LECTURES OR TRACTATES ON THE GOSPEL ACCORDING TO ST. JOHN. TRACTATES XVII TO
XX.
TRACTATE XVII.
CHAPTER V. 1-18.
1. It ought not to be a matter of wonder that a miracle was wrought by
God; the wonder would be if man had wrought it. Rather ought we to rejoice than
wonder that our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ was made man, than that He
performed divine works among men. It is of greater importance to our salvation what He
was made for men, than what He did among men: it is more important that He
healed the faults of souls, than that He healed the weaknesses of mortal bodies.
But as the soul knew not Him by whom it was to be healed, and had eyes in the
flesh whereby to see corporeal deeds, but had not yet sound eyes in the heart with
which to recognise Him as God concealed in the flesh, He wrought what the soul
was able to see, in order to heal that by which it was not able to see.
He entered a place where lay a great multitude of sick folk--of blind,
lame, withered; and being the physician both of souls and bodies, and having come
to heal all the souls of them that should believe, of those sick folk He chose
one for healing, thereby to signify unity. If in doing this we regard Him with
a commonplace mind, with the mere human understanding and wit, as regards power
it was not a great matter that He performed; and also as regards goodness He
performed too little. There lay so many there, and yet only one was healed,
whilst He could by a word have raised them all up. What, then, must we understand
but that the power and the goodness was doing what souls might, by His deeds,
understand for their everlasting salvation, than what bodies might gain for
temporal health? For that which is the real health of bodies, and which is looked
for from the Lord, will be at the end, in the resurrection of the dead. What
shall live then shall no more die; what shall be healed shall no more be sick; what
shall be satisfied shall no more hunger and thirst; what shall be made new
shall not grow old. But at this time, however, the eyes of the blind, that were
opened by those acts of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ, were again closed in
death; and limbs of the paralytics that received strength Were loosened again in
death; and whatever was for a time made whole in mortal limbs came to nought
in the end: but the soul that believed passed to eternal life. Accordingly, to
the soul that should believe, whose sins He had come to forgive, to the healing
of whose ailments He had humbled Himself, He gave a significant proof by the
healing of this impotent man. Of the profound mystery of this thing and this
proof, so far as the Lord deigns to grant us, while you are attentive and siding
our weakness by prayer, I will speak as I shall have ability. And whatever I am
not able to do, that will be supplied to you by Him by whose help I do what I
can.
2. Of this pool, which was surrounded with five porches, in which lay a
great multitude of sick folk, I remember that I have very often treated; and most
of you will with me recollect what I am about to say, rather than gain the
knowledge of it for the first time. But it is by no means unprofitable to go back
upon matters already known, that both they who know not may be instructed, and
they who do know may be confirmed. Therefore, as being already known, these
things must be touched upon briefly, not leisurely inculcated. That pool and that
water seem to me to have signified the Jewish people. For that peoples are
signified under the name of waters the Apocalypse of John clearly indicates to us,
where, after he had been shown many waters, and he had asked what they were,
was answered that they were peoples.(1) That water, then--namely, that
people--was shut in by the five books of Moses, as by five porches. But those books
brought forth the sick, not healed them. For the law convicted, not acquitted
sinners. Accordingly the letter, without grace, made men guilty, whom on confessing
grace delivered. For this is what the apostle saith: "For if a law had been
given which could have given life, verily righteousness should have been by the
law." Why, then, was the law given? He goes on to say, "But the Scripture hath
concluded all under sin, that the promise by faith of Jesus Christ might be given
to them that believe."(2) What more evident? Have not these words expounded to
us both the five porches, and also the multitude of sick folk? The five porches
are the law. Why did not the five porches heal the sick folk? Because, "if
there had been a law given which could have given life, verily righteousness
should have been by the law." Why, then, did the porches contain those whom they did
not heal? Because "the Scripture hath concluded all under sin, that the
promise by faith of Jesus Christ might be given to them that believe."
3. What was done, then, that they who could not be healed in the porches
might be healed in that water after being troubled? For on a sudden the water
was seen troubled, and that by which it was troubled was not seen. Thou mayest
believe that this was wont to be done by angelic virtue, yet not without some
mystery being implied. After the water was troubled, the one who was able cast
himself in, and he alone was healed: whoever went in after that one, did so in
vain. What, then, is meant by this, unless it be that there came one, even Christ,
to the Jewish people; and by doing great things, by teaching profitable
things, troubled sinners, troubled the water by His presence, and roused it towards
His own death? But He was hidden that troubled. For had they known Him, they
would never have crucified the Lord of glory.(1) Wherefore, to go down into the
troubled water means to believe in the Lord's death. There only one was healed,
signifying unity: whoever came thereafter was not healed, because whoever shall
be outside unity cannot be healed.
4. Now let us see what He intended to signify in the case of that one whom
He Himself, keeping the mystery of unity, as I said before, deigned to heal
out of so many sick folk. He found in the number of this man's years the number,
so to speak, of infirmity: "He was thirty and eight years in infirmity." How
this number refers more to weakness than to health must be somewhat more
carefully expounded. I wish you to be attentive; the Lord will aid us, so that I may
fitly speak, and that you may sufficiently hear. The number forty is commended to
our attention as one consecrated by a kind of perfection. This, I suppose, is
well known to you, beloved. The Holy Scriptures very often testify to the fact.
Fasting was consecrated by this number, as you are well aware. For Moses
fasted forty days, and Elias as many; and our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ did
Himself fulfill this number of fasting. By Moses is signified the law; by Elias,
the prophets; by the Lord, the gospel. It was for this reason that these three
appeared on that mountain, where He showed Himself to His disciples in the
brightness of His countenance and vesture. For He appeared in the middle, between
Moses and Elias, as the gospel had witness from the law and the prophets.(2)
Whether, therefore, in the law, or in the prophets, or in the gospel, the number
forty is commended to our attention in the case of fasting. Now fasting, in its
large and general sense, is to abstain from the iniquities and unlawful pleasures
of the world, which is perfect fasting: "That, denying ungodliness and worldly
lusts, we may live temperately, and righteously, and godly in this present
world." What reward does the apostle join to this fast? He goes on to say:
"Looking for that blessed hope, and the appearing of the glory of the blessed God, and
our Saviour Jesus Christ."(3) In this world, then, we celebrate, as it were,
the forty days' abstinence, when we live aright, and abstain from iniquities and
from unlawful pleasures. But because this abstinence shall not be without
reward, we look for "that blessed hope, and the revelation of the glory of the
great God, and of our Saviour Jesus Christ." In that hope, when the reality of the
hope shall have come to pass, we shall receive our wages, a penny (denarius).
For the same is the wages given to the workers laboring in the vineyard,(4) as I
presume you remember; for we are not to repeat everything, as if to persons
wholly ignorant and inexperienced. A denarius, then, which takes its name from
the number ten, is given, and this joined with the forty makes up fifty; whence
it is that before Easter we keep the Quadragesima with labor, but after Easter
we keep the Quinquagesima with joy, as having received our wages. Now to this,
as if to the wholesome labor of a good work, which belongs to the number forty,
there is added the denarius of rest and happiness, that it may be made the
number fifty.
5. The Lord Jesus Himself showed this also far more openly, when He
companied on earth with His disciples during forty days after His resurrection; and
having on the fortieth day ascended into heaven, did at the end of ten days send
the wages, the Holy Ghost. These were done in signs, and by a kind of signs
were the very realities anticipated. By significant tokens are we fed, that we
may be able to come to the enduring realities. We are workmen, and are still
laboring in the vineyard: when the day is ended and the work finished, the wages
will be paid. But what workman can hold out to the receiving of the wages, unless
he be fed while be labors? Even thou thyself wilt not give thy workman only
wages; wilt thou not also bestow on him that where with he may repair his
strength in his labor? Surely thou feedest him to whom thou art to give wages. In like
manner also doth the Lord, in those significant tokens of the Scriptures, feed
us while we labor. For if that joy in understanding holy mysteries be
withdrawn from us, we faint in labor, and there will be none to come to the reward.
6. How, then, is work perfected in the number forty? The reason, it may
be, is, because the law was given in ten precepts, and was to be preached
throughout the whole world: which whole world, we are to mark, is made up of four
quarters, east and west, south and north, whence the number ten, multiplied by
four, comes to forty. Or, it may be, because the law is fulfilled by the gospel,
which has four books: for in the gospel it is said, "I came not to destroy the
law, but to fulfill it." Whether, then, it be for this reason or for that, or for
some other more probable, which is hid from us, but not from more learned men;
certain it is, however, that in the number forty a certain perfection in good
works is signified, which good works are most of all practised by a kind of
abstinence from unlawful lusts of the world, that is, by fasting in the general
sense.
Hear also the apostle when he says, "Love is the fulfilling of the
law."(1) Whence the love? By the grace of God, by the Holy Spirit. For we could not
have it from ourselves, as if making it for ourselves. It is the gift of God, and
a great gift it is: for, saith he, "the love of God is shed abroad in our
hearts by the Holy Spirit, which is given to us."(2) Wherefore love completes the
law, and most truly it is said, "Love is the perfecting of the law." Let us
inquire as to this love, in what manner the Lord doth commend it to our
consideration. Remember what I laid down: I want to explain the number thirty-eight of
the years of that impotent man, why that number thirty-eight is one of weakness
rather than of health. Now, as I was saying, love fulfills the law. The number
forty belongs to the perfecting of the law in all works; but in love two
precepts are committed to our keeping. Keep before your eyes, I beseech you, and fix
in your memory, what I say; be ye not despisers of the word, that your soul may
not become a trodden path, where the seed cast cannot sprout, "and the fowls of
the air will come and gather it up." Apprehend it, and lay it up in your
hearts. The precepts of love, given to us by the Lord, are two: "Thou shalt love the
Lord thy God with all thy heart, and with all thy soul, and with all thy
mind;" and, "Thou shalt love thy neighbor as thyself. On these two commandments hang
all the law and the prophets."(3) With good reason did the widow cast "two
mites," all her substance, into the offerings of God: with good reason did the
host take "two" pieces of money, for the poor man that was wounded by the robbers,
for his making whole: with good reason did Jesus spent two days with the
Samaritans, to establish them in love. Thus, whilst a certain good thing is
generally signified by this number two, most especially is love in its twofold
character set forth to us thereby. If, therefore, the number forty possesses the
perfecting of the law, and the law is fulfilled only in the twin precepts of love,
why dost thou wonder that he was weak and sick, who was short of forty by two?
7. Therefore let us now see the sacred mystery whereby this impotent man
is healed by the Lord. The Lord Himself came, the Teacher of love, full of love,
"shortening," as it was predicted of Him, "the word upon the earth,"(4) and
showed that the law and the prophets hang on two precepts of love. Upon these
hung Moses with his number forty, upon these Elias with his; and the Lord brought
in this number in His testimony. This impotent man is healed by the Lord in
person; but before healing him, what does He say to him? "Wilt thou be made
whole?" The man answered that he had not a man to put him into the pool. Truly he had
need of a "man" to his healing, but that "man" one who is also God. "For there
is one God, and one Mediator between God and man, the man Christ Jesus."(5) He
came, then, the Man who was needed: why should the healing be delayed?
"Arise," saith He; "take up thy bed, and walk." He said three things: "Arise, Take up
thy bed, and Walk." But that "Arise" was not a command to do a work, but the
operation of healing. And the man, on being made whole, received two commands:
"Take up thy bed, and Walk." I ask you, why was it not enough to say, "Walk?" Or,
at any rate, why was it not enough to say, "Arise"? For when the man had
arisen whole, he would not have remained in the place. Would it not be for the
purpose of going away that he would have arisen? My impression is, that He who found
the man lacking two things, gave him these two precepts: for, by ordering him
to do two things, it is as if He filled up that which was lacking.
8. How, then, do we find the two precepts of love indicated in these two
commands of the Lord? "Take up thy bed," saith He, "and walk." What the two
precepts are, my brethren, recollect with me. For they ought to be thoroughly
familiar to you, and not merely to come into your mind when they are recited by us,
but they ought never to be blotted out from your hearts. Let it ever be your
supreme thought, that you must love God and your neighbor: "God with all thy
heart, and with all thy soul, and With all thy mind; and thy neighbor as thyself."
These must always be pondered, meditated, retained, practised, and fulfilled.
The love of God comes first in the order of enjoying; but in the order of doing,
the love of our neighbor comes first. For He who commanded thee this love in
two precepts did not charge thee to love thy neighbor first, and then God, but
first God, afterwards thy neighbor. Thou however, as thou dost not yet see God
dost earn to see Him by loving thy neighbor; by loving thy neighbor thou purgest
thine eye for seeing God, as John evidently says, "If thou lovest not thy
brother whom thou seest, how canst thou love God, whom thou dost not see?"(1) See,
thou art told, "Love God." If thou say to me, "Show me Him, that I may love
Him;" what shall I answer, but what the same John saith: "No man hath seen God at
any time"? And, that you may not suppose yourself to be wholly estranged from
seeing God, he saith, "God is love; and he that dwelleth in love dwelleth in
God."(2) Therefore love thy neighbor; look at the source of thy love of thy
neighbor; there thou wilt see, as thou mayest, God. Begin, then, to love thy
neighbor. "Break thy bread to the hungry, and bring into thy house him that is needy
without shelter; if thou seest the naked, clothe him; and despise not those of
the household of thy seed." And in doing this, what wilt thou get in consequence?
