LECTURES OR TRACTATES ON THE GOSPEL ACCORDING TO ST. JOHN. TRACTATES V TO VII.
TRACTATE V.
CHAPTER I. 33.
1. WE have arrived, as the Lord hath willed it, to the day of our promise.
He will grant this also, that we may arrive at the fulfillment of the promise.
For then those things which we say, if they are useful to us and to you, are
from Him; but those things which proceed from man are false, as our Lord Jesus
Christ Himself has said, "He that speaketh a lie speaketh of his own."(1) No one
has anything of his own except falsehood and sin. But if man has any truth and
justice, it is from that fountain after which we ought to thirst in this
desert, so that being, as it were, bedewed by some drops from it, and comforted in
the meantime in this pilgrimage, we may not fail by the way, but reach His rest
and satisfying fullness. If then "he that speaketh a lie speaketh of his own,"
he who speaketh the truth speaketh of God. John is true, Christ is the Truth;
John is true, but every true man is true from the Truth. If, then, John is true,
and a man cannot be true except from the Truth, from whom was he true, unless
from Him who said, "I am the truth"?(2) The Truth, then, could not speak
contrary to the true man, or the true man contrary to the Truth. The Truth sent the
true man, and he was true because sent by the Truth. If it was the Truth that
sent John, then it was Christ that sent him. But that which Christ does with the
Father, the Father does; and what the Father does with Christ, Christ does. The
Father does nothing apart from the Son, nor the Son anything apart from the
Father: inseparable love, inseparable unity: inseparable majesty, inseparable
power, according to these words which He Himself propounded," I and my Father are
one."(1) Who then sent John? If we say the Father, we speak truly; if we say
the Son, we speak truly; but to speak more plainly, we say the Father and the
Son. But whom the Father and the Son sent, one God sent; because the Son said, "I
and the Father are one." How, then, did he not know Him by whom he was sent?
For he said, "I knew Him not: but He that sent me to baptize with water, the same
said unto me." I interrogate John: "Who sent thee to baptize with water? what
did He say to thee?' "Upon whom thou shalt see the Spirit descending as a dove,
and abiding upon Him, the same is He which baptizeth with the Holy Ghost." Is
it this, O John, that He said to thee who sent thee? It is manifest that it was
this; who, then, sent thee? Perhaps the Father. True God is the Father, and
the Truth is God the Son: if the Father without the Son sent thee, God without
the Truth sent thee; but if thou art true, because thou dost speak the truth, and
dost, speak of the Truth, the Father did not send thee without the Son, but
the Father and the Son together sent thee. If, then, the Son sent thee with the
Father, how didst thou not know Him by whom thou wast sent? He whom thou hadst
seen in the Truth, Himself sent thee that He might be recognized in the flesh,
and said, "Upon whom thou shalt see the Spirit descending as a dove, and abiding
upon Him, the same is He which baptizeth with the Holy Ghost.'
2. Did John hear this that he might know Him whom he had not known, or
that he might more fully know Him whom he had already known? For if he had been
entirely ignorant of Him, he would not have said to Him when He came to the river
to be baptized, "I have need to be baptized of Thee, and comest Thou to
me?"(2) He knew Him therefore. But when did the dove descend? When the Lord had been
baptized, and was ascending from the water. But if He who sent Him said, "Upon
whom thou shalt see the Spirit descending as a dove, and abiding upon Him, the
same is He which baptizeth with the Holy Ghost," and he knew Him not, but when
the dove descended he learned to know Him, and the time at which the dove
descended was when the Lord was going up from the water; but John had known the
Lord, when the Lord came to him to the water: it is made plain to us that John
after a manner knew, and after a manner did not at first know the Lord. And unless
we understand it so, he was a liar. How was he true acknowledging the Lord and
saying, "Comest Thou to me to be baptized," and, "I have need to be baptized of
Thee"? Is he true when he said this? And how is he again true when he saith,
"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 as a dove, and abiding upon
Him, the same is He who baptizeth with the Holy Ghost"? The Lord was made known
by a dove, not to him who knew Him not, but to him who in a manner knew Him,
and in a manner knew Him not. It is for us to discover what, in Him, John did not
know, and learned by the dove.
3. Why was John sent baptizing? Already, I recollect, I have explained
that to you, beloved, according to my ability. For if the baptism of John was
necessary for our salvation, it ought even now to be used. For we cannot think that
men are not saved now, or that more are not saved now, or that there was one
salvation then, another now. If Christ has been changed, the salvation has also
been changed; if salvation is in Christ, and Christ Himself is the same, there
is the same salvation to us. But why was John sent baptizing? Because it
behoved Christ to be baptized. Wherefore did it behove Christ to be baptized?
Wherefore did it behove Christ to be born? Wherefore did it behove Christ to be
crucified? For if He had come to point out the way of humility, and to make Himself
the way of humility; in all things had humility to be fulfilled by Him. He
deigned from this to give authority to His own baptism, that His servants might know
with what alacrity they ought to run to the baptism of the Lord, when He
Himself did not refuse to receive the baptism of a servant. This favor was bestowed
upon John that it should be called his baptism.
4. Give heed to this, exercise your discrimination, and know it, beloved.
The baptism which John received is called the baptism of John: alone he
received such a gift. No one of the just before him and no one after him so received a
baptism that it should be called his baptism. He received it indeed, for of
himself he could do nothing: for if any one speaketh of his own, he speaketh of
his own a lie. And whence did he receive it except from the Lord Jesus Christ?
From Him he received power to baptize whom he afterwards baptized. Do not
marvel; for Christ acted in the same manner in respect to John as in respect to His
mother. For concerning Christ it was said, "All things were made by Him."(1) If
all things were made by him, Mary also was made by Him, of whom Christ was
afterwards born. Give heed, beloved; in the same manner that He did create Mary.
and was created by Mary, so did He give the baptism of John, and was baptized by
John.
5. For this purpose therefore did He receive baptism from John, in order
that, receiving what was inferior from an inferior, He might exhort inferiors to
receive that which was superior. But wherefore was not He alone baptized by
John, if John, by whom Christ was baptized, was sent for this end, to prepare a
way for the Lord, that is, for Christ Himself? This we have already explained,
but we recur to it, because it is necessary for the present question. If our
Lord Jesus Christ had been alone baptized with the baptism of John;--hold fast
what we say; let not the world have such power as to efface from your hearts what
the Spirit of God has written there; let not the thorns of care have such power
as to choke the seed which is being sown in you: for why are we compelled to
repeat the same things, but because we are not sure of the memory of your
hearts?--and if then the Lord alone had been baptized with the baptism of John, there
would be persons who would so reckon it, that the baptism of John was greater
than is the baptism of Christ. For they would say, that baptism is so much the
greater, that Christ alone deserved to be baptized with it. Therefore, that an
example of humility might be given us by the Lord, that the salvation of
baptism might be obtained by us, Christ accepted what for Him was not necessary, but
on our account was necessary. And again, lest that which Christ received from
John should be preferred to the baptism of Christ, others also were permitted to
be baptized by John. But for those who were baptized by John that baptism did
not suffice: for they were baptized with the baptism of Christ; because the
baptism of John was not the baptism of Christ. Those who receive the baptism of
Christ do not seek the baptism of John; those who received the baptism of John
sought the baptism of Christ. Therefore was the baptism of John sufficient for
Christ. How should it not be sufficient, when not even it was necessary? For to
Him was no baptism necessary; but in order to exhort us to receive His baptism,
He received the baptism of His servant. And lest the baptism of the servant
should be preferred to the baptism of the Lord, other fellow-servants were
baptized with the baptism of the servant. But it behoved those fellow-servants who
were baptized with that baptism to be likewise baptized with the baptism of the
Lord: but those who were baptized with the baptism of the Lord do not require
the baptism of the fellow-servant.
6. Since, then, John had accepted a baptism which may be properly called
the baptism of John, but the Lord Jesus Christ would not give His baptism to
any, not that no one should be baptized with the baptism of the Lord, but that the
Lord Himself should always baptize: that was done, that the Lord should
baptize by means of servants; that is to say, those whom the servants of the Lord
were to baptize, the Lord baptized, not they. For it is one thing to baptize in
the capacity of a servant, another thing to baptize with power. For baptism
derives its character from Him through whose power it is given; not from him through
whose ministry it is given. As was John, so was his baptism: the righteous
baptism of a righteous man; but of a man who had received from the Lord that
grace, and so great grace, that he was worthy to be the forerunner of the Judge, and
to point Him out with the finger, and to fulfill the saying of that prophecy:
"The voice of one crying in the wilderness, Prepare ye the way for the Lord."
(2) As was the Lord, such was His baptism: the baptism of the Lord, then, was
divine, because the Lord was God.
7. But the Lord Jesus Christ could, if He wished, have given power to one
of His servants to give a baptism of his own, as it were, in His stead, and
have transferred from Himself the power of baptizing, and assigned it to one of
His servants, and have given the same power to the baptism transferred to the
servant as it had when bestowed by the Lord. This He would not do, in order that
the hope of the baptized might be in him by whom they acknowledged themselves to
have been baptized. He would not, therefore, that the servant should place his
hope in the servant. And therefore the apostle exclaimed, when he saw men
wishing to place their hope in himself, "Was Paul crucified for you? or were ye
baptized in the name of Paul?"(3) Paul then baptized as a servant, not as the
power itself; but the Lord baptized as the power. Give heed. He was both able to
give this power to His servants, and unwilling. For if He had given this power to
His servants--that is to say, that what belonged to the Lord should be
theirs--there would have been as many baptisms as servants; so that, as we speak of
the baptism of John, we should also have spoken of the baptism of Peter, the
baptism of Paul, the baptism of James, the baptism of Thomas, of Matthew, of
Bartholomew: for we spoke of that baptism as that of John. But perhaps some one
objects, and says, Prove to us that that baptism was called the baptism of John. I
will prove it from the very words of the Truth Himself, when He asked the Jews,
"The baptism of John, whence was it? from heaven, or of men?"(1) Therefore,
lest as many baptisms should be spoken of as there are servants who received power
from the Lord to baptize, the Lord kept to Himself the power of baptizing, and
gave to His servants the ministry. The servant says that he baptizes; he says
so rightly, as the apostle says. "And I baptized also the household of
Stephanas;"(2) but as a servant. Therefore, if even he be bad, and he happen to have
the ministration of baptism, and if men do not know him, but God knows him, God,
who has kept the power to Himself, permits baptism to be administered through
him.
8. But this John did not know in the Lord. That He was the Lord he knew,
and that he ought to be baptized by Him he knew; and he confessed that He was
the Truth, and that he, the true man, was sent by the Truth: this he knew. But
what was in Him which he knew not? That he was about to retain to Himself the
power of His baptism, and was not to transmit or transfer it to any servant; but
that, whether a good servant baptized in a ministerial manner, or whether an
evil servant baptized, the person baptized should not know that he was baptized,
unless by Him who kept to Himself the power of baptizing. And that you may know,
brethren, what john did not know in Him, he learned it by means of the dove:
for he knew the Lord; but that He was to retain to Himself the power of
baptizing, and not to give it to any servant, he did not yet know. Regarding this he
said, "I knew Him not." And that you may know that he there learnt this, give
heed to what follows: "But He that sent me to baptize with water, the same said
unto me, Upon whom thou shalt see the Spirit descending as a dove, and abiding
upon Him, the same is He." What same is He? The Lord? But he already knew the
Lord. Suppose, then, that John had said thus far, "I knew Him not: but He that
sent me to baptize with water, the same said unto me--" We ask, what He said? It
follows: "Upon whom thou shall see the Spirit descending as a dove, and abiding
upon Him." I do not say what follows. In the meantime give heed: "Upon whom
thou shalt see the Spirit descending as a dove, and abiding upon Him, the same is
He." But what same is He? What did He who sent me mean to teach me by means of
a dove? That He was Himself the Lord. Already I knew by whom I was sent;
already I knew Him to whom I said, "Comest Thou to me to be baptized? I have need to
be baptized of Thee." So far, then, did I know the Lord, that I wished to be
baptized by Him, not that He should be baptized by me; and then He said to me,
"Suffer it to be so now; for thus it becometh us to fulfill all righteousness." I
came to suffer; do I not come to be baptized? "Let all righteousness be
fulfilled," says my God to me. Let all righteousness be fulfilled; let me teach
entire humility. I know that there will be proud ones in my future people; I know
that some men then will be eminent in some grace, so that when they see ordinary
persons baptized, they, because they consider themselves better, whether in
continence, or in alms-giving, or in doctrine, will perhaps not deign to receive
what has been received by their inferiors. It was needful that I should heal
them, so that they should not disdain to come to the baptism of the Lord, because
I came to the baptism of the servant.
