LECTURES OR TRACTATES ON THE GOSPEL ACCORDING TO ST. JOHN. TRACTATES XXI TO
XXV.
TRACTATE XXI.
CHAPTER V. 20-23
1. YESTERDAY, so far as the Lord vouchsafed to bestow, we discussed with
what ability we could, and discerned according to our capacity, how the works of
the Father and of the Son are inseparable; and how the Father doeth not some,
the Son others, but that the Father doeth all things through the Son, as
through His Word, of which it is written, "All things were made by Him, and without
Him was nothing made." Let us to-day look at the words that follow. And of the
same Lord let us pray for mercy, and hope that, if He deem it meet, we may
understand what is true; but if we should not be able to do this, that we may not go
into what is false. For it is better not to know than to go astray; but to
know is better than not to know. Therefore, before all things, we ought to strive
to know. Should we be able, to God be thanks; but should we not be able
meanwhile to arrive at the truth, let us not go to falsehood. For we are bound to
consider well what we are, and what we are treating of. We are men bearing flesh,
walking in this life; and though now begotten again of the seed of the Word of
God, yet in Christ renewed in such manner that we are not yet wholly rid of
Adam. For truly our mortal and corruptible part that weighs down the soul(1) shows
itself to be, and manifestly is, of Adam; but what in us is spiritual, and
raises up the soul, is of God's gift and of His mercy, who has sent His only Son to
partake our death with us, and to lead us to His own immortality. The Son we
have for our Master, that we may not sin; and for our defender, if we have
sinned and have confessed, and been converted; an intercessor for us, if we have
desired any good of God; and the bestower of it with the Father, because Father
and Son is one God. But He was speaking these things as man to men: God
concealed, the man manifest, that He might make them gods that are manifest men; and the
Son of God made Son of man, that He might make the sons of men sons of God. By
what skill of His wisdom He doeth this, we perceive in His own words. For as a
little one He speaks to little ones, but Himself little in such wise that He
is also great, and we little, but in Him great. He speaks, indeed, as one
cherishing and nourishing children at the breast that grow by loving.
2. He had said, "The Son cannot of Himself do anything, but what He seeth
the Father doing." We, however, understood it not that the Father doeth
something separately, which when the Son seeth, Himself also doeth something of the
same kind, after seeing His Father's work; but when He said, "The Son cannot of
Himself do anything, but what He seeth the Father doing," we understood it that
the Son is wholly of the Father--that His whole substance and His whole power
are of the Father that begat Him. But just now, when He had said that He doeth
in like manner these things which the Father doeth, that we may not understand
it to mean that the Father doeth some, the Son others, but that the Son with
like power doeth the very same which the Father doeth, whilst the Father doeth
through the Son, He went on, and said what we have heard read to-day: "For the
Father Ioveth the Son, and showeth Him all things that Himself doeth." Again
mortal thought is disturbed. The Father showeth to the Son what things Himself
doeth; therefore, saith some one, the Father doeth separately, that the Son may be
able to see what He doeth. Again, there occur to human thought, as it were, two
artificers--as, for instance, a carpenter teaching his son his own art, and
showing him whatever he doeth, that the son also may be able to do it. "Showeth
Him," saith He, "all things that Himself doeth." Is it therefore so, that whilst
He doeth, the Son doeth not, that He may be able to see the Father do? Yet,
certainly, "all things were made by Him, and without Him was nothing made." Hence
we see how the Father showeth the Son what He doeth, since the Father doeth
nothing but what He doeth through the Son. What hath the Father made? He made the
world. Hath He shown the world, when made, to the Son in such wise, that the
Son also should make something like it? Then let us see the world which the Son
made. Nevertheless, both" all things were made by Him, and without Him was
nothing made," and also "the world was made by Him."(1) If the world was made by
Him, and all things were made by Him, and the Father doeth nothing save by the
Son, where cloth the Father show to the Son what He doeth, if it be not in the Son
Himself, through whom He doeth? In what place can the work of the Father be
shown to the Son, as though He were doing and sitting outside, and the Son
attentively watching the Father's hand how it maketh? Where is that inseparable
Trinity? Where the Word, of which it is said that the same is ''the power and the
wisdom of God"?(2) Where that which the Scripture saith of the same wisdom:
"For it is the brightness of the eternal light?"(3) Where what was said of it
again: "It powerfully reaches from the end even to the end, and ordereth all things
sweetly"?(4) Whatever the Father doeth, He doeth through the Son: through His
wisdom and his power He doeth; not from without doth He show to the Son what He
may see, but in the Son Himself He showeth Him what He doeth.
3. What seeth the Father, or rather, what doth the Son see in the Father,
that Himself also may do? Perhaps I may be able to speak it, but show me the
man who can comprehend it; or perhaps I may be able to think and not speak it; or
perhaps I may not be able even to think it. For that divinity excels us, as
God excels men, as the immortal excels a mortal, as the eternal excels the
temporal. May He inspire and endow us, and out of that fountain of life deign to
bedew and to drop somewhat on our thirst. that we may not be parched in this
wilderness! Let us say to Him, Lord, to whom we have learnt to say Father. We make
bold to say this, because Himself willed it; if only we so live that He may not
say to us, "If I am a Father, where is mine honor? if I am Lord, where is my
fear?" Let us then say to Him, "Our Father." To whom do we say, "Our Father"? To
the Father of Christ. He, then, who says "Our Father" to the Father of Christ,
says to Christ, what else but "Our Brother"? Not, however, as He is the Father
of Christ is He in like manner our Father; for Christ never so con joined us as
to make no distinction between Him and us. For He is the Son equal to the
Father, the eternal Son with the Father, and co-eternal with the Father; but we
became sons through the Son, adopted through the Only-begotten. Hence was it never
heard from the mouth of our Lord Jesus Christ, when speaking to His disciples,
that He said of the supreme God His Father, "Our Father;" but He said either
"My Father" or "Your Father." But He said not "Our Father;" so much so, that in
a certain place He used these two expressions: "I go to my God," saith He, "and
to your God." Why did He not say, "Our God"? Further, He said, "My Father, and
your Father;" He said not, "Our Father." He so joins as to distinguish,
distinguishes so as not to disjoin. He wills us to be one in Him, but the Father and
Himself one.
4. How much soever then we may understand, and how much soever we may see,
we shall not see as the Son seeth, even when we shall be made equal with the
angels. For we are something even when we do not see; but what are we when we do
not see, other than persons not seeing? And that we may see, we turn to Him
whom we may see, and there is formed in us a seeing which was not before,
although we were in being. For a man is when not seeing; and the same, when he doth
see, is called a man seeing. For him, then, to see is not the same thing as to be
a man; for if it were, he would not be man when not seeing. But since he is
man when not seeing, and seeks to see what he sees not, he is one who seeks, and
who turns to see; and when he has well turned and has seen, he becomes a man
seeing, who was before a man not seeing. Consequently, to see is to him a thing
that comes and goes; it comes to him when he turns to, and leaves him when he
turns away. Is it thus with the Son? Far be it from us to think so. It was never
so that He was Son, not seeing, and afterwards was made to see; but to see the
Father is to Him the same thing as to be Son. For we, by turning away to sin,
lose enlightenment; and by turning to God we receive enlightenment. For the
light by which we are enlightened is one thing; we who are enlightened, another
thing. But the light itself, by which we are enlightened, neither turns away from
itself, nor loses its lucidity, because as light it exists. The Father, then,
showeth a thing which He doeth to the Son, in such wise that the Son seeth all
things in the Father, and is all things in the Father. For by seeing He was
begotten; and by being begotten He seeth. Not, however, that at any time He was
not begotten, and afterwards was begotten; nor that at any time He saw not, and
afterwards saw. But in what consists His seeing, in the same consists His being,
in the same His being begotten, in the same His continuing, in the same His
unchanging, in the same His abiding without beginning and without end. Let us not
therefore take it in a carnal sense that the Father sitteth and doeth a work,
and showeth it to the Son; and the Son seeth the work that the Father doeth,
and doeth another work in another place, or out of other materials. For "all
things were made by Him, and without Him was nothing made." The Son is the Word of
the Father. The Father said nothing which He did not say in the Son. For by
speaking in the Son what He was about to do through the Son, He begat the Son
through whom He made all things.
5. "And greater works than these will He show Him, that ye may marvel."
Here again we are embarrassed. And who is there that may worthily investigate
this so great a secret? But now, in that He has deigned to speak to us, Himself
opens it. For He would not speak what He would not have us understand; and as He
has deigned to speak, without doubt He has excited attention: for does He
forsake any whom He has roused to give attentive hearing? We have said that it is
not in a temporal sense that the Son knoweth,--that the knowledge of the Son is
not one thing, and the Son Himself another; nor one thing His seeing, Himself
another; but that the seeing itself is the Son, and the knowledge as well as the
wisdom of the Father is the Son; and that that wisdom and seeing is eternal and
co-eternal with Him from whom it is; that it is not something that varies by
time, nor something produced that was not in being, nor something that vanishes
away which did exist. What is it, then, that time does in this case, that He
should say, "Greater works than these He will show Him"? "He will show," that is,
"He is about to show." Hath shown is a different thing from will show: hath
shown, we say of an act past; will show, of an act future. What shall we do here,
then, brethren? Behold, He whom we had declared to be co-eternal with the
Father, in whom nothing is varied by time, in whom is no moving through spaces
either of moments or of places, of whom we had declared that He abides ever with
the Father seeing, seeing the Father, and by seeing existing; He, I say, here
again mentioning times to us, saith, "He will show Him greater works than these."
Is He then about to show something to the Son, which the Son doth not as yet
know? What, then, do we make of it? How do we understand this? Behold, our Lord
Jesus Christ was above, is beneath. When was He above? When He said, "What
things soever the Father doeth, these same also the Son doeth in like manner."
Whence know we that He is now beneath? Hence: "Greater works than these He will show
Him." O Lord Jesus Christ, our Saviour, Word of God, by which all things were
made, what is the Father about to show Thee, that as yet Thou knowest not? What
of the Father is hid from Thee? What in the Father is hid from Thee, from whom
the Father is not hid? What greater works is He about to show Thee? Or greater
than what works are they which He is to show Thee? For when He said, "Greater
than these," we ought first to understand the works than which are they greater.
6. Let us again call to mind whence this discourse started. It was when
that man who was thirty-eight years in infirmity was healed, and Jesus commanded
him, now made whole, to take up his bed and to go to his house. For this cause,
indeed, the Jews with whom He was speaking were enraged. He spoke in words, as
to the meaning He was silent; hinted in some measure at the meaning to those
who understood, and hid the matter from them that were wroth. For this cause, I
say, the Jews, being enraged because the Lord did this on the Sabbath, gave
occasion to this discourse. Therefore let us not hear these things in such wise
as if we had forgotten what was said above, but let us look back to that
impotent man languishing for thirty-eight years suddenly made whole, while the Jews
marvelled and were wroth. They sought darkness from the Sabbath more than light
from the miracle. Speaking then to these, while they are indignant, He saith,
"Greater works than these will He show Him." "Greater than these:" than which?
What ye have seen, that a man, whose infirmity had lasted thirty-eight years, was
made whole greater than these the Father is about to show to the Son. What are
greater works? He goes on, saying, "For as the Father raiseth the dead, and
quickeneth them, so also the Son quickeneth whom He will." Clearly these are
greater. Very much greater is it that a dead man should rise, than that a sick man
should recover: these are greater. But when is the Father about to show these
to the Son? Does the Son not know them? And He who was speaking, did He not know
how to raise the dead? Had He yet to learn how to raise the dead to life--He,
I say, by whom all things were made? He who caused that we should live, when we
were not in being, had He yet to learn how we might be raised to life again?
What, then, do His words mean?
7. But now He condescends to us, and He who a little before was speaking
as God, now begins to speak as man. Notwithstanding, the same is man who is God,
for God was made man; but was made what He was not, without losing what He
was. The man therefore was added to the God, that He might be man who was God, but
not that He should now henceforth be man and not be God. Let us then hear Him
also as our brother whom we did hear as our Maker. Our Maker, because the Word
in the beginning; our Brother, because born of the Virgin Mary: Maker, before
Abraham, before Adam, before earth, before heaven, before all things corporeal
and spiritual; but Brother, of the seed of Abraham, of the tribe of Judah, of
the Israel-irish virgin. If therefore we know Him who speaks to us as both God
and man, let us understand the words of God and of man; for sometimes He speaks
to us such things as are applicable to the majesty, sometimes such as are
applicable to the humility. For the selfsame is high who was made low, that He might
make us high who are low. What, then, saith He? "The Father will show" to me
"greater than these, that ye may marvel." To us, therefore, He is about to show,
not to Him. And since it is to us that the Father is to show, for that reason
He said, "that ye may marvel." He has, in fact, explained what He meant in
saying, "The Father will show" to me. Why did He not say, The Father will show to
you; but, He will show to the Son? Because also we are members of the Son; and
like as what we the members learn, He Himself in a manner learns in His members.
How doth He learn in us? As He suffers in us. Whence may we prove that He
suffers in us? From that voice out of heaven, "Saul, Saul, why. persecutest thou
me?" (1) Is it not Himself that will sit as Judge in the end of the world, and,
setting the just on the right, and the wicked on the left, will say, "Come, ye
blessed of my Father, receive the kingdom; for I was hungry, and ye gave me to
eat"? And when they shall answer, "Lord, when saw we Thee hungry?" He will say
to them, "Since ye gave to one of the least of mine, ye gave to me." (2) Let us
at this time question Him, and let us say to Him, Lord; when wilt Thou be a
learner, seeing Thou teachest all things? Immediately, indeed, He makes answer to
us in our faith, When one of the least of mine doth learn, I learn.
8. Let us rejoice, then, and give thanks that we are made not only
Christians, but Christ. Do ye understand, brethren, and apprehend the grace of God
upon us? Marvel, be glad, we are made Christ. For if He is the head, we are the
members: the whole man is He and we. This is what the Apostle Paul saith: "That
we be no longer babes, tossed to and fro, and carried about with every wind of
doctrine." But above he had said, "Until we all come together into the unity of
faith, and to the knowledge of the Son of God, to the perfect man, to the
measure of the age of the fullness of Christ." (3) The fullness of Christ, then, is
head and members. Head and members, what is that? Christ and the Church. We
should indeed be arrogating this to ourselves proudly, if He did not Himself deign
to promise it, who saith by the same apostle, "But ye are the body of Christ,
and members." (4)
9. Whenever, then, the Father showeth to Christ's members, He showeth to
Christ. A certain great but yet real miracle happens. There is a showing to
Christ of what Christ knew, and it is shown to Christ through Christ. A marvelous
and great thing it is, but the Scripture so saith. Shall we contradict the
divine declarations? Shall we not rather understand them, and of His own gift render
thanks to Him who freely bestowed it on us? What is this that I said, "is
shown to Christ through Christ"? Is shown to the members through the head. Lo, look
at this in thyself. Suppose that with thine eyes shut thou wouldest take up
something, thy hand knows not whither to go; and yet thy hand is at any rate thy
member, for it is not separated from thy body. Open thine eyes, now the hand
sees whither it may go; while the head showed, the member followed. If, then,
there could be found in thyself something such, that thy body showed to thy body,
and that through thy body something was shown to thy body, then do not marvel
that it is said there is shown to Christ through Christ. For the head shows that
the members may see, and the head teaches that the members may learn;
nevertheless one man, head and members. He willed not to separate Himself, but deigned
to attach Himself to us. Far was He from us, yea, very far. What so far apart
as the creature and the Creator? What so far apart as God and man? What so far
as justice and iniquity? What so far as eternity and mortality? Behold, so far
from us was the Word in the beginning, God with God, by whom all things were
made. How, then, was He made near, that He might be what we are, and we in Him?
