LECTURES OR TRACTATES ON THE GOSPEL ACCORDING TO ST. JOHN. TRACTATES VIII TO
XII.
TRACTATE VIII.
CHAPTER II 1-4.
1. The miracle indeed of our Lord Jesus Christ, whereby He made the water
into wine, is not marvellous to those who know that it was God's doing. For He
who made wine on that day at the marriage feast, in those six water-pots, which
He commanded to be filled with water, the self-same does this every year in
vines. For even as that which the servants put into the water-pots was turned
into wine by the doing of the Lord, so in like manner also is what the clouds pour
forth changed into wine by the doing of the same Lord. But we do not wonder at
the latter, because it happens every year: it has lost its marvellousness by
its constant recurrence. And yet it suggests a greater consideration than that
which was done in the water-pots. For who is there that considers the works of
God, whereby this whole world is governed and regulated, who is not amazed and
overwhelmed with miracles ? If he considers the vigorous power of a single grain
of any seed whatever, it is a mighty thing, it inspires him with awe. But
since men, intent on a different matter, have lost the consideration of the works
of God, by which they should daily praise Him as the Creator, God has, as it
were, reserved to Himself the doing of certain extraordinary actions, that, by
striking them with wonder, He might rouse men as from sleep to worship Him. A dead
man has risen again; men marvel: so many are born daily, and none marvels. If
we reflect more considerately, it is a matter of greater wonder for one to be
who was not before, than for one who was to come to life again. Yet the same
God, the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, doeth by His word all these things; and
it is He who created that governs also. The former miracles He did by His
Word, God with Himself; the latter miracles He did by the same Word incarnate, and
for us made man. As we wonder at the things which were done by the man Jesus,
so let us wonder at the things which where done by Jesus God. By Jesus God were
made heaven, and earth, and the sea, all the garniture of heaven, the
abounding riches of the earth, and the fruitfulness of the sea;--all these things
which lie within the reach of our eyes were made by Jesus God. And we look at these
things, and if His own spirit is in us they in such manner please us, that we
praise Him that contrived them; not in such manner that turning ourselves to
the works we turn away from the Maker, and, in a manner, turning our face to the
things made and our backs to Him that made them.
2. And these things indeed we see; they lie before our eyes. But what of
those we do not see, as angels, virtues, powers, dominions,and every inhabitant
of this fabric which is above the heavens, and beyond the reach of our eyes?
Yet angels, too, when necessary, often showed themselves to men. Has not God made
all these too by His Word, that is, by His only Son, our Lord Jesus Christ ?
What of the human soul itself, which is not seen, and yet by its works shown in
the flesh excites great admiration in those that duly reflect on them,--by whom
was it made, unless by God? And through whom was it made, unless through the
Son of God? Not to speak as yet of the soul of man: the soul of any brute
whatever, see bow it regulates the huge body, puts forth the senses, the eyes to see,
the ears to hear, the nostrils to smell, the taste to discern flavors--the
members, in short, to execute their respective functions! Is it the body, not the
soul, namely the inhabitant of the body, that doeth these things? The soul is
not apparent to the eyes, nevertheless it excites admiration by these its
actions. Direct now thy consideration to the soul of man, on which God has bestowed
understanding to know its Creator to discern and distinguish between good and
evil, that is, between right and wrong: see how many things it does through the
body! Observe this whole world arranged in the same human commonwealth, with
what administrations, with what orderly degrees of authority, with what conditions
of citizenship, with what laws, manners, arts ! The whole of this is brought
about by the soul, and yet this power of the soul is not visible. When withdrawn
from the body, the latter is a mere carcase: first, it in a manner preserves
it from rottenness. For all flesh is corruptible, and falls off into putridity
unless preserved by the soul as by a kind of seasoning. But the human soul has
this quality in common with the soul of the brute; those qualities rather are to
be admired which I have stated, such as belong to the mind and intellect,
wherein also it is renewed after the image of its Creator, after whose image man
was formed. [1] What will this power of the soul be when this body shall have put
on incorruption, and this mortal shall have put on immortality? [2] If such is
its power, acting through corruptible flesh, what shall be its power through a
spiritual body, after the resurrection of the dead? Yet this soul, as I have
said, of admirable nature and substance, is a thing invisible, intellectual;
this soul also was made by God Jesus, for He is the Word of God. " All things were
made by Him, and without Him was nothing made."
3. When we see, therefore, such deeds wrought by Jesus God, why should we
wonder at water being turned into wine by the man Jesus? For He was not made
man in such manner that He lost His being God. Man was added to Him, God not lost
to Him. This miracle was wrought by the same who made all those things Let us
not therefore wonder that God did it, but love Him because He did it in our
midst, and for the purpose of our restoration. For He gives us certain intimations
by the very circumstances of the case. I suppose that it was not without
cause He came to the marriage. The miracle apart, there lies something mysterious
and sacramental in the very fact. Let us knock, that He may open to us, and fill
us with the invisible wine: for we were water, and He made us wine, made us
wise; for He gave us the wisdom of His faith, whilst before we were foolish. And
it appertains, it may be, to this wisdom, together with the honor of God, and
with the praise of His majesty, and with the charity of His most powerful
mercy, to understand what was done in this miracle.
4. The Lord, on being invited, came to the marriage. What wonder if He
came to that house to a marriage, having come into this world to a marriage? For,
indeed, if He came not to a marriage, He has not here a bride. But what says
the apostle? "I have espoused you to one husband, to present you a chaste virgin
to Christ." Why does he fear lest the virginity of Christ's bride should be
corrupted by the subtilty of the devil? "I fear," saith he, "lest as the serpent
beguiled Eve by his subtilty, so also your minds should be corrupted from the
simplicity and chastity which is in Christ." [3] Thus has He here a bride whom He
has redeemed by His blood, and to whom He has given the Holy Spirit as a
pledge. He has freed her from the bondage of the devil: He died for her sins, and is
risen again for her justification. [4] Who will make such offerings to his
bride? Men may offer to a bride every sort of earthly ornament,--gold, silver,
precious stones, houses, slaves, estates, farms,--but will any give his own
blood? For if one should give his own blood to his bride, he would not live to take
her for his wife. But the Lord, dying without fear, gave His own blood for her,
whom rising again He was to have, whom He had already united to Himself in the
Virgin's womb. For the Word was the Bridegroom, and human flesh the bride; and
both one, the Son of God, the same also being Son of man. The womb of the
Virgin Mary, in which He became head of the Church, was His bridal chamber: thence
He came forth, as a bridegroom from his chamber, as the Scripture foretold,
"And rejoiced as a giant to run his way." From His chamber He came forth as a
bridegroom; and being invited, came to the marriage.
5. It is because of an indubitable mystery that He appears not to
acknowledge His mother. from whom as the Bridegroom He came forth, when He says to her,
"Woman, what have I to do with thee? mine hour is not yet come." What is this
? Did He come to the marriage for the purpose of teaching men to treat their
mothers with contempt ? Surely he to whose marriage He had come was taking a wife
with the view of having children, and surely he wished to be honored by those
children he would beget: had Jesus then come to the marriage in order to
dishonor His mother, when marriages are celebrated and wives married with the view of
having children, whom God commands to honor their parents? Beyond all doubt,
brethren, there is some mystery lurking here. It is really a matter of such
importance that some,--of whom the apostle, as we have mentioned before, has
forewarned us to be on our guard, saying, " I fear, lest, as the serpent beguiled Eve
by his subtilty, so also your minds should be corrupted from the simplicity
and chastity which is in Christ,"--taking away from the credibility of the
gospel, and asserting that Jesus was not born of the Virgin Mary, used to endeavor to
draw from this place an argument in support of their error, so far as to say,
How could she be His mother, to whom He said, "Woman, what have I to do with
thee?" Wherefore we must answer them, and show them why the Lord said this, test
in their insanity they appear to themselves to have discovered something
contrary to wholesome belief, whereby the chastity of the virgin bride may be
corrupted, that is, whereby the faith of the Church may be injured. For in very deed,
brethren, their faith is corrupted who prefer a lie to the truth. For these
men, who appear to honor Christ in such wise as to deny that He had flesh, do
nothing short of proclaiming Him a liar. Now they who build up a lie in men, what
do they but drive the truth out of them? They let in the devil, they drive
Christ out; they let in an adulterer, shut out the bridegroom, being evidently
paranymphs, or rather, the panderers of the serpent. For it is for this object they
speak, that the serpent may possess, and Christ be shut out. How doth the
serpent possess? When a lie possesses. When falsehood possesses, then the serpent
possesses; when truth possesses, then Christ possesses. For Himself has said, "I
am the truth;" [1] but of that other He said, "He stood not in the truth,
because the truth is not him." [2] And Christ is the truth in such wise that thou
shouldst receive the whole to be true in Him. The true Word, God equal with the
Father, true soul, true flesh, true man, true God, true nativity, true passion,
true death, true resurrection. If thou say that any of these is false,
rottenness enters, the worms of falsehood are bred of the poison of the serpent, and
nothing sound will remain.
6. What, then, is this, saith one, which the Lord saith, "Woman, what have
I to do with thee?" Perhaps the Lord shows us in the sequel why He said this:
"Mine hour," saith He, "is not yet come." For thus is how He saith, "Woman,
what have I to do with thee? mine hour is not yet come." And we must seek to know
why this was said. But first let us therefrom withstand the heretics. What says
the old serpent, of old the hissing instiller of poison? What saith he? That
Jesus had not a woman for His mother. Whence provest thou that? From this, saith
he, because Jesus said, "Woman, what have I to do with thee?" Who has related
this, that we should believe that Jesus said it? Who has related it? None other
than John the evangelist. But the same John the evangelist said, "And the
mother of Jesus was there." For this is how he has told us: "The next day. there
was a marriage in Cana of Galilee, and the mother of Jesus was there. And having
been invited to the marriage, Jesus had come thither with His disciples." We
have here two sayings uttered by the evangelist. "The mother of Jesus was there,"
said the evangelist; and it is the same evangelist that has told us what Jesus
said to His mother. And see, brethren, how he has told us that Jesus answered
His mother, having said first, "His mother said unto Him," in order that you
may keep the virginity of your heart secure against the tongue of the serpent.
Here we are told in the same Gospel, the record of the same evangelist, "The
mother of Jesus was there," and "His mother said unto Him." Who related this? John
the evangelist. And what said Jesus in answer to His mother? "Woman, what have
I to do with thee? Who relates this? The very same Evangelist John. O most
faithful and truthspeaking evangelist, thou tellest me that Jesus said, "Woman,
what have I to do with thee?" why hast thou added His mother, whom He does not
acknowledge? For thou hast said that "the mother of Jesus was there," and that
"His mother said unto Him;" why didst thou not rather say, Mary was there, and
Mary said unto Him. Thou tellest as these two facts, "His mother said unto Him,"
and "Jesus answered her, Woman, why have I to do with thee?" Why doest thou
this, if it be not because both are true ? Now, those men are willing to believe
the evangelist in the one case, when he tells us that Jesus said to His mother,
"Woman, what have I to do with thee?" and yet they will not believe him in the
other, when he says, "The mother of Jesus was there," and " His mother said unto
Him." But who is he that resisteth the serpent and holds fast the truth, whose
virginity of heart is not corrupted by the subtilty of the devil? He who
believes both to be true, namely, that the mother of Jesus was there, and that Jesus
made that answer to His mother. But if he does not as yet understand in what
manner Jesus said, "Woman, what have I to do with thee?" let him meanwhile
believe that He said it, and said it, moreover, to His mother. Let him first have
the piety to believe, and he will then have fruit in understanding.
7. I ask you, O faithful Christians, Was the mother of Jesus there? Answer
ye, She was. Whence know you? Answer, The Gospel says it. What answer made
Jesus to His mother? Answer ye, "Woman, what have I to do with thee? mine hour is
not yet come." And whence know you this? Answer, The Gospel says it. Let no man
corrupt this your faith, if you desire to preserve a chaste virginity for the
Bridegroom. But if it be asked of you, why He made this answer to His mother,
let him declare who understands; but he who does not as yet understand, let him
most firmly believe that Jesus made this answer, and made it moreover to His
mother. By this piety he will learn to understand also why Jesus answered thus,
if by praying he knock at the door of truth, and do not approach it with
wrangling. Only this much, while he fancies himself to know, or is ashamed because he
does not know, why Jesus answered thus, let him beware lest he be constrained
to believe either that the evangelist lied when he said, "The mother of Jesus
was there," or that Jesus Himself suffered for our sins by a counterfeit death
and for our justification showed counterfeit scars; and that He spoke falsely in
saying, "If ye continue in my word, ye are my disciples indeed; and ye shall
know the truth, and the truth shall make you free. [1] For if He had a false
mother, false flesh, false death, false wounds in His death, false scars in His,
resurrection, then it will not be the truth, but rather falsehood, that shall
make free those that believe on Him. Nay, on the contrary, let falsehood yield to
truth, and let all be confounded who would have themselves be accounted
truthspeaking, because they endeavor to prove Christ a deceiver, and will not have it
said to them, We do not believe you because you lie, when they affirm that
truth itself has lied. Nevertheless, if we ask them, Whence know you that Christ
said, "Woman, what have I to do with thee?" they answer that they believe the
Gospel. Then why do they not believe the Gospel when it says, "The mother of Jesus
was there," and, "His mother said unto Him"? Or if the Gospel lies here, how
are we to believe it there, that Jesus said this, "Woman, what have I to do with
thee?" Why do not those miserable men rather faithfully believe that the Lord
did so answer, not to a stranger, but to His mother; and also piously seek to
know why He did so answer? There is a great difference between him who says, I
would know why Christ made this answer to His mother, and him who says, I know
that it was not to His mother that Christ made this answer. It is one thing to
be willing to understand what is shut up, another thing to be unwilling to
believe what is open. He who says, I would know why Christ thus made answer to His
mother, wishes the Gospel, in which he believes, opened up to him; but he who
says, I know that it was not to His mother that Christ made this answer, accuses
of falsehood the very Gospel, wherein he believed that Christ did so answer.
8. Now then, if it seem good, brethren, those men being repulsed, and ever
wandering in their own blindness, unless in humility they be healed, let us
inquire why our Lord answered His mother in such a manner. He was in an
extraordinary manner begotten of the Father without a mother, born of a mother without a
father; without a mother He was God, without a father He was man; without a
mother before all time, without a father in the end of times. What He said was
said in answer to His mother, for "the mother of Jesus was there," and " His
mother said unto Him." All this the Gospel says. It is there we learn that "the
mother of Jesus was there," just where we learn that He said unto her, "Woman,
what have I to do with thee? mine hour is not yet come." Let us believe the whole;
and what we do not yet understand, let us search out. And first take care,
lest perhaps, as the ManichAEeans found occasion for their falsehood, because the
Lord said, "Woman, what have I to do with thee?" the astrologers in like manner
may find occasion for their deception, in that He said, " Mine hour is not yet
come." If it was in the sense of the astrologers He said this, we have
committed a sacrilege in burning their books. But if we have acted rightly, as was
done in the times of the apostles, [2] it was not according to their notion that
the Lord said, "Mine hour is not yet come." For, say those vain-talkers and
deceived seducers, thou seest that Christ was under fate, as He says, "Mine hour is
not yet come." To whom then must we make answer first--to the heretics or to
the astrologers? For both come of the serpent, and desire to corrupt the
Church's virginity of heart, which she holds in undefiled faith. Let us first reply to
those whom we proposed, to whom, indeed, we have already replied in great
measure. But lest they should think that we have not what to say of the words which
the Lord uttered in answer to His mother, we prepare you further against them;
for I suppose what has already been said is sufficient for their refutation.
