LECTURES OR TRACTATES ON THE GOSPEL ACCORDING TO ST. JOHN. TRACTATES XLV TO
XLIX.
TRACTATE XLV
CHAPTER X. 1-10.
1. OUR Lord's discourse to the Jews began in connection with the man who
was born blind and was restored to sight. Your Charity therefore ought to know
and be advised that today's lesson is interwoven with that one. For when the
Lord had said, "For judgment I am come into this world; that they who see not
might see, and they who see might be made blind,"--which, on the occasion of its
reading, we expounded according to our ability,--some of the Pharisees said, "Are
we blind also?" To whom He replied. "If ye were blind, ye should have no sin:
but now ye say, We see; [therefore] your sin remaineth."(1) To these words He
added what we have been hearing today when the lesson was read.
2. "Verily, verily, I say unto you, He that entereth not by the door into
the sheepfold, but climbeth up some other way, the same is a thief and a
robber." For they declared that they were not blind; yet could they see only by being
the sheep of Christ. Whence claimed they possession of the light, who were
acting as thieves against the day? Because, then, of their vain and proud and
incurable arrogance, did the Lord Jesus subjoin these words, wherein He has given
us also salutary lessons, if we lay them to heart. For there are many who,
according to a custom of this life, are called good people,--good men, good women,
innocent, and observers as it were of what is commanded in the law; paying
respect to their parents, abstaining from adultery, doing no murder, committing no
theft, giving no false witness against any one, and observing all else that the
law requires--yet are not Christians; and for the most part ask boastfully,
like these men. "Are we blind also?" But just because all these things that they
do, and know not to what end they should have reference, they do to no purpose,
the Lord has set forth in today's lesson the similitude of His own flock, and
of the door that leads into the sheepfold. Pagans may say, then, We live well.
If they enter not by the door, what good will that do them, whereof they boast?
For to this end ought good living to benefit every one, that it may be given
him to live for ever: for to whomsoever eternal life is not given, of what
benefit is the living well? For they ought not to be spoken of as even living well,
who either from blindness know not the end of a right life, or in their pride
despise it. But no one has the true and certain hope of living always, unless he
know the life, that it is Christ; and enter by the gate into the sheepfold.
3. Such, accordingly, for the most part seek to persuade men to live well,
and yet not to be Christians. By another way they wish to climb up, to steal
and to kill, not as the shepherd, to preserve and to save. And thus there have
been certain philosophers, holding many subtle discussions about the virtues and
the vices, dividing, defining, drawing out to their close the most acute
processes of reasoning, filling books, brandishing their wisdom with rattling jaws;
who would even dare to say to people, Follow us, keep to our sect, if you would
live happily. But they had not entered by the door: they wished to destroy, to
slay, and to murder.
4. What shall I say of such? Look, the Pharisees themselves were in the
habit of reading, and in what they read, their voices re-echoed the Christ, they
hoped He would come, and recognized Him not when present; they boasted, even
they, of being amongst those who saw, that is, among the wise, and they disowned
the Christ, and entered not in by the door. Therefore would such also, if they
chanced to seduce any, seduce them to be slaughtered and murdered, not to be
brought into liberty. Let us leave these also to themselves, and look at those
who glory in the name of Christ Himself, and see whether even they perchance are
entering in by the door.
5. For there are countless numbers who not only boast that they see, but
would have it appear that they are enlightened by Christ; yet are they heretics.
Have even they somehow entered by the gate? Surely not. Sabellius says, He who
is the Son is Himself the Father; but if the Son, then is there no Father. He
enters not by the door, who asserts that the Son is the Father. Arius says, The
Father is one thing, the Son is another thing. He would say rightly if he
said, Another person; but not another thing.(2) For when he says, Another thing, he
contradicts Him who says in his hearing, "I and my Father are One."(3) Neither
does he therefore enter by the door; for he preaches a Christ such as he
fabricates for himself, not such as the truth declares Him. Thou hast the name, thou
hast not the reality. Christ is the name of something; keep hold of the thing
itself, if thou wouldst benefit by the name. Another, I know not from whence,
says with Photinus,(4) Christ is mere man; He is not God. He enters not in by
the door, for Christ is both man and God. But why need I make many references,
and enumerate the many vanities of heretics? Keep hold of this, that Christ's
sheepfold is the Catholic Church. Whoever would enter the sheepfold, let him enter
by the door, let him preach the true Christ. Not only let him preach the true
Christ, but seek Christ's glory, not his own; for many, by seeking their own
glory, have scattered Christ's sheep, instead of gathering them. For Christ the
Lord is a low gateway: he who enters by this gateway must humble himself, that
he may be able to enter with head unharmed. But he that humbleth not, but
exalteth himself, wishes to climb over the wall; and he that climbeth over the wall,
is exalted only to fall.
6. Thus far, however, the Lord Jesus speaks in covert language; not as yet
is He understood. He names the door, He names the sheepfold, He names the
sheep: all this He sets forth, but does not yet explain. Let us read on then, for
He is coming to those words, wherein He may think proper to give us some
explanation of what He has said; from the explanation of which He will perhaps enable
us to understand also what He has not explained. For He gives us what is plain,
for food; what is obscure, for exercise. "He that entereth not by the door
into the sheepfold, but climbeth up some other way." Woe to the wretch, for he is
sure to fall! Let him then be humble, let him enter by the door: let him walk
on the level ground, and he shall not stumble. "The same," He says, "is a thief
and a robber." The sheep of another he desires to call his own sheep,--his own,
that is, as carried off by stealth, for the purpose, not of saving, but of
slaying them. Therefore is he a thief, because what is another's he calls his own;
a robber, because what he has stolen he also kills. "But he that entereth in
by the door is the shepherd of the sheep: to him the porter openeth." Concerning
this porter we shall make inquiry, when we have heard of the Lord Himself what
is the door and who is the shepherd. "And the sheep hear his voice: and he
calleth his own sheep by name." For He has their names written in the book of
life. "He calleth his own sheep by name." Hence, says the apostle, "The Lord
knoweth them that are His."(1) "And he leadeth them out. And when he putteth forth
his own sheep, he goeth before them, and the sheep follow him: for they know his
voice. And a stranger do they not follow, but do flee from him: for they know
not the voice of strangers." These are veiled words, full of topics of inquiry,
pregnant with sacramental signs. Let us follow then, and listen to the Master
as He makes some opening into these obscurities; and perhaps by the opening He
makes, He will cause us to enter.
7. "This parable spake Jesus unto them; but they understood not what He
spake unto them." Nor we also, perhaps. What, then, is the difference between
them and us, before even we can understand these words? This, that we on our part
knock, that it may be opened unto us; while they, by disowning Christ, refused
to enter for salvation, and preferred remaining outside to be destroyed. In as
far, then, as we listen to these words with a pious mind, in as far as, before
we understand them, we believe them to be true and divine, we stand at a great
distance from these men. For when two persons are listening to the words of the
gospel, the one impious, the other pious, and some of these are such as
neither perhaps understands, the one says, It has said nothing; the other says, It
has said the truth, and what it has said is good, but we do not understand it.
This latter, because he believes, now knocks, that he may be worthy to have it
opened up to him, if he continue knocking; but the other still hears the words,
"If ye believe not, ye shall not understand."(2) Why do I draw your attention to
this? Even for this reason, that when I have explained as I can these obscure
words, or, because of their great abstruseness, I have either myself failed to
arrive at an understanding of them, or wanted the faculty of explaining what I
do understand, or every one has been so dull as not to follow me, even when I
give the explanation, yet should he not despair of himself; but continue in
faith, walk on in the way, and hear the apostle saying, "And if in anything ye be
otherwise minded, God shall reveal even this unto you. Nevertheless whereto we
have already attained, let us walk therein."(3)
8. Let us begin, then, with hearing His exposition of what we have heard
Him propounding. "Then said Jesus unto them again, Verily, verily, I say unto
you, I am the door of the sheep." See, He has opened the very door which was shut
in His former description. He Himself is the door. We have come to know it;
let us enter, or rejoice that we are already within. "All that ever came are
thieves and robbers." What is this, Lord, "All that ever came"? How so? hast Thou
not come? But understand; I said, "All that ever came," meaning, of course,
exclusive of myself.(4) Let us recollect then. Before His coming came the prophets:
were they thieves and robbers? God forbid. They did not come apart from Him,
for they came with Him. When about to come, He sent heralds, but retained
possession of the hearts of His messengers. Do you wish to know that they came with
Him, who is Himself ever existent? Certainly He assumed human flesh at the time
appointed. But what means that "ever"? "In the beginning was the Word."(1) With
Him, therefore, came those who came with the word of God. "I am," said He,
"the way, and the truth, and the life."(2) If He is the truth, with Him came those
who were truthful. As many, therefore, as were apart from Him, were "thieves
and robbers," that is, had come to steal and to destroy.
9. 'But the sheep did not hear them." This is a more important point, "the
sheep did not hear them." Before the advent of our Lord Jesus Christ, when He
came in humility in the flesh, righteous men preceded, believing in the same
way in Him who was to come, as we believe in Him who has come. Times vary, but
not faith. For verbs themselves also vary with the tense, when they are variously
declined. He is to come, has one sound; He has come, has another: there is a
change in the sound between He is to come, and He has come:(3) yet the same
faith unites both,--both those who believed that He would come, and those who have
believed that He is come. At different times, indeed, but by the one doorway of
faith, that is, by Christ, do we see that both have entered. We believe that
the Lord Jesus Christ was born of the Virgin, that He came in the flesh,
suffered, rose again, ascended into heaven: all this, just as you hear verbs of the
past tense, we believe to be already fulfilled. In that faith a partnership is
also held with us by those fathers who believed that He would be born of the
Virgin, would suffer, would rise again, would ascend into heaven; for to such the
apostle pointed when he said, "But we having the same spirit of faith, according
as it is written, I believed, and therefore have I spoken; we also believe,
and therefore speak."(4) The prophet said, "I believed, therefore have I
spoken:"(5) the apostle says, "We also believe, and therefore speak." But to let you
know that their faith is one, listen to him saying, "Having the same spirit of
faith, we also believe." So also in another place, "For I would not have you
ignorant, brethren, how that all our fathers were under the cloud, and all passed
through the sea: and were all baptized unto Moses in the cloud and in the sea;
and did all eat the same spiritual meat, and did all drink the same spiritual
drink." The Red Sea signifies baptism; Moses, their leader through the Red Sea,
signifies Christ; the people, who passed through, signify believers; the death
of the Egyptians signifies the abolition of sins. Under different signs there is
the same faith. It is with different signs as with different words [verbs];
for verbs change their sounds through the tenses, and verbs are indeed nothing
else than signs. For they are words because of what they signify: take away the
meaning from a word,(6) and it becomes a senseless sound. All, therefore, have
become signs. Was not the same faith theirs by whom these signs were employed,
and by whom were foretold in prophecy the very things which we believe?