"Then shall thy light break forth as the morning light."(3) Thy light is thy
God, a "morning light" to thee, because He shall come to thee after the night of
this world: for He neither rises nor sets, because He is ever abiding. He will
be a morning light to thee on thy return, He who had set for thee on thy
falling away from Him. Therefore, in this "Take up thy bed," He seems to me to have
said, Love thy neighbor.
9. But why the love of our neighbor is set forth by the taking up of the
bed, is still shut up, and, as I suppose, needs to be expounded: unless,
perhaps, it offend us that our neighbor should be indicated by means of a bed, a
stolid, senseless thing. Let not my neighbor be angry if he be set forth to us by a
thing without soul and without feeling. The Lord Himself, even our Saviour
Jesus Christ, is called the corner-stone, to build up two in Himself. He is called
also a rock, from which water flowed forth: "And that rock was Christ."(4) What
wonder, then, if Christ is called rock, that neighbor is called wood? Yet not
any kind of wood whatever; as neither that was any kind of rock soever, but one
from which water flowed to the thirsty; nor any kind soever of stone, but a
corner-stone, which in itself coupled two walls coming from different directions.
So neither mayest thou take thy neighbor to be wood of any kind soever, but a
bed. Then what is there in a bed, pray? What, but that the impotent man was
borne on it; but, when made whole, he carries the bed? What does the apostle say?
"Bear ye one another's burdens, and so shall ye fulfill the law of Christ."(5)
Now the law of Christ is love, and love is not fulfilled except we bear one
another's burdens. "Forbearing," saith he, "one another in love, endeavoring to
keep the unity of the Spirit in the bond of peace."(5) When thou wast weak thy
neighbor bore thee: thou art made whole, bear thy neighbor. So wilt thou fill up,
O man, that which was lacking to thee. "Take up thy bed, then." But when thou
hast taken it up, stay not in the place; "walk." By loving thy neighbor, by
caring for thy neighbor, dost thou perform thy going. Whither goest thy way, but
to the Lord God, whom we ought to love with the whole heart, and with the whole
soul, and with the whole mind? For we are not yet come to the Lord, but we have
our neighbor with us. Bear him, then, when thou walkest, that thou mayest come
to Him with whom thou desirest to abide.Therefore, "take up thy bed, and walk."
10. The man did this, and the Jews were offended. For they saw a man
carrying his bed on the Sabbath-day, and they did not blame the Lord for healing him
on the Sabbath, that He should be able to answer them, that if any of them had
a beast fallen into a well, he would surely draw it out on the Sabbath-day,
and save his beast; and so, now they did not object to Him that a man was made
whole on the Sabbath-day, but that the man was carrying his bed. But if the
healing was not to be deferred, should a work also have been commanded? "It is not
lawful for thee," say they, to do what thou art doing, "to take up thy bed." And
he, in defence, put the author of his healing before his censors, saying, "He
that made me whole, the same said unto me, Take up thy bed, and walk." Should I
not take injunction from him from whom I received healing? And they said, "Who
is the man that said unto thee, Take up thy bed, and walk?"
11. "But he that was made whole knew not who it was" that had said this to
him. "For Jesus," when He had done this, and given him this order, "turned
away from him in the crowd." See how this also is fulfilled. We bear our neighbor,
and walk towards God; but Him, to whom we are walking, we do not yet see: for
that reason also, that man did not yet know Jesus. The mystery herein intimated
to us is, that we believe on Him whom we do not yet see; and that He may not
be seen, He turns aside in the crowd. It is difficult in a crowd to see Christ:
a certain solitude is necessary for our mind; it is by a certain solitude of
contemplation that God is seen. A crowd has noise; this seeing requires secrecy.
"Take up thy bed"--being thyself borne, bear thy neighbor; "and walk," that
thou mayest come to the goal. Do not seek Christ in a crowd: He is not as one of a
crowd; He excels all crowd. That great fish first ascended from the sea, and
He sits in heaven making intercession for us: as the great high priest He
entered alone into that within the veil; the crowd stands without. Do thou walk,
bearing thy neighbor: if thou hast learned to bear, thou, who wast wont to be
borne. In a word, even now as yet thou knowest not Jesus, not yet seest Jesus: what
follows thereafter? Since that man desisted not from taking up his bed and
walking, "Jesus seeth him afterwards in the temple." He did not see Jesus in the
crowd, he saw Him in the temple. The Lord Jesus, indeed, saw him both in the
crowd and in the temple; but the impotent man does not know Jesus in the crowd, but
he knows Him in the temple. The man came then to the Lord: saw Him in the
temple, saw Him in a consecrated, saw Him in a holy place. And what does the Lord
say to him? "Behold, thou art made whole; sin no more, lest some worse thing
befall thee."
12. The man, then, after he saw Jesus, and knew Him to be the author of
his healing, was not slothful in preaching Him whom he had seen: "He departed,
and told the Jews that it was Jesus that had made him whole." He brought them
word, and they were mad against him; he preached his own salvation, they sought
not their own salvation.
13. The Jews persecuted the Lord Jesus because He did these things on the
Sabbath-day. Let us hear what answer the Lord now made to the Jews. I have told
you how He is wont to answer concerning the healing of men on the Sabbath-day,
that they used not on the Sabbath-day to slight their cattle, either in
delivering or in feeding them. What does He answer concerning the carrying of the
bed? A manifest corporal work was done before the eyes of the Jews; not a healing
of the body, but a bodily work, which appeared not so necessary as the healing.
Let the Lord, then, openly declare that the sacrament of the Sabbath, even the
sign of keeping one day, was given to the Jews for a time, but that the
fulfillment of the sacrament had come in Himself. "My Father," saith He, "worketh
hitherto, and I work." He sent a great commotion among them: the water is troubled
by the coming of the Lord, but yet He that troubles is not seen. Yet one great
sick one is to be healed by the troubled water, the whole world by the death
of the Lord.
14. Let us see, then, the answer made by the Truth: "My Father worketh
hitherto, and I work." Is it false, then, which the Scripture has said, that "God
rested from all His works on the seventh day"? And does the Lord Jesus speak
contrary to this Scripture ministered by Moses, whilst He Himself says to the
Jews, "If ye believed Moses, ye would believe me; for He wrote of me"? See, then,
whether Moses did not mean it to be significant of something that "God rested
on the seventh day." For God had not become wearied in doing the work of His own
creation, and needed rest as a man. How can He have been wearied, who made by
a word? Yet is both that true, that "God rested from His works on the seventh
day;" and this also is true that Jesus saith, "My Father worketh hitherto." But
who can unfold it in words, man to men, weak to weak, unlearned to them that
seek to learn; and if he chance to understand somewhat, unable to bring it forth
and unfold it to men, who with difficulty, it may be, receive it, even if what
is received can possibly be unfolded? Who, I say, my brethren, can unfold in
words how God both works while at rest, and rests while working? I pray you to
put this matter off while you are advancing on the way; for this seeing requires
the temple of God, requires the holy place. Bear your neighbor, and walk. Ye
shall see Him in that place where ye shall not require the words of men.
15. Perhaps we can more appropriately say this, that in the saying, "God
rested on the seventh day," he signified by a great mystery the Lord and our
Saviour Jesus Christ Himself, who spoke and said, "My Father worketh hitherto, and
I work." For the Lord Jesus is, of course, God. For He is the Word of God, and
you have heard that "in the beginning was the Word;" and not any word
whatsoever, but "the Word was God, and all things were made by Him." He was perhaps
signified as about to rest on the seventh day from all His works. For, read the
Gospel, and see what great works Jesus wrought. He wrought our salvation on the
cross, that all things foretold by the prophets might be fulfilled in Him. He
was crowned with thorns; He hung on the tree; said, "I thirst," received vinegar
on a sponge, that it might be fulfilled which was said, "And in my thirst they
gave me vinegar to drink."(1) And when all His works were completed, on the
sixth day of the week, He bowed His head and gave up the ghost, and on the
Sabbath-day He rested in the tomb from all His works. Therefore it is as if He said to
the Jews, "Why do ye expect that I should not work on the Sabbath? The
Sabbath-day was ordained for you for a sign of me. You observe the works of God: I was
there when they were made, by me were they all made; I know them. 'My Father
worketh hitherto.' The Father made the light, but He spoke that there should be
light; if He spoke, it was by His Word He made it: His Word I was, I am; by me
was the world made in those works, by me the world is ruled in these works. My
Father worked when He made the world, and hitherto now worketh while He rules
the world: therefore by me He made when He made, and by me He rules while He
rules." This He said, but to whom? To men deaf, blind, lame, impotent, not
acknowledging the physician, and as if in a frenzy they had lost their wits, wishing
to slay Him.
16. Further, what said the evangelist as he went on? "Therefore the Jews
sought the more to kill Him, because He not only broke the Sabbath, but said
also that God was His Father;" not in any ordinary manner, but how? "Making
Himself equal with God." For we all say to God, "Our Father which art in heaven;" we
read also that the Jews said, "Seeing Thou art our Father."(2) Therefore it was
not for this they were angry, because He said that God was His Father, but
because He said it in quite another way than men do. Behold, the Jews understand
what the Arians do not understand. The Arians, in fact, say that the Son is not
equal with the Father, and hence it is that the heresy was driven from the
Church. Lo, the very blind, the very slayers of Christ, still understood the words
of Christ. They did not understand Him to be Christ, nor did they understand
Him to be the Son of God: but they did nevertheless understand that in these
words such a Son of God was intimated to them as should be equal with God. Who He
was they knew not; still they did acknowledge such a One to be declared, in that
"He said God was His Father, making Himself equal with God." Was He not
therefore equal with God? He did not make Himself equal, but the Father begat Him
equal. Were He to make Himself equal, He would fall by robbery. For he who wished
to make himself equal with God, whilst he was not so, fell, and of an angel
became a devil,(3) and administered to man that cup of pride by which himself was
cast down. For this fallen said to man, envying his standing, "Taste, and ye
shall be as gods;"(3) that is, seize to yourselves by usurpation that which ye
are not made, for I also have been cast down by robbery. He did not put forth
this, but this is what he persuaded to. Christ, however, was begotten equal to the
Father, not made; begotten of the substance of the Father. Whence the apostle
thus declares Him: "Who, being in the form of God, thought it not robbery to be
equal with God." What means "thought it not robbery"? He usurped not equality
with God, but was in that equality in which He was begotten. And how were we to
come to the equal God? "He emptied Himself, taking upon Him the form of a
servant."(5) But He emptied Himself not by losing what He was, but by taking to Him
what He was not. The Jews, despising this form of a servant, could not
understand the Lord Christ equal to the Father, although they had not the least doubt
that He affirmed this of Himself, and therefore were they enraged: and yet He
still bore with them, and sought the healing of them, while they raged against
Him.
TRACTATE XVIII.
CHAPTER V. 19.
1. John the evangelist, among his fellows and companions the other
evangelists, received this special and peculiar gift from the Lord (on whose breast he
reclined at the feast, hereby to signify that he was drinking deeper secrets
from His inmost heart), to utter those things concerning the Son of God which
may perhaps rouse the attentive minds of the little ones, but cannot fill them,
as yet not capable of receiving them; while to minds, of somewhat larger growth,
and coming to a certain age of inner manhood, he gives in these words
something whereby they may both be exercised and fed. You have heard it when it was
read, and you remember how this discourse arose. For yesterday it was read, that
"therefore the Jews sought to kill Jesus, because He not only broke the Sabbath,
but also said that God was His Father, making Himself equal with God." This
that displeased the Jews, pleased the Father. This, without doubt, pleases them
too that honor the Son as they honor the Father; for if it does not please them,
they will not be pleasing. For God will not be greater because it pleases
thee, but thou wilt be less if it displeases thee. Now against this calumny of
theirs, coming either of ignorance or of malice, the Lord speaks not at all what
they can understand, but that whereby they may be agitated and troubled, and, on
being troubled, it may be, seek the Physician. And He uttered what should be
written, that it might afterwards be read even by us. Now we have seen what
happened in the hearts of the Jews when they heard these words; what happens in
ourselves when we hear them, let us more fully consider. For heresies, and certain
tenets of perversity, ensnaring souls and hurling them into the deep, have not
sprung up except when good Scriptures are not rightly understood, and when that
in them which is not rightly understood is rashly and boldly asserted. And so,
dearly beloved, ought we very cautiously to hear those things for the
understanding of which we are but little ones, and that, too, with pious heart and with
trembling, as it is written, holding this rule of soundness, that we rejoice
as in food in that which we have been able to understand, according to the faith
with which we are imbued; and what we have not yet been able to understand,
that we lay aside doubting, and defer the understanding of it for a time; that
is, even if we do not yet know what it is, that still we doubt not in the least
that it is good and true. And as for me, brethren, you must consider who I am
that undertake to speak to you, and what I have undertaken: for I have taken upon
me to treat of things divine, being a man; of spiritual things, being carnal;
of things eternal, being a mortal. Also from me, dearly beloved, far be vain
presumption, if my conversation would be sound in the house of God, "which is the
Church of the living God, the pillar and foundation of the truth."(1) In
proportion to my measure I take what I put before you: where it is opened, I see
with you; where it is shut, I knock with you.