9. Already, then, John knew this, and he knew the Lord. What then did the
dove teach? What did He desire to teach by means of the dove--that is, by means
of the Holy Spirit thus coming to teach who had sent him to whom He said,
"Upon whom thou shall see the Spirit descending as a dove, and abiding upon Him,
the same is He"? Who is this He? The Lord? I know. But didst thou already know
this, that the same Lord having the power to baptize, was not to give that power
to any servant, but to retain it to Himself, so that all who were baptized by
the ministration of the servant, should not impute their baptism to the servant,
but to the Lord? Didst thou already know this? I did not know this: so what
did He say to me? "Upon whom thou shalt see the Spirit descending as a dove, and
abiding upon Him, the same is He who baptizeth with the Holy Ghost." He does
not say, "He is the Lord;" He does not say, "He is the Christ;" He does not say,
"He is God;" He does not say, "He is Jesus;" He does not say, "He is the One
who was born of the Virgin Mary, after thee, before thee." This He does not say,
for this John did already know. But what did he not know? That this great
authority of baptism the Lord Himself was to have, and to retain to Himself, whether
present in the earth or absent in body in the heaven, and present in majesty;
lest Paul should say, my baptism; lest Peter should say, my baptism. Therefore
see, give heed to the words of the apostles. None of the apostles said, my
baptism. Although there was one gospel of all, yet thou findest that they said, my
gospel: thou dost not find that they say, my baptism.
10. This, then, my brethren, John learned. What John learned by means of
the dove let us also learn. For the dove did not teach John without teaching the
Church, the Church to which it was said, "My dove is one."(1) Let the dove
teach the dove; let the dove know what John learned by the dove. The Holy Spirit
descended in the form of a dove. But this which John learned in the dove,
wherefore did he learn it in the dove? For it behoved him to learn, and perhaps it
did not so, much behove him to learn as to learn by the dove. What shall I say,
my brethren, concerning the dove? or when will faculty of tongue or heart
suffice to speak as I wish? And perchance, my wish falls short of my duty in
speaking; even if I were able to speak as I wish, how much less am I able to speak as I
ought? I could wish to hear one better than myself speak this, rather than
speak of it to you.
11. John learns to know Him whom he knew; but he learns in Him with regard
to what he did not know; with regard to what he did know, he does not learn.
And what did he know? The Lord. What did he not know? That the power of the
Lord's baptism was not to pass from the Lord to any man, but that the ministration
of it plainly would do so; the power from the Lord to no one, the ministration
both to good and bad. Let not the dove shrink from the ministration of the bad,
but have regard to the power of the Lord. What injury does a bad servant do to
you where the Lord is good? What impediment can the malicious herald put in
your way if the judge is well-disposed? John learned by means of the dove this.
What is it that he learned? Let him repeat it himself. "The same said unto me,"
saith he, "Upon whom thou shalt see the Spirit descending as a dove, and
abiding on Him, this is He which baptizeth with the Holy Ghost." Let not those
seducers deceive thee, O dove, who say, We baptize. Acknowledge, dove, what the dove
has taught: "This is He which baptizeth with the Holy Ghost." By means of the
dove we are taught that this is He; and dost thou think that thou art baptized
by his authority by whose ministration thou art baptized? If thou thinkest
this, thou art not as yet in the body of the dove; and if thou art not in the body
of the dove, it is not to be wondered at that thou hast not simplicity; for by
means of the dove, simplicity is chiefly designated.
12. Wherefore, my brethren, by the simplicity of the dove did John learn
that "This is He which baptizeth with the Holy Ghost," unless to show that these
are not doves who have scattered the Church? Hawks they were, and kites. The
dove does not tear. And thou seest that they hold us up to hatred, for the
persecutions, as they call them, which they have suffered. Bodily persecutions,
indeed, if they are to be so called, they have suffered, since these were the
scourges of the Lord, plainly administering temporal correction, lest He should have
to condemn them eternally, if they did not acknowledge it and amend
themselves. They truly persecute the Church who persecute by means of deceit; they strike
the heart more heavily who strike with the sword of the tongue; they shed
blood more bitterly who, as far as they can, slay Christ in man. They seem to be in
fear, as it were, of the judgment of the authorities. What does the authority
do to thee if thou art good? but if thou art evil, fear the authority; "For he
beareth not the sword in vain,"(2) saith the apostle. Draw not the sword
wherewith thou dost strike Christ. Christian, what dost thou persecute in a
Christian? What did the Emperor persecute in thee? He persecuted the flesh; thou in a
Christian persecutest the Spirit. Thou dost not slay the flesh. And,
nevertheless, they do not spare the flesh; as many as they were able, they slew with the
sword; they spared neither their own nor strangers. This is known to all. The
authority is hated because it is legitimate; he acts in a hated manner who acts
according to the law; he acts without incurring hatred who acts contrary to the
laws. Give heed, each one of you, my brethren, to what the Christian possesses.
His humanity he has in common with many, his Christianity distinguishes him
from many, and his Christianity belongs to him more strictly than his humanity.
For, as a Christian, he is renewed after the image of God, by whom man was made
after the image of God;(3) but as a man he might be bad, he might be a pagan, he
might be an idolater. This thou dost persecute in the Christian, which is his
better part; for this by which he lives thou wishest to take away from him. For
he lives temporally according to the spirit of life, by which his body is
animated, but he lives for eternity according to the baptism which he received from
the Lord; thou wishest to take this away from him which he received from the
Lord, this thou wishest to take away from him by which he lives. Robbers, with
regard to those whom they wish to despoil, have the purpose to enrich themselves
and to deprive their victims of all that they have; but thou takest from him,
and with thee there will not be anything more, for there does not accrue more
to thee because thou takest from him. But, truly, they do the same as those who
take away the natural life: they take it away from another, and yet they
themselves have not two lives.
13. What, then, dost thou wish to take away? What displeases thee in the
man whom thou wishest to rebaptize? Thou art not able to give what he already
has, but thou makest him deny what he has. What greater cruelty did the pagan
persecutor of the Church commit? Swords were stretched out against the martyrs,
wild beasts were let loose, fires were applied: for what purpose these things? In
order that the sufferer might be induced to say, I am not a Christian. What
dost thou teach him whom thou wishest to rebaptize, unless that he first say, I
am not a Christian? For the same purpose for which the persecutor put forth the
flame, thou puttest forth the tongue; thou dost by seducing what he did not do
by slaying. And what is it thou dost give, and to whom art thou to give it? If
he tells thee the truth, and does not lie, seduced by thee, he will say, I
have. Thou askest, Hast thou baptism? I have, he says. As long as he says, I have,
thou sayest, I will not give. And do not give, for that which thou wishest to
give cannot cleave to me; because what I received cannot be taken away from me.
But wait, nevertheless; let me see what thou wouldest teach me. Say, he said,
in the first place, I have not. But this I have; if I shall say, I have not, I
lie; for what I have I have. Thou hast not, he says. Teach me that I have it
not. An evil man gave it to thee. If Christ is evil, an evil man did give it to
me. Christ, he says, is not evil; but Christ did not give it to thee. Who then
gave it to me? Reply, I know that I received it from Christ. He who gave it to
thee, he says, was not Christ, but some traditor. I shall see to it who was the
minister; I shall see who was the herald. Concerning the official, I do not
dispute; I give heed to the Judge: and, perchance, in thy objection to the
official, thou speakest falsely. But I decline to discuss it; let the Lord of both
decide the cause of His own official. If, perhaps, I were to ask for proof, thou
couldst give none; indeed, thou liest; it has been proved that thou wert not able
to give proof. But I do not place my case on this, lest from my zealous
defense of innocent men thou infer that I have placed my hope even on innocent men.
Let the men be what. they may, I received from Christ, I was baptized by Christ.
No, he says; not Christ, but that bishop baptized thee, and that bishop
communicates to them. By Christ I have been baptized, I know. How dost thou know? The
dove taught me, which John saw. O evil kite, thou mayest not tear me from the
bowels of the dove. I am numbered among the members of the dove, because what
the dove taught, this I know. Thou sayest to me, This man or that baptized thee:
by means of the dove it is said to me and to thee, "This is He which
baptizeth." Which shall I believe, the kite or the dove?
14. Tell me certainly, that thou mayest be confounded by that lamp by
which also were the former enemies confounded, who were like to thee, the
Pharisees, who, when they questioned the Lord by what authority He did those things: "I
also," said He, "will ask you this question, Tell me, the baptism of John,
whence is it? from heaven, or of men?" And they, who were preparing to spread their
wiles, were entangled by the question, and began to debate with themselves,
and say, "If we shall answer, It is from heaven, He will say unto us, Wherefore
did ye not believe him?" For John had said of the Lord, "Behold the Lamb of God,
who taketh away the sin of the world!"(1) Why then do you inquire by what
authority I act? O wolves, what I do, I do by the authority of the Lamb. But that
you may know the Lamb, why do you not believe John, who said, "Behold the Lamb
of God, who taketh away the sin of the world"? They, then, knowing what John had
said regarding the Lord, said among themselves, "If we shall say that John's
baptism is from heaven, He will say unto us, Wherefore then did ye not believe
him? If we shall say, It is of men, the people will stone us; for they hold John
as a prophet." Hence, they feared men; hence, they were confounded to confess
the truth. Darkness replied with darkness; but they were overcome by the light.
For what did they reply? "We know not;" regarding that which they knew, they
said, "We know not." And the Lord said, "Neither tell I you by what authority I
do these things."(2) And the first enemies were confounded. How? By the lamp.
Who was the lamp? John. Can we prove that he was the lamp? We can prove it; for
the Lord says: "He was a burning and a shining lamp."(1) Can we prove also that
the enemies were confounded by him? Listen to the psalm: "I have prepared," he
says, "a lamp for my Christ. His enemies I will clothe with shame."(2)
15. As yet, in the darkness of this life, we walk by the lamp of faith:
let us hold also to the lamp John, and let us confound by him the enemies of
Christ; indeed, let Christ Himself confound His own enemies by His own lamp. Let us
put the question which the Lord put to the Jews, let us ask and say, "The
baptism of John, whence is it? from heaven, or of men?" What will they say? Mark,
if they are not as enemies confounded by the lamp. What will they say? If they
shall say, Of men, even their own will stone them; but if they shall say, From
heaven, let us say to them, Wherefore, then, did ye not believe him? They
perhaps say, We believe him. Wherefore, then, do you say that you baptize, when John
says, "This is He which baptizeth"? But it behoveth, they say, the ministers of
so great a Judge who baptize, to be righteous. And I also say, and all say,
that it behoveth the ministers of so great a Judge to be righteous; let the
ministers, by all means, be righteous if they will; but if they will not be
righteous who sit in the seat of Moses, my Master made me safe, of whom His Spirit
said, "This is He which baptizeth." How did He make me safe? "The scribes and the
Pharisees," He says, "sit in Moses' seat: what they say, do; but what they do,
that do not ye: for they say, and do not."(3) If the minister is righteous, I
reckon him with Paul, I reckon him with Peter; with those I reckon righteous
ministers: because, in truth, righteous ministers seek not their own glory; for
they are ministers, they do not wish to be thought judges, they abhor that one
should place his hope on them; therefore, I reckon the righteous minister with
Paul. For what does Paul say? "I have planted, Apollos watered; but God gave the
increase. Neither is he that planteth anything, nor he that watereth; but God
who giveth the increase."(4) But he who is a proud minister is reckoned with the
devil; but the gift of Christ is not contaminated, which flows through him
pure, which passes through him liquid, and comes to the fertile earth. Suppose that
he is stony, that he cannot from water rear fruit; even through the stony
channel the water passes, the water passes to the garden beds; in the stony channel
it causes nothing to grow, but nevertheless it brings much fruit to the
gardens. For the spiritual virtue of the sacrament is like the light: both by those
who are to be enlightened is it received pure, and if it passes through the
impure it is not stained. Let the ministers be by all means righteous, and seek
not their own glory, but His glory whose ministers they are; let them not say,
The baptism is mine; for it is not theirs. Let them give heed unto John. Behold,
John was full of the Holy Spirit; and he had his baptism from heaven, not from
men; but how long had he it? He said himself, "Prepare ye the way for the
Lord."(5) But when the Lord was known, Himself became the way; there was no longer
need for the baptism of John to prepare the way for the Lord.
16. What, however, are they accustomed to say against us? "Behold, after
John, baptism was given." For before that question was properly treated in the
Catholic Church, many erred in it, both great and good men; but because they
were members of the dove, they did not cut themselves off, and in their case that
happened which the apostle said, "If in any thing ye are otherwise minded, God
shall reveal even this unto you."(6) Whence those who separated themselves
became unteachable. What then are they wont to say? Behold, after John baptism was
given; after heretical baptism is it not to be given? because certain who had
the baptism of John were commanded by Paul to be baptized,(7) for they had not
the baptism of Christ. Why then, say they, dost thou exaggerate the merit of
John, and, as it were, underrate the misery of heretics? I also grant to you that
the heretics are wicked; but the heretics gave the baptism of Christ, which
baptism John did not give.
