LECTURES OR TRACTATES ON THE GOSPEL ACCORDING TO ST. JOHN. TRACTATES XIII TO
XVI.
TRACTATE XIII.
CHAPTER III. 22-29.
1. The course of reading from the Gospel of John, as those of you who are
concerned for your own progress may remember, so proceeds in regular order,
that the passage which has now been read comes before us for exposition to-day.
You remember that we have expounded it, in the preceding discourses, from the
very beginning of the Gospel, as far as the lesson of to-day. And though perhaps
you have forgotten much of it, at least it remains in your memory that we have
done our part in it. What you have heard from it about the baptism of John, even
though you retain not all, yet I believe you have heard that which you may
retain. Also, what was said as to why the Holy Spirit appeared in the shape of a
dove; and how that most knotty question was solved, namely, what was that
something in the Lord which John did not know, and which he learned by means of the
dove, whilst already John knew Him, since, as Jesus came to be baptized, he said
to Him, "I ought to be baptized by Thee, and comest Thou to me?" when the Lord
answered him, "Suffer it now, that all righteousness may be fulfilled."(1)
2. Now, therefore, the order of our reading obliges us to return to that
same John. The same is he who was prophesied of by Isaiah, "The voice of one
crying in the wilderness, Prepare yea way for the Lord, make His paths
straight."(2) Such testimony gave he to his Lord and (for the Lord deemed him worthy) his
friend. And the Lord, even his friend, did also Himself bear witness to John.
For concerning John He said, "Among them that are born of women, there hath not
arisen a greater than John the Baptist." But as He put Himself before John, in
that wherein He was greater, He was God. "But he that is! less," saith He, "in
the kingdom of heaven is greater than he."(3) Less in age; greater in power, in
deity, in majesty, in brightness: even as "in the beginning was the Word, and
the Word was with God, and the Word was God." In the preceding passages,
however, John had given testimony to the Lord, in such wise that he did indeed call
Him Son of God, but said not that He was God, nor yet denied it: he was silent
as to His being God, not denied that He was God; but yet he was not altogether
silent as to His being God, for perhaps we find this in the lesson of to-day. He
had called Him Son of God; but men, too, have been called sons of God. He had
declared Him to be of such excellence, that he was not himself worthy to loose
the latchet of His shoe. Now this greatness gives us much to understand: whose
shoe-latchet he was not worthy to loose, he than whom none greater had arisen
among them that are born of women. He was more, indeed, than all men and angels.
For we find an angel forbidding a man to fall at his feet. For example, when
in the Apocalypse an angel was showing certain things to John, the writer of
this Gospel, John, terrified at the greatness of the vision, fell down at the
angel's feet. But said the angel, "Rise; see thou do it not: worship God, for I am
thy fellow-servant, and the brethren's."(4) An angel, then, forbade a man to
fall down at his feet. Is it not manifest that He must be above all angels, for
whom a man, such that a greater than he has not risen among them that are born
of women, declares himself to be not worthy to loose the latchet of His shoe?
3. John, however, may say something more evidently, that our Lord Jesus
Christ is God. We may find this in the present passage, that it is perhaps of Him
we have been singing, "The Lord reigned over all the earth;" against which
they are deaf who imagine that He reigns only in Africa. But let them not suppose
that it is not of Christ it is spoken when it is said, "God reigned over all
the earth." For who else is our King, but our Lord Jesus Christ? It is He that is
our King. And what have you heard in the same psalm, in the verse just sung?
"Sing praises to our God, sing praises: sing praises to our Kings sing praises."
Whom he called God, the same he called our King: "Sing praises to our God,
sing praises: sing praises to our King, sing ye praises with understanding." And
that thou shouldest not understand Him to whom thou singest praises to reign in
one part, he says, "For God is King of all the earth."(5) And how is He King of
all the earth, who appeared in one part of the earth, in Jerusalem, in Judea,
walking among men, born, sucking the breast, growing, eating, drinking,
waking, sleeping, sitting at a well, wearied; laid hold of, scourged, spat upon,
crowned with thorns, hanged on a tree, wounded with a spear, dead, buried? How
then King of all the earth? What was seen locally was flesh, to carnal eyes only
flesh was visible; the immortal majesty was concealed in mortal flesh. And
with what eyes shall we be able to behold the immortal majesty, after penetrating
through the structure of the flesh? There is another eye, there is an inner
eye. Tobias, for example, was not without eyes, when, blind in his bodily eyes,
he was giving precepts of life to his son.(6) The son was holding the father's
hand, that the father might walk with his feet, whilst the father was giving the
son counsel to walk in the way of righteousness. Here I see eyes, and there I
understand eyes. And better are the eyes of him that gives counsel of life,
than his who holds the hand. Such eyes Jesus also required when He said to Philip,
"Am I so long time with you, and ye have not known me?" Such eyes He required
when He said, "Philip, he that seeth me, seeth the Father." These are the eyes
of the understanding, these are the eyes of the mind. It is for that reason
that the psalm, when it had said, "For God is King of all the earth," immediately
added, "Sing ye praises with understanding." For in that I say, "Sing ye
praises to our God," I say that God is our King. But yet our King you have seen among
men, as man; you have seen Him suffering, crucified, dead: there was in that
flesh something concealed, which you might have seen with eyes of flesh. What
was there concealed? "Sing ye praises with understanding." Do not seek to see
with the eyes what is beheld by the mind. "Sing praises" with the tongue, for He
is among you as flesh; but because "the Word was made flesh, and dwelt among
us," render the sound to the flesh, render to God the gaze of the mind "Sing ye
praises with understanding," and you see that the "Word was made flesh, and dwelt
among us."
4. Now let John also declare his witness: "After these things came Jesus
and His disciples into the land of Judea; and there He tarried with them, and
baptized." Being baptized, He baptized. Not with that baptism with which He was
baptized did He baptize. The Lord, being baptized by a servant gives baptism,
showing the path of humility and leading to the baptism of the Lord, that is, His
own baptism, by giving an example of humility, in not Himself refusing baptism
from a servant. And in the baptism by a servant, a way was prepared for the
Lord; the Lord also being baptized, made Himself a way for them that come to Him.
Let us hear Himself: "I am the way, the truth, and the life." If thou seekest
truth, keep the way, for the way and the truth are the same. The way that thou
art going is the same as the whither thou art going: thou art not going by a
way as one thing, to an object as another thing; not coming to Christ by
something else as a way, thou comest to Christ by Christ. How by Christ to Christ? By
Christ the man, to Christ God; by the Word made flesh, to the Word which in the
beginning was God with God; from that which man ate, to that which angels daily
eat. For so it is written, "He gave them bread of heaven: man ate the bread of
angels."(1) What is the bread of angels? "In the beginning was the Word, and
the Word was with God, and Re Word was God." How has man eaten the bread of
angels? "And the Word was made flesh, and dwelt among us."
5. But though we have said that angels eat, do not fancy, brethren, that
this is done with teeth. For if you think so, God, of whom the angels eat, is as
it were torn in pieces. Who tears righteousness in pieces? But still, some one
asks me, And who is it that can eat righteousness? Well, how is it said,
"Blessed are they that hunger and thirst after righteousness, for they shall be
filled"? The food which thou eatest carnally perishes, in order to refresh thee;
to repair thy waste it is consumed: eat righteousness; and while thou art
refreshed, it continues entire. Just as by seeing this corporeal light, these eyes of
ours are refreshed, and yet it is a corporeal thing that is seen by corporeal
eyes. Many there have been, when too long in darkness, whose eyesight is
weakened by fasting, as it were, from light. The eyes, deprived of their food (for
they feed on light), become wearied by fasting, and weakened, so that they cannot
bear to see the light by which they are refreshed; and if the light is too
long absent, they are quenched, and the very sense of sight dies as it were in
them. What then? Does the light become less, because so many eyes are daily fed
by it? Thy eyes are refreshed, and the light remains entire. As God was able to
show this in the case of corporeal light to corporeal eyes, does He not show
that other light to clean hearts as unwearied, continuing entire, and in no
respect failing? What light? "In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with
God." Let us see if this is light. "For with Thee is the fountain of light, and
in Thy light shall we see light." On earth, fountain is one thing, light
another. When thirsting, thou seekest a fountain, and to get to the fountain thou
seekest light; and if it is not day, thou lightest a lamp to get to the fountain.
That fountain is the very light: to the thirsting a fountain, to the blind a
light. Let the eyes be opened to see the light, let the lips of the heart be
opened to drink of the fountain; that which thou drinkest, thou seest, thou
hearest. God becomes all to thee; for He is to thee the whole of these things which
thou lovest. If thou regardest things visible, neither is God bread, nor is God
water, nor is God this light, nor is He garment nor house. For all these are
things visible, and single separate things. What bread is, water is not; and what
a garment is, a house is not; and what these things are, God is not, for they
are visible things. God is all this to thee: if thou hungerest, He is bread to
thee; if thou thirstest, He is water to thee; if thou art in darkness, He is
light to thee: for He remains incorruptible. If thou art naked, He is a garment
of immortality to thee, when this corruptible shall put on incorruption, and
this mortal shall put on immortality. All things can be said of God, and nothing
is worthily said of God. Nothing is wider than this poverty of expression. Thou
seekest a fitting name for Him, thou canst not find it; thou seekest to speak
of Him in any way soever, thou findest that He is all. What likeness have the
lamb and the lion? Both is said of Christ. "Behold the Lamb of God!" How a lion?
"The Lion of the tribe of Judah hath prevailed."(1)
6. Let us hear John: "Jesus baptized." We said that Jesus baptized. How
Jesus? How the Lord? How the Son of God? How the Word? Well, but the Word was
made flesh. "And John also was baptizing in AEnon, near to Salim." A certain lake,
"AEnon."(2) How do we know it was a lake? "Because there was much water there,
and they came and were baptized. For John was not yet cast into prison." If
you remember (see, I say it again), I told you why John baptized: because the
Lord must needs be baptized. And why must the Lord be baptized? Because many there
would be to despise baptism, that they might appear to be endowed with greater
grace than they saw other believers endowed with. For example, a catechumen,
now living continently, might despise a married person, and say of himself that
he was better than the other believer. That catechumen might possibly say in
his heart, "What need have I to receive baptism, to have just what that other man
has, than whom I am already better?" Therefore, lest that neck of pride should
hurl to destruction certain men much elated with the merits of their own
righteousness, the Lord was willing to be baptized by a servant, as if addressing
His chief sons: "Why do you extol yourselves? Why lift yourselves up because you
have, one prudence, another learning, another chastity, another the courage of
patience? Can you possibly have as much as I who gave you these? And yet I was
baptized by a servant, you disdain to be baptized by the Lord." This is the
sense of "to fulfill all righteousness."
7. But some one will say, "It were enough, then, that John baptized only
the Lord; what need was there for others to be baptized by John?" Now we have
said this too, that if John had baptized only the Lord, men would not be without
this thought, that John had a better baptism than the Lord had. They would say,
in fact, "So great was the baptism of John, that Christ alone was worthy to
be baptized therewith." Therefore, to show that the baptism which the Lord was
to give was better than that of John,--that the one might be understood as that
of a servant, the other as that of the Lord,--the Lord was baptized to give an
example of humility; but He was not the only one baptized by John, lest John's
baptism should appear to be better than the baptism of the Lord. To this end,
however, our Lord Jesus Christ showed the way, as you have heard, brethren,
lest any man, arrogating to himself that he has abundance of some particular
grace, should disdain to be baptized with the baptism of the Lord. For whatever the
catechumen's proficiency, he still carries the load of his iniquity: it is not
forgiven him until he shall have come to baptism. Just as the people Israel
were not rid of the Egyptians until they had come to the Red Sea, so no man is rid
of the pressure of sins until he has come to the font of baptism.