"The Word was made flesh, and dwelt in (among) us." (1)
10. This, then, He is about to show us; this He showed to His disciples,
who saw Him in the flesh. What is this? "As the Father raiseth the dead, and
quickeneth them, so also the Son quickeneth whom He will." Is it that the Father
some, the Son others? Surely all things were made by Him. What do we say, my
brethren? Christ raised Lazarus; what dead man did the Father raise, that Christ
might see how to raise Lazarus? When Christ raised Lazarus, did not the Father
raise him? or was it the doing of the Son alone, without the Father? Read ye the
passage itself, and see that He invokes the Father that Lazarus may rise
again. (2) As a man, He calls on the Father; as God, He doeth with the Father.
Therefore also Lazarus, who rose again, was raised both by the Father and by the
Son, in the gift and grace of the Holy Spirit; and that wonderful work the
Trinity performed. Let us not, therefore, understand this, "As the Father raiseth
the dead, and quickeneth them, so also the Son quickeneth whom He will," in such
wise as to suppose that some are raised and quickened by the Father, others by
the Son; but that the Son raiseth and quickeneth the very same whom the Father
raiseth and quickeneth; because" all things were made by Him, and without Him
was nothing made." And to show that He has, though given by the Father, equal
power, therefore He saith, "So also the Son quickeneth whom He will," that He
might therein show His will; and lest any should say, "The Father raiseth the dead
by the Son, but the Father as being powerful, and as having power, the Son as
by another's power, as a servant does something, as an angel," He indicated His
power when He saith, "So also the Son quickeneth whom He will." It is not so
that the Father willeth other than the Son; but as the Father and the Son have
one substance, so also one will.
11. And who are these dead whom the Father and the Son quicken? Are they
the same of whom we have spoken--Lazarus, or that widow's son, (3) or the ruler
of the synagogue's daughter? (4) For we know that these were raised by Christ
the Lord. it is some other thing that He means to signify to us,--namely, the
resurrection of the dead, which we all look for; not that resurrection which
certain have had, that the rest might believe. For Lazarus rose to die again; we
shall rise again to live for ever. Is it the Father that effects such a
resurrection, or the Son? Nay verily, the Father in the Son. Consequently the Son, and
the Father in the Son. Whence do we prove that He speaks of this resurrection?
When He had said, "As the Father raiseth up the dead, and quickeneth them, so
also the Son quickeneth whom He will." Lest we should understand here that
resurrection which He performs for a miracle, not for eternal life, He proceeded,
saying, "For the Father judgeth not any man, but all judgment hath He given to the
Son." What is this? He was speaking of the resurrection of the dead, that "as
the Father raiseth the dead, and quickeneth them, so also the Son quickeneth
whom He will;" and immediately thereupon added as a reason, concerning the
judgment, saying, "for the Father judgeth not any man, but all judgment hath He given
to the Son." Why said He this, but to indicate that He had spoken of that
resurrection of the dead which will take place in the judgment?
12. "For," saith He, "the Father judgeth no man, but all judgment hath He
given to the Son." A little before we were thinking that the Father doeth
something which the Son doeth not, when He said," The Father loveth the Son, and
showeth Him all things that Himself doeth;" as though the Father were doing, and
the Son were seeing. In this way there was creeping in upon our mine a carnal
conception, as if the Father did what the Son did not; but that the Son was
looking on while the Father showed what He was doing. Then, as the Father was doing
what the Son did not, just now we see the Son doing what the Father doeth not.
How He turns us about, and keeps our mind busy! He leads us hither and thither,
will not allow us to remain in one place of the flesh, that by changing He may
exercise us, by exercising He may cleanse us, by cleansing He may render us
capable of receiving, and may fill us when made capable. What have these words to
do with us? What was He speaking? What is He speaking? A little before, He
said that the Father showeth to the Son whatever He doeth. I did see, as it were,
the Father doing. the Son waiting to see; presently again, I see the Son doing,
the Father idle: "For the Father judgeth not any man, but all judgment hath He
given to the Son." When, therefore, the Son is about to judge, will the Father
be idle, and not judge? What is this? What am I to understand? What dost Thou
say, O Lord? Thou art God the Word, I am a man. Dost Thou say that "the Father
judgeth not any man, but hath given all judgment to the Son"? I read in another
place that Thou sayest, "I judge not any man; there is one who seeketh and
judgeth." (1) Of whom sayest Thou, "There is one who seeketh and judgeth," unless
it be of the Father? He maketh inquisition for thy wrongs, and judgeth for
them. How is it to be understood here that "the Father judgeth not any man, but all
judgment hath He given to the Son"? Let us ask Peter; let us hear him speaking
in his epistle: "Christ suffered for us," saith he, "leaving us an example
that we should follow His steps; who did no sin, neither was guile found in His
mouth; who, when He was reviled, reviled not again; when He suffered wrong, He
threatened not, but committed Himself to Him that judgeth righteously." (2) How
is it true that "the Father judgeth not any man, but hath given all judgment to
the Son"? We are here in perplexity, and being perplexed let us exert
ourselves, that by exertion we may be purified. Let us endeavor as best we may, by His
own gift, to penetrate the deep secrets of these words. It may be that we are
acting rashly, in that we wish to discuss and to scrutinize the words of God. Yet
why were they spoken, but to be known? Why did they sound forth, but to be
heard? Why were they heard, but to be understood? Let Him greatly strengthen us,
then, and bestow somewhat on us so far as He may deem worthy; and if we do not
yet penetrate to the fountain, let us drink of the brook. Behold, John himself
has flowed forth to us like a brook, conveyed to us the word from on high. He
brought it low, and in a manner levelled it, that we may not dread the lofty One,
but may draw nigh to Him that is low.
13. By all means there is a sense, a true and strong sense, if somehow we
can grasp it, in which "the Father judgeth not any man, but hath given all
judgment to the Son." For this is said because none will appear to men in the
judgment but the Son. The Father will be hidden, the Son will be manifest. In what
will the Son be manifest? In the form in which He ascended. For in the form of
God He was hidden with the Father; in the form of a servant, manifest to men.
Not therefore "the Father judgeth any man, but all judgment hath He given to the
Son:" only the manifest judgment, in which manifest judgment the Son will
judge, since the same will appear to them that are to be judged. The Scripture shows
us more clearly that it is the Son that will appear. On the fortieth day after
His resurrection He ascended into heaven, while His disciples were looking on;
and they hear the angelic voice: "Men of Galilee," saith it, "why stand ye
gazing up into heaven? This same that is taken up from you into heaven, shall so
come in like manner as ye have seen Him going into heaven." (3) In what manner
did they see Him go? In the flesh, which they touched, which they handled. the
wounds even of which they proved by touching; in that body in which He went in
and out with them for forty days, manifesting Himself to them in truth, not in
falsity; not a phantom, or shadow, or ghost, but, as Himself said, not deceiving
them, "Handle and see, for a spirit hath not flesh and bones, as ye see me
have." (4) That body is now indeed worthy of a heavenly habitation, not being
subject to death, nor mutable by the lapse of ages. It is not as it had grown to
that age from infancy, so from the age of manhood declines to old age: He remains
as He ascended, to come to those to whom He willed His word to be preached
before He comes. Thus will He come in human form, and this form the wicked will
see; both they on the right shall see it, and they that are separated to the left
shall see it: as it is written, "They shall look on Him whom they pierced."
(1) If they shall look on Him whom they pierced, they shall look on that same
body which they struck through with the spear; for a spear does not pierce the
Word. This body, therefore, will the wicked be able to look on which they were
able to wound. God hidden in the body they will not see: after the judgment He
will be seen by those who will be on the right hand. This, then, is what He means
when He saith, "The Father judgeth not any man, but all judgment hath He given
to the Son,"--that the Son will come to judgment manifest, apparent to men in
human body; saying to those on the right, "Come, ye blessed of my Father,
receive the kingdom;" and to those on the left, "Go into everlasting fire, which is
prepared for the devil and his angels." (2)
14. Behold, that form of man will be seen by the godly and by the wicked,
by the just and the unjust, by the believers and unbelievers, by those that
rejoice and by those that mourn, by them that trusted and by them that are
confounded: lo, seen it will be. When that form shall have appeared in the judgment,
and the judgment shall have been finished, where it is said that the Father
judgeth not any, but hath given all judgment to the Son, for this reason, that the
Son will appear in the judgment in that form which He took from us. What shall
be after this? When shall be seen the form of God, which all the faithful are
thirsting to see? When shall be seen that Word which was in the beginning, God
with God, by which all things were made? When shall be seen that form of God, of
which the apostle saith, "Being in the form of God, He thought it not robbery
to be equal with God"? (3) For great is that form, in which, moreover, the
quality of the Father and Son is recognized; ineffable, incomprehensible, most of
all to little ones. When shall this form be seen? Behold, on the right are the
just, on the left are the unjust; all alike see the man, they see the Son of
man, they see Him who was pierced, Him who was crucified they see: they see Him
that was made low, Him who was born of the Virgin, the Lamb of the tribe of Judah
they see. But when will they see the Word, God with God? He will be the very
same even then, but the form of a servant will appear. The form of a servant
will be shown to servants: the form of God will be reserved for sons. Wherefore
let the servants be made sons: let them who are on the right hand go into the
eternal inheritance promised of old, which the martyrs, though not seeing,
believed, for the promise of which they poured out their blood without hesitation; let
them go thither and see there. When shall they go thither? Let the Lord
Himself say: "So those shall go into everlasting burning, but the righteous into life
eternal." (4)
15. Behold, He has named eternal life. Has He told us that we shall there
see and know the Father and Son? What if we shall live for ever, yet not see
that Father and Son? Hear, in another place, where He has named eternal life, and
expressed what eternal life is: "Be not afraid; I do not deceive thee; not
without cause have I promised to them that love me, saying, 'He that hath my
commandments, and keepeth them, he it is that loveth me; and he that loveth me,
shall be loved of my Father, and I will love him, and will show myself to him.'"
(5) Let us answer the Lord, and say, What great thing is this, O Lord our God?
What great thing is it? Wilt Thou show Thyself to us? What, then, didst Thou not
show Thyself to the Jews also? Did not they see Thee who crucified Thee? But
Thou wilt show Thyself in the judgment, when we shall stand at Thy right hand;
will not also they who will stand on Thy left see Thee? What is it that Thou wilt
show Thyself to us? Do we, indeed, not see Thee now when Thou art speaking? He
makes answer: I will show myself in the form of God; just now you see the form
of a servant. I will not deceive thee, O faithful man; believe that thou shall
see. Thou lovest, and yet thou dost not see: shall not love itself lead thee
to see? Love, persevere in loving; I will not disappoint thy love, saith He, I
who have purified thy heart. For why have I purified thy heart, but to the end
that God may be seen by thee? For "blessed are the pure in heart, for they shall
see God." (6) "But this," saith the servant, as if disputing with the Lord,
"Thou didst not express, when Thou didst say, 'The righteous shall go into life
eternal;' Thou didst not say, They shall go to see me in the form of God, and to
see the Father, with whom I am equal." Observe what He said elsewhere: "This
is life eternal, that they may know Thee the one true God,and Jesus Christ whom
Thou hast sent." (7)
16. And immediately, then, after the judgment mentioned, all which the
Father, not judging any man, hath given to the Son, what shall be? What follows?
"That all may honor the Son, even as they honor the Father." The Jews honor the
Father, despise the Son. For the Son was seen as a servant, the Father was
honored as God. But the Son will appear equal with the Father, that all may honor
the Son, even as they honor the Father. This we have, therefore, now in faith.
Let not the Jew say, "I honor the Father; what have I to do with the Son?" Let
him be answered, "He that honoreth not the Son, honoreth not the Father. Thou
liest every way; thou blasphemest the Son, and dost wrong to the Father. For the
Father sent the Son, and thou despisest Him whom the Father sent. How canst
thou honor the sender, who blasphemest the sent?"
17. Behold, says some one, the Son has been sent; and the Father is
greater, because He sent. Withdraw from the flesh; the old man suggests oldness in
time. Let the ancient, the perpetual, the eternal, to thee the new, call off thy
understanding from time to this. Is the Son less because He is said to have
been sent? I hear of a sending, not a separation. But yet, saith he, among men we
see that he who sends is greater than he who is sent. Be it so; but human
affairs deceive a man; divine things purge him. Do not regard things human, in which
the sender appears greater, the sent less; notwithstanding, things human
themselves bear testimony against thee. Just as, for example, if a man wishes to ask
a woman to wife, and, not being able to do this in person, sends a friend to
ask for him. And there are many cases in which the greater is chosen to be sent
by the less. Why, then, wouldst thou now raise a captious objection, because
the one has sent, the other is sent? The sun sends out a ray, but does not
separate it; the moon sends out her sheen, but does not separate it; a lamp sheds
light, but does not separate it: I see there a sending forth, not a separation.
For if thou seekest examples from human things, O heretical vanity, although, as
I have said, even human things in some instances refute thee, and convict of
error; yet consider how different it is in the case of things human, from which
you wish to deduce examples for things divine. A man that sends remains himself
behind, while only the man that is sent goes forward. Does the man who sends go
with him whom he sends? Yet the Father, who sent the Son, has not departed
from the Son. Hear the Lord Himself saying, "Behold, the hour is coming, when
every one shall depart to his own, and ye will leave me alone; but I am not alone,
because the Father is with me." (1) How has He, with whom He came, sent Him?
How has He, from whom He has not departed, sent Him? In another place He said,
"The Father abiding in me doeth the works." (2) Behold, the Father is in Him,
works in Him. The Father sending has not departed from the Son sent, because the
sent and the sender are one.
TRACTATE XXII
CHAPTER V. 24-30.
UPON the discourses delivered yesterday and the day before, follows the
Gospel lesson of to-day, which we must endeavor to expound in due course, not
indeed proportionably to its importance, but according to our ability: both
because you take in, not according to the bountifulness of the gushing fountain, but
according to your moderate capacity; and we too speak into your ears, not so
much as the fountain gives forth, but so much as we are able to take in we convey
into your minds,--the matter itself working more fruitfully in your hearts
than we in your ears. For a great matter is treated of, not by great masters, nay,
rather by very small; but He who, being great, for our sakes became small,
gives us hope and confidence. For if we were not encouraged by Him, and invited to
understand Him; if He abandoned us as contemptible, since we were not able to
partake His divinity if He did not partake our mortality and come to us to
speak His gospel to us; if He had not willed to partake with us what in us is
abject and most small,--then we might think that He who took on Himself our
smallness, had not been willing to bestow on us His own greatness. This I have said
test any should blame us as over-bold in handling these matters, or despair of
himself that he should be able to understand, by God's gift, what the Son of God
has deigned to speak to him Therefore what He has deigned to speak to us, we
ought to believe that He meant us to understand. But if we do not understand He,
being asked, gives understanding, who gave His Word unasked.
