LECTURES OR TRACTATES ON THE GOSPEL ACCORDING TO ST. JOHN. TRACTATES I TO IV.
TRACTATE I.
CHARTER I. I--5.
1. When I give heed to what we have just read from the apostolic lesson,
that "the natural man perceiveth not the things which are of the Spirit of
God,"[1] and consider that in the present assembly, my beloved, there must of
necessity be among you many natural men, who know only according to the flesh, and
cannot yet raise themselves to spiritual understanding, I am in great difficulty
how, as the Lord shall grant, I may be able to express, or in my small measure
to explain, what has been read from the Gospel, "In the beginning was the Word,
and the Word was with God, and the Word was God;" for this the natural man
does not perceive. What then, brethren? Shall we be silent for this cause? Why
then is it read, if we are to be silent regarding it? Or why is it heard, if it be
not explained? And why is it explained, if it be not understood? And so, on
the other hand, since I do not doubt that there are among your number some who
can not only receive it when explained, but even understand it before it is
explained, I shall not defraud those who are able to receive it, from fear of my
words being wasted on the ears of those who are not able to receive it. Finally,
there will be present with us the compassion of God, so that perchance there may
be enough for all, and each receive what he is able, while he who speaks says
what he is able. For to speak or the matter as it is, who is able? I venture to
say, my brethren, perhaps not John himself spoke of the matter as it is, but
even he only as he was able; for it was man that spoke of God, inspired indeed
by God, but still man. Because he was inspired he said something; if he had not
been inspired, he would have said 'nothing; but because a man inspired, he
spoke not the whole, but what a man could he spoke.
2. For this John, dearly beloved brethren, was one of those mountains
concerning which it is written: "Let the mountains receive peace for thy people,
and the hills righteousness."[2] The mountains are lofty souls, the hills little
souls. But for this reason do the mountains receive peace, that the hills may
be able to receive righteousness. What is the righteousness which the hills
receive? Faith, for" the just doth live by faith."[3] The smaller souls, however,
would not receive faith unless the greater souls, which are called mountains,
were illuminated by Wisdom herself, that they may be able to transmit to the
little ones what the little ones can receive; and the hills live by faith, because
the mountains receive peace. By the mountains themselves it was said to the
Church, "Peace be with you;" and the mountains themselves in proclaiming peace to
the Church did not divide themselves against Him from whom they received
peace,[1] that truly, not feignedly, they might proclaim peace.
3. For there are other mountains which cause shipwreck, on which, if any
one drive his ship, she is dashed to pieces. For it is easy, when land is seen
by men in peril, to make a venture as it were to reach it; but sometimes land is
seen on a mountain, and rocks lie hid under the mountain; and when any one
makes for the mountain, he falls on the rocks, and finds there not rest, but
wrecking. So there have been certain mountains, and great have they appeared among
men, and they have created heresies and schisms, and have divided the Church of
God; but those who divided the Church of God were not those mountains
concerning which it is said, "Let the mountains receive peace for thy people." For in
what manner have they received peace who have severed unity?
4. But those who received peace to proclaim it to the people have made
Wisdom herself an object of contemplation, so far as human hearts could lay hold
on that which "eye hath not seen, nor ear heard, neither has ascended into the
heart of man."[2] If it has not ascended into the heart of man, how has it
ascended into the heart of John? Was not John a man? Or perhaps neither into John's
heart did it ascend, but John's heart ascended into it? For that which ascends
into the heart of man is from beneath, to man; but that to which the heart of
man ascends is above, from man. Even so brethren, can it be said that, if it
ascended into the heart of John (if in any way it can be said), it ascended into
his heart in so far as he was not man What means '' was not man"? In so far as
he had begun to be an angel. For all saints are angels, since they are
messengers of God. Therefore to carnal and natural men, who are not able to perceive the
things that are of God, what says the apostle? "For whereas ye say, I am of
Paul, I of Apollos, are ye not men?,[3] What did he wish to make them whom, he
upbraided because they were men? Do you wish to know what he wished to make them?
Hear in the Psalms: "I have said, ye are gods; and all of you are children of
the Most High."[4] To this, then, God calls us, that we be not men. But then
will it be for the better that we be not men, if first we recognize the fact that
we are men, that is, to the end that we may rise to that height from humility;
lest, when we think that we are something when we are nothing, we not only do
not receive what we are not, but even lose what we are.
5. Accordingly, brethren, of these mountains was John also, who said, " In
the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God."
This mountain had received peace; he was contemplating the divinity of the
Word. Of what sort was this mountain? How lofty? He had risen above all peaks of
the earth, he had risen above all plains of the sky, he had risen above all
heights of the stars, he had risen above all choirs and legions of the angels. For
unless he rose above all those things which were created, he would not arrive at
Him by whom all things were made. You cannot imagine what he rose above,
unless you see at what he arrived. Dost thou inquire concerning heaven and earth?
They were made. Dost thou inquire concerning the things that are in heaven and
earth? Surely much more were they made. Dost thou inquire concerning spiritual
beings, concerning angels, archangels, thrones, dominions, powers,
principalities? These also were made. For when the Psalm enumerated all these things, it
finished thus: " He spoke, and they were made; He commanded, and they were
created."[5] If "He spoke and they were made," it was by the Word that they were made;
but if it was by the Word they were made, the heart of John could not reach to
that which he says, "In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God,
and the Word was God," unless he had risen above all things that were made by
the Word. What a mountain this! How holy! How high among those mountains that
received peace for the people of God, that the hills might receive righteousness!
6. Consider, then, brethren, if perchance John is not one of those
mountains concerning whom we sang a little while ago, "I have lifted up mine eyes to
the mountains, from whence shall come my help." Therefore, my brethren, if you
would understand, lift up your eyes to this mountain, that is, raise yourselves
up to the evangelist, rise to his meaning. But, because though these mountains
receive peace he cannot be in peace who places his hope in man, do not so raise
your eyes to the mountain as to think that your hope should be placed in man;
and so say, "I have lifted up mine eyes to the mountains, from whence shall
come my help," that you immediately add, "My help is from the Lord, who made
heaven and earth."[6] Therefore let us lift our eyes to the mountains, from whence
shall come our help; and yet it is not in the mountains themselves that our hope
should be placed, for the mountains receive what they may minister to us;
therefore, from whence the mountains also receive there should our hope be placed.
When we lift our eyes to the Scriptures, since it was through men the
Scriptures were ministered, we are lifting our eyes to the mountains, from whence shall
come our help; but still, since they were men who wrote the Scriptures, they
did not shine of themselves, but "He was the true light,[1] who lighteth every
man that cometh into the world." A mountain also was that John the Baptist, who
said, "I am not the Christ,"[2] lest any one, placing his hope in the mountain,
should fall from Him who illuminates the mountain. He also confessed, saying,
"Since of His fullness have all we received."[3] So thou oughtest to say, "I
have lifted up mine eyes to the mountains, from whence shall come my help," so as
not to ascribe to the mountains the help that comes to thee; but continue and
say, "My help is from the Lord, who made heaven and earth."
7. Therefore, brethren, may this be the result of my admonition, that you
understand that in raising your hearts to the Scriptures (when the gospel was
sounding forth, "In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and
the Word was God," and the rest that was read), you were lifting your eyes to
the mountains, For unless the mountains said these things, you would not find out
how to think of them at all. Therefore from the mountains came your help, that
you even heard of these things; but you cannot yet understand what you have
heard. Call for help from the Lord, who made heaven and earth; for the mountains
were enabled only so to speak as not of themselves to illuminate, because they
themselves are also illuminated by hearing. Thence John, who said these things,
received them--he who lay on the Lord's breast, and from the Lord's breast
drank in what he might give us to drink. But he gave us words to drink. Thou
oughtest then to receive understanding from the source from which he drank who gave
thee to drink; so that thou mayest lift up thine eyes to the mountains from
whence shall come thine aid, so that from thence thou mayest receive, as it were,
the cup, that is, the word, given thee to drink; and yet, since thy help is
from the Lord, who made heaven and earth, thou mayest fill thy breast from the
source from which he filled his; whence thou saidst, "My help is from the Lord,
who made heaven and earth:" let him, then, fill who can. Brethren, this is what I
have said: Let each one lift up his heart in the manner that seems. fitting,
and receive what is spoken. But perhaps you will say that I am more present to
you than God, Far be such a thought from you! He is much more present to you;
for I appear to your eyes, He presides over your consciences. Give me then your
ears, Him your hearts, that you may fill both. Behold, your eyes, and those your
bodily senses, you lift up to us; and yet not to us, for we are not of those
mountains, but to the gospel itself, to the evangelist himself: your hearts,
however, to the Lord to be filled. Moreover, let each one so lift up as to see
what he lifts up, and whither. What do I mean by saying, "what he lifts up, and
whither?" Let him see to it what sort of a heart he lifts up, because it is to
the Lord he lifts it up, lest, encumbered by a load of fleshly pleasure, it fall
ere ever it is raised. But does each one see that he bears a burden of flesh?
Let him strive by continence to purify that which he may lift up to God. For
"Blessed are the pure in heart, because they shall see God."[4]
8. But let us see what advantage it is that these words have sounded, "In
the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God."
We also uttered words when we spoke. Was it such a word that was with God? Did
not those words which we uttered sound and pass away? Did God's Word, then,
sound and come to an end? If so, how were all things made by it, and without it was
nothing made? how is that which it created ruled by it, if it sounded and
passed away? What sort of a word, then, is that which is both uttered and passes
not away? Give ear, my beloved, it is a great matter. By everyday talk, words
here become despicable to us, because through their sounding and passing away they
are despised, and seem nothing but words. But there is a word in the man
himself which remains within; for the sound proceeds from the mouth. There is a word
which is spoken in a truly spiritual manner, that which you understand from
the sound, not the sound itself. Mark, I speak a word when I say "God." How short
the word which I have spoken--four letters and two syllables![5] Is this all
that God is, four letters and two syllables? Or is that which is signified as
costly as the word is paltry? What took place in thy heart when thou heardest
"God"? What took place in my heart when I said "God"? A certain great and perfect
substance was in our thoughts, transcending every changeable creature of flesh
or of soul. And if I say to thee, "Is God changeable or unchangeable?" thou
wilt answer immediately, "Far be it from me either to believe or imagine that God
is changeable: God is unchangeable." Thy soul, though small, though perhaps
still carnal, could not answer me otherwise than that God is unchangeable: but
every creature is changeable; how then weft thou able to enter, by a glance of thy
spirit, into that which is above the creature, so as confidently to answer me,
"God is unchangeable"? What, then, is that in thy heart, when thou thinkest of
a certain substance, living, eternal, all-powerful, infinite, everywhere
present, everywhere whole, nowhere shut in? When thou thinkest of these qualities,
this is the word concerning God in thy heart. But is this that sound which
consists of four letters and two syllables ? Therefore, whatever things are spoken
and pass away are sounds, are letters, are syllables. His word which sounds
passes away; but that which the sound signified, and was in the speaker as he
thought of it, and in the hearer as he understood it, that remains while the sounds
pass away.
9. Turn thy attention to that word. Thou canst have a word in thy heart,
as it were a design born in thy mind, so that thy mind brings forth the design;
and the design is, so to speak, the offspring of thy mind, the child of thy
heart. For first thy heart brings forth a design to construct some fabric, to set
up something great on the earth; already the design is conceived, and the work
is not yet finished: thou seest what thou wilt make; but another does not
admire, until thou hast made and constructed the pile, and brought that. fabric into
shape and to completion; then men regard the admirable fabric, and admire the
design of the architect; they are astonished at what they see, and are pleased
with what they do not see: who is there who can see a design? If, then, on
account of some great building a human design receives praise, do you wish to see
what a design of God is the Lord Jesus Christ, that is, the Word of God? Mark
this fabric of the world. View what was made by the Word, and then thou wilt
understand what is the nature of the world. Mark these two bodies of the world, the
heavens and the earth. Who will unfold in words the beauty of the heavens? Who
will unfold in words the fruitfulness of the earth? Who will worthily extol
the changes of the seasons? Who will worthily extol the power of seeds? You see
what things I do not mention, lest in giving a long list I should perhaps tell
of less than you can call up to your own minds. From this fabric, then, judge
the nature of the Word by which it was made: and not it alone; for all these
things are seen, because they have to do with the bodily sense. By that Word angels
also were made; by that Word archangels were made, powers, thrones, dominions,
principalities; by that Word were made all things. Hence, judge what a Word
this is.