8. "Then there arose a question on the part of John's disciples with the
Jews about purifying." John baptized, Christ baptized. John's disciples were
moved; there was a running after Christ, people were coming to John. Those who
came to John, he sent to Jesus to be baptized; but they who were baptized by
Christ were not sent to John. John's disciples were alarmed, and began to dispute
with the Jews, as usually happens. Understand the Jews to have declared that
Christ was greater, and that to His baptism people ought to have recourse. John's
disciples, not yet understanding this, defended John's baptism. They came to
John himself, that he might solve the question. Understand, beloved. And here we
are given to see the use of humility, and, when people were erring in the
subject of dispute, are shown whether John desired to glory in himself. Now probably
he said, "You say the truth, you contend rightly; mine is the better baptism, I
baptized Christ Himself." John could say this after Christ was baptized. If he
wished to exalt himself, what an opportunity he had to do so! But he knew
better before whom to humble himself: to Him whom he knew to have come after
himself by birth, he willingly yielded precedence by confessing Him. He understood
his own salvation to be in Christ. He had already said above, "We all have
received out of His fullness;" and this is to confess Him to be God. For how can all
men receive of His fullness, if He be not God? For if He is man in such wise
that He is not God, then Himself also receives of the fullness of God, and so is
not God. But if all men receive of His fullness, He is the fountain, they are
drinkers. They that drink of a fountain, both thirst and drink. The fountain
never thirsts; it has never need of itself. Men need a fountain. With thirsty
stomachs and parched lips they run to the fountain to be refreshed. The fountain
flows to refresh, so does the Lord Jesus.
9. Let us see, then, what answer John gives: "They came unto John, and
said unto him, Rabbi, he that was with thee beyond Jordan, to whom thou barest
witness, behold the same baptizeth, and all men come to him:" that is, What sayest
thou? Ought they not to be hindered, that they may rather come to thee? "He
answered and said, A man cannot receive anything, except it be given him from
heaven." Of whom, think you, had John said this? Of himself. "As a man, I
received," saith he, "from heaven." Note, my beloved: "A man cannot receive anything,
except it be given him from heaven Ye yourselves bear me witness that I said, I
am not the Christ." As much as to say, "Why do ye deceive yourselves? See how
you have put this question before me. What have you said to me? 'Rabbi, he that
was with thee beyond Jordan, to whom thou barest witness.' Then you know what
sort of witness I bare to Him. Am I now to say that He is not the same whom I
declared Him to be? And because I received somewhat from heaven, in order to be
something, do you wish me to be empty of it, so as to speak against the truth?
'A man cannot receive anything, except it be given him from heaven. Ye
yourselves bear me witness that I said I am not the Christ.'" Thou art not the Christ;
but what if thou art greater than He since thou didst baptize Him? "I am sent:"
I am the herald, He is the Judge.
10. But hear a far stronger, a far more expressive testimony. See ye what
it is we are treating of; see ye that to love any person in place of Christ is
adultery. Why do I say this? Let us attend to the voice of John. People could
be mistaken in him, could think him to be the person he was not. He rejects the
false honor, in order to hold the truth complete. See what he declares Christ
to be; what does he say himself is? "He that hath the bride is the bridegroom."
Be chaste, love the bridegroom. But what art thou, who sayest to us, "He that
hath the bride is the bridegroom? But the friend of the bridegroom, who standeth
and heareth him, rejoiceth greatly because of the bridegroom's voice." The
Lord our God will help me in proportion to the tumult of my heart, for it is full
of sadness, to utter the grief I feel; but I beseech you by Christ Himself to
imagine in thought what it will not be possible for me to utter; for I know
that my grief cannot be expressed with befitting impressiveness. Now I see many
adulterers who desire to get possession of the bride, purchased at so great a
price, loved while deformed that she might be made fair, having been purchased
and delivered and adorned by such an one; and those adulterers strive with their
words to be loved instead of the bridegroom. Of that One it is said, "This is
He that baptizeth."(1) Who is he that goes forth from us and says, "I am he that
baptizeth"? Who is he that goes forth from us and says, "That is holy which I
give"? Who is he that goes hence and says, "It is good for thee to be born of
me"? Let us hear the friend of the bridegroom, not the adulterers against the
bridegroom; let us hear one jealous, but not for himself.
11. Brethen, return in thought to your own homes. I speak of carnal, I
speak of earthly things; I speak after the manner of men, for the infirmity of
your flesh. Many of you have, many of you wish to have, many, though you wish not
to have, still have had wives; many who do not at all wish to have wives, are
born of the wives of your fathers. This is a feeling that touches every heart.
There is no man so alien from mankind in human affairs as not to feel what I
say. Suppose that a man, having set out on a journey, had commended his bride to
the care of his friend: "See, I pray thee, thou art my dear friend; see to it,
lest in my absence some other may perchance be loved in my stead." Then what
sort of a person must he be, who, while the guardian of the bride or wife of his
friend, does indeed endeavor that none other be loved, but if he wishes himself
to be loved instead of his friend, and desires to enjoy her who was committed
to his care, how detestable must he appear to all mankind! Let him see her
gazing out of the window, or joking with some one somewhat too heedlessly, he
forbids her as one who is jealous. I see him jealous, but let me see for whom he is
jealous; whether for his absent friend or for his present self. Think that our
Lord Jesus Christ has done this. He has committed His bride to the care of His
friend; He has set out on a journey to a far country to receive a kingdom, as He
says Himself in the Gospel,(2) but yet is present in His majesty. Let the
friend who has gone beyond the sea be deceived; and if he is deceived, woe to him
who deceives! Why do men attempt to deceive God,--God who looks at the hearts of
all, and searches the secrets of all? But some heretic shows himself, and
says, "'Tis I that give, 'tis I that sanctify, 'tis I that justify; go not thou to
that other sect." He does well indeed to be jealous, but see for whom. "Go not
thou to idols," saith he,--he is rightly jealous; "nor to diviners,"--still
rightly jealous. Let us see for whom he is jealous: "What I give is holy, because
it is I that give it; he is baptized whom I baptize; he whom I baptize not is
not baptized." Hear thou the friend of the bridegroom, learn to be jealous for
thy friend; hear His voice who is "He that baptizeth." Why desire to arrogate to
thyself what is not thine? Is he so very absent who has left here his bride?
Knowest thou not, that He who rose from the dead is sitting at the right hand of
the Father? If the Jews despised Him hanging on the tree, dost thou despise
Him sitting in heaven? Be assured, beloved, that I suffer great grief of this
matter; but, as I have said, I leave the rest to your thoughts. I cannot utter it
if I speak the whole day. If I bewail it the whole day, I do not enough. I
cannot utter it, if I should have, as the prophet says, "a fountain of tears;" and
were I changed into tears, and to become all tears, were I turned into tongues,
and to become all tongues, it were not enough.
12. Let us return and see what this John saith: "He that hath the bride is
the bridegroom;" she is not my bride. And dost thou not rejoice in the
marriage? Yea, saith he, I do rejoice: "But the friend of the bridegroom, who standeth
and heareth him, rejoiceth greatly because of the voice of the bridegroom."
Not because of mine own voice, saith he, do I rejoice, but because of the
Bridegroom's voice. I am in the place of hearer; He, of speaker: I am as one that must
be enlightened, He is the light; I am as the ear, He is the word. Therefore
the friend of the Bridegroom standeth and heareth Him. Why standeth? Because he
falls not. How fails not? Because he is humble. See him standing on solid
ground; "I am not worthy to loose the latchet of His shoe." Thou doest well to be
humble; deservedly thou dost not fall; deservedly thou standest, and hearest Him,
and rejoicest greatly for the Bridegroom's voice. So also the apostle is the
Bridegroom's friend; he too is jealous, not for himself, hut for the Bridegroom.
Hear his voice when he is jealous: "I am jealous over you," said he, "with the
jealousy of God:" not with my own, nor for myself, but with the jealousy of
God. Why? How? Over whom art thou jealous, and for whom? "For I have espoused you
to one husband, to present a chaste virgin to Christ." Why dost thou fear,
then? Why art thou jealous? "I fear," saith he, "lest, as the serpent beguiled Eve
by his subtilty, so your minds should be corrupted from the chastity which is
in Christ."(1) The whole Church is called a virgin. You see that the members of
the Church are divers, that they are endowed with and do rejoice in divers
gifts: some men wedded, some women wedded; some are widowers who seek no more to
have wives, some are widows who seek no more to have husbands; some men preserve
continence from their youth, some women have vowed their virginity to God:
divers are the gifts, but all these are one virgin. Where is this virginity? for it
is not in the body. It belongs to few women; and if virginity can be said of
men, to few men in the Church belongs a holy integrity even of body; yet one
such is a more honorable member. Other members, however, preserve virginity, not
in body, but all in mind. What is the virginity of the mind? Entire faith, firm
hope, sincere charity. This is the virginity which he, who, was jealous for the
Bridegroom, feared might be corrupted by the serpent. For, just as the bodily
member is marred in a certain part, so the seduction of the tongue defiles the
virginity of the heart. Let her who does not desire without cause to keep
virginity of body, see to it that she be not corrupted in mind.
13. What shall I say, then, brethren? Even the heretics have virgins, and
there are many virgins among heretics. Let us see whether they love the
Bridegroom, so that this virginity may be guarded. For whom is it guarded? "For
Christ." Let us see if it be for Christ, and not for Donatus: let us see for whom
this virginity is preserved: you can easily prove. Behold, I show you the
Bridegroom, for He shows Himself. John bears witness to Him: "This is He that
baptizeth." O thou virgin, if for this Bridegroom thou preservest thy virginity, why
runnest thou to him who says, "I am he that baptizeth," while the friend of the
Bridegroom tells thee, "This is He that baptizeth"? Again, thy Bridegroom
possesseth the whole world; why, then, shouldst thou be defiled with a part of it? Who
is the Bridegroom? "For God is King of all the earth." This thy Bridegroom
possesses the whole, because He purchased the whole. See at what price He
purchased it, that thou mayest understand what He has purchased. What price has He
given? He gave His blood. Where gave He, where shed He, His blood? In His passion.
Is it not to thy Bridegroom thou singest, or feignest to sing, when the whole
world was purchased: "They pierced my hands and my feet, they counted all my
bones: but they themselves considered me, they looked upon me, they divided my
garments among them, and upon my vesture they cast lots"? Thou art the bride,
acknowledge thy Bridegroom's vesture. Upon what vesture was the lot cast? Ask the
Gospel; see to whom thou art espoused, see from whom thou receivest pledges. Ask
the Gospel; see what it tells thee in the suffering of the Lord. "There was a
coat" there: let us see what kind; "woven from the top throughout." What does
the coat woven from the top signify, but charity? What does this coat signify,
but unity? Consider this coat, which not even the persecutors of Christ divided.
For it saith, "They said among themselves, Let us not divide it, but let us
cast lots upon it." Behold that of which the psalm spoke! Christ's persecutors
did not rend His garment; Christians divide the Church.
14. But what shall I say, brethren? Let us see plainly what He purchased.
For there He bought, where He paid the price. Paid it for how much? If He paid
it only for Africa, let us be Donatists, and not be called Donatists, but
Christians; since Christ bought only Africa: although even here are other than
Donatists. But He has not been silent of what He bought in this transaction. He has
made up the account: thanks be to God, He has not tricked us. Need there is for
that bride to hear, and then to understand to whom she has vowed her
virginity. There, in that psalm where it says, "They pierced my hands and my feet, they
counted all my bones;" wherein the Lord's passion is most openly declared;--the
psalm which is read every year on the last week, in the hearing of the whole
people, at the approach of Christ's passion; and this psalm is read both among
them and us;--there, I say, note, brethren, what He has bought: let the bill of
merchandise be read: hear ye what He bought: "All the ends of the earth shall
remember, and turn unto the Lord; and all the kindreds of the nations shall
worship in His sight: for the kingdom is His, and He shall rule the nations."
Behold what it is He has bought! Behold! "For God, the King of all the earth," is
thy Bridegroom. Why, then, wouldst thou have one so rich reduced to rags?
Acknowledge Him: He bought the whole; yet thou sayest, "Thou hast a part of it here."
Oh, would that thou weft well-pleasing to thy Spouse; would that thou who
speakest wert not defiled, and, what is worse, defiled in heart, not in body! Thou
lovest a man instead of Christ; lovest one that says, "'Tis I that baptize;" not
hearing the friend of the Bridegroom when he says, "This is He that
baptizeth;" not hearing him when he says, "He that hath the bride is the Bridegroom." I
have not the bride, said he; but what am I? "But the friend of the Bridegroom,
who standeth and heareth Him, rejoiceth greatly, because of the Bridegroom's
voice."