Certainly it was: but they believed that they were yet to come, and we, that they have
come. In like manner does he also say, "They all drank the same spiritual
drink;" "the same spiritual," for it was not the same material [drink]. For what was
it they drank? "For they drank of the spiritual Rock that followed them; and
that Rock was Christ."(7) See, then, how that while the faith remained, the
signs were varied. There the rock was Christ; to us that is Christ which is placed
on the altar of God. And they, as a great sacramental sign of the same Christ,
drank the water flowing from the rock: what we drink is known to believers. If
one's thoughts turn to the visible form, the thing is different; if to the
meaning that addresses the understanding, they drank the same spiritual drink. As
many, then, at that time as believed, whether Abraham, or Isaac, or Jacob, or
Moses, or the other patriarchs or prophets who foretold of Christ, were sheep,
and heard Christ. His voice, and not another's, did they hear. The Judge was
present in the person of the Crier. For even when the judge speaks through the
crier, the clerks does not make it, The crier said; but the judge said. But others
there are whom the sheep did not hear, in whom Christ's voice had no
place,--wanderers, uttering falsehoods, prating inanities, fabricating vanities,
misleading the miserable.
10. Why is it, then, that I have said, This is a more important point?
What is there about it obscure and difficult to understand? Listen, I beseech you.
See, the Lord Jesus Christ Himself came and preached. Much more surely was
that the Shepherd's voice which was uttered by the very mouth of the Shepherd. For
if the Shepherd's voice came through the prophets, how much more did the
Shepherd's own tongue give utterance to the Shepherd's voice? Yet all did not hear
Him. But what are we to think? Those who did hear, were they sheep? Lo? Judas
heard, and was a wolf: he followed, but, clad in sheep-skin. he was laying snares
for the Shepherd. Some, again, of those who crucified Christ did not hear, and
yet were sheep; for such He saw in the crowd when He said, "When ye have
lifted up the Son of man, then shall ye know that I am He."(1) Now, how is this
question to be solved? They that are not sheep do hear, and they that are sheep do
not hear. Some, who are wolves, follow the Shepherd's voice; and some, that are
sheep, contradict it. Last of all, the sheep slay the Shepherd. The point is
solved; for some one in reply says. But when they did not hear, as yet they were
not sheep, they were then wolves: the voice, when it was heard, changed them,
and out of wolves transformed them into sheep; and so, when they became sheep,
they heard, and found the Shepherd, and followed Him. They built their hopes on
the Shepherd's promises, because they obeyed His precepts.
11. That question has been solved in a way, and perhaps satisfies every
one. But I bare still a subject of concern, and what concerns me I shall impart
to you, that, in some sort inquiring together, I may through His revelation be
found worthy with you to attain the solution. Hear, then, what it is that moves
me. By the Prophet Ezekiel the Lord rebukes the shepherds, and among other
things says of the sheep, "The wandering sheep have ye not recalled."(2) He both
declares it a wanderer, and calls it a sleep. If, while wandering, it was a
sheep, whose voice was it hearing to lead it astray? For doubtless it would not be
straying were it hearing the shepherd's voice: but it strayed just because it
heard another's voice; it heard the voice of the thief and the robber. Surely the
sheep do not hear the voice of robbers. "Those that came," He said,--and we
are to understand, apart from me,--that is, "those that came apart from me are
thieves and robbers, and the sheep did not hear them." Lord, if the sheep did not
hear them, how can the sheep wander? If the sheep hear only Thee, and Thou art
the truth, whoever heareth the truth cannot certainly fall into error. But
they err, and are called sheep. For if, in the very midst of their wandering, they
were not called sheep, it would not be said by Ezekiel, "The wandering sheep
have ye not recalled." How is it at the same time a wanderer and a sheep? Has it
heard the voice of another? Surely "the sheep did not hear them." Accordingly
many are just now being gathered into Christ's fold, and from being heretics
are becoming catholics. They are rescued from the thieves, and restored to the
shepherds: and sometimes they murmur, and become wearied of Him that calls them
back, and have no true knowledge of him that would murder them; nevertheless
also, when, after a struggle, those have come who are sheep, they recognize the
Shepherd's voice, and are glad they have come, and are ashamed of their
wandering. When, then, they were glorying in that state of error as in the truth, and
were certainly not hearing the Shepherd's voice, but were following another, were
they sheep, or were they not? If they were sheep, how can it be the case that
the sheep do not listen to aliens? If they were not sheep, wherefore the rebuke
addressed to those to whom it is said, "The wandering sheep have ye not
recalled"? In the case also of those already become catholic Christians, and
believers of good promise, evils sometimes occur: they are seduced into error, and
after their error are restored. When they were thus seduced, and were rebaptized,
or after the companionship of the Lord's fold were turned back again into their
former error, were they sheep, or were they not? Certainly they were catholics.
If they were faithful catholics, they were sheep. If they were sheep, how was
it that they could listen to the voice of a stranger when the Lord saith, "The
sheep did not hear them"?
12. You hear, brethren, the great importance of the question. I say then,
"The Lord knoweth them that are His."(3) He knoweth those who were foreknown,
He knoweth those who were predestinated; because it is said of Him, "For whom He
did foreknow, He also did predestinate to be conformed to the image of His
Son, that He might be the firstborn among many brethren. Moreover, whom He did
predestinate, them He also called; and whom He called, them He also justified; and
whom He justified, them He also glorified. If God be for us, who can be
against us?" Add to this: "He that spared not His own Son, but delivered Him up for
us all, how hath He not with Him also freely given us all things?" But what
"us"? Those who are foreknown, predestinated, justified, glorified; regarding whom
there follows, "Who shall lay anything to the charge of God's elect?"(1)
Therefore "the Lord knoweth them that are His;" they are the sheep. Such sometimes do
not know themselves, but the Shepherd knoweth them, according to this
predestination, this foreknowledge of God, according to the election of the sheep
before the foundation of the world: for so saith also the apostle, "According as He
hath chosen us in Him before the foundation of the world."(2) According, then,
to this divine foreknowledge and predestination, how many sheep are outside,
how many wolves within! and how many sheep are inside, how many wolves without!
How many are now living in wantonness who will yet be chaste! how many are
blaspheming Christ who will yet believe in Him! how many are giving themselves to
drunkenness who will yet be sober! how many are preying on other people s
property who will yet freely give of their own! Nevertheless at present they are
hearing the voice of another, they are following strangers. In like manner, how many
are praising within who will yet blaspheme; are chaste who will yet be
fornicators; are sober who will wallow hereafter in drink; are standing who will by
and by fall! These are not the sheep. (For we speak of those who were
predestinated,--of those whom the Lord knoweth that they are His.) And yet these, so long
as they keep right, listen to the voice of Christ. Yea, these hear, the others
do not; and yet, according to predestination, these are not sheep, while the
others are.
13. There remains still the question, which I now think may meanwhile thus
be solved. There is a voice of some kind,--there is, I say, a certain kind of
voice of the Shepherd, in respect of which the sheep hear not strangers, and in
respect of which those who are not sheep do not hear Christ. What a word is
this! "He that endureth to the end, the same shall be saved."(3) No one of His
own is indifferent to such a voice, a stranger does not hear it: for this reason
also does He announce it to the former, that he may abide perseveringly with
Himself to the end; but by one who is wanting in such persevering continuance
with Him, such a word remains unheard. One has come to Christ, and has heard
word after word of one kind and another, all of them true, all of them salutary;
and among all the rest is also this utterance, "He that endureth to the end,
the same shall be saved." He who has heard this is one of the sheep. But there
was, perhaps, some one listening to it, who treated it with dislike, with
coldness, and heard it as that of a stranger. If he was predestinated, he strayed for
the time, but he was not lost for ever: he returns to hear what he has
neglected, to do what he has heard. For if he is one of those who are predestinated,
then both his very wandering and his future conversion have been foreknown by
God: if he has strayed away, he will return to hear that voice of the Shepherd,
and to follow Him who saith, "He that endureth to the end, the same shall be
saved." A good voice, brethren, it is; true and shepherd-like, the very voice of
salvation in the tabernacles of the righteous.(4) For it is easy to hear Christ,
easy to praise the gospel, easy to applaud the preacher: but to endure unto
the end, is peculiar to the sheep who hear the Shepherd's voice. A temptation
befalls thee, endure thou to the end, for the temptation will not endure to the
end. And what is that end to which thou shalt endure? Even till thou reachest the
end of thy pathway. For as long as thou hearest not Christ, He is thine
adversary in the pathway, that is, in this mortal life. And what doth He say? "Agree
with thine adversary quickly, while thou art in the way with him."(5) Thou hast
heard, hast believed, hast agreed. If thou hast been at enmity, agree. If thou
hast got the opportunity of coming to an agreement, keep not up the quarrel
longer. For thou knowest not when thy way will be ended, and it is known to Him.
If thou art a sheep, and if thou endurest to the end, thou shalt be saved: and
therefore it is that His own despise not that voice, and strangers hear it not.