10. Perhaps some one now answers me, "Who so conceives this Word?" Do not
then imagine, as it were, some paltry thing when thou hearest " the Word," nor
suppose it to be words such as thou hearest them every day--"he spoke such
words," "such words he uttered," "such words you tell me;" for by constant
repetition the term word has become, so to speak, worthless. And when thou hearest, "In
the beginning was the Word," lest thou shouldest imagine something worthless,
such as thou hast been accustomed to think of when thou weft wont to listen to
human words, hearken to what thou must think of: "The Word was God."
11. Now some unbelieving Arian may come forth and say that "the Word of
God was made." How can it be that the Word of God was made, when God by the Word
made all things? If the Word of God was itself also made, by what other Word
was it made ? But if thou sayest that there is a Word of the Word, I say, that by
which it was made is itself the only Son of God. But if thou dost not say
there is a Word of the Word, allow that that was not made by which all things were
made. For that by which all things were made could not be made by itself.
Believe the evangelist then. For he might have said, "In the beginning God made the
Word:" even as Moses said, "In the beginning God made the heavens and the
earth;" and enumerates all things thus: "God said, Let it be made, and it was
made."[1] If "said," who said? God. And what was made ? Some creature. Between the
speaking of God and the making of the creature, what was there by which it was
made but the Word ? For God said, "Let it be made, and it was made." This Word is
unchangeable; although changeable things are made by it, the Word itself is
unchangeable.
12. Do not then believe that that was made by which were made all things,
lest thou be not new-made by the Word, which makes all things new. For already
hast thou been made by the Word, but it behoves thee to be new-made by the
Word. If, however, thy belief about the Word be wrong, thou wilt not be able to be
new-made by the Word. And although creation by the Word has happened to thee,
so that thou hast been made by Him, thou art unmade by thyself: if by thyself
thou art unmade, let Him who made thee make thee new: if by thyself thou hast
been made worse, let Him who created thee re-create thee. But how can He re-create
thee by the Word, if thou boldest a wrong opinion about the Word? The
evangelist says, "In the beginning was the Word;" and thou sayest, '' In the beginning
the Word was made." He says, "All things were made by Him;" and thou sayest
that the Word Himself was made. The evangelist might have said, "In the beginning
the Word was made:" but what does he say? "In the beginning was the Word." If
He was, He was not made; that all things might be made by it, and without Him
nothing be made. If, then, "in the beginning the Word was, and the Word was with
God, and the Word was God;" if thou canst not imagine what it is, wait till
thou art grown. That is strong meat: receive thou milk that thou mayest be
nourished, and be able to receive strong meat.
13. Give good heed to what follows, brethren, "All things were made by
Him, and without Him was nothing made," so as not to imagine that "nothing" is
something. For many, wrongly understanding " without Him was nothing made," are
wont to fancy that "nothing" is something. Sin, indeed, was not made by Him; and
it is plain that sin is nothing, and men become nothing when they sin. An idol
also was not made by the Word ;--it has indeed a sort of human form, but man
himself was made by the Word;--for the form of man in an idol was not made by the
Word, and it is written, "We know that an idol is nothing."[1] Therefore these
things were not made by the Word; but whatever was made in the natural manner,
whatever belongs to the creature, everything that is fixed in the sky, that
shines from above, that flies under the heavens, and that moves in universal
nature, every creature whatsoever: I will speak more plainly, brethren, that you
may understand me; I will say, from an angel even to a worm. What more excellent
than an angel among created things? what lower than a worm? He who made the
angel made the worm also; but the angel is fit for heaven, the worm for earth. He
who created also arranged. If He had placed the worm in heaven, thou mightest
have found fault; if He had willed that angels should spring from decaying
flesh, thou mightest have found fault: and yet God almost does this, and He is not
to be found fault with. For all men born of flesh, what are they but worms? and
of these worms God makes angels. For if the Lord Himself says, "But I am a worm
and no man,"[2] who will hesitate to say what is written also in Job, "How
much more is man rottenness, and the son of man a worm?"[3] First he said, "Man is
rottenness;" and afterwards, "The son of man a worm:" because a worm springs
from rottenness, therefore "man is rottenness," and "the son of man a worm."
Behold what for thy sake He was willing to become, who "in the beginning was the
Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God!" Why did He for thy sake
become this? That thou mightest suck, who wert not able to chew. Wholly in this
sense, then, brethren, understand "All things were made by Him, and without
Him was nothing made." For every creature, great and small, was made by Him: by
Him were made things above and things beneath; spiritual and corporeal, by Him
were they made. For no form, no structure, no agreement of parts, no substance
whatever that can have weight, number, measure, exists but by that Word, and by
that Creator Word, to whom it is said, "Thou hast ordered all things in
measure, and in number, and in weight."[4]
14. Therefore, let no one deceive you, when perchance you suffer annoyance
from flies. For some have been mocked by the devil, and taken with flies. As
fowlers are accustomed to put flies in their traps to deceive hungry birds, so
these have been deceived with flies by the devil. Some one or other was
suffering annoyance from flies; a Manichaean found him in his trouble, and when he said
that he could not bear flies, and hated them exceedingly, immediately the
Manichaean said, "Who made them ?" And since he was suffering from annoyance, and
hated them, he dared not say, " God made them," though he was a Catholic. The
other immediately added, "If God did not make them, who made them?" "Truly,"
replied the Catholic, "I believe the devil made them." And the other immediately
said, " If the devil made the fly, as I see you allow, because you understand the
matter well, who made the bee, which is a little larger than the fly?" The
Catholic dared not say that God made the bee and not the fly, for the case was
much the same. From the bee he led him to the locust; from the locust to the
lizard; from the lizard to the bird; from the bird to the sheep; from the sheep to
the cow; from that to the elephant, and at last to man; and persuaded a man that
man was not made by God. Thus the miserable man, being troubled with the
flies, became himself a fly, and the property of the devil. In fact, Beelzebub, they
say, means "Prince of flies;" and of these it is written, "Dying flies deprive
the ointment of its sweetness."[1]
15. What then, brethren? why have I said these things? Shut the ears of
your hearts against the wiles of the enemy. Understand that God made all things,
and arranged them in their orders. Why, then, do we suffer many evils from a
creature that God made? Because we have offended God? Do angels suffer these
things? Perhaps we, too, in that life of theirs, would have no such thing to fear.
For thy punishment, accuse thy sin, not the Judge. For, on account of our
pride, God appointed that tiny and contemptible creature to torment us; so that,
since man has become proud and has boasted himself against God, and, though
mortal, has oppressed mortals, and, though man, has not acknowledged his
fellowman,--since he has lifted himself up, he may be brought low by gnats. Why art thou
inflated with human pride? Some one has censured thee, and thou art swollen with
rage. Drive off the gnats, that thou mayest sleep: understand who thou art.
For, that you may know, brethren, it was for the taming of our pride these things
were created to be troublesome to us, God could have humbled Pharaoh's proud
people by bears, by lions, by serpents; He sent flies and frogs upon them,[2]
that their pride might be subdued by the meanest creatures.
16. "All things," then, brethren, "all things were made by Him, and
without Him was nothing made." But how were all things made by Him? "That, which was
made, in Him is life." It can also be read thus "That, which was made in Him,
is life;" and if we so read it, everything is life. For what is there that was
not made in Him? For He is the Wisdom of God, and it is said in the Psalm,[3]
"In Wisdom hast Thou made all things." If, then, Christ is the Wisdom of God, and
the Psalm says, "In Wisdom hast Thou made all things:" as all things were made
by Him, so all things were made in Him. If, then, all things were made in Him,
dearly beloved brethren, and that, which was made in Him, is life, both the
earth is life and wood is life. We do indeed say wood is life, but in the sense
of the wood of the cross, whence we have received life. A stone, then, is life.
It is not seemly so to understand the passage, as the same most vile sect of
the Manichaeans creep stealthily on us again, and say that a stone has life, that
a wall has a soul, and a cord has a soul, and wool, and clothing. For so they
are accustomed to talk in their raving; and when they have been driven back and
refuted, they in some sort bring forward Scripture, saying, "Why is it said,
'That, which was made in Him, is life'?" For if all things were made in Him, all
things are life. Be not carried away by them; read thus "That which was made;
'" here make a short pause, and then go on, "in Him is life." What is the
meaning of this? The earth was made, but the very earth that was made is not life;
but there exists spiritually in the Wisdom itself a certain reason by which the
earth was made: this is life.
17. As far as I can, I shall explain my meaning to you, beloved. A
carpenter makes a box. First he has the box in design; for if he had it not in design,
how could he produce it by workmanship? But the box in theory is not the very
box as it appears to the eyes. It exists invisibly in design, it will be
visible in the work. Behold, it is made in the work; has it ceased to exist in
design? The one is made in the work, and the other remains which exists in design;
for that box may rot, and another be fashioned according to that which exists in
design. Give heed, then, to the box as it is in design, and the box as it is in
fact, The actual box is not life, the box in design is life; because the soul
of the artificer, where all these things are before they are brought forth, is
living. So, dearly beloved brethren, because the Wisdom of God, by which all
things have been made, contains everything according to design before it is made,
therefore those things which are made through this design itself are not
forthwith life, but whatever has been made is life in Him. You see the earth, there
is an earth in design; you see the sky, there is a sky in design; you see the
sun and the moon, these also exist in design: but externally they are bodies, in
design they are life. Understand, if in any way you are able, for a great
matter has been spoken. If I am not great by whom it is spoken, or through whom it
is spoken, still it is from a great authority. For these things are not spoken
by me who am small; He is not small to whom I refer in saying these things. Let
each one take in what he can, and to what extent he can; and he who is not
able to take in any of it, let him nourish his heart, that he may become able. How
is he to nourish it ? Let him nourish it with milk, that he may come to strong
meat. Let him not leave Christ born through the flesh till he arrive at Christ
born of the Father alone, the God-Word with God, through whom all things were
made; for that is life, which in Him is the light of men.
18. For this follows: "and the life was the light of men;" and from this
very life are men illuminated. Cattle are not illuminated, because cattle have
not rational minds capable of seeing wisdom. But man was made in the image of
God, and has a rational mind, by which he can perceive wisdom. That life, then,
by which all things were made, is itself the light; yet not the light of every
animal, but of men. Wherefore a little after he says, "That was the true light,
which lighteth every man that cometh into the world." By that light John the
Baptist was illuminated; by the same light also was John the Evangelist himself
illuminated. He was filled with that light who said, "I am not the Christ; but
He cometh after me, whose shoe's latchet I am not worthy to unloose."[1] By that
light he had been illuminated who said, "In the beginning was the Word, and
the Word was with God, and the Word was God." Therefore that life is the light of
men.
19. But perhaps the slow hearts of some of you cannot receive their sins,
so that they cannot see. Let them not on that account think that the light is
in any way absent, because they are not able to see it; for they themselves are
darkness on account of their sins. "And the light shineth in darkness, and the
darkness comprehended it not." Accordingly, brethren, as in the case of a
blind man placed in the sun, the sun is present to him, but he is absent from the
sun. So every foolish man, every unjust man, every irreligious man, is blind in
heart. Wisdom is present; but it is present to a blind man, and is absent from
his eyes; not because it is absent from him, but because he is absent from it.
What then is he to do? Let him become pure, that he may be able to see God.