15. Evidently, then, my brethren, it profits those men nothing to keep
virginity, to have continence, to give alms. All those doings which are praised in
the Church profit them nothing; because they rend unity, namely, that "coat"
of charity. What do they? Many among them are eloquent; great tongues, streams
of tongues. Do they speak like angels? Let them hear the friend of the
Bridegroom, jealous for the Bridegroom, not for himself: "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."(1)
16. But what say they? "We have baptism." Thou hast, but not thine. It is
one thing to have, another to own. Baptism thou hast, for thou hast received to
be baptized, received as one enlightened, provided thou be not darkened of
thyself; and when thou givest, thou givest as a minister, not as owner; as a
herald proclaiming, not as a judge. The judge speaks through the herald, and
nevertheless it is not written in the registers, "The herald said," but, "The judge
said." Therefore see if what thou givest is thine by authority. But if thou hast
received, confess with the friend of the Bridegroom, "A man cannot receive
anything, except it be given him from heaven." Confess with the friend of the
Bridegroom, "He that hath the bride is the Bridegroom; but the friend of the
Bridegroom standeth and heareth Him." But O, would thou didst stand and hear Him, and
not fall, to hear thyself! For by hearing Him, thou wouldst stand and hear; for
thou wilt speak, and thy head is puffed with pride. I, saith the Church, if I
am the bride, if I nave received pledges, if I have been redeemed at the price
of that blood, do hear the voice of the Bridegroom; and I do hear the voice of
the Bridegroom's friend too, if he give glory to my Bridegroom, not to himself.
Let the friend speak: "He that hath the bride is the Bridegroom; but the
friend of the Bridegroom standeth and heareth Him, and rejoices greatly because of
the voice of the Bridegroom." Behold, thou hast sacraments; and I grant that
thou hast. Thou hast the form, but thou art a branch cut off from the vine; thou
hast a form, I want the root. There is no fruit of the form, except where there
is a root; but where is the root but in charity? Hear the form of the cut-off
branches; let Paul speak: "Though I know all mysteries," saith he, "and have all
prophecy, and all faith" (and how great a faith!), "so as to remove mountains,
and have not charity, I am nothing."
17. Let no man tell you fables, then. "Pontius wrought a miracle; and
Donatus prayed, and God answered him from heaven." In the first place, either they
are deceived, or they deceive. In the last place, grant that he removes
mountains: "And have not charity," saith the apostle, "I am nothing." Let us see
whether he has charity. I would believe that he had, if he had not divided unity.
For against those whom I may call marvel-workers, my God has put me on my guard,
saying, "In the last times there shall arise false prophets, doing signs and
wonders, to lead into error, if it were possible, even the elect: Lo, I have
foretold it to you."(1) Therefore the Bridegroom has cautioned us, that we ought
not to be deceived even by miracles. Sometimes, indeed, a deserter frightens a
plain countryman; but whether he is of the camp, and whether he is the better of
that character with which he is marked, is what he who would not be frightened
or seduced attends to. Let us then, my brethren, hold unity: without unity,
even he who works miracles is nothing. The people Israel was in unity, and yet
wrought no miracles: Pharaoh's magicians were out of unity, and yet they wrought
the like works as Moses."(2) The people Israel, as I have said, wrought no
miracles. Who were saved with God--they who did, or they who did not, work miracles?
The Apostle Peter raised a dead person: Simon Magus did many things: there
were there certain Christians who were not able to do either what Peter did or
what Simon did; and wherein did they rejoice? In this, that their names were
written in heaven. For this is what our Lord Jesus Christ said to the disciples on
their return, because of the faith of the Gentiles. The disciples, in truth,
themselves said, boasting, "Behold, Lord, in Thy name even the devils are subject
to us." Rightly indeed they confessed, they brought the honor to the name of
Christ; and yet what does He say to them? "Do not ye glory in this, that the
devils are subject to you; but rejoice that your names are written in heaven."(3)
Peter cast out devils. Some old widow, some lay person or other, having charity,
and holding the integrity of faith, forsooth does not do this. Peter is the
eye in the body, that man is the finger, yet is he in the same body in which
Peter is; and if the finger has less power than the eye, yet it is not cut off from
the body. Better is it to be a finger and to be in the body, than to be an eye
and to be plucked out of the body.
18. Therefore, my brethren, let no man deceive you, let no man seduce you:
love the peace of Christ, who was crucified for you, whilst He was God. Paul
says, "Neither he that planteth is anything, neither he that watereth, but God
who giveth the increase."(4) And does any of us say that he is something? If we
say that we are something, and give not the glory to Him, we are adulterers; we
desire ourselves to be loved, not the Bridegroom. Love ye Christ, and us in
Him, in whom also you are beloved by us. Let the members love one another, but
live all under the Head. With grief indeed, my brethren, I have been obliged to
speak much, and yet I have said little: I have not been able to finish the
passage; God will help us to finish it in due season. I did not wish to burden your
hearts further; I wish them to be free for sighs and prayers in behalf of those
who are still deaf and do not understand.
TRACTATE XIV.
CHAPTER III. 29-36.
1. This lesson from the holy Gospel shows us the excellency of our Lord
Jesus Christ's divinity, and the humility of the man who earned the title of the
Bridegroom's friend; that we may distinguish between the man who is man, and
the Man who is God. For the Man who is God is our Lord Jesus Christ, God before
all ages, Man in the age of our world: God of the Father, man of the Virgin, yet
one and the same Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ, Son of God, God and man. But
John, a man of distinguished grace, was sent before Him, a man enlightened by
Him who is the Light. For of John it is said, "He was not the Light, but that he
should bear witness of the Light." He may himself be called a light indeed, and
rightly so; but an enlightened, not an enlightening light. The light that
enlightens, and that which is enlightened, are different things: for even our eyes
are called lights (lumina), and yet when we open them in the dark, they do not
see. But the light that enlightens is a light both from itself and for itself,
and does not need another light for its shining; but all the rest need it, that
they may shine.
2. Accordingly John confessed Him: as you have heard that when Jesus was
making many disciples, and they reported to John as if to excite him to
jealousy,--for they told the matter as if moved by envy, "Lo, he is making more
disciples than thou,"--John confessed what he was, and thereby merited to belong to
Him, because he dared not affirm himself to be that which Jesus is. Now this is
what John said: "A man cannot receive anything, except it be given him from
heaven." Therefore Christ gives, man receives. "Ye yourselves bear me witness that
I said, I am not the Christ, but that I am sent before Him He that hath the
bride is the Bridegroom; but the friend of the Bridegroom, who standeth and
heareth Him, rejoiceth greatly because of the Bridegroom's voice." Not of himself did
he give himself joy. He that will have joy of himself shall be sad; but he
that will have his joy of God will ever rejoice, because God is everlasting. Dost
thou desire to have everlasting joy? Cleave to Him who is everlasting. Such an
one John declared himself to be. "Because of the Bridegroom's voice, the friend
of the Bridegroom rejoiceth," not because of his own voice, and "standeth and
heareth." Therefore, if he falls, he heareth Him not: for of a certain one who
fell it is said, "And he stood not in the truth;"' this is said of the devil.
It behoves the Bridegroom's friend, then, "to stand and to hear." What is it to
stand? It is to abide in His grace, which he received. And he hears a voice at
which he rejoices. Such was John: he knew whereof he rejoiced; he did not
arrogate to himself to be what he was not; he knew himself as one enlightened, not
the enlightener. "But that was the true Light," saith the evangelist, "that
lighteneth every man coming into this world." If "every man," then also John
himself; for he too is of men. Moreover, although none hath arisen among them that
are born of women greater than John, yet he was himself one of those that are
born of women. Is he to be compared with Him who, because He willed it, was born
by a singular and extraordinary birth? For both generations of the Lord are
unexampled, both the divine and the human: by the divine He has no mother; by the
human, no father. Therefore John was but one of the rest: of greater grace,
however, so that of those born of women none arose greater than he; so great a
testimony he gave to our Lord Jesus Christ as to call Him the Bridegroom, and
himself the Bridegroom's friend, not worthy however to loose the latchet of the
Bridegroom's shoe. You have already heard much on this point, beloved: let us look
to what follows; for it is somewhat hard to understand. But as John himself
says, that "no man can receive anything, except it be given him from heaven,"
whatever we shall not have understood, let us ask Him who gives from heaven: for we
are men, and cannot receive anything, except He, who is not man, give it us.
3. Now this is what follows: and John says, "This my joy therefore is
fulfilled." What is his joy? To rejoice at the Bridegroom's voice. It is fulfilled
in me, I bare my grace; more I do not assume to myself, lest also I lose what I
have received. What is this joy? "With joy rejoiceth for the Bridegroom's
voice." A man may understand, then, that he ought not to rejoice of his own wisdom,
but of the wisdom which he has received from God. Let him ask nothing more,
and he loses not what he found. For many, in that they affirmed themselves to be
wise, became fools. The apostle convicts them, and says of them, "Because that
which is known of God is manifest to them; for God has showed it unto them."
Hear ye what he says of certain unthankful, ungodly men: "For the invisible
things of Him from the creation of the world are seen, being understood by the
things that are made, His eternal power likewise, and Godhead; so that they are
without excuse." Why without excuse? "Because, knowing God" (he said not, "because
they knew Him not "), "they glorified Him not as God, nor were thankful; but
became vain in their imaginations, and their foolish heart was darkened:
professing themselves to be wise, they became fools."(2) If they had known God, they
had known at the same time that God, and none other, had made them wise; and they
would not then attribute to themselves that which they did not have from
themselves, but to Him from whom they had received it. But by their unthankfulness
they became fools. Therefore, what God gave freely, He took from the unthankful.
John would not be this; he would be thankful: he confessed to have received,
and declared that he rejoiced for the Bridegroom's voice, saying, "Therefore
this my joy is fulfilled."
4. "He must increase, but I must decrease." What is this? He must be
exalted, but I must be humbled. How is Jesus to increase? How is God to increase?
The perfect does not increase. God neither increases nor decreases. For if He
increases, He is not perfect; if He decreases, he is not God. And how can Jesus
increase, being God? If to man's estate, since He deigned to be man and was a
child; and, though the Word of God, lay an infant in a manger; and, though His
mother's Creator, yet sucked the milk of infancy of her: then Jesus having grown
in age of the flesh, that perhaps is the reason why it is said, "He must
increase, but I must decrease." But why in this? As regards the flesh, John and Jesus
were of the same age, there being six months between them: they had grown up
together; and if our Lord Jesus Christ had willed to be here longer before His
death, and that John should be here with Him, then, as they had grown up
together, so would they have grown old together: in what way, then, "He must increase
but I must decrease"? Above all, our Lord Jesus Christ being now thirty years
old, does a man who is already thirty years old still grow? From that same age,
men begin to go downward, and to decline to graver age, thence to old age.
Again, even had they both been lads, he would not have said. "He must increase,"
but, We must increase together. But now each is thirty years of age. The interval
of six months makes no difference in age; the difference is discovered by
reading rather than by the look of the persons.
5. What means, then, "He must increase, but I must decrease"? This is a
great mystery! Before the Lord Jesus came, men were glorying of themselves; He
came a man, to lessen man's glory, and to increase the glory of God. Now He came
without sin, and found all men in sin. If thus He came to put away sin, God may
freely give, man may confess. For man's confession is man's lowliness: God's
pity is God's loftiness. Therefore, since He came to forgive man his sins, let
man acknowledge his own lowliness and let God show His pity. "He must increase,
but I must decrease:" that is, He must give, but I must receive; He must be
glorified, but I must confess. Let man know his own condition, and confess to God;
and hear the apostle as he says to a proud, elated man, bent on extolling
himself: "What hast thou that thou didst not receive? And if thou didst receive it,
why dost thou glory as if thou didst not receive it?"(1) Then let man
understand that he has received; and when he would call that his own which is not his,
let him decrease: for it is good for him that God be glorified in him. Let him
decrease in himself, that he may be increased in God. These testimonies and
this truth, Christ and John signified by their deaths. For John was lessened by
the Head: Christ was exalted on the cross; so that even there it appeared what
this is, "He must increase, but I must decrease." Again, Christ was born when the
days were just beginning to lengthen; John was born when they began to
shorten. Thus their very creation and deaths testify to the words of John, when he
says, "He must increase, but I must decrease." May the glory of God then increase
in us, and our own glory decrease, that even ours may increase in God! For this
is what the apostle says, this is what Holy Scripture says: "He that glorieth,
let him glory in the Lord."(2) Wilt thou glory in thyself? Thou wilt grow; but
grow worse in thy evil. For whoso grows worse is justly decreased. Let God,
then, who is ever perfect, grow, and grow in thee. For the more thou
understandest God, and apprehendest Him, He seems to be growing in thee; but in Himself He
grows not, being ever perfect. Thou didst understand a little yesterday; thou
understandest more to-day, wilt understand much more to-morrow: the very light
of God increases in thee: as if thus God increases, who remains ever perfect. It
is as if one's eyes were being cured of former blindness, and he began to see
a little glimmer of light, and the next day he saw more, and the third day
still more: to him the light would seem to grow; yet the light is perfect, whether
he see it or not. Thus it is also with the inner man: he makes progress indeed
in God, and God seems to be increasing in him; yet man himself is decreasing,
that he may fall from his own glory, and rise into the glory of God.