17. I go back to John, and say, "This is he which baptizeth." For John is
better than a heretic, just as John is better than a drunkard, as John is
better than a murderer. If we ought to baptize after the worse because the apostles
baptized after the better, whosoever among them were baptized by a drunkard,--I
do not say by a murderer. I do not say by the satellite of some wicked man, I
do not say by the robber of other men's goods, I do not say by the oppressor of
orphans, or a separater of married persons; I speak of none of these; I speak
of what happens every year, of what happens every day; I speak of what all are
called to, even in this city, when it is said to them, Let us play the part of
the irrational, let us have pleasure, and on such a day as this of the calends
of January we ought not to fast: these are the things I speak of, these
trifling everyday proceedings;--when one is baptized by a drunkard, who is better?
John or the drunkard? Reply, if thou canst, that the drunkard is better than John!
This thou wilt never venture to do. Do you then, as a sober man, baptize after
thy drunkard. For if the apostles baptized after John, how much more ought the
sober to baptize after the drunkard? Or dost thou say, the drunkard is in
unity with me? Was not John then, the friend of the Bridegroom, in unity with the
Bridegroom?
18. But I say to thee thyself, whoever thou art, Art thou better than
John? Thou wilt not venture to say: I am better than John. Then let thine own
baptize after thee if they are better. For if baptism was administered after John,
blush that baptism is not administered after thee. Thou wilt say, But I have and
teach the baptism of Christ. Acknowledge, then, now the Judge, and do not be a
proud herald. Thou givest the baptism of Christ, therefore baptism is not
administered after thee: after John it was administered, because he gave not the
baptism of Christ, but his own; for he had in such manner received it that it was
his own. Thou art then not better than John: but the baptism given through
thee is better than that of John; for the one is Christ's, but the other is that
of John. And that which was given by Paul, and that which was given by Peter, is
Christ's; and if baptism was given by Judas it was Christ's. Judas gave
baptism and after Judas baptism was not repeated; John gave baptism, and baptism was
repeated after John: because if baptism was given by Judas, it was the baptism
of Christ; but that which was given by John, was John's baptism. We prefer not
Judas to John; but the baptism of Christ, even when given by the hand of Judas,
we prefer to the baptism of John, rightly given even by the hand of John. For
it was said of the Lord before He suffered, that He baptized more than John;
then it was added: "Howbeit, Jesus Himself baptized not, but His disciples."(1)
He, and not He: He by power, they by ministry; they performed the service of
baptizing, the power of baptizing remained in Christ. His disciples, then,
baptized, and Judas was still among his disciples: and were those, then, whom Judas
baptized not again baptized; and those whom John baptized were they again
baptized? Plainly there was a repetition, but not a repetition of the same baptism.
For those whom John baptized, John baptized; those whom Judas baptized, Christ
baptized. In like manner, then, they whom a drunkard baptized, those whom a
murderer baptized, those whom an adulterer baptized, if it was the baptism of
Christ, were baptized by Christ. I do not fear the adulterer, the drunkard, or the
murderer, because I give heed unto the dove, through whom it is said to me, "This
is He which baptizeth."
19. But, my brethren, it is madness to say that--I will not say Judas--but
that any man was better than he of whom it was said, that "Among those that
are born of women, there hath not arisen a greater than John the Baptist."(2) No
servant then is preferred to him; but the baptism of the Lord, even when given
through an evil servant, is preferred to the baptism even of a servant who was
a friend. Listen to the sort of persons whom the Apostle Paul mentions, false
brethren, preaching the word of God through envy, and what he says of them: "And
I therein do rejoice, yea, and will rejoice."(3) They proclaimed Christ,
through envy indeed, but still they proclaimed Christ. Consider not the why, but the
whom: through envy is Christ preached to thee. Behold Christ, avoid envy. Do
not imitate the evil preacher, but imitate the Good One who is preached to thee.
Christ then was preached by some out of envy. And what is envy? A shocking
evil. By this evil was the devil cast down; this malignant pest it was which cast
him down; and certain preachers of Christ were possessed by it, whom,
nevertheless, the apostle permitted to preach. Wherefore? Because they preached Christ
But he who envies, hates; and he who hates, what is said concerning him? Listen
to the Apostle John: "He who hateth his brother is a murderer."(4) Behold,
after John baptism was given, after a murderer baptism was not given; because John
gave his own baptism, the murderer gave the baptism of Christ. That sacrament
is so sacred that not even the ministration of a murderer pollutes it.
20. I do not reject John, but rather I believe John. In what do I believe
John? In that which he learned through the dove? What did he learn through the
dove? "This is He which baptizeth with the Holy Ghost." Now therefore,
brethren, hold this fast and impress it upon your hearts; for if I would more fully
explain to-day, Wherefore through the dove? time fails. For I have, I think, to
some extent made plain to you, holy brethren, that a matter which had to be
learned was instilled into John by means of the dove, a matter with regard to Christ
which John did not know, although he already knew Christ; but why it behoved
this matter to be pointed out by means of the dove, I would say, were it
possible to say it briefly: but because it would take long to say, and I am unwilling
to burden you, since I have been helped by your prayers to perform my promise;
with the renewed help of your pious attention and good wishes, it will likewise
become clear to you, wherefore John with regard to that matter which he
learned regarding the Lord, namely, that it is "He which baptizeth with the Holy
Ghost," and that to none of His servants had he transferred the power of
baptizing--why this it became him not to learn except through the dove.
TRACTATE VI.
CHAPTER I. 32, 33.
1. I CONFESS to you, holy brethren, I was afraid the cold would have made
you cold in assembling yourselves together; but since you prove by this, your
crowded assembly, that you are fervent in spirit, I doubt not that you have
also prayed for me, that I may pay you what I owe. For I promised you in the name
of Christ that, as the shortness of the time prevented us from expounding it
before, I would to-day discuss why God was pleased to manifest the Holy Ghost in
the form of a dove. That this may be explained, this day has dawned on us; and
I perceive that from eagerness to hear, and pious devotion, you have come
together in greater number than usual. May God, by our mouth, fulfill your
expectation. For your coming together is of your love; but love of what? If of us, even
that is well; for we desire to be loved by you, but not in ourselves. Because
we love you in Christ, do you love us in Christ in return, and let our love
mutually sigh towards God; for the note of the dove is a sighing or moaning.
2. Now if the dove's note is a moaning, as we all know it to be, and doves
moan in love, hear what the apostle says, and wonder not that the Holy Ghost
willed to be manifested in the form of a dove: "For what we should pray for as
we ought," says he, "we know not; but the Spirit Himself intercedes for us with
groanings which cannot be uttered."(1) What then, my brethren? shall we say
this, that the Spirit groans where He has perfect and eternal blessedness with the
Father and the Son? For the Holy Spirit is God, even as the Son of God is God,
and the Father God. I have said "God" thrice, but not three Gods; for indeed
it is God thrice rather than three Gods; because the Father, and the Son, and
the Holy Ghost are one God: this you know full well. It is not then in Himself
with Himself in that Trinity, in that blessedness, in that His eternal substance,
that the Holy Spirit groans; but in us He groans because He makes us to groan.
Nor is it a little matter that the Holy Spirit teaches us to groan, for He
gives us to know that we are sojourners in a foreign land, and He teaches us to
sigh after our native country; and through that very longing do we groan. He with
whom it is well in this world, or rather he who thinks it is well with him,
who exults in the joy of carnal things, in the abundance of things temporal, in
an empty felicity, has the cry of the raven; for the raven's cry is full of
clamor, not of groaning. But he who knows that he is in the pressure of this mortal
life, a pilgrim "absent from the Lord,"(2) that he does not yet possess that
perpetual blessedness which is promised to us, but that he has it in hope, and
will have it in reality when the Lord shall come openly in glory who came before
in humility concealed; he, I say, who knows this doth groan. And so long as it
is for this he groans, he does well to groan; it was the Spirit that taught
him to groan, he learnt it from the dove. Many indeed groan by reason of earthly
misery. They are shattered, it may be, by losses, or weighed down by bodily
ailment, or shut up in prisons, or bound with chains, or tossed about on the waves
of the sea, or hedged in by the ensnaring devices of their enemies. Therefore
do they groan, but not with the moaning of the dove, not with love of God, not
in the Spirit. Accordingly, when such are delivered from these same
afflictions, they exult with loud voices, whereby it is made manifest that they are
ravens, not doves. It was with good reason that a raven was sent forth from the ark,
and returned not again; a dove was sent forth, and it returned. These two birds
Noah sent forth.(1) He had there the raven, and also the dove. That ark
contained both kinds; and if the ark was a figure of the Church, you see indeed that
in the present deluge of the world, the Church must of necessity contain both
kinds, as well the raven as the dove. Who are the ravens? They who seek their
own. Who are the doves? They who seek the things that are Christ's.(2)
3. Therefore, when He sent the Holy Spirit He manifested Him visibly in
two ways--by a dove and by fire: by a dove upon the Lord when He was baptized, by
fire upon the disciples when they were gathered together. For when the Lord
had ascended into heaven after His resurrection, having spent forty days with His
disciples, and the day of Pentecost being fully come, He sent unto them the
Holy Spirit as He had promised. Accordingly the Spirit coming at that time filled
the place, and there was first a sound from heaven as of a rushing mighty
wind, as we read in the Acts of the Apostles, and "there appeared unto them," it
says, "cloven tongues as of fire, and it sat upon each of them; and they began to
speak with tongues, as the Spirit gave them utterance."(3) Here we have seen a
dove descending upon the Lord; there, cloven tongues upon the assembled
disciples: in the former, simplicity is shown; in the latter, fervency. Now there are
who are said to be simple, who are only indolent; they are called simple, but
they are only slow. Not such was Stephen, full of the Holy Ghost: he was
simple, because he injured no one; he was fervent, because he reproved the ungodly.
For he held not his peace before the Jews. His are those burning words: "Ye
stiff-necked and uncircumcised of heart and ears, ye do always resist the Holy
Spirit." Mighty impetuosity; but it is the dove without gall raging. For that you
know that he was fierce without gall, see how, upon hearing these words, they
who were the ravens immediately took up stones and rushed together upon this
dove. They begin to stone Stephen; and he who a little before stormed and glowed
with ardor of spirit,--who had, as it were, made an onset on his enemies, and
like one full of violence had attacked them in such fiery and burning words as you
have heard, "Ye stiff-necked and uncircumcised in heart and ears," that any
one who heard those words might fancy that Stephen, if he were allowed, would
have them consumed at once, --but when the stones thrown from their hands reached
him, with fixed knee he saith, "Lord, lay not this sin to their charge."(4) He
held fast to the unity of the dove. For his Master, upon whom the dove
descended, had done the same thing before him; who, while hanging on the cross, said,
"Father, forgive them, for they know not what they do."(5) Wherefore by the dove
it is shown that they who are sanctified by the Spirit should be without
guile; and that their simplicity should not continue cold is shown us by the fire.
Nor let it trouble you that the tongues were divided; for tongues are diverse,
therefore the appearance was that of cloven tongues. "Cloven tongues," it saith,
"as of fire, and it sat upon each of them." There is a diversity of tongues,
but the diversity of tongues does not imply schisms. Be not afraid of separation
in the cloven tongues; in the dove recognize unity.
4. Hence in this manner it behoved the Holy Spirit to be manifested when
coming upon the Lord, that every one might understand that if he has the Holy
Spirit he ought to be simple as the dove, to have true peace with his brethren,
that peace which the kisses of doves signify. Ravens have their kisses too; but
in the case of the ravens it is a false peace, in that of the dove a true
peace. Not every one, therefore, who says, "Peace be with you," is to be listened to
as if he were a dove. How then are the kisses of ravens distinguished from
those of doves? Ravens kiss, but they tear; the nature of doves is innocent of
tearing. Where consequently there is tearing, there is not true peace in the
kisses. They have true peace who have not torn the Church. Ravens feed upon carrion,
it is not so with the dove; it lives on the fruits of the earth, its food is
innocent. This, brethren, is really worthy of admiration in the dove. Sparrows
are very small birds, but yet they kill flies at least. The dove does nothing of
this sort, for it does not feed on what is dead. They who have torn the Church
feed on the dead. God is mighty; let us pray that they who are devoured by
them, and perceive it not, may come to life again. Many acknowledge that they do
come to life again, for at their coming we daily express joy with them in the
name of Christ. Be ye simple, but only in such wise that ye be fervent, and let
your fervor be in your tongues. Hold not your peace, speak with glowing tongues,
set those that are cold on fire.
5. For why, my brethren? Who does not see what they do not? And no wonder;
for they who are unwilling to return from that are just like the raven that
was sent forth from the ark. For who does not see what they see not? They are
unthankful even to the Holy Spirit Himself. See, the dove descended upon the Lord,
upon the Lord when baptized: and thereupon was manifested that holy and real
Trinity, which to us is one God. For the Lord went up out of the water, as we
read in the Gospel: "And, lo, the heavens were opened unto Him, and He saw the
Spirit descending like a dove, and it abode upon Him: and immediately a voice
followed, Thou art my beloved Son, in whom I am well pleased."(1) The Trinity most
manifestly appears: the Father in the voice, the Son in the man, the Spirit in
the dove. In this Trinity let us see, as we do see, whereunto the apostles
were sent forth, and what it is wonderful those men do not see. Not indeed that
they really do not see, but that they really shut their eyes to that which
strikes them in the very face: that whereunto the disciples were sent forth in the
name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost, by Him of whom it is
said, "This is He that baptizeth:" it was said, in fact, to His ministers, by
Him who has retained this authority to Himself.