2. Lo, what these secrets of His words are, consider well. "Verily,
verily, I say unto you, Whoso heareth my word, and believeth on Him that sent me,
hath eternal life." Surely we are all striving after eternal life: and He saith,
"Whoso heareth my word, and believeth Him that sent me, hath eternal life."
Then, would He have us hear His word, and yet would He not have us understand it?
Since, if in hearing and believing is eternal life, much more in understanding.
But the action of piety is faith, the fruit of faith understanding, that we may
come to eternal life, when there will be no reading of Gospel to us; but after
all pages of reading and the voice of reader and preacher have been removed
out of the way, He, who has at this time dispensed to us the gospel, will Himself
appear to all that are His, now present with Him with purged heart and in an
immortal body never more to die, cleansing and enlightening them, now living and
seeing how that "in the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God."
Therefore let us consider at this time who we are, and ponder whom we hear.
Christ is God, and He is speaking with men. He would have them to apprehend Him, let
Him make them capable; He would have them see Him, let Him open their eyes. It
is not, however, without cause that He speaks to us, but because that is true
which He promises to us.
3. "Whoso heareth my words," saith He, "and believeth Him that sent me,
hath eternal life, and shall not come into judgment, but is passed from death
unto life." Where, when do we come from death to life, that we come not into
judgment? In this life there is a passing from death to life; in this life, which is
not yet life, there is a passing hence from death unto life. What is that
passing? "Whoso heareth my words," He said, "and believeth Him that sent me."
Observing these, thou believest and passest. And does a man pass while standing?
Evidently; for in body he stands in mind he passes. Where was he, whence he should
pass, and whither does he pass? He passes from death to life. Look at a man
standing, in whom all that is here said may happen. He stands, he hears, perhaps
he did not believe, by hearing he believes: a little before he did not believe,
just now he believes; he has made a passage, as it were, from the region of
unbelief to the region of faith, by motion of the heart, not of the body, by a
motion into the better; because they who again abandon faith move into the worse.
Behold, in this life, which, just as I have said, is not yet life, there is a
passing from death to life, so that there may not be a coming into judgment.
But why did I say that it is not yet life? If this were life, the Lord would not
have said to a certain man, "If thou wilt come into life, keep the
commandments."(1) For He saith not to him, If thou wilt come into eternal life; He did not
add eternal, but said only life. Therefore this life is not to be named life,
because it is not a true life. What is true life, but that which is eternal
life? Hear the apostle speaking to Timothy, when he says, "Charge them that are
rich in this world, not to be high-minded, nor to trust in uncertain riches, but
in the living God, who giveth us all things richly to enjoy; let them do good,
be rich in good works, ready to distribute, to communicate." Why does he say
this? Hear what follows: "Let them lay up in store for themselves a good
foundation for the time to come, that they may lay hold of the true life."(2) If they
ought to lay up for themselves a good foundation for the time to come, in order
to lay hold of the true life, surely this in which they were is a false life.
For why shouldest thou desire to lay hold of the true, if thou hast the true
already? Is the true to be laid hold of? There must then be a departing from the
false. And by what way must be the departing? Whither? Hear, believe; and thou
makest the passage from death into life, and comest not into judgment.
4. What is this, "and thou comest not into judgment"? And who will be
better than the Apostle Paul, who saith, "We must all appear before the
judgment-seat of Christ, that every one may there receive what he has done in the body,
whether it he good or evil"?(3) Paul saith, "We must all appear before the
judgment-seat of Christ;" and darest thou promise to thyself that thou shall not come
into judgment? Be it far from me, sayest thou, that I should dare promise this
to myself. But I believe Him that doth promise. The Saviour speaks, the Truth
promises, Himself said to me, "Whoso heareth my words, and believeth Him that
sent me, hath eternal life, and makes a passage from death unto life, and shall
not come into judgment." I then have heard the words of my Lord, and I have
believed; so now, when I was an unbeliever, I became a believer even as He warned
me, I passed from death to life, I come not into judgment; not by my
presumption, but by His promise. Does Paul, however, speak contrary to Christ, the
servant against his Lord, the disciple against his Master, the man against God; so
that, when the Lord saith, "Whoso heareth and believeth, passeth from death to
life," the apostle should say, "We must all appear before the judgment-seat of
Christ"? Otherwise, if he comes not into judgment who appears before the
judgment-seat, I know not how to understand it.
5. The Lord our God then reveals it, and by His Scriptures puts us in mind
how it may be understood when judgment is spoken of. I exhort you, therefore,
to give attention. Sometimes judgment means punishment, sometimes it means
discrimination. According to that mode of speech in which judgment means
discrimination, "we must all appear before the judgment-seat of Christ that" a man "may
there receive what things he has done in the body, whether it be good or ill."
For this same is a discrimination, to distribute good things to the good, evil
things to the evil. For if judgment were always to be taken in a bad sense, the
psalm would not say, "Judge me, O God." Perhaps some one is surprised when he
hears one say, "Judge me, O God." For man is wont to say, "Forgive me, O God;"
"Spare me, O God." Who is it that says, "Judge me, O God"? Sometimes in the
psalm this very verse even is placed in the pause,(1) to be given out by the reader
and responded by the people. Does it not perhaps strike some man's heart so
much that he is afraid to sing and to say to God, "Judge me, O God"? And yet the
people sing it with confidence, and do not imagine that they wish an evil thing
in that which they have learned from the divine word; even if they do not well
understand it, they believe that what they sing is something good. And yet
even the psalm itself has not left a man without an insight into the meaning of
it. For, going on, it shows in the words that follow what kind of judgment it
spoke of; that it is not one of condemnation, but of discrimination. For saith it,
"Judge me, O God." What means "Judge me, O God, and discern my cause from an
unholy nation"? According to this judgment of discerning, then, "we must all
appear before the judgment-seat of Christ." But again, according to the judgment
of condemnation, "Whoso heareth my words," saith He, "and believeth Him that
sent me, hath eternal life, and shall not come into judgment, but makes a passage
from death to life." What is "shall not come into judgment?" Shall not come
into condemnation. Let us prove from the Scriptures that judgment is put where
punishment is understood; although also in this very passage, a little further on,
you will hear the same term judgment put for nothing else than for
condemnation and punishment. Yet the apostle says in a certain place, writing to those who
abused the body, what the faithful among you know; and because they abused it,
they were chastised by the scourge of the Lord. For he says to them, "Many
among you are weak and sickly, and deeply sleep." For many therefore even died.
And he went on: "For if we judged ourselves, we should not be judged by the
Lord;" that is, if we reproved ourselves, we should not be reproved by the Lord.
"But when we are judged, we are chastened by the Lord, that we may not be
condemned with the world."(2) There are therefore those who are judged here according
to punishment, that they may be spared there; there are those who are spared
here, that they may be the more abundantly tormented there; and there are those to
whom the very punishments are meted out without the scourge of punishment, if
they be not corrected by the scourge of God; that, since here they have
despised the Father that scourgeth, they may there feel the Judge that punisheth.
Therefore there is a judgment into which God, that is, the Son of God, will in the
end send the devil and his angels, and all the unbelieving and ungodly with
him. To this judgment, he who, now believing, passes from death unto life, shall
not come.
6. For, lest thou shouldest think that by believing thou art not to die
according to the flesh, or lest, understanding it carnally, thou shouldest say to
thyself, "My Lord has said to me, Whoso heareth my words, and believeth Him
that sent me, is passed from death to life: I then have believed, I am not to
die;" be assured that thou shall pay that penalty, death, which thou owest by the
punishment of Adam. For he, in whom we all then were, received this sentence,
"Thou shall surely die;"(3) nor can the divine sentence be made void. But after
thou hast paid the death of the old man, thou shall be received into the
eternal life of the new man, and shall pass from death to life. Meanwhile, make the
transition of life now. What is thy life? Faith: "The just doth live by
faith."(1) The unbelievers, what of them? They are dead. Among such dead was he, in the
body, of whom the Lord says, "Let the dead bury their dead."(2) So, then, even
in this life there are dead, and there are living; all live in a sense. Who
are dead? They who have not believed. Who are living? They who have believed.
What is said to the dead by the apostle? "Arise, thou that sleepest." But, quoth
an objector, he said sleep, not death. Hear what follows: "Arise, thou that
sleepest, and come forth from the dead." And as if the sleeper said, Whither shall
I go? "And Christ shall give thee light."(3) Christ having enlightened thee,
now believing, immediately thou makest a passage from death to life: abide in
that to which thou hast passed, and thou shall not come into judgment.
7. Himself explains that already, and goes on, "Verily, verily, I say unto
you." In case, because He said "is passed from death to life," we should
understand this of the future resurrection, and willing to show that he who believes
is passed, and that to pass from death to life is to pass from unbelief to
faith, from injustice to justice, from pride to humility, from hatred to charity,
He saith now, "Verily, verily, I say unto you, The hour cometh, and now is."
What more evident? "And now is, when the dead shall hear the voice of the Son of
God, and they that hear shall live." We have already spoken of these dead. What
think we, my brethren? Are there no dead in this crowd that hear me? They who
believe and act according to the true faith do live, and are not dead. But they
who either do not believe, or believe as the devils believe, trembling,(4) and
living wickedly, confessing the Son of God, and without charity, must rather
be esteemed dead. This hour, however, is still passing. For the hour of which
the Lord spoke will not be an hour of the twelve hours of a day. From the time
when He spoke even to the present, and even to the end of the world, the same one
hour is passing; of which hour John saith in his epistle, "Little children, it
is the last hour."(5) Therefore, is now. Whoso is alive, let him live; whoso
was dead, let him live; let him hear the voice of the Son of God, who lay dead;
let him arise and live. The Lord cried out at the sepulchre of Lazarus, and he
that was four days dead arose. He who stank in the grave came forth into the
air. He was buried, a stone was laid over him: the voice of the Saviour burst
asunder the hardness of the stone; and thy heart is so hard, that Divine Voice
does not yet break it! Rise in thy heart; go forth from thy tomb. For thou wast
lying dead in thy heart as in a tomb, and pressed down by the weight of evil
habit as by a stone. Rise, and go forth. What is Rise, and go forth? Believe and
confess. For he that has believed has risen; he that confesses is gone forth.
Why said we that he who confesses is gone forth? Because he was hid before
confessing; but when he does confess, he goes forth from darkness to light. And after
he has confessed, what is said to the servants? What was said beside the
corpse of Lazarus? "Loose him, and let him go." How? As it was said to His servants
the apostles, "What things ye shall loose on earth, shall be loosed in
heaven."(6)
8. "The hour cometh, and now is, when the dead shall hear the voice of the
Son of God; and they that hear shall live." From what source shall they live?
From life. From what life? From Christ, How do we prove that the source is
Christ the life? "I am," saith He, "the way, the truth, and the life."(7) Dost thou
wish to walk? "I am the way." Dost thou wish not to be deceived? "I am the
truth" Wouldest thou not die? "I am the life." This saith thy Saviour to thee:
There is not whither thou mayest go but to me; there is not whereby thou mayest go
but by me. Therefore this hour is going on now, this act is clearly taking
place, and does not at all cease. Men who were dead, rise; they pass over to life;
at the voice of the Son of God they live; from Him they live, while
persevering in the faith of Him. For the Son hath life, whence He has it that they that
believe shall live.
9. And how hath He? Even as the Father hath. Hear Himself saying, "For as
the Father hath life in Himself, so also hath He given to the Son to have life
in Himself." Brethren, I shall speak as I shall be able. For these are those
words that perplex the puny understanding. Why has He added, "in Himself"? It
would suffice to say, "For as the Father hath life, so also hath He given to the
Son to have life." He added, "in Himself:" for the Father "hath life in
Himself," and the Son hath life in Himself. He meant us to understand something in
that which He saith, "in Himself." And here a secret matter is shut up in this
word; let there be knocking, that there may be an opening. O Lord, what is this
that Thou hast said? Wherefore hast Thou added, "in Himself"? For did not Paul
the apostle, whom Thou madest to live, have life? He had, said He. As for men
that were dead to be made alive, and at Thy word to pass unto life by believing;
when they shall have passed, will they not have life in Thee ? They shall have
life; for I said also a little before, "Whoso heareth my words, and believeth
Him that sent me, hath eternal life." Therefore those that believe in Thee have
life; and Thou hast not said, "in themselves," But when Thou speakest of the
Father, "even as the Father hath life in Himself;" again, when Thou speakest of
Thyself, Thou saidst, "So also hath He given to the Son to have life in
Himself." Even as He hath, so gave He to have. Where hath He? "In Himself." Where gave
He to have? "In Himself." Where hath Paul life? Not in himself, but in Christ.
Where hast thou, believer? Not in thyself, but in Christ. Let us see whether
the apostle says this: "Now I live; but not I, but Christ liveth in me."(1) Our
life, as ours, that is, of our own personal will,will be only evil, sinful,
unrighteous; but the life in us that is good is from God, not from ourselves; it is
given to us by God, not by ourselves. But Christ hath life in Himself, as the
Father hath, because He is the Word of God. With Him, it is not the case that
He liveth now ill, now well; but as for man, he liveth now ill, now well. He who
was living ill, was in his own life; he who is living well, is passed to the
life of Christ. Thou art made a partaker of life; thou wast not that which thou
hast received, but wast one who received: but it is not so with the Son of God
as if at first He was without life, and then received life. For if thus He
received life, He would not have it in Himself. For, indeed, what is in Himself?
That He should Himself be the very life.
10. I may perhaps declare that matter more plainly still. One lights a
candle: that candle, for example, so far as regards the little flame which shines
there--that fire has light in itself; but thine eyes, which lay idle and saw
nothing, in the absence of the candle, now have light also, but not in
themselves. Further, if they turn away from the candle, they are made dark; if they turn
to it, they are illumined. But certainly that fire shines so long as it exists:
if thou wouldst take the light from it, thou dost also at the same time
extinguish it; for without the light it cannot remain. But Christ is light
inextinguishable and co-eternal with the Father, always bright, always shining, always
burning: for if He were not burning, would it be said in the psalm, "Nor is there
any that can hide himself from his heat?"(2) But thou wast cold in thy sin;
thou turnest that thou mayest become warm; if thou wilt turn away, thou wilt
become cold. In thy sin thou wast. dark; thou turnest in order to be enlightened;
if thou turnest away, thou wilt become dark. Therefore, because in thyself thou
wast darkness, when thou shalt be enlightened, thou wilt be light, though in
the light. For saith the apostle, "Ye were once darkness, but now light in the
Lord."(3) When he had said, "but now light," he added, "in the Lord." Therefore
in thyself darkness, "light in the Lord." In what way "light"? Because by
participation of that light thou art light. But if thou wilt depart from the light by
which thou art enlightened, thou returnest to thy darkness. Not so Christ, not
so the Word of God. But how not? "As the Father hath life in Himself, so hath
He given also to the Son to have life in Himself;" so that He lives, not by
participation, but unchangeably, and is altogether Himself life. "So hath He given
also to the Son to have life." Even as He hath, so has He given. What is the
difference? For the one gave, the other received. Was He already in being when
He received? Are we to understand that Christ was at any time in being without
light, when Himself is the wisdom of the Father, of which it is said, "It is
the brightness of the eternal light?"(4) Therefore what is said, "gave to the
Son," is such as if it were said, "begat the Son;" for by begetting He gave. As He
gave Him to be, so He gave Him to be life, so also gave Him to be life in
Himself. What is that, to be life in Himself? Not to need life from elsewhere, but
to be Himself the plenitude of life, out of which others believing should have
life while they lived. "Hath given Him," then. "to have life in Himself." Hath
given as to whom? As to His own Word, as to Him who "in the beginning was the
Word, and the Word was with God."