6. What we have just heard, appears now distinctly and clearly. "He that
cometh from above, is above all." See what he says of Christ. What of himself?
"He that is of the earth, is of earth, and speaketh of the earth. He that cometh
from above is above all"-this is Christ; and "he that is of the earth, is of
earth, and speaketh of the earth "--this is John. And is this the whole: John is
of the earth, and speaks of the earth? Is the whole testimony that he bears of
Christ a speaking of the earth? Are they not voices of God that are heard from
John, when he bears witness of Christ? Then how does he speak of the earth? He
said this of man. So far as relates to man in himself, he is of earth, and
speaks of the earth; and when he speaks some divine things, he is enlightened by
God. For, were he not enlightened, he would be earth speaking of earth. God's
grace is apart by itself, the nature of man apart by itself. Do but examine the
nature of man: man is born and grows, he learns the customs of men. What does he
know but earth, of earth? He speaks the things of men, knows the things of
men, minds the things of men; carnal, he judges carnally, conjectures carnally:
lo! it is man all over. Let the grace of God come, and enlighten his darkness, as
it saith, "Thou wilt lighten my candle, O Lord; my God, enlighten my
darkness;"(1) let it take the mind of man, and turn it to its own light; immediately he
begins to say, as the apostle says, "Yet not I, but the grace of God that is
with me;"(2) and, "Now I live; yet not I, but Christ liveth in me."(3) That is to
say, "He must increase, but I must decrease." Thus John: as regards John, he
is of the earth, and speaks of the earth; whatever that is divine thou hast
heard from John, is of Him that enlightens, not of him that receives.
7. "He that cometh from heaven is above all; and what He hath seen and
heard, that He testifieth: and no man receiveth His testimony." Cometh from
heaven, is above all, our Lord Jesus Christ; of whom it was said above, "No man hath
ascended into heaven, but He that came down from heaven, the Son of man who is
in heaven." And He is above all; "and what He hath seen and heard, that He
speaks." Moreover, He hath a Fathers being Himself the Son of God; He hath a
Father, and He also hears of the Father. And what is that which He hears of the
Father? Who can unfold this? When can my tongue, when can my heart be sufficient,
either the heart to understand, or the tongue to utter, what that is which the
Son hath heard from the Father? May it be the Son has heard the Word of the
Father? Nay, the Son is the Word of the Father. You see how all human effort is here
wearied out; you see how all guessing of our heart, all straining of our
darkened mind, here fails. I hear the Scripture saying that the Son speaks that
which He heareth from the Father; and again, I hear the Scripture saying that the
Son is Himself the Word of the Father: "In the beginning was the Word, and the
Word was with God, and the Word was God." The words that we speak are fleeting
and transient: as soon as thy word has sounded from thy mouth, it passeth away;
it makes its noise, and passes away into silence. Canst thou follow thy sound,
and hold it to make it stand? Thy thought, however, remains, and of that
thought that remains thou utterest many words that pass away. What say we, brethren?
When God spake, did He give out a voice, or sounds, or syllables? If He did, in
what tongue spake He? In Hebrew, or in Greek, or in Latin? Tongues are
necessary where there is a distinction of nations. But there none can say that God
spake in this tongue, or in that. Observe thy own heart. When thou conceivest a
word which thou mayest utter,--For I will say, if I can, what we may note in
ourselves, not whereby we may comprehend that,--well, when thou conceivest a word
to utter, thou meanest to utter a thing, and the very conception of the thing
is already a word in thy heart: it has not vet come forth, but it is already
born in the heart, and is waiting to come forth. But thou considerest the person
to whom it is to come forth, with whom thou art to speak: if he is a Latin, thou
seekest a Latin expression; if a Greek, thou thinkest of Greek words; if a
Punic, thou considerest whether thou knowest the Punic language: for the diversity
of hearers thou hast recourse to divers tongues to utter the word conceived;
but the conception itself was bound by no tongue in particular. Whilst therefore
God, when speaking, required not a language, nor took up any kind of speech,
how was He heard by the Son, seeing that God's speaking is the Son Himself? As,
in fact, thou hast in thy heart the word that thou speakest, and as it is with
thee, and is none other than the spiritual conception itself (for just as thy
soul is spirit, so also the word which thou hast conceived is spirit; for it has
not yet received sound to be divided by syllables, but remains in the
conception of thy heart, and in the mirror of the mind); so God gave out His Word, that
is, begat the Son. And thou, indeed, begettest the word even in thy heart
according to time; God without time begat the Son by whom He created all times.
Whilst, therefore, the Son is the Word of God, and the Son spoke to us not His own
word, but the word of the Father, He willed to speak Himself to us when He was
speaking the word of the Father. This it is that John said, as was fit and
necessary; and we have expounded according to our ability. He whose heart has not
yet attained to a proper perception of so great a matter, has whither to turn
himself, has where to knock, has from whom to ask, from whom to seek, of whom to
receive.
8. "He that cometh from heaven is above all; and what He hath seen and
heard, that testifieth He; and His testimony no man receiveth." If no man, to what
purpose came He? He means, no man of a certain class. There are some people
prepared for the wrath of God, to be damned with the devil; of these, none
receiveth the testimony of Christ. For if none at all, not any man, received, what
could these words mean, "But he that received His testimony hath set to his seal
that God is true"? Not certainly, then, no man, if thou sayest thyself, "He
that received His testimony has set to his seal that God is true." Perhaps John,
on being questioned, would answer and say, I know what I have said, in saying no
man. There are, in fact, people born to God's wrath, and thereunto foreknown.
For God knows who they are that will and that will not believe; He knows who
they are that shall persevere in that in which they have believed, and who that
shall fall away; and all that shall be for eternal life are numbered by God; and
He knows already the people set apart. And if He knows this, and has given to
the prophets by His Spirit to know it, He gave this also to John. Now John was
observing, not with his eye,--for as regards himself he is earth, and speaketh
of earth,--but with that grace of the Spirit which he received of God, he saw a
certain people, ungodly, unbelieving. Contemplating that people in its
unbelief, he says, "His testimony, who came from heaven, no man receiveth." No man of
whom? Of them who shall be on the left hand, of them to whom it shall be said,
"Go into the everlasting fire, which is prepared for the devil and his angels."
Who are they that do receive it? They who shall be at the right hand, they to
whom it shall be said, "Come, ye blessed of my Father, receive the kingdom
which is prepared for you from the beginning of the world." He observes, then, in
the Spirit a dividing, but in the human race a mingling together; and that which
is not yet separated locally, he separated in the understanding, in the view
of the heart; and he saw two peoples, one of believers, one of unbelievers.
Fixing his thought on the unbelievers, he says, "He that cometh from heaven is
above all; and what He hath seen and heard, that He testifieth and no man receiveth
His testimony." He then turned his thought from the left hand, and looked at
the right, and proceeded to say, "He that received His testimony has set to his
seal that God is true." What means "has set to his seal that God is true," if
it be not that man is a liar, and God is true? For no human being can speak any
truth, unless he be enlightened by Him who cannot lie. God, then, is true; but
Christ is God. Wouldest thou prove this? Receive His testimony and thou findest
it. For "he that hath received His testimony has set to his seal that God is
true." Who is true? The same who came from heaven, and is above all, is God, and
true. But if thou dost not yet understand Him to be God, thou hast not yet
received His testimony: receive it, and thou puttest thy seal to it; confidently
thou understandest, definitely thou acknowledgest, that God is true.
9. "For He whom God hath sent speaketh the words of God." Himself is the
true God, and God sent Him: God sent God. Join both, one God, true God sent by
God. Ask concerning them singly, He is God; ask concerning them both, they are
God. Not individually God, and both Gods; but each individual God, and both God.
For so great is the charity of the Holy Spirit-there, so great the peace of
unity, that when thou questionest about them individually, the answer to thee is,
God; when thou askest concerning the Trinity, thou gettest for answer, God.
For if the spirit of man, when it cleaves to God, is one spirit, as the apostle
openly declares, "He that is joined to the Lord is one spirit;"(1) how much more
is the equal Son, joined to the Father, together with Him one God! Hear
another testimony. You know how many believed, when they sold all they had and laid
it at the apostles' feet, that it might be distributed to each according to his
need; and what saith the Scripture of that gathering of the saints? "They had
one soul and one heart in the Lord."(2) If charity made one soul of so many
souls, and one heart of so many hearts, how great must be the charity between the
Father and the Son! Surely it must be greater than that between those men who
had one heart. If, then, the heart of many brethren was one by charity, if the
soul of many brethren was one by charity, wouldst thou say that God the Father
and God the Son are two? If they are two Gods, there is not the highest charity
between them. For if charity is here so great as to make thy soul and thy
friend's soul one soul, how can it be then that the Father and the Son is not one
God? Far be unfeigned faith from this thought. In short, how excellent that
charity is, understand hence: the souls of many men are many, and if they love one
another, it is one soul; still, in the case of men, they may be called many
souls, because the union is not so strong. But there it is right for thee to say one
God; two or three Gods it is not right for thee to say. From this, the supreme
and surpassing excellency of charity is shown thee to be such, that a greater
cannot be.
10. "For He whom God hath sent speaketh the words of God." This, of
course, he said of Christ, to distinguish himself from Christ. What then? Did not God
send John himself? Did he not say himself, "I am sent before Him"? and, "He
that sent me to baptize with water"? And is it not of John that it is said,
"Behold, I send my messenger before Thee, and he shall prepare Thy way"?(1) Does he
not himself speak the words of God, he of whom it is said that he is more than
a prophet? Then, if God sent him too, and he speaks the words of God, how do we
understand him to have distinctly said of Christ, "He whom God hath sent
speaketh the words of God"? But see what he adds: "For God giveth not the Spirit by
measure." What is this, "For God giveth not the Spirit by measure"? We find
that God does give the Spirit by measure. Hear the apostle when he says,
"According to the measure of the gift of Christ."(2) To men He gives by measure, to the
only Son He gives not by measure. How does He give to men by measure? "To one
is given by the Spirit the word of wisdom: to another the word of wisdom
according to the same Spirit; to another faith by the same Spirit; to another
prophecy; to another discerning of spirits; to another kinds of tongues; to another the
gift of healing. Are all apostles? Are all prophets? Are all teachers? Are all
workers of miracles? Have all the gift of healing? Do all speak with tongues?
Do all interpret?"(3) This man has one gift, that man another; and what that
man has, this has not: there is a measure, a certain division of gifts. To men,
therefore, it is given by measure, and concord among them makes one body. As the
hand receives one kind of gift to work, the eye another to see, the ear
another to hear, the foot another to walk; nevertheless the soul that does all is
one, in the hand to work, in the foot to walk, in the ear to hear, in the eye to
see; so are also the gifts of believers diverse, distributed to them as to
members, to each according to his proper measure. But Christ, who gives, receives
not by measure.
11. Now hear further what follows: because He had said of the Son, "For
God giveth not the Spirit by measure: the Father loveth the Son, and hath given
all things into His hand," He added, "hath given all things into His hands,"
that thou mightest know also here with what distinction it is said, "The Father
loveth the Son." And why? Does the Father not love John? And yet He has not given
all things into his hand. Does the Father not love Paul? And yet He has not
given all things into his hand. "The Father loveth the Son:" but as father
loveth, not as master loveth a servant; as the Only Son, not as an adopted son. And
so "hath given all things into His hand." What means "all things"? That the Son
should be such as the Father is. To equality with Himself He begat Him in whom
it was no robbery to be in the form of God, equal to God. "The Father loveth
the Son, and hath given all things into His hand." Therefore, having deigned to
send us the Son, let us not imagine that it is something less than the Father
that is sent to us. The Father, in sending the Son, sent His other self.