6. Now this it was in Him that John saw, and came to know which he did not
know. Not that he did not know Him to be the Son of God, or that he did not
know Him to be the Lord, or not know Him to be the Christ; or that he did not
know this too, that it was He who should baptize with water and with the Holy
Ghost. This he did know; but that he should do this so as to retain the authority
to Himself and transfer it to none of His ministers, this is what he learnt in
the dove. For by this authority, which Christ has retained to Himself alone, and
conferred upon none of His ministers, though He has deigned to baptize by His
ministers; by this authority, I say, stands the unity of the Church, which is
figured in the dove, concerning which it is said, "My dove is one, the only one
of her mother."(2) For if, as I have already said, my brethren, the authority
were transferred by the Lord to His minister, there would be as many baptisms as
ministers, and the unity of baptism would no longer exist.
7. Mark, brethren; before our Lord Jesus Christ came to His baptism (for
it was after the baptism that the dove descended, whereby John recognized
something that was peculiar to Him, since he was told, "Upon whom thou shalt see the
Spirit descending like a dove, and remaining on Him, the same is He that
baptizeth with the Holy Ghost"), John knew that He it was that baptizeth with the
Holy Ghost; but that it should be with this peculiarity, that the authority should
not pass from Him to another, notwithstanding He confers it, this is what he
learnt there. And whence do we prove that John did already know that the Lord
was to baptize with the Holy Ghost; so that what he must be understood to have
learned by the dove is, that the Lord was to baptize with the Holy Ghost in such
wise that the authority should not pass from Him to any other man? Whence do we
prove this? The dove descended after the Lord was baptized; but before the
Lord came to be baptized by John in the Jordan, we have said that John knew Him,
on the evidence of those words, in which he says, "Comest Thou to me to be
baptized? I have need to be baptized of Thee." Well, he did know Him to be the Lord,
knew Him to be the Son of God; how do we prove that he knew already that the
same was He who should baptize with the Holy Ghost? Before He came to the river,
whilst many people were running together to John to be baptized, he says to
them, "I indeed baptize you with water; but He that cometh after me is greater
than I, the latchet of whose shoes I am not worthy to loose; the same shall
baptize you with the Holy Ghost, and with fire."(3) Already he knew this also. What
then did he learn from the dove, that he may not afterwards be found a liar
(which God forbid we should think), if it be not this, that there was to be a
certain peculiarity in Christ, such that, although many ministers, be they
righteous or unrighteous, should baptize, the virtue of baptism would be attributed to
Him alone on whom the dove descended, and of whom it was said, "This is He
that baptizeth with the Holy Ghost"? Peter may baptize, but this is He that
baptizeth; Paul may baptize, yet this is He that baptizeth; Judas may baptize, still
this is He that baptizeth.
8. For if the sanctity of baptism be according to the diversity of merits
in them that administer it, then as merits are diverse there will be diverse
baptisms; and the recipient will imagine that what he receives is so much the
better, the better he appears to be from whom he received it. The saints
themselves--understand brethren, they that belong to the dove, that have their part in
that city of Jerusalem, the good themselves in the Church, of whom the apostle
says, "The Lord knoweth them that are His"(1)--are endued with different graces,
and do not all possess like merits. Some are more holy than others, some are
better than others. Therefore if one receive baptism from him, for example, who
is a righteous saint, another from another who is of inferior merit with God,
of inferior degree, of inferior continence, of inferior life, how
notwithstanding is that which they receive one, equal and like, if it be not because, "This
is He that baptizeth"? Just, then, as when the good and the better administer
baptism, one man does not receive a good thing, another a better; but,
notwithstanding that the ministers were one good the other better, they receive what is
one and equal, not a better in the one case and a worse in the other; so, too,
when a bad man administers baptism, through the ignorance or forbearance of the
Church (for bad men either are not known as such, or are borne with; the chaff
is tolerated until the floor be fully purged at the last), that which is given
is one, not unlike because the ministers are unlike, but like and equal because
"This is He that baptizeth."
9. Therefore, beloved, let us see what those men desire not to see; not
what they may not see, but what they grieve to see, as though it were shut
against them. Whither were the disciples sent to baptize as ministers, in the name of
the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost? Whither were they sent?
"Go," said He, "baptize the nations." You have heard, brethren, how that
inheritance comes, "Ask of me, and I will give Thee the nations for Thine inheritance,
and the utmost bounds of the earth for Thy possessions."(2) You have heard how
that "from Sion went forth the law, and the word of the Lord from Jerusalem."(3)
For it was there the disciples were told, "Go, baptize the nations in the name
of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost."(4) We became attentive
when we heard, "Go, baptize the nations." In whose name? "In the name of the
Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost." This is one God; for it says not
in the "names" of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost, but "in
the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost." Where thou
hearest one name, there is one God; just as it was said of Abraham's seed, and the
Apostle Paul expounds it, "In thy seed shall all nations be blessed; he said not,
In seeds, as in many, but as in one, and in thy seed which is Christ."(5)
Wherefore, just as the apostle wished to show thee that, because in that place it
is not said "in seeds," Christ is one; so here too, when it is said, "in the
name," not in the names, even as these, "in seed," not in seeds, is it proved that
the Father, and the Son. and the Holy Ghost are one God.
10. But lo, say the disciples to the Lord, we are told in what name we are
to baptize; Thou hast made us ministers, and hast said to us, "Go, baptize in
the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost." Whither shall
we go? Whither? Have you not heard? To Mine inheritance. You ask, Whither shall
we go? To that which I bought with my blood. Whither then? To the nations,
saith He. I fancied that He said, Go, baptize the Africans in the name of the
Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost. Thanks be to God, the Lord has solved
the question the dove has taught us. Thanks be to God, it was to the nations
the apostles were sent; if to the nations, then to all tongues. The Holy Spirit
signified this, being divided in the tongues, united in the dove. Here the
tongues are divided, there the dove unites them. The tongues of the nations agreed,
perhaps that of Africa alone disagreed. What can be more evident, my brethren?
In the dove the unity, in the tongues the community of the nations. For once
the tongues became discordant through pride, and then of one became many
tongues. For after the flood certain proud men, as if endeavoring to fortify
themselves against God, as if aught were high for God, or aught could give security to
pride, raised a tower, apparently that they might not be destroyed by a flood,
should there come one thereafter. For they had heard and considered that all
iniquity was swept away by a flood; to abstain from iniquity they would not; they
sought the height of a tower as a defense against a flood; they built a lofty
tower. "God saw their pride, and frustrated their purpose by causing that they
should not understand one another's speech, and thus tongues became diverse
through pride." If pride caused diversities of tongues, Christ's humility has
united these diversities in one. The Church is now bringing together what that tower
had sundered. Of one tongue there were made many; marvel not: this was the
doing of pride. Of many tongues there is made one; marvel not: this was the doing
of charity. For although the sounds of tongues are various, in the heart one
God is invoked, one peace preserved. How then should the Holy Spirit have been
manifested when signifying a unity, if not by the dove, so that it might be said
to the Church brought into a state of peace, "My dove is one "? How ought
humility to have been represented but by an innocent, sorrowing bird; not by a
proud, exulting bird like the raven?
11. But perhaps they will say: Well, as it is a dove, and the dove is one,
baptism there cannot be apart from the one dove. Therefore if the dove is with
thee, or if thou be thyself a dove, do thou give me, when I come to thee, that
which I have not. You know that this is what they say; but you will presently
see that it is not of the voice of the dove, but of the clamor of the raven.
For attend a little, beloved, and fear their devices; nay, beware of them, and
listen to the words of gainsayers only to reject them, not to swallow them and
take them into your bowels. Do therein what the Lord did when they offered Him
the bitter draught, "He tasted, and spat it out; " [1] so also you hear and cast
away. What indeed say they? Let us see. Lo, Church, it is to thee it is said,
"My dove is one, the only one of her mother" to thee certainly is it said. Stop,
do not question me; prove first whether to me it was said; if it was said to
me, I would hear it at once. "To thee," saith he, "it was said." I answer, in
the voice of the Catholic Church, "To me." And this answer, brethren, sounding
forth from my mouth alone, has sounded, as I believe, also from your hearts, and
we all affirmed together, yea, to the Catholic Church was it said, "One is my
dove, the only one of her mother." Apart from this dove, says he further, there
is no baptism: I was baptized apart from this dove, consequently have not
baptism; if I have not baptism, why dost thou not give it me when I come to thee?
12. I also will put questions; let us meanwhile lay aside the inquiry as
to whom this was said, "My dove is one, the only one of her mother; "--as yet we
are inquiring;--it was said either to me or to thee; let us postpone the
question as to whom it was said. This is what I ask, if the dove is simple,
innocent, without gall, peaceful in its kisses, not fierce with its talons, I ask
whether the covetous, the rapacious, the crafty, the sottish, the infamous, belong
to the members of this dove? are they members of this dove? Far be the thought,
says he. And who would really say this, brethren? To speak of nothing else, if
I mention the rapacious alone, members of the hawk they may be, not members of
the dove. Kites seize and plunder, so do hawks, so do ravens; doves do not
plunder nor tear, consequently they who snatch and rob are not members of the dove.
Was there not even one rapacious person among you? Why abides the baptism,
which in this case the hawk, not the dove, has given? Why do you not among
yourselves baptize after robbers, after adulterers, after drunkards? why not baptize
after the avaricious among yourselves ? Are these all members of the dove? You
so dishonor your dove that you make those that have the nature of the vulture
her members. What, then, brethren, what say we? There are the bad and the good in
the Catholic Church, but with them the bad only. But perhaps I say this with a
hostile feeling: let this too be afterwards examined. They do say, certainly,
that among them are the good and the bad; for, should they assert that they
have only the good, let their own credit it, and I subscribe. With us, let them
say, there are none but holy, righteous, chaste, sober men; no adulterers, no
usurers, no deceivers, no false swearers, no wine-bibbers;--let them say this, for
I heed not their tongues I touch their hearts. But since they are well known
to us, and to you, and to their own, just as you are known both to yourselves in
the Catholic Church and to them, neither let us find fault with them, nor let
them flatter themselves. We confess that in the Church there are good and bad,
yet as the grain and the chaff. Sometimes he who is baptized by the grain is
chaff, and he who is baptized by the chaff is grain. Otherwise, if his baptism
who is baptized by the grain stands good, and his who is baptized by the chaff
not, then it is not true, "This is He that baptizeth." But if it is true "This is
He that baptizeth," then what is given by the chaff stands good, and he
baptizeth in like manner as the dove. For the bad man (who administers baptism) is
not the dove, nor belongs to the members of the dove, nor can he possibly be
affirmed to be so, either with us in the Catholic Church or with them, if they
assert that their Church is the dove. What then are we to understand, brethren?
Since it is evident, and known to all, and they must admit, though it be against
their will, that when with them bad men give baptism, it is not given after
those bad men; and with us, too, when the bad give baptism, t is not given after
them. The dove does not baptize after the raven; why then would the raven baptize
after the dove?
13. Consider, beloved, why also was there a something pointed out by means
of the dove, as that the dove--namely, the Holy Spirit in the shape of a
dove--came to the Lord on being baptized, and rested upon Him, whilst by the coming
of the dove John learned this, that there dwelt in the Lord a power peculiarly
His own to baptize? Because it was by this power peculiar to Himself, as I have
said, the peace of the Church was made secure. And yet it may be that one may
have baptism apart from the dove; but that baptism apart from the dove should
do him good, is impossible. Consider, beloved, and understand what I say, for by
this deception they mislead such of our brethren as are dull and cold. Let us
be more simple and more fervent See, say they, have I received, or have I not?
I answer, Thou hast received. Well, if I have received, there is nothing which
thou canst give me; I am safe, even on thine own evidence. For I affirm that I
have received, and thou, too, dost confess that I have received: I am safe by
the confession of both: what then dost thou promise me? Why wouldst thou make me
a Catholic, when thou wouldst not give me anything further, seeing thou
confessest that I have already received that which thou affirmest thyself to possess?
But when I say, Come to me, I say that thou dost not possess, who yet
confessest that I do. Why dost thou say, Come to me?
14. The dove teaches us. From the head of the Lord she answers, and says,
Thou hast baptism, but the charity with which I groan thou hast not. How is
this says he, I have baptism, and have not charity? Have I the sacraments, and not
charity? Do not shout: show me how can he who divides unity have charity? I,
saith he, have baptism. Thou hast; but that baptism, without charity, profits
thee nothing; because without charity thou art nothing. The baptism itself, even
in him who is nothing, is not nothing. Baptism, indeed, is something, aye,
something great, for His sake, of whom it is said, "This is He that baptizeth." But
lest thou shouldst fancy that that which is great can profit thee aught, if
thou be not in unity, it was after He was baptized that the dove descended, as if
intimating, If thou hast baptism, be in the dove, lest what thou hast profit
thee not. Come, then, to the dove, we say; not that thou mayest begin to have
what thou hadst not before, but that what thou didst have may begin to profit
thee. For thou didst have baptism to destruction without; if thou shalt have it
within, it begins to profit thee to salvation.