Just as if a man could not see because his eyes were dirty and sore with dust,
rheum, or smoke, the physician would say to him: "Cleanse from your eye whatever
bad thing is in it, so that you may be able to see the light of your eyes."
Dust, rheum, and smoke are sins and iniquities: remove then all these things, and
you will see the wisdom that is present; for God is that wisdom, and it has been
said, "Blessed are the pure in heart; for they shall see God."[2]
TRACTATE II.
CHAPTER I. 6-14.
1. IT is fitting, brethren, that as far as possible we should treat of the
text of Holy Scripture, and especially of the Holy Gospel, without omitting
any portion, that both we ourselves may derive nourishment according to our
capacity, and may minister to you from that source from which we have been
nourished. Last Lord's day, we remember, we treated of the first section; that is, "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 is life; and the life was the
light of men. And the light shineth in darkness; and the darkness comprehended
it not." So far, I believe, had I advanced in the treatment of the passage: let
all who were present recall what was then said; and those of you who were not
present, believe me and those who chose to be present. Now therefore,--because
we cannot always be repeating everything, out of justice to those who desire to
hear what follows, and because repetition of the former thought is a burden to
them and deprives them of what succeeds,--let those who were absent on the
former occasion refrain from demanding repetition, but, together with those who
were here, listen to the present exposition.
2. It goes on, "There was a man sent from God whose name was John." Truly,
brethren beloved, those things which were said before, were said regarding the
ineffable divinity of Christ, and almost ineffably. For who shall comprehend
"In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God"? And do not allow the
name word to appear mean to you, through the habit of daily words, for it is
added, "and the Word was God." This Word is He of whom yesterday we spoke much;
and I trust that God was present, and that even from only thus much speaking
something reached your hearts. "In the beginning was the Word." He is the same,
and is in the same manner; as He is, so He is always; He cannot be changed; that
is, He is. This His name He spoke to His servant Moses: "I am that I am; and
He that is hath sent me."[1] Who then shall comprehend this when you see that
all mortal things are variable; when you see that not only do bodies vary as to
their qualities, by being born, by increasing, by becoming less, by dying, but
that even souls themselves through the effect of divers volitions are distended
and divided; when you see that men can obtain wisdom if they apply themselves
to its light and heat, and also lose wisdom if they remove themselves from it
through some evil influence? When, therefore, you see that all those things are
variable, what is that which is, unless that which transcends all things which
are so that they are not ? Who then can receive this? Or who, in what manner
soever he may have applied the strength of his mind to touch that which is, can
reach to that which he may in any way have touched with his mind ? It is as if
one were to see his native land at a distance, and the sea intervening; he sees
whither he would go, but he has not the means of going. So we desire to arrive
at that our stability where that which is, is, because this alone always is as
it is: the sea of this world interrupts our course, even although already we see
whither we go; for many do not even see whither they go, That there might be a
way by which we could go, He has come from Him to whom we wished to go. And
what has He done ? He has appointed a tree by which we may cross the sea. For no
one is able to cross the sea of this world, unless borne by the cross of
Christ. Even he who is of weak eyesight sometimes embraces this cross; and he who
does not see from afar whither he goes, let him not depart from it, and it will
carry him over.
3. Therefore, my brethren, I would desire to have impressed this upon your
hearts: if you wish to live in a pious and Christian manner, cling to Christ
according to that which He became for us, that you may arrive at Him according
to that which is, and according to that which was. He approached, that for us He
might become this; because He became that for us, on which the weak may be
borne, and cross the sea of this world and reach their native country; where there
will be no need of a ship, for no sea is crossed. It is better then not to see
with the mind that which is, and yet not to depart from the cross of Christ,
than to see it with the mind, and despise the cross of Christ. It is good beyond
this, and best of all, if it be possible, that we both see whither we ought to
go, and hold fast that which carries us as we go. This they were able to do,
the great minds of the mountains, who have been called mountains, whom the light
of divine justice pre-eminently illuminates; they were able to do this, and
saw that which is. For John seeing said, "In the beginning was the Word, and the
Word was with God, and the Word was God." They saw this, and in order that they
might arrive at that which they saw from afar, they did not depart from the
cross of Christ, and did not despise Christ's lowliness. But little ones who
cannot understand this, who do not depart from the cross and passion and
resurrection of Christ, are conducted in that same ship to that which they do not see, in
which they also arrive who do see.
4. But truly there have been some philosophers of this world who have
sought for the Creator by means of the creature; for He can be found by means of
the creature, as the apostle plainly says, "For the invisible things of Him from
the creation of the world are clearly seen, being understood by the things that
are made, even His eternal power and glory; so they are without excuse." And
it follows, "Because that, when they knew God;" he did not say, Because they did
not know, but "Because that, when they knew God, they glorified Him not as
God, neither were thankful; but became vain in their imaginations, and their
foolish heart was darkened." How darkened? It follows, when he says more plainly:
"Professing themselves to be wise, they became fools"[2] They saw whither they
must come; but ungrateful to Him who afforded them what they saw, they wished to
ascribe to themselves what they saw; and having become proud, they lost what
they saw, and were turned from it to idols and images, and to the worship of
demons, to adore the creature and to despise the Creator. But these having been
blinded did those things, and became proud, that they might be blinded: when they
were proud they said that they were wise. Those, therefore, concerning whom he
said, "Who, when they had known God," saw this which John says, that by the
Word of God all things were made. For these things are also found in the books of
the philosophers: and that God has an only-begotten Son, by whom are all
things. They were able to see that which is, but they saw it from afar: they were
unwilling to hold the lowliness of Christ, in which ship they might have arrived
in safety at that which they were able to see from afar and the cross of Christ
appeared vile to them. The sea has to be crossed, and dost thou despise the
wood? Oh, proud wisdom! thou laughest to scorn the crucified Christ; it is He whom
thou dost see from afar: "In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with
God." But wherefore was He crucified? Because the wood of His humiliation was
needful to thee. For thou hadst become swollen with pride, and hadst been cast
out far from that fatherland; and by the waves of this world has the way been
intercepted, and there is no means of passing to the fatherland unless borne by
the wood Ungrateful one ! thou laughest Him to scorn who has come to thee that
thou mayest return: He has become the way, and that through the sea:[1] thence
He walked in the sea to show that there is a way in the sea. But thou who art
not able in any way thyself to walk in the sea, be carried in a ship, be carried
by the wood: believe in the crucified One, and thou shalt arrive thither. On
account of thee He was crucified, to teach thee humility; and because if He
should come as God, He would not be recognized. For if He should come as God, He
would not come to those who were not able to see God. For not according to His
Godhead does He either come or depart; since He is everywhere present, and is
contained in no place. But, according to what did He come? He appeared as a man.
5. Therefore, because He was so man, that the God lay hid in Him, there
was sent before Him a great man, by whose testimony He might be found to be more
than man. And who is this? "He was a main" And how could that man speak the
truth concerning God? "He was sent by God." What was he called ? "Whose name was
John." Wherefore did he come ? "He came for a witness, that he might bear
witness concerning the light, that all might believe through him." What sort of man
was he who was to bear witness concerning the light? Something great was that
John, vast merit, great grace, great loftiness ! Admire, by all means, admire;
but as it were a mountain. But a mountain is in darkness unless it be clothed
with light. Therefore only admire John that you may hear what follows, "He was
not that light;" lest if, when thou thinkest the mountain to be the light, thou
make shipwreck on the mountain, and find not consolation. But what oughtest
thou to admire? The mountain as a mountain. But lift thyself up to Him who
illuminates the mountain, which for this end was elevated that it might be the first
to receive the rays, and make them known to your eyes. Therefore, "he was not
that light."
6. Wherefore then did he come? "But that he might bear witness concerning
the light." Why so? "That all might believe through him." And concerning what
light was he to bear witness? "That was the true light." Wherefore is it added
true ? Because an enlightened man is also called a light; but the true light is
that which enlightens. For even our eyes are called lights; and nevertheless,
unless either during the night a lamp is lighted, or during the day the sun
goes forth, these lights are open in vain. Thus, therefore, John was a light, but
not the true light; because, if not enlightened, he would have been darkness;
but, by enlightenment, he became a light. For unless he had been enlightened he
would have been darkness, as all those once impious men, to whom, as believers,
the apostle said, "Ye were sometimes darkness." But now, because they had
believed, what?--" but now are ye light," he says, "in the Lord."[2] Unless he had
added "in the Lord," we should not have understood. "Light," he says, "in the
Lord:" darkness you were not in the Lord. "For ye were sometimes darkness,[11]
where he did not add in the Lord. Therefore, darkness in you, light in the Lord.
And thus "he was not that light, but was sent to bear witness of the light."
7. But where is that light? "He was the true light, which lighteth every
man that cometh into the world." If every man that cometh, then also John. The
true light, therefore, enlightened him by whom He desired Himself to be pointed
out. Understand, beloved, for He came to infirm minds, to wounded hearts, to
the gaze of dim-eyed souls. For this purpose had He come. And whence was the soul
able to see that which perfectly is ? Even as it commonly happens, that by
means of some illuminated body, the sun, which we cannot see with the eyes, is
known to have arisen. Because even those who have wounded eyes are able to see a
wall illuminated and enlightened by the sun, or a mountain, or a tree, or
anything of that sort; and, by means of another body illuminated, that arising is
shown to those who are not as yet able to gaze on it. Thus, therefore all those to
whom Christ came were not fit to see Him: upon John He shed the beams of His
light; and by means of him confessing himself to have been irradiated and
enlightened, not claiming to be one who irradiates and enlightens, He is known who
enlightens, He is known who illuminates, He is known who fills. And who is it?
"He who lighteth every man," he says, "who cometh into the world." For if man had
not receded from that light, he would not have required to be illuminated; but
for this reason has he to be illuminated here, because he departed from that
light by which man might always have been illuminated.
8. What then ? If He came hither, where was He? " He was in this world."
He was both here and came hither; He was here according to His divinity, and He
came hither according to the flesh; because when He was here according to His
divinity, He could not be seen by the foolish, by the blind, and the wicked.
These wicked men are the darkness concerning which it was said, "The light shineth
in darkness, and the darkness comprehended it not."[1] Behold, both here He is
now, and here He was, and here He is always; and He never departs, departs
no-whither. There is need that thou have some means whereby thou mayest see that
which never departs from thee; there is need that thou depart not from Him who
departs no-whither; there is need that thou desert not, and thou shalt not be
deserted. Do not fall, and His sun will not set to thee. If thou fallest, His sun
setteth upon thee; but if thou standest, He is present with thee. But thou
hast not stood: remember how thou hast fallen, how he who fell before thee cast
thee down. For he cast thee down, not by violence, not by assault, but by thine
own will. For hadst thou not consented unto evil, thou wouldest have stood, thou
wouldest have remained enlightened. But now, because thou hast already fallen,
and hast become wounded in heart,--the organ by which that light can be
seen,--He came to thee such as thou mightest see; and He in such fashion manifested
Himself as man, that He sought testimony from man. From man God seeks testimony,
and God has man as a witness;--God has man as a witness, but on account of
man: so infirm are we. By a lamp we seek the day; because John himself was called
a lamp, the Lord saying," He was a burning and a shining light; and ye were
willing for a season to rejoice in his light: but I have greater witness than
John."[2]
9. Therefore He showed that for the sake of men He desired to have Himself
revealed by a lamp to the faith of those who believed, that by means of the
same lamp His enemies might be confounded. There were enemies who tempted Him,
and said, "Tell us by what authority doest thou these things ?" "I also," saith
He, "will ask you one question; answer me. The baptism of John, whence was it?
from heaven, or of men ? And they were troubled, and said among themselves, If
we shall say, From heaven, he will say unto us, Why did ye not believe him ?"