12. But the disciples, still thinking that the Father is something greater
than the Son, seeing only the flesh, and not understanding His divinity, said
to Him, "Lord, show us the Father and it sufficeth us." As much as to say, "We
know Thee already, and bless Thee that we know Thee: for we thank Thee that
Thou hast shown Thyself to us. But as yet we know not the Father: therefore our
heart is inflamed, and occupied with a certain holy longing of seeing Thy Father
who sent Thee. Show us Him, and we shall desire nothing more of Thee: for it
sufficeth us when He has been shown, than whom none can be greater." A good
longing, a good desire; but small intelligence. Now the Lord Jesus Himself,
regarding them as small men seeking great things, and Himself great among the small,
and yet small among the small, says to Philip, one of the disciples, who had said
this: "Am I so long time with you, and ye have not known me, Philip?" Here
Philip might have answered, Thee we have known, but did we say to Thee, Show us
Thyself? We have known Thee, but it is the Father we seek to know. He immediately
adds, "He that hath seen me, hath seen the Father also."(4) If, then, One
equal with the Father has been sent, let us not estimate Him from the weakness of
the flesh, but think of the majesty clothed in flesh, but not weighed down by
the flesh. For, remaining God with the Father, He was made man among men, that,
through Him who was made man, thou mightest become such as to receive God. For
man could not receive God. Man could see man; God he could not apprehend. Why
could he not apprehend God? Because he had not the eye of the heart, by which to
apprehend Him. There was something within disordered, something without sound:
man had the eyes of the body sound, but the eyes of the heart sick. He was made
man to the eye of the body; so that, believing on Him who could be seen in
bodily form, thou mightst be healed for seeing Him whom thou wast not able to see
spiritually. "Am I so long time with you, and ye know me not, Philip? He that
hath seen me, hath seen the Father also." Why did they not see Him? Lo, they did
see Him, and yet saw not the Father: they saw the flesh, but the majesty was
concealed. What the disciples who loved Him saw, saw also the Jews who crucified
Him. Inwardly, then, was He all; and in such manner inwardly in the flesh,
that He remained with the Father when He came to the flesh.
13. Carnal thought does not apprehend what I say: let it defer
understanding, and begin by faith; let it hear what follows: "He that believeth on the Son
hath everlasting life: and he that believeth not the Son shall not see life;
but the wrath of God abideth on him." He has not said, The wrath of God cometh
to him; but, "The wrath of God abideth on him." All that are born mortals have
the wrath of God with them. What wrath of God? That wrath which Adam first
received. For if the first man sinned, and heard the sentence, "Thou shalt die the
death," he became mortal, and we began to be born mortal; and we have been born
with the wrath of God. From this stock came the Son, not having sin, and He was
clothed with flesh and mortality. If He partook with us of the wrath of God,
are we slow to partake with Him the grace of God? He, then, that will not
believe the Son, on the same "the wrath of God abideth." What wrath of God? That of
which the apostle says, "We also were by nature the children of wrath, even as
the rest."(1) All are therefore children of wrath, because coming of the curse
of death. Believe on Christ, for thee made mortal, that thou mayest receive Him,
the immortal; and when thou shalt have received His immortality, thou shalt no
longer be mortal. He lived, thou wast dead; He died that thou shouldst live.
He has brought us the grace of God, and has taken away the wrath of God. God has
conquered death, lest death should conquer man.
TRACTATE XV.
CHAPTER IV. 1-42.
1. It is nothing new to your ears, beloved, that the Evangelist John, like
an eagle, takes a loftier flight, and soars above the dark mist of earth, to
gaze with steadier eyes upon the light of truth. From his Gospel much has
already been treated of and discussed through our ministry, with the Lord's help; and
the passage which has been read to-day follows in due order. What I am about
to say, with the Lord's permission, many of you will hear in such wise that you
will be reviewing what you know, rather than learning what you know not. Yet,
for all that, your attention ought not to be slack, because it is not an
acquiring, but a reviewing, of knowledge. This has been read, and we have in our hands
to discourse upon this passage--that which the Lord Jesus spoke with the
Samaritan woman at Jacob's well. The things spoken there are great mysteries, and
the similitudes of great things; feeding the hungry, and refreshing the weary
soul.
2. Now when the Lord knew this, "when He had heard that the Pharisees had
learned that He was making more disciples than John, and baptized more (though
Jesus baptized not, but His disciples), He left Judea, and departed again into
Galilee." We must not discourse of this too long, lest, by dwelling on what is
manifest, we shall lack the time to investigate and lay open what is obscure.
Certainly, if the Lord saw that the fact of their coming to know that He made
more disciples, and baptized more, would so avail to salvation to the Pharisees
in following Him, as to become themselves His disciples, and to desire to be
baptized by Him; rather would He not have left Judea, but would have remained
there for their sakes. But because He knew their knowledge of the fact, and at the
same time knew their envy, and that they learned this, not to follow, but to
persecute him, He departed thence. He could, indeed, even when present, cause
that He should not be taken of them, if He would not; He had it in His power not
to be put to death, if He would not, since He had the power not to be born, if
He would not. But because, in everything that He did as man, He was showing an
example to them who were to believe on Him (that any one servant of God sinneth
not if he retire into another place, when he sees, it may be, the rage of his
persecutors, or of them that seek to bring his soul into evil; but if a servant
of God did this he might appear to commit sin, had not the Lord led the way in
doing it), that good Master did this to teach us, not because He feared it.
3. It may perhaps surprise you why it is said, that "Jesus baptized more
than John;" and after this was said, it is subjoined, "although Jesus baptized
not, but His disciples." What then? Was the statement made false, and then
corrected by this addition? Or, are both true, viz. that Jesus both did and also did
not baptize? He did in fact baptize, because it was He that cleansed; and He
did not baptize, because it was not He that touched. The disciples supplied the
ministry of the body; He afforded the aid of His majesty. Now, when could He
cease from baptizing, so long as He ceased not from cleansing? Of Him it is said
by the same John, in the person of the Baptist, who saith, "This is He that
baptizeth." Jesus, therefore, is still baptizing; and so long as we continue to be
baptized, Jesus baptizeth. Let a man come without fear to the minister below;
for he has a Master above.
4. But it may be one saith, Christ does indeed baptize, but in spirit, not
in body. As if, indeed, it were by the gift of another than He that any is
imbued even with the sacrament of corporal and visible baptism. Wouldest thou know
that it is He that baptizeth, not only with the Spirit, but also with water?
Hear the apostle: "Even as Christ," saith he, "loved the Church, and gave
Himself for it, purifying it with the washing of water by the Word, that He might
present to Himself a glorious Church, not having spot, or wrinkle, or any such
thing."(1) Purifying it. How? "With the washing of water by the Word." What is the
baptism of Christ? The washing of water by the Word. Take away the water, it
is no baptism; take away the Word, it is no baptism.
5. This much, then, on the preliminary circumstances, by occasion of which
He came to a conversation with that woman, let us look at the matters that
remain; matters full of mysteries and pregnant with sacraments. "And He must needs
pass through Samaria. He cometh then to a city of Samaria which is called
Sychar, near to the parcel of ground which Jacob gave to his son Joseph. Now
Jacob's fountain was there." It was a well; but every well is a fountain, yet not
every fountain a well. For where the water flows from the earth, and offers itself
for use to them that draw it, it is called a fountain; but if accessible, and
on the surface, it is called only a fountain: if, however, it be deep and far
down, it is called a well, but in such wise as not to lose the name of fountain.
6. "Jesus therefore, being wearied with His journey, sat thus on the well.
It was about the sixth hour." Now begin the mysteries. For it is not without a
purpose that Jesus is weary; not indeed without a purpose that the strength of
God is weary; not without a purpose that He is weary, by whom the wearied are
refreshed; not without a purpose is He weary, by whose absence we are wearied,
by whose presence we are strengthened. Nevertheless Jesus is weary, and weary
with His journey; and He sits down, and that, too, near a well; and it is at the
sixth hour that, being wearied, He sits down. All these things hint something,
are intended to intimate something, they make us eager, and encourage us to
knock. May Himself open to us and to you; He who has deigned to exhort us, so as
to say, "Knock, and it shall be opened to you." It was for thee that Jesus was
wearied with His journey. We find Jesus to be strength, and we find Jesus to be
weak: we find a strong and a weak Jesus: strong, because "in the beginning was
the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God: the same was in the
beginning with God." Wouldest thou see how this Son of God is strong? "All
things were made by Him, and without Him was nothing made:" and without labor,
too, were they made. Then what can be stronger than He, by whom all things were
made without labor? Wouldest thou know Him weak? "The Word was made flesh, and
dwelt among us." The strength of Christ created thee, the weakness of Christ
created thee anew. The strength of Christ caused that to be which was not: the
weakness of Christ caused that what was should not perish. He fashioned us by His
strength, He sought us by His weakness.
7. As weak, then, He nourishes the weak, as a hen her chickens; for He
likened Himself to a hen: "How often," He saith to Jerusalem, "would I have
gathered thy children under my wings, as a hen her chickens; but thou wouldest
not!"(1) And you see, brethren, how a hen becomes weak with her chickens. No other
bird, when it is a mother, is recognized at once to be so. We see all kinds of
sparrows building their nests before our eyes; we see swallows, storks, doves,
every day building their nests; but we do not know them to be parents, except
when we see them on their nests. But the hen is so enfeebled over her brood, that
even if the chickens are not following her, if thou see not the young ones, yet
thou knowest her at once to be a mother. With her wings drooping, her feathers
ruffled, her note hoarse, in all her limbs she becomes so sunken and abject,
that, as I have said, even though thou seest not her young, yet thou perceivest
her to be a mother. In such manner was Jesus weak, wearied with His journey.
His journey is the flesh assumed for us. For how can He, who is present
everywhere, have a journey, He who is nowhere absent? Whither does He go, or whence, but
that He could not come to us, except He had assumed the form of visible flesh?
Therefore, as He deigned to come to us in such manner, that He appeared in the
form of a servant by the flesh assumed, that same assumption of flesh is His
journey. Thus, "wearied with His journey," what else is it but wearied in the
flesh? Jesus was weak in the flesh: but do not thou become weak; but in His
weakness be strong, because what is "the weakness of God is stronger than men."
8. Under this image of things, Adam, who was the figure of Him that was to
be, afforded us a great indication of this mystery; rather, God afforded it in
him. For he was deemed worthy to receive a wife while he slept, and that wife
was made for him of his own rib: since from Christ, sleeping on the cross, was
the Church to come,--from His side, namely, as He slept; for it was from His
side, pierced with the spear, as He hung on the cross, that the sacraments of the
Church flowed forth. But why have I chosen to say this, brethren? Because it
is the weakness of Christ that makes us strong. A remarkable figure of this went
before in the case of Adam. God could have taken flesh from the man to make of
it a woman, and it seems that this might have been the more suitable. For it
was the weaker sex that was being made, and weakness ought to have been made of
flesh rather than of bone; for the bones are the stronger parts it the flesh.
He took not flesh to make of it a woman; but took a bone, and of the bone was
the woman shaped, and flesh was filled in into the place of the bone. He could
have restored bone for bone; He could have taken, not a rib, but flesh, for the
making of the woman. What, then, did this signify? Woman was made, as it were,
strong, from the rib; Adam was made, as it were, weak, from the flesh. It is
Christ and the Church; His weakness is our strength.
9. But why at the sixth hour? Because at the sixth age of the world. In
the Gospel, count up as an hour each, the first age from Adam to Noah; the
second, from Noah to Abraham; the third, from Abraham to David; the fourth, from
David to the removing to Babylon; the fifth, from the removing to Babylon to the
baptism of John: thence is the sixth being enacted. Why dost thou marvel? Jesus
came, and, by humbling Himself, came to a well. He came wearied, because He
carried weak flesh. At the sixth hour, because in the sixth age of the world. To a
well, because to the depth of this our habitation. For which reason it is said
in the psalm: "From the depth have I cried unto Thee, O Lord."(2)He sat, as I
said, because He was humbled.