9. Why, then, said the Son to the mother, "Woman, what have I to do with
thee? mine hour is not yet come?" Our Lord Jesus Christ was both God and man.
According as He was God, He had not a mother; according as He was man, He had.
She was the mother, then, of His flesh, of His humanity, of the weakness which
for our sakes He took upon Him. But the miracle which He was about to do, He was
about to do according to His divine nature, not according to His weakness;
according to that wherein He was God not according to that wherein He was born
weak. But the weakness of God is stronger than men. [1] His mother then demanded a
miracle of Him; but He, about to perform divine works, so far did not recognize
a human womb; saying in effect, "That in me which works a miracle was not born
of thee, thou gavest not birth to my divine nature; but because my weakness
was born of thee, I will recognize thee at the time when that same weakness shall
hang upon the cross." This, indeed, is the meaning of "Mine hour is not yet
come." For then it was that He recognized, who, in truth, always did know. He
knew His mother in predestination, even before He was born of her; even before, as
God, He created her of whom, as man, He was to be created, He knew her as His
mother: but at a certain hour in a mystery He did not recognize her; and at a
certain hour which had not yet come, again in a mystery, He does recognize her.
For then did He recognize her, when that to which she gave birth was a-dying.
That by which Mary was made did not die, but that which was made of Mary; not
the eternity of the divine nature, but the weakness of the flesh, was dying. He
made that answer therefore, making a distinction in the faith of believers,
between the who; and the how, He came. For whiIe He was God and the Lord of heaven
and earth, He came by a mother who was a woman. In that He was Lord of the
world, Lord of heaven and earth, He was, of course, the Lord of Mary also; but in
that wherein it is said, "Made of a woman, made under the law," He was Mary's
son. The same both the Lord of Mary and the son of Mary; the same both the
Creator of Mary and created from Mary. Marvel not that He was both son and Lord. For
just as He is called the son of Mary, so likewise is He called the son of
David; and son of David because son of Mary. Hear the apostle openly declaring, "Who
was made of the seed of David according to the flesh." [2] Hear Him also
declared the Lord of David; let David himself declare this: " The Lord said to my
Lord, Sit Thou on my right hand. " [3] And this passage Jesus Himself brought
forward to the Jews, and refuted them from it. [4] How then was He both David's
son and David's Lord? David's son according to the flesh, David's Lord according
to His divinity; so also Mary's son after the flesh, and Mary's Lord after His
majesty. Now as she was not the mother of His divine nature, whilst it was by
His divinity the miracle she asked for would be wrought, therefore He answered
her, "Woman, what have I to do with thee?" But think not that I deny thee to be
my mother: "Mine hour is not yet come;" for in that hour I will acknowledge
thee, when the weakness of which thou art the mother comes to hang on the cross.
Let us prove the truth of this. When the Lord suffered, the same evangelist
tells us, who knew the mother of the Lord, and who has given us to know about her
in this marriage feast,--the same, I say, tells us, "There was there near the
cross the mother of Jesus; and Jesus saith to His mother, Woman, behold thy son!
and to the disciple, Behold thy mother!" [5] He commends His mother to the care
of the disciple; commends His mother, as about to die before her, and to rise
again before her death. The man commends her a human being to man's care. This
humanity had Mary given birth to. That hour had now come, the hour of which He
had then said, "Mine hour is not yet come."
10. In my opinion, brethren, we have answered the heretics. Let us now
answer the astrologers. And how do they attempt to prove that Jesus was under
fate? Because, say they, Himself said, "Mine hour is not vet come." Therefore we
believe Him; and if He had said, "I have no hour," He would have excluded the
astrologers: but behold, say they, He said, " Mine hour is not yet come." If then
He had said, "I have no hour," the astrologers would have been shut out, and
would have no ground for their slander; but now that He said, " Mine hour is not
yet come," how can we contradict His own words? 'Tis wonderful that the
astrologers, by believing Christ's words, endeavor to convince Christians that Christ
lived under an hour of fate. Well, let them believe Christ when He saith, "I
have power to lay down my life and to take it up again: no man taketh it from me,
but I lay it down of myself, and I take it again." [1] Is this power then
under fate ? Let them show us a man who has it in his power when to die, how long
to live: this they can never do. Let them, therefore, believe God when He says,
"I have power to lay down my life, and to take it up again;" and let them
inquire why it was said, "Mine hour is not yet come;" and let them not because of
these words, be imposing fate on the Maker of heaven, the Creator and Ruler of
the stars. For even if fate were from the stars, the Maker of the stars could not
be subject to their destiny. Moreover, not only Christ had not what thou
callest fate, but not even hast thou, or I, or he there, or any human being
whatsoever.
11. Nevertheless, being deceived, they deceive others, and propound
fallacies to men. They lay snares to catch men, and that, too. in the open streets.
They who spread nets to catch wild beasts even do it in woods and desert places:
how miserably vain are men, for catching whom the net is spread in the forum !
When men sell themselves to men, they receive money; but these give money in
order to sell themselves to vanities. For they go in to an astrologer to buy
themselves masters, such as the astrologer is pleased to give them: be it Saturn,
Jupiter, Mercury, or any other named profanity. The man went in free, that
having given his money he might come out a slave. Nay, rather, had he been free he
would not have gone in; but he entered whither his master Error and his
mistress Avarice dragged him. Whence also the truth says, " Every one that doeth sin
is the slave of sin." [2]
12. Why then did He say, "Mine hour is not yet come?" Rather because,
having it in His power when to die, He did not yet see it fit to use that power.
Just as we, brethren, say, for example, "Now is the appointed hour for us to go
out to celebrate the sacraments." If we go out before it is necessary, do we not
act perversely and absurdly? And because we act only at the proper time, do we
therefore in this action regard fate when we so express ourselves? What means
then, "Mine hour is not yet come?" When I know that it is the fitting time for
me to suffer, when my suffering will be profitable, then I will willingly
suffer. That hour is not yet: that thou mayest preserve both, this, "Mine hour is
not yet come;" and that, "I have power to lay down my life, and power to take it
again." He had come, then, having it in His power when to die. And surely it
would not have been right were He to die before He had chosen disciples. Had he
been a man who had not his hour in his own power, he might have died before he
had chosen disciples; and if haply he had died when his disciples were now
chosen and instructed, it would be something conferred on him, not his own doing.
But, on the contrary, He who had come having in His power when to go, when to
return, how far to advance, and for whom the regions of the grave were open, not
only when dying but when rising again; He, I say, in order to show us His
Church's hope of immortality, showed in the head what it behoved the members to
expect. For He who has risen again in the head will also rise again in all His
members. The hour then had not yet come, the fit time was not yet. Disciples had to
be called, the kingdom of heaven to be proclaimed, the Lord's divinity to be
shown forth in miracles, and His humanity in His very sympathy with mortal men.
For He who hungered because He was man, fed so many thousands with five loaves
because He was God; He who slept because He was man, commanded the winds and the
waves because He was God. All these things had first to be set forth, that the
evangelists might have whereof to write, that there might be what should be
preached to the Church. But when He had done as much as He judged to be
sufficient, then His hour came, not of necessity, but of will,--not of condition, but of
power.
13. What then, brethren? Because we have replied to these and those, shall
we say nothing as to what the water-pots signify? what the water turned into
wine? what the master of the feast? what the bridegroom? what in mystery the
mother of Jesus? what the marriage itself? We must speak of all these, but we must
not burden you. I would have preached to you in Christ's name yesterday also,
when the usual sermon was due to you, my beloved, but I was hindered by certain
necessities. If you please then, holy brethren, let us defer until to-morrow
what pertains to the hidden meaning of this translation, and not burden both
your and our own weakness. There are many of you, perhaps, who have to-day come
together on account of the solemnity of the day, not to hear the sermon. Let
those who come to-morrow come to hear, so that we may not defraud those who are
eager to learn, nor burden those who are fastidious.
TRACTATE IX.
CHAPTER II. 1-11.
1. May the Lord our God be present, that He may grant us to render you
what we promised. For yesterday, if you remember, holy brethren, when the
shortness of the time prevented us from completing the sermon we had begun, we put off
until to-day the unfolding, by God's assistance, of those things which are
mystically put in hidden meanings in this fact of the Gospel lesson. We need not,
therefore, now stay any longer to commend the miracle of God. For He is the same
God who, throughout the whole creation, worketh miracles every day, which
become lightly esteemed by men, not because of the ease with which they are
wrought, but by reason of their constant recurrence. Those uncommon works, however,
which were done by the same Lord--that is, by the Word for us made
flesh--occasioned greater astonishment to men, not because they are greater than those which
He daily performs in the creation, but because these which happen every day are
accomplished as it were in the course of nature; but the others appear
exhibited to the eyes of men, wrought by the: efficacy of a power, as it were,
immediately present. We said, as you remember, one dead man rose again, people were
amazed, whilst no man wonders at the birth every day of those who were not in
being. In like manner, who does not wonder at water turned into wine, although God
is doing this every year in vines? But since all the works which the Lord
Jesus did, serve not only to rouse our hearts by their miraculous character, but
also to edify our hearts in the doctrine of faith, it behoves us thoroughly to
examine into the meaning and significance of those works. For the consideration
of the meaning of all these things we deferred, as you remember, till today.
2. The Lord, in that He came to the marriage to which He was invited,
wished, apart from the mystical signification, to assure us that marriage was His
own institution. For there were to be those of whom the apostle spoke,
"forbidding to marry,"' and asserting that marriage was an evil, and of the devil's
institution: notwithstanding the same Lord declares in the Gospel, on being asked
whether it be lawful for a man to put away his wife for any cause, that it is
not lawful save for the cause of fornication. In His answer, if you remember, He
said, "What God hath joined together let not man put asunder." [2] And they
that are well instructed in the catholic faith know that God instituted marriage;
and as the union of man and wife is from God, so divorce is from the devil. But
in the case of fornication it is lawful for a man to put away his wife,
because she first chose to be no longer wife in not preserving conjugal fidelity to
her husband. Nor are those women who vow virginity to God, although they hold a
higher place of honor and sanctity in the Church, without marriage. For they
too, together with the whole Church, attain to a marriage, a marriage in which
Christ is the Bridegroom. And for this cause, therefore, did the Lord, on being
invited, come to the marriage, to confirm conjugal chastity, and to show forth
the sacrament of marriage. For the bridegroom in that marriage, to whom it was
said, "Thou hast kept the good wine until now," represented the person of the
Lord. For the good wine--namely, the gospel--Christ has kept until now.
3. For now let us begin to uncover the hidden meanings of the mysteries,
so far as He in whose name we made you the promise may enable us. In the ancient
times there was prophecy, and no times were left without the dispensation of
prophecy. But the prophecy, since Christ was not understood therein, was water.
For in water wine is in some manner latent. The apostle tells us what we are to
understand by this water: "Even unto this day," saith he, "whilst Moses is
read, that same veil is upon their heart; that it is not unveiled because it is
done away in Christ. And when thou shalt have passed over," saith he, "to the
Lord, the veil shall be taken away." [1] By the veil he means the covering over of
prophecy, so that it was not understood. When thou hast passed over to the
Lord, the veil is taken away; so likewise is tastelessness taken away when thou
hast passed over to the Lord; and what was water now becomes wine to thee. Read
all the prophetic books; and if Christ be not understood therein, what canst
thou find so insipid and silly? Understand Christ in them, and what thou readest
not only has a taste, but even inebriates thee; transporting the mind from the
body, so that forgetting the things that are past, thou reachest forth to the
things that are before. [2]
4. Wherefore, prophecy from ancient times, even from the time when the
series of human births began to run onwards, was not silent concerning Christ; but
the import of the prophecy was concealed therein, for as yet it was water.
Whence do we prove that in all former times, until the age in which the Lord came,
prophecy did not fail concerning Him? From the Lord's own saying. For when He
had risen from the dead, He found His disciples doubting concerning Himself
whom they had followed. For they saw that He was dead, and they had no hope that
He would rise again; all their hope was gone. On what ground was the thief,
after receiving praise, deemed worthy to be that same day in Paradise? Because when
bound on the cross he confessed Christ, while the disciples doubted concerning
Him. Well, He found them wavering, and in a manner reproving themselves
because they had looked for redemption in Him. Yet they sorrowed for Him as cut off
without fault, for they knew Him to be innocent. And this is what the disciples
themselves said, after His resurrection, when He had found certain of them in
the way, sorrowful, "Art thou only a stranger in Jerusalem, and hast not known
the things which are come to pass there in these days? And He said unto them,
What things? And they said, Concerning Jesus of Nazareth, who was a prophet
mighty in deeds and words before God and all the people: how our priests and rulers
delivered Him to be condemned to death, and bound Him to the cross. But we
trusted that it was He who should have redeemed Israel; and to-day is now the third
day since these things were done." After one of the two whom He found in the
way going to a neighboring village had spoken these and other words, Jesus
answered and said, "O irrational, and slow of heart to believe all that the prophets
have spoken. Ought not Christ to have suffered all these things. and to enter
into His glory? And beginning from Moses and all the prophets, He expounded
unto them in all the Scriptures the things concerning Himself." And likewise, in
another place, when He would even have His disciples touch Him with their hands,
that they might believe that He had risen in the body, He saith, "These are
the words which I have spoken unto you, while I was yet with you, that all things
must be fulfilled which were written in the law of Moses, and in the prophets,
and in the Psalms, concerning me. Then opened He their understanding, that
they might understand the Scriptures, and said unto them, Thus it is written, that
Christ should suffer, and rise again from the dead the third day: and that
repentance and remission of sins should be preached in His name among all nations,
beginning at Jerusalem."