2. Now the Jews were moved and indignant: justly, indeed, because a man
dared to make himself equal with God; but unjustly in this, because in the man
they understood not the God. They saw the flesh, the God they knew not; they
observed the habitation, of the inhabitant they were ignorant. That flesh was a
temple, within it dwelt God. It was not the flesh that Jesus made equal to the
Father, it was not the form of a servant that He compared to the Lord; not that
which He became for us, but that which He was when He made us. For who Christ is
(I speak to Catholics) you know, because you have rightly believed; not Word
only, nor flesh only, but the Word was made flesh to dwell among us. I recite
again concerning the Word what you know: "In the beginning was the Word, and the
Word was with God, and the Word was God:" here is equality with the Father. But
"the Word was made flesh, and dwelt among us." Than this flesh the Father is
greater. Thus the Father is both equal and greater; equal to the Word, greater
than the flesh; equal to Him by whom He made us, greater than He who was made for
us. By this sound catholic rule, which you ought particularly to know. which
you who know it hold fast, from which your faith ought not in any case to slip,
which is to be wrested from your heart by no arguments of men, let us measure
the things we do understand; and the things which, it may be, we do not
understand, let us defer, to be hereafter measured by this rule, when we shall be
competent to do this. We know Him, then, as equal to the Father, the Son of God,
because we know Him in the beginning as God the Word. Why, then, sought the Jews
to slay Him? "Because He not only broke the Sabbath, but also said that God was
His Father, making Himself equal with God:" seeing the flesh, not seeing the
Word. Let Him therefore speak against them, the Word through the flesh; let Him,
the dweller within, speak for through His dwelling-place, that whoso can, shall
know who He is that dwells within.
3. What saith He then to them? "Then answered Jesus, and said unto them,"
being indignant because He made Himself equal with God, "Verily, verily, I say
unto you, The Son cannot do anything of Himself, but what He seeth the Father
doing." What the Jews answered to these words is not written: and perhaps they
said nothing. Certain, however, who wish to be esteemed Christians, are not
silent, but from these words somehow conceive certain opinions in contradiction to
us, which are not to be despised, both for their and for our sakes. The Arian
heretics, namely, while they assert that the Son, who took upon Himself flesh,
is less than the Father, not by the flesh, but before taking flesh, and not of
the same substance as the Father, take a handle of misrepresentation from these
words, and reply to us: "You see that the Lord Jesus, observing the Jews to be
moved with indignation at his making himself equal to God the Father, subjoined
such words as these, to show that he was not equal with God. For the Jews,"
say they, "were provoked against Christ, because he made him self equal with God;
and Christ, wishing to cure them of this impression, and to show them that the
Son is not equal to the Father, that is, to God, saith this, as if he said,
Why are ye angry? Why are ye indignant? I am not equal to God, since 'the Son
cannot do anything of himself, except what he seeth the Father doing.' Now," say
they, "he who 'cannot do anything of himself, but what he seeth the Father
doing,' is surely less, not equal."
4. In this distorted and depraved rule of his own heart, let the heretic
hear us, not as yet chiding, but still as it were inquiring, and let him explain
to us what he thinks. For, I suppose, whoever thou art (for we may regard him
as here present in person), thou dost hold with us, that "in the beginning was
the Word." I do hold it, saith he. And that "the Word was with God"? This too,
saith he, I hold. Proceed then, and hold the stronger saying that follows, that
"the Word was God." Even this, says he, I hold: but yet, this, God the
greater; that, God the less. Now this somehow smells of the pagan: I thought I was
speaking with a Christian. If there is God the greater, and God the less, then we
worship two Gods, not one God. Why, saith he; dost not thou, too, affirm two
Gods, equal the one to the other? This I do not assert: for I understand this
equality as implying therein also undivided love; and if undivided love, then
perfect unity. For if the love that God put in men doth make of many hearts of men
one heart, and doth make many souls of men into one soul, as it is written of
them that believed and mutually loved one another, in the Acts of the Apostles,
"They had one soul and one heart toward God:"(1) if, therefore, my soul and thy
soul become one soul, when we think the same thing and love one another, how
much more must God the Father and God the Son be one God in the fountain of love!
5. But to these words, by which thy heart is disturbed, bend thy thought,
and reflect with me on that which we were seeking out concerning the Word. We
already hold that "the Word was God:" I join to this another thing, that, having
said, "This was in the beginning with God," the evangelist immediately
subjoined, "All things were made by Him." Now will I urge thee by questioning, now
will I move thee against thyself, and sue thee against thyself: only keep this in
memory concerning the Word, that "the Word was God, and all things were made by
Him." Hear now the words by which thou wast moved to assert that the Son is
less, forsooth, because He said, "The Son cannot of Himself do anything, but what
He seeth the Father doing." Just so, saith he. Explain to me this a little:
This is, I presume, how thou thinkest: that the Father doeth certain things, and
the Son observes how the Father doeth, that He may also Himself be able to do
those things which He seeth the Father doing. Thou hast set up two artisans, as
it were: the Father and the Son just like master and learner, like as artisan
fathers are wont to teach their sons their craft. Behold, I come down to thy
carnal sense: for the moment I think as thou doest: let us see if this our
conception finds an issue in harmony with the things which we have just now alike
spoken and alike hold regarding the Word, that "the Word was God," and that "all
things were made by Him." Suppose, then, the Father, as an artisan, doing certain
works, and the Son as a learner, who "cannot of Himself do anything, but what
He seeth the Father doing:" He keenly watches, in a manner, the Father's hands,
that, as He seeth Him fashioning aught, so He may Himself in like manner
fashion something similar by His own works. But the Father here doeth all those
things that He doeth, and wishes the Son to give heed to Him, and to do the like
also Himself; by whom doeth the Father? Come! now is the time for thee to stand
to thy former opinion, which thou didst recite with me, and didst hold with me;
that "in the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word
was God, and all things were made by Him." But thou, after holding with me, that
all things were made by the Word, dost again, with thy carnal wit and childish
fancy, imagine with thyself God making something, and the Word giving heed; so
that when God has made, the Word also may make the like. Now, what does God
make without the Word? For if He doeth aught, then were not all things made by the
Word; thou hast given up the position which thou didst hold. But if all things
were made by the Word, correct what thou didst understand amiss. The Father
made, and made only by the Word: in what way does the Word give heed to see the
Father making without the Word, what the Word may do in like manner? Whatever
the Father hath made, He made it by the Word; else is it false that "all things
were made by Him." But it is true that "all things were made by Him." Perhaps
this did not seem enough for thee? Well, "and without Him was nothing made."
6. Withdraw, then, from this wisdom of the flesh, and let us inquire in
what manner it is said, "The Son cannot of Himself do anything, but what He seeth
the Father doing." Let us inquire, if we are worthy to apprehend. For I
confess it is a great thing, and altogether difficult; to see the Father doing
through the Son: not the Father and the Son doing each His particular works, but the
Father doing every work whatsoever by the Son; so that not any works are done
by the Father without the Son, or by the Son without the Father, because "all
things were made by Him, and without Him was nothing made." These truths being
most firmly established in the foundation of faith, what now is the nature of
this "seeing"? Thou seek-eat, as I suppose, to know the Son doing: seek first to
know the Son seeing. For what, in fact, saith He? "The Son cannot of Himself do
anything, but what He seeth the Father doing." Note what He said, "but what He
seeth the Father doing." The seeing comes first, the doing follows: He seeth in
order to do. As for thee, why seekest thou at present to know how He doeth,
whilst thou understandest not as yet how He seeth? Why runnest thou to that which
comes later, leaving that which comes first? He declares Himself as seeing and
doing, not doing and seeing; because "He cannot of Himself do anything, but
what He seeth the Father doing." Wilt thou that I explain to thee how He doeth?
Do thou explain to me how He seeth. If thou canst not explain this, neither can
I that. If thou art not yet competent to understand this, neither am I to
understand that. Wherefore let each of us seek, each knock, that each may merit to
receive. Why dost thou, as if thou wert learned, unjustly blame me who am
unlearned? I in respect of the doing, thou in respect of the seeing, being both
unlearned, let us inquire of the Master, not childishly wrangle in His school. We
have already, however, learned together that "all things were made by Him."
Therefore it is manifest that it is not a different kind of works that the Father
doeth, that, seeing them, the Son may do other works like them; but the very same
doeth the Father by the Son, because all things were made by the Word. Now, as
to how God doeth, who knows? How made He, I will not say the world, but thine
own eye, in thy carnal attachment to which thou comparest visible things with
invisible? For thou conceivest of God such things as thou art wont to see with
these eyes. But if God might be seen with these eyes, He would not have said,
"Blessed are the pure in heart, for they shall see God." Accordingly, thou hast
an eye of the body to see an artificer, but thou hast not yet the eye of the
heart to see God: hence, what thou art wont to see in an artificer, thou wouldest
transfer to God. Leave earthly things on the earth; set thy heart on high.
7. What then, beloved, are we going to explain that which we have asked,
how the Word seeth, how the Father is seen by the Word, what the seeing of the
Word is? I am not so bold, so rash, as to promise to explain this, for myself or
for you: however I estimate your measure, still I know my own. Therefore, if
you please, not to delay it longer, let us run over the passage, and see how
carnal hearts are troubled by the words of the Lord; to this end troubled, that
they may not continue in that which they hold. Let this be wrested from them, as
some toy is wrested from children, with which they amuse themselves to their
hurt, that, as persons of larger growth, they may have more profitable things
planted in them, and may be able to make progress, instead of crawling on the
earth Arise, seek, sigh, pant with desire, and knock at what is shut. But if we do
not yet desire, not yet earnestly seek, not yet sigh, we shall only be throwing
pearls to all indiscriminately, or finding pearls ourselves, regardless of
what kind. Wherefore, beloved, I would move a longing desire in your heart. Good
character leads to right understanding: the kind of life leads to another kind
of life. One kind of life is earthly, another is heavenly: there is a life of
beasts, another of men, and another of angels. The life of beasts is excited with
earthly pleasures, seeks earthly pleasures alone, and grovels after them with
immoderate desire: the life of angels is alone heavenly; the life of men is
midway between that of angels and of beasts. If man lives after the flesh, he is
on a level with the beasts; if he lives after the Spirit, he joins in the
fellowship of angels. When thou livest after the Spirit, examine even in the angelic
life whether thou be small or well-grown. For if thou art still a little one,
the angels say to thee, "Grow: we feed on bread; thou art nourished with milk,
with the milk of faith that thou mayest come to the meat of sight." But if there
be still a longing for filthy pleasures, if the thoughts be still of deceit,
if lies are not avoided, if perjuries be heaped on lies, shall a heart so foul
dare to say, "Explain to me how the Word sees;" even if I be able to do so, even
if I myself now see? And further, though not perhaps of this character myself,
and I am nevertheless far from this vision, how must that man be weighed down
with earthly desires, who is not yet rapt with this desire from above! There is
a wide difference between loathing and desiring; and again, between desiring
and enjoying. If thou livest as do the beasts, thou loathest: the angels have
full enjoyment. If, on the other hand, thou livest not as the beast, thou hast no
longer loathing: something thou desirest, and dost not receive: thou hast, by
the very desire, begun the life of the angels. May it grow in thee, and be
perfected in thee; and mayest thou receive this, not of me, but of Him who made
both me and thee!
8. Yet the Lord also has not left us to chance, since, in that He said,
"The Son cannot of Himself do anything, but what He seeth the Father doing," He
meant us to understand that the Father doeth, not some works which the Son may
see, and the Son doeth other works after He has seen the Father doing; but that
both the Father and Son do the very same works. For He goes on to say, "For
what things soever He doeth, these also doeth the Son in like manner." Not after
the Father hath done works, doeth the Son other works in like manner; but,
"whatever He doeth, these also the Son doeth in like manner." If these the Son doeth
which the Father doeth, then it is by the Son that the Father doeth: if by the
Son the Father doeth what He doeth, then the Father doeth not some, the Son
others; but the works of the Father and of the Son are the same works. And how
doeth the Son also the same? Both "the same," and "in like manner." In case you
should think them the same, but in a different manner, the "same," saith He, and
"in like manner." And how could they be the same and not in like manner? Take
an example, which I presume is not too big for you: when we write letters they
are first formed by our heart, then by our hand. Certainly: why otherwise have
you all agreed, but because you perceived it to be so? It is as I have said, it
is manifest to us all. The letters are made first by our heart, then by our
body; the hand serves, the heart commands; both the heart and the hand make the
same letters. Dost think the heart doeth some letters, the hand some others? The
same indeed doeth the hand, but not in like manner: our heart forms them
intelligibly, but our hand visibly. See how the same things are made, but not in
like manner. Hence it was not enough for the Lord to say, "What things soever the
Father doeth, these also the Son doeth;" He must add, "and in like manner." For
what if thou shouldst understand this just as thou understandest whatever thy
heart doeth, this also thy hand doeth, but in a different manner? Here,
however, he added, "These also the Son doeth in like manner." If He both doeth these,
and in like manner doeth, then awake; let the Jew be crushed, let the Christian
believe, let the heretic be convinced: The Son is equal to the Father.
9. "For the Father loveth the Son, and showeth Him all things that Himself
doeth." Here is that "showeth." "Showeth," as it were, to whom? Of course, as
to one that sees. We return to that which we cannot explain, how the Word
seeth. Behold, man was made by the Word; but man has eyes, ears, hands, divers
members in the body: he is able by the eyes to see, by the ears to hear, by the
hands to work; the members are diverse, their offices diverse. One member cannot do
the office of another; yet, by reason of the unity of the body, the eye sees
both for itself and for the ear, and the ear hears for itself and for the eye.