11. Afterwards, because He was made man, what gave He to Him? "And hath
given Him authority to execute judgment, because He is the Son of man." In that
He is the Son of God, "As the Father hath life in Himself, so also hath He given
to the Son to have life in Himself;" in that He is the Son of man, "He hath
given Him authority of executing judgment." This is what I explained to you
yesterday, my beloved, that in the judgment man will be seen, but God will not be
seen; but after the judgment, God will be seen by those who have prevailed in the
judgment, but by the wicked He will not be seen. Since, therefore, the man
will be seen in the judgment in that form in which He will so come as He ascended,
for that reason He had said above, "The Father judgeth not any man, but hath
given all judgment to the Son." He repeats the same thing also in this place,
when He says, "And hath given Him authority of executing judgment, because He is
the Son of man." As if thou wert to say, "hath given Him authority of executing
judgment." In what way? When He had not that authority of executing judgment?
Since "in the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word
was God;" since "all things were made by Him," did He not already have authority
of executing judgment? Yes, but according to this, I say, "He gave Him
authority of executing judgment, because He is the Son of man:" according to this, He
received authority of judging "because He is the Son of man." For in that He is
the Son of God, He always had this authority. He that was crucified, received;
He who was in death, is in life: the Word of God never was in death, but is
always in life.
12. Now, therefore, as to a resurrection, perhaps some one of us was
saying: Behold, we have risen; be who hears Christ, and believes, and is passed from
death to life, also will not come into judgment. The hour cometh, and now is,
that whoso heareth the voice of the Son of God shall live: he was dead, he has
heard; behold, he doth rise. What is this that is said, that there is to be a
resurrection afterwards? Spare thyself, do not hasten the sentence, lest thou
hurry after it. There is, indeed, this resurrection which comes to pass now;
unbelievers were dead, the unrighteous were dead; the righteous live, they pass
from the death of unbelief to the life of faith. But do not thence believe that
there will not be a resurrection afterwards of the body; believe that there will
be a resurrection of the body also. For hear what follows after the declaration
of this resurrection which is by faith, lest any should think this to be the
only resurrection, or fall into that desperation and error of men who perverted
the thoughts of others, "saying that the resurrection is past already," of whom
the apostle saith, "and they overthrow the faith of some."(1) For I believe
that they were saying to them such words as these: "Behold, when the Lord saith,
And he that believeth in me is passed from death unto life;" the resurrection
has already taken place in believing men, who were before unbelievers: how can a
second resurrection be meant?" Thanks to our Lord God, He supports the
wavering, directs the perplexed, confirms the doubting. Hear what follows, now that
thou hast not whereof to make to thyself the darkness of death. If thou hast
believed, believe the whole. What whole, sayest thou, am I to believe? Hear what He
saith: "Marvel not at this," namely, that He gave to the Son authority of
making judgment. I say, in the end of the world, saith He. How in the end? "Do not
marvel at this; for the hour cometh." Here He has not said, "and now is." In
reference to that resurrection of faith, what did He say? "The hour cometh, and
now is." In reference to that resurrection which He intimates there will be of
dead bodies, He said, "The hour cometh;" He has not said, "and now is," because
it is to come in the end of the world.
13. And whence, sayest thou, dost thou prove to me that He spoke about the
resurrection itself? If thou hear patiently, thou wilt presently prove it to
thyself. Let us go on then: "Marvel not at this; for the hour cometh, in which
all that are in the graves." What more evident than this resurrection? A while
ago, He had not said, "they that are in the graves," but, "The dead shall hear
the voice of the Son of God; and they that hear shall live." He has not said,
some shall live, others shall be damned; because all who believe shall live. But
what does He say concerning the graves? "All that are in the graves shall hear
His voice, and shall come forth." He said not, "shall hear and live." For if
they have lived wickedly, and lay in the graves, they shall rise to death, not to
life. Let us see, then, who shall come forth. Although, a little before, the
dead by hearing and believing did live, there was no distinction there made: it
was not said, The dead shall hear the voice of the Son of God; and when they
shall have heard, some shall live, and some shall be damned; but, "all that hear
shall live:" because they that believe shall live, they that have charity shall
live, and none of them shall die. But concerning the graves, "They shall hear
His voice, and come forth: they that have done well, to the resurrection of
life; they that have done ill, to the resurrection of judgment." This is the
judgment, that punishment of which He had said a while before, "Whoso believeth in
me is passed from death to life," and shall not come into judgment.
14. "I cannot of myself do anything; as I hear I judge, and my judgment is
just." If as Thou hearest Thou judgest, of whom dost Thou hear? If of the
Father, yet surely "the Father judgeth not any man, but hath given all judgment to
the Son.' When dost Thou, being in a manner the Father's herald, declare what
Thou hearest? I speak what I hear, because what the Father is, that I am: for,
indeed, speaking is my function; because I am the Father's Word. For this Christ
says to thee. Thereupon, of thine. What is "As I hear I judge," but "As I am"?
For in what manner does Christ hear? Let us inquire, brethren, I beg of you.
Does Christ hear of the Father? How doth the Father speak to Him? Undoubtedly,
if He speaks to Him, He uses words to Him; for every one who says something to
any one, says it by a word. How doth the Father speak to the Son, seeing that
the Son is the Father's Word? Whatever the Father says to us, He says it by His
Word: the Word of the Father is the Son; by what other word, then, doth He speak
to the Word Himself? God is one, has one Word, contains all things in one
Word. What does that mean, then, "As I hear, I judge?" Just as I am of the Father,
so I judge. Therefore "my judgment is just." If Thou doest nothing of Thyself,
O Lord Jesus, as carnal men think; if Thou doest nothing of Thyself, how didst
Thou say a while before, "So also the Son quickeneth whom He will"? Just now
Thou sayest, Of myself I do nothing. But what does the Son declare, but that He
is of the Father? He that is of the Father is not of Himself. If the Son were of
Himself, He would not be the Son: He is of the Father. That the Father is, is
not of the Son; that the Son is, is of the Father. Equal to the Father; but yet
the Son of the Father, not the Father of the Son.
15. "Because I seek not my own will, but the will of Him that sent me."
The Only Son saith, "I seek not my own will," and yet men desire to do their own
will! To such a degree does He who is equal to the Father humble Himself; and
to such a degree does He extol Himself, who lies in the lowest depth, and cannot
rise except a hand is reached to Him! Let us then do the will of the Father,
the will of the Son, the will of the Holy Ghost; because of this Trinity there
is one will, one power, one majesty. Yet for that reason saith the Son, "I came
not to do mine own will, but the will of Him that sent me;" because Christ is
not of Himself, but of the Father. But what He had that He might appear as a
man, He assumed of the creature which He himself formed.
TRACTATE XXIII.
CHAPTER V. 19-40.
1. In a certain place in the Gospel, the Lord says that the prudent hearer
of His word ought to be like a man who, wishing to build a house, digs deeply
until he comes to the foundation of stability on the rock, and there
establishes in security what he builds against the violence of the flood; so that, when
the flood comes, it may be rather beaten back by the strength of the building.
than bring ruin on that house by the force of its pressure.(1) Let us regard the
Scripture of God to be, as it were, the field where we wish to build
something. Let us not be slothful, nor be content with the surface; let us dig deeply
until we come to the rock: "And that rock was Christ."(2)
2. The passage read to-day has spoken to us of the witness of the Lord,
that He does not hold the witness of men necessary, but has a greater witness
than men; and He has told us what this witness is: "The works," saith He, "which I
do bear witness of me." Then He added, "And the Father that sent me beareth
witness of me." The very works also which He doeth, He says that He has received
from the Father. The works, therefore, bear witness, the Father bears witness.
Has John borne no witness? He did clearly bear witness, but as a lamp; not to
satisfy friends, but to confound enemies: for it had been predicted long before
by the person of the Father, "I have prepared a lamp for mine Anointed: I will
clothe His enemies with confusion; but upon Him shall flourish my
sanctification."(1) Be it that thou wert left in the dark in the night-time, thou didst
direct thy attention to the lamp, thou didst admire the lamp, and didst exult at
its light. But that lamp says that there is a sun, in which thou oughtest to
exult; and though it burns in the night, it bids thee to be looking out for the
day. Therefore it is not the case that there was no need of that man's testimony.
For wherefore was he sent, if there was no need of him? But, on the contrary,
lest man should stay at the lamp, and think the light of the lamp to be
sufficient for him, therefore the Lord neither says that this lamp had been
superfluous, nor yet doth He say that thou oughtest to stay at the lamp. The Scripture of
God utters another testimony there undoubtedly God hath borne witness to His
Son, and in that Scripture the Jews had placed their hope,--namely, in the law of
God, given by Moses His servant. "Search the Scripture," saith He, "in which
ye think ye have eternal life: the same bears witness of me; and ye will not
come to me that ye may have life." Why do ye think that in the Scripture ye have
eternal life? Ask itself to whom does it bear witness, and understand what is
eternal life. And because for the sake of Moses they were willing to reject
Christ, as an adversary to the ordinances and precepts of Moses, He convicts those
same men as by another lamp.
3. For, indeed, all men are lamps, since they can be both lighted and
extinguished. Moreover, when the lamps are wise, they shine and glow with the
Spirit; yet also, if they did burn and are put out, they even stink. The servants of
God remain good lamps by the oil of His mercy, not by their own strength. The
free grace of God, truly, is the oil of the lamps. "For I have labored more
than they all," saith a certain lamp; and lest he should seem to burn by his own
strength, he added, "But not I, but the grace of God that was with me."(2) All
prophecy, therefore, before the coming of the Lord, is a lamp. Of this lamp the
Apostle Peter says: "We have a more sure word of prophecy, to which ye do well
giving heed, as unto a lamp shining in a dark place, until the day dawn, and
the day-star arise in your hearts."(3) Accordingly the prophets are lamps, and
all prophecy one great lamp. What of the apostles? Are not they, too, lamps? They
are, clearly. He alone is not a lamp. For He is not lighted and put out;
because "even as the Father hath life in Himself, so hath He given to the Son to
have life in Himself." The apostles also, I say, are lamps; and they give thanks
because they were both lighted by the light of truth, and are burning with the
spirit of charity, and supplied with the oil of God's grace. If they were not
lamps, the Lord would not say to them, "Ye are the light of the world." For after
He said, "Ye are the light of the world," He shows that they should not think
themselves such a light as that of which it is said, "That was the true light,
that enlighteneth every man coming into this world." But this was said of the
Lord at that time when He was distinguished from John (the Baptist). Of John the
Baptist, indeed, it had been said, "He was not the light, but that he might
bear witness of the light."(4) And lest thou shouldst say, How was he not the
light, of whom Christ says that "he was a lamp"?--I answer, In comparison of the
other light, he was not light. For "that was the true light that enlighteneth
every man coming into this world." Accordingly, when He said also to the
disciples, "Ye are the light of the world," lest they should imagine that anything was
attributed to them which was to be understood of Christ alone, and thus the
lamps should be extinguished by the wind of pride, when He had said, "Ye are the
light of the world," He immediately subjoined, "A city that is set on a hill
cannot be hid; neither do men light a candle and put it under a bushel, but an a
candlestick, that it may shine on all that are in the house." But what if He
did not call the apostles the candle, but the lighters of the candle, which they
were to put on a candlestick? Hear that He called themselves the candle. "So
let your light shine," saith He, "before men, that they, seeing your good works,
may glorify," not you, but "your Father who is in heaven."(5)
4. Wherefore both Moses bore witness to Christ, and John bore witness to
Christ, and all the other prophets and apostles bore witness to Christ. Before
all these testimonies He places the testimony of His own works. Because through
those men too, it was God and none other that bore witness to His Son. But yet
in another way God bears testimony to His Son. God reveals His Son through the
Son Himself, He reveals Himself through the Son. To Him, if a man shall have
been able to reach, he shall need no lamps; and by truly digging deep, he will
carry down his building to the rock.
5. The lesson of to-day, brethren, is easy; but on account of what was due
yesterday (for I know what I have delayed, not withdrawn, and the Lord has
deigned to allow me even to-day to speak to you), recall to mind what you ought to
demand, if perhaps, while preserving piety and wholesome humility, we may in
some measure stretch out ourselves, not against God, but towards Him, and lift
up our soul, pouring it out above us, like the Psalmist, to whom it was said,
"Where is thy God? "On these things," saith he, "I meditated, and poured out my
soul above me."(1) Therefore let us lift up our soul to God, not against God;
for this also is said, "To Thee, O Lord, I have lifted up my soul."(2) And let us
lift it up with His own assistance, for it is heavy. And from what cause is it
heavy? Because the body which is corrupt weighs down the soul, and the earthly
tabernacle depresses the mind while meditating on many things.(3) Let us try,
then, whether we may not be able to withdraw our mind from many things in order
to concentrate it on one, and to raise it to one (which indeed we cannot do,
as I have said, unless He assist us who wills our souls to be raised to
Himself). And so we may apprehend in some measure how the Word of God, the only
begotten of the Father, the co-eternal and equal with the Father, doeth not anything
except what He seeth the Father doing, whilst yet the Father Himself doeth not
anything but through the Son, who seeth Him doing. Since the Lord Jesus, as it
seems to me,--willing here to make known some great matter to those that give
attention to it, and to pour into those that are capable of receiving, and to
rouse, on the other hand, the incapable to assiduity, in order that, while not yet
understanding, they may by right living be made capable,--has intimated to us
that the human soul and rational mind which is in man, not in the beast, is
invigorated, enlightened, and made happy in no other way than by the very
substance of God: that the soul itself gets somewhat by and of the body, and yet holds
the body subject to it, while the senses of the body can be soothed and
delighted by things bodily, and that because of this kind of fellowship of soul and
body in this life, and in this mutual embrace of theirs, the soul is delighted
when the bodily senses are soothed, and saddened when they are offended; while
yet the happiness by which the soul itself is made happy cannot be realized but
by a participation of that ever-living, unchangeable life, of that eternal
substance, which is God: that as the soul, which is inferior to God, causes the
body, which is inferior to itself, to live, so that alone which is superior to
the soul can cause that same soul to live happily. For the soul is higher than
the body, and higher than the soul is God. It bestows something on its inferior,
while there is something bestowed on itself by the superior. Let it serve its
Lord, that it may not be trampled on by its own servant. This, brethren, is the
Christian religion, which is preached through the whole world, while its
enemies are dismayed; who, where they are conquered, murmur, and fiercely rage
against it where they prevail. This is the Christian religion, that one God be
worshipped, not many gods, because only one God can make the soul happy. It is made
happy by participation of God. Not by participation of a holy soul does the
feeble soul become happy, nor by participation of an angel does the holy soul
become happy; but if the feeble soul seeks to be happy, let it seek that by which
the holy soul is made happy. For thou art made happy, not of an angel, but the
angel as well as thou of the same source.
