Thyself entrust them, he is a
shepherd. Let us now see whether he be not a good one. This we find by the
very question, and his answer. Thou didst ask, whether he loved Thee; he answered,
"I do love Thee?' Thou sawest his heart, that he answered truth. Is he not
then good, who Ioveth so great a Good? Whence that answer drawn front his inmost
heart? Wherefore was this Peter, who had Thine eyes in his heart for witnesses,
sad because Thou askedst him not once only, but a second and a third time, that
by a threefold confession of love, he might efface the threefold sin of
denial; wherefore, I say, being sad that he was asked repeatedly by. Him who knew
what He was asking, and had given what He heard; wherefore being sad, did he
return such an answer, "Lord, Thou knowest all things, Thyself knowest that I love
Thee"? What! in making such a confession, such a profession rather, would he
lie? In truth then, he made answer of his love to Thee, and from his inmost heart
he gave utterance to a lover's words. Now Thou hast said, "A good man out of
the good treasure of the heart bringeth forth good things"(1) So then he is both
a shepherd, and a good shepherd; nothing it is true to the power and goodness
of the Shepherd of shepherds; hut nevertheless even he is both a shepherd, and a
good one; and all other such are good shepherds.
5. What means it then, that to good shepherds Thou dost set forth One Only
Shepherd, but that in One Shepherd Thou teachest unity? and the Lord Himself
explains this more clearly by my ministry, putting you, beloved, in remembrance
by this Gospel, and saying, "Hear ye what I have set forth; I have said, ' I am
the good Shepherd ;' because all the rest, all the good shepherds, are My
members." One Head, One Body, One Christ. So then both the Shepherd of shepherds,
and the shepherds of the Shepherd, and the sheep with their shepherds under The
Shepherd. What is all this, but what the Apostle says? "For as the body is one,
and hath many members, and all the members of the body, being many, are one
body; so also is Christ."(2) Therefore if Christ be even so, with good reason
doth Christ in Himself containing all good shepherds, set forth One, saying, "' I
am the good Shepherd.' 'I am,' I Alone am, all the rest with Me are one in
unity. Whoso feedeth without Me, feedeth against Me. 'He that gathereth not with
Me, scattereth.' "(3) Hear then this unity more forcibly set forth; "Other
sheep," saith He, "I have which are not of this fold."(4) For He was speaking to the
first fold of the stock of the fleshly Israel. But there were others of the
stock of the faith of this Israel, and they were yet without, were among the
Gentiles, predestinated, not yet gathered in. These He knew who had predestinated
them; He knew, who had come to redeem them with the shedding of His Own Blood. He
saw them who did not yet see Him; He knew them who yet believed not on Him.
"Other sheep," saith He, "I have which are not of this fold ;" because they are
not of the stock of the flesh of Israel. But nevertheless they shall not be
outside of this fold, "for them also I must bring, that there may be One Fold, and
One Shepherd."
6. With good reason then to This Shepherd of shepherds, doth His Beloved,
His Spouse, His Fair One, but by Him made fair, before by sin deformed,
beautiful afterward through pardon and grace, speak in her love and ardour after Him,
and say to Him, "Where feedest Thou?"(5) And observe how, by what transport
this spiritual love is here animated. And far better are they by this transport
delighted, who have tasted ought of the sweetness of this love. They hear this
properly, who love Christ. For in them, and of them, doth the Church sing this in
the Song of Songs; who love Christ, as it seemed without beauty, yet the Only
Beautiful One. "For we saw Him," it is said, "and He had neither beauty nor
comeliness."(6) Such He appeared on the Cross, such when crowned with thorns did
He exhibit Himself, disfigured, and without comeliness, as if He had lost His
power, as if not the Son of God. Such seemed He to the blind. For it is in the
person of the Jews that Isaiah said this, "We saw Him, and He had no beauty nor
comeliness." When it was said, "If He be the Son of God, let Him come down from
the Cross. He saved others, Himself He cannot save."(7) And smiting Him on the
head with a reed, they said, "Prophesy unto us, thou Christ, who smote Thee
?"(8) Because "He had neither beauty nor comeliness." As such did ye Jews see Him.
For" blindness hath happened in part to Israel, until the fulness of the
Gentiles enter in,"(9) until the other sheep come. Because then blindness hath
happened, therefore did ye see the Comely One without comeliness. "For had ye known
Him, ye would never have crucified the Lord of Glory."(10) But ye did it,
because ye knew Him not. And yet He who as though without beauty bare with you, all
Beauteous as He was, prayed for you; "Father," saith He, "forgive them, for
they know not what they do."(11) For if He were without comeliness, how is it that
she loveth Him, who saith, "Tell me, O Thou whom my soul loveth"?(1) How is it
that she loveth Him? how is it that she burneth for Him? how is it that she
feareth so much to stray from Him? How is it that she hath so great delight in
Him, that her only punishment is to be without Him? What would there be for which
He should be loved, if He were not beautiful? But how could she love Him so,
if He appeared to her as He did to those blind men persecuting Him, and knowing
not what they do? As what then did she love Him? As "comely in form above the
sons of men. Comely in form above the sons of men, grace is poured abroad in Thy
Lips."(2) So then from these Thy Lips, "Tell me, 0 Thou whom my soul Ioveth.