Are we to suppose that something like this holds good in the Word, seeing all
things are by Him; and Scripture has said in the psalm, "Understand, ye brutish
among the people; and ye fools, at length be wise. He that planted the ear,
shall He not hear? And He that formed the eye, shall He not see?"(1) Hence, if the
Word is He that formed the eye, for all things are by the Word; if the Word is
He that planted the ear, for all things are by the Word: we cannot say the Word
doth not hear, the Word doth not see; lest the psalm reprove us, and say,
"Fools, at length be wise." Therefore, if the Word heareth and seeth, if the Son
heareth and seeth, are we yet to search for eyes and ears in Him in separate
places? Does He by one part hear, by another see; and cannot His ear do what His
eye doth; and cannot His eye do what His ear can? Or is He not all sight, all
hearing? Perhaps yes; nay, not perhaps, but truly yes; whilst, however, that
seeing of His, and that hearing of His, is in a way far other than it is with us.
Both to see and to hear exist together in the Word: seeing and hearing are not
diverse things in Him; but hearing is sight, and sight is hearing.
10. And we, who see in one way, and hear in another way, how know we this?
We return perhaps to ourselves, if we are not the trangressors to whom it is
said, "Return, O trangressors, to your heart."(2) Return to your heart: why go
from yourselves, and perish from yourselves? Why go the ways of solitude? You go
astray by wandering: return ye. Whither? To the Lord. 'Tis quickly done: first
return to thine own heart; thou hast wandered abroad an exile from thyself;
thou knowest not thyself, and yet thou art asking by whom thou wast made! Return,
return to thy heart, lift thyself away from the body: thy body is thy place of
abode; thy heart perceives even by thy body. But thy body is not what thy
heart is; leave even thy body, return to thy heart. In thy body thou didst find
eyes in one place, ears in another place: dost thou find this in thy heart? Or
hast thou not ears in thy heart? Else of what did the Lord say, "Whoso hath ears
to hear, let him hear?"(3) Or hast thou not eyes in thy heart? Else of what
saith the apostle. "The eyes of your heart being enlightened?"(4) Return to thy
heart; see there what, it may be, thou canst perceive of God, for in it is the
image of God. In the inner man dwelleth Christ, in the inner man art thou renewed
after the image of God, in His own image recognize its Author. See how all the
senses of the body bring intelligence to the heart within of what they have
perceived abroad; see how many ministers the one commander within has and what it
can do by itself even without these ministers. The eyes report to the heart
things black and white; the ears report to the same heart pleasant and harsh
sounds; to the same heart the nostrils announce sweet odors and stenches; to the
same heart the taste announces things bitter and sweet; to the same heart the
touch announces things smooth and rough; and the heart declares to itself things
just and unjust. Thy heart sees and hears and judges all other things perceived
by the senses; and, what the senses do not aspire to, discerns things just and
unjust, things evil and good. Show me the eyes, ears, nostrils, of thy heart.
Diverse are the things that are referred to thy heart, yet are there not diverse
members there. In thy flesh, thou hearest in one place, seest in another; in
thy heart, where thou seest, there thou hearest. If this be the image, how much
more mightily He whose the image is! Therefore the Son both heareth and seeth;
the Son is both the hearing itself and the seeing: to hear is to Him the same
thing as "to be;" and to see is to Him the same thing as "to be." To see is not
the same thing to thee as to be; for if thou lose thy sight, thou canst be; and
if thou lose thy hearing, thou canst be.
11. Do we think we have knocked? Is there raised up within us something
whereby we may even slightly conjecture whence light may come to us? It is my
opinion, brethren, I that when we speak of these things, and meditate upon them,
we are exercising ourselves. And when we are exercising ourselves, and are as it
were bent back again by our own weight to our customary thoughts, we are like
weak-eyed persons, when they are brought forth to see the light, if perchance
they had no sight at all before, and begin in some sort to recover their sight
by the assiduous care of physicians. And when the physician would test the
progress of recovery, he tries to show them something which they sought to see, but
could not while they were blind: and while the eyesight is now somewhat
recovered, they are brought forth to the light; and as they see it, are beaten back in
a manner by the very glare; and they answer the physician, as he points out
the object, This moment I did see, but now I cannot. What then does the
physician? He brings them back to their usual ways, and applies the eye-salve to nourish
the longing for seeing that which was seen only for a moment, so that by the
very longing he may cure more completely; and if any stinging salves are applied
for the recovery of soundness, let the patient bear it bravely, and, inflamed
with love of the light, say to himself, When will it be that with strong eyes I
shall see what with sore and weak eyes I could not? He urges the physician,
and begs him to heal him. Therefore, brethren, if, it may be, something like this
has taken place in your hearts, if somehow you have raised your heart to see
the Word, and, beaten back by its light, you have fallen back to your wonted
ways; pray the Physician to apply sharp salves, the precepts of righteousness.
There is that which thou mayest see, but not that whereby thou canst see. Thou
didst not believe me before that there is that which thou mayest see: thou art
now, as by the guidance of reason, brought to it: thou hast drawn near, strained
thine eyes to see it, throbbed, and shrunk back. Thou knowest for certain that
there is what thou mayest see, but that thou art not yet meet to see it.
Therefore be healed. What are the eye-salves? Do not lie, do not swear falsely, do not
commit adultery, do not steal, do not defraud. But thou art used to these, and
it is with some pain thou art drawn away from old habits: this is what bites,
but yet heals. For I tell thee freely, by fear of myself and of thee, if thou
give up the healing, and scorn to become meet to enjoy this light, by weakness
of thine eyes, thou wilt love darkness; and by loving darkness, wilt remain in
darkness; and by remaining in darkness, wilt be cast even into outer darkness:
there shall be weeping and gnashing of teeth. If the love of light has effected
nothing in thee, let the fear of pain effect something.
12. I think I have spoken long enough, and yet I have not concluded the
Gospel lesson: if I go on to declare what remains, I shall burden you, and I fear
lest even what has been drawn may be lost; therefore let this be enough for
you now, beloved. We are debtors, not now, but always as long as we live; because
we live for you. However, do you, by good living, comfort this life of ours,
so weak, toilsome, and full of peril in this world; do not afflict and wear us
out by your evil manners. For if, when offended with your evil life, we flee
from you and separate ourselves from you, and no longer come to you, will ye not
complain, and say, And if we were sick, ye might care for us; and if we were
weak, ye might have visited us? Behold, we do care for you; behold, we do visit
you; but let it not be with us as you have heard from the apostle, "I fear lest I
have bestowed labor upon you in vain."(1)
TRACTATE XIX.
CHAPTER V. 19-30.
1. In the former discourse, so far as the subject impressed us, and so far
as our poverty of understanding attained to, we have spoken by occasion of the
words of the Gospel, where it is written: "The Son cannot do anything of
Himself, but what He seeth the Father doing,"--what it is for the Son--that is, the
Word, for the Son is the Word--"to see;" and as all things were made by the
Word, how it is to be understood that the Son first sees the Father doing, and
then only Himself also doeth the things which He has seen done, seeing that the
Father has done nothing except by the Son. For "all things were made by Him, and
without Him was nothing made. We have not, however, delivered to you anything
as fully explained, and that because we have not understood anything thus
clearly set forth. For, indeed, speech sometimes fails even where the understanding
makes way; how much more doth speech suffer defect, where the understanding has
nothing perfect! Now, therefore, as the Lord gives us, let us briefly run over
the passage, and even to-day complete the due task. Should there perchance
remain somewhat of time or of strength, we will reconsider (so far as it may be
practicable for us and with you) what it is for the Word "to see" and "to be shown
to;" since, in fact, all that is here spoken is such that, if understood
according to man's sense, carnally, the soul full of vain fancies makes for us only
certain images of the Father and the Son, just as of two men, the one showing,
the other seeing; the one speaking, the other hearing,--all which are idols of
the heart. And if now at length idols have been cast down from their own
temples, how much more ought they to be cast down from Christian hearts!
2. "The Son," saith He, "cannot do anything of Himself, but what He sees
the Father doing." This is true: hold this fast, while at the same time ye do
not let slip what ye have gotten in the beginning of the Gospel, that "in the
beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God," and
especially that "all things were made by Him." Join this that ye have now heard to
that hearing, and let both agree together in your hearts. Thus, "The Son cannot
of Himself do anything, except what He seeth the Father doing," is yet in such
wise that what the Father doeth, He doeth only by the Son, because the Son is
His Word: and, "In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and
the Word was God;" also, "All things were made by Him." For what things soever
He doeth, the Son also doeth in like manner; not other things, but these and not
in a different, but in like manner.
3. "For the Father loveth the Son, and showeth Him all things that Himself
doeth." To that which He said above, "except what He seeth the Father doing,"
seems to belong this also, "He showeth Him all things that Himself doeth." But
if the Father doth show what He doeth, and the Son cannot do except the Father
hath shown, and if the Father cannot show unless He hath done, it will follow
that it is not through the Son that the Father doeth all things; moreover, if we
hold it fixed and unshaken, that the Father doeth all by the Son, then He
shows the Son before He doeth. For if the Father doth show to the Son after He has
done, that the Son may do the things shown, which being shown were already
done, then doubtless something there is that the Father doeth without the Son. But
the Father doeth not anything without the Son, because the Son of God is God's
Word, and all things were made by Him. It remains, then, that possibly what the
Father is about to do, He shows as about to be done, that it may be done by
the Son. For if the Son doeth those things which the Father showeth as already
done, surely it is not by the Son that the Father hath done the things which He
thus showeth. For they could not be shown to the Son unless they were first
done, and the Son would not be able to do them unless they were first shown;
therefore were they made without the Son. But yet it is a true thing, "All things
were made by Him;" therefore they were shown before they were made. But this we
said must be put off, and returned to after briefly scanning the passage, if, as
we said, some portion of time and of strength should remain to us for a
reconsideration of the matters deferred.
4. Attend now to a wider and more difficult question. "And greater works
than these," saith He, "will He show Him, that ye may marvel." "Greater than
these." Greater than which? The answer readily occurs: than the cures of bodily
diseases which ye have just heard: For the whole occasion of this discourse arose
about the man who was thirty and eight years in infirmity, and was healed by
the word of Christ; and in respect of this cure, the Lord could say, "Greater
works than these He will show Him, that ye may marvel." For there are greater,
and the Father will show them to the Son. It is not "hath shown," as of a thing
past, but "will show," of a thing future; or, is about to show. Again a
difficult question arises: Why, then, is there something with the Father that has not
yet been shown to the Son? Is there something with the Father that was still hid
from the Son when He spoke these words? For surely, if it be "will show," that
is to say, "is about to show," then He has not yet shown; and He is about to
show to the Son at the same time as to these persons, since it follows, "that ye
may marvel." And this is a thing hard to see, how the Eternal Father doth show
something, as it were in time, to the coeternal Son, who knoweth all things
that are with the Father.
5. But what are the greater works? For perhaps this is easy to understand.
"For as the Father," saith He, "raiseth up the dead, and quickeneth them, even
so the Son quickeneth whom He will." To raise the dead, then, are greater
works than to heal the sick. But "as the Father raiseth the dead, and quickeneth
them, so also the Son quickeneth whom He will." Hence, the Father some, the Son
others? But all things are by Him: therefore the Son the same persons as the
Father doth; since the Son doeth not other things and in a different manner, but
"these" and in "like manner." Thus clearly it must be understood, and thus held.
But keep in memory that" the Son quickeneth whom He will." Here, too, know not
only the power of the Son, but also the will. Both the Son quickeneth whom He
will, and also the Father quickeneth whom He will--the Son the same persons as
the Father; and hence the power of the Father and of the Son is the same, and
also the will is the same. What follows then? "For the Father judgeth not any
man, but hath given all judgment to the Son, that all men may honor the Son, even
as they honor the Father:" this He subjoined, as rendering a reason of the
foregoing sentence. A great question comes before us; give it you r earnest
attention. The Son quickeneth whom He will, the Father quickeneth whom He will; the
son raiseth the dead, just as the Father raiseth the dead. And further, "the
Father judgeth not any man." If the dead must be raised in the judgment, how can
it be said that the Father raiseth the dead, if He judgeth not any man, since
"He hath given all judgment to the Son"? But in that judgment the dead are
raised; some rise to life, others to punishment. If the Son doeth all this, but the
Father not, inasmuch as "He judgeth not any man, but hath given all judgment to
the Son," it will appear contrary to what has been said, viz., "As the Father
raiseth up the dead, and quickeneth them, so also the Son quickeneth whom He
will." Consequently the Father and the Son raise together; if they raise together,
they quicken together: hence they judge together. How, then, is that true,
"For the Father judgeth not any man, but hath given all judgment to the Son"?
Meanwhile let the questions now proposed engage your minds; the Lord will cause
that, when solved, they will delight you. For so it is, brethren: every question,
unless it stirs the mind to reflection, will not give delight when explained.
May the Lord Himself then follow with us, in case He may perhaps reveal Himself
somewhat in those matters which He foldeth up. For He foldeth up His light with
a cloud; and it is difficult to fly like an eagle above every obscure mist
with which the whole earth is covered, and to behold the most serene light in the
words of the Lord. In case, then, He may perhaps dissipate our darkness with
the heat of His rays, and deign to reveal Himself somewhat in the sequel, let us,
deferring these questions, look at what follows.