6. These things being premised and firmly established,--that the rational
soul is made happy only by God, that the body is enlivened only by the soul,
and that the soul is a something intermediate between God and the body,--direct
your thoughts to, and recollect with me, not the passage read to-day, of which
we have spoken enough, but that of yesterday, which we have been turning over
and handling these three days, and, to the best of our abilities, digging into
until we should come to the rock. The Word Christ, Christ the Word of God with
God, Christ the Word and the Word God, Christ and God and Word one God. To this
press on; O soul, despising, or even transcending all things else, to this press
on. There is nothing more powerful than this creature, which is called the
rational mind, nothing more sublime: whatever is above this, is but the Creator.
But I was saying that Christ is the Word, and Christ is the Word of God, and
Christ the Word is God; but Christ is not only the Word, since "the Word became
flesh, and dwelt among us:"(4) therefore Christ is both Word and flesh. For when
"He was in the form of God, He thought it not robbery to be equal with God."
And what of us in our low estate, who, feeble and crawling on the ground, Were
not able to reach unto God, were we to be abandoned? God forbid. "He emptied
Himself, taking upon Him the form of a servant;"(5) not, therefore, by losing the
form of God. He became man who was God, by receiving what He was not, not by
losing what He was: so God became man. There thou hast something for thy weakness,
something for thy perfection. Let Christ raise thee by that which is man, lead
thee by That which is God-man, and guide thee through to that which is God.
And the whole preaching and dispensation by Christ is this, brethren, and there
is not another, that souls may be raised again, and that bodies also may be
raised again. For each of the two was dead; the body by weakness, the soul by
iniquity. Because each was dead, each may rise again What each? Soul and body. By
what, then, can the soul rise again but by Christ God? By what the body, but by
the man Christ? For there was also in Christ a human soul, a whole soul; not
merely the irrational part of the soul, but also the rational, which is called
mind. For there have been certain heretics, and they have been driven out of the
Church, who fancied that the body of Christ did not have in it a rational mind,
but, as it were, the animal life of a beast; since, without the rational mind,
life is only animal life. But because they were driven out, and driven out by
the truth, accept thou the whole Christ, Word, rational mind, and flesh. This is
the whole Christ. Let thy soul rise again from iniquity by that which is God,
thy body from corruption by that which is man. There, most beloved, hear ye
what, so far as it appears to me, is the great profundity of this passage; and see
how Christ here speaks to the effect, that the only reason why He came is, in
order that souls may have a resurrection from iniquity, and bodies from
corruption. I have already said by what our souls are raised, by the very substance of
God; by what our bodies are raised, by the human dispensation of our Lord
Jesus Christ.
7. "Verily, verily, I say unto you, The Son cannot of Himself do anything,
but what He seeth the Father doing; for what things soever He has done, these
also the Son doeth in like manner." Yes, the heaven, the earth, the sea; the
things that are in heaven, on the earth, and in the sea; the visible and
invisible, the animals on the land, the plants in the fields, the creatures that swim
in the waters, that fly in the air, that shine in heaven; besides all these,
angels, virtues, thrones, dominations, principalities, powers; "all were made by
Him." Did God make all these, and show them when made to the Son, that He also
should make another world full of all these? Certainly not. But, on the
contrary, what does He say? "For what things soever He has made, these," not others,
but "these also the Son doeth," not differently, "but in like manner." "For the
Father loveth the Son, and showeth Him all things which Himself doeth." The
Father showeth to the Son that souls may be raised, for souls are raised up by the
Father and the Son; nor can souls live except God be their life. If souls,
then, cannot live unless God be their life, just as themselves are the life of
bodies; what the Father shows to the Son, that is, what He doeth, He doeth through
the Son. For it is not by doing that He shows to the Son, but by showing He
doeth through the Son. For the Son sees the Father showing before anything is
done; and from the Father's showing and the Son's vision, is done what is done by
the Father through the Son. So are souls raised up, if they can see that
conjunction of unity, the Father showing, the Son seeing, and the creature made by
the Father's showing and the Son's seeing; and that thing made by the Father's
showing and the Son's seeing, which is neither the Father nor the Son, but
beneath the Father and the Son, whatever is made by the Father through the Son. Who
sees this?
8. Behold, again we humble ourselves to carnal notions, and descend to
you, if indeed we had at any time ascended somewhat from you. Thou wishest to show
something to thy son, that he may do what thou doest; thou art about to do,
and thus to show the thing. Therefore, what thou art about to do, in order to
show it to thy son, thou doest not surely by thy son; but thou alone doest that
thing which, when done, he may see, and do another such thing in like manner.
This is not the case there; why goest thou on to thy own similitude, and blottest
out the similitude of God within thee? There, the case is wholly otherwise.
Find a case in which thou showest to thy son what thou doest before thou doest it;
so that, after thou hast shown it, it will be by the son thou doest. Perhaps
something like this now occurs to thee: Lo, sayest thou, I think to make a
house, and I wish it to be built by my son: before I build it myself, I point out to
my son what I mean to do: both he doeth, and I too by him to whom I pointed
out my wish. Thou hast retreated, indeed, from the former similitude, but still
thou liest in great dissimilitude. For, lo, before thou canst make the house.
thou dost inform thy son, and point out to him what thou meanest to do; that,
upon thy showing before thou makest, he may make what thou hast shown, and so thou
mayest make by him: but thou wilt speak words to thy son, words will have to
pass between thee and him; between the person showing and the person seeing,
between speaker and hearer, flies articulate sound, which is not what thou art,
nor what he is. That sound, indeed, which goes out of thy mouth, and by the
concussion of the air touches thy son's ear, and filling the sense of hearing,
conveys thy thought to his heart that sound, I say, is not thyself, nor thy son. A
sign is given from thy mind to thy son's mind, but that sign not either thy mind
or thy son's mind, but something else. Is it thus that we think the Father has
spoken to the Son? Were there words between the Father and the Word? Then how
is it? Or, whatever the Father would say to the Son, if He would say it by a
word, the Son Himself is the Word of the Father, would He speak by a word to the
Word? Or, since the Son is the great Word, had smaller words to pass between
the Father and Son? Was it so, that some sound, as it were a temporal, fleeting
creature, had to issue from the mouth of the Father, and strike upon the ear of
the Son? Has God a body, that this should proceed, as it were, from His lips?
And has the Word the ears of a body, into which sound may come? Lay aside all
notions of corporeal forms, regard simplicity, if thou art single. minded. But
how wilt thou be single-minded? If thou wilt not entangle thyself with the world.
but disentangle thyself from the world. For by disentangling thyself, thou
wilt be single-minded. And see, if thou canst, what I say; or if thou canst not,
believe what thou dost not see. Thou speakest to thy son; thou speakest by a
word: neither art thou, nor is thy son, the word that sounds.
9. I have, sayest thou, another method of showing; for so well instructed
is my son, that he hears without my speaking, but I show him by a nod what to
do. Lo, show him by a nod what thou wilt, yet certainly the mind holds within
itself that which it would show. By what dost thou give this nod? With the
body,--namely, with the lips, the look, the brows, the eyes, the hands. All these are
not what thy mind is: these, too, are media; there was something understood by
these signs which are not what thy mind is, not what the mind of thy son is;
but all this which thou doest by the body is beneath thy mind, and beneath the
mind of thy son: nor can thy son know thy mind, unless thou give him signs by
the body. What, then, do I say? This is not the case there; there all is
simplicity. The Father shows to the Son what He is doing, and by showing begets the
Son. I see what I have said; but because I see also to whom I have said it, may
such understanding be some time or other formed in you as to grasp it. If ye are
not able now to comprehend what God is, comprehend at least what God is not:
you will have made much progress, if you think of God as being not something
other than He is. God is not a body, not the earth, not the heaven, not the moon,
or sun, or stars--not these corporeal things. For if not heavenly things, how
much less is He earthly things! Put all body out of the question. Further, hear
another thing: God is not a mutable spirit. For I confess,--and it must be
confessed, for it is the Gospel that speaks it,--" God is a Spirit." But pass beyond
all mutable spirit, beyond all spirit that now knows, now knows not; that now
remembers, now forgets; that wills what before it willed not, that wills not
what before it willed; either that suffers these mutabilities now or may suffer
them: pass beyond all these. Thou findest not any mutability in God; nor aught
that may have been one way before, and is otherwise now. For where thou findest
alternation, there a kind of death has taken place: since, for a thing not to
be what it was, is a death. The soul is said to be immortal; so indeed it is,
because it ever lives, and there is in it a certain continuous life, but yet a
mutable life. According to the mutability of this life, it may be said to be
mortal; because if it lived wisely, and then becomes foolish, it dies for the
worse; if it lived foolishly, and becomes wise, it dies for the better. For the
Scripture teaches us that there is a death for the worse, and that there is a death
for the better. In any case, they had died for the worse, of whom it said,
"Let the dead bury their dead;"(1) and, "Awake, thou that sleepest, and arise from
the dead, and Christ shall give thee light;"(2) and from this passage before
us, "When the dead shall hear, and they that hear shall live." For the worse
they had died; therefore do they come to life again. By coming to life they die
for the better, because by coming to life again they will not be what they were;
but for that to be, which was not, is death. But perhaps it is not called death
if it is for the better? The apostle has called that death: "But if ye be dead
with Christ from the elements of this world, why do ye judge concerning this
world as if ye were still living?"(3) And again, "For ye are dead, and your life
is hid with Christ in God." He wishes us to die that we may live, because we
have lived to die. Whatever therefore dies, both from better to worse, and from
worse to better, is not God; because neither can supreme goodness proceed to
better, nor true eternity to worse. For true eternity is, where is nothing of
time. But was there now this, now that? Immediately time is admitted, it is not
eternal. For that ye may know that God is not thus, as the soul is,-certainly the
soul is immortal,--what, however, saith the apostle of God, "Who alone hath
immortality," unless that he openly says this, He alone hath unchangeableness,
because He alone hath true eternity? Therefore no mutability is there.
10. Recognize in thyself something which I wish to say within, in thyself;
not within as if in thy body, for in a sense one may say, "in thyself." For
there is in thee health, thy age whatever it be, but this in regard to the body.
In thee is thy hand and thy foot; but there is one thing in thee, within;
another thing in thee as in thy garment. But leave outside thy garment and thyself,
descend into thyself, go to thy secret place, thy mind, and there see, if thou
canst, what I wish to say. For if thou art far from thyself, how canst thou
come near to God? I was speaking of God, and thou believedst that thou wouldst
understand. I am speaking of the soul, I am speaking of thyself: understand this,
there I will try thee. For I do not travel very far for examples, when I mean
to give thee some similitude to thy God from thy own mind; because surely not in
the body, but in that same mind, was man made after the image of God. Let us
seek God in His own similitude; let us recognize the Creator in His own image.
There within, if we can, let us find this that we speak of,--how the Father
shows to the Son, and how the Son sees what the Father shows, before anything is
made by the Father through the Son. But when I shall have spoken, and thou hast
understood, thou must not think that spoken of to be something just such as our
example, that thou mayest therein keep piety, which I wish to be kept by thee,
and earnestly admonish thee to keep: that is, if thou art not able to
comprehend what God is, do not think it a small matter for thee to know what He is not.
11. Behold, in thy mind, I see some two things, thy memory and thy
thought, which is, as it were, the seeing faculty and the vision of thy soul. Thou
seest something, and perceivest it by the eyes, and thou committest it to the care
of the memory. There, within, is that which thou hast committed to thy memory,
laid up in secret as in a storehouse, as in a treasury, as in a kind of secret
chamber and inner cabinet. Thou thinkest of something else, thy attention is
elsewhere; what thou didst see is in thy memory, but not seen by thee, because
thy thought is bent on another thing. I prove this at once. I speak to you who
know; I mention by name Carthage; all who know it have instantly seen Carthage
within the mind. Are there as many Carthages as there are minds of you? You have
all seen it by means of this name, by means of these syllables known to you,
rushing forth from my mouth: your ears were. touched; the sense of the soul was
touched through the body, and the mind bent back from another object to this
word, and saw Carthage. Was Carthage made there and then? It was there already,
but latent in the memory. Why was latent there? Because thy mind was engaged on
another matter; but when thy thought turned back to that which was in the
memory, thence it was shaped, and became a kind of vision of the mind. Before, there
was not a vision, but there was memory; the vision was made by the turning
back of thought to memory. Thy memory, then, showed Carthage to thy thought; and
that which was in it before thou didst direct thy mind to the memory, it
exhibited to the attention of thy thought when turned upon it. Behold, a showing is
effected by the memory, and a vision is produced in thought; and no words passed
between, no sign was given from the body: thou didst neither nod, nor write,
nor utter a sound; and yet thought saw what the memory showed. But both that
which showed, and that to which it showed, are of the same substance. But yet, that
thy memory might have Carthage in it, the image was drawn in through the eyes,
for thou didst see what thou didst store up in thy memory. So hast thou seen
the tree which thou rememberest; so the mountain, the river; so the face of a
friend, of an enemy, of father, mother, brother, sister, son, neighbor; so of
letters written in a book, of the book itself; so of this church: all these thou
didst see, and didst commit to thy memory after they were seen; and didst, as it
were, lay up there what thou mightst by thinking see at will, even when they
should be absent from these eyes of the body. Thou sawest Carthage when thou
wast at Carthage; thy soul received the image by the eyes; this image was laid up
in thy memory; and thou, the person who wast present at Carthage, didst keep
something within thee which thou mightst be able to see with thyself, even when
thou shouldst not be there. All these things thou didst receive from without.
What the Father shows to the Son, He does not receive from without: all comes to
pass within, because there would be no creature at all without, unless the
Father had made it by the Son. Every creature was made by God; before it was made
it was not in being. It was not therefore seen, after being made and retained in
memory, that the Father might show it to the Son, as the memory might show to
thought; but, on the contrary, the Father showed it to be made, the Son saw it
to be made; and the Father made it by showing, because He made it by the Son
seeing. And therefore we ought not to be surprised that it is said, "But what He
seeth the Father doing," not showing. For by this it is intimated that, with
the Father, to do and to show is the same thing; that hence we may understand
that He doeth all things by the Son seeing. Neither is that showing, nor that
seeing, temporal. Forasmuch as all times are made by the Son, they could not
certainly be shown to Him at any point of time to be made. But the Father's showing
begets the Son's seeing, just in the same manner as the Father begets the Son.
For the showing produces the seeing, not the seeing the showing. And if we were
able to look into this matter more purely and perfectly, perhaps we should find
that the Father is not one thing, His showing another; nor the Son one thing,
His seeing another. But if we have hardly apprehended this,--if we have hardly
been able to explain how the memory exhibits to the thought what it has
received from without,--how much less can we take in or explain how God the Father
shows to the Son, what He has not from elsewhere, or that which is not other than
Himself! We are only little ones: I tell you what God is not, do not show you
what God is. What shall we do, then, that we may apprehend what He is? Can ye do
this by or through me? I say this to the little ones, both to you and to
myself; there is by whom we can: we have just now sung, just now heard, "Cast thy
care upon the Lord, and He will nourish thee."(1) The reason why thou art not
able, O man, is because thou art a little one; being a little one, thou must be
nourished; being nourished, thou wilt become full-grown; and what as a little one
thou couldst not, thou shalt see when full-grown; but that thou mayest be
nourished, "cast thy care upon the Lord, and He will nourish thee."