15. For not only was baptism not profitable to thee, and not also hurtful
Even holy things may be hurtful. In the good, indeed, holy things are to
salvation; in the evil, to judgment. For we certainly know, brethren, what we
receive, and what we receive is at any rate holy, and no one says that it is not: and
what says the apostle? "But he that eateth and drinketh unworthily, eateth and
drinketh judgment to himself." [1] He does not say that the thing itself is
bad, but that the evil man, by receiving it amis , receives the good thing which
he does receive to judgment. Was that morsel which the Lord delivered to Judas
evil? God forbid. The physician would not give poison; it was health the
physician gave; but by unworthily receiving it, he who received it not being at peace,
received it unto destruction. So likewise also good heed to what thou hast; by
that very thing which thou hast thou wilt be condemned. Wherefore? Because
thou hast what belongs to the dove apart from the dove. If thou hast what is the
dove's in the dove, thou art safe. Suppose thyself a soldier: if thou hast thy
general's mark within the lines, thou servest in safety; but if thou hast it out
of bounds, not only that mark will not be of advantage to thee for service,
but thou wilt even be punished as a deserter. Come, then, come, and do not say, I
have already, I have enough. Come; the dove is calling thee, calling thee by
her sighing. My brethren, to you I say, call by groaning, not by quarreling;
call by praying, by invitation, by fasting; let them by your charity understand
that you pity them. I doubt not, my brethren, that if they see your sorrow they
will be astonished, and will come to life again. Come, then, come; be not
afraid; be afraid if thou do not come; nay, be not afraid, rather bewail thyself.
Come, thou wilt rejoice if thou wilt come; thou wilt indeed groan in the
tribulations of thy pilgrimage, but thou wilt rejoice in hope. Come where the dove is,
to whom it was said, "My dove is one, the only one of her mother." Seest thou
not the one dove upon the head of Christ? seest thou not the tongues throughout
the whole world? It is the same Spirit by the dove and by the tongues: if by the
dove the same Spirit, and by the tongues the same Spirit, then was the Holy
Spirit given to the whole world, from which Spirit thou hast cut thyself off,
that thou mightest clamor with the raven, not that thou mightest sigh with the
dove. Come, then.
16. But thou art anxious, it may be, and sayest, I was baptized without; I
fear lest therefore I am guilty, in that I was baptized without. Already thou
beginnest to know what thou hast to bewail. Thou sayest truly that thou art
guilty, not because of thy receiving, but because of thy receiving without. Keep
then what thou hast received; amend thy receiving it without. Thou hast received
what is the doves apart from the dove. Here are two things said to thee: Thou
hast received, and, Apart from the dove thou hast received. In that thou hast
received, I approve; that thou hast received without, I disappprove. Keep then
what thou hast received, it is not changed, but recognized: it is the mark of my
king, I will not profane it. I will correct the deserter, not change the mark.
17. Boast not of thy baptism because I call it a red baptism. Behold, I
say that it is so the whole Catholic Church says that it is so the dove regards
it, and acknowledges it, and groans because thou hast it without; she sees
therein what she may acknowledge, sees also what she may correct. It is a real
baptism, come. Thou boastest that it is real, and yet wilt thou not come? What then
of the wicked, who do not belong to the dove? Saith the dove to thee, Even the
wicked, among whom I groan, who belong not to my members, and it must needs be
that I groan among them, have not they that which thou boastest of having? Have
not many drunkards baptism? Have not many covetous? Have not many idolaters,
and, what is worse, who are such as stealth? Do not the pagans resort, now
Christians secretly seek out diviners and consult astrologers. And yet these have
baptism; but the dove groans among ravens. Why then dost thou boast in the
having it? This that thou hast, the wicked man also has. Have thou humility,
charity, peace; have thou the good thing which as yet thou hast not, so that the good
thing which thou hast may profit thee.
18. For what thou hast, even Simon Magus had: the Acts of the Apostles are
witness, that canonical book which has to be read in the Church every year.
You know that every year, in the season following the Lord's Passion, that book
is read, wherein it is written, how the apostle was converted, and from a
persecutor became a preacher; [1] also, how on the day of Pentecost the Holy Spirit
was sent in cloven tongues as of fire. [2] There we read that in Samaria many
believed through the preaching of Philip: and he is understood to have been
either one of the apostles or one of the deacons; for we read there that seven
deacons were ordained, among whom is the name of Philip. Well, then, through the
preaching of Philip the Samaritans believed; Samaria began to abound in believers.
This Simon Magus was there. By his magical arts he had so befooled the people,
that they fancied him to be the power of God. Impressed, however, by the signs
which were done by Philip, he also believed; but in what manner he believed,
the events that followed afterwards proved. And Simon also was baptized. The
apostles, who were at Jerusalem, heard this. Peter and John were sent to those in
Samaria; they found many baptized; and as none of them had as yet received the
Holy Ghosts--in like manner as He at that time descended, so as that they on
whom the Holy Spirit came should speak with tongues, for a manifest token that
the nations would believe,--they laid their hands on them, praying for them, and
they received the Holy Ghost. This Simon--who was not a dove but a raven in the
Church, because he sought his own things, not the things which are Jesus
Christ's; whence he loved the power which was in the Christians more than the
righteousness--Simon, I say, saw that the Holy Spirit was given by the laying on of
the hands of the apostles (not that it was given by them, but given in answer to
their prayers), and he said to them, " How much money will ye that I give you,
so that by the laying on of my hands also, the Holy Ghost may be given? And
Peter said unto him, Thy money perish with thee, because thou thoughtest that the
gift of God was to be bought with money." To whom said he, "Thy money perish
with thee"? Undoubtedly to one that was baptized. Baptism he had already; but he
did not cleave to the bowels of the dove. Understand that he did not; attend
to the very words of the Apostle Peter, for he goes on, "Thou hast no part nor
lot in this faith: for I see that thou art in the gall of bitterness." [3] The
dove has no gall; Simon had, and for that reason he was separated from the
bowels of the dove. What did baptism profit him ? Do not therefore boast of thy
baptism, as if that were of itself enough for thy salvation. Be not angry, put away
thy gall, come to the dove. Here that will profit thee, which without not only
did not profit thee, but even was prejudicial to thee.
19. Neither say, I will not come, because I was baptized without. So,
begin to have charity, begin to have fruit, let there be fruit found in thee, and
the dove will send thee within. We find this in Scripture. The ark was made of
incorruptible wood. The incorruptible timbers are the saints, the faithful that
belong to Christ. For as in the temple the living stones of which it is built
are said to be faithful men, so likewise the incorruptible timbers are they who
persevere in the faith. In that same ark, then, the timbers were incorruptible.
Now the ark is the Church, it is there the dove baptizeth; for the ark was
borne on the water, the incorruptible timbers timbers were baptized without, such
as all the trees that were in the world. Nevertheless the water was the same,
not another sort; all had come from heaven, or from abysses of the fountains.
It was the same water in which the incorruptible timbers which were in the ark
were baptized, and in which the timbers that were without were baptized. The
dove was sent forth, and at first found no rest for its feet; it returned to the
ark, for all was full of water, and it preferred to return rather than be
rebaptized. But the raven was sent out before the water was dried up. Rebaptized, it
desired not to return, and died in those waters. May God avert from us that
raven's death. For why did not the raven return, unless because it was taken off
by the waters? rest for its feet, whilst the water was crying to it on every
side, "Come, come, dip thyself here;" just as these heretics cry, "Come, come,
here thou hast it;" the dove, finding no rest for its feet, returned to the ark.
And ark sends you out to speak to them; and what did the dove afterwards?
Because there were timbers without that were baptized, it brought back to the ark an
olive branch. That branch had both leaves and fruit. Let there not be in thee
words only, nor leaves only; let there be fruit, and thou returnest to the ark,
not of thyself, the dove calls thee back. Groan ye without, that ye may call
them back within.
20. Moreover, as to this fruit of the olive. if the matter be examined,
you will find what it was. The fruit of the olive signifies charity. How do we
prove this? Just as oil is kept down by no liquid, but bursting through all,
bounds up and overtops them; so likewise charity cannot be pressed to the bottom,
but must of necessity show itself at the top. Therefore the apostle says of it,
"Yet show I unto you a more excellent [1] way." Since we have said of oil that
it overtops other liquids, in case it should not be of charity, the apostle
said," I show you a more excellent way," let us hear what follows. "Though I speak
with the tongues of men and of angels, and have not charity, I am become as
sounding brass, or a tinkling cymbal." Go now, Donatus, and cry, "I am eloquent;"
go now, and cry, "I am learned." How far eloquent? How far learned? Hast thou
spoken with the tongues of angels? Yet though thou wert to speak with the
tongues of angels, not having charity, I should hear only sounding brass and
tinkling cymbals. I want solidity; let me find fruit among the leaves; let there be
not words merely, let them have the olive, let them return to the ark.
21. But I have the sacrament, thou wilt say. Thou sayest the truth; the
sacrament is divine; thou hast baptism, and that I confess. But what says the
apostle? "If I should know all mysteries, [2] and have prophecy and all faith, so
that I could remove mountains;" in case thou shouldest say this, "I believe;
enough for me." But what says James? "The devils believe and tremble." [3] Faith
is mighty, but without charity it profits nothing. The devils confessed Christ.
Accordingly it was from believing, but not from loving, they said, "What have
we to do with Thee?" [4] They had faith, but not charity; hence they were
devils. Boast not of faith; so far thou art on a level with the devils. Say not to
Christ, What have I to do with Thee? For Christ's unity speaks to thee. have
fruit, and thou returnest to the ark. The reason why we seek you is, because you
are bad; for if you were not bad, we should have found you, and would not be
seeking you. He who is good is already found; he who is bad is still sought after.
Consequently, we are seeking you; return ye to the ark. "But I have baptism
already." " Though I should know all mysteries, [5] and have prophecy and all
faith, so as to remove mountains, but have not charity, I am nothing." Let me see
fruit there; let me see the olive there, and thou art called back to the ark.
23. But what sayest thou? "Behold, we suffer many evils." Would that ye
suffered these for Christ, not for your own honor! Hear what follows: They,
indeed, boast sometimes, because they do many alms, give to the poor; because they
suffer afflictions: but it is for Donatus, not for Christ. Consider how thou
sufferest; for if thou sufferest for Donatus, it is for a proud man: thou art not
in the dove if thou art suffering for Donatus. Donatus was not the friend of
the Bridegroom; for had he been, he would have sought the glory of the
Bridegroom, not his own. See the friend of the Bridegroom saying, "This is He that
baptizeth." He, for whom thou art suffering, was not the friend of the Bridegroom.
Thou hast not the wedding garment; and if thou art come to the feast, thou wilt
be put out of doors; nay, thou hast been cast out of doors already, and for that
reason thou art wretched: return at length, and do not boast. Hear what the
apostle says: "Though I should distribute all my goods to the poor, and give my
body to be burnt, but have not charity." See what thou dost not have. "Though,"
he saith, "I should give my body to be burnt;" and that, too, for the name of
Christ; but since there are many who do this boastfully, not with charity,
therefore, "Though I should give my body to be burnt, and have not charity, it
profiteth me nothing." [1] It was by charity those martyrs, who suffered in time of
persecution, did this; but these men do it of their vanity and pride; for in
the absence of a persecutor, they throw themselves headlong into destruction.
Come, then, that thou mayest have charity. "But we have our martyrs." What
martyrs? They are not doves; hence they attempted to fly, and fell over the rock.
24. You see then, my brethren, that all things cry against them, all the
divine pages, all prophecy, the whole gospel, all the apostolic letters, every
sigh of the dove, and yet they awake not, they do not yet rouse from their
sleep. But if we are the dove, let us groan, let us persevere, let us hope; God's
compassion will be with you, that the fire of the Holy Spirit may glow in your
simplicity; and they will come. There must be no despairing; pray, preach, love;
the Lord is able to the utmost. Already they begin to be sensible of their
shame; many have become sensible of it, and blushed; Christ will aid, that the rest
also may become sensible of it. However, my brethren, at least let the chaff
alone remain there; let all the grain be gathered together; let whatever has
borne fruit among them return to the ark by the dove.
25. Failing everywhere else, what do they now allege against us, not
finding what to say? They have taken away our houses, they have taken away our
estates. They bring forward wills. "See, Gaius Seius made a grant of an estate to
the church over which Faustinus presided." Of what church was Faustinus bishop?
What is the church? To the church over which Faustinus presided, said he. But
Faustinus presided not over a church, but over a sect. The dove, however, is the
Church. Why cry out? We have not devoured houses; let the dove have them. Let
inquiry be made who the dove is, and let her have them. For you know, my
brethren, that those houses of theirs are not Augustin's; and if you know it not, and
imagine that I delight in the possession of them, God knows, yea, knows my
judgment respecting those estates, and even what I suffer in that matter; He knows
my groaning, since He has deigned to impart to me somewhat of the dove.