5. When these words of the Gospel are understood, and they are certainly
clear, all the mysteries which are latent in this miracle of the Lord will be
laid open. Observe what He says, that it behoved the things to be fulfilled in
Christ that were written of Him. Where were they written? "In the law," saith He,
"and in the prophets, and in the Psalms." He omitted no part of the Old
Scriptures. These were water; and hence the disciples were called irrational by the
Lord, because as yet they tasted to them as water, not as wine. And how did He
make of the water wine? When He opened their understanding, and expounded to
them the Scriptures, beginning from Moses, through all the prophets; with which
being now inebriated, they said, "Did not our hearts burn within us in the way,
when He opened to us the Scriptures?" For they understood Christ in those books
in which they knew Him not before. Thus our Lord Jesus Christ changed the water
into wine, and that has now taste which before had not, that now inebriates
which before did not. For if He had commanded the water to be poured out of the
water-pots, and so Himself had put in the wine from the secret repositories of
the creature, whence He made bread when He satisfied so many thousands; for five
loaves were not in themselves sufficient to satisfy five thousand men, nor
even to fill twelve baskets, but the omnipotence of the Lord was, as it were, a
fountain of bread; so likewise He might, on the water being poured out, have
poured in wine: but had He done this, He would appear to have rejected the Old
Scriptures. When, however, He turns the water itself into wine, He shows us that
the Old Scripture also is from Himself, for at His own command were the
water-pots filled. It is from the Lord, indeed, that the Old Scripture also is; but it
has no taste unless Christ is understood therein.
6. But observe what Himself saith, "The things which were written in the
law, and in the prophets, and in the Psalms concerning me." And we know that the
law extends from the time of which we have record, that is, from the beginning
of the world: "In the beginning God made the heaven and the earth.' [1] Thence
down to the time in which we are now living are six ages, this being the
sixth, as you have often heard and know. The first age is reckoned from Adam to
Noah; the second, from Noah to Abraham; and, as Matthew the evangelist duly follows
and distinguishes, the third, from Abraham to David; the fourth, from David to
the carrying away into Babylon; the fifth, from the carrying away into Babylon
to John the Baptist; [2] the sixth, from John the Baptist to the end of the
world. Moreover, God made man after His own image on the sixth day, because in
this sixth age is manifested the renewing of our mind through the gospel, after
the image of Him who created us; [3] and the water is turned into wine, that we
may taste of Christ, now manifested in the law and the prophets, Hence "there
were there six water-pots," which He bade be filled with water. Now the six
water-pots signify the six ages, which were not without prophecy. And those six
periods, divided and separated as it were by joints, would be as empty vessels
unless they were filled by Christ. Why did I say, the periods which would run
fruit-lessly on, unless the Lord Jesus were preached in them? Prophecies are
fulfilled, the water-pots are full; but that the water may be turned into wine,
Christ must be understood in that whole prophecy.
7. But what means this: "They contained two or three metretAE apiece" ?
This phrase certainly conveys to us a mysterious meaning. For by "metretAE" he
means certain measures, as if he should say jars, flasks, or something of that
sort. Metreta is the name of a measure, and takes its name from the word
"measure." For <greek>met</greek>s232><greek>on</greek> is the Greek word for measure,
whence the word "metretAE" is derived. "They contained," then, "two or three
metretAE apiece." What are we to say, brethren ? If He had simply said "three
apiece," our mind would at once have run to the mystery of the Trinity. And,
perhaps, we ought not at once to reject this application of the meaning, because He
said, "two or three apiece;" for when the Father and Son are named, the Holy
Spirit must necessarily be understood. For the Holy Spirit is not that of the
Father only, nor of the Son only, but the Spirit of the Father and of the Son. For
it is written," If any man love the world, the Spirit of the Father is not in
him." [4] And again, "Whoso hath not the Spirit of Christ is none of His." [5]
The same, then, is the Spirit of the Father and of the Son. Therefore, the
Father and the Son being named, the Holy Spirit also is understood, because He is
the Spirit of the Father and of the Son. And when there is mention of the Father
and Son, "two metretAE," as it were, are mentioned; but since the Holy Spirit
is understood in them, "three metretAE." That is the reason why it is not said,
"Some containing two metretAE apiece, others three apiece;" but the same six
water-pots contained "two or three metretAE apiece." It is as if he had said,
When I say two apiece, I would have the Spirit of the Father and of the Son to be
understood together with them; and when I say three apiece, I declare the same
Trinity more plainly.
8. Wherefore, whoso names the Father and the Son ought thereby to
understand the mutual love of the Father and Son, which is the Holy Spirit. And perhaps
the Scriptures on being examined (r do not say that I am able to show you this
to-day, or as if another proof cannot be found),--nevertheless, the
Scriptures, perhaps, on being searched, do show us that the Holy Spirit is charity. And
do not count charity a thing cheap. How, indeed, can it be cheap, when all
things that are said to be not cheap are called dear (chara)? Therefore, if what is
not cheap is dear, what is dearer than dearness itself (charitas)? The apostle
so commends charity to us that he says, "I show unto you a more excellent way.
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 know all
mysteries and all knowledge, and have prophecy and all faith, so that I could remove
mountains, and have not charity, I am nothing. And though I distribute all my
goods to the poor, and give my body to be burned, and have not charity, it
profiteth me nothing." [6] How great, then, is charity, which, if wanting, in vain
have we all things else; if present, rightly have we all things ! Yet the Apostle
Paul, setting forth the praise of charity with copiousness and fullness, has
said less of it than did the Apostle John in brief, whose Gospel this is. For he
has not hesitated to say, "God is love." It is also written, "Because the love
of God is shed abroad in our hearts by the Holy Spirit which is given us." [1]
Who, then, can name the Father and the Son without thereby understanding the
love of the Father and Son? Which when one begins to have, he will have the Holy
Spirit; which if one has not, he will not have the Holy Spirit. And just as
thy body, if it be without spirit, namely thy soul, is dead so likewise thy soul,
if it be without the Holy Spirit, that is, without charity, will be reckoned
dead. Therefore "The water-pots contained two metretAE apiece," because the
Father and the Son are proclaimed in the prophecy of all the periods; but the Holy
Spirit is there also, and therefore it is added, "or three apiece." "I and the
Father," saith He, "are one." [2] But far be it from us to suppose that where
we are told, "I and the Father are one," the Holy Spirit is not there. Yet since
he named the Father and the Son, let the water-pots contain "two metretAE
apiece;" but attend to this, "or three apiece." "Go, baptize the nations in the
name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost." So, therefore, when it
says "two apiece," the Trinity is not expressed but understood; but when it
says, "or three," the Trinity is expressed also.
9. But there is also another meaning that must not be passed over, and
which I will declare: let every man choose which he likes best. We keep not back
what is suggested to us. For it is the Lord's table, and the minister ought not
to defraud the guests, especially when they hunger as you now do, so that your
longing is manifest. Prophecy, which is dispensed from the ancient times, has
for its object the salvation of all nations. True, Moses was sent to the people
of Israel alone, and to that people alone was the law given by him; and the
prophets, too, were of that people, and the very distribution of times was marked
out according to the same people; whence also the water-pots are said to be
"according to the purification of the Jews:" nevertheless, that the prophecy was
proclaimed to all other nations also is manifest, forasmuch as Christ was
concealed in him in whom all nations are blessed, as it was promised to Abraham by
the Lord, saying, "In thy seed shall all nations be blessed. [3] But this was not
as yet understood, for as yet the 2 water was not turned into wine. The
prophecy therefore was dispensed to all nations. But that this may appear more
agreeably, let us, so far as our time permits, mention certain facts respecting the
several ages, as represented respectively by the water-pots.
10. In the very beginning, Adam and Eve were the parents of all nations,
not of the Jews only; and whatever was represented in Adam concerning Christ,
undoubtedly concerned all nations, whose salvation is in Christ. What better can
I say of the water of the first water-pot than what the apostle says of Adam
and Eve? For no man will say that I misunderstand the meaning when I produce, not
my own, but the apostle's. How great a mystery, then, concerning Christ does
that of which the apostle makes mention contain, when he says, "And the two
shall be in one flesh: this is a great mystery!" [4] And lest any man should
understand that greatness of mystery to exist in the case of the individual men that
have wives, he says, "But I speak concerning Christ and the Church." What great
mystery is this, "the two shall be one flesh?" While Scripture, in the Book of
Genesis, was speaking of Adam and Eve, it came to these words, "Therefore
shall a man leave his father and mother, and shall cleave to his wife; and they two
shall be one flesh." [5] Now, if Christ cleave to the Church, so that the two
should be one flesh, in what manner did He leave His Father and His mother? He
left His Father in this sense, that when He was in the form of God, He thought
it not robbery to be equal with God, but emptied Himself, taking to Him the
form of a servant. [6] In this sense He left His Father, not that He forsook or
departed from His Father, but that He did not appear unto men in that form in
which He was equal with the Father. But how did He leave His mother? By leaving
the synagogue of the Jews, of which, after the flesh, He was born, and by
cleaving to the Church which He has gathered out of all nations. Thus the first
water-pot then held a prophecy of Christ; but so long as these things of which I
speak were not preached among the peoples, the prophecy was water, it was not vet
changed into wine. And since the Lord his enlightened us through the apostle, to
show us what we were in search of, by this one sentence, "The two shall be one
flesh; a great mystery concerning Christ and the Church;" we are now permitted
to seek Christ everywhere, and to drink wine from all the water-pots. Adam
sleeps, that Eve may be formed; Christ dies, that the Church may be formed. When
Adam sleeps, Eve is formed from his side; when Christ is dead, the spear pierces
His side, that the mysteries may flow forth whereby the Church is formed. Is
it not evident to every man that in those things then done, things to come were
foreshadowed, since the apostle says that Adam himself was the figure of Him
that was to come? "Who is," saith he, "the figure of Him that was to come."[1]
All was mystically prefigured. For, in reality, God could have taken the rib from
Adam when he was awake, and formed the woman. Or was it, haply, necessary for
him to sleep lest he should feel pain in his side when the rib was taken away?
Who is there that sleeps so soundly that his bones may be torn from him without
his awaking? Or was it because it was God that tore it out, that the man did
not feel it? Well, He who could take it from him without pain when he was
asleep, could do it also when he was awake. But, without doubt, the first water-pot
was being filled, there was a dispensation of the prophecy of that time
concerning this which was to be.
11. Christ was represented also in Noah and in that ark of the whole
world. For why were all kinds of animals shut in, in the ark but to signify all
nations? For God could again create every kind of animals. When as yet they were
not, did He not say, "Let the earth bring forth," and the earth brought forth?
From the same source He could make anew, whence He then made; by a word He made,
by a word He could make again: were it not that He was setting before us a
mystery, and filling up the second water-pot of prophetical dispensation, that the
world might by the wood be delivered in a figure; because the life of the world
was to be nailed on wood.
12. Now, in the third water-pot, to Abraham, as I have mentioned before,
it was said, "In thy seed shall all nations be blessed." And who does not see
whose figure Abraham's only son was, he who bore the wood for the sacrifice of
himself, to that place whither he was being led to be offered up? For the Lord
bore his own cross, as the Gospel tells us. This will be enough to say concerning
the third water-pot.
13. But as to David, why do I say that his prophecy extends to all
nations, when we have just heard the psalm (and it is difficult to mention a psalm in
which the same is not sounded forth)? But certainly, as I have said. we have
been just singing, "Arise, O God, judge the earth; for Thou shalt inherit among
all nations."[2] And this is why the Donatists are as men cast forth from the
marriage: just as the man who had not a wedding garment was invited, and came,
but was cast forth from the number of the guests because he had not the garment
to the glory of the bridegroom; for he who seeks his own glory, not Christ's,
has not the wedding garment: for they refuse to agree with him who was the friend
of the Bridegroom, and says, "This is He that baptizeth." And deservedly was
that which he was not made, by way of rebuke, an objection to him who had not
the wedding garment, "Friend, how art thou come hither? "[3] And just as he was
speechless, so also are these. For what can tongue-clatter avail when the heart
is mute? For they know that inwardly, and with their own selves, they have not
anything to say. Within, they are mute; without, they make a din. But whether
they will or no, they hear this sung even among themselves, "Arise, O God, judge
the earth; for Thou shalt inherit among the nations "and by not communicating
with all nations, what do they but acknowledge themselves to be disinherited?
14. Now what I said, brethren, that prophecy extends to all nations (for I
wish to show you another meaning in the expression, "Containing two or three
metretae apiece "),--that prophecy, I say, extends to all nations, is pointed
out, as we have just now reminded you, in Adam, "who is the figure of Him that
was to come." Who does not know that from him all nations are sprung; and that in
the four letters of his name the four quarters of the globe, by their Greek
appellations, are indicated? For if the east, west, north, and south are
expressed in Greek even as Holy Scripture mentions them in various places, the initial
letters of the words, thou wilt find, make the word Adam: for in Greek the four
quarters of the world are called Anatole, Dysis, Arktos, Mesembria. If thou
write these four words, one under the other, like four verses, the capital
letters form the word Adam. The same is represented in Noah, by reason of the ark, in
which were all animals, significant of all nations: the same in Abraham, to
whom it was said more clearly, "In thy seed shall all nations be blessed:" the
same in David, from whose psalms, to omit other expressions, we have just been
singing, "Arise, O God, judge the earth; for Thou shalt inherit among all
nations." Now to what God is it said "Arise," but to Him who slept? "Arise, O God,
judge the earth." As if it were said, Thou hast been asleep, having been judged by
the earth; arise, to judge the earth. And whither does that prophecy extend,
"For Thou shalt inherit among all nations"?
15. Moreover, in the fifth age, in the fifth water-pot as it were, Daniel
saw a stone that had been cut from a mountain without hands, and had broken all
the kingdoms of the earth; and he saw the stone grow and become a great
mountain, so as to fill the whole face of the earth.[1] What can be plainer, my
brethren? The stone is cut from a mountain: the same is the stone which the builders
rejected, and is become the head of the corner.[2] From what mountain is it
cut, if not from the kingdom of the Jews, of which our Lord Jesus Christ was born
according to the flesh? And it is cut without hands, without human exertion;
because Christ sprung from a virgin, without a husband's embrace. The mountain
from which it was cut had not filled the whole face of the earth; for the
kingdom of the Jews did not possess all nations. But, on the other hand, the kingdom
of Christ we see occupying the whole world.
16. To the sixth age belongs John the Baptist, than whom none greater has
arisen among those born of women; of whom it was said, that he was "greater
than a prophet."[3] And how did John show that Christ was sent to all nations?
When the Jews came to him to be baptized, that they might not pride themselves on
the name of Abraham, he said to them, "O generation of vipers, who has
proclaimed to you to flee from the wrath to come? Bring forth therefore fruit worthy of
repentance;" that is, be humble; for he was speaking to proud people. But
whereof were they proud? Of their descent according to the flesh, not of the fruit
of imitating their father Abraham. What said he to them? "Say not, We have
Abraham for our father: for God is able of these stones to raise up children to
Abraham."[4] Meaning by stones all nations, not on account of their durable
strength, as in the case of that stone which the builders rejected, but on account of
their stupidity and their foolish insensibility, because they had become like
the things which they were accustomed to worship: for they worshipped senseless
images, themselves equally senseless. "They that make them are like them, and
so are all they that trust in them."[5] Accordingly, when men begin to worship
God, what do they hear said to them? "That ye may be the children of your
Father who is in heaven; who maketh His sun to rise on the good and on the evil,
and sendeth rain on the just and on the unjust."[6] Wherefore, if a man becomes
like that which he worships, what is meant by "God is able of these stones to
raise up children unto Abraham"? Let us ask ourselves and we shall see that it is
a fact. For of those nations are we come, but we should not have come of them
had not God of the stones raised up children unto Abraham. We are made children
of Abraham by imitating his faith, not by being born of his flesh. For just as
they by their degeneracy have been disinherited, so have we by imitating been
adopted. Therefore, brethren, this prophecy also of the sixth water-pot
extended to all nations; and hence it was said concerning all, " containing two or
three metretae apiece."