According to my ability, as He gave me the power, I have either explained to
you or gone over with you a subject of great profundity. If any have failed
fully to understand, let him retain his piety, and the truth will be revealed: and
let not those who have understood vaunt themselves as swifter at the expense of
the slower, lest in their vaunting they turn out of the track, and the slower
more easily attain the goal. But let all of us be guided by Him to whom we say,
"Lead me, O Lord, in Thy way, and I will walk in Thy truth."(6)
14. By this, then, which the Lord hath explained, that He Himself is the
door, let us find entrance to what He has set forth, but not explained. And
indeed who it is that is the Shepherd, although He hath not told us in the lesson
we have read to-day, yet in that which follows He very plainly tells us: "I am
the good Shepherd." And although He had not said so, whom else but Himself ought
we to have understood in those words where He saith, "He that entereth in by
the door is the Shepherd of the sheep. To Him the porter openeth: and the sheep
hear His voice: and He calleth His own sheep by name, and leadeth them out. And
when He putteth forth His own sheep, He goeth before them, and the sheep
follow Him: for they know His voice"? For who else calleth His own sheep by name,
and leadeth them hence unto eternal life, but He who knoweth the names of those
that are fore-ordained? Hence He said to His disciples, "Rejoice that your names
are written in heaven;"(1) for from this it is that He calleth them by name.
And who else putteth them forth, save He who putteth away their sins, that,
freed from their grievous fetters, they may be able to follow Him? And who hath
gone before them to the place whither they are to follow Him, but He who, rising
from the dead, dieth no more; and death shall have no more dominion over Him;(2)
and who, when He was manifest here in the flesh, said, "Father, I will that
they also whom Thou hast given me be with me where I am"?(3) Hence it is that He
saith, "I am the door: by me if any man enter in, he shall be saved, and shall
go in and out, and find pasture." In this He clearly shows that not only the
Shepherd, but the sheep also enter in by the door.
15. But what is this, "He shall go in and out, and find pasture"? To enter
indeed into the Church by Christ the door, is eminently good; but to go out of
the Church, as this same John the evangelist saith in his epistle, "They went
out from us, but they were not of us,"(4) is certainly otherwise than good. Such
a going out could not then be commended by the good Shepherd, when He said,
"And he shall go in and out, and find pasture." There is therefore not only some
sort of entrance, but some outgoing also that is good, by the good door, which
is Christ. But what is that praiseworthy and blessed outgoing? I might say,
indeed, that we enter when we engage in some inward exercise of thought; and go
out, when we take to some active work without: and since, as the apostle saith,
Christ dwelleth in our hearts by faith,(5) to enter by Christ is to give
ourselves to thought in accordance with that faith; but to go out by Christ is, in
accordance also with that same faith, to take to outside works, that is to say, in
the presence of others. Hence, also, we read in a psalm, "Man goeth forth to
his work;"(6) and the Lord Himself saith, "Let your works shine before men."(7)
But I am better pleased that the Truth Himself, like a good Shepherd, and
therefore a good Teacher, hath in a certain measure reminded us how we ought to
understand His words, "He shall go in and out, and find pasture," when He added in
the sequel, "The thief cometh not, but for to steal, and to kill, and to
destroy: I am come that they might have life, and that they might have it more
abundantly." For He seems to me to have meant, That they may have life in coming in,
and have it more abundantly at their departure. For no one can pass out by the
door--that is, by Christ--to that eternal life which shall be open to the
sight, unless by the same door--that is, by the same Christ--he has entered His
church, which is His fold, to the temporal life, which is lived in faith.
Therefore, He saith, "I am come that they may have life," that is, faith, which worketh
by love;(8) by which faith they enter the fold that they may live, for the just
liveth by faith:(9) "and that they may have it more abundantly," who, enduring
unto the end, pass out by this same door, that is, by the faith of Christ; for
as true believers they die, and will have life more abundantly when they come
whither the Shepherd hath preceded them, where they shall die no more.
Although, therefore, there is no want of pasture even here in the fold,--for we may
understand the words "and shall find pasture" as referring to both, that is, both
to their going in and their going out,--yet there only will they find the true
pasture. where they shall be filled who hunger and thirst after
righteousness,(10)--such pasture as was found by him to whom it was said, "To-day shalt thou
be with me in paradise."(11) But how He Himself is the door, and Himself the
Shepherd, so that He also may in a certain respect be understood as going in and
out by Himself, and who is the porter, it would be too long to inquire to-day,
and, according to the grace given us by Himself, to unfold in the way of
dissertation.
TRACTATE XLVI.
CHAPTER X. 11-13.
1. THE Lord Jesus is speaking to His sheep--to those already so, and to
those yet to become such--who were then present; for in the place where they
were, there were those who were already His sheep, as well as those who were
afterwards to become so: and He likewise shows to those then present and those to
come, both to them and to us, and to as many also after us as shall yet be His
sheep, who it is that had been sent to them. All, therefore, hear the voice of
their Shepherd saying, "I am the good Shepherd." He would not add "good," were
there not bad shepherds. But the bad shepherds are those who are thieves and
robbers, or certainly hirelings at the best. For we ought to examine into, to
distinguish, and to know, all the characters whom He has here depicted. The Lord has
already unfolded two points, which He had previously set forth in a kind of
covert form: we already know that He is Himself the door, and we know that He is
Himself the Shepherd. Who the thieves and robbers are, was made clear in
yesterday's lesson; and to-day we have heard of the hireling, as we have heard also of
the wolf. Yesterday the porter was also introduced by name. Among the good,
therefore, are the door, the doorkeeper, the shepherd, and the sheep: among the
bad, the thieves and robbers, the hirelings, and the wolf.
2. We understand the Lord Christ as the door, and also as the Shepherd;
but who is to be understood as the doorkeeper? For the former two, He has Himself
explained: the doorkeeper He has left us to search out for ourselves. And what
doth He say of the doorkeeper? "To him," He saith, "the porter [doorkeeper](1)
openeth." To whom cloth he open? To the Shepherd. What doth he open to the
Shepherd? The door. And who is also the door? The Shepherd Himself. Now, if Christ
the Lord had not Himself explained, had not Himself said, "I am the Shepherd,"
and "I am the door," would any of us have ventured to say that Christ is
Himself both the Shepherd and the door? For had He said, "I am the Shepherd," and
had not said, "I am the door," we should be setting ourselves to inquire what was
the door, and perhaps, mistaken in our views, be still standing before the
door. His grace and mercy have revealed to us the Shepherd, by His calling Himself
so; have revealed to us also the door, when declared Himself such; but He hath
left us to search out the doorkeeper for ourselves. Whom, then, are we to call
the doorkeeper? Whomsoever we fix upon, we must take care not to think of him
as greater than the door itself; for in men's houses the doorkeeper is greater
than the door. The doorkeeper is placed before the door, not the door before
the doorkeeper; because the porter keepeth the door, not the door the porter. I
dare not say that any one is greater than the door, for I have heard already
what is the door: that is no longer unknown to me, I am not left to my own
conjecture, and I have not got much room for mere human guess work: God hath said it,
the Truth hath said it, and we cannot change what the Unchangeable hath uttered.
3. In respect, then, of the profound nature of this question, I shall tell
you what I think: let each one make the choice that pleases him, but let him
think of it reverently; as it is written, "Think of the Lord with goodness, and
in simplicity of heart seek Him."(2) Perhaps we ought to understand the Lord
Himself as the doorkeeper: for the shepherd and the door are in human respects as
much different from each other as the doorkeeper and the door; and yet the
Lord has called Himself both the Shepherd and the door. Why, then, may we not
understand Him also as the doorkeeper? For if we look at His personal qualities,(3)
the Lord Christ is neither a shepherd, in the way we are accustomed to know
and to see shepherds; nor is He a door, for no artisan made Him: but if, because
of some point of similarity, He is both the door and the Shepherd, I venture to
say, He is also a sheep. True, the sheep is under the shepherd; yet He is both
the Shepherd and a sheep. Where is He the Shepherd? Look, here thou hast it;
read the Gospel: "I am the good Shepherd." Where is He a sheep? Ask the prophet:
"He was led as a sheep to the slaughter."(4) Ask the friend of the bridegroom:
"Behold the Lamb of God, that taketh away the sin of the world."(5) Moreover,
I am going to say something of a still more wonderful kind, in accordance with
these points of similarity. For both the lamb, and the sheep, and the shepherd
are friendly with one another, but from the lions as their foes the sheep are
protected by their shepherds: and yet of Christ, who is both sheep and Shepherd,
we have it said, "The Lion of the tribe of Judah hath prevailed."(1) All this,
brethren, understand in connection with points of similarity, not with
personal qualities. It is a common thing to see the shepherds sitting on a rock, and
there guarding the cattle committed to their care. Surely the shepherd is better
than the rock that he sits upon; and yet Christ is both the Shepherd and the
rock. All this by way of comparison. But if thou askest me for His peculiar
personal quality:(2) "In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and
the Word was God."(3) If thou askest me for the personal quality peculiarly
His own: The only Son, from everlasting to everlasting begotten of the Father,
the equal of Him that begat, the Maker of all things, unchangeable with the
Father, unchanged by the assuming of human form, man by incarnation, the Son of man,
and the Son of God. All this that I have said is not figure, but reality.
4. Therefore, let us not, brethren, be disturbed in understanding Him, in
harmony with certain resemblances, as Himself the door, and also the
doorkeeper. For what is the door? The way of entrance. Who is the doorkeeper? He who
opens it. Who, then, is He that opens Himself, but He who unveils Himself to sight?
See, when the Lord spoke at first of the door, we did not understand: so long
as we did not understand, it was shut: He who opened it is Himself the
doorkeeper. There is no need, then, of seeking any other meaning, no need; but perhaps
there is the desire. If there is so, quit not the path, go not outside of the
Trinity. If thou art in quest of some other impersonation of the doorkeeper,
bethink thee of the Holy Spirit; for the Holy Spirit will not think it unmeet to
be the doorkeeper, when the Son has thought it meet to be Himself the door. Look
at the doorkeeper as perhaps the Holy Spirit: about Him the Lord saith to His
disciples, "He shall guide you into all truth."(4) What is the door? Christ.