10. "And there came a woman." Figure of the Church not yet justified, but
now about to be justified: for this is the subject of the discourse. She comes
ignorant, she finds Him, and there is a dealing with her. Let us see what, and
wherefore. "There cometh a woman of Samaria to draw water." The Samaritans did
not belong to the nation of the Jews: they were foreigners, though they
inhabited neighboring lands. It would take a long time to relate the origin of the
Samaritans; that we may not be detained by long discourse of this, and leave
necessary matters unsaid, suffice to say, then, that we regard the Samaritans as
aliens. And, lest you should think that I have said this with more boldness than
truth, hear the Lord Jesus Himself, what He said of that Samaritan, one of the
ten lepers whom He had cleansed, who alone returned to give thanks: "Were there
not ten cleansed? And where are the nine? There was not another to give glory
to God, save this stranger."(3) It is pertinent to the image of the reality,
that this woman, who bore the type of the Church, comes of strangers: for the
Church was to come of the Gentiles, an alien from the race of the Jews. In that
woman, then, let us hear ourselves, and in her acknowledge ourselves, and in her
give thanks to God for ourselves. For she was the figure, not the reality; for
she both first showed forth the figure and became the reality. For she believed
on Him who, of her, set the figure before us. "She cometh, then, to draw
water." Had simply come to draw water, as people are wont to do, be they men or women.
11. "Jesus saith unto her, Give me to drink. For His disciples were gone
away into the city to buy meat. Then saith the Samaritan woman unto Him, How is
it that thou, being a Jew, askest drink of me, who am a Samaritan woman? For
the Jews have no dealings with the Samaritans." You see that they were aliens:
indeed, the Jews would not use their vessels. And as the woman brought with her a
vessel with which to draw the water, it made her wonder that a Jew sought
drink of her,--a thing which the Jews were not accustomed to do. But He who was
asking drink was thirsting for the faith of the woman herself.
12. At length, hear who it is that asketh drink: "Jesus answered and said
unto her, If thou knewest the gift of God, and who it is that saith to thee,
Give me to drink, thou wouldest, it may be, have asked of Him, and He would have
given thee living water." He asks to drink, and promises to give drink. He
longs as one about to receive; He abounds as one about to satisfy. "If thou
knewest," saith He, "the gift of God." The gift of God is the Holy Spirit. But as yet
He speaks to the woman guardedly, and enters into her heart by degrees. It may
be He is now teaching her. For what can be sweeter and kinder than that
exhortation? "If thou knewest the gift of God," etc.: thus far He keeps her in
suspense. That is commonly called living water which issues from a spring: that which
is collected from rain in pools and cisterns is not called living water. And it
may have flowed from a spring; yet if it should stand collected in some place,
not admitting to it that from which it flowed, but, with the course
interrupted, separated, as it were, from the channel of the fountain, it is not called
"living water:" but that is called living water which is taken as it flows. Such
water there was in that fountain. Why, then, did He promise to give that which
He was asking?
13. The woman, however, being in suspense, saith to Him, "Lord, thou hast
nothing to draw with, and the well is deep." See how she understood the living
water, simply the water which was in that fountain. "Thou wouldst give me
living water, and I carry that with which to draw, and thou dost not. The living
water is here; how art thou to give it me?" Understanding another thing, and
taking it carnally, she does in a manner knock, that the Master may open up that
which is closed. She was knocking in ignorance, not with earnest purpose; she is
still an object of pity, not yet of instruction.
14. The Lord speaks somewhat more clearly of that living water. Now the
woman had said, "Art thou greater than our father Jacob, who gave us the well,
and drank of it himself, his children, and his cattle?" Thou canst not give me of
the living water of this well, because thou hast nothing to draw with: perhaps
thou promisest another fountain? Canst thou be better than our father, who dug
this well, and used it himself, and his? Let the Lord, then, declare what He
called living water. "Jesus answered and said unto her, Every one that drinketh
of this water shall thirst again: but he that drinketh of the water that I
shall give him, shall not thirst forever; but the water which I shall give him will
become in him a fountain of water, springing up into everlasting life." The
Lord has spoken more openly: "It shall become in him a fountain of water,
springing up into everlasting life. He that drinketh of this water shall not thirst
forever." What more evident than that it was not visible, but invisible water,
that He was promising? What more evident than that He was speaking, not in a
carnal, but in a spiritual sense?
15. Still, however, the woman has her mind on the flesh: she is delighted
with the thought of thirsting no more, and fancies that this was promised to
her by the Lord after a carnal sense; which it will be indeed, but in the
resurrection of the dead. She desired this now. God had indeed granted once to His
servant Elias, that during forty days he neither hungered nor thirsted. Could not
He give this always, seeing He had power to give it during forty days? She,
however, sighed for it, desiring to have no want, no toil. To be always coming to
that fountain, to be burdened with a weight with which to supply her want, and,
when that which she had drawn is spent, to be obliged to return again: this
was a daily toil to her; because that want of hers was to be relieved, not
extinguished. Such a gift as Jesus promised delighted her; she asks Him to give her
living water.
16. Nevertheless, let us not overlook the fact that it is something
spiritual that the Lord was promising. What means, "Whoso shall drink of this water
shall thirst again?" It is true as to this water; it is true as to what the
water signified. Since the water in the well is the pleasure of the world in its
dark depth: from this men draw it with the vessel of lusts. Stooping forward,
they let down the lust to reach the pleasure fetched from the depth of the well,
and enjoy the pleasure and the preceding lust let down to fetch it. For he who
has not despatched his lust in advance cannot get to the pleasure. Consider
lust, then, as the vessel; and pleasure as the water from the depth of the well:
when one has got at the pleasure of this world, it is meat to him, it is drink,
it is a bath, a show, an amour; can it be that he will not thirst again?
Therefore, "Whoso shall drink of this water," saith He, "will thirst again;" but if he
shall receive water of me, "he shall never thirst." "We shall be satisfied,"
it saith, "with the good things of Thy house."(1) Of what water, then, is He to
give, but of that of which it is said, "With Thee is the fountain of life"? For
how shall they thirst, who "shall be drunk with the fatness of Thy house"?(2)
17. What He was promising them was a certain feeding and abundant fullness
of the Holy Spirit: but the woman did not yet understand; and not
understanding, how did she answer? "The woman saith unto Him, Sir, give me this water, that
I thirst not, neither come hither to draw." Want forced her to labor, and her
weakness was pleading against the toil. Would that she heard the invitation,
"Come unto me, all ye that labor and are heavy laden, and I will refresh you!"(3)
This is, in fact, what Jesus was saying to her, that she might no longer
labor: but she did not yet understand.
18. At length, wishing her to understand, "Jesus saith unto her, Go, call
thy husband, and come hither." What means this, "Call thy husband"? Was it
through her husband that He wished to give her that water? Or, because she did not
understand, did He wish to teach her through her husband? Perhaps it was as the
apostle says concerning women, "If they wish to learn anything, let them ask
their husbands at home." But this the apostle says of that where there is no
Jesus present to teach. It is said, in short, to women whom the apostle was
forbidding to speak in the Church.(4) But when the Lord Himself was at hand, and in
person speaking to her, what need was there that He should speak to her by her
husband? Was it through her husband that he spoke to Mary, while sitting at His
feet and receiving His word; while Martha, wholly occupied with much serving,
murmured at the happiness of her sister?(5) Wherefore, my brethren, let us hear
and understand what it is that the Lord says to the woman, "Call thy husband."
For it may be that He is saying also to our soul, "Call thy husband." Let us
inquire also concerning the soul's husband. Why, is not Jesus Himself already the
soul's real husband? Let the understanding be present, since what we are about
to say can hardly be apprehended but by attentive hearers: therefore let the
understanding be present to apprehend, and perhaps that same understanding will
be found to be the husband of the soul.
19. Now Jesus, seeing that the woman did not understand, and willing her
to understand, says to her, "Call thy husband." "For the reason why thou knowest
not what I say is, because thy understanding is not present: I am speaking
after the Spirit, and thou art hearing after the flesh. The things which I speak
relate neither to the pleasure of the ears, nor to the eyes, nor to the smell,
nor to the taste, nor to the touch; by the mind alone are they received, by the
understanding alone are they drawn up: that understanding is not with thee, how
canst thou apprehend what I am saying? 'Call thy husband,' bring thy
understanding forward. What is it for thee to have a soul? It is not much, for a beast
has a soul. Wherein art thou better than the beast? In having understanding,
which the beast has not." Then what is "Call thy husband"? "Thou dost not
apprehend me, thou dost not understand me: I am speaking to thee of the gift of God,
and thy thought is of the flesh; thou wishest not to thirst in a carnal sense, I
am addressing myself to the spirit: thy understanding is absent. 'Call thy
husband.' Be not as the horse and mule, which have no understanding.'" Therefore,
my brethren, to have a soul, and not to have understanding, that is, not to use
it, not to live according to it, is a beast's life. For we have somewhat in
common with the beasts, that by which we live in the flesh, but it must be ruled
by the understanding. For the motions of the soul, which moves after the flesh,
and longs to run unrestrainedly loose after carnal delights, are ruled over by
the understanding. Which is to be called the husband?--that which rules, or
that which is ruled? Without doubt, when the life is well ordered the
understanding rules the soul, for itself belongs to the soul. For the understanding is not
something other than the soul, but a thing of the soul: as the eye is not
something other than the flesh, but a thing of the flesh. But whilst the eye is a
thing of the flesh, yet it alone enjoys the light; and the other fleshy members
may be steeped in light, but they cannot feel the light: the eye alone is both
bathed in it, and enjoys it. Thus in our soul there is a something called the
understanding. This something of the soul, which is called understanding and
mind, is enlightened by the higher light. Now that higher light, by which the human
mind is enlightened, is God; for "that was the true light which enlighteneth
every man coming into this world." Such a light was Christ, such a light was
speaking with the woman yet she was not present with the understanding, to have it
enlightened with that light; not merely to have it shed upon it, but to enjoy
it. Therefore the Lord said, "Call thy husband," as if He were to say, I wish
to enlighten, and yet there is not here whom I may enlighten: bring hither the
understanding through which thou mayest be taught, by which thou mayest be
ruled. Thus, put the soul without the understanding for the woman; and having the
understanding as having the husband. But this husband does not rule the wife
well, except when he is ruled by a higher. "For the head of the woman is the man,
but the head of the man is Christ."(1) The head of the man was talking with the
woman, and the man was not present. And so the Lord, as if He said, Bring
hither thy head, that he may receive his head, says, "Call thy husband, and come
hither;" that is, Be here, be present: for thou art as absent, while thou
understandest not the voice of the Truth here present; be thou present here, but not
alone; be thou here with thy husband.
20. And, the husband being not yet called, still she does not understand,
still she minds the flesh; for the man is absent: "I have not," saith she, "a
husband." And the Lord proceeds and utters mysteries. Thou mayest understand
that woman really to have had at that time no husband; she was living with some
man, not a lawful husband, rather a paramour than a husband. And the Lord said to
her, "Thou hast well said, I have not a husband." How then didst Thou say,
"Call thy husband"? Now hear how the Lord knew well that she had not a husband "He
says to her," etc. In case the woman might suppose that the Lord had said,
"Thou hast well said, I have not a husband," just because He had learned this fact
of her, and not because he knew it by His own divinity, hear something which
thou hast not said: "For thou hast had five husbands, and he whom thou now hast
is not thy husband; this thou hast said truly."
21. Once more He urges us to investigate the matter somewhat more exactly
concerning these five husbands. Many have in fact understood, not indeed
absurdly, nor so far improbably, the five husbands of this woman to mean the five
books of Moses. For the Samaritans' made use of these books, and were under the
same law: for it was from it they had circumcision. But since we are hemmed in by
what follows, "And he whom thou now hast is not thy husband," it appears to me
that we can more easily take the five senses of the body to be the five former
husbands of the soul. For when one is born, before he can make use of the mind
and reason, he is ruled only by the senses of the flesh. In a little child,
the soul seeks for or shuns what is heard, and seen, and smells, and tastes, and
is perceived by the touch. It seeks for whatever soothes, and shuns whatever
offends, those five senses. At first, the soul lives according to these five
senses, as five husbands; because it is ruled by them. But why are they called
husbands? Because they are lawful and right: made indeed by God, and are the gifts
of God to the soul. The soul is still weak while ruled by these five husbands,
and living under these five husbands; but when she comes to years of exercising
reason, if she is taken in hand by the noble discipline and teaching of
wisdom, these five men are succeeded in their rule by no other than the true and
lawful husband, and one better than they, who both rules better and rules for
eternity, who cultivates and instructs her for eternity. For the five senses rule
us, not for eternity, but for those temporal things that are to be sought or
shunned. But when the understanding, imbued by wisdom, begins to rule the soul, it
knows now not only how to avoid a pit, and to walk on even ground--a thing
which the eyes show to the soul even in its weakness; nor merely to be charmed with
musical voices, and to repel harsh sounds; nor to delight in agreeable scents,
and to refuse offensive smells; nor to be captivated by sweetness, and
displeased with bitterness; nor to be soothed with what is soft, and hurt with what is
rough. For all these things are necessary to the soul in its weakness. Then
what rule is made use of by that understanding? Not one to discern between black
and white, but between just and unjust, between good and evil, between the
profitable and the unprofitable, between chastity and impurity, that it may love
the one and avoid the other; between charity and hatred, to be in the one, not to
be in the other.