17. But how do we show that all nations belong to the "two or three
metretae apiece"? It was a matter of reckoning, in some measure, that he should say
the same water-pots contained "two apiece," which he had said contained "three
apiece;" evidently in order to intimate to us a mystery therein. How are there
"two metretAE apiece" ? Circumcision and uncircumcision. Scripture mentions
these two classes of people, and leaves out no kind of men, when it says,
"Circumcision and uncircumcision;"[7] in these two appellations thou hast all nations:
they are the two metretAE apiece. In these two walls, meeting from different
quarters, "Christ became the corner-stone, in order to make peace in Himself."[8]
Let us show also the "three metretAE apiece" in the case of these same all
nations. Noah had three sons, through whom the human race was restored. Hence the
Lord says, "The kingdom of heaven is like leaven, which a woman took and hid in
three measures of meal, till the whole was leavened."[9] What is this woman,
but the flesh of the Lord? What is the leaven, but the gospel? What the three
measures, but all nations, on account of the three sons of Noah? Therefore the
"six water-pots containing two or three metretae apiece" are six periods of time,
containing the prophecy relating to all nations, whether as represented in two
sorts of men, namely, Jews and Greeks, as the apostle often mentions them;[10]
or in three sorts, on account of the three sons of Noah. For the prophecy was
represented as reaching unto all nations. And because of that reaching it is
called a measure,[11] even as the apostle says, "We have received a measure for
reaching unto you."[12] For in preaching the gospel to the Gentiles, he says, "A
measure for reaching unto you."
TRACTATE X.
CHAPTER II. 12-21.
1. In the psalm you have heard the groaning of the poor, whose members
endure tribulations over the whole earth, even unto the end of the world. Make it
your chief business, my brethren, to be among and of these members: for all
tribulation is to pass away. "Woe to them that rejoice!"[1] "Blessed," says the
Truth, "are they that mourn, for they shall be comforted." God has become man:
what shall man be, for whom God is become man ? Let this hope comfort us in every
tribulation and temptation of this life. For the enemy does not cease to
persecute; and when he does not openly rage, he plots in secret. How does he plot?
"And for wrath, they worked deceitfully."[2] Thence is he called a lion and a
dragon. But what is said to Christ ? "Thou shall tread on the lion and the
dragon." Lion, for open rage; dragon, for hidden treachery. The dragon cast Adam out
of Paradise; as a lion, the same persecuted the Church, as Peter says: "For
your adversary, the devil, goeth about as a roaring lion, seeking whom he may
devour."[3] Let it not seem to you as if the devil had lost his ferocity. When he
blandly flatters, then is he the more vigilantly to be guarded against. But amid
all these treacherous devices and temptations of his, what shall we do but
that which we have heard in the psalm: "And I, when they were troublesome to me,
clothed me in sackcloth, and humbled my soul in fasting."[4] There is one that
heareth prayer, hesitate not to pray; but He that heareth abideth within. You
need not direct your eyes towards some mountain'; you need not raise your face to
the stars, or to the sun, or to the moon; nor must you suppose that you are
heard when you pray beside the sea: rather detest such prayers. Only cleanse the
chamber of thy heart; wheresoever thou art, wherever thou prayest, He that
hears is within, within in the secret place, which the psalmist calls his bosom,
when he says, "And my prayer shall be turned in my own bosom."[5] He that
heareth thee is not beyond thee; thou hast not to travel far, nor to lift thyself up,
so as to reach Him as it were with thy hands. Rather, if thou lift thyself up,
thou shall fall; if thou humble thyself, He will draw near thee. Our Lord God
is here, the Word of God, the Word made flesh, the Son of the Father, the Son
of God, the Son of man; the lofty One to make us, the humble to make us anew,
walking among men, bearing the human, concealing the divine.
2. "He went down," as the evangelist says, "to Capernaum, He, and His
mother, and His brethren, and His disciples; and they continued there not many
days." Behold He has a mother, and brethren, and disciples: whence He has a mother,
thence brethren. For our Scripture is wont to call them brethren, not only
that are sprung from the same man and woman, or from the same mother, or from the
same father, though by different mothers; or, in truth, that are of the same
degree as cousins by the father's or mother's side: not these alone is our
Scripture wont to call brethren. The Scripture must be understood as it speaks. It
has its own language; one who does not know this language is perplexed and says,
Whence had the Lord brethren? For surely Mary did not give birth a second time?
Far from it ! With her begins the dignity of virgins. She could be a mother,
but a woman known of man she could not be. She is spoken of as mulier [which
usually signifies a wife], but only in reference to her sex, not as implying loss
of virgin purity: and this follows from the language of Scripture itself. For
Eve, too, immediately she was formed from the side of her husband, and as yet
not known of her husband, is, as you know, called mulier: "And he made her a
woman [mulier]." Then, whence the brethren? The kinsmen of Mary, of whatever
degree, are the brethren of the Lord. How do we prove this? From Scripture itself.
Lot is called " Abraham's brother;"[6] he was his brother's son. Read, and thou
wilt find that Abraham was Lot's uncle on the father's side, and yet they are
called brethren. Why, but because they were kinsmen? Laban the Syrian was Jacob's
uncle by the mother's side, for he was the brother of Rebecca, Isaac's wife
and Jacob's mother.[7] Read the Scripture, and thou wilt find that uncle and
sister's son are called brothers.[8] When thou hast known this rule, thou wilt find
that all the blood relations of Mary are the brethren of Christ. 3. But rather
were those disciples brethren; for even those kinsmen would not be brethren
were they not disciples: and to no advantage brethren, if they did not recognize
their brother as their master. For in a certain place, when He was informed
that His mother and His brethren were standing without, at the time He was
speaking to His disciples, He said: "Who is my mother? or who are my brethren ? And
stretching out His hand over His disciples, He said, These are my brethren;" and,
"Whosoever shall do the will of my Father, the same is my mother, and brother,
and sister."[1] Therefore also Mary, because she did the will of the Father.
What the Lord magnified in her was, that she did the will of the Father, not
that flesh gave birth to flesh. Give good heed, beloved. Moreover, when the Lord
was regarded with admiration by the multitude, while doing signs and wonders,
and showing forth what lay concealed under the flesh, certain admiring souls
said: "Happy is the womb that bare Thee: and He said, Yea, rather, happy are they
that hear the word of God, and keep it."[2] That is to say, even my mother, whom
ye have called happy, is happy in that she keeps the word of God: not because
in her the Word was made flesh and dwelt in us; but because she keeps that same
word of God by which she was made, and which in her was made flesh. Let not
men rejoice in temporal offspring, but let them exult if in spirit they are
joined to God. We have spoken these things on account of that which the evangelist
says, that He dwelt in Capernaum a few days, with His mother, and His brethren,
and His disciples.
4. What follows upon this? "And the Jews' passover was at hand; and He
went up to Jerusalem." The narrator relates another matter, as it came to his
recollection. "And He found in the temple those that sold oxen, and sheep, and
doves, and the changers of money sitting: and when He had made, as it were, a
scourge of small cords, He drove them all out of the temple; the oxen likewise, and
the sheep; and poured out the changers' money, and overthrew the tables; and
said unto them that sold doves, Take these things hence; and make not my Father's
house a house of merchandise." What have we heard, brethren? See, that temple
was still a figure, and yet the Lord cast out of it all that sought their own,
all who had come to market. And what did they sell there? Things which people
needed in the sacrifices of that time. For you know, beloved, that sacrifices
were given to that people, in consideration of the carnal mind and stony heart
yet in them, to keep them from falling away to idols: and they offered there for
sacrifices oxen, sheep, and doves: you know this, for you have read it. It was
not a great sin, then, if they sold in the temple that which was bought for the
purpose of offering in the temple: and yet He cast them out thence. If, while
they were selling what was lawful and not against justice (for it is not
unlawful to sell what it is honorable to buy), He nevertheless drove those men out,
and suffered not the house of prayer to be made a house of merchandise; how, if
He found drunkards there, what would the Lord do? If the house of God ought not
to be made a house of trading, ought it to be made a house of drinking? But
when we say this, they gnash upon us with their teeth; but the psalm which you
have heard comforts us: "They gnashed upon me with their teeth." Yet we know how
we may be cured, although the strokes of the lash are multiplied on Christ, for
His word is made to bear the scourge: "The scourges," saith He, "were gathered
together against me, and they knew not." He was scourged by the scourges of
the Jews; He is now scourged by the blasphemies of false Christians: they
multiply scourges for their Lord, and know it not. Let us, so far as He aids us, do as
the psalmist did: "But as for me, when they were troublesome to me, I put on
sackcloth, and humbled my soul with fasting."[3]
5. Yet we say, brethren (for He did not spare those men: He who was to be
scourged by them first scourged them), that He gave us a certain sign, in that
He made a scourge of small cords, and with it lashed the unruly, who were
making merchandise of God's temple. For indeed every man twists for himself a rope
by his sins: "Woe to them who draw sins as a long rope ?"[4] Who makes a long
rope? He who adds sin to sin. How are sins added to sins? When the sins which
have been committed are covered over by other sins. One has committed a theft:
that he may not be found out to have committed it, he seeks the astrologer. It
were enough to have committed theft: why wilt thou add sin to sin ? Behold two
sins committed. When thou art forbidden to go to the astrologer, thou revilest the
bishop: behold three sins. When thou hearest it said of thee, Cast him forth
from the Church; thou sayest, I will betake me to the party of Donatus: behold
thou addest a fourth sin. The rope is growing; be thou afraid of the rope. It is
good for thee to be corrected here, when thou art scourged with it; that it
may not be said of thee at the last, "Bind ye his hands and feet, and cast him
forth into outer darkness."[1] For, "With the cords of his own sins is every one
bound."[2] The former of these is the saying of the Lord, the latter that of
another Scripture; but yet both are the sayings of the Lord. With their own sins
are men bound and cast into outer darkness.
6. However, to seek the mystery of the deed in the figure, who are they
that sell oxen? Who are they that sell sheep and doves? They are they who seek
their own in the Church, not the things which are Christ's. They account all a
matter of sale, while they will not be redeemed: they have no wish to be bought,
and yet they wish to sell. Yes; good indeed is it for them that they may be
redeemed by the blood of Christ, that they may come to the peace of Christ. Now,
what does it profit to acquire in this world any temporal and transitory thing
whatsoever, be it money, or pleasure of the palate, or honor that consists in
the praise of men? Are they not all wind and smoke? Do they not all pass by and
flee away? Are they not all as a river rushing headlong into the sea? And woe to
him who shall fall into it, for he shall be swept into the sea. Therefore
ought we to curb all our affections from such desires. My brethren, they that seek
such things are they that sell. For that Simon too, wished to buy the Holy
Ghost, just because he meant to sell the Holy Ghost; and he thought the apostles to
be just such traders as they whom the Lord cast out of the temple with a
scourge. For such an one he was himself, and desired to buy what he might sell he
was of those who sell doves. Now it was in a dove that the Holy Ghost
appeared.[3] Who, then, are they, brethren, that sell doves, but they who say, "We give
the Holy Ghost "? But why do they say this? and at what price do they sell ? At
the price of honor to themselves. They receive as the price, temporal seats of
honor, that they may be seen to be sellers of doves. Let them beware of the
scourge of small cords. The dove is not for sale: it is given freely; for grace, or
favor, it is called. Therefore, my brethren, just as you see them that sell,
common chapmen, each cries up what he sells: how many stalls they have set up !
Primianus has a stall at Carthage, Maximianus has another, Rogatus has another
in Mauritania, they have another in Numidia, this party and that, which it is
not in our power now to name. Accordingly, one goes round to buy the dove, and
every one at his own stall cries up what he sells.
Let the heart of such an one turn away from f every seller; let him come
where he receives freely. Aye, brethren, and they do not blush, that, by these
bitter and malicious dissensions of theirs, they have made of themselves so many
parties, while they assume to be what they are not, while they are lifted up,
thinking themselves to be something when they are nothing.[4] But what is
fulfilled in them, since that they will not be corrected, but that which you have
heard in the psalm: "They were rent asunder, and felt no remorse"?
7. Well, who sell oxen ? They who have dispensed to us the Holy Scriptures
are understood to mean the oxen. The apostles were oxen, the prophets were
oxen. Whence the apostle says: "Thou shalt not muzzle the mouth of the ox that
treadeth out the corn. Doth God take care for oxen? Or saith He it for our sakes ?
Yea, for our sakes He saith it: that he who ploweth should plow in hope; and
he that thresheth, in hope of partaking."[5] Those oxen, then, have left to us
the narration of the Scriptures. For it was not of their own that they
dispensed, because they sought the glory of the Lord. Now, what have ye heard in that
psalm? "And let them say continually, The Lord be magnified, they that wish the
peace of His servant.''[6] God's servant, God's people, God's Church. Let them
who wish the peace of that Church magnify the Lord, not the servant: "and let
them say continually, The Lord be magnified." Who, let say? "Them who wish the
peace of His servant." The voice of that people, of that servant, is clearly that
voice which you have heard in lamentations in the psalm, and were moved at
hearing, because you are of that people. What was sung by one, re-echoed from the
hearts of all. Happy they who recognized themselves in those voices as in a
mirror. Who, then, are they that wish the peace of His servant, the peace of His
people, the peace of the one whom He calls His "only one," and whom He wishes to
be delivered from the lion: "Deliver mine only one from the power of the
dog?"[7] They who say always, "The Lord be magnified." Those oxen, then, magnified
the Lord, not themselves. See this ox magnifying his Lord, because "the ox
knoweth his owner;"[8] observe that ox in fear lest men desert the ox's owner and
rely on the ox: how he dreads them that are willing to put their confidence in
him: "Was Paul crucified for you? or were ye baptized in the name of Paul ? "[1]
Of what I gave, I was not the giver: freely ye have received; the dove came
down from heaven. "I have planted," saith he, "Apollo, watered; but God gave the
increase: neither he that planteth is anything, neither he that watereth; but
God that giveth the increase."[2] "And let them say always, The Lord be
magnified, they that wish the peace of His servant."