(Because he had borne testimony to Christ, and had said, I am not the Christ, but
He.[3] "But if we shall say, Of men, we fear the people, lest they should
stone us: for they held John as a prophet." Afraid of stoning, but fearing more to
confess the truth, they answered a lie to the Truth; and "wickedness imposed a
lie upon itself."[4] For they said, "We know not." And the Lord, because they
shut the door against themselves, by professing ignorance of what they knew, did
not open to them, because they did not knock. For it is said, Knock, and it
shall be opened unto you."[5] Not only did these not knock that it might be
opened to them; but, by denying that they knew, they barred that door against
themselves. And the Lord says to them, Neither tell I you by what authority I do
these things."[6] And they were confounded by means of John; and in them were the
words fulfilled, "I have ordained a lamp for mine anointed. His enemies will I
clothe with shame."[7]
10. "He was in the world, and the world was made by Him." Think not that
He was in the world as the earth is in the world, as the sky is in the world, as
the sun is in the world, the moon and the stars, trees, cattle, and men. He
was not thus in the world. But in what manner then? As the Artificer governing
what He had made. For He did not make it as a carpenter makes a chest. The chest
which he makes is outside the carpenter, and so it is put in another place,
while being made; and although the workman is nigh, he sits in another place, and
is external to that which he fashions. But God, infused into the world,
fashions it; being everywhere present He fashions, and withdraweth not Himself
elsewhere, nor doth He, as it were, handle from without, the matter which He fashions.
By the presence of His majesty He maketh what He maketh; His presence governs
what He made. Therefore was He in the world as the Maker of the world; for,
"The world was made by Him, and the world knew Him not."
11. What meaneth "the world was made by Him"? The heaven, the earth, the
sea, and all things which are therein, are called the world. Again, in another
signification, those who love the world are called the world "The world was made
by Him, and the world knew Him not." Did not the heavens know their Creator,
or did the angels not know their Creator, or did the stars not know their things
from all sides gave testimony. But who did not know? Those who, for their love
of the world, are called the world. By loving we dwell with the heart; but
because of their loving the world they deserved to be called after the name of
that in which they dwelt. In the same manner as we say, This house is bad, or this
house is good, we do not in calling the one bad or the other good accuse or
praise the walls; but by a bad house we mean a house with bad inhabitants, and by
a good house, a house with good inhabitants. In like manner we call those the
world who by loving it, inhabit the world. Who are they? Those who love the
world; for they dwell with their hearts in the world. For those who do not love
the world in the flesh, indeed, sojourn in the world, but in their hearts they
dwell in heaven, as the apostle says, "Our conversation is in heaven."[1]
Therefore "the world was made by Him, and the world knew Him not."
12. "He came unto His own,"--because all these things were made by Him,--"
and His own received Him not." Who are they? The men whom He made. The Jews
whom He at the first made to be above all nations. Because other nations
worshipped idols and served demons; but that people was born of the seed of Abraham,
and in an eminent sense His own, because kindred through that flesh which He
deigned to assume. "He came unto His own, and His own received Him not." Did they
not receive Him at all ? did no one receive Him? Was there no one saved ? For no
one shall be saved unless he who shall have received the coming Christ.
13. But John adds: "As many as received Him." What did He afford to them?
Great benevolence! Great mercy! He was born the only Son of God, and was
unwilling to remain alone. Many men, when they have not sons, in advanced age adopt a
son, and thus obtain by an exercise of will what nature has denied to them:
this men do. But if any one have an only son, he rejoices the more in him;
because he alone will possess everything, and he will not have any one to divide with
him the inheritance, so that he should be poorer. Not so God: that same only
Son whom He had begotten, and by whom He created all things, He sent into this
world that He might not be alone, but might have adopted brethren. For we were
not born of God in the manner in which the Only-begotten was born of Him, but
were adopted by His grace. For He, the Only-begotten, came to loose the sins in
which we were entangled, and whose burden hindered our adoption: those whom He
wished to make brethren to Himself, He Himself loosed, and made joint-heirs. For
so saith the apostle, "But if a son, then an heir through God." And again,
"Heirs of God, and join-heirs with Christ." He did not fear to have joint-heirs,
because His heritage does not become narrow if many are possessors. Those very
persons, He being possessor, become His inheritance, and He in turn becomes
their inheritance. Hear in what manner they become His inheritance: "The Lord hath
said unto me, Thou art my Son, this day have I begotten Thee. Ask of me, and I
will give Thee the nations for Thine inheritance." Hear in what manner He
becomes their inheritance. He says in the Psalms: "The Lord is the portion of mine
inheritance, and of my cup."[3] Let us possess Him, and let Him possess us: let
Him possess us as Lord; let us possess Him as salvation, let us possess Him as
light. What then did He give to them who received Him? "To them He gave power
to become sons of God, even to them that believe on His name;" that they may
ring to the wood and cross the sea.
14. And how are they born ? Because they become sons of God and brethren
of Christ, they are certainly born. For if they are not born, how can they be
sons ? But the sons of men are born of flesh and blood, and of the will of man,
and of the embrace of wedlock. But in what manner are they born ? "Who not of
bloods," as if of male and female. Bloods is not Latin; but because it is plural
in Greek, the interpreter preferred so to express it, and to speak bad Latin
according to the grammarian that he might make the matter plain to the
understanding of the weak among his hearers. For if he had said blood in the singular
number, he would not have explained what he desired; for men are born of the
bloods of male and female. Let us say so, then, and not fear the ferule of
grammarians, so long as we reach the solid and certain truth. He who understands it and
blames it, is thankless for his having understood. "Not of bloods, nor of the
will of the flesh, nor of the will of man." The apostle puts flesh for woman;
because, when she was made of his rib, Adam said, "This is now bone of my bone,
and flesh of my flesh." [1] And the apostle saith, "He that loveth his wife
loveth himself; for no one ever hated his own flesh."[2] Flesh, then, is put for
woman, in the same manner that spirit is sometimes put for husband. Wherefore?
Because the one rules, the other is ruled; the one ought to command, the other to
serve. For where the flesh commands and the spirit serves, the house is turned
the wrong way. What can be worse than a house where the woman has the mastery
over the man? But that house is rightly ordered where the man commands and the
woman obeys. In like manner that man is rightly ordered where the spirit
commands and the flesh serves.
15. These, then, "were born not of the will of the flesh, nor of the will
of man, but of God." But that men might be born of God, God was first born of
them. For Christ is God, and Christ was born of men. It was only a mother,
indeed, that He sought upon earth; because He had already a Father in heaven: He by
whom we were to be created was born of God, and He by whom we were to be
re-created was born of a woman. Marvel not, then, O man, that thou art made a son by
grace, that thou art born of God according to His Word. The Word Himself first
chose to be born of man, that thou mightest be born of God unto salvation, and
say to thyself, Not without reason did God wish to be born of man, but because
He counted me of some importance, that He might make me immortal, and for me be
born as a mortal man. When, therefore, he had said, "born of God," lest we
should, as it were, be filled with amazement and trembling at such grace, at grace
so great as to exceed belief that men are born of God, as if assuring thee, he
says, "And the Word was made flesh, and dwelt among us." Why, then, dost thou
marvel that men are born of God ? Consider God Himself born of men: "And the
Word was made flesh, and dwelt among us."
16. But because "the Word was made flesh, and dwelt among us," by His very
nativity he made an eye-salve to cleanse the eyes of our heart, and to enable
us to see His majesty by means of His humility. Therefore "the Word was made
flesh, and dwelt among us:" He healed our eyes; and what follows? "And we beheld
His glory." His glory can no one see unless healed by the humility of His
flesh. Wherefore were we not able to see? Consider, then, dearly beloved, and see
what I say. There had dashed into man's eye, as it were, dust, earth; it had
wounded the eye, and it could not see the light: that wounded eye is anointed; by
earth it was wounded, and earth is applied to it for healing. For all eye-salves
and medicines are derived from the earth alone. By dust thou wert blinded, and
by dust thou art healed: flesh, then, had wounded thee, flesh heals thee. The
soul had become carnel by consenting to the affections of the flesh; thus had
the eye of the heart been blinded. "The Word was made flesh:" that Physician
made for thee an eye-salve. And as He thus came by flesh to extinguish the vices
of the flesh, and by death to slay death; therefore did this take place in thee,
that, as "the Word became flesh," thou mayest be able to say, "And we beheld
His glory What sort of glory? Such as He became as Son of man? That was His
humility, not His glory. But to what is the sight of man brought when cured by
means of flesh? "We beheld His glory, the glory as of the Only-begotten from the
Father, full of grace and truth." Of grace and truth we shall speak more fully in
another place in this same Gospel, if the Lord vouchsafe us opportunity. Let
these things suffice for the present, and be ye edified in Christ: be ye
comforted in faith, and watch in good works, and see that ye do not depart from the
wood by which ye may cross the sea.
TRACTATE III.
CHAPTER I. 15-18.
1. WE undertook, in the name of the Lord, and promised to you, beloved, to
treat of that grace and truth of God, full of which the only-begotten Son, our
Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ, appeared to the saints, and to show how, as a
matter belonging to the New Testament, it is to be distinguished from the Old
Testament. Give, then, your attention that what I receive in my measure from God
you in your measure may receive and hear the same. For it will only remain if,
when the seed is scattered in your hearts, the birds take it not away, nor
thorns choke it, nor heat scorch it, and there descend upon it the rain of daily
exhortations and your own good thoughts, by which that is done in the heart which
in the field is done by means of harrows, so that the clod is broken, and the
seed covered and enabled to germinate: that you bear fruit at which the
husbandman may be glad and rejoice. But if, in return for good seed and good rain, you
bring forth not fruit but thorns, the seed will not be blamed, nor will the
rain be in fault; but for thorns due fire is prepared.[1]
2. I do not think that I need spend much time in endeavoring to persuade
you that we are Christian men; and if Christians, by virtue of the name,
belonging to Christ. Upon the forehead we bear His sign; and we do not blush because
of it, if we also bear it in the heart. His sign is His humility. By a star the
Magi knew Him;[2] and this sign was given by the Lord, and it was heavenly and
beautiful He did not desire that a star should be His sign on the forehead of
the faithful, but His cross. By it humbled, by it also glorified; by it He
raised the humble, even by that to which He, when humbled, descended. We belong,
then, to the gospel, we belong to the New Testament. "The law was given by Moses,
but grace and truth came by Jesus Christ." We ask the apostle, and he says to
us, since we are not under the law but under grace.[3] "He sent therefore His
Son, made of a woman, made under the law, that He might redeem those who were
under the law, that we might receive the adoption of sons."[4] Behold, for this
end Christ came, that He might redeem those who were under the law; that now we
may not be under the law, but under grace. Who, then, gave the law? He gave the
law who gave likewise grace; but the law He sent by a servant, with grace He
Himself came down. And in what manner were men made under the law? By not
fulfilling the law. For he who fulfills the law is not under the law, but with the
law; but he who is under the law is not raised up, but pressed down by the law.
All men, therefore, being placed under the law, are by the law made guilty; and
for this purpose it is over their head, that it may show sins, not take them
away. The law then commands, the Giver of the law showeth pity in that which the
law commands. Men, endeavoring by their own strength to fulfill that which the
law commands, fell by their own rash and headstrong presumption; and not with
the law, but under the law, became guilty: and since by their own strength they
were unable to fulfill the law, and were become guilty under the law, they
implored the aid of the Deliverer; and the guilt which the law brought caused
sickness to the proud. The sickness of the proud became the confession of the
humble. Now the sick confess that they are sick; let the physician come to heal the
sick.
3. Who is the Physician? Our Lord Jesus Christ. Who is our Lord Jesus
Christ? He who was seen even by those by whom He was crucified. He who was seized,
buffeted, scourged, spit upon, crowned with thorns, suspended upon the cross,
died, pierced by the spear, taken down from the cross, laid in the sepulchre.