6. "Whoso honoreth not the Son, honoreth not the Father that sent Him."
This is a truth, and is plain. Since, then, "all judgment hath He given to the
Son," as He said above, "that all may honor the Son, even as they honor the
Father," what if there be those who honor the Father and honor not the Son? It
cannot be, saith He: "Whoso honoreth not the Son, honoreth not the Father that sent
Him." One cannot therefore say, I honored the Father, because I knew not the
Son. If thou didst not yet honor the Son, neither didst thou honor the Father.
For what is honoring the Father, unless it be in that He hath a Son? It is one
thing when thou art taught to honor God in that He is God; but another thing when
thou art taught to honor Him in that He is Father. When thou art taught to
honor Him in that He is God, it is as the Creator, as the Almighty, as the Spirit
supreme, eternal, invisible, unchangeable, that thou art led to think of Him;
but when thou art taught to honor Him in that He is Father, it is the same thing
as to honor the Son; because Father cannot be said if there be not a Son, as
neither can Son if there be not a Father. But lest, it may be, thou honorest the
Father indeed as greater, but the Son as less,--as thou mayest say to me, "I
do honor the Father, for I know that He has a Son; nor do I err in the name
Father, for I do not understand Father without Son, and yet the Son also I honor as
the less,"--the Son Himself sets thee right, and recalls thee, saying, "that
all may honor the Son," not in a lower degree, but "as they honor the Father."
Therefore, "whoso honoreth not the Son, honoreth not the Father that sent Him."
"I," sayest thou, "wish to give greater honor to the Father, less to the Son."
Therein thou takest away honor from the Father, wherein thou givest less to the
Son. For, being thus minded, it must really seem to thee that the Father
either would not or could not beget a Son equal to Himself: if He would not, He
lacked the will; if He could not, He lacked the ability. Dost thou not therefore
see that, being thus minded, wherein thou wouldst give greater honor to the
Father, therein thou art reproachful to the Father? Wherefore, so honor the Son as
thou honorest the Father, if thou wouldest honor both the Father and the Son.
7. "Verily, verily, I say unto you, Whoso heareth my word, and believeth
on Him that sent me, hath eternal life, and cometh not into judgment, but is
passed," not is passing now, but is already passed, "from death into life." And
mark this, "Whoso heareth my word, and"--He says not, believeth me,
but--"believeth Him that sent me." Let him hear the word of the Son, that he may believe the
Father. Why heareth Thy word, and yet believeth another? When we hear any
one's word, is it not him that utters the word we believe? is it not to him who
speaks we lend our faith? What, then, did He mean, saying, "Whoso heareth my word,
and believeth Him that sent me," if it be not this, because" His word is in
me"? And what is "heareth my word," but "heareth me"? So, too, "believeth Him
that sent me," because, believing Him, he believeth His word; but again, believing
His word, he believeth me, because I am the Word of the Father. There is
therefore peace in the Scriptures, and all things duly disposed, and in no way
clashing. Cast away, then, contention from thy heart; understand the harmony of the
Scriptures. Dost thou think that the Truth should speak things contrary to
itself?
8. "Whoso heareth my word, and believeth Him that sent me, hath eternal
life, and cometh not into judgment, but is passed from death unto life." You
remember what we laid down above, that "as the Father raiseth up the dead, and
quickeneth them, so also the Son quickeneth whom He will." He is beginning already
to reveal Himself; and behold, even now, the dead are rising. For "whoso
heareth my word, and believeth Him that sent me, hath eternal life, and will not come
into judgment." Prove that he has risen again. "But is passed," saith He "from
death unto life." He that is passed from death unto life, has surely without
any doubt risen again. For he could not pass from death to life, unless he were
first in death and not in life; but when he will have passed, he will be in
life, and not in death. He was therefore dead, and is alive again; he was lost,
but is found.(1) Hence a resurrection does take place now, and men pass from a
death to a life; from the death of infidelity to the life of faith; from the
death of falsehood to the life of truth; from the death of iniquity to the life of
righteousness. There is, therefore, that which is a resurrection of the dead.
9. May He open the same more fully, and dawn upon us as He begins to do!
"Verily, verily, I say unto you, The hour is coming, and now is." We did look
for a resurrection of the dead in the end, for so we have believed; yea, not we
looked, but are manifestly bound to look for it: for it is not a false thing we
believe, when we believe that the dead will rise in the end. When the Lord
Jesus, then, was willing to make known to us a resurrection of the dead before the
resurrection of the dead, it is not as that of Lazarus,(2) or of the widow's
son,(3) or of the ruler of the synagogue's daughter,(4) who were raised to die
again (for in their case there was a resurrection of the dead before the
resurrection of the dead); but, as He says here, "hath," says He, "eternal life, and
cometh not into judgment, but is passed from death into life." To what life? To
life eternal. Not, then, as the body of Lazarus: for he indeed passed from the
death of the tomb to the life of men, but not to life eternal, seeing he was to
die again; whereas the dead, that are to rise again at the end of the world,
will pass to eternal life. When our Lord Jesus Christ, then, our heavenly Master,
the Word of the Father, and the Truth, was willing to represent to us a
resurrection of the dealt to eternal life before the resurrection of the dead to
eternal life, "The hour cometh," saith He. Doubtless thou, imbued with a faith of
the resurrection of the flesh, didst look for the hour of the end of the world,
which, that thou shouldst not look for here, He added, "and now is." Therefore
He saith not this, "The hour cometh," of that last hour, when "at the commuted
and the voice of the archangel and the trump of God, the Lord Himself shall
descend from heaven, and the dead in Christ shall rise first; then we who are
alive and remain shall be caught up together with them in the clouds, to meet
Christ in the air: and so shall we be ever with the Lord."(5) That hour will come,
but is not now. But consider what this hour is: "The hour cometh, and now is."
What happens in that hour? What, but a resurrection of the dead? And what kind
of resurrection? Such that they who rise live for ever. This will be also in the
last hour.
10. What then? How do we understand these two resurrections? Do we, it may
be, understand that they who rise now will not rise then; that the
resurrection of some is now, of some others then? It is not so. For we have risen in this
resurrection, if we have rightly believed; and we ourselves, who have already
risen, are looking for another resurrection in the end. Moreover, both now are
we risen to eternal life, if we perseveringly continue in the same faith; and
then, too, we shall rise to eternal life, when we shall be made equal with the
angels.(6) But let Himself distinguish and open up what we have made bold to
speak; how there happens to be a resurrection before a resurrection, not of
different but of the same persons; nor like that of Lazarus, but into eternal life. He
will open it clearly. Hear ye the Master, while dawning upon us, and as our
Sun gliding in upon our hearts; not such as the eyes of flesh desire to look
upon, but on whom the eyes of the heart fervently long to be opened. To Him, then,
let us give ear: "Verily, verily, I say unto you, The hour cometh, and now is,
when the dead"--you see that a resurrection is asserted--"shall hear the voice
of the Son of God; and they that hear shall live." Why hath He added, "they
that hear shall live"? Why, could they hear unless they lived? It would have been
enough, then, to say, "The hour cometh, and now is, when the dead shall hear
the voice of the Son of God." We should immediately understand them to be living,
since they could not hear unless they lived. No, saith He, not because they
live they bear; but by hearing they come to life again: "Shall hear, and they
that hear shall live." What, then, is "shall hear," but "shall obey"? For, as to
the hearing of the ear, not all who hear shall live. Many, indeed, hear and do
not believe; by hearing and not believing, they obey not; by not obeying, they
live not. And so here, they that" shall hear" are they that "shall obey." They
that obey, then, shall live: let them be sure and certain of it, shall live.
Christ, the Word of God, is preached to us; the Son of God, by whom all things
were made, who, for the dispensation's sake, surely took flesh, was born of a
virgin, was an infant in the flesh, a young man in the flesh, suffering in the
flesh, dying in the flesh, rising again in the flesh, ascending in the flesh,
promising a resurrection to the flesh, promising a resurrection to the mind--to the
mind before the flesh, to the flesh after the mind. Whoso heareth and obeyeth,
shall live; whoso heareth and obeyeth not, that is, heareth and despiseth,
heareth and believeth not, shall not live. Why shall not live? Because he heareth
not. What is "heareth not"? Obeyeth not. Thus, then, "they that hear shall live."
11. Turn your thoughts now to what we said had to be deferred, that it may
now, if possible, be opened. Concerning this very resurrection He immediately
subjoined, "For as the Father hath life in Himself, even so hath He given to
the Son to have life in Himself." What means that, "The Father hath life in
Himself"? Not elsewhere hath He life but in Himself. His living, in fact, is in Him,
not from elsewhere, nor derived from another. He does not, as it were, borrow
life, nor, as it were, become a partaker of life, of a life which is not what
Himself is: but "hath life in Himself," so that the very life is to Him His very
self. If I should be able yet further in some small measure to speak from this
matter, by proposing examples for informing your understanding, will depend on
God's help and the piety of your attention. God lives, and the soul also
lives; but the life of God is unchangeable, the life of the soul is changeable. In
God is neither increase nor decrease; but He is the same always in Himself, is
ever as He is: not in one way now, in another way hereafter, in some other way
before. But the life of the soul is exceedingly various: it lived foolish, it
lives wise; it lived unrighteous, it lives righteous; now remembers, now forgets;
now learns, now cannot learn; now loses what it had learned, now apprehends
what it had lost. The life of the soul is changeable. And when the soul lives in
unrighteousness, that is its death; when again it becomes righteous, it becomes
partaker of another life, which is not what itself is, inasmuch as by rising
up to God, and cleaving to God, of Him it is justified. For it is said, "To him
that believeth on Him that justifieth the ungodly, his faith is counted for
righteousness."(1) By forsaking God, it becomes unrighteous; by coming to Him, it
is made righteous. Does it not seem to thee as it were something cold, which,
when brought near the fire, grows warm; when removed from the fire, grows cold?
A something dark, which, brought near the light, grows bright; when removed
from the light, grows dark? Something such is the soul: God is not any such thing.
Moreover, man may say that he has light now in his eyes. Let thine eyes say
then, if they can, as by a voice of their own, "We have light in ourselves." I
answer: Not correctly do you say that you have light in yourselves: you have
light, but in the heavens; you have light, but in the moon, in candles, if it
happen to be night, not in yourselves: for, being shut, you lose what you perceive
when open. Not in yourselves have you light; keep the light if you can when the
sun is set: 'tis night, enjoy the light of night; keep the light when the
candle is withdrawn; but since you remain in darkness when the candle is withdrawn,
you have not light in yourselves. Consequently, to have light in oneself is not
to need light from another. Behold, whoso understands wherein He shows that
the Son is equal with the Father, when He saith, "As the Father hath life in
Himself, so hath He given to the Son also to have life in Himself;" that there may
be only this difference between the Father and the Son, that the Father hath
life in Himself, which none gave Him, whilst the Son hath life in Himself which
the Father gave.
12. But here also arises a cloud that must be scattered. Let us not lose
heart, let us strive in earnest. Here are pastures of the mind; let us not
disdain them, that we may live. Behold, sayest thou, thyself confessest that the
Father hath given life to the Son, that He may have life in Himself, even as the
Father hath life in Himself; that the Father not lacking, the Son may not lack;
that as the Father is life, so the Son may be life; and both united one life,
not two lives; because God is one, not two Gods; and this same is to be life.
How, then, is the Father said to have given life to the Son? Not so as if the Son
had been without life before, and received life from the Father that He might
live; for if it were so, He would not have life in Himself. Behold, I was
speaking of the soul. The soul exists; though it be not wise, though it be not
righteous, though it be not godly, it is soul. It is one thing for it to be soul,
but another thing to be wise, to be righteous, to be godly. Something there is,
then, in which it is not yet wise, not yet righteous, not yet godly.