8. These men, however, deceive the people by the very Scriptures, that
they may receive honors and praises at their hand, and that men may not turn to
the truth. But in that they deceive, by the very Scriptures, the people of whom
they seek honors, they do in fact sell oxen: they sell sheep too; that is, the
common people themselves. And to whom do they sell them, but to the devil? For
if the Church be Christ's sole and only one, who is it that carries off whatever
is cut away from it, but that lion that roars and goes about, "seeking whom he
may devour?"[3] Woe to them that are cut off from the Church! As for her, she
will remain entire. "For the Lord knoweth then that are His."[4] These,
however, so far as they can, sell oxen and sheep, they sell doves too: let them guard
against the scourge of their own sins. But when they suffer some such things
for these their iniquities, let them acknowledge that the Lord has made a scourge
of small cords, and is admonishing them to change themselves and be no longer
traffickers: for if they will not change, they shall at the end hear it said,
"Bind ye these men's hands and feet, and cast them forth into outer darkness."
9. "Then the disciples remembered that it was written, The zeal of Thine
house hath eaten me up:" because by this zeal of God's house, the Lord cast
these men out of the temple. Brethren, let every Christian among the members of
Christ be eaten up with zeal of God's house. Who is eaten up with zeal of God's
house? He who exerts himself to have all that he may happen to see wrong; there
corrected, desires it to be mended, does not rest idle: who if he cannot mend
it, endures it, laments it. The grain is not shaken out on the threshing-floor
that it may enter the barn when the chaff shall have been separated. If thou art
a grain, be not shaken out from the floor before the putting into the granary;
lest thou be picked up by the birds before thou be gathered into the granary.
For the birds of heaven, the powers of the air, are waiting to snatch up
something off the threshing-floor, and they can snatch up only what has been shaken
out of it. Therefore, let the zeal of God's house eat thee up: let the zeal of
God's house eat up every Christian, zeal of that house of God of which he is a
member. For thy own house is not more important than that wherein thou hast
everlasting rest. Thou goest into thine own house for temporal rest, thou enterest
God's house for everlasting rest If, then, thou busiest thyself to see that
nothing wrong be done in thine own house, is it fit that thou suffer, so far as
thou canst help, if thou shouldst chance to see aught wrong in the house of God,
where salvation is set before thee, and rest without end? For example, seest
thou a brother rushing to the theatre ? Stop him, warn him, make him sorry, if
the zeal of God's house doth eat thee up. Seest thou others running and desiring
to get drunk, and that, too, in holy places, which is not decent to be done in
any place? Stop those whom thou canst, restrain whom thou canst, frighten whom
thou canst, allure gently whom thou canst: do not, however, rest silent. Is it
a friend? Let him be admonished gently. Is it a wife? Let her be bridled with
the utmost rigor. Is it a maid-servant? Let her be curbed even with blows. Do
whatever thou canst for the part thou bearest; and so thou fulfillest, "The zeal
of Thy house hath eaten me up." But if thou wilt be cold, languid, having
regard only to thyself, and as if thyself were enough to thee, and saying in thy
heart, What have I to do with looking after other men's sins? enough for me is the
care of my own soul: this let me keep undefiled for God;--come, does there not
recur to thy mind the case of that servant who hid his talent and would not
lay it out? Was he accused because he lost it, and not because he kept it without
profit?[5] So hear ye then, my brethren, that ye may not rest idle. I am about
to give you counsel: may He who is within give it; for though it be through
me, it is He that gives it. You know what to do, each one of you, in his own
house, with his friend, his tenant, his client, with greater, with less: as God
grants an entrance, as He opens a door for His word, do not cease to win for
Christ; because you were won by Christ.
10. "The Jews said unto Him, What sign showest thou unto us, seeing that
thou doest these things ?" And the Lord answered, "Destroy this temple, and in
three days I will raise it up. Then said the Jews, Forty and six years was this
temple in building, and dost thou say, In three days I will rear it up?" Flesh
they were, fleshly things they minded; but He was speaking spiritually. But who
could understand of what temple He spoke? But yet we have not far to seek; He
has discovered it to us through the evangelist, he has told us of what temple
He said it. "But He spake," saith the evangelist, "of the temple of His body."
And it is manifest that, being slain, the Lord did rise again after three days.
This is known to us all now: and if from the Jews it is concealed, it is
because they stand without; yet to us it is open, because we know in whom we believe.
The destroying and rearing again of that temple, we are about to celebrate in
its yearly solemnity: for which we exhort you to prepare yourselves, such of
you as are catechumens that you may receive grace; even now is the time, even now
let that be purposed which may then come to the birth. Now, that thing we know.
11. But perhaps this is demanded of us, whether the fact that the temple
was forty and six years in building may not have in it some mystery. There are,
indeed, many things that may be said of this matter; but what may briefly be
said, and easily understood, that we say meanwhile. Brethren, we have said
yesterday, if I mistake not, that Adam was one man, and is yet the whole human race.
For thus we said, if you remember. He was broken, as it were, in pieces; and,
being scattered, is now being gathered together, and, as it were, conjoined into
one by a spiritual fellowship and concord. And "the poor that groan," as one
man, is that same Adam, but in Christ he is being renewed: because an Adam is
come without sin, to destroy the sin of Adam in His own flesh, and that Adam
might renew to himself the image of God. Of Adam then is Christ's flesh: of Adam
the temple which the Jews destroyed, and the Lord raised up in three days. For He
raised His own flesh: see, that He was thus God equal with the Father. My
brethren, the apostle says, "Who raised Him from the dead." Of whom says he this?
Of the Father. "He became," saith he, "obedient unto death, even the death of
the cross; wherefore also God raised Him from the dead, and gave Him a name which
is above every name."(1) He who was raised and exalted is the Lord. Who raised
Him? The Father, to whom He said in the psalms, "Raise me up and I will
requite them."(2) Hence, the Father raised Him up. Did He not raise Himself? And
doeth the Father anything without the Word? What doeth the Father without His only
One? For, hear that He also was God. "Destroy this temple, and in three days I
will raise it up." Did He say, Destroy the temple, which in three days the
Father will raise up? But as when the Father raiseth, the Son also raiseth; so when
the Son raiseth, the Father also raiseth: because the Son has said, "I and the
Father are one."(3)
12. Now, what does the number Forty-six mean? Meanwhile, how Adam extends
over the whole globe, you have already heard explained yesterday, by the four
Greek letters of four Greek words. For if thou write the four words, one under
the other, that is, the names of the four quarters of the world, of east, west,
north, and south, which is the whole globe,--whence the Lord says that He will
gather His elect from the four winds when He shall come to judgment;(4)--if, I
say, you take these four Greek words,--<greek>anauolh</greek>, which is east;
<greek>duQis</greek>, which is west; <greek>arktos</greek>, which is north;
<greek>meshmbria</greek>, which is south; Anatole, Dysis, Arctos, Mesembria,--the
first letters of the words make Adam. How, then, do we find there, too, the
number forty-six? Because Christ's flesh was of Adam. The Greeks compute numbers by
letters. What we make the letter A, they in their tongue put Alpha,
<greek>a</greek>, and Alpha, <greek>a</greek>, is called one. And where in numbers they
write Beta, <greek>b</greek>, which is their <greek>b</greek>, it is called in
numbers two. Where they write Gamma, <greek>g</greek>, it is called in their
numbers three. Where they write Delta, <greek>d</greek>, it is called in their
numbers four; and so by means of all the letters they have numbers. The letter we
call M, and they call My, <greek>m</greek>, signifies forty; for they say My,
<greek>m</greek>, <greek>tessarakonta</greek>. Now look at the number which
these letters make, and you will find in it that the temple was built in forty-six
years. For the word Adam has Alpha, <greek>a</greek>, which is one: it has
Delta, <greek>d</greek>, which is four; there are five for thee: it has Alpha,
<greek>a</greek>, again, which is one; there are six for thee: it has also My,
<greek>m</greek>, which is forty; there hast thou forty-six. These things, my
brethren, were said by our elders before us, and that number forty-six was found by
them in letters. And because our Lord Jesus Christ took of Adam a body, not of
Adam derived sin; took of him a corporeal temple, not iniquity which must be
driven from the temple: and that the Jews crucified that very flesh which He
derived from Adam (for Mary was of Adam, and the Lord's flesh was of Mary); and
that, further, He was in three days to raise that same flesh which they were about
to slay on the cross: they destroyed the temple which was forty-six years in
building, and that temple He raised up in three days.
13. We bless the Lord our God, who gathered us together to spiritual joy.
Let us be ever in humility of heart, and let our joy be with Him. Let us not be
elated with any prosperity of this world, but know that our happiness is not
until these things shall have passed way. Now, my brethren, let our joy be in
hope: let none rejoice as in a present thing, lest he stick fast in the way. Let
joy be wholly of hope to come, desire be wholly of eternal life. Let all
sighings breathe after Christ. Let that fairest one alone, who loved the foul to
make them fair, be all our desire; after Him alone let us run, for Him alone pant
and sigh; "and let them say always, The Lord be magnified, that wish the peace
of His servant."
TRACTATE XI.
CHAPTER II. 23-25; III. 1-5.
1. OPPORTUNELY has the Lord procured for us that this passage should occur
in its order to day: for I suppose you have observed, beloved, that we have
undertaken to consider and explain the Gospel according to John in due course.
Opportunely then it occurs, that to-day you should hear from the Gospel, that,
"Except a man be born again of water and of the Spirit, he shall not see the
kingdom of God." For it is time that we exhort you, who are still catechumens, who
have believed in Christ in such wise, that you are still bearing your sins. And
none shall see the kingdom of heaven while burdened with sins; for none shall
reign with Christ, but he to whom they have been forgiven: but forgiven they
cannot be, but to him who is born again of water and of the Holy Spirit. But let
us observe all the words what they imply, that here the sluggish may find with
what earnestness they must haste to put off their burden. For were they bearing
some heavy load, either of stone, or of wood, or even of some gain; if they
were carrying corn, or wine, or money, they would run to put off their loads:
they are carrying a burden of sins, and yet are sluggish to run. You must run to
put off this burden; it weighs you down, it drowns you.
2. Behold, you have heard that when our Lord Jesus Christ "was in
Jerusalem at the Passover, on the feast day, many believed in His name, seeing the
signs which He did." "Many believed in His name;" and what follows? "But Jesus did
not trust Himself to them." Now what does this mean, "They believed," or
trusted, "in His name;" and yet "Jesus did not trust Himself to them;"? Was it,
perhaps, that they had not believed on Him, but were feigning to have believed, and
that therefore Jesus did not trust Himself to them? But the evangelist would
not have said, "Many believed in His name," if he were not giving a true
testimony to them. A great thing, then, it is, and a wonderful thing: men believe on
Christ, and Christ trusts not Himself to men. Especially is it wonderful, since,
being the Son of God, He of course suffered willingly. If He were not willing,
He would never have suffered, since, had He not willed it, He had not been
born; and if He had willed this only, merely to be born and not to die, He might
have done even whatever He willed, because He is the almighty Son of the almighty
Father Let us prove it by facts. For when they wished to hold Him, He departed
from them. The Gospel says, "And when they would have cast Him headlong from
the top of the mountain, He departed from them unhurt."(1) And when they came to
lay hold of Him, after He was sold by Judas the traitor, who imagined that he
had it in his power to deliver up his Master and Lord, there also the Lord
showed that He suffered of His own will, not of necessity. For when the Jews
desired to lay hold of Him, He said to them, "Whom seek ye? But they said, Jesus of
Nazareth. And said He, I am He. On hearing this saying, they went backward, and
fell to the ground."(2) In this, that in answering them He threw them to the
ground, He showed His power; that in His being taken by them He might show His
will. It was of compassion, then, that He suffered. For "He was delivered up for
our sins, and rose again for our justification."(3) Hear His own words: "I have
power to lay down my life, and I have power to take it again: no man taketh it
from me, but I lay it down of myself, that I may take it again."(1) Since,
therefore, He had such power, since He declared it by words, showed it by deeds,
what then does it mean that Jesus did not trust Himself to them, as if they
would do Him some harm against His will, or would do something to Him against His
will, especially seeing that they had already believed in His name? Moreover, of
the same persons the evangelist says, "They believed in His name," of whom he
says, "But Jesus did not trust Himself to them." Why? "Because He knew all men,
and needed not that any should bear witness of man: for Himself knew what was
in man." The artificer knew what was in His own work better than the work knew
what was in itself. The Creator of man knew what was in man, which the created
man himself knew not. Do we not prove this of Peter, that he knew not what was
in himself, when he said, "With Thee, even to death"? Hear that the Lord knew
what was in man: "Thou with me even to death? Verily, verily, I say unto thee,
Before the cock crow, thou shalt deny me thrice."(2) The man, then, knew not
what was in himself; but the Creator of the man knew what was in the man.
Nevertheless, many believed in His name, and yet Jesus did not trust Himself to them.
What can we say, brethren? Perhaps the circumstances that follow will indicate
to us what the mystery of these words is. That men had believed in Him is
manifest, is true; none doubts it, the Gospel says it, the truth-speaking evangelist
testifies to it. Again, that Jesus trusted not Himself to them is also
manifest, and no Christian doubts it; for the Gospel says this also, and the same
truth-speaking evangelist testifies to it. Why, then, is it that they believed in
His name, and yet Jesus did not trust Himself to them? Let us see what follows.
3. "And there was a man of the Pharisees, Nicodemus by name, a ruler of
the Jews: the same came to Him by night, and said unto Him, Rabbi (you already
know that Master is called Rabbi), we know that Thou art a teacher come from God;
for no man can do these signs which Thou doest, except God be with him." This
Nicodemus, then, was of those who had believed in His name, as they saw the
signs and prodigies which He did. For this is what he said above: "Now, when He
was in Jerusalem at the passover on the feast-day, many believed in His name."
Why did they believe? He goes on to say, "Seeing His signs which He did." And
what says he of Nicodemus? "There was a ruler of the Jews, Nicodemus by name the
same came to Him by night, and says to Him, Rabbi, we know that Thou art a
teacher come from God." Therefore this man also had believed in His name. And why
had he believed? He goes on, "For no man can do these signs which Thou doest,
except God be with him." If, therefore, Nicodemus was of those who had believed in
His name, let us now consider, in the case of this Nicodemus, why Jesus did
not trust Himself to them. "Jesus answered and said unto him, Verily, verily, I
say unto thee, Except a man be born again, he cannot see the kingdom of God."
Therefore to them who have been born again cloth Jesus trust Himself. Behold,
those men had believed on Him, and yet Jesus trusted not Himself to them. Such are
all catechumens: already they believe in the name of Christ, but Jesus does
not trust Himself to them. Give good heed, my beloved, and understand. If we say
to a catechumen, Dost thou believe on Christ? he answers, I believe, and signs
himself; already he bears the cross of Christ on his forehead, and is not
ashamed of the cross of his Lord. Behold, he has believed in His name. Let us ask
him, Dost thou eat the flesh of the Son of man, and drink the blood of the Son of
man? he knows not what we say, because Jesus has not trusted Himself to him.