Behold, there are those estates; by what right dost thou assert thy claim to them? By
divine right, or by human? Let them answer: Divine right we have in the
Scriptures, human right in the laws of kings. By what right does every man possess
what he possesses? Is it not by human right? For by divine right, "The earth is
the Lord's, and the fullness thereof." [2] The poor and the rich God made of one
clay; the same earth supports alike the poor add the rich. By human right,
however, one says, This estate is mine, this house is mine, this servant is mine.
By human right, therefore, is by right of the emperors. Why so? Because God has
distributed to mankind these very human rights through the emperors and kings
of this world. Do you wish us to read the laws of the emperors, and to act by
the estates according to these laws? If you will have your possession by human
right, let us recite the laws of the emperors; let us see whether they would
have the heretics possess anything. But what is the emperor to me? thou sayest. It
is by right from him that thou possessest the land. Or take away rights
created by emperors, and then who will dare say, That estate is mine, or that slave
is mine, or this house is mine? If, however, in order to their possessing these
thing, men have received rights derived from kings, will ye that we read the
laws, that you may be glad in having even a single garden, and impute it to
nothing but the clemency of the dove that you are permitted to remain in the
communion of the Catholic Church, usurp peace, may not dare to possess anything in the
name of the Church.
26. But what have we to do with the emperor? treating of human right. And
yet the apostle would have us obey kings, would have us honor kings, and said,
"Honor the king." [3] Do not say, What have I to do with the king? as in that
case, what have you to do with the possession? It is by the rights derived from
kings that possessions are enjoyed. Thou hast said, What have I to do with the
king? Say not then that the possessions are thine; which men enjoy their
possessions, thou hast referred them. But it is with divine right I have to do,
saith he. Well, let us read the Gospel; let us see how far extends the Catholic
Church of Christ, upon whom the dove came, which taught, "This is He that
baptizeth." In what way, then, can he possess by divine right, who says, "I baptize;"
whilst the dove says, "This is He that baptizeth;" whilst the Scripture says,
"My dove is one, the only one of her mother"? Why have you torn the dove?--nay,
rather, have torn your own bowels? for while you are yourselves torn to pieces,
the dove continues entire. Therefore, my brethren, if, driven from every point,
they have nothing to say, I will tell them what to do; let them come to the
Catholic Church, and together with us, they will have not only the earth, but Him
also who made heaven and earth.
TRACTATE VII.
CHAPTER I. 34--51.
1. WE rejoice at your numbers, for you have come together with readiness
and in greater numbers than we could have hoped. This it is that delights and
consoles us in all the labors and dangers of this life, your love towards God,
and pious zeal, and assured hope, and fervor of spirit. You heard when the psalm
was read, "that the needy and poor man cries to God in this world." [1] For it
is the voice, as you have often heard, and ought to remember, not of one man,
and yet of one man; not of one, because the faithful are many--many grins
groaning amid the chaff diffused throughout the whole world--but of one, because all
are members of Christ, rejoicing of the world is vanity. With great expectation
is it hoped foB and it cannot, when it comes, be held fast. For this day which
is a day of rejoicing in this city to the lost, to-morrow will, of course,
cease to be; nor will they themselves be the same tomorrow that they are to-day.
And all things every soul follows what it loves. "All flesh is grass, and all
the goodliness thereof as the flower of the field: the grass withereth, the
flower fadeth; but the word of the Lord abideth forever." [2] Behold what thou must
love if thou dost desire to abide for ever. But thou hadst this to reply: How
can I apprehend the word of God ? "The Word was made flesh, and dwelt among us."
[3]
2. Wherefore, beloved, let it belong to our neediness and poverty to
grieve for those who seem to themselves to abound. For their joy is as that of
madmen. But as a madman rejoices for the most part in his madness, and laughs, and
grieves over him who is in his senses, so let us, beloved, if we have received
the medicine coming from heaven, because we all were madmen, as if made whole,
because those things which we did love we do not love,--let us, I say, groan
unto God for those who are yet in madness, for He is able to themselves, they see
their own confusion. But until this take place, let our pursuits be different,
let the recreations of our souls be different; our grief avails more than their
joy. As far as regards the number of the brethren, it is difficult to conceive
that any one of the men should have been carried away by that celebration; but
as regards the number of the sisters, it grieves us, and this is a greater
cause for grief, that they do not rather repair to the Church, whom if not fear,
modesty at all events ought to deter from the public scene. May He see to this
who sees it; and may His mercy be present to heal all. Let us who have come
together feed upon the feast of God, and let our joy be His word. For He has
invited us to His gospel, and He is our food, than whom nothing is sweeter, if only a
man have a healthy palate in his heart.
3. But I imagine, beloved brethren, that you remember that this Gospel is
read in order in suitable portions; and I think that it has not escaped you
what has lately been treated of, specially the recent matters concerning John and
the dove. Concerning John, namely, what new thing he learned concerning the
Lord by means of the dove, although he had already known the Lord. And this was
discovered by the inspiration of the Spirit of God, that John indeed already knew
the Lord, but that the Lord Himself was to baptize, that the power of
baptizing He would not transfer from Himself to any one, this he learned by means of
the dove, because it was said to him, "On whom thou shalt see the Spirit
descending as a dove, and abiding upon Him, this is He which baptizeth with the Holy
Ghost." [1] What is "This is He" ? Not another, although by means of another. But
why by means of a dove ? Many things were said, and I am not able, nor is
there need that I should go over all;--principally, however, to denote peace,
because also the trees which were baptized outside, because the dove found in them
fruit, it brought to the ark, as you remember the dove sent out by Noah from the
ark, which floated on the flood and was washed by baptism, was not submerged.
When, then, it was sent forth, it brought an olive branch; but it had not
leaves alone, it had also fruit. [2] This, then, we ought to wish for our brethren
who are baptized outside, that they may have fruit; the dove will not permit
them to remain outside, but bring them back to the ark. For the whole of fruit is
charity, without which a man is nothing, whatever else he have. And this, which
is most fully said by the apostle, we have mentioned and recounted. For he
says, "Though I speak with the tongues of men and of angels, and have not charity,
I am become as sounding brass or a tinkling cymbal; and though I should have
all knowledge, and know all mysteries, and have all prophecy, and should have
all faith" (but in what sense did he say all faith ?), "so that I could remove
mountains, and have not charity, I am nothing. And though I should distribute all
my goods to the poor, and though I should give my body to be burned, and have
not charity, it profiteth me nothing." [3] But in no manner are they able to
say that they have charity who divide unity. These things were said: let us see
what follows.
4. John bare record because he saw. What record did he bear ? "That this
is the Son of God." It behoved, then, that He should baptize who is God's only
Son, not His adopted son. Adopted sons are the ministers of the only Son: the
only Son has power; the adopted, the ministry. In the case that a minister
baptizes who does not belong to the number of sons, because he lives evilly and acts
evilly, what is our consolation ? "This is He which baptizeth."
5. "The next day, John stood, and two of his disciples; and looking upon
Jesus as He walked, he saith, Behold the Lamb of God !" Assuredly, in a special
sense, the Lamb; for the disciples were also called lambs: "Behold, I send you
as lambs in the midst of wolves."[4] They were also called light: "Ye are the
light of the world; "[5] but in another sense is He called so, concerning whom
it was said, "That was the true light, which lighteth every man that cometh into
the world." [6] In like manner was He called the dove in a special sense,
alone without stain, without sin; not one whose sins have been washed away, but One
who never had stain. For what ? Because John said concerning the Lord, "Behold
the Lamb of God," was not John himself a lamb ? Was he not a holy man ? Was he
not the friend of the Bridegroom? Wherefore, with a special meaning, said John
of Him, "This is the Lamb of God;" because solely by the blood of this Lamb
alone could men be redeemed.
6. My brethren, if we acknowledge our price, that it is the blood of the
Lamb, who are they who this day celebrate the festival of the blood of I know
not what woman? and how ungrateful are they! The gold was snatched, they say,
from the ear of a woman, and the blood ran, and the gold was placed on a pair of
scales or on a balance, and the advantage was much on the side of the blood. If
the blood of a woman was sufficiently weighty to outweigh the gold, what power
to outweigh the world has the blood of the Lamb by whom the world was made?
And, indeed, that spirit, I know not who, was pacified by the blood that he should
depress the weight. Impure spirits knew that Jesus Christ would come, they had
heard of His coming from the angels, they had heard of it from the prophets,
and they expected it. For if they were not expecting it, why did they exclaim,
"What have we to do with Thee? art Thou come before the time to destroy us? We
know who Thou art; the Holy One of God." [1] They expected that He would come,
but they were ignorant of the time. But what have you heard in the psalm
regarding Jerusalem? "For Thy servants have taken pleasure in her stones, and will
pity the dust thereof. Thou shall arise," says he, "and have mercy upon Zion: for
the time is come that Thou wilt have mercy upon her." [2] When the time came
for God to have mercy, the Lamb came. What sort of a Lamb whom wolves fear? What
sort of a Lamb is it who, when slain, slew a lion? For the devil is called a
lion, going about and roaring, seeking whom he may devour. [3] By the blood of
the Lamb the lion was vanquished. Behold the spectacles of Christians. And what
is more: they with the eyes of the flesh behold vanity, we with the eyes of the
heart behold truth. Do not think, brethren, that our Lord God has dismissed us
without spectacles; for if there are no spectacles, why have ye come together
to-day? Behold, what we have said you saw, and you exclaimed; you would not have
exclaimed if you had not seen. And this is a great thing to see in the whole
world, the lion vanquished by the blood of the Lamb: members of Christ delivered
from the teeth of the lions, and joined to the body of Christ. Therefore some
spirit or other contrived the counterfeit that His image should be bought for
blood, because he knew that the human race was at some time to be redeemed by
the precious blood. For evil spirits counterfeit certain shadows of honor to
themselves, that they may deceive those who follow Christ. So much so, my brethren,
that those who seduce by means of amulets, by incantations, by the devices of
the enemy, mingle the name of Christ with their incantations: because they are
not now able to seduce Christians, so as to give them poison they add some
honey, that by means of the sweet the bitter may be concealed, and be drunk to
ruin. So much so, that I know that the priest of that Pilleatus was sometimes in
the habit of saying, Pilleatus himself also is a Christian. Why so, brethren,
unless that they were not able otherwise to seduce Christians?
7. Do not, then, seek Christ elsewhere than where Christ wished Himself to
be preached to you; and as He wished Himself to be preached to you, in that
fashion hold Him fast, in that manner write Him on your heart. It is a wall
against all the assaults, and against all the snares of the enemy. Do not fear, he
does not tempt unless he has been permitted; it is certain that he does nothing
unless permitted or sent. He is sent as an evil angel by a power holding him in
control: he is permitted when he asks anything; and this, brethren, does not
take place unless that the just may be tried, the unjust punished. Why, then,
dost thou fear? Walk in the Lord thy God; be thou assured, what He does not wish
thee to suffer thou dost not suffer; what He permits thee to suffer is the
scourge of one correcting, not the punishment of one condemning. We are being
educated for an eternal inheritance, and do we spurn to be scourged ? My brethren,
if a boy were to refuse the punishment of cuffs or stripes from his father,
would he not be called proud, incorrigible, ungrateful towards paternal discipline?
And for what does an earthly father educate his son? That he may not lose the
temporal things which he has acquired for him, which he has collected for him,
which he does not wish him to lose, which he who leaves them cannot retain
eternally. He does not teach a son with whom he is to possess, but one who is to
possess after him My brethren, if a father teaches a son who is to succeed him,
and teaches him also that he will have to pass through all these things, in same
way as he who is admonishing him is destined to pass through them, how do you
wish that He educate us, our Father to whom we are not to succeed, but to whom
we are to approach, and with whom we are to abide eternally in an inheritance
which does not decay nor die, and which no storms can desolate? He is Himself
both the inheritance and the Father. Shall we possess Him, and ought we not to
undergo training? Let us hear the instruction of the Father. When our head aches,
let us not have recourse to the superstitious intercessor, to the diviners and
remedies of vanity. My brethren, shall I not mourn over you? Daily do I find
these things; and what shall I do? Not yet have I persuaded Christians that
their hope ought to be placed in God. Behold, if one dies to whom one of these
remedies has been given (and how many have died with remedies, and how many have
lived without them!), with what confidence does the spirit go forth to God? He
has lost the sign of Christ, and has received the sign of the devil. Perhaps he
may say that he has not lost the sign of Christ. Thou canst have, then, the sign
of Christ along with the sign of the devil. Christ does not desire community
of ownership, but He desires to possess alone what He has purchased. He has
bought at so great a price that He may possess alone: thou makest Him the partner
of that devil to whom thou didst sell thyself by thy sin. " Woe to the
double-hearted," [4] to those who in their hearts give part to God and part to the
devil. God, being angry that the devil has part there, departs, and the devil will
possess the whole. Not in vain, therefore, says the apostle, "Neither give place
to the devil." [1] Let us know the Lamb, then, brethren; let us know our price.