Nevertheless it is not therefore nothing, it is not therefore non-life; for it shows
itself to be alive by certain of its own actions, although it does not show itself
to be wise, godly, or righteous. For if it were not living it would not move the
body, would not command the feet to walk, the hands to work, the eyes to look,
the ears to hear; would not open the mouth for speaking, nor move the tongue
to distinction of speech. So, then, by these operations it shows itself to have
life, and to be something which is better than the body. But does it in any
wise show itself by these operations to be wise, godly, or righteous? Do not the
foolish, the wicked the unrighteous walk, work, see, hear, speak? But when the
soul rises to something which itself is not, which is above itself, and from
which its being is, then it gets wisdom, righteousness, holiness, which so long as
it was without, it was dead, and did not have the life by which itself should
live, but only that by which the body was quickened. For that in the soul by
which the body is quickened is one thing, that by which the soul itself is
quickened is another. Better, certainly, than the body is the soul, but better than
the soul itself is God. The soul, even if it be foolish, ungodly, unrighteous,
is the life of the body. But since its own life is God, just as it supplies
vigor, comeliness, activity, the functions of the limbs to the body, while it
exists in the body; so, in like manner, while God, its life, is in the soul, He
supplies to it wisdom, godliness, righteousness charity. Accordingly, what the soul
supplies to the body, and what God supplies to the soul, are of a different
kind: the soul quickens and is quickened. It quickens while dead, even if itself
is not quickened. But when the word comes, and is poured into the hearers, and
they not only hear, but are made obedient, the soul rises from its death to its
life--that is, from unrighteousness, from folly, from ungodliness, to its God,
who is to it wisdom, righteousness, light. Let it rise to Him, and be
enlightened by Him. "Come near,' saith he, "to Him." And what shall we have? "And be
enlightened."(1) If, therefore, by "coming to" ye are enlightened, and by
"departing from" ye become darkened, your light was not in yourselves, but in your
God. Come to Him that ye may rise again: if ye depart from Him, ye shall die. If
by coming to Him ye live, and by departing from Him ye die, your life was not in
yourselves. For the same is your life which is your light. "Because with Thee
is the fountain of life, and in Thy light we shall see light."(2)
13. Not, then, in like manner as the soul is one thing before it is
enlightened, and becomes a better thing when it is enlightened, by participation of a
better; not so, I say, was the Word of God, the Son of God, something else
before He received life, that He should have life by participation; but He has
life in Himself, and is consequently Himself the very life. What is it, then, that
He saith, "hath given to the Son to have life in Himself"? I would say it
briefly, He begot the Son. For it is not that He existed without life, and received
life, but He is life by being begotten. The Father is life not by being
begotten; the Son is life by being begotten. The Father is of no father; the Son is
of God the Father. The Father in His being is of none, but in that He is
Father, 'tis because of the Son. But the Son also, in that He is Son, 'tis because of
the Father: in His being, He is of the Father. This He said, therefore: "hath
given life to the Son, that He might have it in Himself." Just as if He were to
say, "The Father, who is life in Himself, begot the Son, who should be life in
Himself." Indeed, He would have this dedit (hath given) to be understood for
the same thing as geniut (hath begotten). It is like as if we said to a person,
"God hath given thee being." To whom? If to some one already existing, then He
gave him not being, because he who could receive existed before it was given
him. When, therefore, thou hearest it said, "He gave thee being," thou wast not
in being to receive, but thou didst receive, that thou shouldst be by coming
into existence. The builder gave to this house that it should be. But what did he
give to it? He gave it to be a house. To what did he give? To this house. Gave
it what? To be a house. How could he give to a house that it should be a house?
For if the house was, to what did he give to be a house, when the house
existed already? What, then, does that mean, "gave it to be a house"? It means, he
brought to pass that it should be a house. Well, then, what gave He to the Son?
Gave Him to be the Son, begot Him to be life--that is, "gave Him to have life in
Himself " that He should be the life not needing life, that He may not be
understood as having life by participation For if He had life by participation, He
might, by losing, be without life. Do not take, nor think, nor believe this to
be possible respecting the Son. Wherefore the Father continues the life, the
Son continues the life: the Father, life in Himself, not from the Son; the Son,
life in Himself, but from the Father. Begotten of the Father, that He might live
in Himself; but the Father, not begotten, life in Himself. Nor did He beget
the Son less than Himself to become equal by growth. For surely He by whom, being
perfect, the times were created, was not assisted by time towards His own
perfection. Before all time, He is co-eternal with the Father. For the Father has
never been without the Son; but the Father is eternal, therefore also the Son
co-eternal. Soul, what of thee? Thou wast dead, didst lose life; hear then the
Father through the Son. Arise, take to thee life, that in Him who has life in
Himself thou mayest receive the life which is not in thee. He that giveth thee
life, then, is the Father and the Son; and the first resurrection is accomplished
when thou risest to partake of the life which thou art not thyself, and by
partaking art made living. Rise from thy death to thy life, which is thy God, and
pass from death to eternal life. For the Father hath eternal life in Himself;
and unless He had begotten such a Son as had life in Himself, it could not be
that as the Father raiseth up the dead, and quickeneth them, so also the Son
should quicken whom He will.
14. But what of that resurrection of the body? For these who hear and
live, whence live, except by hearing? For "the friend of the Bridegroom standeth
and heareth Him, and rejoiceth greatly because of the Bridegroom's voice:"(1) not
because of his own voice; that is to say, they hear and live by partaking, not
by coming into being; and all that hear live, because all that obey live. Tell
us something, O Lord, also of the resurrection of the flesh; for there have
been those who denied it, asserting that this is the only resurrection which is
wrought by faith. Of which resurrection the Lord has just now, made mention, and
inflamed our desire, because "the dead shall hear the voice of the Son of God,
nd shall live." It is not same of those who hear shall live, and others shall
die; but "all that hear shall live," because all that obey shall live. Behold,
we see a resurrection of the mind; let us not therefore let go our faith of the
resurrection of the flesh. And unless Thou, O Lord Jesus, declare to us this,
whom shall we oppose to those who assert the contrary? For truly all sects that
have undertaken to engraft any religion upon men have allowed this
resurrection of minds; otherwise, it might be said to them, If the soul rise not, why
speakest thou to me? What meanest thou to do in me? If thou dost not make of the
worse a better, why speakest thou? If thou dost not make a righteous of the
unrighteous, why speakest thou? But if thou dost make righteous of the unrighteous,
godly of the ungodly, wise of the foolish, thou confessest that my soul doth
rise again, if I comply with thee and believe. So, then, all those that have
founded any sect, even of false religion, while they wished to be believed, could
not but admit this resurrection of minds: all have agreed concerning this; but
many have denied the resurrection of the flesh, and affirmed that the
resurrection had taken place already in faith. Such the apostle resisteth, saying, "Of
whom is Hymeneus and Philetus, who concerning the truth have erred, saying that
the resurrection hath taken place already, and overthrow the faith of some."(2)
They said that the resurrection had taken place already, but in such manner
that another was not to be expected; and they blamed people who were looking for a
resurrection of the flesh, just as if the resurrection which was promised were
already accomplished in the act of believing, namely, in the mind. The apostle
censures these. Why does he censure them? Did they not affirm what the Lord
spoke just now: "The hour cometh, and now is, when the dead shall hear the voice
of the Son of God, and they that hear shall live"? But, saith Jesus to thee, it
is of the life of minds that I am hitherto speaking: I am not yet speaking of
the life of bodies; but I speak of the life of that which is the life of
bodies, that is, of the life of souls, in which the life of bodies exists. For I know
that there are bodies lying in the tombs; I know also that your bodies will
lie in the tombs. I am not speaking of that resurrection, but I speak of this; in
this, rise ye again, lest ye rise to punishment in that. But that ye may know
that I speak also of that, what do I add? "For as the Father hath life in
Himself, even so hath He given to the Son to have life in Himself." This life which
the Father is, which the Son is, to what does it pertain ? To the soul or to
the body? It is not surely the body that is sensible of that life of wisdom, but
the rational mind. For not every soul hath capacity to apprehend wisdom. A
brute beast, in fact, has a soul, but the soul of the brute beast cannot apprehend
wisdom. It is the human soul, then, that can perceive this life which the
Father hath in Himself, and hath given to the Son to have in Himself; because that
is "the true light which enlighteneth," not every soul, but "every man coming
into this world." When, therefore, I speak to the mind itself, let it hear, that
is, let it obey and live.
15. Wherefore, keep not silent, O Lord, concerning the resurrection of the
flesh; lest men believe it not, and we continue reasoners, not preachers. But
"as the Father hath life in Himself, even so hath He given to the Son to have
life in Himself." Let them that hear, understand; let them believe that they may
understand; let them obey that they may live. And that they may not suppose
that the resurrection is finished here, let them hear this further: "and hath
given Him authority to execute judgment also." Who hath given? The Father. To whom
hath He given? To the Son; namely, to whom He gave to have life in Himself, to
the same hath He given authority to execute judgment. "Because He is the Son
of man." For this is the Christ, both Son of God and Son of man. "In the
beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God. This was in
the beginning with God." Behold, how He hath given Him to have life in Himself!
But because "the Word was made flesh, and dwelt among us," was made man of the
Virgin Mary, He is the Son of man. What, therefore, hath He received as Son of
man? Authority to execute judgment. What judgment? That in the end of the
world. Then also there will be a resurrection, but a resurrection of bodies. So,
then, God raiseth up souls by Christ, the Son of God; bodies He raiseth up by the
same Christ, the Son of man. "Hath given Him authority." He should not have
this authority did He not receive it; and He should be a man without authority.
But the same who is Son of God is also Son of man. For by adhering to the unity
of person, the Son of man with the Son of God is made one person, and the Son of
God is the same person which the Son of man is. But what characteristic it
has, and wherefore, must be distinguished. The Son of man has soul and body. The
Son of God, which is the Word of God, has man, as the soul has body. And just as
soul having body does not make two persons, but one man; so the Word, having
man, maketh not two persons, but one Christ. What is man? A rational soul,
having a body. What is Christ? The Word of God, having man. I see of what things I
speak, who I the speaker am, and to whom I am speaking.
16. Now hear concerning the resurrection of bodies, not me, but the Lord
about to speak, on account of those who have risen again by a resurrection from
death, by cleaving to life. To what life? To a life which knows not death. Why
knows not death? Because it knows not mutability. Why knows not mutability?
Because it is life in itself. "And hath given Him authority to execute judgment,
because He is the Son of man." What judgment, what kind of judgment? "Marvel not
at this" which I have said,--gave Him authority to execute judgment,--"for the
hour is coming." He does not adds "and now is:" therefore He means to make
known to us a certain hour in the end of the world. The hour is now that the dead
rise, the hour will be in the end of the world that the dead rise: but that
they rise now in the mind, then in the flesh; that they rise now in the mind by
the Word of God, the Son of God; then in the flesh by the Word of God made flesh,
the Son of man. For it will not be the Father Himself that will come to
judgment, notwithstanding the Father cloth not withdraw Himself from the Son. How,
then, is it that the Father Himself will not come? In that He will not be seen in
the judgment. "They shall look on Him whom they pierced."(1) That form which
stood before the judge, will be Judge: that form will judge which was judged;
for it was judged unjustly, it will judge justly. There will come the form of a
servant, and that same will be apparent. For how could the form of God be made
apparent to the just and to the unjust? If the judgment were to be only among
the just, then the form of God might appear as to the just. But because the
judgment is to be of the just and of the unjust, and that it is not permitted to the
wicked to see God,--for "blessed are the pure in heart, for they shall see
God,"(2)--such a Judge will appear as may be seen by those whom He is about to
crown, and by those whom He is about to condemn. Hence the form of a servant will
be seen, the form of God will be hid. The Son of God will be hid in the
servant, and the Son of man will be manifest, because to Him "hath He given authority
to execute judgment, because He is the Son of man." And because He alone will
appear in the form of a servant, but the Father not, since He has not taken upon
Him the form of a servant; for that reason He saith above: "The Father judgeth
not any man, but hath given all judgment to the Son." Rightly then had it been
deferred, that the propounder might Himself be the interpreter. For before it
was hidden; now, as I think, it is already manifest, that "He gave Him
authority to execute judgment," that "the Father judgeth not any man, but hath given
all judgment to the Son:" because the judgment is to be by that form which the
Father hath not. And what kind of judgment? "Marvel not at this, for the hour is
coming:" not that which now is, for the souls to rise; but that which is to be,
for the bodies to rise.
17. Let Him declare this more distinctly, that the heretical denier of the
resurrection of the body may not find a pretext for sophistical cavil,
although the meaning already shines out clearly. When it was said above, "The hour is
coming," He added, "and now is;" but just now, "The hour is coming," He has not
added, "and now is." Let Him, however, by the open truth, burst asunder all
handles, all loops and pegs of sophistical attack, all the nooses of ensnaring
objections. "Marvel not at this: for the hour is coming, in which all that are in
the graves." What more evident? what more distinct? Bodies are in the graves;
souls are not in the graves, either of just or of unjust. The soul of the just
man was in the bosom of Abraham; the unjust man's soul was in hell, tormented:
neither the one nor the other was in the grave. Above, when He saith, "The hour
is coming, and now is," I beseech you give earnest heed. Ye know, brethren,
that we get the bread of the belly with toil; with how much greater toil the
bread of the mind! With labor you stand and hear, but with greater we stand and
speak. If we labor for your sake, you ought to labor with us for your own sake.
Above, then, when He said, "The hour is coming," and added, "and now is," what
did He subjoin? "When the dead shall hear the voice of the Son of God, and they
that hear shall live." He did not say, "All the dead shall hear, and they that
hear shall live;" for He meant the unrighteous to be understood. And is it so,
that all the unrighteous obey the gospel? The apostle says openly, "But not all
obey the gospel."(1) But they that hear shall live, because all that obey the
gospel shall pass to eternal life by faith: yet all do not obey; and this is
now. But certainly, in the end, "All that are in the graves," both the just and
the unjust, "shall hear His voice, and come forth." How is it He would not say,
"and shall live"? All, indeed, will come forth, but all will not live. For in
that which He said above, "And they that hear shall live," He meant it to be
understood that there is in that very hearing and obeying an eternal and blessed
life, which not all that shall come forth from the graves will have. Here, then,
both in the mention of graves, and by the expression of a "coming forth" from
the graves, we openly understand a resurrection of bodies.