22. This husband had not yet succeeded to those five husbands in that
woman. And where he does not succeed, error sways. For when the soul has begun to
be capable of reason, it is ruled either by the wise mind or by error: but yet
error does not rule but destroys. Wherefore, after these five senses was that
woman still wandering, and error was tossing her to and fro. And this error was
not a lawful husband, but a paramour: for that reason the Lord saith to her,
"Thou hast well said, I have not a husband. For thou hast had five husbands." The
five senses of the flesh ruled thee at first; thou art come to the age of using
reason, and yet thou art not come to wisdom, but art fallen into error.
Therefore, after those five husbands, "this whom thou now hast is not thy husband."
And if not a husband, what was he but a paramour? And so, "Call," not the
paramour, but "thy husband," that thou mayest receive me with the understanding, and
not by error have some false notion of me. For the woman was still in error, as
she was thinking of that water; whilst the Lord was now speaking of the Holy
Ghost. Why was she erring, but because she had a paramour, not a husband? Put
away, therefore, that paramour who corrupts thee, and "go, call thy husband."
Call, and come that thou mayest understand me.
23. "The woman saith unto Him, Sir, I see that thou art a prophet." The
husband begins to come, he is not yet fully come. She accounted the Lord a
prophet, and a prophet indeed He was; for it was of Himself He said, that "a prophet
is not without honor, save in his own country."(1) Again, of Him it was said to
Moses, "A Prophet will I raise up to them of their brethren, like unto
thee."(2) Like, namely, as to the form of the flesh, but not in the eminence of His
majesty. Accordingly we find the Lord Jesus called a Prophet. Hence this woman is
now not far wrong. "I see," she saith, "that thou art a prophet." She begins
to call the husband, and to shut out the paramour; she begins to ask about a
matter that is Wont to disquiet her. For there was a contention between the
Samaritans and the Jews, because the Jews worshipped God in the temple built by
Solomon; but the Samaritans, being situated at a distance from it, did not worship
there. For this reason the Jews, because they worshipped God in the temple,
boasted themselves to be better than the Samaritans. "For the Jews have no dealings
with the Samaritans:" because the latter said to them, How is it you boast and
account yourselves to be better than we, just because you have a temple which
we have not? Did our fathers, who were pleasing to God, worship in that temple?
Was it not in this mountain where we are they worshipped? We then do better,
say they, who pray to God in this mountain, where our fathers prayed. Both
peoples contended in ignorance, because they had not the husband: they were inflated
against each other, on the one side in behalf of the temple, on the other in
behalf of the mountain.
24. What, however, does the Lord teach the woman now, as one whose husband
has begun to be present? "The woman saith unto Him, Sir, I perceive that thou
art a prophet. Our fathers worshipped in this mountain; and ye say that in
Jerusalem is the place where men ought to worship. Jesus saith unto her, Woman,
believe me." For the Church will come, as it is said in the Song of Songs, "will
come, and will pass over from the beginning of faith."(3) She will come in order
to pass through; and pass through she cannot, except from the beginning of
faith. Rightly she now hears, the husband being present: "Woman, believe me." For
there is that in thee now which can believe, since thy husband is present. Thou
hast begun to be present with the understanding when thou calledst me a
prophet. Woman, believe me; for if ye believe not, ye will not understand.(4)
Therefore, "Woman, believe me, for the hour will come when ye shall neither in this
mountain nor in Jerusalem worship the Father. Ye worship ye know not what: we
worship what we know; for salvation is of the Jews. But the hour will come." When?
"And now is." Well, what hour? "When the true worshippers shall worship the
Father in spirit and in truth," not in this mountain, not in the temple, but in
spirit and in truth. "For the Father seeketh such to worship Him." Why does the
Father seek such to worship Him, not on a mountain, not in the temple, but in
spirit and in truth? "God is Spirit." If God were body, it were right that He
should be worshipped on a mountain, for a mountain is corporeal; it were right He
should be worshipped in the temple, for a temple is corporeal. "God is Spirit;
and they that worship Him, must worship in spirit and in truth."
25. We have heard, and it is manifest; we had gone out of doors, and we
are sent inward. Would I could find, thou didst say, some high and lonely
mountain! For I think that, because God is on high, He hears me the rather from a high
place. Because thou art on a mountain, dost thou imagine thyself near to God.
and that He will quickly hear thee, as if calling to Him from the nearest
place? He dwells on high, but regards the lowly. "The Lord is near." To whom? To the
high, perhaps? "To them who are contrite of heart."(1) 'Tis a wonderful thing:
He dwelleth on high, and yet is near to the lowly; "He hath regard to lowly
things, but lofty things He knoweth from afar;"(2) He seeth the proud afar off,
and He is the less near to them the higher they appear to themselves to be.
Didst thou seek a mountain, then? Come down, that thou mayest come near Him. But
wouldest thou ascend? Ascend, but do not seek a mountain. "The ascents," it
saith, "are in his heart, in the valley of weeping."(3) The valley is humility.
Therefore do all within. Even if perhaps thou seekest some lofty place, some holy
place, make thyself a temple for God within time. "For the temple of God is
holy, which temple are ye."(4) Wouldest thou pray in a temple? Pray in thyself. But
be thou first a temple of God, for He in His temple heareth him that prays.
26. "The hour cometh, and now is, when the true worshippers shall worship
the Father in spirit and in truth. We worship that which we know: ye worship ye
know not what; for salvation is of the Jews." A great thing has He attributed
to the Jews; but do not understand Him to mean those spurious Jews. Understand
that wall to which another is joined, that they may be joined together, resting
on the corner-stone, which is Christ. For there is one wall from the Jews,
another from the Gentiles; these walls are far apart, only until they are united
in the Corner. Now the aliens were strangers and foreigners from the covenants
of God.(5) According to this, it is said, "We worship what we know." It is said,
indeed, in the person of the Jews, but not of all Jews, not of reprobate Jews,
but of such as were the apostles, as were the prophets, as were all those
saints who sold all their goods, and laid the price of their goods at the apostles'
feet. "For God hath not rejected His people which He foreknew."(6)
27. The woman heard this, and proceeded. She had already called Him a
prophet; she observes that He with whom she was speaking uttered such things as
still more pertained to the prophet; and what answer did she make? See: "The woman
saith unto Him, I know that Messias will come, who is called Christ: when He
then is come, He will show us all things." What is this? Just now she saith, The
Jews are contending for the temple, and we for this mountain: when He has
come, He will despise the mountain, and overthrow the temple; He will teach us all
things, that we may know how to worship in spirit and in truth. She knew who
could teach her, but she did not yet know Him that was now teaching her. But now
she was worthy to receive the manifestation of Him. Now Messias is Anointed:
Anointed, in Greek, is Christ; in Hebrew, Messias; whence also, in Punic, Messe
means Anoint. For the Hebrew, Punic and Syriac are cognate and neighboring
languages.
28. Then, "The woman saith unto Him, I know that Messias will come, who is
called Christ: when He then is come, He will tell us all things. Jesus saith
unto her, I that speak with thee am He." She called her husband; he is made the
head of the woman, and Christ is made the head of the man. Now is the woman
constituted in faith, and ruled, as about to live rightly. After she heard this,
"I that speak with thee am He," what further could she say, when the Lord Jesus
willed to manifest Himself to the woman, to whom He had said, "Believe me?"
29. "And immediately came His disciples, and marvelled that He talked with
the woman." That He was seeking her that was lost, He who came to seek that
which was lost: they marvelled at this. They marvelled at a good thing, they were
not suspecting an evil thing. "Yet no man said, What seekest Thou, or why
talkest Thou with her?"
30. "The woman then left her water-pot." Having heard, "I that speak with
thee am He," and having received Christ the Lord into her heart, what could she
do but now leave her water-pot, and run to preach the gospel? She cast out
lust, anti hastened to proclaim the truth. Let them who would preach the gospel
learn; let them throw away their water-pot at the well. You remember what I said
before of the water-pot: it was a vessel with which the water was drawn, called
hydria, from its Greek name, because water is hydor in Greek; just as if it
were called aquarium, from the Latin. She threw away her water-pot then, which
was no longer of use, but a burden to her, such was her avidity to be satisfied
with that water. Throwing her burden away, to make known Christ, "she ran to the
city, and says to those men. Come, and see a man that told me all things that
ever I did." Step by step, lest those men should get angry and indignant, and
should persecute her. "Is this Christ? Then they went out of the city, and came
to Him."
31. "And in the meanwhile His disciples besought Him, saying, Master,
eat." For they had gone to buy meat, and had returned. "But He said, I have meat to
eat which ye know not of. Therefore said the disciples one to another, Hath
any man brought Him aught to eat?" What wonder if that woman did not understand
about the water? See; the disciples do not yet understand the meat. But He heard
their thoughts, and now as a master instructs them, not in a round-about way,
as He did the woman while He still sought her husband, but openly at once: "My
meat," saith He, "is to do the will of Him that sent me." Therefore, in the
case of that woman, it was even His drink to do the will of Him that sent Him.
That was the reason why He said, "I thirst, give me to drink;" namely, to work
faith in her, and to drink of her faith, and to transplant her into His own body,
for His body is the Church. Therefore He saith," My meat is to do the will of
Him that sent me."
32. "Say ye not, that there are yet four months, and then cometh harvest?"
He was aglow for the work, and was arranging to send forth laborers. You count
four months to the harvest; I show you another harvest, white and ready.
Behold, I say unto you, "Lift up your eyes, and see that the fields are already
white for the harvest." Therefore He is going to send forth the reapers. "For in
this is the saying true, that one reapeth, another soweth: that both he that
soweth and he that reapeth may rejoice together. I have sent you to reap that on
which ye have not labored: others have labored, and ye are entered into their
labor." What then? He sent reapers; sent He not the sowers? Whither the reapers?
Where others labored already. For where labor had already been bestowed, surely
there had been sowing; and what had been sown had now become ripe, and required
the sickle and the threshing. Whither, then, were the reapers to be sent?
Where the prophets had already preached before; for they were the sowers. For had
they not been the sowers, whence had this come to the woman, "I know that
Messias will come"? That woman was now ripened fruit, and the harvest fields were
white, and sought the sickle. "I sent you," then. Whither? "To reap what ye have
not sown: others sowed, and ye are entered into their labors." Who labored?
Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob. Read their labors; in all their labors there is a
prophecy of Christ, and for that reason they were sowers. Moses, and all the other
patriarchs, and all the prophets, how much they suffered in that cold season when
they sowed! Therefore was the harvest now ready in Judea. Justly was the corn
there said to be as it were ripe, when so many thousands of men brought the
price of their goods, and, laying them at the apostles' feet, having eased their
shoulders of this worldly baggage, began to follow the Lord Christ. Verily the
harvest was ripe. What was made of it? Of that harvest a few grains were thrown
out, and sowed the whole world; and another harvest is rising which is to be
reaped in the end of the world. Of that harvest it is said, "They that sow in
tears shall reap with joy."(1) But to that harvest not apostles, but angels, shall
be sent forth. "The reapers," saith He, "are the angels."(2) That harvest,
then, is growing among tares, and is awaiting to be purged in the end of the
world. But that harvest to which the disciples were sent first, where the prophets
labored, was already ripe. But yet, brethren, observe what was said: "may
rejoice together, both he that soweth and he that reapeth." They had disSimilar
labors in time, but the rejoicing they shall enjoy alike equally; they shall receive
for their wages together eternal life.
33. "And many Samaritans of that city believed on Him, because of the
saying of the woman, who testified, He told me all that ever I did. And when the
Samaritans came to Him, they besought Him that He would tarry with them; and He
tarried there two days. And many more believed because of His word; and said to
the woman, Now we believe, not because of thy words; for we have heard Him
ourselves, and we know that this is indeed the Saviour of the world." This also
must be slightly noticed, for the lesson is come to an end. The woman first
announced Him, and the Samaritans believed her testimony; and they besought Him to
stay with them, and He stayed there two days, and many more believed. And when
they had believed, they said to the woman, "Now we believe, not because of thy
word; but we are come to know Him ourselves, and we know that this is indeed the
Saviour of the world:" first by report, then by His presence. So it is to-day
with them that are without, and are not yet Christians. Christ is made known to
them by Christian friends; and just upon the report of that woman, that is, the
Church, they come to Christ, they believe through this report. He stays with
them two days, that is, gives them two precepts of charity; and many more
believe, and more firmly believe, on Him, because He is in truth the Saviour of the
world.