What is Christ? The Truth. Who, then, openeth the door, but He who guideth into
all truth?
5. But what are we to say of the hireling? He is not mentioned here among
the good. "The good Shepherd," He says, "giveth His life for the sheep. But he
that is an hireling, and not the Shepherd, whose own the sheep are not, seeth
the wolf coming, and leaveth the sheep, and fleeth; and the wolf catcheth them,
and scattereth the sheep." The hireling does not here bear a good character,
and yet in some respects is useful; nor would he be called an hireling, did he
not receive hire from his employer. Who then is this hireling, that is both
blameworthy and needful? And here, brethren, let the Lord Himself give us light,
that we may know who the hirelings are, and be not hirelings ourselves. Who then
is the hireling? There are some in office in the church, of whom the Apostle
Paul saith, "Who seek their own, not the things that are Jesus Christ's." What
means that, "Who seek their own"? Who do not love Christ freely, who do not seek
after God for His own sake; who are pursuing after temporal advantages, gaping
for gain, coveting honors from men. When such things are loved by an overseer,
and for such things God is served, whoever such an one may be, he is an hireling
who cannot count himself among the children. For of such also the Lord saith:
"Verily, I say unto you, they have their reward."(5) Listen to what the Apostle
Paul says of St. Timothy: "But I trust in the Lord Jesus to send Timothy
shortly unto you, that I also may be of good comfort, when I know your
circumstances; for I have no man like-minded, who will naturally(6) care for you. For all
seek their own, not the things which are Jesus Christ's."(7) The shepherd mourned
in the midst of hirelings. He sought some one who sincerely loved the flock of
Christ, and round about him, amongst those who were with him at that time, he
found not one. Not that there was no one then in the Church of Christ but the
Apostle Paul and Timothy, who had a brother's(8) concern for the flock; but it
so happened at the time of his sending Timothy, that he had none else of his
sons about him; only hirelings were with him, "who sought their own, not the
things which are Jesus Christ's." And yet he himself, with a brother's anxiety for
the flock, preferred sending his son, and remaining himself amongst hirelings.
Hirelings are also found among ourselves, but the Lord alone distinguisheth
them. He that searcheth the heart, distinguisheth them; and yet sometimes we know
them ourselves. For it was not without a purpose that the Lord Himself said also
of the wolves: "By their fruits ye shall know them."(1) Temptations put many
to the question, and then their thoughts are made manifest; but many remain
undiscovered. The Lord's fold must have as overseers, both those who are children
and those who are hirelings. But the overseers, who are sons, are the shepherds.
If they are shepherds, how is there but one Shepherd, save that all of them
are members of the one Shepherd, to whom the sheep belong? For they are also
members of Himself as the one sheep; because "as a sheep he was led to the
slaughter."
6. But give heed to the fact that even the hirelings are needful. For many
indeed in the Church are following after earthly profit, and yet preach
Christ, and through them is heard the voice of Christ; and the sheep follow, not the
hireling, but the Shepherd's voice speaking through the hireling. Hearken to
the hirelings as pointed out by the Lord Himself: "The scribes," He saith, "and
the Pharisees sit in Moses' seat: do what they say; but do not what they do."(2)
What else said He but, Listen to the Shepherd's voice speaking through the
hirelings? For sitting in Moses' seat, they teach the law of God; therefore God
teacheth by them. But if they wish to teach their own things, hear them not, do
them not. For certainly such seek their own, not the things which are Jesus
Christ's; but no hireling has dared to say to Christ's people, Seek your own, not
the things which are Jesus Christ's. For his own evil conduct he does not preach
from the seat of Christ: he does injury by the evil that he does, not by the
good that he says. Pluck the grapes, beware of the thorn. It is well I see that
you have understood; but for the sake of those that are slower, I shall repeat
these words with greater plainness. How said I, Pluck the bunch of grapes,
beware of the thorn; when the Lord saith, "Do men gather grapes of thorns, or figs
of thistles"? That is quite true: and yet what I said is also true, Pluck the
bunch of grapes, beware of the thorn. For sometimes the grape-cluster, springing
from the root of the vine, finds its support in a common hedge; its branch,
grows, becomes embedded among thorns, and the thorn bears other fruit than its
own. For the thorn has not been produced from the vine, but has become the
resting-place of its runner. Make thine inquiries only at the roots. Seek for the
thorn-root, thou wilt find it apart from the vine: seek the origin of the grape,
and from the root of the vine it will be found to have sprung. And so, Moses'
seat was the vine; the morals of the Pharisees were the thorns. Sound doctrine
cometh through the wicked, as the vine-branch in a hedge, a bunch of grapes
among thorns. Gather care. fully, so as in seeking the fruit not to tear thine
hand; and while thou art to hear one speaking what is good, imitate him not when
doing what is evil. "What they tell you, do,"--gather the grapes; "but what they
do, do not,"--beware of the thorns. Even through hirelings listen to the voice
of the Shepherd, but be not hirelings yourselves, seeing ye are members of the
Shepherd. Yea, Paul himself, the holy apostle who said, "I have no one who
hath a brother's concern about you; for all seek their own, not the things which
l are Jesus Christ's," draws a distinction in another place between hirelings
and sons; and see what he saith: "Some preach Christ even of envy and strife,
and some also of good will: some of love, knowing that I am set for the defence
of the gospel; but some also preach Christ of contention, not sincerely,
supposing to add affliction to my bonds." These were hirelings who disliked the
Apostle Paul. And why such dislike, but just because they were seeking after temporal
things? But mark what he adds: "What then? notwithstanding, every way, whether
in pretence or in truth, Christ is preached: and I therein do rejoice, yea,
and will rejoice."(3) Christ is the truth: let the truth be preached in pretense
by hirelings, let it be preached in truth by the children: the children are
waiting patiently for the eternal inheritance of the Father, the hirelings are
longing for, and in a hurry to get, the temporal pay of their employer. For my
part let me be shorn of the human glory, which I see such an object of envy to
hirelings: and yet by the tongues both of hirelings and of children let the divine
glory of Christ be published abroad, seeing that, "whether in pretense or in
truth, Christ is preached."
7. We have seen who the hireling is also. Who, but the devil, is the wolf?
And what was said of the hireling? "When he seeth the wolf coming, he fleeth:
but the sheep are not his own, and he careth not for the sheep." Was the
Apostle Paul such an one? Certainly not. Was Peter such an one? Far from it. Was such
the character of the other apostles, save Judas, the son of perdition? Surely
not. Were they shepherds then? Certainly they were. And how is there one
Shepherd? I have already said they were shepherds, because members of the Shepherd.
In that head they rejoiced, under that head they were in harmony together, with
one spirit they lived in the bond of one body; and therefore belonged all of
them to the one Shepherd. If, then, they were shepherds, and not hirelings,
wherefore fled they when suffering persecution? Explain it to us, O Lord. In an
epistle, I have seen paul fleeing: he was let down by the wall in a basket, to
escape the hands of his persecutor.(1) Had he, then, no care of the sheep, whom he
thus abandoned at the approach of the wolf? Clearly he had, but he commended
them by his prayers to the Shepherd who was sitting in heaven; and for their
advantage he preserved himself by flight, as he says in a certain place, "To abide
in the flesh is needful for you."(2) For all had heard from the Shepherd
Himself, "If they persecute you in one city, flee ye into another."(3) May the Lord
be pleased to explain to us this point! Lord, Thou saidst to those whom Thou
didst certainly wish to be faithful shepherds, and whom Thou didst form into Thine
own members, "If they persecute you flee." Doest Thou, then, injustice to
them, when Thou blamest the hirelings who flee when they see the wolf coming! We
ask Thee to tell us what meaning lies hid in the depths of the question. Let us
knock, and the keeper of the door, which is Christ, will be here to reveal
Himself.
8. Who is the hireling that seeth the wolf coming, and fleeth? He that
seeketh his own, not the things which are Jesus Christ's. He is one that does not
venture plainly to rebuke an offender.(4) Look, some one or other has
sinned--grievously sinned; he ought to be rebuked, to be excommunicated: but once
excommunicated, he will turn into an enemy, hatch plots, and do all the injury he
can. At present, he who seeketh his own, not the things that are Jesus Christ's,
in order not to lose what he follows after, the advantages of human friendship,
and incur the annoyances of human enmity, keeps quiet and does not administer
rebuke. See, the wolf has caught a sheep by the throat; the devil has enticed a
believer into adultery: thou holdest thy peace--thou utterest no reproof. O
hireling, thou hast seen the wolf coming and hast fled! Perhaps he answers and
says: See, I am here; I have not fled. Thou hast fled, because thou hast been
silent; thou hast been silent, because thou hast been afraid. The flight of the
mind is fear. Thou stoodest with thy body, thou fleddest in thy spirit, which was
not the conduct of him who said, "Though I be absent in the flesh, yet am I
with you in the spirit."(5) For how did he flee in spirit, who, though absent in
the flesh, yet in his letters reproved the fornicators? Our affections are the
motions of our minds. Joy is expansion of the mind; sorrow, contraction of the
mind; desire, a forward movement of the mind; and fear, the flight of the mind.
For thou art expanded in mind when thou art glad; contracted in mind when thou
art in trouble; thou movest forward in mind when thou hast an earnest desire;
and thou fleest in mind when thou art afraid. This, then, is how the hireling is
said to flee at the sight of the wolf. Why? "Because he careth not for the
sheep." Why "careth he not for the sheep"? "Because he is an hireling." What is
that, "he is an hireling"? He seeketh a temporal reward, and shall not dwell in
the house for ever. There are still some things here to be inquired about and
discussed with you, but it is not prudent to burden you. For we are ministering
the Lord's food to our fellow-servants; we feed as sheep in the Lord's pastures,
and are fed together. And just as we must not withhold what is needful, so our
weak hearts are not to be overcharged with the abundance of provisions. Let it
not then annoy your Charity that I do not take up to-day all that I think is
still here to be discussed; but the same lesson will, in the Lord's name, be
read over to us again on the preaching days, and be, with His help, more carefully
considered.