8. "John stood, and two of his disciples." Behold two of John's disciples:
since John, the friend of the Bridegroom, was such as he was, he sought not
his own glory, but bore witness to the truth. Did he wish that his disciples
should remain with him and not follow the Lord? Rather he himself showed his
disciples whom they should follow. For they accounted of him as though he were the
lamb; and he said, "Why do you give heed to me? I am not the lamb; behold the
Lamb of God," of whom also he had already said, Behold the Lamb of God. And what
benefit does the Lamb of God confer upon us ? "Behold," he says, "who taketh
away the sin of the world." The two who were with John followed Him when they
heard this.
9. Let us see what follows: "Behold the Lamb of God." This John said, and
the two disciples heard him speak, and followed Jesus. Then Jesus turned and
saw them following, and saith unto them, "What seek ye?" And they said, "Rabbi
(that is to say, being interpreted, Master), where dwellest Thou?" They did not
follow Him in such manner as that they should cleave to Him; for it is plain
when they cleave unto Him, for He called them from the ship. For one of the two
was Andrew, as you have just heard, and Andrew was the brother of Peter; and we
know from the Gospel that the Lord called Peter and Andrew from the ship,
saying, "Come ye after me, and I will make you fishers of men." [2] And from that
time they clave unto Him, so as not to go away. On the present occasion these two
followed Him, not as those who were not again to leave Him, but to see where He
dwelt, and to fulfill the Scripture: "Let thy foot wear out the threshold of
His doors; arise to come to Him continually, and be instructed in His precepts."
[3] He showed them where He dwelt: they came and remained with Him. What a
blessed day they spent, what a blessed night! Who can make known to us those
things which they heard from the Lord ? Let us also build in our heart, and make a
house into which He may come and teach us, and have converse with us.
10. "What seek ye?" They said unto Him, "Rabbi (which is to say, being
interpreted, Master), where dwellest Thou? He says to them, Come and see. And they
came and saw where He dwelt, and abode with Him that day: and it was about the
tenth hour." Do we think that it did in no wise pertain to the evangelist to
tell us what hour it was? Is it possible that he wished us to give heed to
nothing in that, to inquire after nothing? It was the tenth hour. That number
signifies the law, because the law was given in ten commandments. But the time had
come for the law to be fulfilled by love, because it could not be fulfilled by
the Jews by fear. Hence the Lord says, "I am not come to destroy the law, but to
fulfill." [4] Suitably, then, at the tenth hour did these two follow Him, at
the testimony of the friend of the Bridegroom, and that He at the tenth hour
heard" Rabbi (which is interpreted, Master)." If at the tenth hour the Lord heard
Rabbi, and the tenth number pertains to the law, the master of the law is no
other than the giver of the law. Let no one say that one gave the law, and that
another teaches the law: for the same teaches it who gave it; He is the Master
of His own law, and teaches it. And mercy is in His I tongue therefore
mercifully teacheth He the law, as it is said regarding wisdom, The law and mercy doth
she carry in her tongue." [5] Do not fear that thou art not able to fulfill the
law, flee to mercy. If thou canst not fulfill the law, make use of that
covenant, make use of the bond, make use of the prayers which the heavenly One,
skilled in the law, has ordained and composed for you.
11. For those who have a cause, and wish to supplicate the emperor, seek
for some one skilled in the law, and trained in the schools, to compose their
petition for them; lest perchance, if they ask in an unbecoming manner, they not
only do not obtain what they seek, but get punishment instead of a benefit.
When, therefore, the apostles sought to petition, and could not find how to
approach the Emperor God, they said unto Christ, "Lord, teach us to pray;" that is to
say, "O thou who art our skilled One in the law, our Assessor, yea, the
Concessor of God, compose for us prayers." And the Lord taught them from the book of
the celestial law, taught them how to pray; and in that which He taught, He
laid down a certain condition: "Forgive us our debts, as we also forgive our
debtors." [6] If thou seekest not according to the law, thou becomest guilty. Dost
thou not tremble before the Emperor, having become guilty? Offer the sacrifice
of humility, offer the sacrifice of mercy; pray, saying, Forgive me, for I also
forgive. But if thou sayest, do. For what wilt thou do? whither wilt thou go if
thou hast lied in thy prayers? Not as it is said in the forum, thou shalt lose
the benefit of the rescript; but thou shall not obtain a rescript. For it is
the law of the forum that he who shall have lied in his petition shall derive no
benefit from that which he has obtained. But this among men, because a man can
be deceived: the emperor might have been deceived, when thou didst address to
him thy petition; for thou saidest what thou wouldest, and he to whom thou
didst speak knew not whether it was true or false; he sent thee away to thy
adversary to be confuted if possible, so that if before the judge thou shouldest be
convicted of falsehood (because he was not able not to grant the rescript, not
knowing whether thou hadst lied), thou shouldest lose the benefit of the
rescript, in the place to which thou hadst taken it. But God, who knows whether thou
liest or speakest the truth, does not cause thee to lose in the judgment the
benefit, but does not permit thee to obtain it, because thou hast dared to lie to
the Truth.
12. What, then, wilt thou do? Tell me. To fulfill the law in every part,
so as to offend in nothing, is difficult: the condition of guilt is therefore
certain; wilt thou refuse to use the remedy? Behold, my brethren, what a remedy
the Lord hath provided for the sicknesses of the soul! What then? When thy head
aches, we praise thee if thou placest the gospel at thy head, instead of having
recourse to an amulet. For so far has human weakness proceeded, and so
lamentable is the estate of those who have recourse to amulets, that we rejoice when
we see a man who is upon his bed, and tossed about with fevers and pains,
placing his hope on nothing else than that the gospel lies at his head; not because
it is done for this purpose, but because the gospel is preferred to amulets. If,
then, it is placed at the head to allay the pain of the head, is it not placed
at the heart to heal it from sin? Let it be done then. Let what be done? Let
it be placed at the heart, let the heart be healed. It is well,--well that thou
shouldest have no further care regarding the safety of the body, than to ask it
from God. If He knows that it will do thee good, He will give it thee; if He
give it not to thee, it would not have profited thee to have it. How many are
sick in bed, and for that reason are innocent ! for if they were to recover, they
would go forth to commit acts of wickedness. To how many is health an injury !
The robber who goes forth to the narrow path to slay a man, how much better
for him would it have been to have been sick! And he who rises by night to dig
through his neighbor's wall, how much better for him to be tossed by fever! If he
were ill, he would have been comparatively innocent; being well, he is guilty
of wickedness. It is known, then, to God what is expedient for us: let us make
this only our endeavor, that our hearts be whole from sins; and when it happens
that we are scourged in the body, let us pray to Him for relief. The Apostle
Paul besought Him that He would take away the thorn in his flesh, and He would
not. Was he disturbed? Was he filled with sadness, and did he speak of himself
as deserted? Rather did he say that he was not deserted, because that was not
taken away which he desired to be taken away, to the end that infirmity might be
cured. For this he found in the voice of the Physician, "My grace is sufficient
for thee; for my strength is made perfect in weakness." [1] Whence knowest
thou, then, that God does not wish to heal thee? As yet it is expedient for thee
to be scourged. Whence knowest thou how diseased that is which the physician
cuts, using his knife on the diseased parts? Does he not know the measure, what he
is to do, and how far he is to do it? Does the shrieking of him he cuts
restrain the hands of the physician cutting according to his art? The one cries, the
other cuts. Is he cruel who does not listen to the man crying out, or is he not
rather merciful in following the wound, that he may heal the sick man? These
things have I said, my brethren, in order that no one seek any other aid than
that of God, when we happen to be under the reproof of God. See that ye perish
not; see that ye do not depart from the Lamb, and be devoured by the lion.
13. We have declared, then, why it was at the tenth hour. Let us see what
follows: "One of the two which heard John speak, and followed Him, was Andrew.
Simon Peter's brother. He findeth his own brother Simon, and saith unto him, We
have found the Messias, which is, being interpreted, the Christ." Messias, in
Hebrew; Christ. in Greek; in Latin, Anointed. <greek>crtsma</greek> is
anointing in Greek; Christ, therefore, is the Anointed. He is peculiarly anointed,
pre-eminently anointed; wherewith all Christians are anointed, He is pre-eminently
anointed. Hear how He speaks in the psalm: "Wherefore God, Thy God, hath
anointed Thee with the oil of gladness above Thy fellows." For all the holy ones are
His fellows, but He in a peculiar sense is the Holy of Holies, peculiarly
anointed, peculiarly Christ.
14. "And he brought him to Jesus; and when Jesus beheld him, He said, Thou
art Simon the son of Joannes: thou shall be called Cephas, which is, by
interpretation, Peter." It is not a great thing that the Lord said whose son Peter
was. What is great to the Lord ? He knew all the names of His own saints, whom
He predestinated before the foundation of the world; and dost thou wonder that
He said to one man, Thou art the son of this man, and thou shall be called this
or that? Is it a great matter that He changed his name, and converted it from
Simon to Peter? Peter is from petra, a rock, but the petra [rock]; is the
Church; in the name of Peter, then, was the Church figured. And who is safe, unless
he who builds upon the rock? And what saith the Lord Himself? "He that heareth
these my words, and doeth them, I will liken him unto a wise man building his
house upon a rock" (he doth not yield to temptation). "The rain descended, the
floods came, the winds blew, and beat upon that house; and it fell not: for it
was founded upon a rock. But he that heareth my words, and doeth them not" (now
let each one of us fear and beware), " I will liken him to a foolish man, who
built his house upon the sand: the rain descended, the floods came, the winds
blew, and beat upon that house; and it fell: and great was the fall of it." [1]
What profit is it to enter the Church for him who builds upon the sand? For, by
hearing and not doing, he builds indeed, but on the sand. For if he hears
nothing, he builds nothing; but if he hears, he builds. But we ask, Where? For if he
hears and does, he builds upon the rock; if he hears and does not, he builds
upon the sand. There are two kinds of builders, those building upon the rock, and
those building upon the sand. What, then, are those who do not hear? Are they
safe? Does He say that they are safe because they do not build? They are naked
beneath the rains, before the winds, before the floods; when these come, they
carry away: those persons before they overthrow the houses. It is then the only
security, both to build, and to build upon the rock. If thou wilt hear and do
not, thou buildest; but thou buildest a ruin: and when temptation comes it
overthrows the house, and carries away thee with the ruin. But if thou dost not
hear, thou art naked; thou thyself art dragged away by those temptations. Hear,
then, and do; it is the only remedy. How many, perchance, on this day, by hearing
and not doing, are hurried away on the stream of this festival! For, through
hearing and not doing, the flood cometh, this annual festival; the torrent is
filled, it will pass away and become dry, but woe to him whom it shall carry away!
Know this, then, beloved, that unless a man hears and does, he builds not upon
the rock, and he does not belong to that great name which the Lord so
commended. For He has called thy attention. For if Simon had been called Peter
before, thou wouldest not have so clearly seen the mystery of the rock, and thou
wouldest have thought that he was called so by chance, not by the providence of
God; therefore God willed that he should be called first something else, that by
the very change of name the reality of the sacrament might be commended to our
notice.
15. "And the day following He would go forth into Galilee, and finding
Philip, He saith unto him, Follow me. Now he was of the city of Andrew and Peter.
And Philip findeth Nathanael" (Philip who had been already called by the Lord);
"and he said units him, We have found Him, of whom Moses in the law, and the
prophets, did write, Jesus, the son of Joseph." He was called the son of that
man to whom His mother had been espoused. For that He was conceived and born
while she was still a virgin, all Christians know well from the Gospel. This Philip
said to Nathanael, and he added the place, "from Nazareth." And Nathanael said
unto him, "From Nazareth something good can come." What is the meaning,
brethren? Not as some read, for it is likewise wont to be read, "Can any good thing
come out of Nazareth?" For the words of Philip follow, who says, "Come and see."
But the words of Philip can suitably follow both readings, whether you read it
thus, as confirming, "From Nazareth something good can come," to which Philip
replies, "Come and see;" or whether as doubting, and making the whole a
question, "Can any good thing come out of Nazareth? Come and see." Since then, whether
read in this manner or in that, the words following are not incompatible, it
is for us to inquire which of the two interpretations we shall adopt.
16. What sort of a man this Nathanael was, we prove by the words which
follow. Hear what sort of a man he was; the Lord Himself bears testimony. Great is
the Lord, known by the testimony of John; blessed Nathanael, known by the
testimony of the truth. Because the Lord, although He had not been commended by the
testimony of John, Himself to Himself bore testimony, because the truth is
sufficient for its own testimony. But because men were not able to receive the
truth, they sought the truth by means of a lamp, and therefore John was sent to
show them the Lord. Hear the Lord bearing testimony to Nathanael: " Nathanael
said unto him, Can any good thing come out of Nazareth? Philip says to him, Come
and see. And Jesus sees Nathanael coming to Him, and says concerning him, Behold
an Israelite indeed, in whom is no guile." Great testimony! Not of Andrew, nor
of Peter, nor of Philip was that said which was said of Nathanael, "Behold an
Israelite indeed, in whom is no guile."