4. Therefore, since Nicodemus was of that number, he came to the Lord, but
came by night; and this perhaps pertains to the matter. Came to the Lord, and
came by night; came to the Light, and came in the darkness. But what do they
that are born again of water and of the Spirit hear from the apostle? "Ye were
once darkness, buff now light in the Lord; walk as children of light;"(3) and
again, "But we who are of the day, let us be sober."(4) Therefore they who are
born again were of the night, and are of the day; were darkness, and are light.
Now Jesus trusts Himself to them, and they come to Jesus, not by night, like
Nicodemus; not in darkness do they seek the day. For such now also profess: Jesus
has come near to them, has made salvation in them; for He said, "Except a man
eat my flesh, and drink my blood, he shall not have life in him."(5) And as the
catechumens have the sign of the cross on their forehead, they are already of
the great house; but from servants let them become sons. For they are something
who already belong to the great house. But when did the people Israel eat the
manna? After they had passed the Red Sea. And as to what the Red Sea signifies,
hear the apostle: "Moreover, brethren, I would not have you ignorant, that all
our fathers were under the cloud, and all passed through the sea." To what
purpose passed they through the sea? As if thou wert asking of him, he goes on to
say, "And all were baptized by Moses in the cloud and in the sea."(1) Now, if
the figure of the sea had such efficacy, how great will be the efficacy of the
true form of baptism! If what was done in a figure brought the people, after they
had crossed over, to the manna, what will Christ impart, in the verity of His
baptism, to His own people: brought over through Himself? By His baptism He
brings over them that believe; all their sins, the enemies as it were that pursue
them, being slain, as all the Egyptians perished in that sea. Whither does He
bring over, my brethren? Whither does Jesus bring over by baptism, of which
Moses then showed the figure, when he brought them through the sea? Whither? To the
manna. What is the manna? "I am," saith He, "the living bread, which came down
from heaven."(2) The faithful receive the manna, having now been brought
through the Red Sea? Why Red Sea? Besides sea, why also "red"? That "Red Sea"
signified the baptism of Christ. How is the baptism of Christ red, but as consecrated
by Christ's blood? Whither, then, does He lead those that believe and are
baptized? To the manna. Behold, "manna," I say: what the Jews, that people Israel,
received, is well known, well known what God had rained on them from heaven;
and yet catechumens know not what Christians receive. Let them blush, then, for
their ignorance; let them pass through the Red Sea, let them eat the manna, that
as they have believed in the name of Jesus, so likewise Jesus may trust
Himself to them.
5. Therefore mark, my brethren, what answer this man who came to Jesus by
night makes. Although he came to Jesus, yet because he came by night, he still
speaks from the darkness of his own flesh. He understands not what he hears
from the Lord, understands not what he hears from the Light, "which lighteth every
man that cometh into this world."(3) Already hath the Lord said to him,
"Except a man be born again, he shall not see the kingdom of God. Nicodemus saith
unto Him, How can a man be born again when he is old?" The Spirit speaks to him,
and he thinks of the flesh. He thinks of his own flesh, because as yet he thinks
not of Christ's flesh. For when the Lord Jesus had said, "Except a man eat my
flesh, and drink my blood, he shall not have life in him," some who followed
Him were offended, and said among themselves, "This is a hard saying; who can
hear it?" For they fancied that, in saying this, Jesus meant that they would be
able to cook Him, after being cut up like a lamb, and eat Him: horrified at His
words, they went back, and no more followed Him. Thus speaks the evangelist:
"And the Lord Himself remained with the twelve; and they said to Him, Lo, those
have left Thee. And He said, Will ye also go away?"--wishing to show them that He
was necessary to them, not they necessary to Christ. Let no man fancy that he
frightens Christ, when he tells Him that he is a Christian; as if Christ will
be more blessed if thou be a Christian. It is a good thing for thee to be a
Christian; but if thou be not, it will not be ill for Christ. Hear the voice of the
psalm, "I said to the Lord, Thou art my God, since Thou hast no need of my
goods."(4) For that reason, "Thou art my God, since of my goods Thou hast no
need." If thou be without God, thou wilt be less; if thou be with God, God will not
be greater. Not from thee will He be greater, but thou without Him wilt be
less. Grow, therefore, in Him; do not withdraw thyself, that He may, as it were,
diminish. Thou wilt be renewed if thou come to Him, wilt suffer loss if thou
depart from Him. He remains entire when thou comest to Him, remains entire even
when thou fallest away. When, therefore, He had said to His disciples, "Will ye
also go away?" Peter, that Rock, answered with the voice of all, "Lord, to whom
shall we go? Thou hast the words of eternal life." Pleasantly savored the Lord's
flesh in his mouth. The Lord, however, expounded to them, and said, "It is the
Spirit that quickeneth." After He had said, "Except a man eat my flesh, and
drink my blood, he shall not have life in him," lest they should understand it
carnally, He said, "It is the Spirit that quickeneth, but the flesh profiteth
nothing: the words which I have spoken unto you are spirit and life."(5)
6. This Nicodemus, who had come to Jesus by night, did not savor of this
spirit and this life. Saith Jesus to him, "Except a man be born again, he shall
not see the kingdom of God." And he, savoring of his own flesh, while as yet he
savored not of the flesh of Christ in his mouth, saith, "How can a man be born
a second time, when he is old? Can he enter a second time into his mother's
womb, and be born?" This man knew but one birth, that from Adam and Eve; that
which is from God and the Church he knew not yet: he knew only those parents that
bring forth to death, knew not yet the parents that bring forth to life; he
knew but the parents that bring forth successors, knew not yet the ever-living
parents that bring forth those that shall abide.
Whilst there are two births, then, he understood only one. One is of the
earth, the other of heaven; one of the flesh, the other of the Spirit; one of
mortality, the other of eternity; one of male and female, the other of God and
the Church. But these two are each single; there can be no repeating the one or
the other. Rightly did Nicodemus understand the birth of the flesh; so
understand thou also the birth of the Spirit, as Nicodemus understood the birth of the
flesh. What did Nicodemus understand? "Can a man enter a second time into his
mother's womb, and be born?" Thus, whosoever shall tell thee to be spiritually
born a second time, answer in the words of Nicodemus, "Can a man enter a second
time into his mother's womb, and be born?" I am already born of Adam, Adam
cannot beget me a second time. I am already born of Christ, Christ cannot beget me
again. As there is no repeating from the womb, so neither from baptism.
7. He that is born of the Catholic Church, is born, as it were, of Sarah,
of the free woman; he that is born of heresy is, as it were, born of the bond
woman, but of Abraham's seed. Consider, beloved, how great a mystery. God
testifies, saying, "I am the God of Abraham, and the God of Isaac, and the God of
Jacob." Were there not other patriarchs? Before these, was there not holy Noah,
who alone of the whole human race, with all his house, was worthy to be delivered
from the flood,--he in whom, and in his sons, the Church was prefigured? Borne
by wood, they escaped the flood. Then afterwards great men whom we know, whom
Holy Scriptures commends, Moses faithful in all his house.(1) And yet those
three are named, just as if they alone deserved well of him: "I am the God of
Abraham, and the God of Isaac, and the God of Jacob: this is my name for ever."(2)
Sublime mystery! It is the Lord that is able to open both our mouth and your
hearts, that we may speak as He has deigned to reveal, and that you may receive
even as it is expedient for you.
8. The patriarchs, then, are these three, Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob. You
know that the sons of Jacob were twelve, and thence the people Israel; for Jacob
himself is Israel, and the people Israel in twelve tribes pertaining to the
twelve sons of Israel. Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob three fathers, and one people.
The fathers three, as it were in the beginning of the people; three fathers in
whom the people was figured: and the former people itself the present people.
For in the Jewish people was figured the Christian people. There a figure, here
the truth; there a shadow, here the body: as the apostle says, "Now these things
happened to them in a figure." It is the apostle's voice: "They were written,"
saith he, "for our sakes, upon whom the end of the ages is come."(3) Let your
mind now recur to Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob. In the case of these three, we
find that free women bear children, and that bond women bear children: we find
there offspring of free women, we find there also offspring of bond women. The
bond woman signifies nothing good: "Cast out the bond woman," saith he, "and her
son; for the son of the bond woman shall not be heir with the son of the free."
The apostle recounts this; and he says that in those two sons of Abraham was a
figure of the two Testaments, the Old and the New. To the Old Testament belong
the lovers of temporal things, the lovers of the world: to the New Testament
belong the lovers of eternal life. Hence, that Jerusalem on earth was the shadow
of the heavenly Jerusalem, the mother of us all, which is in heaven; and these
are the apostle's words.(4) And of that city from which we are absent on our
sojourn, you know much, you have now heard much. But we find a wonderful thing in
these births, in these fruits of the womb, in these generations of free and
bond women: namely, four sorts of men; in which four sorts is completed the
figure of the future Christian people, so that what was said in the case of those
three patriarchs is not surprising, "I am the God of Abraham, and the God of
Isaac, and the God of Jacob." For in the case of all Christians, observe, brethren,
either good men are born of evil men, or evil men of good; or good men of
good, or evil men of evil: more than these four sorts you cannot find. These things
I will again repeat: Give heed, keep them, excite your hearts, be not dull;
take in, lest ye be taken, how of all Christians there are four sorts. Either of
the good are born good, or of the evil, are born evil; or of the good are born
evil, or of the evil good. I think it is plain. Of the good, good; if they who
baptize are good, and also they who are baptized rightly believe, and are
rightly numbered among the members of Christ. Of the evil, evil; if they who baptize
are evil, and they who are baptized approach God with a double heart, and do
not observe the morals which they hear urged in the Church, so as not to be
chaff, but grain, there. How many such there are, you know, beloved. Of the evil,
good; sometimes an adulterer baptizes, and be that is baptized is justified. Of
the good, evil; sometimes they who baptize are holy, they who are baptized do
not desire to keep the way of God.
9. I suppose, brethren, that this is known in the Church, and that what we
are saying is manifest by daily examples; but let us consider these things in
the case of our fathers before us, how they also had these four kinds. Of the
good, good; Ananias baptized Paul. How of the evil, evil? The apostle declares
that there were certain preachers of the gospel, who, he says, did not use to
preach the gospel with a pure motive, whom, however, he tolerates in the
Christian society, saying, "What then? notwithstanding every way, whether by occasion
or in truth, Christ is preached, and in this I rejoice."(1) Was he therefore
malevolent, and did he rejoice in another's evil? No, but rejoiced because through
evil men the truth was preached, and by the mouths of evil men Christ was
preached. If these men baptized any persons like themselves, evil men baptized evil
men: if they baptized such as the Lord admonishes, when He says, "Whatsoever
they bid you, do; but do not ye after their works,"(2) they were evil men that
were baptizing good. Good men baptized evil men, as Simon the sorcerer was
baptized by Philip, a holy man.(3) Therefore these four sorts, my brethren, are
known. See, I repeat them again, hold them, count them, think upon them; guard
against what is evil; keep what is good. Good men are born of good, when holy men
are baptized by holy; evil men are born of evil, when both they that baptize and
they that are baptized live unrighteously and ungodly; good men are born of
evil, when they are evil that baptize, and they good that are baptized; evil men
are born of good, when they are good that baptize, and they evil that are
baptized.
10. How do we find this in these three names, "I am the God of Abraham,
and the God of Isaac, and the God of Jacob"? We hold the bond women among the
evil, and the free women among the good. Free women bear the good; Sarah bare
Isaac: bond women bear the evil; Hagar bare Ishmael. We have in the case of Abraham
alone the two sorts, both when the good are of the good, and also when the
evil are of the evil. But where have we evil of good figured? Rebecca, Isaac's
wife, was a free woman: read, She bare twins; one was good, the other evil. Thou
hast the Scripture openly declaring by the voice of God, "Jacob have I loved,
but Esau have I hated."(4) Rebecca bare those two, Jacob and Esau: one of them is
chosen, the other is reprobated; one succeeds to the inheritance, the other is
disinherited. God does not make His people of Esau, but makes it of Jacob. The
seed is one, those conceived are dissimilar: the womb is one, those born of it
are diverse. Was not the free woman that bare Jacob, the same free woman that
bare Esau? They strove in the mother's womb; and when they strove there, it was
said to Rebecca," Two peoples are in thy womb." Two men, two peoples; a good
people, and a bad people: but yet they strive m one womb. How many evil men
there are in the Church! And one womb carries them until they are separated in the
end: and the good cry out against the evil, and the evil in turn cry out
against the good, and both strive together in the bowels of one mother. Will they be
always together? There is a going forth to the light in the end; the birth
which is here figured in a mystery is declared; and it will then appear that "Jacob
have I loved, but Esau have I hated."
11. Accordingly we have now found, brethren, of the good, good--of the
free woman, Isaac; and of the evil, evil--of the bond woman, Ishmael; and of the
good, evil--of Rebecca, Esau: where shall we find of the evil, good? There
remains Jacob, that the completion of these four sorts may be concluded in the three
patriarchs. Jacob had for wives free women, he had also bond women: the free
bear children, as do also the bond, and thus come the twelve sons of Israel. If
you count them all, of whom they were born, they were not all of the free
women, nor all of the bond women; but yet they were all of one seed. What, then, my
brethren? Did not they who were born of the bond women possess the land of
promise together with their brethren? We have there found good sons of Jacob born
of bond women, and good sons of Jacob born of free women. Their birth of the
wombs of bond women was nothing against them, when they knew their seed in the
father, and consequently they held the kingdom with their brethren. Therefore, as
in the case of Jacob's sons, that they were born of bond women did not hinder
their holding the kingdom, and receiving the land of promise on an equality with
their brothers; their birth of bond women did not hinder them, but the
father's seed prevailed: so, whoever are baptized by evil men, appear as if born of
bond women; nevertheless, because they are of the seed of the Word of God, which
is figured in Jacob, let them not be cast down, they shall possess the
inheritance with their brethren. Therefore, let him who is born of the good seed be
without fear; only let him not imitate the bond woman, if he is born of a bond
woman. Do not thou imitate the evil, proud, bond woman. For how came the sons of
Jacob, that were born of bond women, to possess the land of promise with their
brethren, whilst Ishmael, born of a bond woman, was cast out from the
inheritance? How, but because he was proud, they were humble? He proudly reared his neck,
and wished to seduce his brother while he was playing with him.
12. A great mystery is there. They were playing together, Ishmael and
Isaac: Sarah sees them playing, and says to Abraham, "Cast out the bond woman and
her son; for the son of the bond woman shall not be heir with my son Isaac." And
when Abraham was sorrowful, the Lord confirmed to him the saying of his wife.
Now here is evidently a mystery, that the event was somehow pregnant with
something future. She sees them playing, and says, "Cast out the bond woman and her
son." What is this, brethren? For what evil had Ishmael done to the boy Isaac,
in playing with him? That playing was a mocking; that playing signified
deception. Now attend, beloved, to this great mystery. The apostle calls it
persecution; that playing, that play, he calls persecution: for he says, "But as then he
that was born after the flesh, persecuted him that was born after the Spirit,
so also now;" that is, they that are born after the flesh persecute them that
are born after the Spirit. Who are born after the flesh? Lovers of the world,
lovers of this life. Who are born after the Spirit? Lovers of the kingdom of
heaven, lovers of Christ, men that long for eternal life, that worship God freely.