TRACTATE XLVII.
CHAPTER X. 14-21.
1. Those of you who hear the word of our God, not only with willingness,
but also with attention, doubtless remember our promise. Indeed the same gospel
lesson has also been read to-day which was read last Lord's day; because,
having lingered over certain closely related topics, we could not discuss all that
we owed to your powers of understanding. Accordingly, what has been already said
and discoursed about we do not inquire into today, lest by continual
repetitions we should be prevented from reaching what has still to be spoken. You know
now in the Lord's name who is the good Shepherd, and in what way good shepherds
are His members, and therefore the Shepherd is one. You know who is the
hireling we have to bear with; who the wolf, and the thieves, and the robbers we have
to beware of; who are the sheep, and what is the door whereby both sheep and
shepherd enter: how we are to understand the doorkeeper. You know also that every
one who entereth not by the door is a thief and a robber, and cometh not but
to steal, and to kill, and to destroy. All these sayings have, as I think, been
sufficiently handled. To-day we ought to tell you, as far as the Lord enables
us (for Jesus Christ our Saviour hath Himself told us that He is both the
Shepherd and the door, and that the good Shepherd entereth in by the door), how it is
that He entereth in by Himself. For if no one is a good shepherd but he that
entereth by the door, and He Himself is preeminently the good Shepherd, and also
Himself the door, I can understand it only in this way, that He entereth in by
Himself to His sheep, and calleth them to follow Him, and they, going in and
out, find pasture, which is to say, eternal life.
2. I proceed, then, without more delay. When I seek to get into you, that
is, into your heart, I preach Christ: were I preaching something else, I
should be trying to climb up some other way. Christ, therefore, is my gate to you:
by Christ I get entrance, not to your houses, but to your hearts. It is by
Christ I enter: it is Christ in me that you have been willingly hearing. And why is
it you have thus willingly hearkened to Christ in me? Because you are the sheep
of Christ, purchased with the blood of Christ. You acknowledge your own price,
which is not paid by me, but is preached by my instrumentality. He, and only
He, was the buyer, who shed precious blood--the precious blood of Him who was
without sin. Yet made He precious also the blood of His own, for whom He paid the
price of blood: for had He not made the blood of His own precious, it would
not have been said, "Precious in the sight of the Lord is the death of His
saints."(1) So also when He saith, "The good Shepherd giveth His life for the sheep,"
He is not the only one who has done such a deed; and yet if those who have
done so are His members, He only Himself was the doer of it. For He was able to do
so without them, but whence had they the power apart from Him, who Himself had
said, "Without me ye can do nothing"?(2) But from the same source we can show
what others also have done, for the apostle John himself, who preached the very
gospel you have been hearing, has said in his epistle, "Just as Christ laid
down His life for us, so ought we also to lay down our lives for the
brethren."(3) "We ought," he says: He made us debtors who first set the example. To the
same effect it is written in a certain place, "If thou sittest down to sup at a
ruler's table, make wise observation of what is set before thee; and put to thy
hand, knowing that it will be thy duty to make similar provision in turn."(4)
You know what is meant by the ruler's table: you there find the body and blood of
Christ; let him who comes to such a table be ready with similar provision. And
what is such similar provision? As fire laid down His life for us, so ought we
also, for the edification of others, and the maintenance of the faith,(5) to
lay down our lives far the brethren. To the same effect He said to Peter, whom
He wished to make a good shepherd. not in Peter's own person, but as a member of
His body: "Peter, lovest thou me? Feed my sheep." This He did once, again, and
a third time, to the disciple's sorrow. And when the Lord had questioned him
as often as lie judged it needful, that he who had thrice denied might thrice
confess Him, and had a third time given him the charge to feed His sheep, He said
to him, "When thou wast young, thou girdedst thyself, and walkedst whither
thou wouldest: but when thou shall be old, thou shall stretch forth thy hands, and
another shall gird thee, and carry thee whither thou wouldest not." And the
evangelist has explained the Lord's meaning: "But this spake He, signifying by
what death he should glorify God."(6) "Feed my sheep" applies, then, to this,
that thou shouldst lay down thy life for my sheep.
3. And now when He saith, "As the Father knoweth me, even so know I the
Father," who can be ignorant of His meaning? For He knoweth the Father by
Himself, and we by Him. That He hath knowledge by Himself, we know already: that we
also have knowledge by Him, we have likewise learned, for this also we have
learned of Him. For He Himself hath said: "No one hath seen God at any time; but the
only-begotten Son, who is in the bosom of the Father, He hath declared
Him."(1) And so by Him do we also get this knowledge, to whom He hath declared Him. In
another place also He saith: "No one knoweth the Son, but the Father; neither
knoweth any one the Father, save the Son, and he to whomsoever the Son will
reveal Him."(2) As He then knoweth the Father by Himself, and we know the Father
by Him; so into the sheepfold He entereth by Himself, and we by Him. We were
saying that by Christ we have a door of entrance to you; and why? Because we
preach Christ. We preach Christ; and therefore we enter in by the door. But Christ
preacheth Christ, for He preacheth Himself; and so the Shepherd entereth in by
Himself. When the light shows the other things that are seen in the light, does
it need some other means of being made visible itself? The light, then,
exhibits both other things and itself. Whatever we understand, we understand with the
intellect: and how, save by the intellect, do we understand the intellect
itself? But does one in the same way with the bodily eye see both other things and
[the eye] itself? For though men see with their eyes, yet their own eyes they
see not. The eye of the flesh sees other things, itself it cannot [see]: but the
intellect understands itself as well other things. In the same way as the
intellect seeth itself, so also cloth Christ preach Himself. If He preacheth
Himself, and by preaching entereth into thee, He entereth into thee by Himself. And He
is the door to the Father, for there is no way of approach to the Father but
by Him. "For there is one God and one Mediator between God and men, the man
Christ Jesus."(3) Many things are expressed by a word: all that I have just said, I
have said, of course, by means of words. If I were wishing to speak also of a
word itself, how could I do so but by the use of the word? And thus both many
things are expressed by a word, which are not the same as the word, and the word
itself can only be expressed by means of the word. By the Lord's help we have
been copious in illustration. Remember, then, how the Lord Jesus Christ is both
the door and the Shepherd: the door, in presenting Himself to view; the
Shepherd, in entering in by Himself. And indeed, brethren, because He is the
Shepherd, He hath given to His members to be so likewise. For both Peter, and Paul, and
the other apostles were, as all good bishops are, shepherds. But none of us
calleth himself the door. This--the way of entrance for the sheep--He has
retained as exclusively belonging to Himself. In short, Paul discharged the office of
a good shepherd when he preached Christ, because he entered by the door. But
when the undisciplined sheep began to create schisms, and to set up other doors
before them, not of entrance to their joint assembly, but for falling away into
divisions, saying, some of them, "I am of Paul;" others, "I am of Cephas;"
others," I of Apollos;" others, "I of Christ:" terrified for those who said, "I am
of Paul,"--as if calling out to the sheep, Wretched ones, whither are you
going? I am not the door,--he said, "Was Paul crucified for you? or were ye baptized
in the name of Paul?"(4) But those who said, "I am of Christ," had found the
door.
4. But of the one sheepfold and of the one Shepherd, you are now indeed
being constantly reminded; for we have commended much the one sheepfold,
preaching unity, that all the sheep should enter by Christ, and none of them should
follow Donatus. Nevertheless, for what particular reason this was said by the
Lord, is sufficiently apparent. For He was speaking among the Jews, and had been
specially sent to the Jews, not for the sake of that class who were bound up in
their inhuman hatred and persistently abiding in darkness, but for the sake of
some in the nation whom He calls His sheep: of whom He saith, "I am not sent but
to the lost sheep of the house of Israel."(5) He knew them even amid the crowd
of His raging foes, and foresaw them in the peace of believing. What, then,
does He mean by saying, "I am not sent but to the lost sheep of the house of
Israel," but that He exhibited His bodily presence only to the people of Israel? He
did not proceed Himself to the Gentiles, but sent: to the people of Israel He
both sent and came in person, that those who proved despisers should receive
the greater judgment, because favored also with the sight of His actual presence.
The Lord Himself was there: there He chose a mother: there He wished to be
conceived, to be born, to shed His blood: there are His footprints,(6) now objects
of adoration where last He stood, and whence He ascended to heaven: but to the
Gentiles He only sent.
5. But perhaps some one thinks that, as He Himself came not to us, but
sent, we have not heard His own voice, but only the voice of those whom He sent.
Far from it: let such a thought be banished from your hearts; for He Himself was
in those whom He sent. Listen to Paul himself whom He sent; for Paul was
specially sent as an apostle to the Gentiles; and it is Paul who, terrifying them
not with himself but with Him saith, "Do ye wish to receive a proof of Him who
speaketh in me, that is, of Christ?"(1) Listen also to the Lord Himself. "And
other sheep I have," that is, among the Gentiles, "which are not of this fold,"
that is, of the people of Israel: "them also must I bring." Therefore, even when
it is by the instrumentality of His servants, it is He and not another that
bringeth them. Listen further: "They shall hear my voice." See here also, it is He
Himself who speaks by His servants, and it is His voice that is heard in those
whom He sends. "That there may be one fold, and one shepherd." Of these two
flocks, as of two walls, is the corner-stone formed.(2) And thus is He both door
and the corner-stone: all by way of comparison, none of them literally.