12. Therefore let us now briefly run over what remains, and do you see how
the Lord makes known to us the things which I have been here commending to
your attention. "The Father loveth the Son, and showeth Him all things which
Himself doeth." Himself raiseth up souls, but by the Son, that the souls raised up
may enjoy the substance of God, that is, of the Father and of the Son. "And
greater works than these He will show Him." Greater than which? Than healings of
bodies. We have treated of this already, and must not linger upon it now. Greater
is the resurrection of the body unto eternity than this healing of the body,
wrought in that impotent man, to last only for a time. "And greater works than
these He will show Him, that ye may marvel."(1) "Will show," as if the act were
temporal, therefore as to a man made in time, since God the Word is not made,
He by whom all times were made. But Christ was made man in time. We know in what
consulship the Virgin Mary brought forth Christ, conceived of the Holy Ghost.
Wherefore He, by whom as God the times were made, was made man in time. Hence,
just as in time, "He will show Him greater works," that is, the resurrection of
bodies, "that ye may marvel" at the resurrection of bodies wrought by the Son.
13. He then returns to that resurrection of souls: "For as the Father
raiseth the dead, and quickeneth them, so also the Son quick-eneth whom He will;"
but this according to the Spirit. The Father quickeneth, the Son quickeneth; the
Father whom He will, the Son whom He will; but the Father quickeneth the same
as the Son, because all things were made by Him. "For as the Father raiseth up
the dead, and quickeneth them, so also the Son quickeneth whom He will." This
is said of the resurrection of souls; but what of the resurrection of bodies? He
returns, and says: "For the Father judgeth not any man. but all judgment hath
He given to the Son." The resurrection of souls is effected by the eternal and
unchangeable substance of the Father and Son. But the resurrection of bodies is
effected by the dispensation of the Son's humanity, which dispensation is
temporal, not co-eternal with the Father. Therefore, when He mentioned judgment, in
which there should be a resurrection of bodies, He saith, "For the Father
judgeth not any man, but all judgment hath He given to the Son;" but concerning the
resurrection of souls, He saith, "Even as the Father raiseth the dead, and
quickeneth them, so also the Son quickeneth whom He will." That, then, the Father
and the Son together. But this concerning the resurrection of bodies: "The
Father judgeth not any man, but hath given all judgment to the Son; that all may
honor the Son, even as they honor the Father." This is referred to the
resurrection of souls. "That all may honor the Son." How? "Even as they honor the
Father." For the Son works the resurrection of souls in the same manner as the Father
doth; the Son quickeneth just as the Father doth. Therefore, in the
resurrection of souls, "let all honor the Son as they honor the Father." But what of the
honoring on account of the resurrection of the body? "Whoso honoreth not the
Son, honoreth not the Father that sent Him." He said not even as, but honoreth and
honoreth. For the man Christ is honored, but not even as God the Father. Why?
Because, with respect to this, He said, "The Father is greater than I."(1) And
when is the Son honored even as the Father is honored? When "in the beginning
was the Word, and the Word was with God; and all things were made by Him." And
hence, in this second honoring, what saith He? "Whoso honoreth not the Son,
honoreth not the Father that sent Him." The Son was not sent, but because He was
made man.
14. "Verily, verily, I say unto you." Again He returns to the resurrection
of souls, that by continual repetition we may apprehend His meaning; because
we could not keep up with His discourse hastening on as on wings. Lo, the Word
of God lingers with. us; lo, it doth, as it were, dwell with our infirmities. He
returns again to the mention of the resurrection of souls. "Verily, verily, I
say unto you, Whoso heareth my word, and believeth Him that sent me, hath
eternal life;" but hath it as from the Father. "For whoso heareth my word, and
believeth Him that sent me, hath eternal life" from the Father, by believing the
Father that sent the Son "And shall not come into judgment, but is passed from
death to life." But from the Father, whom he believes, is he quickened. What, dost
Thou not quicken? See that the Son also "quickeneth whom He will." "Verily,
verily, I say unto you, That the hour cometh when the dead shall hear the voice
of the Son of God, and they that hear shall live." Here He did not say, they
shall believe Him that sent me, and therefore shall live; but by hearing the voice
of the Son of God, "they that hear," that is, they that obey the Son of God,
"shall live." Therefore, both from the Father shall they live, when they will
believe the Father; and from the Son shall they live, when they will hear the
voice of the Son of God. Why shall they live both from the Father and from the Son
"For even as the Father hath life in Himself, so also hath He given to the Son
to have life in Himself."
15. He has finished speaking of the resurrection of souls; it remains to
speak more evidently of the resurrection of bodies. "And hath given Him
authority also to execute judgment:" not only to raise up souls by faith and wisdom,
but also to execute judgment. But why this? "Because He is the Son of man."
Therefore the Father doeth something through the Son of man, which He doeth not from
His own substance, to which the Son is equal: as, for instance, that He should
be born, crucified, dead, and have a resurrection; for not any of these is
contingent to the Father. In the same manner also the raising again of bodies. For
the raising to life of souls the Father effects from His own substance, by the
substance of the Son, in which the Son is equal to Him; because souls are made
partakers of that unchangeable light, but not bodies; but the raising again of
bodies, the Father effects through the Son of man. For "He hath given Him
authority also to execute judgment, because He is the Son of man;" according to
that which He said above, "For the Father judgeth not any man." And to show that
He said this of the resurrection of bodies, He goes on: "Marvel not at this, for
the hour cometh:" not, and now is; but, "the hour cometh, in which all that
are in the graves (this ye have already heard sufficiently explained yesterday)
shall hear His voice, and come forth." Where? Into judgment: "They that have
done well, into the resurrection of life; and they that have done evil, into the
resurrection of judgment." And dost Thou do this alone, because the Father hath
given all judgment to the Son, and judgeth not any man? I, saith He, do it. But
how doest Thou it? "I cannot of myself do anything; as I hear, I judge; and my
judgment is just." When He was treating of the resurrection of souls, He did
not say, I hear; but, l see. For I hear refers to the command of the Father as
giving order. Therefore, now as a man, just as He than whom the Father is
greater; as from the form of a servant, not from the form of God, "As I hear, I
judge; and my judgment is just." Whence is the man's judgment a just one? My
brethren, mark well: "Because I seek not my own will, but the will of Him that sent
me."
TRACTATE XXIV.
CHAPTER VI. 1-14.
1. The miracles performed by our Lord Jesus Christ are indeed divine
works, and incite the human mind to rise to the apprehension of God from the things
that are seen. But inasmuch as He is not such a substance as may be seen with
the eyes, and His miracles in the government of the whole world and the
administration of the universal creation are, by their familiar constancy, slightly
regarded, so that almost no man deigns to consider the wonderful and stupendous
works of God, exhibited in every grain of seed; He has, agreeably to His mercy,
reserved to Himself certain works, beyond the usual course and order of nature,
which He should perform on fit occasion, that they, by whom His daily works are
lightly esteemed, might be struck with astonishment at beholding, not indeed
greater, but uncommon works. For certainly the government of the whole world is
a greater miracle than the satisfying of five thousand men with five loaves;
and yet no man wonders at the former; but the latter men wonder at, not because
it is greater, but because it is rare. For who even now feeds the whole world,
but He who creates the cornfield from a few grains? He therefore created as God
creates. For, whence He multiplies the produce of the fields from a few grains,
from the same source He multiplied in His hands the five loaves. The power,
indeed, was in the hands of Christ; but those five loaves were as seeds, not
indeed committed to the earth, but multiplied by Him who made the earth. In this
miracle, then, there is that brought near to the senses, whereby the mind should
be roused to attention, there is exhibited to the eyes, whereon the
understanding should be exercised, that we might admire the invisible God through His
visible works; and being raised to faith and purged by faith, we might desire to
behold Him even invisibly, whom invisible we came to know by the things that are
visible.
2. Yet it is not enough to observe these things in the miracles of Christ.
Let us interrogate the miracles themselves, what they tell us about Christ:
for they have a tongue of their own, if they can be understood. For since Christ
is Himself the Word of God, even the act of the Word is a word to us. Therefore
as to this miracle, since we have heard how great it is, let us also search
how profound it is; let us not only be delighted with its surface, but let us
also seek to know its depth. This miracle, which we admire on the outside, has
something within. We have seen, we have looked at something great, something
glorious, and altogether divine, which could be performed only by God: we have
praised the doer for the deed. But just as, if we were to inspect a beautiful
writing somewhere, it would not suffice for us to praise the hand of the writer,
because he formed the letters even,equal and elegant, if we did not also read the
information he conveyed to us by those letters; so, he who merely inspects this
deed may be delighted with its beauty to admire the doer: but he who
understands does, as it were, read it. For a picture is looked at in a different way from
that in which a writing is looked at. When thou hast seen a picture, to have
seen and praised it is the whole thing; when thou seest a writing, this is not
the whole, since thou art reminded also to read it. Moreover, when thou seest a
writing, if it chance that thou canst not read, thou sayest, "What do we think
that to be which is here written?" Thou askest what it is, when already thou
seest it to be something. He of whom thou seekest to be informed what it is that
thou hast seen, will show thee another thing. He has other eyes than thou hast.
Do you not alike see the form of the letters? But yet you do not alike
understand the signs. Well, thou seest and praisest; but he sees, praises, reads and
understands. Therefore, since we have seen and praised, let us also read and
understand.
3. The Lord on the mount: much rather let us understand that the Lord on
the mount is the Word on high. Accordingly, what was done on the mount does not,
as it were, lie low, nor is to be cursorily passed by, but must be looked up
to. He saw the multitude, knew them to be hungering, mercifully fed them: not
only in virtue of His goodness, but also of His power. For what would mere
goodness avail, where there was not bread with which to feed the hungry crowd? Did
not power attend upon goodness, that crowd had remained fasting and hungry. In
short, the disciples also, who were with the Lord, and hungry, themselves wished
to feed the multitudes, that they might not remain empty, but had not
wherewithal to feed them. The Lord asked, whence they might buy bread to feed the
multitude. And the Scripture saith: "But this He said, proving him;" namely, the
disciple Philip of whom He had asked; "for Himself knew what He would do." Of what
advantage then was it to prove him, unless to show the disciple's ignorance?
And, perhaps, in showing the disciple's ignorance He signified something more.
This will appear, then, when the sacrament of the five loaves itself will begin
to speak to us, and to intimate its meaning: for there we shall see why the Lord
in this act wished to exhibit the disciple's ignorance, by asking what He
Himself knew. For we sometimes ask what we do not know, that, being willing to
hear, we may learn; sometimes we ask what we do know, wishing to learn whether he
whom we ask also knows. The Lord knew both the one and the other; knew both what
He asked, for He knew what Himself would do; and He also knew in like manner
that Philip knew not this. Why then · did He ask, but to show Philip's
ignorance? And why He did this, we shall, as I have said, understand afterwards.
4. Andrew saith: "There is a lad here, who has five loaves and two fishes,
but what are these for so many?" When Philip, on being asked, had said that
two hundred pennyworth of bread would not suffice to refresh that so great a
multitude, there was there a certain lad, carrying five barley loaves and two
fishes. "And Jesus saith, Make the men sit down. Now there was there much grass: and
they sat down about five thousand men. And the Lord Jesus took the loaves,
gave thanks;" He commanded, the loaves were broken, and put before the men that
were set down. It was no longer five loaves, but what He had added thereto, who
had created that which was increased. "And of the fishes as much as sufficed."
It was not enough that the multitude had been satisfied, there remained also
fragments; and these were ordered to be gathered up, that they should not be lost:
"And they filled twelve baskets with the fragments."
5. To run over it briefly: by the five loaves are understood the five
books of Moses; and rightly are they not wheaten but barley loaves, because they
belong to the Old Testament. And you know that barley is so formed that we get at
its pith with difficulty; for the pith is covered in a coating of husk, and
the husk itself tenacious and closely adhering, so as to be stripped off with
labor. Such is the letter of the Old Testament, invested in a covering of carnal
sacraments: but yet, if we get at its pith, it feeds and satisfies us. A certain
lad, then, brought five loaves and two fishes. If we inquire who this lad was,
perhaps it was the people Israel, which, in a childish sense, carried, not
ate. For the things which they carried were a burden while shut up, but when
opened afforded nourishment. And as for the two fishes, they appear to us to signify
those two sublime persons, in the Old Testament, of priest and of ruler, who
were anointed for the sanctifying and governing of the people. And at length
Himself in the mystery came, who was signified by those persons: He at length came
who was pointed out by the pith of the barley, but concealed by its husk. He
came, sustaining in His one person the two characters of priest and ruler: of
priest by offering Himself to God as a victim for us; of ruler, because by Him we
are governed. And the things that were carried closed are now opened up.
Thanks be to Him. He has fulfilled by Himself what was promised in the Old
Testament. And He bade the loaves to be broken; in the breaking they are multiplied.
Nothing is more true. For when those five books of Moses are expounded, how many
books have they made by being broken up, as it were; that is, by being opened
and laid out? But because in that barley the ignorance of the first people was
veiled, of whom it is said, "Whilst Moses is read, the veil is upon their
hearts;"(1) for the veil was not yet removed, because Christ had not yet come; not yet
was the veil of the temple rent, while Christ is hanging on the cross:
because, I say, the ignorance of the people was in the law, therefore that proving by
the Lord made the ignorance of the disciple manifest.
6. Wherefore nothing is without meaning; everything is significant, but
requires one that understands: for even this number of the people fed, signified
the people that were under the law. For why were there five thousand, but
because they were under the law, which is unfolded in the five books of Moses? Why
were the sick laid at those five porches, but not healed? He, however, there
cured the impotent man, who here fed multitudes with five loaves. Moreover, they
sat down upon the grass; therefore understood carnally, and rested in the
carnal. "For all flesh is grass."(2) And what were those fragments, but things which
the people were not able to eat? We understand them to be certain matters of
more hidden meaning, which the multitude are not able to take in. What remains
then, but that those matters of more hidden meaning, which the multitude cannot
take in, be entrusted to men who are fit to teach others also, just as were the
apostles? Why were twelve baskets filled? This was done both marvellously,
because a great thing was done; and it was done profitably, because a spiritual
thing was done. They who at the time saw it, marvelled; but we, hearing of it, do
not marvel. For it was done that they might see it, but it was written that we
might hear it. What the eyes were able to do in their case, that faith does in
our case. We perceive, namely, with the mind, what we could not with the eyes:
and we are preferred before them, because of us it is said, "Blessed are they
who see not, and yet believe."(1) And I add that, perhaps, we have understood
what that crowd did not understand. And we have been fed in reality, in that we
have been able to get at the pith of the barley.