That same Jesus Christ our Lord, that same Jesus exactly, He is the complete
Physician of our wounds. That crucified One at whom insults were cast, and while He
hung on the cross His persecutors wagging the head, and saying. "If he be the
Son of God, let him come down from the cross,"[5]--He, and no other, is our
complete Physician. Wherefore, then, did He not show to his deriders that He was
the Son of God; so that if He allowed Himself to be lifted up upon the cross, at
least when they said, " If he be the Son of God, let him come down from the
cross," He should then come down, and show to them that He was the very Son of
God whom they had dared to deride? He would not. Wherefore would He not? Was it
because He could not? Manifestly He could. For which is greater, to descend from
the cross or to rise from the sepulchre? But He bore with His insulters; for
the cross was taken not as a proof of power, but as an example of patience.
There He cured thy wounds, where He long bore His own; there He healed thee of
death eternal, where He vouchsafed to die the temporal death. And did He die, or in
Him did death die? What a death was that, which slew death!
4. Is it, however, our Lord Jesus Christ Himself--His whole self--who was
seen, and held, and crucified? Is the whole very self that? It is the same, but
not the whole, that which the Jews saw; this is not the whole Christ. And what
is? "In the beginning was the Word." In what beginning? "And the Word was with
God." And what word? "And the Word was God." Was then perhaps this Word made
by God? No. For "the same was in the beginning with God." What then? Are the
other things which God made not like unto the Word? No: because "all things were
made by Him, and without Him was not anything made." In what manner were all
things made by Him? Because "that which was made in Him was life;" and before it
was made there was life. That which was made is not life; but in the art, that
is, in the wisdom of God, before it was made, it was life. That which was made
passes away; that which is in wisdom cannot pass away. There was life,
therefore, in that which was made. And what sort of life, since the soul also is the
life Of the body? Our body has its own life; and when it has lost it, the death of
the body ensues. Was then the life such as this? No; but "the life was the
light of men." Was it the light of cattle? For this light is the light of men and
of cattle. There is a certain light of men: let us see how far men differ from
the cattle, and then we shall understand what is the light of men. Thou dost
not differ from the cattle except in intellect; do not glory in anything besides.
Dost thou presume upon thy strength? By the wild beasts thou art surpassed.
Upon thy swiftness dost thou presume? By the flies thou art surpassed. Upon thy
beauty dost thou presume? How great beauty is there in the feathers of a
peacock! Wherein then art thou better? In the image of God. Where is the image of God?
In the mind, in the intellect. If then thou art in this respect better than
the cattle, that thou hast a mind by which thou mayest understand what the cattle
cannot understand; and therein a man, because better than the cattle; the
light of men is the light of minds. The light of minds is above minds and surpasses
all minds. This was that life by which all things were made.
5. Where was it? Was it here? was it with the Father, and was it not here?
or, what is more true, was it both with the Father and here also? If then it
was here, wherefore was it not seen? Because "the light shineth in darkness, and
the darkness comprehended it not." Oh men, be not darkness, be not
unbelieving, unjust, unrighteous, rapacious, avaricious lovers of this world: for these
are the darkness. The light is not absent, but you are absent from the light. A
blind man in the sunshine has the sun present to him, but is himself absent from
the sun. Be ye not then darkness. For this is perhaps the grace regarding
which we are about to speak, that now we be no more darkness, and that the apostle
may say to us, "We were sometime darkness, but now light in the Lord."[1]
Because then the light of men was not seen, that is, the light of minds, there was a
necessity that a man should give testimony regarding the light, who was not in
darkness, but who was already enlightened; and nevertheless,because
enlightened,not the light itself, "but that He might bear witness of the light." For "he
was not that light." And what was the light? "That was the true light which
enlightened every man that cometh into the world." And where was that light? "In
this world it was." And how was it "in this world?" As the light of the sun, of
the moon, and of lamps, was that light thus in the world? No. Because "the
world was made by Him, and the world knew Him not;" that is to say, "the light
shineth in darkness, and the darkness comprehended it not." For the world is
darkness; because the lovers of the world are the world. For did not the creature
acknowledge its Creator? The heavens gave testimony by a star;[2] the sea gave
testimony, and bore its Lord when He walked upon it;[3] the winds gave testimony,
and were quiet at His bidding;[4] the earth gave testimony, and trembled when
He was crucified.[5] If all these gave testimony, in what sense did the world
not know Him, unless that the world signifies the lovers of the world, those who
with their hearts dwell in the world? And the world is evil, because the
inhabitants of the world are evil; just as a house is evil, not because of its walls,
but because of its inhabitants.
6. "He came unto His own;" that is to say, He came to that which belonged
to Himself; "and His own received Him not." What, then, is the hope, unless
that "as many as received Him, to them gave He power to become the sons of God"?
If they become sons, they are born; if born, how are they born? Not of flesh,
"nor of blood, nor of the will of the flesh, nor of the will of man; but of God
are they born." Let them rejoice, therefore, that they are born of God; let them
believe that they are born of God; let them receive the proof that they are
born of God: "And the Word became flesh, and dwelt among us." If the Word was not
ashamed to be born of man, are men ashamed to be born of God? And because He
did this, He cured us; and because He cured us, we see. For this, "that the Word
was made flesh, and dwelt among us," became a medicine unto us, so that as by
earth we were made blind, by earth we might be healed; and having been healed,
might behold what? "And we beheld," he says, "His glory, the glory as of the
Only-begotten of the Father, full of grace and truth."
7. "John beareth witness of Him, and crieth, saying, This was He of whom I
spake, He that cometh after me is made before me." He came after me, ad He
preceded me. What is it, "He is made before me"? He preceded me. Not was made
before I was made, but was preferred before me, this is "He was made before me."
Wherefore was He made before thee, when He came after thee? "Because He was
before me." Before thee, O John! what great thing to be before thee! It is well that
thou dost bear witness to Him; let us, however, hear Himself saying, "Even
before Abraham, I am." But Abraham also was born in the midst of the human race:
there were many before him, many after him. Listen to the voice of the Father to
the Son: "Before Lucifer I have begotten Thee."[2] He who was begotten before
Lucifer Himself illuminates all. A certain one was named Lucifer, who fell; for
he was an angel and became a devil; and concerning him the Scripture said,
"Lucifer, who did arise in the morning, fell"[3] And why was he Lucifer? Because,
being enlightened, he gave forth light. But for what reason did he become dark!
Because he abode not in the truth? Therefore He was before Lucifer, before
every one that is enlightened; since before every one that is enlightened, of
necessity He must be by whom all are enlightened who can be enlightened.
8. Therefore this follows: "And of His fullness have all we received."
What have ye received? "And grace for grace." For so run the words of the Gospel,
as we find by a comparison of the Greek copies. He does not say, And of His
fullness have all we received grace for grace; but thus He says: "And of His
fullness have all we received, and grace for grace,"--that is, have we received; so
that He would wish us to understand that we have received from His fullness
something unexpressed, and something besides, grace for grace. For we received of
His fullness grace in the first instance; and again we received grace, grace
for grace, What grace did we, in the first instance, receive? Faith: walking in
faith, we walk in grace. How have we merited this? by what previous merits of
ours? Let not each one flatter himself, but let him return into his own
conscience, seek out the secret places of his own thoughts, recall the series of his
deeds; let him not consider what he is if now he is something, but what he was
that he might be something: he will find that he was not worthy of anything save
punishment. If, then, thou wast worthy of punishment, and He came not to punish
sins, but to forgive sins, grace was given to thee, and not reward rendered.
Wherefore is it called grace? Because it is bestowed gratuitously. For thou didst
not, by previous merits, purchase that which thou didst receive. This first
grace, then, the sinner received, that his sins were forgiven. What did he
deserve? Let him interrogate justice, he finds punishment; let him interrogate mercy,
he finds grace. But God promised this also through the prophets; therefore,
when He came to give what He had promised, He not only gave grace, but also
truth. How was truth exhibited? Because that was done which had been promised.
9. What, then, is "grace for grace"? By faith we render God favorable to
us; and inasmuch as we were not worthy to have our sins forgiven, and because
we, who were unworthy, received so great a benefit it is called grace. What is
grace? That which is freely given. What is "freely given"? Given, not paid. If
it was due, wages were given, not grace bestowed; but if it was reply due, thou
wast good; but if, as is true, thou wast evil, but didst believe on Him who
justifieth the ungodly[5] (What is, Who justifieth the ungodly? Of the ungodly
maketh pious), consider what did by right hang over thee by the law, and what thou
hast obtained by grace. But having obtained that grace of faith, thou shalt be
just by faith (for the just lives by faith);[6] and thou shalt obtain favor of
God by living by faith. And having obtained favor from God by living by faith,
thou shalt receive immortality as a reward, and life eternal And that is
grace. For because of what merit dost thou receive life eternal? Because of grace.
For if faith is grace, life eternal is, as it were, the wages of faith: God,
indeed, appears to bestow eternal life as if it were due (To whom due? To the
faithful, because he had merited it by faith); but because faith itself is grace,
life eternal also is grace for grace.
10. Listen to the Apostle Paul acknowledging grace, and afterwards
desiring the payment of a debt. What acknowledgment of grace is there in Paul? "Who
was before a blasphemer, and a persecutor, and injurious; but I obtained," saith
he, "mercy." [1] He said that he who obtained it was unworthy; that he had,
however, obtained it, not through his own merits, but through the mercy of God.
Listen to him now demanding the payment of a debt, who had first received
unmerited grace: "For," saith he, "I am now ready to be offered up, and the time of my
departure is at hand. I have fought a good fight, I have finished my course, I
have kept the faith: henceforth there is laid up for me a crown of
righteousness."[2] Now he demands a debt, he exacts what is due. For consider the
following words: "Which the Lord, the righteous Judge, shall render unto me in that
day." That he might in the former instance receive grace, he stood in need of a
merciful Father; for the reward of grace, of a just judge, Will He who did not
condemn the ungodly man condemn the faithful man? And yet, if thou dost rightly
consider, it was He who first gave thee faith, whereby thou didst obtain favor;
for not of thine own didst thou so obtain favor that anything should be due to
thee. Wherefore, then, in afterwards bestowing the reward of immortality, He
crowns His own gifts, not thy merits. Therefore, brethren, "we all of His
fullness have received;" of the fullness of His mercy, of the abundance of His
goodness have we received. What? The remission of sins that we might be justified by
faith. And what besides? "And grace for grace;" that is, for this grace by which
we live by faith we shall receive another grace. What, then, is it except
grace? For if I shall say that this also is due, I attribute something to myself as
if to me it were due. But God crowns in us the gifts of His own mercy; but on
condition that we walk with perseverance in that grace which in the first
instance we received.
11. "For the law was given by Moses;" which law held the guilty. For what
saith the apostle? "The law entered that the offense might abound." It was a
benefit to the proud that the offense abounded, for they gave much to themselves,
and, as it were, attributed much to their own strength; and they were unable
to fulfill righteousness without the aid of Him who had commanded it. God,
desirous to subdue their pride, gave the law, as if saying: Behold, fulfill, and do
not think that there is One wanting to command. One to command is not wanting,
but one to fulfill.
12. If, then, there is one wanting to fulfill, whence does he not fulfill?
Because born with the heritage of sin and death. Born of Adam, he drew with
him that which was there conceived. The first man felt, and all who were born of
him from him derived the concupiscence of the flesh. It was needful that
another man should be born who derived no concupiscence. A man and a man: a man to
death and a man to life. Thus saith the apostle: "Since, indeed, by man death, by
man also the resurrection of the dead." By which man death, and by which man
the resurrection of the dead? Do not make haste: he goes on to say, "For as in
Adam all die, so also in Christ shall all be made alive."[3] Who belong to Adam?
All who are born of Adam. Who to Christ? All who were born through Christ.