17. What do we then, brethren? Ought this man to be the first among the
apostles? Not only is Nathanael not found as first among the apostles, but he is
neither the middle nor the last among the twelve, although the Son of God bore
such testimony to him, saying, "Behold an Israelite indeed, in whom is no
guile." Is the reason asked for? In so far as the Lord intimates, we find a probable
reason. For we ought to understand that Nathanael was learned and skilled in
the law and for that reason was the Lord unwilling to place him among His
disciples, because He chose unlearned persons, that He might by them confound the
world. Listen to the apostle speaking these things: "For ye see," saith he, "your
calling, brethren, how that not many wise men after the flesh, not many mighty,
not many noble, are called: but God hath chosen the weak things of the world
to confound the things which are mighty; and base things of the world, and
things that are despised, hath God chosen, yea, and things which are not, as though
they were things that are, to bring to nought things that are. [1] If a learned
man had been chosen, perhaps he would have said that he was chosen for the
reason that his learning made him worthy of choice. Our Lord Jesus Christ, wishing
to break the necks of the proud, did not seek the orator by means of the
fisherman, but by the fisherman He gained the emperor. Great was Cyprian as an
orator, but before him was Peter the fisherman, by means of whom not only the
orator, but also the emperor, should believe. No noble was chosen in the first
place, no learned man, because God chose the weak things of the world that He might
confound the strong. This man, then, was great and without guile, and for this
reason only was not chosen, lest the Lord should seem to any to have chosen the
learned. And from this same learning in the law, it came that when he heard
"from Nazareth,"-- for he had searched the Scripture, and knew that s the Saviour
was to be expected thence, what the other scribes and Pharisees had difficulty
in knowing,--this man, then, very learned in the law, when he heard Philip
saying, "We have found Him, of whom Moses in the law, and the prophets, did write,
Jesus of Nazareth, the son of Joseph; "--this man, who knew the Scriptures
excellently well, when he heard the name "Nazareth," was filled with hope, and
said, "From Nazareth something good can come."
18. Let us now see the rest concerning this man. "Behold an Israelite
indeed, in whom is no guile." What is" in whom is no guile?" Perhaps he had no sin?
Perhaps he was not sick? Perhaps he did not need a physician ? God forbid. No
one is born here in such fashion as not to need that Physician. What, then, is
the meaning of the words, "in whom is no guile"? Let us search a little more
intently--it will appear presently--in the name of the Lord. The Lord says dolus
[guile]; and every one who understands Latin knows that dolus is when one thing
is done and another feigned. Give heed, beloved. Dolus (guile) is not dolor
(pain). I say this because many brethren, not well skilled in Latin, so speak as
to say, Dolus torments him, using it for dolor. Dolus is fraud, it is deceit.
When a man conceals one thing in his heart, and speaks another, it is guile, and
he has, as it were, two hearts; he has, as it were, one recess of his heart
where he sees the truth, and another recess where he conceives falsehood. And
that you may know that this is guile, it is said in the Psalms, "Lips of guile."
What are "lips of guile"? It follows, "In a heart and in a heart have they
spoken evil." [2] What is "in a heart and in a heart," unless in a double heart? If,
then, guile was not in Nathanael, the Physician judged him to be curable, not
whole. A whole man is one thing, a curable another, an incurable a third: he
who is sick, but not hopelessly sick, is called curable; he who is sick
hopelessly, incurable; but he who is already whole does not need a physician. The
Physician, then, who had come to cure, saw that he was curable, because there was no
guile in him. How was guile not in him, if he is a sinner? He confesses that he
is a sinner. For if he is a sinner, and says that he is a just man, there is
guile in his mouth. Therefore in Nathanael He praised the confession of sin, He
did not judge that he was not a sinner.
19. Wherefore, when the Pharisees, who seemed righteous to themselves,
blamed the Lord, because, as physician, he mixed with the sick, and when they
said, "Behold with whom he eats, with publicans and sinners," the Physician replied
to the madmen, "They that are whole need not a physician, but they that are
sick: I came not to call the righteous, but sinners." [1] That is to say, because
you call yourselves righteous when you are sinners, because you judge
yourselves to be whole when you are languishing, you put away from you the medicine,
and do not hold fast health. Hence that Pharisee who had asked the Lord to
dinner, was whole in his own eyes; but that sick woman rushed into the house to which
she had not been invited, and, made impudent by the desire of health,
approached not the head of the Lord, nor the hands, but the feet; washed them with
tears, wiped them with her hair, kissed them, anointed them with ointment,--made
peace, sinner as she was, with the footprints of the Lord. The Pharisee who sat
at meat there, as though whole himself, blamed the Physician, and said within
himself, "This man, if he were a prophet, would have known what woman touched his
feet." He suspected that He knew not, because He did not repulse her to
prevent His being touched with unclean hands; but He did know, He permitted Himself
to be touched, that the touch itself might heal. The Lord, seeing the heart of
the Pharisee, put forth a parable: "There was a certain creditor, which had two
debtors; the one owed five hundred denars, and the other fifty; and when they
had nothing to pay, he frankly forgave them both. Which of them loved him most?"
He answered, "I suppose, Lord, he to whom he forgave most." And turning to the
woman, He said unto Simon, "Seest thou this woman? I entered into thine house,
thou gavest me no water for my feet; but she hath washed my feet with tears,
and wiped them with the hairs of her head: thou gavest me no kiss; she hath not
ceased to kiss my feet: thou gavest me no oil; she hath anointed my feet with
ointment. Wherefore, I say unto thee, to her are forgiven many sins, for she
loved much; but to whom little is forgiven, the same loveth little."[2] That is to
say, thou art more sick, but thou thinkest thyself whole; thou thinkest that
little is forgiven thee when thou owest more. Well did she, because guile was
not in her, deserve medicine. What means, guile was not in her? She confessed her
sins. This He also praises in Nathanael, that guile was not in him; for many
Pharisees who abounded in sins said that they were righteous, and brought guile
with them, which made it impossible for them to be healed.
20. Jesus then saw this man in whom was no guile, and said, "Behold an
Israelite indeed, in whom is no guile." Nathanael saith unto Him, "Whence knowest
Thou me?" Jesus answered and said, "Before that Philip called thee, when thou
wast under the fig (that is, under the fig-tree), I saw thee." Nathanael
answered and said unto Him, "Rabbi, Thou art the Son of God; Thou art the King of
Israel." Some great thing Nathanael may have understood in the saying, "When thou
wast under the fig-tree, I saw thee, before that Philip called thee;" for his
words, "Thou art the Son of God, Thou art the King of Israel," were not
dissimilar to those of Peter so long afterwards, when the Lord said unto him, "Blessed
art thou, Simon Barjona, for flesh and blood hath not revealed it unto thee, but
my Father which is in heaven." And there He named the rock, and praised the
strength of the Church's support in this faith. Here already Nathanael says,
"Thou art the Son of God; Thou art the King of Israel." Wherefore? Because it was
said to him, "Before that Philip called thee, when thou wast under the fig-tree,
I saw thee."
21. We must inquire whether this fig-tree signifies anything. Listen, my
brethren. We find the fig-tree cursed because it had leaves only, and not fruit.
[3] In the beginning of the human race, when Adam and Eve had sinned, they
made themselves girdles of fig leaves.[4] Fig leaves then signify sins. Nathanael
then was under the fig-tree, as it were under the shadow of death. The Lord saw
him, he concerning whom it was said, "They that sat under the shadow of death,
unto them hath light arisen." [5] What then was said to Nathanael? Thou sayest
to me, O Nathanael, "Whence knowest thou me ?" Even now thou speakest to me,
because Philip called thee. He whom an apostle had already called, He perceived
to belong to His Church. O thou Church, O thou Israel, in whom is no guile! if
thou art the people, Israel, in whom is no guile, thou hast even now known
Christ by His apostles, as Nathanael knew Christ by Philip. But His compassion
beheld thee before thou knewest Him, when thou wert lying under sin. For did we
first seek Christ, and not He seek us? Did we come sick to the Physician, and not
the PhySician to the sick? Was not that sheep lost, and did not the shepherd,
leaving the ninety and nine in the wilderness, seek and find it, and joyfully
carry it back on his shoulders? Was not that piece of money lost, and the woman
lighted the lamp, and searched in the whole house until she found it? And when
she had found it, "Rejoice with me," she said to her neighbors, "for I have
found the piece of money which I lost." [1] In like manner were we lost as the
sheep, lost as the piece of money; and our Shepherd found the sheep, but sought the
sheep; the woman found the piece of money, but sought the piece of money. What
is the woman? The flesh of Christ. What is the lamp? "I have prepared a lamp
for my Christ." [2] Therefore were we sought that we might be found; having been
found, we speak. Let us not be proud, for before we were found we were lost,
if we had not been sought. Let them then not say to us whom we love, and whom we
desire to gain to the peace of the Catholic Church, "What do you wish with us?
Why seek you us if we are sinners?" We seek you for this reason that you
perish not: we seek you because we were sought; we wish to find you because we have
been found.
52. When, then, Nathanael had said "Whence knowest Thou me?" the Lord said
to him, "Before that Philip called thee, when thou wast under the fig-tree, I
saw thee." O thou Israel without guile, whosoever thou art O people living by
faith, before I called thee by my apostles, when thou wast under the shadow of
death, and thou sawest not me, I saw thee. The Lord then says to him, "Because I
said unto thee, I saw thee under the fig-tree, thou believest: thou shalt see
a greater thing than these." What is this, thou shalt see a greater thing than
these? And He saith unto him, "Verily, verily, I say unto you, ye shall see
heaven open, and angels ascending and descending upon the Son of man." Brethren,
this is something greater than "under the fig-tree I saw thee." For it is more
that the Lord justified us when called than that He saw us lying under the
shadow of death. For what profit would it have been to us if we had remained where
He saw us? Should we not be lying there? What is this greater thing? When have
we seen angels ascending and descending upon the Son of man?
23. Already on a former occasion I have spoken of these ascending and
descending angels; but lest you should have forgotten, I shall speak of the latter
briefly by way of recalling it to your recollection. I should use more words if
I were introducing, not recalling the subject. Jacob saw a ladder in a dream;
and on a ladder he saw angels ascending and descending: and he anointed the
stone which he had placed at his head. [3] You have heard that the Messias is
Christ; you have heard that Christ is the Anointed. For Jacob did not place the
stone, the anointed stone, that he might come and adore it: otherwise that would
have been idolatry, not a pointing out of Christ. What was done was a pointing
out of Christ, so far as it behoved such a pointing out to be made, and it was
Christ that was pointed out. A stone was anointed, but not for an idol. A stone
anointed; why a stone? "Behold, I lay in Zion a stone, elect, precious: and he
that believeth on Him shall not be confounded." [4] Why anointed? Because
Christus comes from chrisma. But what saw he then on the ladder ? Ascending and
descending angels. So it is the Church, brethren: the angels of God are good
preachers, preaching Christ; this is the meaning of, "they ascend and descend upon
the Son of man." How do they ascend, and how do they descend? In one case we have
an example; listen to the Apostle Paul. What we find in him, let us believe
regarding the other preachers of the truth. Behold Paul ascending: "I know a man
in Christ fourteen years ago was caught up into the third heaven (whether in
the body, or whether out of the body, I cannot tell: God knoweth), and that he
heard unspeakable words, which it is not lawful for a man to utter." [5] You have
heard him ascending, hear him descending: "I could not speak unto you as unto
spiritual, but as unto carnal; as babes in Christ I have fed you with milk, not
with meat." [6] Behold he descended who had ascended. Ask whether he ascended
to the third heaven. Ask whether he descended to give milk to babes. Hear that
he descended: "I became a babe in the midst of you, even as a nurse cherisheth
her children." [7] For we see both nurses and mothers descend to babes, and
although they be able to speak Latin, they shorten the words, shake their tongues
in a certain manner, in order to frame childish endearments from a methodical
language; because if they speak according to rule, the infant does not
understand nor profit. And if there be a father well skilled in speaking, and such an
orator that the forum resounds with his eloquence, and the judgment-seats shake,
if he have a little son, on his return home he puts aside the forensic
eloquence to which he had ascended, and in child's language descends to his little one.
Hear in one place the apostle himself ascending and descending in the same
sentence: "For whether," says he, "we be beside ourselves, it is to God; or
whether we be sober, it is for your cause. " [1] What is "we are beside ourselves"?
That we see those things which it is not lawful for a man to speak. What is
"we are sober for your cause? Have I judged myself to know anything among you,
save Jesus Christ and Him crucified?" If the Lord Himself ascended and
descended, it is evident that His preachers ascend by imitation. descend by preaching.
24. And if we have detained you somewhat longer than is our wont, the
design was that the dangerous hours might pass: we imagine that those people have
now brought their vanity to a close. But let us, brethren, having fed upon the
feasts of salvation, do what remains, that we may in a religious manner fill up
the Lord's day with spiritual joys, and compare the joys of verity with the
joys of vanity;' and if we are horrified, let us grieve; if we grieve, let us
pray; if we pray, may we be heard; if we are heard, we gain them also.