They play, and the apostle calls it persecution. For after he said these words,
"And as then be that was born after the flesh persecuted him that was born
after the Spirit, so also now;" the apostle went on, and showed of what
persecution, he was speaking: "But what says the Scripture? Cast out the bond woman and
her son: for the son of the bond woman shall not be heir with my son Isaac."[1]
We search where the Scripture says this, to see whether any persecution on
Ishmael's part against Isaac preceded this; and we find that this was said by Sarah
when she saw the boys playing together. The playing which Scripture says that
Sarah saw, the apostle calls persecution. Hence, they who seduce you by playing,
persecute you the more. "Come," say they, "Come, be baptized here, here is
true baptism for thee." Do not play, there is one true baptism; that other is
play: thou wilt be seduced, and that will be a grievous persecution to thee. It
were better for thee to make Ishmael a present of the kingdom; but Ishmael will
not have it, for he means to play. Keep thou thy father's inheritance, and hear
this: "Cast out the bond woman and her son; for the son of the bond woman shall
not be heir with my son Isaac."
13. These men, too, dare to say that they are wont to suffer persecution
from catholic kings, or from catholic princes. What persecution do they bear?
Affliction of body: yet if at times they have suffered, and how they suffered,
let themselves know, and settle it with their consciences; still they suffered
only affliction of body: the persecution which they cause is more grievous.
Beware when Ishmael wishes to play with Isaac, when he fawns on thee, when he offers
another baptism: answer him, I have baptism already. For if this baptism is
true, he who would give thee another would be mocking thee. Beware of the
persecution of the soul. For though the party of Donatus has at tithes suffered
somewhat at the hands of catholic princes, it was a bodily suffering, not the
suffering of spiritual deception. Hear and see in the very facts of Old Testament
history all the signs and indications of things to come. Sarah is found to have
afflicted her maid Hagar: Sarah is free. After her maid began to be proud, Sarah
complained to Abraham, and said, "Cast out the bond woman;" she has lifted her
neck against me. His wife complains of Abraham, as if it were his doing. But
Abraham, who was not bound to the maid by lust, but by the duty of begetting
children, inasmuch as Sarah had given her to him to have offspring by her, says to
her: "Behold, she is thy handmaid; do unto her as thou wilt." And Sarah
grievously afflicted her, and she fled from her face. See, the free woman afflicted the
bond woman, and the apostle does not call that a persecution; the slave plays
with his master, and he calls it persecution: this afflicting is not called
persecution; that playing is. How does it appear to you, brethren? Do you not
understand what is signified? Thus, then, when God wills to stir up powers against
heretics, against schismatics, against those that scatter the Church, that blow
on Christ as if they abhorred Him, that blaspheme baptism, let them not
wonder; because God stirs them up, that Hagar may be beaten by Sarah. Let Hagar know
herself, and yield her neck: for when, after being humiliated, she departed
from her mistress, an angel met her, and said to her, "What is the matter with
thee, Hagar, Sarah's handmaid?" When she complained of her mistress, what did she
hear from the angel? "Return to thy mistress."(1) It is for this that she is
afflicted, that she may return; and would that she may return, for her offspring,
just like the sons of Jacob, will obtain the inheritance with their brethren.
14. But they wonder that Christian powers are roused against detestable
scatterers of the Church. Should they not be moved, then? How otherwise should
they give an account of their rule to God? Observe, beloved, what I say, that it
concerns Christian kings of this world to wish their mother the Church, of
which they have been spiritually born, to have peace in their times. We read
Daniel's visions and prophetical histories. The three children praised the Lord in
the fire: King Nebuchadnezzar wondered at the children praising God, and at the
fire around them doing them no harm: and whilst he wondered, what did King
Nebuchadnezzar say, he who was neither a Jew nor circumcised, who had set up his own
image and compelled all men to adore it; but, impressed by the praises of the
three children when he saw the majesty of God present in the fire what said he?
"And I will publish a decree to all tribes and tongues in the whole earth."
What sort of decree? "Whosoever shall speak blasphemy against the God of
Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego, shall be cut off, and their houses shall be made a
ruin."(2) See how an alien king acts with raging indignation that the God of
Israel might not be blasphemed, because He was able to deliver the three children
from the fire: and yet they would not have Christian kings to act with severity
when Christ is contemptuously rejected, by whom not three children, but the
whole world, with these very kings, is delivered from the fire of hell! For those
three children, my brethren, were delivered from temporal fire. Is He not the
same God who was the God of the Maccabees and the God of the three children? The
latter He delivered from the fire; the former did in body perish in the
torments of fire, but in mind they remained steadfast in the ordinances of the law.
The latter were openly delivered, the former were crowned in secret? It is a
greater thing to be delivered from the flame of hell than from the furnace of a
human power. If, then, Nebuchadnezzar praised and extolled and gave glory to God
because He delivered three children from the fire, and gave such glory as to
send forth a decree throughout his kingdom, "Whosoever shall speak blasphemy
against the God of Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego, shall be cut off, and their
houses shall be brought to ruin," how should not these kings be moved, who observe,
not three children delivered from the flame, but their very selves delivered
from hell, when they see Christ, by whom they have been delivered,
contemptuously spurned in Christians, when they hear it said to a Christian, "Say that thou
art not a Christian"? Men are willing to do such deeds, but they do not wish to
suffer, at all events, such punishments.
15. For see what they do and what they suffer. They slay souls, they
suffer in body: they cause everlasting deaths, and yet they complain that they
themselves suffer temporal deaths. And yet what deaths do they suffer? They allege
to us some martyrs of theirs in persecution. See, Marculus was hurled headlong
from a rock; see, Donatus of Bagaia was thrown into a well. When have the Roman
authorities decreed such punishments as casting men down rocks? But what do
those of our party reply? What was done I know not; what however do ours tell?
That they hung themselves headlong and cast the infamy of it upon the authorities.
Let us call to mind the custom of the Roman authorities, and see to whom we
are to give credit. Our men declare that those men cast themselves down headlong.
If they are not the very disciples of those men, who now cast themselves down
precipices, while no man persecutes them, let us not credit the allegation of
our men: what wonder if those men did what these are wont to do? The Roman
authorities never did employ such punishments: for had they not the power to put
them to death openly? But those men, while they wished to be honored when dead,
found not a death to make them more famous. In short, whatever the fact was, I
do not know. And even if thou hast suffered corporal affliction, O party of
Donatus, at the hand of the Catholic Church, as an Hagar thou hast suffered it at
the hand of Sarah; "return to thy mistress." A point which it was indeed
necessary to discuss has detained us somewhat too long to be at all able to expound
the whole text of the Gospel Lesson. Let this suffice you in the meantime,
beloved brethren, lest, by speaking of other matters, what has been spoken might be
shut out from your hearts. Hold fast these things, declare such things; and
while yourselves are inflamed, go your way thither, and set on fire them that are
cold.
TRACTATE XII.
CHAPTER III. 6-21.
1. We observe, beloved, that the intimation with which we yesterday
excited your attention has brought you together with more alacrity, and in greater
number than usual; but meanwhile let us, if you please, pay our debt of a
discourse on the Gospel Lesson, which comes in due course. You shall then hear,
beloved, as well what we have already effected concerning the peace of the Church,
and what we hope yet further to accomplish. For the present, then, let the whole
attention of your hearts be given to the gospel; let none be thinking of
anything else. For if he who attends to it wholly apprehends with difficulty, must
not he who divides himself by diverse thoughts let go what he has received?
Moreover, you remember, beloved, that on the last Lord's day, as the Lord deigned to
help us, we discoursed of spiritual regeneration. That lesson we have caused
to be read to you again, so that what was then left unspoken, we may now, by the
aid of your prayers in the name of Christ, fulfill.
2. Spiritual regeneration is one, just as the generation of the flesh is
one. And Nicodemus said the truth when he said to the Lord that a man cannot,
when he is old, return again into his mother's womb and be born. He indeed said
that a man cannot do this when he is old, as if he could do it even were he an
infant. But be he fresh from the womb, or now in years, he cannot possibly
return again into the mother's bowels and be born. But just as for the birth of the
flesh, the bowels of woman avail to bring forth the child only once, so for the
spiritual birth the bowels of the Church avail that a man be baptized only
once. Therefore, in case one should say, "Well, but this man was born in heresy,
and this in schism:" all that was cut away, if you remember what was debated to
you about our three fathers, of whom God willed to be called the God, not that
they were thus alone but because in them alone the figure of the future people
was made up in its completeness. For we find one born of a bond woman
disinherited, one born of a free woman made heir: again, we find one born of a free
woman disinherited, one born of a bond woman made heir. Ishmael, born of a bond
woman, disinherited; Isaac, born of a free woman, made heir: Esau, born of a
free woman, disinherited; the sons of Jacob, born of bond women, made heirs. Thus,
in these three fathers the figure of the whole future people is seen: and not
without reason God saith, "I am the God of Abraham, and the God of Isaac, and
the God of Jacob: this," saith He, "is my name for ever."(1) Rather let us
remember what was promised to Abraham himself: for this was promised to Isaac, and
also to Jacob. What do we find? "In thy seed shall all nations be blessed."(2)
At that time the one man believed what as yet he saw not: men now see, and are
blinded. What was promised to the one man is fulfilled in the nations; and they
who will not see what is already fulfilled, are separating themselves from the
communion of the nations. But what avails it them that they will not see? See
they do, whether they will or no; the open truth strikes against their closed
eyes.
3. It was in answer to Nicodemus, who was of them that had believed on
Jesus, that it was said, And Jesus did not trust Himself to them. To certain men,
indeed, He did not trust Himself, though they had already believed on Him. Thus
it is written, "Many believed in His name, seeing the signs which He did. But
Jesus did not trust Himself to them. For He needed not that any should testify
of man; for Himself knew what was in man." Behold, they already believed on
Jesus, and yet Jesus did not trust Himself to them. Why? because they were not yet
born again of water and of the Spirit. From this have we exhorted and do
exhort our brethren the catechumens. For if you ask them, they have already believed
in Jesus; but because they have not yet received His flesh and blood, Jesus
has not yet trusted Himself to them. What must they do that Jesus may trust
Himself to them? They must be born again of water and of the Spirit; the Church that
is in travail with them must bring them forth. They have been conceived; they
must be brought forth to the light: they have breasts to be nourished at; let
them not fear lest, being born, they may be smothered; let them not depart from
the mother's breasts.
4. No man can return into his mother's bowels and be born again. But some
one is born of a bond woman? Well, did they who were born of bond women at the
former time, return into the wombs of the free to be born anew? The seed of
Abraham was in Ishmael also; but that Abraham might have a son of the bond maid,
it was at the advice of his wife. The child was of the husband's seed, not of
the womb, but at the sole pleasure of the wife. Was his birth of a bond woman the
reason why he was disinherited? Then, if he was disinherited because he was
the son of a bond woman, no sons of bond women would be admitted to the
inheritance. The sons of Jacob were admitted to the inheritance; but Ishmael was put out
of it, not because born of a bond woman, but because he was proud to his
mother, proud to his mother's son; for his mother was Sarah rather than Hagar. The
one gave her womb, the other's will was added: Abraham would not have done what
Sarah willed not: therefore was he Sarah's son rather. But because he was proud
to his brother, proud in playing, that is, in mocking him; what said Sarah?
"Cast out the bond woman and her son; for the son of the bond woman shall not be
heir with my son Isaac."(1) It was not, therefore, the bowels of the bond woman
that caused his rejection, but the slave's neck. For the free-born is a slave
if he is proud, and, what is worse, the slave of a bad mistress, of pride
itself. Thus, my brethren, answer the man, that a man cannot be born a second time;
answer fearlessly, that a man cannot be born a second time. Whatever is done a
second time is mockery, whatever is done a second time is play. It is Ishmael
playing, let him be cast out. For Sarah observed them playing, saith the
Scripture, and said to Abraham, "Cast out the bond woman and her son." The playing of
the boys displeased Sarah. She saw something strange in their play. Do not they
who have sons like to see them playing? She saw and disapproved it. Something
or other she saw in their play; she saw mockery in it, observed the pride of
the slave; she was displeased with it, and she cast him out. The children of bond
women, when wicked, are cast out; and the child of the free woman, when an
Esau, is cast out. Let none, therefore, presume on his birth of good parents; let
none presume on his being baptized by holy men. Let him that is baptized by
holy men still beware lest he be not a Jacob, but an Esau. This would I say then,
brethren, it is better to be baptized by men that seek their own and love the
world, which is what the name of bond woman imports, and to be spiritually
seeking the inheritance of Christ, so as to be as it were a son of Jacob by a bond
woman, than to be baptized by holy men and to become proud, so as to be an Esau
to be cast out, though born of a free woman. Hold ye this fast, brethren. We
are not coaxing you, let none of your hope be in us; we flatter neither ourselves
nor you; every man bears his own burden. It is our duty to speak, that we be
not judged unhappily: yours to hear, and that with the heart, lest what we give
be required of you; nay, that when it is required, it may be found a gain, not
a loss.
5. The Lord says to Nicodemus, and explains to him: "Verily, verily, I say
unto thee, Except a man be born again of water and of the Spirit, he cannot
enter into the kingdom of God." Thou, says He, understandest a carnal generation,
when thou sayest, Can a man return into his mother's bowels? The birth for the
kingdom of God must be of water and of the Spirit. If one is born to the
temporal inheritance of a human father, be he born of the bowels of a carnal mother;
if one is born to the everlasting inheritance of God as his Father, be he born
of the bowels of the Church. A father, as one that will die, begets a son by
his wife to succeed him; but God begets of the Church sons, not to succeed Him,
but to abide with Himself. And He goes on: "That which is horn of the flesh is
flesh; and that which is born of the Spirit is spirit." We are born spiritually
then, and m spirit we are born by the word and sacrament. The Spirit is
present that we may be born; the Spirit is invisibly present whereof thou art born,
for thou too must be invisibly born. For He goes on to say: "Marvel not that I
said unto thee, Ye must be born again. The Spirit bloweth where it listeth, and
thou hearest its voice, but knowest not whence it cometh, or whither it goeth."
None sees the Spirit; and how do we hear the Spirit's voice? There sounds a
psalm, it is the Spirit's voice; the gospel sounds, it is the Spirit's voice; the
divine word sounds, it is the Spirit's voice. "Thou hearest its voice, and
knowest not whence it cometh, and whither it goeth." But if thou art born of the
Spirit, thou too shall be so, that one who is not born of the Spirit knows not,
as for thee, whence thou comest, or whither thou goest. For He said, as He went
on, "So is also every one that is born of the Spirit."