6. For I have said so before, and earnestly pressed it on your notice, and
those who comprehend it are wise, yea, those who are wise do comprehend it;
and yet let those who are not yet intellectually enlightened, keep hold by faith
of what they cannot as yet understand. Christ is many things metaphorically,
which strictly speaking(3) He is not. Metaphorically Christ is both a rock, and a
door, and a corner-stone, and a shepherd, and a lamb, and a lion. How numerous
are such similitudes, and as many more as would take too long to enumerate!
But if you select the strict significations of things as you are accustomed to
see them, then He is neither a rock, for He is not hard and senseless; nor a
door, for no artisan made Him; nor a corner-stone, for He was not constructed by a
builder; nor a shepherd, for He is no keeper of four-footed animals; nor a
lion, as it ranks among the beasts of the forest; nor a lamb, as it belongs to the
flock. All such, then, are by way of comparison. But what is He properly? "In
the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God [God
was the Word]." And what, as He appeared in human nature? "And the Word was
made flesh, and dwelt among us [in us]."(4)
7. Hear also what follows. "Therefore doth my Father love me," He saith,
"because I lay down my life. that I might take it again." What is this that He
says? "Therefore doth my Father love me:" because I die, that I may rise
again.(5) For the "I" is uttered with special emphasis: "Because I lay down," He
saith, "I lay down my life," "I lay down." What is that "I lay down"? I Lay it down.
Let the Jews no longer boast: they might rage, but they could have no power:
let them rage as they can; if I were unwilling to lay down my life, what would
all their raging effect? By one answer of His they were prostrated in the dust:
when they were asked, "Whom seek ye?" they said, "Jesus;" and on His saying to
them, "I am He, they went backward, and fell to the ground."(6) Those who thus
fell to the ground at one word of Christ when about to die, what will they do
at the sound of His voice when coming to judgment? "I, I," I say, "lay down my
life, that I may take it again." Let not the Jews boast, as if they had
prevailed; He Himself laid down His life. "I laid me down [to sleep]," He says
[elsewhere]. You know the psalm: "I laid me down and slept; and I awaked [rose up], for
the Lord sustaineth me." What of that--"I lay down"? Because it was my
pleasure, I did so. What does "I lay down" mean? I died. Was it not a lying down to
sleep on His part, who, when He pleased, rose from the tomb as He would from a
bed? But He loves to give glory to the Father, that He may stir us up to glorify
our Creator. For in adding, "I arose, for the Lord sustaineth me;" think you
there was here a kind of failing in His power, so that, while He had it in His
own power to die, He had it not in His power to rise again? So, indeed, the words
seem to imply when not more closely considered. "I lay down to sleep;" that
is, I did so, because I pleased. "And I arose:" why? "Because the Lord sustaineth
[will sustain] me."(7) What then? wouldst Thou not have power to rise of
Thyself? If Thou hadst not the power, Thou wouldst not have said, "I have power to
lay down my life, and I have power to take it again." But, as showing that not
only did the Father raise the Son, but the Son also raised Himself, hear how, in
another passage in the Gospel, He saith, "Destroy this temple, and in three
days I will raise it up." And the evangelist adds: "But this He spake of the
temple Of is body."(1) For only that which died was restored to life. The Word is
not mortal, His soul is not mortal. If even thine dieth not, could the Lord's be
subject to death?
8. How can I know, thou wilt say, that mine dieth not? Slay it not
thyself, and it cannot die. How, thou asketh, can I slay my soul? To say nothing.
meanwhile of other sins, "The mouth that lieth, slayeth the soul."(2) How, thou
sayest, can I be sure that it dieth not? Listen to the Lord Himself giving
security to His servant: "Be not afraid of them that kill the body, and after that
have no more that they can do." But what in the plainest terms does He say? "Fear
Him who hath power to slay both soul and body in hell."(3) Here you have the
fact that it dieth, and that it doth not die. What is its dying? What is dying to
thy flesh? Dying, to thy flesh, is the losing of its life: dying to thy soul,
is the losing of its life. The life of thy flesh is thy soul: the life of thy
soul is thy God. As the flesh dies in losing the soul, which is its life, so the
soul dieth in losing God, who is its life. Of a certainty, then, the soul is
immortal. Manifestly immortal, for it liveth even when dead. For what the
apostle said of the luxurious widow, may also be said of the soul if it has lost its
God, "she is dead while she liveth."(4)
9. How, then, does the Lord lay down His life [soul]?(5) Let us, brethren,
inquire into this a little more carefully. The time is not so pressing as is
usual on the Lord's day: we have leisure. and theirs will be the profit who have
assembled to-day also to wait on the Word of God. "I lay down my life," He
says. Who lays down? What lays He down? What is Christ? The Word and man. Not man
as being flesh alone: but as man consists of flesh and soul, so, in Christ
there is a complete humanity. For He would not have assumed the baser part, and
left the better behind, seeing that the soul of man is certainly superior to the
body. Since, then, there is entire manhood in Christ, what is Christ? The Word,
I repeat, and man. What is the Word and man? The Word soul, and flesh. Keep
hold of that, for there has been no lack of heretics on this point also, expelled
as they were some time ago from the catholic truth, but still persisting, like
thieves and robbers who enter not by the door, to lay their snares around the
fold. These heretics are termed Apollinarians,(6) and have ventured to assert
dogmatically that Christ is only the word and flesh, and contend that He did not
assume a human soul. And yet some of them could not deny that there was a soul
in Christ. See their intolerable absurdity and madness. They would have Him to
possess an irrational soul, but deny Him a rational one. They allowed Him a
mere animal, they deprived Him of a human, soul. But they took away Christ's
reason by losing their own. Let it be otherwise with us, who have been nourished and
established in the catholic faith. Accordingly, on this occasion I would
remind your Charity, that, as in former lectures, we have given you sufficient
instruction against the Sabellians and Arians,--the Sabellians, who say, The Father
is the same as the Son--the Arians, who say, The Father is one being, the Son
is another, as if the Father and Son were not of the same substance--and also,
provided you remember as you ought, against the Photinian heretics, who have
asserted that Christ was mere man, and destitute of Godhead:(7) and against the
Manicheans, who maintain that He was God only without any true humanity: we may,
on this occasion, in speaking about the soul, give you some instruction also in
opposition to the Apollinarians, who say that our Lord Jesus Christ had no
human soul, that is, a rational intelligent soul,--that soul, I mean, by which, as
men, we differ from the brutes.
10. In what sense, then, did our Lord say here, "I have power to lay down
my soul [life]"? Who lays down his soul, and takes it again? Is it as being the
Word that Christ does so? Or is it the human soul He possesses that lays down
and resumes its own existence? Or is it His fleshly nature that lays down its
life and takes it again? Let us sift each of the three questions I have
suggested, and choose that which conforms to the standard of truth. For if we say that
the Word of God laid down His soul, and took it again, we should have to fear
the entrance of a wicked thought, and have it said to us: Then there was a time
when that soul was separated from the Word, and a time, after His assumption of
that soul, when He was without a soul. I see, indeed, that the Word was once
without a human soul, but only so, when "in the beginning was the Word, and the
Word was with God, and the Word was God." But from the time that the Word was
made flesh, to dwell amongst us,(1) and manhood was assumed by the Word, that
is, our whole nature, soul and flesh, what more could His passion and death do
than separate the body from the soul? It separated not the soul from the Word.
For if the Lord died, yea, because He died (for He did so for us on the cross),
doubtless His flesh breathed out that which was its life: for a short time the
soul forsook the flesh, although destined by its own return to raise the flesh
again to life. But I cannot say that the soul was separated from the Word. He
said to the soul of the thief, "To-day shalt thou be with me in paradise."(2) He
forsook not the believing soul of the robber, and did He abandon His own?
Surely not; but when the Lord took that of the other into His keeping, He certainly
retained His own in indissoluble union. If, on the other hand, we say that the
soul laid down and reassumed itself, we fall into the greatest absurdity; for
what was not separated from the Word, was inseparable from itself.
11. Let us turn, then, to what is true and easily understood. Take the
case of any man, who does not consist of the word and soul and flesh, but only of
soul and flesh; and let us inquire how any such man lays down his life. Can no
ordinary man do so? Thou mayest say to me: No man has power to lay down his
life [soul], and to take it again. But were not a man able to lay down his life,
the Apostle John would not say, "As Christ laid down his life for us, even so
ought we also to lay down our lives for the brethren."(3) Therefore may we also
(if only we are filled with His courage, for without Him we can do nothing) lay
down our lives for the brethren. When some holy martyr has laid down his life
for the brethren, who laid it down, and what laid he down? If we understand
this, we shall perceive in what sense it was said by Christ, "I have power to lay
down my life." Art thou prepared, O man, to die for Christ? I am prepared, he
replies. Let me repeat the question in other words. Art thou prepared to lay
down thy life for Christ? And to these words he makes me the same reply, I am
prepared, as he had, when I said, Art thou prepared to die? To lay down one's life
[soul], is, then, the same as to die. But in whose behalf is the sacrifice in
this case? For all men, when they die, lay down their life; but it is not all
who lay it down for Christ. And no one has power to resume what he has laid
down. But Christ both laid it down for us, and did so when it pleased Him; and
when it pleased Him, He took it again. To lay down one's soul then, is to die. As
also the Apostle Peter said to the Lord: "I will lay down my life [soul] for
Thy sake;"(4) that is, I will die for Thy sake. View it, then, as referable to
the flesh: the flesh layeth down its life, and the flesh taketh it again; not,
indeed, the flesh by its own power, but by the power of Him that inhabiteth it.
The flesh, then, layeth down its life in expiring. Look at the Lord Himself on
the cross: He said, "I thirst:" those who were present dipped a sponge in
vinegar, fastened it to a reed, and applied it to His mouth; then, having received
it, He said, "It is finished;" meaning, All is fulfilled which had been
prophesied regarding me as, prior to my death, still in the future. And because He had
the power, when He pleased, to lay down His life, after He had said, "It is
finished," what adds the evangelist? "And He bowed His head, and gave up the
spirit."(5) This is to lay down the soul [life]. Only let your Charity attend to
this. "He bowed His head, and gave up the spirit." Who gave up? what gave He up? He
gave up the spirit; His flesh gave it up. What means, the flesh gave it up?