18. "All shall hear His voice, and shall come forth." And where is
judgment, if all shall hear and all shall come forth? It is as if all were confusion;
I see no distinguishing. Certainly Thou hast received authority to judge,
because Thou art the Son of man: behold, Thou wilt be present in the judgment; the
bodies will rise again; but tell us something of the judgment itself, that is,
of the separation of the evil and the good. Hear this further, then: "They
that have done good into the resurrection of life; they that have done evil into
the resurrection of judgment." When above He spoke of a resurrection of minds
and souls, did He make any distinction? No, for all "that hear shall live;"
because by hearing, viz. by obeying, shall they live. But certainly not all will go
to eternal life by rising and coming forth from the graves,--only they that
have done well; and they that have done ill, to judgment. For here He has put
judgment for punishment. There will also be a separation, not such as there is
now. For now we are separated, not by place, but by character, affections,
desires, faith, hope, charity. Now we live together with the unjust, though the life
of all is not the same: in secret we are distinguished, in secret we are
separated; as grain on the floor, not as grain in the granary. On the floor, grain is
both separated and mixed: separated, because severed from the chaff; mixed,
because not yet winnowed. Then there will be an open separation; a distinguishing
of life just as of the character, a separation as there is in wisdom, so also
will there be in bodies. They that have done well will go to live with the
angels of God; they that have done evil, to be tormented with the devil and his
angels. And the form of a servant will pass away. For to this end He had manifested
Himself, that He might execute judgment. After the judgment, He shall go
hence, will lead with Him the body of which He is the head, and deliver up the
kingdom of God.(2) Then will openly be seen that form of God which could not be seen
by the wicked, to whose vision the form of a servant must be shown. He says
also in another place on this wise: "These shall go away into everlasting
burning" (speaking of certain on the left), "but the just into life eternal;"(1) of
which life He says in another place: "And this is eternal life, that they may
know Thee the one true God, and Jesus Christ whom Thou hast sent."(2) Then will He
be there manifested, "who, being in the form of God, thought it not robbery to
be equal with God."(3) Then He will manifest Himself, as He has promised to
manifest Himself to them that love Him. For "he that loveth me," saith He,
"keepeth my commandments; and he that loveth me shall be loved of my Father; and I
will love him, and will manifest myself to him."(4) He was present in person with
those to whom He was speaking: but they saw the form of a servant, they did
not see the form of God. They were being led on His own beast to His dwelling to
be healed; but now being healed, they will see, because, saith He, "I will
manifest myself to him." How is He shown equal to the Father? When He says to
Philip, "He that seeth me seeth my Father also."(5)
19. "I cannot of myself do anything: as I hear, I judge: and my judgment
is just." Else we might have said to Him, "Thou wilt judge, and the Father
will not judge, for 'all judgment hath He given to the Son;' It is not, therefore,
according to the Father that Thou wilt judge." Hence He added, "I cannot of
myself do anything: as I hear, I judge: and my judgment is just; because I seek
not my own will, but the will of Him that sent me." Undoubtedly the Son
quickeneth whom He will. He seeketh not His own will, but the will of Him that sent
Him. Not my own, my proper will; not mine, not the Son of man's; not mine to
resist God. For men do their own will, not God's, when they do what they list, not
what God commands; but when they do what they list, so as yet to follow God's
will, they do not their own will, notwithstanding they do what they list to do.
Do what thou art bidden willingly, and thus shall thou both do what thou
wiliest, and also not do thine own will, but His that biddeth.
20. What then? "As I hear, I judge." The Son "heareth," and the Father
"showeth" to Him, and the Son seeth the Father doing. But we had deferred these
matters, in order to handle them, so far as might lie in our abilities, with
somewhat greater plainness and fullness, should time and strength remain to us
after finishing the perusal of the passage. If I say that I am able to speak yet
further, you perhaps are not able to go on hearing. Again, perhaps, in your
eagerness to hear, you say, "We are able." Better, then, that I should confess my
weakness, that, being already fatigued, I am not able to speak longer, than
that, when you are already satiated, I should continue to pour into you what you
cannot well digest. Then, as to this promise, which I deferred until today,
should there be an opportunity, hold me, with the Lord's help, your debtor until
to-morrow.
TRACTATE XX.
CHAPTER V. 19.
1. Tag words of our Lord Jesus Christ, especially those recorded by the
Evangelist John,--who not without cause leaned on the Lord's bosom, that he might
drink in the secrets of that higher wisdom, and by evangelizing give forth
again what by loving he had drunk in,--are so secret and profound of
understanding, that they trouble all who are perverse of heart, and exercise all who are in
heart upright. Wherefore, beloved, give heed to these few words that have been
read. Let us see if in any wise we can, by His own gift and help who has willed
His words to be recited to us, which at that time were heard and committed to
writing that they might now be read, what He means in what ye have now heard
Him say: "'Verily, verily, I say unto you, The Son cannot of Himself do anything,
but what He seeth the Father doing: for what things soever the Father doeth,
these same the Son also doeth in like manner."
2. Now you need to be reminded whence this discourse arose, by reason of
what precedes this passage, where the Lord had cured a certain man among those
who were lying in the five porches of that pool of Solomon, and to whom He had
said, "Take up thy bed, and go unto thy house." But this He had done on the
Sabbath; and hence the Jews, being troubled, were falsely accusing Him as a
destroyer and transgressor of the law. He then said to them, "My Father worketh even
until now, and I work."(1) For they, taking the observance of the Sabbath in a
carnal sense, fancied that God had, as it were, slept after the labor of framing
the world even to this day; and that therefore He had sanctified that day,
from which He began to rest as from labor. Now, to our fathers of old there was
ordained a sacrament of the Sabbath,(2) which we Christians observe spiritually,
in abstaining from every servile work, that is, from every sin (for the Lord
saith, "Every one that committeth sin is the servant of sin"), and in having rest
in our heart, that is, spiritual tranquillity. And although in this life we
strive after this rests yet not until we have departed this life shall we attain
to that perfect rest. But the reason why God is said to have rested is, that He
made no creature after all was finished. Moreover, the Scripture called it
rest, to admonish us that after good works we shall rest. For thus we have it
written in Genesis, "And God made all things very good, and God rested on the
seventh day," in order that thou, O man, considering that God Himself is said to
have rested after good works, shouldest not expect rest for thyself, until after
thou hast wrought good works; and even as God after He made man in His own image
and likeness, and in him finished all His works very good, rested on the
seventh day, so mayest thou also not expect rest to thyself, except thou return to
that likeness in which thou wast made, which likeness thou hast lost by sinning.
For, in reality, God cannot be said to have toiled, who "said, and they were
done." Who is there that, after such facility of work, desires to rest as if
after labor? If He commanded and some one resisted Him, if He commanded and it was
not done, and labored that it might be done, then justly He should be said to
have rested after labor. But when in that same book of Genesis we read, "God
said, Let there be light, and there was light; God said, Let there be a
firmament, and the firmament was made,(3) and all the rest were made immediately at His
word: to which also the psalm testifies, saying, "He spake, and they were made;
He commanded, and they were created,"(4)--how could He require rest after the
world was made, as if to enjoy leisure after toil, He who in commanding never
toiled? Consequently these sayings are mystical, and are laid down in this wise
that we may be looking for rest after this life, provided we have done good
works. Accordingly, the Lord, restraining the impudence and refuting the error of
the Jews, and showing them that they did not think rightly of God, says to
them, when they were offended at His working men's healing on the Sabbath, "My
Father worketh until now, and I work:" do not therefore suppose that my Father so
rested on the Sabbath, that thenceforth He doth not work; but even as He now
worketh, so I also work. But as the Father without toil, so too the Son without
toil. God "said, and they were done;" Christ said to the impotent man, "Take up
thy bed, and go unto thy house," and it was done.
3. But the catholic faith has it, that the works of the Father and of the
Son are not separable. This is what I wish, if possible, to speak to you,
beloved; but, according to those words of the Lord, "he that is able to receive it,
let him receive it."(5) But he that is not able to receive its let him not
charge it on me, but on his own dullness; and let him turn to Him that opens the
heart, that He may pour in what He freely giveth. And, lastly, if any one may not
have understood, because I have not declared it as I ought to have declared
it, let him excuse the weakness of man, and supplicate the divine goodness. For
we have within a Master, Christ. Whatever ye are not able to receive through
your ear and my mouth, turn ye in your heart to Him who both teacheth me what to
speak, and distributeth to you in what measure He deigns. He who knows what to
give, and to whom to give, will help him that seeketh, and open to him that
knocketh. And if so be that He give not, let no one call himself forsaken. For it
may be that He delays to give something, but He leaves none hungry. If, indeed,
He give not at the hour, He is exercising the seeker, He is not Scorning the
suitor. Look ye, then, and give heed to what I wish to say, even if I should not
be able to say it. The catholic faith, confirmed by the Spirit of God in His
saints, has this against all heretical perverseness, that the works of the Father
and of the Son are inseparable. What is this that I have said? As the Father
and the Son are inseparable, so also the works of the Father and of the Son are
inseparable. How are the Father and the Son inseparable, since Himself said, "I
and the Father are one?"(6) Because the Father and the Son are not two Gods,
but one God, the Word and He whose the Word is, One and the Only One, Father and
Son bound together by charity, One God, and the Spirit of Charity also one, so
that Father, Son, and Holy Spirit is made the Trinity. Therefore, not only of
the Father and Son, but also of the Holy Spirit; as there is equality and
inseparability of persons, so also the works are inseparable. I will tell you yet
more plainly what is meant by "the works are inseparable." The catholic faith
does not say that God the Father made something, and the Son made some other
thing; but what the Father made, that also the Son made, that also the Holy Spirit
made. For all things were made by the Word; when "He spoke and they were done,"
it is by the Word they were done, by Christ they were done. For " in the
beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God: all things
were made by Him." If all things were made by Him, "God said, Let there be
light, and there was light; in the Word He made, by the Word He made.
4. Behold, then, we have now heard the Gospel, where He answered the Jews
who were indignant "that He not only broke the Sabbath, but said also that God
was His Father, making Himself equal with God.(1) For so it is written in the
foregoing paragraph. When, therefore, the Son of God, the Truth, made answer to
their erring indignation, saith He, "Verily, verily, I say unto you, The Son
cannot of Himself do anything, but what He seeth the Father doing;" as if He
said, " Why are ye offended because I have said that God is my Father, and that I
make myself equal with God? I am equal in that wise that He begat me; I am equal
in that wise that He is not from me, but I from Him." For this is implied in
these words: "The Son cannot do anything of Himself, but what He seeth the
Father doing." That is, whatever the Son hath to do, the doing it He hath of the
Father. Why of the Father hath He the doing it? Because of the Father He hath it
that He is Son. Why hath He it of the Father to be Son? Because of the Father He
hath it that He is able, of the Father that He is. For, to the Son, both to be
able and to be is the self-same thing. It is not so with man. Raise your
hearts by all means from a comparison of human weakness, that lies far beneath; and
should any of us perhaps reach to the secret, and, while awe-struck by the
brilliance as it were of a great light, should discern somewhat, and not remain
wholly ignorant; yet let him not imagine that he understands the whole, lest he
should become proud, and lose what knowledge he has gotten. With man, to be and
to be able are different things. For sometimes the man is, and yet cannot what
he wills; sometimes, again, the man is in such wise, that he can what he wills;
therefore his bring and his being able are different things. For if man's esse
and posse were the same thing, then he could when he would. But with God it is
not so, that His substance to be is one thing, and His power to be able another
thing; but whatever is His, and whatever He is, is consubstantial with Him,
because He is God: it is not so that in one way He is, in another way is able; He
has the esse and the posse together, because He has to will and to do
together. Since, then, the power of the Son is of the Father, therefore also the
substance of the Son is of the Father; and since the substance of the Son is of the
Father, therefore the power of the Son is of the Father. In the Son, power and
substance are not different: the power is the self-same that the substance is;
the substance to be, the power to be able. Accordingly, because the Son is of
the Father, He said, "The Son cannot of Himself do anything." Because He is not
Son from Himself, therefore He is not able from Himself.
5. He appears to have made Himself as it were less, when He said, "The Son
cannot of Himself do anything, but what He seeth the Father doing." Hereupon
heretical vanity lifts the neck; theirs, indeed, who say that the Son is less
than the Father, of less authority, of less majesty, of less possibility, not
understanding the mystery of Christ's words. But attend, beloved, and see how they
are confounded in their carnal intellect by the words of Christ. And this is
what I said a little before, that the word of God troubles all perverse hearts,
just as it exercises pious hearts, especially that spoken by the Evangelist
John. For they are deep words that are spoken by him, not random words, nor such
as may be easily understood. So, a heretic, if he happen to hear these words,
immediately rises and says to us, "Lo, the Son is less than the Father; hear the
words of the Son, who says, 'The Son cannot do anything of Himself, but what He
seeth the Father doing.' " Wait; as it is written, "Be meek to hear the word,
that thou mayest understand."(2) Well, suppose that because I assert the power
and majesty of the Father and of the Son to be equal, I was disconcerted at
hearing these words, "The Son cannot do anything of Himself, but what He seeth the
Father doing." Well, I, being disconcerted at these words, will ask thee, who
seemest to thyself to have instantly understood them, a question. We know in
the Gospel that the Son walked upon the sea;(1) when saw He the Father walk upon
the sea? Here now he is disconcerted. Lay aside, then, thy understanding of the
words, and let us examine them together. What do we then? We have heard the
words of the Lord: "The Son cannot of Himself do anything, but what He seeth the
Father doing." The Son walked upon the sea, the Father never walked upon the
sea. Yet certainly "the Son cannot of Himself do anything, but what He seeth the
Father doing."