Wherefore all in sin? Because no one was born except through Adam. But that they
were born of Adam was of necessity, arising from damnation; to be born through
Christ is of will and grace. Men are not compelled to be born through Christ:
not because they wished were they born of Adam. All, however, who are of Adam are
sinners with sin: all who are through Christ are justified, and just not in
themselves, but in Him. For in themselves, if thou shouldest ask, they being to
Adam: in Him, if thou shouldest ask, they belong to Christ. Wherefore? Because
He, the Head, our Lord Jesus Christ, did not come with the heritage of sin; but
He came nevertheless with mortal flesh.
13. Death was the punishment of sins; in the Lord was the gift of mercy,
not the punishment of sin. For the Lord had nothing on account of which He
should justly die. He Himself says, "Behold, the prince of this world cometh, and
findeth nothing in me." Wherefore then dost Thou die? "But that all may know that
I do the will of my Father, arise, let us go hence." [4] He had not in Himself
any reason why He should die, and He died: thou hast such a reason, and dost
thou refuse to die? Do not refuse to bear with an equal mind thy desert, when He
did not refuse to suffer, to deliver thee from eternal death. A man and a man
but the one nothing but man, the other God-man. The one a man of sin, the other
of righteousness. Thou didst die in Adam, rise in Christ; for both are due to
thee. Now thou hast believed in Christ, render nevertheless that which thou
owest through Adam. But the chain of sin shall not hold thee eternally; because
the temporal death of thy Lord slew thine eternal death. The same is grace, my
brethren, the same is truth, because promised and manifested.
14. This grace was not in the Old Testament, because the law threatened,
did not bring aid; commanded, did not heal; made manifest, but did not take away
our feebleness: but it prepared the way for that Physician who was to come
with grace and truth; as a physician who, about to come to any one to cure him,
might first send his servant that he might find the sick man bound. He was not
sound; he did not wish to be made sound and lest he should be made sound, he
boasted that he was so. The law was sent, it bound him; he finds himself accused,
now, he exclaims against the bandage. The Lord comes, cures with somewhat bitter
and sharp medicines: for He says to the sick, Bear; He says, Endure; He says,
Love not the world, have patience, let the fire of continence cure thee, let
thy wounds endure the sword of persecutions. Weft thou greatly terrified although
bound? He, free and unbound, drank what He gave to thee; He first suffered
that He might console thee, saying, as it were, that which thou fearest to suffer
for thyself, I first suffer for thee. This is grace, and great grace.Who can
praise it in a worthy manner?
15. I speak, my brethren, regarding the humility of Christ. Who can speak
regarding the majesty of Christ, and the divinity of Christ? In explaining and
speaking of the humility of Christ, to do so in any fashion we find ourselves
not sufficient, indeed wholly insufficient: we commend Him entire to your
thoughts, we do not endeavor to fill Him up to your hearing. Consider the humility of
Christ. But who, thou sayest, may explain it to us, unless thou declare it?
Let Him declare it within. Better does He declare it who dwelleth within, than he
who crieth without. Let Himself show to you the grace of His humility, who has
begun to dwell in your hearts. But now, if in explaining and setting forth His
humility we are deficient, who can speak of His majesty? If "the Word made
flesh" disturbs us, who shall explain "In the beginning was the Word"? Keep hold
then, brethren, upon the entireness of Christ.
16. "The law was given by Moses: grace and truth came by Jesus Christ." By
a servant was the law given, and made men guilty: by an Emperor was pardon
given, and delivered the guilty. "The law was given by Moses." Let not the servant
attribute to himself more than was done through him. Chosen to a great
ministry as one faithful in his house, but yet a servant, he is able to act according
to the law, but cannot release from the guilt of the law. "The law," then, "was
given by Moses: grace and truth came by Jesus Christ."
17. And lest, perhaps, any one should say, And did not grace and truth
come through Moses, who saw God? immediately he adds, "No one hath seen God at any
time." And how did God become known to Moses? Because the Lord revealed
Himself to His servant. What Lord? The same Christ, who sent the law beforehand by
His servant, that He might Himself come with grace and truth. "For no one hath
seen God at any time." And whence did He appear to that servant as far as he was
able to receive Him? But "the Only-begotten," he says, "who is in the bosom of
the Father, He has declared Him." What signifieth "in the bosom of the Father?"
In the secret of the Father. For God has not a bosom, as we have, in our
garments, nor is He to be thought of sitting, as we do, nor is He girt with a girdle
so as to have a bosom; but because our bosom is within, the secret of the
Father is called the bosom of the Father. And He who knew the Father, being in the
secret of the Father, He declared Him. "For no man hath seen God at any time."
He then came and narrated whatever He saw. What did Moses see? Moses saw a
cloud, he saw an angel, he saw a fire. All that is the creature: it bore the type
of its Lord, but did not manifest the presence of the Lord Himself. For thou
hast it plainly stated in the law: "And Moses spake with the Lord face to face, as
a friend with his friend."(1) Following the same scripture, thou findest Moses
saying: "If I have found grace in Thy sight, show me Thyself plainly, that I
may see Thee." And it is little that he said this: he received the reply, "Thou
canst not see my face." An angel then spake with Moses, my brethren, bearing
the type of the Lord; and all those things which were done by the angel promised
that future grace and truth. Those who examine the law well know this; and when
we have opportunity to speak somewhat of this matter also, we shall not fail
to speak to you, beloved brethren, as far as the Lord may reveal to us.
18. But know this, that all those things which were seen in bodily form
were not that substance of God. For we saw those things with the eyes of the
flesh: how is the substance of God seen? Interrogate the Gospel: "Blessed are the
pure in heart; for they shall see God."(1) There have been men who, deceived by
the vanity of their hearts, have said, The Father is invisible, but the Son is
visible. How visible? If on account of His flesh, because He took flesh, the
matter is manifest. For of those who saw the flesh of Christ, some believed, some
crucified; and those who believed doubted when He was crucified; and unless
they had touched the flesh after the resurrection, their faith would not have
been recalled. If, then, on account of His flesh the Son was visible, that we also
grant, and it is the Catholic faith; but if before He took flesh, as they say,
that is, before He became incarnate, they are greatly deluded, and grievously
err. For those visible and bodily appearances took place though the creature,
in which a type might be exhibited: not in any fashion was the substance itself
shown and made manifest. Give heed, beloved brethren, to this easy proof. The
wisdom of God cannot be beheld by the eyes. Brethren, if Christ is the Wisdom of
God and the Power of God;(2) if Christ is the Word of God, and if the word of
man is not seen with the eyes, can the Word of God be so seen?
19. Expel, therefore, from your hearts carnal thoughts, that you may be
really under grace, that you may belong to the New Testament. Therefore is life
eternal promised in the New Testament. Read the Old Testament, and see that the
same things were enjoined upon a people yet carnal as upon us. For to worship
one God is also enjoined upon us. "Thou shall not take the name of the Lord thy
God in vain" is also enjoined upon us, which is the second commandment.
"Observe the Sabbath-day" is enjoined on us more than on them, because it is commanded
to be spiritually observed. For the Jews observe the Sabbath in a servile
manner, using it for luxuriousness and drunkenness. How much better would their
women be employed in spinning wool than in dancing on that day in the balconies?
God forbid, brethren, that we should call that an observance of the Sabbath. The
Christian observes the Sabbath spiritually, abstaining from servile work. For
what is it to abstain from servile work? From sin. And how do we prove it? Ask
the Lord. "Whosoever committeth sin is the servant of sin."(3) Therefore is
the spiritual observance of the Sabbath enjoined upon us. Now all those
commandments are more enjoined on us, and are to be observed: "Thou shall not kill. Thou
shalt not commit adultery. Thou shall not steal. Thou shall not bear false
witness. Honor thy father and thy mother. Thou shalt not covet thy neighbor's
goods. Thou shall not covet thy neighbor's wife."(4) Are not all these things
enjoined upon us also? But ask what is the reward, and thou wilt find it there said:
"That thine enemies may be driven forth before thy face, and that you may
receive the land which God promised to your fathers."(5) Because they were not able
to comprehend invisible things, they were held by the visible. Wherefore held?
Lest they should perish altogether, and slip into idol-worship. For they did
this, my brethren, as we read, forgetful of the great miracles which God
performed before their eyes. The sea was divided; a way was made in the midst of the
waves; their enemies following, were covered by the same waves through which
they passed:(6) and yet when Moses, the man of God, had departed from their sight,
they asked for an idol, and said, "Make us gods to go before us; for this man
has deserted us." Their whole hope was placed in man, not in God. Behold, the
man is dead: was God dead who had rescued them from the land of Egypt? And when
they had made to themselves the image of a calf, they offered it adoration, and
said, "These be thy gods, O Israel, which delivered thee out of the land of
Egypt."(7) How soon forgetful of such manifest grace! By what means could such a
people be held except by carnal promises?
20. The same things are commanded in the Decalogue as we are commanded to
observe; but the same promises are not made as to us. What is promised to us?
Life eternal. "And this is life eternal, that they know Thee, the only true God,
and Jesus Christ whom Thou hast sent."(8) The knowledge of God is promised:
that is, grace for grace. Brethren, we now believe, we do not see; for faith the
reward will be to see what we believe The prophets knew this, but it was
concealed before He came. For a certain lover sighing, says in the Psalms: "One thing
have I desired of the Lord, that will I seek after." And dost thou ask what he
seeks? For perhaps he seeks a land flowing with milk and honey carnally,
although this is to be spiritually sought and desired; or perhaps the subjection of
his enemies, or the death of foes, or the power and riches of this world. For
he glows with love, and sighs greatly, and burns and pants. Let us see what he
desires: "One thing have I desired of the Lord, that will I seek after." What is
it that he doth seek after? "That I may well," saith he, "in the house of the
Lord all the days of my life." And suppose that thou dwellest in the house of
the Lord, from what source will thy joy there be derived? "That I may behold,"
saith he, "the beauty of the Lord."(1)
21. My brethren, wherefore do you cry out, wherefore do you exult,
wherefore do you love, unless that a spark of this love is there? What do you desire?
I ask you. Can it be seen with the eyes? Can it be touched? Is it some fairness
which delights the eyes? Are not the martyrs vehemently beloved; and when we
commemorate them do we not burn with love? What is it that we love in them,
brethren? Limbs torn by wild beasts? What is more revolting if thou askest the eyes
of the flesh? what more fair if thou askest the eyes of the heart? How appears
in your eyes a very fair young man who is a thief? How shocked are your eyes!
Are the eyes of the flesh shocked? If you interrogate them, nothing is more
shapely and better formed than that body; the symmetry of the limbs and the beauty
of the color attract the eyes; and yet, when thou hearest that he is a thief,
your mind recoils from the man. Thou beholdest on the other hand a bent old
man, leaning upon a staff, scarcely moving himself, ploughed all over with
wrinkles. Thou hearest that he is just: thou lovest and embracest him. Such are the
rewards promised to us, my brethren: love such, sigh after such a kingdom, desire
such a country, if you wish to arrive at that with which our Lord came, that
is, at grace and truth. But if you covet bodily rewards from God, thou art still
under the law, and therefore thou shalt not fulfill the law. For when thou
seest those temporal things granted to those who offend God, thy steps falter, and
thou sayest to thyself: Behold, I worship God, daily I run to church, my knees
are worn with prayers, and yet I am constantly sick: there are men who commit
murders, who are guilty of robberies, and yet they exult and have abundance; it
is well with them. Was it such things that thou soughtest from God? Surely
thou didst belong to grace. If, therefore, God gave to thee grace, because He gave
freely, love freely. Do not for the sake of reward love God; let Him be the
reward. Let thy soul say, "One thing have I desired of the Lord, that will I seek
after; that I may dwell in the house of the Lord all the days of my life, that
I may behold the beauty of the Lord." Do not fear that thine enjoyment will
fail through satiety: such will be that enjoyment of beauty that it will ever be
present to thee, and thou shalt never be satisfied; indeed thou shalt be always
satisfied, and yet never satisfied. For if I shall say that thou shalt not be
satisfied, it will mean famine; and if I shall say thou shalt be satisfied, I
fear satiety: where neither satiety nor famine are, I know not what to say; but
God has that which He can manifest to those who know not how to express it, yet
believe that they shall receive.