TRACTATE XVI.
CHAPTER IV. 43-54.
1. The Gospel Lesson of to-day follows that of yesterday, and this is the
subject of our discourse. In this passage the meaning, indeed, is not difficult
of investigation, but worthy of preaching, worthy of admiration and praise.
Accordingly, in reciting this passage of the Gospel, we must commend it to your
attention, rather than laboriously expound it.
Now Jesus, after His stay of two days in Samaria, "departed into Galilee,"
where He was brought up. And the evangelist, as he goes on, says, "For Jesus
Himself testified that a prophet hath no honor in his own country." It was not
because He had no honor in Samaria that Jesus departed. thence after two days;
for Samaria was not His own country, but Galilee. Whilst, therefore, He left
Samaria so quickly, and came to Galilee, where He had been brought up, how does He
testify that "a prophet hath no honor in his own country"? Rather does it seem
that He might have testified that a prophet has no honor in his own country,
had He disdained to go into Galilee, and had stayed in Samaria.
2. Now mark well, beloved, while the Lord suggests and bestows what I may
speak, that here is intimated to us no slight mystery. You know the question
before us; seek ye out the solution of it. But, to make the solution desirable,
let us repeat the theme. The point that troubles us is, why the evangelist said,
"For Jesus Himself testified that a prophet hath no honor in his own country."
Urged by this, we go back to the preceding words, to discover the evangelist's
intention in saying this; and we find him relating, in the preceding words of
the narrative, that after two days Jesus departed from Samaria into Galilee.
Was it for this, then, thou saidst, O evangelist, that Jesus testified that a
prophet hath no honor in his own country, just because He left Samaria after two
days, and made haste to come to Galilee? On the contrary, I should have thought
it more likely, that if Jesus had no honor in His own country, He should not
have hastened to it, and left Samaria. But if I am not mistaken, or rather,
because it is true, and I am not mistaken; for the evangelist saw what he was saying
better than I can see it, saw the truth better than I do, he who drank it in
from the Lord's bosom: for the evangelist is the same John who, among all the
disciples, reclined on the Lord's breast, and whom the Lord, owing love to all,
yet loved above the rest. Is it he, then, that should be mistaken, and I right
in my opinion? Rather, if I am piously-minded, let me obediently hear what he
said, that I may be worthy of thinking as he thought.
3. Hear then, dearly beloved, what I think in this matter, without
prejudice to your own judgment, if you have formed a better. For we have all one
Master, and we are fellow-disciples in one school. This, then, is my opinion, and
see whether my opinion is not true, or near the truth. In Samaria He spent two
days, and the Samaritans believed on Him; many were the days He spent in Galilee.
and yet the Galileans did not believe on Him. Look back to the passage, or
recall in memory the lesson and the discourse of yesterday. He came into Samaria,
where at first He had been preached by that woman with whom He had spoken great
mysteries at Jacob's well. After they had seen and heard Him, the Samaritans
believed on Him because of the woman's word, and believed more firmly because of
His own word, even many more believed: thus it is written. After passing two
days there (in which number of days is mystically indicated the number of the
two precepts on which hang the whole law and the prophets, as you remember we
intimated to you yesterday), He goes into Galilee, and comes to the city Cana of
Galilee, where He made the water wine. And there, when He turned the water into
wine, as John himself writes, His disciples believed on Him; but, of course,
the house was full with a crowd of guests. So great a miracle was wrought, and
yet only His disciples believed on Him. He has now returned to this city of
Galilee. "And, behold, a certain ruler, whose son was sick, came to Him, and began
to beseech Him to go down" to that city or house, "and heal his son; for he was
at the point of death." Did he who besought not believe? What dost thou expect
to hear from me? Ask the Lord what He thought of him. Having been besought,
this is what He answered: "Except ye see signs and wonders, ye believe not." He
shows us a man lukewarm, or cold in faith, or of no faith at all; but eager to
try by the healing of his son what manner of person Christ was, who He was, what
He could do. The words of the suppliant, indeed, we have heard: we have not
seen the heart of the doubter; but He who both heard the words and saw the heart
has told us this. In short, the evangelist himself, by the testimony of his
narrative, shows us that the man who desired the Lord to come to his house to heal
his son, had not yet believed. For after he had been informed that his son was
whole, and found that he had been made whole at that hour in which the Lord had
said, "Go thy way, thy son liveth;" then he saith, "And himself believed, and
all his house." Now, if the reason why he believed, and all his house, was that
he was told that his son was whole, and found the hour they told him agreed
with the hour of Christ's foretelling it, it follows that when he was making the
request he did not yet believe. The Samaritans had waited for no sign, they
believed simply His word; but His own fellow-citizens deserved to hear this said
to them, "Except ye see signs and wonders, ye believe not;" and even there,
notwithstanding so great a miracle was wrought, there did not believe but "himself
and his house." At His discourse alone many of the Samaritans believed; at that
miracle, in the place where it was wrought, only that house believed. What is
it, then, brethren, that the Lord doth show us here? Galilee of Judea was then
the Lord's own country, because He was brought up in it. But now that the
circumstance portends something,--for it is not without cause that "prodigies" are
so called, but because they portend or presage something: for the word "prodigy"
is so termed as if it were porrodicium, quod porro dicat, what betokens
something to come, and portends something future,--now all those circumstances
portended something, predicted something; let us just now assume the country of our
Lord Jesus Christ after the flesh (for He had no country on earth, except after
the flesh which He took on earth); let us, I say, assume the Lord's own country
to mean the people of the Jews. Lo, in His own country He hath no honor.
Observe at this moment the multitudes of the Jews; observe that nation now scattered
over the whole world, and plucked up by the roots; observe the broken
branches, cut off, scattered, withered, which being broken off, the wild olive has
deserved to be grafted in; look at the multitude of the Jews: what do they say to
us even now? "He whom you worship and adore was our brother." And we reply, "A
prophet hath no honor in his own country." In short, those Jews saw the Lord as
He walked on the earth and worked miracles; they saw Him giving sight to the
blind, opening the ears of the deaf, loosing the tongues of the dumb, bracing up
the limbs of the paralytics, walking on the sea, commanding the winds and
waves, raising the dead: they saw Him working such great signs, and after all that
scarcely a few believed. I am speaking to God's people; so many of us have
believed, what signs have we seen? It is thus, therefore, that what occurred at that
time betokened what is now going on. The Jews were, or rather are, like the
Galileans; we, like those Samaritans. We have heard the gospel, have given it our
consent, have believed on Christ through the gospel; we have seen no signs,
none do we demand.
4. For, though one of the chosen and holy twelve, yet he was an Israelite,
of the Lord's nation, that Thomas who desired to put his fingers into the
places of the wounds. The Lord censured him just as He did this ruler. To the ruler
He said, "Except ye see signs and wonders, ye believe not;" and to Thomas He
said, "Because thou hast seen, thou hast believed."He had come to the Galileans
after the Samaritans, who had believed His word, before whom He wrought no
miracles, whom He without anxiety quickly left, strong in faith, because by the
presence of His divinity He had not left them. Now, then, when the Lord said to
Thomas, "Come, reach hither thy hand, and be not faithless, but believing;" and
he, having touched the places of the wounds, exclaimed, and said, "My Lord, and
my God;" he is chided, and has it said to him, "Because thou hast seen, thou
hast believed." Why, but "because a prophet has no honor in his own country?" But
since this Prophet has honor among strangers, what follows? "Blessed are they
that have not seen, and yet have believed."(1) We are the persons here
foretold; and that which the Lord by anticipation praised, He has deigned to fulfill
even in us. They saw Him, who crucified Him, and touched Him with their hands,
and thus a few believed; we have not seen nor handled Him, we have heard and
believed. May it be our lot, that the blessedness which He has promised may be made
good in us: both here, because we have been preferred to His own country; and
in the world to come, because we have been grafted in instead of the branches
that were broken off!
5. For He showed that He would break off these branches, and ingraft this
wild olive, when moved by the faith of the centurion, who said to Him, "I am
not worthy that thou shouldest come under my roof; but only speak the word, and
my child shall be healed: for I also am a man put under authority, having
soldiers under me; and I say to one, Go, and he goeth; and to another, Come, and he
cometh; and to my servant, Do this, and he doeth it. Jesus turned to those who
followed Him, and said, Verily I say unto you, I have not found so great faith
in Israel." Why not found so great faith in Israel? "Because a prophet has no
honor in his own country." Could not the Lord have said to that centurion, what
He said to this ruler, "Go, thy child liveth?" See the distinction: this ruler
desired the Lord to come down to his house that centurion declared himself to be
unworthy. To the one it was said, "I will come and heal him;" to the other,
"Go, thy son liveth." To the one He promised His presence; the other He healed by
His word. The ruler sought His presence by force; the centurion declared
himself unworthy of His presence. Here is a ceding to loftiness; there, a conceding
to humility. As if He said to the ruler, "Go, thy son liveth;" do not weary me.
"Except ye see signs and wonders, ye believe not;" thou desirest my presence
in thy house, I am able to command by a word; do not wish to believe in virtue
of signs: the centurion, an alien, believed me able to work by a word, and
believed before I did it; you, "except ye see signs and wonders, believe not."
Therefore, if it be so, let them be broken off as proud branches, and let the humble
wild olive be grafted; nevertheless let the root remain, while those are cut
off and these received in their place. Where does the root remain? In the
patriarchs. For the people Israel is Christ's own country, since it is of them that
He came according to the flesh; but the root of this tree is Abraham, Isaac, and
Jacob, the holy patriarchs. And where are they? In rest with God, in great
honor; so that it was into Abraham's bosom that the poor man, on being promoted,
was raised after his departure from the body, and in Abraham's bosom was he seen
from afar off by the proud rich man. Wherefore the root remains, the root is
praised; but the proud branches deserved to be cut off, and to wither away; and
by their cutting off, the humble wild olive has found a place.
6. Hear now how the natural branches are cut off, how the wild olive is
grafted in, by means of the centurion himself, whom I have thought proper to
mention for the sake of comparison with this ruler. "Verily I say unto you, I have
not found so great faith in Israel; therefore I say unto you, that many shall
come from the east and from the west." How widely the wild olive took possession
of the earth! This world was a bitter forest; but because of the humility,
because of this "I am not worthy--many shall come from the east and from the
west." And grant that they come, what shall become of them? For if they come, they
are cut off from the forest; where are they to be ingrafted, that they may not
wither? "And shall sit down," saith He, "with Abraham, and Isaac, and Jacob." At
what banquet, in case thou dost not invite to ever living, but to much
drinking? Where, "shall sit down? In the kingdom of heaven." And how will it be with
them who came of the stock of Abraham? What will become of the branches with
which the tree was full? What but to be cut off, that these may be grafted in?
Show us that they shall be cut off: "But the children of the kingdom shall go into
outer darkness."(1)
7. Therefore let the Prophet have honor among us, because He had no honor
in His own country. He had no honor in His country, wherein He was formed; let
Him have honor in the country which He has formed. For in that country was He,
the Maker of all, made as to the form of a servant. For that city in which He
was made, that Zion, that nation of the Jews He Himself made when He was with
the Father as the Word of God: for "all things were made by Him, and without Him
was nothing made." Of that man we have to-day heard it said: "One Mediator of
God and men, the man Christ Jesus."(2) The Psalms also foretold, saying, "My
mother is Sion, shall a man say." A certain man, the Mediator man between God and
men, says, "My mother Sion." Why says, "My mother is Sion"? Because from it He
took flesh, from it was the Virgin Mary, of whose womb He took upon Him the
form of a servant; in which He deigned to appear most humble. "My mother is Sion,"
saith a man; and this man, who says, "My mother is Sion," was made in her,
became man in her. For He was God before her, and became man in her. He who was
made man in her, "Himself did found her; the Most High(3) was made man in her
most low." Because "the Word was made flesh, and dwelt among us." "He Himself, the
Most High, founded her." Now, because He founded this country, here let Him
have honor. The country in which He was born rejected Him; let that country
receive Him which He regenerated.