The flesh sent it forth, breathed it out. For so, in becoming separated from the
spirit, we are said to expire. Just as getting outside the paternal soil is to
be expatriated, turning aside from the track is to deviate; so to become
separated from the spirit is to expire; and that spirit is the soul [life].
Accordingly, when the soul quits the flesh, and the flesh remains without the soul,
then is a man said to lay down his soul [his human life]. When did Christ lay down
His life? When it pleased the Word. For sovereign authority resided in the
Word; and therein lay the power to determine when the flesh should lay down its
life, and when it should take it again.
12. If, then, the flesh laid down its life, how did Christ lay down His
life? For the flesh is not Christ. Certainly in this way, that Christ is both
flesh, and soul, and the Word; and yet these three things are not three Christs,
but one. Ask thine own human nature, and from thyself ascend to what is above
thee, and which, if not yet able to be understood, can at least be believed. For
in the same way that one man is soul and body, is one Christ both the Word and
man. Consider what I have said, and understand. The soul and body are two
things, but one man: the Word and man are two things, but one Christ. Apply, then,
the subject to any man. Where is now the Apostle Paul? If one answer, At rest
with Christ, he speaks truly. And likewise, should one reply, In the sepulchre at
Rome, he is equally right. The one answer I get refers to his soul, the other
to his flesh. And yet we do not say that there are two Apostle Pauls, one who
rests in Christ, another who was laid in the sepulchre; although we may say that
the Apostle Paul liveth in Christ, and that the same apostle lieth dead in the
tomb. Some one dieth, and we say, He was a good man, and faithful; he is in
peace with the Lord: and then immediately, Let us attend his obsequies, and lay
him in the sepulchre. Thou art about to bury one whom thou hadst just declared
to be in peace with God; for the latter regards the soul which blooms eternally,
and the other the body, which is laid down in corruption. But while the
partnership of the flesh and soul has received the name of man, the same name is now
applied to either of them, singly and by itself.
13. Let no one, then, be perplexed, when he hears that the Lord has said,
"I lay down my life, and I take it again." The flesh layeth it down, but by the
power of the Word: the flesh taketh it again, but by the same power. Even His
own name, the Lord Christ, was applied to His flesh alone. How can you prove
it? says some one. We believe of a certainty not only in God the Father, but also
in Jesus Christ His Son, our only Lord: and this that I have just said
contains the whole, in Jesus Christ His Son, our only Lord. Understand that the whole
is here: the Word, and soul, and flesh. At all events thou confessest what is
also held by the same faith, that thou believest in that Christ who was
crucified and buried. Ergo, thou deniest not that Christ was buried; and yet it was the
burial only of His flesh. For had the soul been there, He would not have been
dead: but if it was a true death, and its resurrection real, it was previously
without life in the tomb; and yet it was Christ that was buried. And so the
flesh apart from the soul was also Christ, for it was only the flesh that was
buried. Learn the same likewise in the words of an apostle. "Let this mind," he
says, "be in you, which was also in Christ Jesus: who, being in the form of God,
thought it not robbery to be equal with God." Who, save Christ Jesus, as
respects His nature as the Word, is God with God? But look at what follows: "But
emptied Himself, and took upon Him the form of a servant; being made in the likeness
of men, and found in fashion as a man." And who is this, but the same Christ
Jesus Himself? But here we have now all the parts, both the Word in that form of
God which assumed the form of a servant, and the soul and the flesh in that
form of a servant which was assumed by the form of God. "He humbled Himself, and
became obedient unto death."(1) Now in His death, it was His flesh only that
was slain by the Jews. For if He said to His disciples, "Fear not them that kill
the body, but are not able to kill the soul,"(2) how could they do more in His
own case than kill the body? And yet in the slaying of His flesh, it was Christ
that was slain. Accordingly, when the flesh laid down its life, Christ laid it
down; and when the flesh, in order to its resurrection, assumed its life,
Christ assumed it. Nevertheless this was done, not by the power of the flesh, but
of Him who assumed both soul and flesh, that in them these very things might
receive fulfillment.
14. "This commandment," He says, "have I received of my Father." The Word
received not the commandment in word, but in the only begotten Word of the
Father every commandment resides. But when the Son is said to receive of the
Father what He possesses essentially in Himself, as it is said, "As the Father hath
life in Himself, so hath He given to the Son to have life in Himself,"(3) while
the Son is Himself the life,there is no lessening of His authority, but the
setting forth of His generation. For the Father added not after-gifts as to a son
whose state was imperfect at birth, but on Him whom He begat in absolute
perfection He bestowed all gifts in begetting. In this manner He gave Him equality
with Himself, and yet begat Him not in a state of inequality. But while the Lord
thus spake, for the light was shining in the darkness, and the darkness
comprehended it not,(4) "there was a dissension again created among the Jews for
these sayings, and many of them said, He hath a devil, and is mad: why hear ye
him?" This was the thickest darkness. Others said, "These are not the words of him
that hath a devil; can a devil open the eyes of the blind?" The eyes of such
were now begun to be opened.
TRACTATE XLVIII.
CHAPTER X. 22-42.
1. As I have already charged you, beloved, you ought steadfastly to bear
in mind that Saint John the evangelist would not have us be always nourished
with milk, but fed with solid food. Still, whoever is hardly able as yet to
partake of the solid food of God's word, let him find nourishment in the milk of
faith; and the word which he cannot understand, let him not hesitate to believe.
For faith is the deserving: understanding, the reward. In the very labor of
intent application the eye of our mind struggles(1) to get rid of the foul films of
human mists, and be cleared up to the word of God. Labor, then, will not be
declined if love is present; for you know that he who loves his labor is
insensible to its pain. For no labor is grievous to those who love it. If cupidity on
the part of the avaricious endures so great toils, what in our case will not love
endure?
2. Listen to the Gospel: "And it was at Jerusalem the Encoenia."(2)
Encoenia was the festival of the dedication of the temple. For in Greek kainos means
new; and whenever there was some new dedication, it was called Encoenia.(3) And
now this word is come into common use; if one puts on a new coat, he is said
"encoeniare" (to renovate, or to hold an encoenia). For the Jews celebrated in a
solemn manner the day on which the temple was dedicated; and it was the very
feast day when the Lord spake what has just been read.
3. "It was winter. And Jesus walked in the temple in Solomon's porch. Then
came the Jews round about Him, and said unto Him, How long dost thou keep our
mind in suspense? If thou be the Christ, tell us plainly." They were not
desiring the truth, but preparing a calumny. "It was winter," and they were chill;
because they were slow to approach that divine fire. For to approach is to
believe: he who believes, approaches; who denies, retires. The soul is not moved by
the feet, but by the affections. They had become icy cold to the sweetness of
loving Him, and they burned with the desire of doing Him an injury. They were far
away, while there beside Him. It was not with them a nearer approach in
believing, but the pressure of persecution. They sought to hear the Lord saying, I am
Christ; and probably enough they only thought of the Christ in a human way.
The prophets preached Christ; but the Godhead of Christ asserted in the prophets
and in the gospel itself is not perceived even by heretics; and how much less
by Jews, so long as the vail is upon their heart?(4) In short, in a certain
place, the Lord Jesus, knowing that their views of the Christ were cast in a human
mould, not in the Divine, taking His stand on the human ground, and not on that
where along with the assumption of humanity He also continued Divine, He said
to them, "What think ye of Christ? Whose Son is He?" Following their own
opinion, they replied, "Of David." For so they had read, and this only they retained;
because while they read of His divinity, they did not understand it. But the
Lord, to pin them down to some inquiry touching the divinity of Him whose
apparent weakness they despised, answered them: "How, then, doth David in spirit call
Him Lord, saying, The LORD said unto my Lord, Sit Thou on my right hand, till
I put Thine enemies under Thy feet? If David, then, in spirit call Him Lord,
how is He his son?"(5) He did not deny, but questioned. Let no one think, on
hearing this, that the Lord Jesus denied that He was the Son of David. Had Christ
the Lord given any such denial, He would not have enlightened the blind who so
addressed Him. For as He was passing by one day, two blind men, who were sitting
by the wayside, cried out, "Have mercy upon us, thou Son of David." And on
hearing these words He had mercy on them. He stood still, healed, enlightened
them;(6) for He owned the name. The Apostle Paul also says, "Who was made of the
seed of David according to the flesh;"(7) and in his Epistle to Timothy,
"Remember that Jesus Christ was raised from the dead, [He that is] of the seed of
David, according to my gospel."(8) For the Virgin Mary drew her origin, and hence
our Lord also, from the seed of David.
4. The Jews made this inquiry of Christ, chiefly in order that, should He
say, I am Christ, they might, in accordance with the only sense they attached
to such a name, that He was of the seed of David, calumniate Him with aiming at
the kingly power. There is more than this in His answer to them: they wished to
calumniate Him with claiming to be the Son of David. He replied that He was
the Son of God. And how? Listen: "Jesus answered them, I tell you, and ye believe
not: the works that I do in my Father's name, they bear witness of me: but ye
believe not; because ye are not of my sheep." Ye have already learned above (in
Lecture XLV.) who the sheep are: be ye sheep. They are sheep through
believing, sheep in following the Shepherd, sheep in not despising their Redeemer, sheep
in entering by the door, sheep in going out and finding pasture, sheep in the
enjoyment of eternal life. What did He mean, then, in saying to them, "Ye are
not of my sheep"? That He saw them predestined to everlasting destruction, not
won to eternal life by the price of His own blood.
5. "My sheep hear my voice, and I know them, and they follow me: and I
give unto them eternal life." This is the pasture. If you recollect, He had said
before, "And he shall go in and out, and find pasture." have entered by
believing--we go out at death.(1) But as we have entered by the door of faith, so, as
believers, we quit the body; for it is in going out by that same door that we
are able to find pasture. The good pasture is called eternal life; there no blade
withereth--all is green and flourishing. There is a plant commonly said to be
ever-living; there only is it found to live. "I will give," He says, "unto
them," unto my sheep, "eternal life." Ye are on the search for calumnies, just
because your only thoughts are of the life that is present.