Tell me," says she, "O Thou whom," not my flesh, but, "my soul loveth. Tell me
where Thou feedest, where Thou liest down in the midday; lest haply I light, as
one veiled, upon the flocks of Thy companions."(3)
7. It seems obscure, obscure it is; for it is a mystery of the sacred
marriage bed. For she says, "The King hath brought me into His chamber."(4) Of such
a chamber is this a mystery. But ye who are not as profane kept off from this
chamber, hear ye what ye are, and say with her, if with her ye love (and ye do
love with her, if ye are in her); say all, and yet let one say, for unity
saith; "Tell me, 0 Thou whom my soul Ioveth. For they had one soul to Godward, and
one heart.(5) Tell me where Thou feedest, where Thou liest down in the midday?"
What does the midday(6) signify? "Great heat, and great brightness." So then,
"make known to me who are Thy wise ones," fervent in spirit, and brilliant in
doctrine. "Make known to me Thy Right Hand, and men learned in heart, in
wisdom."(7) To them may I cleave in Thy Body, to them be united, with them enjoy Thee.
Tell me then, "tell me, where Thou feedest, where Thou liest down in the
midday;" lest I fall upon them who say other things of Thee, entertain other
sentiments of Thee; believe other things of Thee, preach other things of Thee; and have
their own flocks, and are Thy companions; for that they live of Thy table, and
handle the sacraments of Thy table. For companions are so called, because they
eat together,(8) messmates as it were. Such are reproved in the Psalm; "For if
Mine enemy had spoken great things against Me, I would surely have hidden
Myself from him; and if he that hated Me had spoken great things against Me, I
would surely have hidden Myself from him; but thou a man of one mind with Me, My
guide, and My familiar, who didst take sweet meats together with Me, in the house
of God we walked with consent."(9) Why then now against the house of the Lord
with dissent, but that "they have gone out from us, but they were not of
us?(10) Therefore, "O Thou whom my soul loveth," that I may not fall upon such, Thy
companions, but companions such i as Samson's were, who kept not faith with
their friend, but wished to corrupt his wife.(11) Therefore, that I may not fall
upon such as these, "that I may not light upon them," that is, fall upon them,
"as one that is veiled," as one that is concealed, that is, and obscure, not as
established upon the mountain. "Tell me" then, "0 thou whom my soul loveth,
where Thou feedest, where Thou liest down in the midday;" who are the wise and
faithful in whom Thou dost specially rest, lest by chance as in blindness I fall
upon the flocks, not Thy flocks, but the flocks of Thy companions. For thou didst
not say to Peter, "Feed thy sheep," but, "Feed My sheep."(12)
8. Let then the "good Shepherd," and, "the Comely in form above the sons
of men," make answer to this beloved one; make answer to her whom He hath made
beautiful from among the children of men. Hear ye what He answereth, and
understand, beware of that wherewith He alarmeth, love that which He adviseth. What
then doth He answer? How free from soft caresses, yea, to her caresses He
returneth severity! He is sharp that He may bind her closely, that He may keep her.
"If thou know not thyself," saith He, "0 thou fair one among women:"(13) for
however fair others may be by the gifts of thy Spouse, they are heresies, fair in
outward ornament, not within:(14) fair are they without, and outwardly they
shine, they disguise themselves by the name of righteousness; "but all the beauty
of the King's daughter is within."(15) "If" then "thou know not thyself;" that
thou art one, that thou art throughout all nations, that thou art chaste, that
thou oughtest not to corrupt thyself with the disordered converse of evil
companions. "If thou know not thyself," that in uprightness, "he hath espoused thee
to Me, to present you a chaste Virgin to Christ;"(16) and that in uprightness
thou shouldest present thine own self to Me, test by evil converse, "as the
serpent beguiled Eve through his subtilty, so your minds too should be corrupted
from my purity."(17) "If," I say, "thou know not thyself" to be such, "go thy way;
go thy way." For to others I shall say, "Enter thou into the joy of thy
Lord."' To time I shall not say, "Enter in;" but, "Go thy way;" that thou mayest be
among those, who "went out from us." "Go thy way." That is, "if thou know not
thyself," then, "go thy way." But if thou know thyself, enter in. But, "if thou
know not thyself, go thy way by the footsteps of the flocks, and feed thy kids
in the tents of the shepherds. Go thy way by the footsteps," not "of the Flock,"
but, "of the flocks, and feed," not as Peter, "My sheep," but, "thy kids; in
the tents," not "of the Shepherd," but, "of the shepherds;" not of unity, but of
dissension; not established there, where there is One flock and One Shepherd.