TRACTATE IV.
JOHN I. 19-33.
1. You have very often heard, holy brethren, and you know well, that John
the Baptist, in proportion as he was greater than those born of women, and was
more humble in his acknowledgment of the Lord, obtained the grace of being the
friend of the Bridegroom; zealous for the Bridegroom, not for himself; not
seeking his own honor, but that of his Judge, whom as a herald he preceded.
Therefore, to the prophets who went before, it was granted to predict concerning
Christ; but to this man, to point Him out with the finger. For as Christ was unknown
by those who did not believe the prophets before He came, He remained unknown
to them even when present. For He had come humbly and concealed from the first;
the more concealed in proportion as He was more humble: but the people,
despising in their pride the humility of God, crucified their Saviour, and made Him
their condemner.
2. But will not He who at first came concealed, because humble, come again
manifested, because exalted? You have just listened to the Psalm: "God shall
come manifestly, and our God shall not keep silence."(1) He was silent that He
might be judged, He will not be silent when He begins to judge. It would not
have been said, "He will come manifestly," unless at first He had come concealed;
nor would it have been said, "He shall not keep silence," unless He had first
kept silence. How was He silent? Interrogate Isaiah: "He was brought as a sheep
to the slaughter, and as a lamb before his shearer was dumb, so He opened not
His mouth.' "But He shall come manifestly, and shall not keep silence." In what
manner "manifestly"? "A fire shall go before Him, and round about Him a strong
tempest."(3) That tempest has to carry away all the chaff from the floor, which
is now being threshed; and the fire has to burn what the tempest carries away.
But now He is silent; silent in judgment, but not silent in precept. For if
Christ is silent, what is the purpose of these Gospels? what the purpose of the
voices of the apostles, what of the canticles of the Psalms, what of the
declarations of the prophets? In all these Christ is not silent. But now He is silent
in not taking vengeance: He is not silent in not giving warning. But He will
come in glory to take vengeance, and will manifest Himself even to all who do not
believe on Him. But now, because when present He was concealed, it behoved
that He should be despised. For unless He had been despised, He would not have
been crucified; if He had not been crucified, He would not have shed His
blood--the price by which He redeemed us. But that He might give a price for us, He was
crucified; that He might be crucified, He was despised; that He might be
despised, He appeared in humility.
3. Yet because He appeared as it were in the night, in a mortal body, He
lighted for Himself a lamp by which He might be seen. That lamp was John,(4)
concerning whom you lately heard many things: and the present passage of the
evangelist contains the words of John; in the first place, and it is the chief
point, his confession that he was not the Christ. But so great was the excellence of
John, that men might have believed him to be the Christ: and in this he gave a
proof of his humility, that he said he was not when he might have been
believed to have been the Christ; therefore, "This is the testimony of John, when the
Jews sent priests and Levites to him from Jerusalem to ask him, Who art thou?"
But they would not have sent unless they had been moved by the excellence of
his authority who ventured to baptize. "And he confessed, and denied not." What
did he confess? "And he confessed, I am not the Christ."
4. 'And they asked him, What then? Art thou Elias?" For they knew that
Elias was to precede Christ. For to no Jew was the name of Christ unknown. They
did not think that he was the Christ; but they did not think that Christ would
not come at all. When they were hoping that He would come, they were offended at
Him when He was present, and stumbled at Him as on a low stone. For He was as
yet a small stone, already indeed cut out of the mountain without hands; as
saith Daniel the prophet, that he saw a stone cut out of the mountain without
hands. But what follows? "And that stone," saith he "grew and became a great
mountain and filled the whole face of the earth."(5) Mark then, my beloved brethren,
what I say: Christ, before the Jews, was already cut out from the mountain. The
prophet wishes that by the mountain should be understood the Jewish kingdom.
But the kingdom of the Jews had not filled the whole face of the earth. The
stone was cut out from thence, because from thence was the Lord born on His advent
among men. And wherefore without hands? Because without the cooperation of man
did the Virgin bear Christ. Now then was that stone cut out without hands
before the eyes of the Jews; but it was humble. Not without reason; because not yet
had that stone increased and filled the whole earth: that He showed in His
kingdom, which is the Church, with which He has filled the whole face of the earth.
Because then it had not yet increased, they stumbled at Him as at a stone: and
that happened in them which is written, "Whosoever shall fall upon that stone
shall be broken; but on whomsoever that stone shall fall, it will grind them to
powder."(6) At first they fell upon Him lowly: as the lofty One He shall come
upon them; but that He may grind them to powder when He comes in His
exaltation, He first broke them in His lowliness. They stumbled at Him, and were broken;
they were not ground, but broken: He will come exalted and will grind them. But
the Jews were to be pardoned because they stumbled at a stone which had not
yet increased. What sort of persons are those who stumble at the mountain itself?
Already you know who they are of whom I speak. Those who deny the Church
diffused through the whole world, do not stumble at the lowly stone, but at the
mountain itself: because this the stone became as it grew. The blind Jews did not
see the lowly stone: but how great blindness not to see the mountain!
5. They saw Him then lowly, and did not know Him. He was pointed out to
them by a lamp. For in the first place he, than whom no greater had arisen of
those born of women, said, "I am not the Christ." It was said to him, "Art thou
Elias? He answered, I am not." For Christ sends Elias before Him: and he said, "I
am not," and occasioned a question for us. For it is to be feared test. men,
insufficiently understanding, think that John contradicted what Christ said. For
in a certain place, when the Lord Jesus Christ said certain things in the
Gospel regarding Himself, His disciples answered Him: "How then say the scribes,"
that is, those skilled in the law, "that Elias must first come?" And the Lord
said, "Elias is already come, and they have done unto him what they listed;" and,
if you wish to know, John the Baptist is he.(1) The Lord Jesus Christ said,
"Elias is already come, and John the Baptist" is he; but John, being
interrogated, confessed that he was not Elias, in the same manner that he confessed that he
was not Christ. And as his confession that he was not Christ was true, so was
his confession that he was not Elias. How then shall we compare the words of
the herald with the words of the Judge? Away with the thought that the herald
speaks falsehood; for that which he speaks he hears from the Judge. Wherefore then
did he say, "I am not Elias;" and the Lord, "He is Elias"? Because the Lord
Jesus Christ wished in him to prefigure His own advent, and to say that John was
in the spirit of Elias. And what John was to the first advent, that will Elias
be to the second advent. As there are two advents of the Judge, so are there
two heralds. The Judge indeed was the same, but the heralds two, but not two
judges. It was needful that in the first instance the Judge should come to be
judged. He sent before Him His first herald; He called him Elias, because Elias
will be in the second advent what John was in the first.
6. For mark, beloved brethren, how true it is what I say. When John was
conceived, or rather when he was born, the Holy Spirit prophesied that this would
be fulfilled in him: "And he shall be," he said, "the forerunner of the
Highest, in the spirit and power of Elias."(2) What signifieth "in the spirit and
power of Elias"? In the same Holy Spirit in the room of Elias. Wherefore in room
of Elias? Because what Elias will be to the second, that John was to the first
advent. Rightly therefore, speaking literally, did John reply. For the Lord
spoke figuratively, "Elias, the same is John:" but he, as I have said, spoke
literally when he said, "I am not Elias." Neither did John speak falsely, nor did the
Lord speak falsely; neither was the word of the herald nor of the Judge false,
if only thou understand. But who shall understand? He who shall have imitated
the lowliness of the herald, and shall have acknowledged the loftiness of the
Judge. For nothing was more lowly than the herald. My brethren, in nothing had
John greater merit than in this humility, inasmuch as when he was able to
deceive men, and to be thought Christ, and to have been received in the place of
Christ (for so great were his grace and his excellency), nevertheless he openly
confessed and said, "I am not the Christ." "Art thou Elias?" If he had said I am
Elias, it would have been as if Christ were already coming in His second advent
to judge, not in His first to be judged. As if saying. Elias is yet to come, "I
am not," said he, "Elias." But give heed to the lowly One before whom John
came, that you may not feel the lofty One before whom Elias came. For thus also
did the Lord complete the saying: "John the Baptist is he which is to come." He
came as a figure of that in which Elias is to come in his own person. Then Elias
will in his own proper person be Elias, now in similitude he was John. Now
John in his own proper person is John, in similitude Elias. The two heralds gave
to each other their similitudes, and kept their own proper persons; but the
Judge is one Lord, whether preceded by this herald or by that.
7. "And they asked him, What then? Art thou Elias? And he said, No. And
they said unto him, Art thou a prophet? and he answered, No! They said therefore
unto him, Who art thou? that we may give an answer to them that sent us. What
sayest thou of thyself? He saith, I am the voice of one crying in the
wilderness."(3) That said Isaiah. This prophecy was fulfilled in John, "I am the voice of
one crying in the wilderness." Crying what? "Prepare ye the way of the Lord,
make straight the paths of our God." Would it not have seemed to you that a
herald would have cried, "Go away, make room." Instead of the herald's cry "Go
away," John says "Come." The herald makes men stand back from the judge; to the
Judge John calls. Yes, indeed, John calls men to the lowly One, that they may not
experience what He will be as the exalted Judge. "I am the voice of one crying
in the wilderness, Prepare ye the way of the Lord, as said the prophet Isaiah."
He did not say, I am John, I am Elias, I am a prophet. But what did he say?
This I am called, "The voice of one crying in the wilderness, Prepare the way for
the Lord: I am the prophecy itself."
8. "And they which were sent were of the Pharisees," that is, of the chief
men among the Jews; "and they asked him and said unto him, Why baptizest thou
then, if thou be not the Christ, nor Elias, nor a prophet?" As if it seemed to
them audacity to baptize, as if they meant to inquire, in what character
baptizest thou? We ask whether thou art the Christ; thou sayest that thou art not. We
ask whether thou perchance art His precursor, for we know that before the
advent of Christ, Elias will come; thou answerest that thou art not. We ask, if
perchance thou art some herald come long before, that is, a prophet, and hast
received that power, and thou sayest that thou art not a prophet. And John was not
a prophet; he was greater than a prophet. The Lord gave such testimony
concerning him: "What went ye out into the wilderness to see? A reed shaken with the
wind?" Of course implying that he was not shaken by the wind; because John was
not such an one as is moved by the wind; for he who is moved by the wind is blown
upon by every seductive blast. "But what went ye out for to see? A man clothed
in soft raiment?" For John was clothed in rough garments; that is, his tunic
was of camel's hair. "Behold, they who are clothed in soft raiment are in kings'
houses." You did not then go out to see a man clothed in soft raiment. "But
what went ye out for to see? A prophet? Yea, I say unto you, one greater than a
prophet is here;"(1) for the prophets prophesied of Christ a long time before,
John pointed Him out as present.
9. "Why baptizest thou then, if thou be not the Christ, nor Elias, nor a
prophet? John answered them, saying, I baptize with water; but there standeth
One among you whom ye know not." For, very truly, He was not seen, being humble,
and therefore was the lamp lighted. Observe how John gives place, who might
have been accounted other than he was. "He it is who cometh after me, who is made
before me" (that is, as we have already said, is "preferred before me"), whose
shoe's latchet I am not worthy to unloose." How greatly did he humble himself!
And therefore he was greatly lifted up; for he that humbleth himself shall be
exalted.(2) Hence, holy brethren, you ought to note that if John so humbled
himself as to say, "I am not worthy to unloose His shoe-latchet," what need they
have to be humbled who say, "We baptize; what we give is ours, and what is ours
is holy." He said, Not I, but He; they say, We. John is not worthy to unloose
His shoe's latchet; and if he had said he was worthy, how humble would he still
have been! And if he had said he was worthy, and had spoken thus, "He came after
me who is made before me, the latchet of whose shoe I am only worthy to
unloose," he would have greatly humbled himself. But when he says that he is not
worthy even to do this, truly was he full of the Holy Spirit, who in such fashion
as a servant acknowledged his Lord, and merited to be made a friend instead of a
servant.