6. Return then with me to what I was saying, in case it is so to be
understood that we may both escape from the question. For I see how I, according to
the catholic faith, may escape without tripping or stumbling; whilst thou, on
the other hand, shut in on every side, art seeking a way of escape. See by what
way thou hast entered. Perhaps thou hast not understood this that I said, See by
what way thou hast entered: hear Himself saying, "I am the door."(2) Not
without cause, then, art thou seeking how thou mayest get out; and this only thou
findest, that thou hast not entered by the door, but fell in over the wall.
Therefore raise thyself up from thy fall how thou canst, and enter by the door, that
thou mayest go in without stumbling, and go out without straying. Come by
Christ, not bringing forward of thy own heart what thou mayest say; but what He
shows, that speak. Behold how the catholic faith gets clear of this question. The
Son walked upon the sea, planted the feet of flesh on the waves: the flesh
walked, and the divinity directed. But when the flesh was walking and the divinity
directing, was the Father absent? If absent, how doth the Son Himself say, "but
the Father abiding in me, Himself doeth the works?"(3) If the Father, abiding
in the Son, Himself doeth His works, then that walking upon the sea was made by
the Father, and through the Son. Accordingly, that walking is an inseparable
work of Father and Son. I see both acting in it. Neither the Father forsook the
Son, nor the Son left the Father. Thus, whatever the Son doeth, He doeth not
without the Father; because whatever the Father doeth, He doeth not without the
Son.
7. We have got clear of this question. Mark ye that rightly we say the
works of the Father, of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit are inseparable. But as
thou understandest it, lo, God made the light, and the Son saw the Father making
light, according to thy carnal understanding, who wilt have it that He is less,
because He said, "The Son cannot of Himself do anything, but what He seeth the
Father doing." God the Father made light; what other light did the Son make?
God the Father made the firmament, the heaven between waters and waters; and the
Son saw Him, according to thy dull and sluggish understanding. Well, since the
Son saw the Father making the firmament, and also said, "The Son cannot of
Himself do anything, but what He seeth the Father doing," then show me the other
firmament made by the Son. Hast thou lost the foundation? But they that are
"built upon the foundation of the apostles and prophets, Jesus Christ Himself being
the chief corner-stone," are brought into a state of peace in Christ;(4) nor
do they strive and wander in heresy. Therefore we understand that the light was
made by God the Father, but through the Son; that the firmament was made by God
the Father, but through the Son. For "all things were made through Him, and
without Him was nothing made." Cast out thine understanding, which ought not to
be called understanding, but evidently foolishness. God the Father made the
world; what other world did the Son make? Show me the Son's world. Whose is this
world in which we are? Tell us, by whom made? If thou sayest, "By the Son, not by
the Father," then thou hast erred from the Father; if thou sayest, "By the
Father, not by the Son," the Gospel answers thee thus, "And the world was made by
(through) Him, and the world knew Him not." Acknowledge Him, then, by whom the
world was made, and be not among those who knew not Him that made the world.
8. Wherefore the works of the Father and of the Son are inseparable.
Moreover, this, "The Son cannot do anything of Himself," would mean the same thing
as if He were to say, "The Son is not from Himself." For if He is a Son, He was
begotten; if begotten, He is from Him of whom He is begotten. Nevertheless, the
Father begat Him equal to Himself. Nor was aught wanting to Him that begat; He
who begat a co-eternal required not time to beget: who produced the Word of
Himself, required not a mother to beget by; the Father begetting did not precede
the Son in age, so that He should beget a Son younger than Himself. But perhaps
some one may say, that after many ages God begat a Son in His old age. Even as
the Father is without age, so the Son is without growth; neither has the one
grown old nor the other increased, but equal begat equal, eternal begat eternal.
How, says some one, has eternal begat eternal? As a temporary flame generates
a temporary light. The generating flame is coeval with the light which it
generates: the generating flame does not precede in time the generated light; but
from the moment the flame begins, from that moment the light begins. Show me
flame without light, and I show thee God the Father without Son. Accordingly, "the
Son cannot do anything of Himself, but what He seeth the Father doing,"
implies, that for the Son to see and to be begotten of the Father, is the same thing.
His seeing and His substance are not different; nor are His power and
substance different. All that He is, He is of the Father; all that He can is of the
Father; because what He can and what He is is one thing, and all of the Father.
9. Moreover, He goes on in His own words, and troubles those that
understand the matter amiss, in order to recall the erring to a right apprehension of
it. After He had said, "The Son cannot of Himself do anything, but what He seeth
the Father doing;" test a carnal understanding of the matter should by chance
creep in and turn the mind aside, and a man should imagine as it were two
mechanics, one a master, the other a learner, attentively observing the master while
making, say a chest, so that, as the master made the chest, the learner should
make another chest according to the appearance which he looked upon while the
master wrought; lest, I say, the carnal mind should frame to itself any such
twofold notion in the case of the divine unity, going on, He saith, "For what
things soever the Father doeth, these same also the Son doeth in like manner." It
is not, the Father doeth some, the Son others like them, but the same in like
manner. For He saith not, What things soever the Father doeth, the Son also
doeth others the like; but saith He, "What things soever the Father doeth, these
same also the Son doeth in like manner." What things the Father doeth, these also
the Son doeth: the Father made the world, the Son made the world, the Holy
Ghost made the world. If three Gods, then three worlds; if one God, the Father,
the Son, and the Holy Ghost, then one world was made by the Father, through the
Son, in the Holy Ghost. Consequently the Son doeth those things which also the
Father doeth, and doeth not in a different manner; He both doeth these, and
doeth them in like manner.
10. After He had said, "these doeth," why did He add, "in like manner
doeth"? Lest another distorted understanding or error should spring up in the mind.
Thou seest, for instance, a man's work: in man there is mind and body; the
mind rules the body, but there is a great difference between body and mind: the
body is visible, the mind is invisible: there is a great difference between the
power and virtue of the mind and that of any kind of body whatever, be it even a
heavenly body. Still the mind rules its own body, and the body doeth; and what
the mind appears to do, this the body doeth also. Thus the body appears to do
this same thing that the mind doeth, but not "in like manner." How doeth this
same, but not in like manner? The mind frames a word in itself; it commands the
tongue, and the tongue produces the word which the mind framed: the mind made,
and the tongue made; the lord of the body made, and the servant made; but that
the servant might make, it received of its lord what to make, and made while
the lord commanded. The same thing was made by both, but was it in like manner?
How not in like manner? says some one. See, the word that my mind formed,
remains in me; that which my tongue made, passed through the smitten air, and is not.
When thou hast said a word in thy mind, and uttered it by thy tongue, return
to thy mind, and see that the word which thou hast made is there still. Has it
remained on thy tongue, just as it has in thy mind? What was uttered by the
tongue, the tongue made by sounding, the mind made by thinking; but what the tongue
uttered has passed away, what the mind thought remains. Therefore the body
made that which the mind made, but not in like manner. For the mind, indeed, made
that which the mind may hold, but the tongue made what sounds and strikes the
ear through the air. Dost thou chase the syllables, and cause them to remain?
Well, not in such manner the Father and the Son; but "these same doeth," and "in
like manner doeth." If God made heaven that remains, this heaven that remains
the Son made. If God the Father made man that is mortal, the same man that is
mortal the Son made. What things soever the Father made that endure, these things
that endure made also the Son, because in like manner He made; and what things
soever the Father made that are temporal, these same things that are temporal
made also the Son, because He made not only the same, but also in like manner
made. For the Father made by the Son, since by the Word the Father made all
things.
11. Seek in the Father and Son a separation, thou findest none; no, not if
thou hast mounted high; no, not even if thou hast reached something above thy
mind. For if thou turnest about among the things which thy wandering mind makes
for itself, thou talkest with thine own imaginations, not with the Word of
God; thine own imaginations deceive thee. Mount also beyond the body, and
understand the mind; mount also beyond the mind, and understand God. Thou reachest not
unto God, unless thou hast passed beyond the mind; how much less thou reachest
unto God, if thou hast tarried in the flesh! They who think of the flesh, how
far are they from understanding what God is!--since they would not be there even
if they knew the mind. Man recedes far from God when his thoughts are of the
flesh; and there is a great difference between flesh and mind, yet a greater
between mind and God. If thou art occupied with the mind, thou art in the midway:
if thou directest thy attention beneath, there is the body; if above, there is
God. Lift thyself up from the body, pass beyond even thyself. For observe what
said the psalm, and thou art admonished how God must be thought of: "My tears,"
it saith, "were made to me my bread day and night, when it was said to me
daily, Where is thy God?" As the pagans may say, "Behold our gods, where is your
God?" They indeed show us what is seen; we worship what is not seen. And to whom
can we show? To a man who has not sight with which to see? For anyhow, if they
see their gods with their eyes, we too have other eyes with which to see our
God: for "blessed are the pure in heart, for they shall see God."(1) Therefore,
when he had said that he was troubled, when it was daily said to him, "Where is
thy God?" "these things I remembered," saith he, "because it is daily said to
me, Where is thy God?" And as if wishing to lay hold of his God, "These things,"
saith he, "I remembered, and poured out my soul above me."(2) Therefore, that
I might reach unto my God, of whom it was said to me, "Where is thy God? I
poured out my soul," not over my flesh, but "above me;" I transcended myself, that
I might reach unto Him: for He is above me who made me; none reaches to Him but
he that passes beyond himself.
12. Consider the body: it is mortal, earthy, weak, corruptible; away with
it. Yes, perhaps thou sayest, but the body is temporal. Think then of other
bodies, the heavenly; they are greater, better, more magnificent. Look at them,
moreover, attentively. They roll from east to west, they stand not; they are seen
with the eyes, not only by man, but even by the beast of the field. Pass
beyond them too. And how, sayest thou, pass beyond the heavenly bodies, seeing that
I walk on the earth? Not in the flesh dost thou pass beyond them, but in the
mind. Away with them too: though they shine ever so much, they are bodies; though
they glitter from heaven, they are bodies. Come, now that perhaps thou
thinkest thou hast not whither to go, after considering all these. And whither am I to
go, sayest thou, beyond the heavenly bodies; and what am I to pass beyond with
the mind? Hast thou considered all these? I have, sayest thou. By what means
hast thou considered them? Let the being that considers appear in person. The
being that considers all these, that discriminates, distinguishes, and in a
manner weighs them in the balance of wisdom, is really the mind. Doubtless, then,
better is the mind with which thou hast contemplated all these things, than these
things which thou hast contemplated. This mind, then, is a spirit, not a body.
Pass beyond it too. And that thou mayest see whither thou art to pass beyond,
compare that mind itself, in the first place, with the flesh. Heaven forbid
that thou shouldest deign so to compare it! Compare it with the brightness of the
sun, of the moon, and of the stars; the brightness of the mind is greater.
Observe, first, the swiftness of the mind; see whether the scintillation of the
thinking mind be not more impetuous than the brilliance of the shining sun. With
the mind thou seest the sun rising. How slow is its motion compared with thy
mind! What the sun is about to do, thou canst think in a trice. It is about to
come from the east to the west; to-morrow rises from another quarter. Where thy
thought has done this, the sun still lags behind, and thou hast traversed the
whole journey. A great thing, therefore, is the mind. But how do I say is? Pass
beyond it also. For the mind, notwithstanding it be better than every kind of
body, is itself changeable. Now it knows, now knows not; now forgets, now
remembers; now wills, now wills not; now errs, now is right. Pass therefore beyond all
changeableness; not only beyond all that is seen, but also beyond all that
changes. For thou hast passed beyond the flesh which is seen; beyond heaven, the
sun, moon, and stars, which are seen. Pass, too, beyond all that changes. For
when thou hadst done with those things that are seen, and hadst come to thy mind,
there thou didst find the changeableness of thy mind. Is God at all
changeable? Pass then, beyond even thy mind. Pour out thy soul "above thee," that thou
mayest reach unto God, of whom it is said to thee, "Where is thy God?"
13. Do not imagine that thou art to do something beyond a man's ability.
The Evangelist John himself did this. He soared beyond the flesh, beyond the
earth which he trod, beyond the seas which he looked upon, beyond the air in which
the fowls fly, beyond the sun, the moon, the stars, beyond all the spirits
unseen, beyond his own mind, by the very reason of his rational soul. Soaring
beyond all these, pouring out his soul above him, whither did he arrive? What did
he see? "In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God." If,
therefore, thou seest no separation in the light, why seekest thou a separation in the
work? See God, see His Word inhering to the Word speaking, that the speaker
speaks not by syllables, but this his speaking is a shining out in the brightness
of wisdom. What is said of the Wisdom itself? "It is the radiance of eternal
light. "(1) Observe the radiance of the sun. The sun is in the heaven, and
spreads out its brightness over all lands and over all seas, and it is simply a
corporal light.
If, indeed, thou canst separate the brightness from the sun, then separate
the Word from the Father. I am speaking of the sun. One small, slender flame
of a lamp, which can be extinguished by one breath, spreads its light over all
that lies near it: thou seest the light generated by the flame spread out; thou
seest its emission, but not a separation. Understand, then, beloved brethren,
that the Father, and the Son, and the Holy Ghost are inseparably united in
themselves; that this Trinity is one God; that all the works of the one God are the
works of the Father, of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost. All the rest which
follows, and which refers to the discourse of our Lord Jesus Christ, now that a
discourse is due to you to-morrow also, be present that ye may hear.