The beloved one was confirmed, edified, made stronger, prepared to die for her
Spouse and to live with her Spouse.
9. These words which I have quoted out of the Holy Song of Songs, of a
kind of bridal song of the Bridegroom and the Bride (for it is a spiritual
wedding, wherein we must live in great purity, for Christ hath granted to the Church
in spirit that which His Mother had in body, to be at once a Mother and a
Virgin); these words, I say, the Donatists accommodate to their own perverted sense
in a very different meaning. And how I will not conceal from you, and what ye
may answer them, I will, by the Lord's help, as well as I shall be able, briefly
recommend. When then we begin to press them with the light of the Church's
unity spread over the whole world, and demand of them to show us any testimony out
of the Scriptures, where God hath foretold that the Church should be in Africa,
as if all the rest of the nations were lost; they are in the habit of taking
this testimony in their mouths, and saying; "Africa is under the midday sun; the
Church then" they say, "asking the Lord where He feedeth, where He lieth down;
He answereth, 'Under the midday sun;'" as if the voice of her who put the
question, were, "Tell me, O Thou whom my soul loveth, where Thou feedest, where
Thou liest down;" and the Voice of Him who answereth, were, "Under the midday
sun;" that is, in Africa. If then it be the Church which asketh, and the Lord
maketh answer where he feedeth, in Africa, because the Church was in Africa; then
she who asketh was not in Africa. "'Tell me," she saith, "O Thou whom my soul
loveth, where Thou feedest, where Thou liest down;" and He maketh answer to some
Church out of Africa, "Under the midday sun," in Africa I lie down, in Africa I
feed, as if it were, "I do not feed in thee." I repeat, if she who asketh is
the Church, which no one disputes, which not even themselves gainsay; and they
hear something about Africa; then she who asketh is out of Africa; and because it
is the Church, the Church is out of Africa.
10. But see, I admit that Africa is trader the midday sun; although Egypt
is rather under the meridian, under the midday sun than Africa. Now after what
fashion This Shepherd is there in Egypt, they who know, will acknowledge; and
for them that know not, let them enquire how large a flock lie gathereth there,
how great a multitude He hath of holy men and women who utterly despise the
world. That flock hath so increased, that it hath expelled superstitions even
thence. To pass over how it hath in its increase banished thence the whole
superstition of idols, which had been firmly fixed there; I admit what you say, O evil
companions; I admit it altogether, I agree that Africa is in the South, and
that Africa is signified in that which is said, "Where feedest Thou, where dost
Thou lie down under the midday sun?" But do ye too equally observe how that up to
this point these are the words of the Bride, and not yet of the Bridegroom.
Hitherto it is the Bride that saith, "Tell me, O Thou whom my soul loveth, where
Thou feedest, where Thou dost lie down in the midday, lest by chance I light,
as one veiled." O thou deaf, and blind one, if in the "midday" thou seest
Africa, why in her that is "veiled" l dost thou not see the Bride? "Tell me," she
said, "O Thou whom my soul loveth." Without doubt she addresses her Spouse, when
she says, "whom" [in the masculine (2)] "my soul loveth." Just as if it were
said, "Tell me, O thou whom [in the feminine (3)] ,' "my soul loveth;" we should
understand that the Bridegroom spake these words to His Bride; so when you
hear, "Tell me, 0 thou whom" (in the masculine) "my soul loveth, where Thou
feedest, where Thou liest down;" add to this, to her words belongs also what follows,
"In the midday." I am asking, "where Thou feedest in the midday, lest by chance
I light as one veiled upon the flocks of Thy companions." I consent entirely,
I admit what you understand of Africa; it is signified by "the midday" But
then as you understand it, the Church of Christ beyond the sea is addressing her
Spouse, in fear of falling into the African error, "O Thou whom my soul,
loveth, tell me," teach me. For I hear that 'm the midday," that is in Africa, there
are two parties, yea rather many schisms.(4) "Tell me," then, "where Thou
feedest," what sheep belong to Thee, what fold Thou biddest me love there,
whereunto ought I to unite myself. "Lest by chance I light as one veiled." For they
mock me as if I were concealed, they mock me as destroyed, as though I existed
nowhere else. "Lest," then, "as one veiled," as if concealed, "I light upon the
flocks," that is, upon the con gregarious of the heretics, "thy companions; the
Donatists, the Maximinianists, the Rogatists and all the other pests who
gather without, and who therefore scatter; "Tell me," I pray Thee if I must seek my
Shepherd there, that I fail not into the gulf of re-baptizing. I exhort you, I
beseech you by the sanctity of such nuptials love this Church, be ye in this
holy Church, be ye this Church; love the good Shepherd, the Spouse so fair, who
deceiveth no one, who desireth no one to perish. Pray too for the scattered
sheep; that they too may come, that they too may acknowledge Him, that they too
may love Him; that there may be One Flock and One Shepherd. Let us turn to the
Lord, etc.