6. "Nicodemus answered and said unto Him, How can these things be?" And,
in fact, in the carnal sense, he knew not how. In him occurred what the Lord had
said; the Spirit's voice he heard, but knew not whence it came, and whither it
was going. "Jesus answered and said unto him, Art thou a master in Israel, and
knowest not these things?" Oh, brethren! what? do we think that the Lord meant
to taunt scornfully this master of the Jews? The Lord knew what He was doing;
He wished the man to be born of the Spirit. No man is born of the Spirit if he
be not humble, for humility itself makes us to be born of the Spirit; "for the
Lord is nigh to them that are of broken heart."(1) The man was puffed up with
his mastership, and it appeared of some importance to himself that he was a
teacher of the Jews. Jesus pulled down his pride, that he might be born of the
Spirit: He taunted him as an unlearned man; not that the Lord wished to appear his
superior. What comparison can there be, God compared to man, truth to
falsehood? Christ greater than Nicodemus! Ought this to be said, can it be said, is it
to be thought? If it were said, "Christ is greater than angels," it were
ridiculous: for incomparably greater than every creature is He by whom every creature
was made. But yet He rallies the man on his pride: "Art thou a master in
Israel, and knowest not these things?" As if He said, Behold, thou knowest nothing,
thou art a proud chief; be thou born of the Spirit: for if thou be born of the
Spirit, thou wilt keep the ways of God, so as to follow Christ's humility. So,
indeed, is He high above all angels, that, "being in the forth of God, He
thought it not robbery to be equal with God, but emptied Himself, taking upon Him the
form of a servant, being made into the likeness of men, and found in fashion
as a man: He humbled Himself, being made: obedient unto death" (and lest any
kind of death should please thee), "even the death of the cross."(2) He hung on
the cross, and they scoffed at Him. He could have come down from the cross; but
He deferred, that He might rise again from the tomb. He, the Lord, bore with
proud slaves;(3) the physician with the sick. If He did this, how ought they to
act whom it behoves to be born of the Spirit!--if He did this, He who is the true
Master in heaven, not of men only, but also of angels. For if the angels are
learned, they are so by the Word of God. If they are learned by the Word of God,
ask of what they are learned; and you shall find, "In the beginning was the
Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God." The neck of man is done
away with, only the hard and stiff neck, that it may be gentle to bear the yoke
of Christ, of which it is said, "My yoke is easy, and my burden is light."(3)
7. And He goes on, "If I have told you earthly things, and ye believe not;
how shall ye believe, if I tell you heavenly things?" What earthly things did
He tell, brethren? "Except a man be born again;" is that an earthly thing? "The
Spirit bloweth where it listeth, and thou hearest its voice, and knowest not
whence it cometh, or whither it goeth;" is that earthly? For if He spoke it of
the wind, as some have understood it, when they were asked what earthly thing
the Lord meant, when He said, "If I told you earthly things, and ye believe not;
how shall ye believe, if I tell you heavenly things?"--when, I say, it was
asked of certain men what "earthly thing" the Lord meant, being in difficulty, they
said, What He said, "The Spirit bloweth where it listeth," and "its voice thou
hearest, and knowest not whence it cometh, or whither it goeth," He said
concerning the wind. Now what did He name earthly? He was speaking of the spiritual
birth; and going on, saith, "So is every one that is born of the Spirit." Then,
brethren, which of us does not see, for example, the south wind going from
south to north, or another wind coming from east to west? How, then, know we not
whence it cometh and whither it goeth? What earthly thing, then, did He tell,
which men did not believe? Was it that which He had said about raising the temple
again? Surely, for He had received His body of the earth, and that earth taken
of the earthly body He was preparing to raise up. They did not believe Him as
about to raise up earth. "If I told you earthly things," saith He, "and ye
believe not; how shall ye believe if I tell you heavenly things?" That is, if ye
believe not that I can raise up the temple cast down by you, how shall ye believe
that men can be regenerated by the Spirit?
8. And He goes on: "And no man hath ascended into heaven, but He that came
down from heaven, the Son of man who is in heaven." Behold, He was here, and
was also in heaven; was here in His flesh, in heaven by His divinity; yea,
everywhere by His divinity. Born of a mother, not quitting the Father. Two
nativities of Christ are understood: one divine, the other human: one, that by which we
were to be made; the other, that by which we were to be made anew: both
marvellous; that without mother, this without father. But because He had taken a body
of Adam,--for Mary was of Adam,--and was about to raise that same body again,
it was an earthly thing He had said in saying, "Destroy this temple, and in
three days I will raise it up." But this was a heavenly thing, when He said,
"Except a man be born again of water and of the Spirit, he shall not see the kingdom
of God." Come then, brethren! God has willed to be the Son of man; and willed
men to be sons of God. He came down for our sakes; let us ascend for His sake.
For He alone descended and ascended, He who saith, "No man hath ascended into
heaven, but He who came down from heaven." Are they not therefore to ascend into
heaven whom He makes sons of God? Certainly they are: this is the promise to
us, "They shall be equal to the angels of God."(1) Then how is it that no man
ascends, but He that descended? Because one only descended, only one ascends.
What of the rest? What are we to understand, but that they shall be His members,
that one may ascend? Therefore it follows that "no man hath ascended into
heaven, but He who came down from heaven, the Son of man who is in heaven." Dost thou
marvel that He was both here and in heaven? Such He made His disciples. Hear
the Apostle Paul saying, "But our conversation is in heaven."(2) If the Apostle
Paul, a man, walked in the flesh on earth, and yet had his conversation in
heaven, was the God of heaven and earth not able to be both in heaven and on earth?
9. Therefore, if none but He descended and ascended, what hope is there
for the rest? The hope for the rest is this, that He came down in order that in
Him and with Him they might be one, who should ascend through Him. "He saith
not, And to seeds," saith the apostle, "as in many; but as in one, And to thy
seed, which is Christ." And to believers he saith, "And ye are Christ's; and if
Christ's, then are Abraham's seed."(3) What he said to be one, that he said that
we all are. Hence, in the Psalms, many sometimes sing, to show that one is made
of many; sometimes one sings, to show what is made of many. Therefore was it
only one that was healed in the pool; and whoever else went down into it was not
healed. Now this one shows forth the oneness of the Church. Woe to them who
hate unity, and make to themselves parties among men! Let them hear him who wished
to make them one, in one, for one: let them hear him who says, Be not ye
making many: "I have planted, Apollos watered; but God gave the increase. But
neither he that planteth is anything, neither he that watereth; but God that giveth
the increase."(4) They were saying, "I am of Paul, I of Apollos, I of Cephas."
And he says, "Is Christ divided?" Be ye in one, be one thing, be one person: "No
man hath ascended into heaven, but He who came down from heaven." Lo! we wish
to be thine, they said to Paul. And he said to them, I will not that ye be
Paul's, but be ye His whose is Paul together with you.
10. For He came down and died, and by that death delivered us from death:
being slain by death, He slew death. And you know, brethren, that this death
entered into the world through the devil's envy. "God made not death," saith the
Scripture, "nor delights He in the destruction of the living; but He created
all things to be." But what saith it here? "But by the devil's envy, death
entered into the whole world."(5) To the death offered for our entertainment by the
devil, man would not come by constraint; for the devil had not the power of
forcing, but only cunning to persuade. Hadst thou not consented, the devil had
brought in nothing: thy own consenting, O man, led thee to death. Of the mortal are
mortals born; from immortals we are become mortals. From Adam all men are
mortal; but Jesus the Son of God, the Word of God, by which all things were made,
the only Son equal with the Father, was made mortal: "for the Word was made
flesh, and dwelt among us."
11. He endured death, then; but death He hanged on the cross, and mortal
men are delivered from death. The Lord calls to mind a great matter, which was
done in a figure with them of old: "And as Moses," saith He, "lifted up the
serpent in the wilderness, so must the Son of man be lifted up; that every one who
believeth on Him may not perish, but have everlasting life." A great mystery is
here, as they who read know. Again, let them hear, as well they who have not
read as they who have forgotten what perhaps they had heard or read. The people
Israel were fallen helplessly in the wilderness by the bite of serpents; they
suffered a great calamity by many deaths: for it was the stroke of God
correcting and scourging them that He might instruct them. In this was shown a great
mystery, the figure of a thing to come: the Lord Himself testifies in this
passage, so that no man can give another interpretation than that which the truth
indicates concerning itself. Now Moses was ordered by the Lord to make a brazen
serpent, and to raise it on a pole in the wilderness, and to admonish the people
Israel, that, when any had been bitten by a serpent, he should look to that
serpent raised up on the pole. This was done: men were bitten; they looked and were
healed.(1) What are the biting serpents? Sins, from the mortality of the
flesh. What is the serpent lifted up? The Lord's death on the cross. For as death
came by the serpent, it was figured by the image of a serpent. The serpent's bite
was deadly, the Lord's death is life-giving. A serpent is gazed on that the
serpent may have no power. What is this? A death is gazed on, that death may have
no power. But whose death? The death of life: if it may be said, the death of
life; ay, for it may be said, but said wonderfully. But should it not be
spoken, seeing it was a thing to be done? Shall I hesitate to utter that which the
Lord has deigned to do for me? Is not Christ the life? And yet Christ hung on the
cross. Is not Christ life? And yet Christ was dead. But in Christ's death,
death died. Life dead slew death; the fullness of life swallowed up death; death
was absorbed in the body of Christ. So also shall we say in the resurrection,
when now triumphant we shall sing, "Where, O death, is thy contest? Where, O
death, is thy sting?"(2) Meanwhile brethren, that we may be healed from sin, let us
now gaze on Christ crucified; for "as Moses," saith He, "lifted up the serpent
in the wilderness, so must the Son of man be lifted up; that whosoever
believeth on Him may not perish, but have everlasting life." Just as they who looked
on that serpent perished not by the serpent's bites, so they who look in faith
on Christ's death are healed from the bites of sins. But those were healed from
death to temporal life; whilst here He saith, "that they may have everlasting
life." Now there is this difference between the figurative image and the real
thing: the figure procured temporal life; the reality, of which that was the
figure, procures eternal life.
12. "For God sent not His Son into the world to judge the world, but that
the world through Him may be saved." So far, then, as it lies in the physician,
He is come to heal the sick. He that will not observe the orders of the
physician destroys himself. He is come a Saviour to the world: why is he called the
Saviour of the world, but that He is come to save the world, not to judge the
world? Thou wilt not be saved by Him; thou shall be judged of thyself And why do
I say, "shall be judged"? See what He says: "He that believeth on Him is not
judged, but he that believeth not." What dost thou expect He is going to say, but
"is judged"? "Already," saith He, "has been judged." The judgment has not yet
appeared, but already it has taken place. For the Lord knoweth them that are
His: He knows who are persevering for the crown, and who for the flame; knows the
wheat on His threshing-floor, and knows the chaff; knows the good corn, and
knows the tares. He that believeth not is already judged. Why judged? "Because he
has not believed in the name of the only-begotten Son of God."
13. "And this is the judgment, that light is come into the world, and men
loved darkness rather than light,because their deeds were evil." My brethren,
whose works does the Lord find to be good? The works of none: He finds the works
of all evil. How is it, then, that some have done the truth, and are come to
the light? For this is what follows: "But he that doeth truth cometh to the
light, that his deeds may be made manifest, that they are wrought in God." In what
way have some done a good work to come to the light, namely, to Christ? And how
have some loved darkness? For if He finds all men sinners, and healeth all of
sin, and that serpent in which the Lord's death was figured healed them that
were bitten, and on account of the serpent's bite the serpent was set up, namely,
the Lord's death on account of mortal men, whom He finds unrighteous; how are
we to understand that "this is the judgment, that light is come into the world,
and men loved darkness rather than light, because their deeds were evil"? How
is this? Whose works, in fact, are good? Hast Thou not come to justify the
ungodly? "But they loved," saith He, "darkness rather than light." There He laid
the emphasis: for many loved their sins; many confessed their sins; and he who
confesses his sins, and accuses them, doth now work with God. God accuses thy
sins: and if thou also accusest, thou art united to God. There are, as it were,
two things, man and sinner. That thou art called man, is God's doing; that thou
art called sinner, is man's own doing. Blot out what thou hast done, that God
may save what He has done. It behoves thee to hate thine own work in thee, and to
love the work of God in thee. And when thy own deeds will begin to displease
thee, from that time thy good works begin, as thou findest fault with thy evil
works. The confession of evil works is the beginning of good works. Thou doest
the truth, and comest to the light. How is it thou doest the truth? Thou dost
not caress, nor soothe, nor flatter thyself; nor say, "I am righteous," whilst
thou art unrighteous: thus, thou beginnest to do the truth. Thou comest to the
light, that thy works may be made manifest that they are wrought in God; for thy
sin, the very thing that has given thee displeasure, would not have displeased
thee, if God did not shine into thee, and His truth show it thee. But he that
loves his sins, even after being admonished, hates the light admonishing him,
and flees from it, that his works which he loves may not be proved to be evil.
But he that doeth truth accuses his evil works in himself, spares not himself,
forgives not himself, that God may forgive him: for that which he desires God to
forgive, he himself acknowledges, and he comes to the light; to which he is
thankful for showing him what he should hate in himself. He says to God, "Turn
away Thy face from my sins:" yet with what countenance says it, unless he adds,
"For I acknowledge mine iniquity, and my sin is ever before me?"(1) Be that
before thyself which thou desirest not to be before God. But if thou wilt put thy
sin behind thee, God will thrust it back before thine eyes; and this He will do
at a time when there will be no more fruit of repentance.
14. Run, my brethren, lest the darkness lay hold of you. Awake to your
salvation, awake while there is time; let none be kept back from the temple of
God, none kept back from the work of the Lord, none called away from continual
prayer, none be defrauded of wonted devotion. Awake, then, while it is day: the
day shines, Christ is the day. He is ready to forgive sins, but to them that
acknowledge them; ready to punish the self-defenders, who boast that they are
righteous, and think themselves to be something when they are nothing. But he that
walks in His love and mercy, even being free from those great and deadly sins,
such crimes as murder, theft, adultery; still, because of those which seem to be
minute sins, of tongue, or of thought, or of intemperance in things permitted,
he doeth the truth in confession, and cometh to the light in good works: since
many minute sins, if they be neglected, kill. Minute are the drops that swell
the rivers; minute are the grains of sand; but if much sand is put together,
the heap presses and crushes. Bilge-water neglected in the hold does the same
thing as a rushing wave. Gradually it leaks in through the hold; and by long
leaking in and no pumping out, it sinks the ship. Now what is this pumping out, but
by good works, by sighing, fasting, giving, forgiving, so to effect that sins
may not overwhelm us? The path of this life, however, is troublesome, full of
temptations: in prosperity, let it not lift us up; in adversity, let it not crush
us. He who gave the happiness of this world gave it for thy comfort, not for
thy ruin. Again, He who scourgeth thee in this life, doeth it for thy
improvement, not for thy condemnation. Bear the Father that corrects thee for thy
training, lest thou feel the judge in punishing thee. These things we tell you every
day, and they must be often said, because they are good and wholesome.