10. "These things were done in Bethany, beyond Jordan, where John was
baptizing. The next day John saw Jesus coming unto him, and saith, Behold the Lamb
of God; behold Him who taketh away the sin of the world!" Let no one so
arrogate to himself as to say that he taketh away the sin of the world. Give heed now
to the proud men at whom John pointed the finger. The heretics were not yet
born, but already were they pointed out; against them he then cried from the
river, against whom he now cries from the Gospel. Jesus comes, and what says he?
"Behold the Lamb of God!" If to be innocent is to be a lamb, then John was a lamb,
for was not he innocent? But who is innocent? To what extent innocent? All
come from that branch and shoot, concerning which David sings, even with
groanings, "Behold, I was shapen in iniquity; and in sin did my mother conceive me."(3)
Alone, then, was He, the Lamb who came, not so. For He was not conceived in
iniquity, because not conceived of mortality; nor did His mother conceive Him in
sin, whom the Virgin conceived, whom the Virgin brought forth; because by faith
she conceived, and by faith received Him. Therefore, "Behold the Lamb of God."
He is not a branch derived from Adam: flesh only did he derive from Adam,
Adam's sin He did not assume. He who took not upon Him sin from our lump, He it is
who taketh away our sin. "Behold the Lamb of God, who taketh away the sin of the
world!"
11. You know that certain men say sometimes, We take away sin from men, we
who are holy; for if he be not holy who baptizeth, how taketh he away the sin
of another, when he is a man himself full of sin? In opposition to these
disputations, let us not speak our own words, let us read what John says: "Behold the
Lamb of God; behold Him who taketh away the sin of the world!" Let there not
be presumptuous confidence of men upon men: let not the sparrow flee to the
mountains, but let it trust in the Lord;(1) and if it lift its eyes to the
mountains, from whence cometh aid to it, let it understand that its aid is from the
Lord who made heaven and earth.(2) So great is the excellence of John, that to him
it is said, "Art thou the Christ?" He says, No. Art thou Elias? He says, No.
Art thou a prophet? He says, No. Wherefore then dost thou baptize? "Behold the
Lamb of God; behold Him who taketh away the sin of the world! This is He of whom
I spake, After me cometh a Man who was made before me; for He was before me."
"Cometh after me," because He was born later; "was made before me," because
preferred before me; "He was before me," because, "In the beginning was the Word,
and the Word was with God, and the Word was God."
12. "And I knew Him not," he said; "but that He might be made manifest to
Israel, therefore came I baptizing with water. And John bare record, saying, I
saw the Spirit descending from heaven like a dove, and it abode upon Him. And I
knew Him not: but He that sent me to baptize with water, the same said unto
me, Upon whom thou shalt see the Spirit descending, and abiding upon Him, the
same is He who baptizeth with the Holy Ghost. And I saw, and bare record that this
is the Son of God." Give heed for a little, beloved. When did John learn
Christ? For he was sent to baptize with water. They asked, Wherefore? That He might
be made manifest to Israel, he said. Of what profit was the baptism of John? My
brethren, if it had profited in any respect, it would have remained now, and
men would have been baptized with the baptism of John, and thus have come to the
baptism of Christ. But what saith he? "That He might be made manifest to
Israel,"--that is, to Israel itself, to the people Israel, so that Christ might be
made manifest to it,--therefore he came baptizing with water. John received the
ministry of baptism, that by the water of repentance he might prepare the way
for the Lord, not being himself the Lord; but where the Lord was known, it was
superfluous to prepare for Him the way, for to those who knew Him He became
Himself the way; therefore the baptism of John did not last long. But how was the
Lord pointed out? Lowly, that John might so receive a baptism in which the Lord
Himself should be baptized.
13. And was it needful for the Lord to be baptized? I instantly reply to
any one who asks this question: Was it needful for the Lord to be born? Was it
needful for the Lord to be crucified? Was it needful for the Lord to die? Was it
needful for the Lord to be buried? If He undertook for us so great
humiliation, might He not also receive baptism? And what profit was there that he received
the baptism of a servant? That thou mightest not disdain to receive the
baptism of the Lord. Give heed, beloved brethren. Certain catechumens were to arise
in the Church of higher grace. It sometimes comes to pass that you see a
catechumen who practises continence, bids farewell to the world, renounces all his
possessions, distributing them to the poor; and although but a catechumen,
instructed in the saving doctrine better, perhaps, than many of the faithful. It is to
be feared regarding such an one that he may say to himself about holy baptism,
whereby sins are remitted, What more shall I receive? Behold, I am better than
this faithful man, and this,--having in his mind those among the faithful who
are either married, or who are perhaps ignorant, or who keep possession of
their property, while he has given his to the poor,--and considering himself better
than those who have been already baptized, he deigns not to come to baptism,
saying, Am I to receive what this man has, and this? thinking of persons whom he
despises, and, as it were, considers it an indignity to receive that which
inferiors have received, because he appears to himself to be already better than
they; and, nevertheless, all his sins are upon him, and without coming to saving
baptism, wherein all sins are remitted, he cannot, with all his excellence,
enter into the kingdom of heaven. But the Lord, in order to invite such
excellence to his baptism, that sins might be remitted, Himself came to the baptism of
His servant; and although He had no sin to be remitted, nor was there anything
in Him that needed to be washed, He received baptism from a servant; and by so
doing, addressed Himself to the son carrying himself proudly, and exalting
himself, and disdaining, perhaps, to receive along with the ignorant that from which
salvation comes to him, and said to him: How dost thou extend thyself? How
dost thou exalt thyself? How great is thy excellence? How great is thy grace? Can
it be greater than mine? If I come to the servant, dost thou disdain to come to
the Lord? If I have received the baptism of the servant, dost thou disdain to
be baptized by the Lord?
14. But that you may know, my brethren, that not from a necessity of any
chain of sin did the Lord come to this John, as the other evangelists say when
the Lord came to him to be baptized, John himself said, "Comest Thou to me? I
have need to be baptized of Thee."(1) What did He reply to him? "Suffer it to be
so now: let all righteousness be fulfilled?" What meaneth this, "let all
righteousness be fulfilled"? I came to die for men, have I not to be baptized for
men? What meaneth" let all righteousness be fulfilled"? Let all humility be
fulfilled. What then? Was not He to accept baptism from a good servant who accepted
suffering at the hands of evil servants? Give heed then. The Lord being
baptized, if John for this end baptized, that by means of his baptism the Lord might
manifest His humility, should no one else have been baptized with the baptism of
John? But many were baptized with the baptism of John. When the Lord was
baptized with the baptism of John, the baptism of John ceased. John was forthwith
cast into prison. Afterwards we do not find that any one is baptized with that
baptism. If, then, John came baptizing for this end that the humility of the Lord
might be made manifest to us, in order that we might not disdain to receive
from the Lord that which the Lord had received from a servant, should John have
baptized the Lord alone? But if John had baptized the Lord alone, some would have
thought that the baptism of John was more holy than that of Christ: as if
Christ alone had been found worthy to be baptized with the baptism of John, but the
human race with that of Christ. Give heed, beloved brethren. With the baptism
of Christ we have been baptized, and not only we, but the whole world, and this
will continue to the end. Which of us can in any respect be compared with
Christ, whose shoe's latchet John declared himself unworthy to unloose? If, then,
the Christ, a man of such excellence, a man who is God, had been alone baptized
with the baptism of John, what were men likely to say? What a baptism was that
of John! His was a great baptism, an ineffable sacrament; behold, Christ alone
deserved to be baptized with the baptism of John. And thus the baptism of the
servant would appear greater than the baptism of the Lord. Others were also
baptized with the baptism of John, that the baptism of John might not appear better
than the baptism of Christ; but baptized also was the Lord, that through the
Lord receiving the baptism of the servant, other servants might not disdain to
receive the baptism of the Lord: for this end, then, was John sent.
15. But did he know Christ, or did he not know Him? If he did not know
Him, wherefore did He say, when Christ came to the river, "I have need to be
baptized of Thee"? that is to say, I know who Thou art. If, then, he already knew
Him, assuredly he knew Him when he saw the dove descending. It is evident that
the dove did not descend upon the Lord until after He went up out of the water of
baptism. "The Lord having been baptized, went up out of the water, and the
heavens were opened, and he saw a dove descending on Him." If, then, the dove
descended after the baptism, and if, before the Lord was baptized, John said to
Him, "Comest Thou to me? I have need to be baptized of Thee;" that is to say,
before he knew Him to whom he said, "Comest Thou to me? I have need to be baptized
of Thee;"--how then said he, "And I knew Him not: but He who sent me to baptize
with water. the same said to me, Upon whom thou seest the Spirit descending as
a dove, and abiding upon Him, the same is He which baptizeth with the Holy
Ghost?" It is not an insignificant question, my brethren. If you have seen the
question, you have seen not a little; it remains that the Lord give the solution
of it. This, however, I say, if you have seen the question, it is no small
matter. Behold, John is placed before your eyes, standing beside the river. Behold
John the Baptist. Behold, the Lord comes, as yet to be baptized, not yet
baptized. Hear the voice of John, "Comest Thou to me? I have need to be baptized of
Thee." Behold, already he knew the Lord, by whom He wishes to be baptized. The
Lord, having been baptized, goes up out of the water; the heavens are opened, the
Spirit descends; then John knows Him. If then for the first time he knew Him,
why did he say before, "I have need to be baptized of Thee"? But if he did not
then recognize Him for the first time, because he knew Him already, what is the
meaning of what he said, "I knew Him not: but He that sent me to baptize with
water, the same said unto me, Upon whom thou shalt see the Spirit descending,
and abiding upon Him, as a dove, the same is He which baptizeth with the Holy
Ghost"?
16. My brethren, this question if solved today would oppress you, I do not
doubt, for already have I spoken many words. But know that the question is of
such a character that alone it is able to extinguish the party of Donatus. I
have said thus much, my beloved, in order to gain your attention, as is my wont;
and also in order that you may pray for us, that the Lord may grant to us to
speak what is suitable, and that you may be found worthy to receive what is
suitable. In the meantime, be pleased to defer the question for to-day. But in the
meantime, I say this briefly, until I give a fuller solution: Inquire
peacefully, without quarreling, without contention, without altercations, without
enmities; both seek by yourselves, and inquire of others, and say, "This question our
bishop proposed to us to-day, and he will resolve it at a future time, if the
Lord will." But whether it be resolved or not, reckon that I have propounded
what appears to me of importance; for it does seem of considerable importance.
John says, "I have need to be baptized of Thee," as if he knew Christ. For if he
did not know Him by whom he wished to be baptized, he spoke rashly when he said,
"I have need to be baptized of Thee." Therefore he knew Him. If he knew Him,
what is the meaning of the saying, "I knew Him not: but He that sent me to
baptize with water, the same said unto me, Upon whom thou shalt see the Spirit
descending, and abiding upon Him, as a dove, the same is He which baptizeth with
the Holy Ghost"? What shall we say? That we do not know when the dove came? Lest
perchance they(1) take refuge in this, let the other evangelists be read, who
have spoken of this matter more plainly, and we find most evidently that the
dove then descended when the Lord came up out of the water. Upon Him baptized the
heavens opened, and He saw the Spirit descending.(2) If it was when He was
already baptized that John knew Him, how saith he to Him, coming to baptism, "I
have need to be baptized of Thee"? Ponder this in the meantime with yourselves,
confer upon it, treat of it, one with another. The Lord our God grant that before
you hear it from me, the explanation may be revealed to some of you first.
Nevertheless, brethren, know this, that by means of the solution of this question,
the allegation of the party of Donatus, if they have any sense of shame, will
be silenced, and their mouths will be shut regarding the grace of baptism, a
matter about which they raise mists to confuse the uninstructed, and spread nets
for flying birds.