7. Lastly, what did those men who saw this miracle think? "The men," saith
he, "when they had seen the sign which He had done, said, This is indeed a
prophet." Perhaps they still thought Christ to be a prophet for this reason,
namely, that they were sitting on the grass. But He was the Lord of the prophets,
the fulfiller of the prophets, the sanctifier of the prophets, but yet a prophet
also: for it was said to Moses, "I will raise up for them a prophet like unto
thee." Like, according to the flesh, but not according to the majesty. And that
this promise of the Lord is to be understood concerning Christ Himself, is
clearly expounded and read in the Acts of the Apostles.(2) And the Lord says of
Himself, "A prophet is not without honor, except in his own country."(3) The Lord
is a prophet, and the Lord is God's Word, and no prophet prophesies without
the Word of God: the Word of God is with the prophets, and the Word of God is a
prophet. The former times obtained prophets inspired and filled by the Word of
God: we have obtained the very Word of God for our prophet. But Christ is in
such manner a prophet, the Lord of prophets, as Christ is an angel, the Lord of
angels. For He is also called the Angel of great counsel.(4) Nevertheless, what
says the prophet elsewhere? that not an ambassador, nor an angel, but Himself
coming will save them;(5) that is, He will not send an ambassador to save them,
nor an angel, but Himself will come. Who will come? The Angel himself? Certainly
not by an angel will He save them, except that He is so an angel, as also Lord
of angels. For angels signify messengers. If Christ brought no message, He
would not be called an angel: if Christ prophesied nothing, He would not be called
a prophet. He has exhorted us to faith and to laying hold of eternal life; He
has proclaimed something present, foretold something future because He
proclaimed the present, thence He was an angel or messenger; because He foretold the
future, thence He was a prophet; and that, as the Word of God He was made flesh,
thence He was Lord of angels and of prophets.
TRACTATE XXV.
CHAPTER VI. 15-44.
1. Following upon yesterday's lesson from the Gospel is that of to-day,
upon which this day's discourse is due to you. When that miracle was wrought, in
which Jesus fed the five thousand with five loaves, and the multitudes marveled
and said that He was a great prophet that came into the world, then follows
this: "When Jesus therefore knew that they came to seize Him, and to make Him
king, He escaped again unto the mountain alone." It is therefore given to be
understood that the Lord, when He sat on the mountain with His disciples, and saw
the multitudes coming to Him, had descended from the mountain, and fed the
multitudes on its lower parts. For how can it be that He should escape thither again,
if He had not before descended from the mountain? There is something meant by
the Lord's descending from on high to feed the multitudes. He fed them, and
ascended.
2. But why did He ascend after He knew that they wished to seize Him and
make Him a king? How then; was He not a king, that He was afraid to be made a
king? He was certainly not such a king as would be made by men, but such as would
bestow a kingdom on men. May it not be that Jesus, whose deeds are words, does
here, too, signify something to us? Therefore in this, that they wished to
seize Him and make Him a king, and that for this He escapes to the mountain alone,
is this action in His case silent; does it speak nothing, does it mean
nothing? Or was this seizing of Him perhaps an intention to anticipate the time of His
kingdom? For He had come now, not to reign immediately, as He is to reign in
the sense in which we pray, Thy kingdom come. He ever reigns, indeed, with the
Father, in that He is the Son of God, the Word of God, the Word by which all
things were made. But the prophets foretold His kingdom according to that wherein
He is Christ made man, and has made His faithful ones Christians. There will
consequently be a kingdom of Christians, which at present is being gathered
together, being prepared and purchased by the blood of Christ. His kingdom will at
length be made manifest, when the glory of His saints shall be revealed, after
the judgment is executed by Him, which judgment He Himself has said above is
that which the Son of man shall execute. Of which kingdom also the apostle has
said: "When He shall have delivered up the kingdom to God, even the Father."(1) In
reference to which also Himself says: "Come, ye blessed of my Father, receive
the kingdom which is prepared for you from the beginning of the world."(2) But
the disciples and the multitudes that believed on Him thought that He had thus
come immediately to reign; hence, they wished to seize Him and to make Him a
king; they wished to anticipate the time which He hid with Himself, to make it
known in due time, and in due time to declare it in the end of the world.
3. That ye may know that they wished to make Him a king,--that is, to
anticipate, and at once to have manifest the kingdom of Christ, whom it behoved
first to be judged and then to judge,--when He was crucified, and they who hoped
in Him had lost hope of His resurrection, having risen from the dead, He found
two of them despairingly conversing together, and, with groaning, talking with
one another of what had been done; and appearing to them as a stranger, while
their eyes were held that He should not be recognized by them, He mixed with them
as they held discourse: but they, narrating to Him the matter of their
conversation, said that He was a prophet, mighty in deeds and in words, that had been
slain by the chief priests; "And we," say they, "did hope that it was He that
should have redeemed Israel."(3) Rightly you hoped: a true thing you hoped for:
in Him is the redemption of Israel. But why are ye in haste? Ye wish to seize
it. The following, too, shows us that this was their feeling, that, when the
disciples inquired of Him concerning the end, they said to Him, "Wilt Thou at this
time be made manifest, and when will be the kingdom of Israel?" For they
longed for it now, they wished it now; that is, they wished to seize Him, and to
make Him king. But saith He to the disciples (for He had yet to ascend alone), "It
is not for you to know the times or seasons which the Father hath put in His
own power: but ye shall receive virtue from on high, the Holy Spirit coming upon
you, and ye shall be witnesses to me in Jerusalem, and in all Judea and
Samaria, and unto the ends of the earth."(4) You wish that I should manifest the
kingdom now; let me first gather what I may manifest; you love elevation, and you
shall obtain elevation, but follow me through humility. Thus it was also
foretold of Him, "And the gathering of the peoples will surround Thee, and for this
cause return Thou on high;"(5) that is, that the gatherings of the peoples may
surround Thee, that Thou mayest gather many together, return Thou on high. Thus
He did; He fed men, and ascended.
4. But why is it said, He escaped? For He could not be held against His
will, nor seized against His will, since He could not be recognized against His
will. But that you may know that this was done mystically, not of necessity, but
of express purpose, you will presently see in the following: that He appeared
to the same multitudes that sought Him, said many things in speaking with them,
and discoursed much about the bread of heaven; when discoursing about bread,
was He not with the same people from whom He had escaped test He should be held
of them? Then, could He not have so acted at that time that He should not be
seized by them, just as afterwards when He was speaking with them? Something,
therefore, was meant by His escaping. What means, He escaped? His loftiness could
not be understood. For of anything which thou hast not understood thou sayest,
"It has escaped me." Wherefore, "He escaped again unto the mountain alone,--the
first-begotten from the dead, ascending above all heavens, and interceding for
us."(6)
5. Meanwhile, He, the one great High Priest being above (He who has
entered into that within the veil, the people standing without; for Him that priest
under the old law, who did this once a year, did signify): He then being above,
what were the disciples enduring in the ship? For that ship prefigured the
Church while He is on high. For if we do not, in the first place, understand this
thing which that ship suffered respecting the Church, those incidents were not
significant, but simply transient; but if we see the real meaning of those signs
expressed in the Church, it is manifest that the actions of Christ are a kind
of speeches. "But when it was late, saith he, His disciples went down to the
sea; and when they had entered into a ship, they came over the sea to Capernaum."
He declared that as finished quickly, which was done afterwards,--"They came
over the sea to Capernaum." He returns to explain how they came; that they
passed over by sailing across the take. And whilst they were sailing to that place
to which He has already said they had come, He explains by recapitulation what
befell them. "It was now dark, and Jesus had not come to them." Rightly he said
"dark," for the light had not come to them "It was now dark, and Jesus had not
come to them." As the end of the world approaches, errors increase, terrors
multiply, iniquity increases, infidelity increases; the light, in short, which, by
the Evangelist John himself, is fully and clearly shown to be charity, so much
so that he says, "Whoso hateth his brother is in darkness;"(1) that light, I
say, is very often extinguished; this darkness of enmity between brethren
increases, daily increases, and Jesus is not yet come. How does it appear to
increase? "Because iniquity will abound, and the love of many will begin to wax cold."
Darkness increases, and Jesus is not yet come. Darkness increasing, love waxing
cold, iniquity abounding,--these are the waves that agitate the ship; the
storms arid the winds are the clamors of revilers. Thence love waxes cold; thence
the waves do swell, and the ship is tossed.
6. "And a great wind blowing, the sea rose." Darkness was increasing,
discernment was diminishing, iniquity was growing. "When, therefore, they had rowed
about twenty-five or thirty furlongs." Meanwhile they struggled onward, kept
advancing; nor did those winds and storms, and waves and darkness effect either
that the ship should not make way, or that it should break in pieces and
founder; but amid all these evils it went on. For, notwithstanding iniquity abounds,
and the love of many waxes cold, and the waves do swell, the darkness grows and
the wind rages, yet the ship is moving forward; "for he that perseveres to the
end, the same shall be saved."(2) Nor is that number of furlongs to be lightly
regarded. For it cannot really be that nothing is meant, when it is said that,
"when they had rowed twenty-five or thirty furlongs, Jesus came to them." It
were enough to say, "twenty-five," so likewise "thirty;" especially as it was an
estimate, not an assertion of the narrator. Could the truth be aught
endangered by a mere estimate, if he had said nearly thirty furlongs, or nearly
twenty-five furlongs? But from twenty-five he made thirty. Let us examine the number
twenty-five. Of what does it consist? of what is it made up? Of the quinary, or
number five. That number five pertains to the law. The same are the five books
of Moses, the same are those five porches containing the sick folk, the same are
the five loaves feeding the five thousand men. Accordingly the number
twenty-five signifies the law, because five by five--that is, five times five--make
twenty-five, or the number five squared. But this law lacked perfection before the
gospel came. Moreover, perfection is comprised in the number six. Therefore in
six days God finished, or perfected, the world, and the same five are
mul-plied by six, that the law may be completed by the gospel, that six times five
become thirty. To them that fulfill the law, therefore. Jesus comes. And how does
He come? Walking upon the waves, keeping all the swellings of the world under
His feet, pressing down all its heights. Thus it goes on, so long as time
endures, so long as the ages roll. Tribulations increase, calamities increase, sorrows
increase, all these swell and mount up: Jesus passeth on treading upon the
waves.
7. And yet so great are the tribulations, that even they who have trusted
in Jesus, and who strive to persevere unto the end, greatly fear lest they
fail; while Christ is treading the waves, and trampling down the world's ambitions
and heights, the Christian is sorely afraid. Were not these things foretold
him? Justly "they were afraid," too, at seeing Jesus walking on the waves; like as
Christians, though having hope in the world to come, are frequently disquieted
at the crash of human affairs, when they see the loftiness of this world
trampled down. They open the Gospel, they open the Scriptures, and they find all
these things there foretold; that this is the Lord's doing. He tramples down the
heights of the world, that He may be glorified by the humble. Concerning whose
loftiness it is foretold: `Thou shalt destroy strongest cities," and "the spears
of the enemy have come to an end, and Thou hast destroyed cities."(1) Why then
are ye afraid, O Christians? Christ speaks: "It is I; be not afraid." Why are
ye alarmed at these things? Why are ye afraid? I have foretold these things, I
do them, they must necessarily be done. "It is I; be not afraid. Therefore they
would receive Him into the ship." Recognizing Him and rejoicing, they are
freed from their fears. "And immediately the ship was at the land to which they
went." There is an end made at the land; from the watery to the solid, from the
agitated to the firm, from the way to the goal.
8. "On the next day the multitude that stood on the other side of the
sea," whence the disciples had come, "saw that there was none other boat there,
save that one whereinto His disciples were entered, and that Jesus went not with
His disciples into the boat, but that His disciples were gone away alone; but
there came other boats from Tiberias, nigh unto the place where they did eat
bread, giving thanks to the Lord: when, therefore, the multitudes saw that Jesus
was not there, nor His disciples, they also took shipping, and came to Capernaum
seeking Jesus." Yet they got some knowledge of so great a miracle. For they saw
that the disciples had gone into the ship alone, and that there was not
another ship there. But there came boats also from near to that place where they did
eat bread; in these the multitudes followed Him. He had not then embarked with
His disciples, and there was not another ship there. How, then, was Jesus on a
sudden beyond the sea, unless that He walked upon the sea to show a miracle?
9. "And when the multitudes had found Him." Behold, He presents Himself to
the people from whom He had escaped into the mountain, afraid that He should
be taken of them by force. In every way He proves to us and gives us to know
that all these things are said in a mystery, and done in a great sacrament (or
mystery) to signify something important. Behold, that is He who had escaped the
crowds unto the mountain; is He not speaking with the same crowds? Let them hold
Him now; let them now make Him a king. "And when they had found Him on the
other side of the sea, they said unto Him Rabbi, when camest Thou hither?"
10. After the sacrament of the miracle, He introduces discourse, that, if
possible, they who have been fed may be further fed, that lie may with
discourse fill their minds, whose bellies He filled with the loaves, provided they take
in. And if they do not, let that be taken up which they do not receive, that
the fragments may not be lost. Wherefore let Him speak, and let us hear. "Jesus
answered and said Verily, verily, I say unto you, ye seek me, not because ye
saw the signs, but because ye have eaten of my loaves." Ye seek me for the sake
of the flesh not for the sake of the spirit. How many seek Jesus for no other
object but that He may bestow on them a temporal benefit! One has a business on
hand, he seeks the intercession of the clergy; another is oppressed by one more
powerful than himself, he flies to the church. Another desires intervention in
his behalf with one with whom he has little influence. One in this way, one in
that, the church is daily filled with such people. Jesus is scarcely sought
after for Jesus' sake. "Ye seek me, not because ye have seen the signs, but
because ye have eaten of my loaves. Labor not for the meat which perisheth, but for
that which endureth unto eternal life." Ye seek me for something else, seek me
for my own sake. For He insinuates the truth, that Himself is that meat: this
shines out clearly in the sequel. "Which the Son of man will give you." Thou
didst expect, I believe, again to eat bread, again to sit down, again to be gorged.
But He had said, "Not the meat which perisheth, but that which endureth unto
eternal life," in the same manner as it was said to that Samaritan woman: "If
thou knewest who it is that asketh of thee drink, thou wouldest perhaps have
asked of Him, and He would give thee living water." When she said, "Whence hast
thou, since thou hast nothing to draw with, and the well is deep?" He answered the
Samaritan woman: "If thou knewest who it is that asketh of thee drink, thou
wouldst have asked of Him, and He would give thee water, whereof whoso drinketh
shall thirst no more; for whoso drinketh of this water shall thirst again." And
she was glad and would receive, as if no more to suffer thirst of body, being
wearied with the labor of drawing water. And so, during a conversation of this
kind, He comes to spiritual drink. Entirely in this manner also here.
11. Therefore "this meat, not that which perisheth, but that which
endureth unto everlasting life, which the Son of man shall give unto you; for Him hath
God the Father sealed." Do not take this Son of man as you take other sons of
men, of whom it is said, "And the sons of men will trust in the protection of
Thy wings."(2) This Son of man is separated by a certain grace of the spirit;
Son of man according to the flesh, taken out from the number of men: He is the
Son of man. This Son of man is also the Son of God; this man is even God. In
another place, when questioning His disciples, He saith: "Whom do men say that I,
the Son of man, am? And they answered, Some John, some Elias, some Jeremias, or
one of the prophets. And He said unto them, But whom say ye that I am? Peter
answered, Thou art the Christ, the S n of the living God."(1) He declared Himself
Son of man, Peter declared Him the Son of the living God. Most fitly did He
mention that which in mercy He had manifested Himself to be; most fitly did the
other mention that which He continues to be in glory. The Word of God commends
to our attention His own humility: the man acknowledged the glory of his Lord.
And indeed, brethren, I think that this is just. He humbled Himself for us, let
us glorify Him. For not for Himself is He Son of man, but for us. Therefore was
He Son of man in that way, when "the Word was made flesh, and dwelt among us."
For to that end "God the Father sealed Him." What is to seal, but to put some
particular mark? To seal is to impress some mark which cannot be confounded
with the rest. To seal is to put a mark on a thing. When thou puttest a mark on
anything, thou doest so test it might be confused with other things, and thou
shouldst not be able to recognize it. "The Father," then, "hath sealed Him." What
is that, "hath sealed"? Bestowed on Him something peculiar, which puts Him out
of comparison with all other men. For that reason it is said of Him, "God, even
Thy God, hath anointed Thee with the oil of gladness above l Thy fellows."(2)
What is it then to seal, but to have Him excepted? This is the import of "above
Thy fellows." And so, do not, saith He, despise me because I am the Son of
man, but seek from me, "not the meat that perisheth, but that which endureth to
eternal life." For I am the Son of man in such manner as not to be one of you: I
am Son of man in such manner that God the Father sealed me. What does that
mean, He "sealed me"? Gave me something peculiarly my own, that I should not be
confounded with mankind, but that mankind should be delivered by me.
12. "They said therefore unto Him, What shall we do, that we may work the
works of God?" For He had said to them, "Labor not for the meat which
perisheth, but for that which endureth unto eternal life." "What shall we do?" they ask;
by observing what, shall we be able to fulfill this precept? "Jesus answered
and said unto them, This is the work of God, that ye believe on Him whom He has
sent." This is then to eat the meat, not that which perisheth, but that which
endureth unto eternal life. To what purpose dost thou make ready teeth and
stomach? Believe, and thou hast eaten already. Faith is indeed distinguished from
works, even as the apostle says, "that a man is justified by faith without the
works of the law:"(3) there are works which appear good, without faith in Christ;
but they are not good, because they are not referred to that end in which
works are good; "for Christ is the end of the law for righteousness to every one
that believeth."(4) For that reason, He willeth not to distinguish faith from
work, but declared faith itself to be work. For it is that same faith that worketh
by love.(5) Nor did He say, This is your work; but, "This is the work of God,
that ye believe on Him whom He has sent;" so that he who glories, may glory in
the Lord. And because He invited them to faith, they, on the other hand, were
still asking for signs by which they might believe. See if the Jews do not ask
for signs. "They said therefore rate Him, What sign doest thou, that we may see
and believe thee? what dost thou work?" Was it a trifle that they were fed with
five loaves? They knew this indeed, but they preferred manna from heaven to
this food. But the Lord Jesus declared Himself to be such an one, that He was
superior to Moses. For Moses dared not say of Himself that He gave, "not the meat
which perisheth, but that which endureth to eternal life." Jesus promised
something greater than Moses gave. By Moses indeed was promised a kingdom, and a
land flowing with milk and honey, temporal peace, abundance of children, health of
body, and all other things, temporal goods indeed, yet in figure spiritual;
because in the Old Testament they were promised to the old man. They considered
therefore the things promised by Moses, and they considered the things promised
by Christ. The former promised a full belly on the earth, but of the meat which
perisheth; the latter promised, "not the meat which perisheth, but that which
endureth unto eternal life." They gave attention to Him that promised the more,
but just as if they did not yet see Him do greater things. They considered
therefore what sort of works Moses had done, and they wished yet some greater
works to be done by Him who promised them such great things. What, say they, doest
thou, that we may believe thee? And that thou mayest know that they compared
those former miracles with this and so judged these miracles which Jesus did as
being less; "Our fathers," say they, "did eat manna in the wilderness." But what
is manna? Perhaps ye despise it. "As it is written, He gave them manna to
eat." By Moses our fathers received bread from heaven, and Moses did not say to
them, "Labor for the meat which perisheth not." Thou promisest "meat which
perisheth not, but which endureth to eternal life;" and yet thou workest not such
works as Moses did. He gave, not barley loaves, but manna from heaven.
13. "Then Jesus said unto them, Verily, verily, I say unto you, not Moses
gave you bread from heaven, but my Father gave you bread from heaven. For the
true bread is He that cometh down from heaven, and giveth life to the world."
The true bread then is He that giveth life to the world; and the same is the meat
of which I have spoken a little before,--"Labor not for the meat which
perisheth, but for that which endureth unto eernal life." Therefore, both that manna
signified this meat, and all those signs were signs of me. Ye have longed for
signs of me; do ye despise Him that was signified? Not Moses then gave bread from
heaven: God gives bread. But what bread? Manna, perhaps? No, but the bread
which manna signified, namely, the Lord Jesus Himself. My Father giveth you the
true bread. "For the bread of God is He that cometh down from heaven, and giveth
life to the world Then said they unto Him, Lord, evermore give us this bread."
Like that Samaritan woman, to whom it was said, "Whoso drinketh of this water
shall never thirst." She, immediately understanding it in reference to the body,
and wishing to be rid of want, said, "Give me, O Lord, of this water;" in the
same manner also these said, "O Lord, give us this bread;" which may refresh
us, and yet not fail.
14. "And Jesus said unto them, I am the Bread of Life: he that cometh to
me shall never hunger; and he that believeth on me shall never thirst." "He that
cometh to me;" this is the same thing as "He that believeth on me;" and "shall
never hunger" is to be understood to mean the same thing as "shall never
thirst." For by both is signified that eternal sufficiency in which there is no
want. You desire bread from heaven; you have it before you, and yet you do not eat.
"But I said unto you, that ye also have seen me, and ye believed not." But I
have not on that account lost my people. "For hath your unbelief made the faith
of God of none effect?"(1) For, see thou what follows: "All that the Father
giveth me shall come to me; and him that cometh to me, I will not cast out of
doors." What kind of within is that, whence there is no going out of doors? Noble
interior, sweet retreat! O secret dwelling without weariness, without the
bitterness of evil thoughts, without the solicitings of temptations and the
interruptions of griefs! Is it not that secret dwelling whither shall enter that
well-deserving servant, to whom the Lord will say, "Enter thou into the joy of thy
Lord ?"(2)
15. "And him that will come to me, I will not cast out. For I came down
from heaven, not to do mine own will, but the will of Him that sent me." Is it
for that reason that Thou wilt not cast out him that shall come unto Thee,
because Thou hast descended from heaven, not to do Thine own will, but the will of
Him that sent Thee? Great mystery! I beseech you, let us knock together;
something may come forth to us which may feed us, according to that which has delighted
us. That great and sweet secret dwelling-place: "He that will come to me."
Give heed, give heed, and weigh the matter: "He that will come unto me, I will not
cast out." Why? "Because I came down from heaven, not to do my own will, but
the will of Him that sent me." Is it then the very reason why Thou castest not
out him that cometh unto Thee, that Thou camest down from heaven, not to do Thy
own will, but the will of Him that sent Thee? The very reason. Why do we ask
whether it be the same? The same it is; Himself says it. For it would not be
right in us to suspect Him to mean other than He says, "Whoso will come to me, I
will not cast out." And, as if thou askedst, wherefore? He answered, "Because I
came not to do my own will, but the will of Him that sent me." I am afraid that
the reason why the soul went forth away from God is, that it was proud; nay, I
do not doubt it. For it is written, "Pride is the beginning of all sin; and the
beginning of man's pride is a failing away from God." It is written, it is
firm and sure, it is true. And hence what is said of proud mortal man, clad in the
tattered rags of the flesh, weighed down with the weight of a corruptible
body, and withal extolling himself, and forgetting with what skin-coat he is cloth
ed,--what, I ask, saith the Scripture to him? "Why is dust and ashes proud?"
Why proud! Let the Scripture tell why. "Because in his life he put forth his
inmost parts."(1) What is "put forth," but "threw afar off"? This is to go forth
away. For to enter within, is to long after the inmost parts; to put forth the
inmost parts, is to go forth away. The proud man puts forth the inmost parts, the
humble man earnestly desires the inmost parts. If we are cast out by pride,
let us return by humility.
16. Pride is the source of all diseases, because pride is the source of
all sins. When a physician removes a disorder from the body, if he merely cures
the malady produced by some particular cause, but not the cause itself, he seems
to heal the patient for a time, but while the cause remains, the disease will
repeat itself. For example, to speak of this more expressly, some humor in the
body produces a scurf or sores; there follows a high fever, and not a little
pain; certain remedies are applied to repress the scurf, and to allay that heat
of the sore; the remedies are applied, and they do good; thou seest the man who
was full of sores and scurf healed; but because that humor was not expelled, it
returns again to ulcers. The physician, perceiving this, purges away the
humor, removes the cause, and there will be no more sores. Whence doth iniquity
abound? From pride. Cure pride and there will be no more iniquity. Consequently,
that the cause of all diseases might be cured, namely, pride, the Son of God came
down and was made low. Why art thou proud, O man? God, for thee, became low.
Thou wouldst perhaps be ashamed to imitate a lowly man; at any rate, imitate the
lowly God. The Son of God came in the character of a man and was made low.
Thou art taught to become humble, not of a man to become a brute. He, being God,
became man; do thou, O man, recognize that thou art man. Thy whole humility is
to know thyself. Therefore because God teaches humility, He said, "I came not to
do my own will, but the will of Him that sent me." For this is the
commendation of humility. Whereas pride doeth its own will, humility doeth the will of
God. Therefore, "Whoso cometh to me, I will not cast him out." Why ? "Because I
came not to do my own will, but the will of Him that sent me." I came humble, I
came to teach humility, I came a master of humility: he that cometh to me is
made one body with me; he that cometh to me becomes humble; he who adnereth to me
will he humble, because he doeth not his own will, but the will of God; and
therefore he shah not be cast out, for when he was proud he was cast out.
17. See those inner things commended to us in the psalm: "But the sons of
men will put their trust in the covering of Thy wings." See what it is to enter
within; see what it is to flee for refuge to His protection; see what it is to
run even under the Father's lash, for He scourgeth every son whom He
receiveth. "But the sons of men shall put their trust under the cover of Thy wings."
What is within? "They shall be filled with the plenteousness of Thy house," when
Thou shalt have sent them within, entering into the joy of their Lord; "they
shall be filled with the plenteousness of Thy house; and Thou shalt give them to
drink of the stream of Thy pleasure. For with Thee is the fountain of life." Not
away without Thee, but within with Thee, is the fountain of life. "And in Thy
light we shall see light. Show Thy mercy upon them that know Thee, and Thy
righteousness to them that are of upright heart." They who follow the will of their
Lord, not seeking their own, but the things of the Lord Jesus Christ, they are
the upright in heart, their feet shall not be moved. For "God is good to
Israel, to the upright in heart. But, as for me, says he, my feet were almost
moved." Why? "Because I was jealous at sinners, looking at the peace of sinners."(2)
To whom is God good then, unless to the upright in heart? For God was
displeasing to me when my heart was crooked. Why displeasing? Because He gave happiness
to the wicked, and therefore my feet tottered, as if I had served God in vain.
For this reason, then, my feet were almost moved, because I was not upright of
heart. What then is upright in heart ? Following the will of God. One man is
prosperous, another man toils; the one lives wickedly and yet is prosperous, the
other lives rightly and is distressed. Let not him that lives rightly and is in
distress be angry; he has within what the prosperous man has not: let him
therefore not be saddened, nor vex himself, nor faint. That prosperous man has gold
in his own chest; this other has God in his conscience. Compare now gold and
God, chest and conscience. The former has that which perishes, and has it where
it will perish; the latter has God, who cannot perish, and has Him there whence
He cannot be taken away: only if he is upright in heart; for then He enters
within and goeth not out. For that reason, what said he? "For with Thee is the
fountain of life:" not with us. We must therefore enter within, that we may live;
we must not be, as it were, content to perish, nor willing to be satisfied of
our own, to be dried up, but we must put our mouth to the very fountain, where
the water fails not. Because Adam wished to live by his own counsel, he, too,
fell through him who had fallen before through pride, who invited him to drink
of the cup of his own pride. Wherefore, because "with Thee is the fountain of
life, and in Thy light we shall see light," let us drink within, let us see
within. Why was there a going out thence? Hear why: "Let not the foot of pride come
to me." Therefore he, to whom the foot of pride came, went out. Show that
therefore he went out. "And let not the hands of sinners move me;" because of the
foot of pride. Why sayest thou this? "They are fallen, all they that work
iniquity." Where are they fallen? In their very pride. "They were driven out, and
they could not stand"(1) If, then, pride drove them out who were not able to
stand, humility sends them in who can stand for ever. For this reason, moreover, he
who said, "The bones that were brought low shall rejoice,"(2) said before,
"Thou shall give joy and gladness to my hearing." What does he mean by, " to my
hearing"? By hearing Thee I am happy; because of Thy voice I am happy; by drinking
within I am happy. Therefore do I not fall; therefore "the bones that were
brought low will rejoice;" therefore "the friend of the Bridegroom standeth and
heareth Him;" therefore he stands, because he hears. He drinks of the fountain
within, therefore he stands. They who willed not to drink of the fountain within,
"there are they fallen: they were driven, they were not able to stand."
18. Thus, the teacher of humility came not to do His own will, but the
will of Him that sent Him. Let us come to Him, enter in unto Him, be ingrafted
into Him, that we may not be doing our own will, but the will of God: and He will
not cast us out, because we are His members, because He willed to be our head
by teaching us humility. Finally, hear Himself discoursing: "Come unto me, ye
who labor and are heavy laden: take my yoke upon you, and learn of me; for I am
meek and lowly of heart:" and when ye have learned this, "ye shall find rest for
your souls,"(3) from which ye cannot be cast out; "because I am come down from
heaven, not to do my own will, but the will of Him that sent me;" I teach
humility; none but the humble can come unto me. Only pride casteth out; how can he
go out who keeps humility and falls not away from the truth? So much as could
be said about the hidden sense has now been said, brethren: this sense is hidden
enough, and I know not whether I have drawn out and shaped in suitable words
for you, why it is that He casteth not out him that cometh unto Him; because He
came not to do His own will, but the will of Him that sent Him.
19. "And this," saith He, "is the will of the Father that sent, that of
all that He hath given me I should lose nothing." He that keeps humility was
given to Him; the same He receives: he that keeps not humility is far from the
Master of humility. "That of all which He hath given me, I should lose nothing."
"So it is not the will of your Father that one of these little ones should
perish." Of the proud, there may perish; but of the little ones, none perisheth;
because, "if ye will not become as this little one, ye shall not enter into the
kingdom of heaven." "Of all that the Father hath given me, I should lose nothing,
but I will raise it up again on the last day." See how here He delineates that
twofold resurrection. "He that cometh unto me" immediately rises again, being
made humble in my members; but I will raise him up again on the last day also
according to the flesh. "For this is the will of my Father that sent me, that
every one who seeth the Son, and believeth on Him, may have eternal life; and I
will raise him up on the last day." He said above, "Whoso heareth my word, and
believeth Him that sent me:" but now, "Whoso seeth the Son, and believeth on
Him." He has not said, seeth the Son, and believeth on the Father; for to believe
on the Son is the same thing as to believe on the Father. Because," even as the
Father hath life in Himself, so hath He given also to the Son to have life in
Himself. That every one who seeth the Son, and believeth on Him, may have
eternal life:" by believing and by passing unto life, just as by that first
resurrection. And, because that is not the only resurrection, He saith, "And I will
raise him up at the last day."