6. "And they shall never perish:" you may hear the undertone, as if He had
said to them, Ye shall perish for ever, because ye are not of my sheep. "No
one shall pluck them out of my hand." Give still greater heed to this: "That
which my Father gave me is greater than all."(2) What can the wolf do? What can the
thief and the robber? They destroy none but those predestined to destruction.
But of those sheep of which the apostle says, "The Lord knoweth them that are
His;"(3) and "Whom He did foreknow, them He also did predestinate; and whom He
did predestinate, them He also called; and whom He called, them He also
justified; and whom He justified, them He also glorified;"(4)--there is none of such
sheep as these that the wolf seizes, or the thief steals, or the robber slays.
He, who knows what He gave for them, is sure of their number. And it is this that
He says: "No one shall pluck them out of my hand;" and in reference also to
the Father, "That which my Father gave me is greater than all." What did the
Father give to the Son that was greater than all? To be His own only-begotten Son.
What, then, means "gave"? Was He to whom He gave previously existent, or gave
He in the act of begetting? For if He previously existed to whom He gave the
gift of Sonship, there was a time when He was, and was not the Son. Far be it
from us to suppose that the Lord Christ ever was, and yet was not the Son. Of us
such a thing may be said: there was a time when we were the sons of men, but
were not the sons of God. For we are made the sons of God by grace, but He by
nature, for such was He born. And yet not so, as that one may say, He did not
exist till He was born; for He, who was coeternal with the Father, was never
unborn. Let him who is wise understand: and whoever understands not, let him believe
and be nourished, and he will come to understanding. The Word of God was always
with the Father, and always the Word; and because the Word, therefore the Son.
So then, always the Son, and always equal. For it is not by growth but by
birth that He is equal, who was always born, the Son of the Father, God of God,
coeternal of the Eternal. But the Father is not God of(5) the Son: the Son is God
of(5) the Father; therefore in begetting the Son, the Father "gave" Him to be
God, in begetting He gave Him to be coeternal with Himself, in begetting He gave
Him to be His equal. This is that which is greater than alI. How is the Son
the life, and the possessor of life? What He has, He is: as for thee, thou art
one thing, thou hast another. For example, thou hast wisdom, but art thou wisdom
itself? In short, because thou thyself art not that which thou hast, shouldst
thou lose what thou hast, thou returnest to the state of no longer having it:
and sometimes thou re-acquirest, sometimes thou losest. As our eye has no light
inherently in itself, it opens, and admits it; it shuts, and loses it. It is not
thus that the Son of God is God--not thus that He is the Word of the Father;
and not thus is He the Word, that passes away with the sound but that which
abides in its birth. In such a way hath He wisdom that He is Himself wisdom, and
maketh men wise: and life, that He is Himself the life, and maketh others alive.
This is that which is greater than all. The evangelist John himself looked to
heaven and earth when wishing to speak of the Son of God; he looked, and rose
above them all. He thought on the thousands of angelic armies above the heavens;
he thought, and, like the eagle soaring beyond the clouds, his mind overpassed
the whole creation: he rose beyond all that was great, and arrived at that
which was greater than all; and said, "In the beginning was the Word." But because
He, of(1) whom is the Word, is not of the Word, and the Word is of Him, whose
Word He is; therefore He says, "That which the Father gave me," namely, to be
His Word, His only-begotten Son, the brightness of His light, "is greater than
all." Therefore, "No one," He says, "plucketh my sheep out of my hand. No one can
pluck them out of my Father's hand."
7. "Out of my hand," and "out of my Father's hand." What is this, "No one
plucketh them out of my hand," and "No one plucketh them out of my Father's
hand"? Have the Father and Son one hand, or is the Son Himself, shall we say, the
hand of His Father? If by hand we are to understand power, the power of Father
and Son is one; for their Godhead is one. But if we mean hand in the way spoken
of by the prophet, "And to whom is the arm of the Lord revealed?"(2) the
Father's hand is the Son Himself, which is not to be so understood as if God had the
human form, and, as it were, bodily members: but that all things were made by
Him. For men also are in the habit of calling other men their hands, by whom
they get done what they wish. And sometimes also the very work done by a man's
hand is called his hand; as one is said to recognize his hand when he recognizes
what he has written. Since, then, there are many ways of speaking of the hand
of a man, who literally has a hand among the members of his body; how much
rather must there be more than one way of understanding it, when we read of the hand
of God, who has no bodily form? And in this way it is better here, by the hand
of the Father and Son, to understand the power of the Father and the Son;
lest, in taking here the hand of the Father as spoken of the Son, some carnal
thought also about the Son Himself should set us looking for the Son as somehow to
be similarly regarded as the hand of Christ. Therefore, "no one plucketh them
out of my Father's hand;" that is, no one plucketh them from me.
8. But that there may be no more room for hesitation, hear what follows:
"I and my Father are one." Up to this point the Jews were able to bear Him; they
heard, "I and my Father are one," and they bore it no longer; and hardened in
their own way, they had recourse to stones. "They took up stones to stone Him."
The Lord, because He suffered not what He was unwilling to suffer, and only
suffered what He was pleased to suffer, still addresses them while desiring to
stone Him. "The Jews took up stones to stone Him. Jesus answered them, Many good
works have I showed you from my Father; for which of those works do ye stone
me? And they answered, For a good work we stone thee not, but for blasphemy, and
because that thou, being a man, makest thyself God," Such was their reply to
His words, "I and my Father are one." You see here that the Jews understood what
the Arians understand not. For they were angry on this account, that they felt
it could not be said, "I and my Father are one," save where there was equality
of the Father and the Son.
9. But see what answer the Lord gave to their dull apprehension. He saw
that they could not bear the brilliance of the truth, and He tempered it with
words. "Is it not written in your law," that is, as given to you, "that I said, Ye
are gods?"(3) And the Lord called all the Scriptures generally, the law:
although elsewhere He speaks more definitely of the law, distinguishing it from the
prophets; as it is said, "The law and the prophets were until John;"(4) and "On
these two commandments hang all the law and the prophets."(5) Sometimes,
however, He divided the same Scriptures into three parts, as where He saith, "All
things must be fulfilled which were written in the law, and the prophets, and the
psalms, concerning me."(1) But now He includes the psalms also under the name
of the law, where it is written, "I said, Ye are gods. If He calleth them gods,
to whom the word of God came, and the Scripture cannot be broken: say ye of
Him, whom the Father hath sanctified, and sent into the world. Thou blasphemest;
because I said, I am the Son of God?" If the word of God came to men, that they
might be called gods, how can the very Word of God, who is with God, be
otherwise than God? If by the word of God men become gods, if by fellowship they
become gods, can He by whom they have fellowship not be God? If lights which are
lit are gods,is the light which enlighteneth not God? If through being warmed in
a way by saving fire they are constituted gods, is He who gives them the
warmth other than God? Thou approachest the light and art enlightened, and numbered
among the sons of God; if thou withdrawest from the light, thou fallest into
obscurity, and art accounted in darkness; but that light approacheth not, because
it never recedeth from itself. If, then, the word of God maketh you gods, how
can the Word of God be otherwise than God? Therefore did the Father sanctify
His Son, and send Him into the world. Perhaps some one may be saying: If the
Father sanctified Him, was there then a time when He was not sanctified? He
sanctified in the same way as He begat Him. For in the act of begetting He gave Him
the power to be holy, because He begat Him in holiness. For if that which is
sanctified was unholy before, bow can we say to God the Father, "Hallowed be Thy
name"?(2)
10. "If I do not the works of my Father, believe me not. But if I do,
though ye will not believe me, believe the works; that ye may know and believe that
the Father is in me, and I in Him." The Son says not, "the Father is in me,
and I in Him," as men can say it. For if we think well, we are in God; and if we
live well, God is in us: believers, by participating in His grace, and being
illuminated by Himself, are in Him, and He in us. But not so is it with the
only-begotten Son: He is in the Father, and the Father in Him; as one who is equal
is in him whose equal he is. In short, we can sometimes say, We are in God, and
God is in us; but can we say, I and God are one? Thou art in God, because God
contains thee; God is in thee, because thou art become the temple of God: but
because thou art in God, and God is in thee, canst thou say, He that seeth me
seeth God; as the Only-begotten said, "He that hath seen me, hath seen the Father
also;"(3) and "I and the Father are one"? Recognize the prerogative of the
Lord, and the privilege of the servant. The prerogative of the Lord is equality
with the Father: the privilege of the servant is fellowship with the Saviour.
11. "Therefore they sought to apprehend Him." Would they had apprehended
by faith and understanding, not in wrath and murder! For now, my brethren, when
I speak thus, it is the weak one wishing to apprehend what is strong, the small
what is great, the fragile what is solid; and it is we ourselves--both you who
are of the same matter as I am, and I myself who speak to you--who all wish to
apprehend Christ. And what is it to apprehend Him? [If] thou hast understood,
thou hast apprehended. But not as did the Jews: thou hast apprehended in order
to possess, they wished to apprehend in order to make away with Him. And
because this was the kind of apprehension they desired, what did He do to them? "He
escaped out of their hands." They failed to apprehend Him, because they lacked
the hand of faith. The Word was made flesh; but it was no great task to the
Word to rescue His own flesh from fleshy hands. To apprehend the Word in the mind,
is the right apprehension of Christ.
12. "And He went away again beyond Jordan, into the place where John at
first baptized; and there He abode. And many resorted unto Him, and said, John,
indeed; did no miracle." You remember what was said of John, that he was a
light, and bore witness to the day.(4) Why, then, say these among themselves, "John
did no miracle"? John, they say, signalized himself by no miracle; he did not
put devils to flight, he drove away no fever, he enlightened not the blind, he
raised not the dead, he fed not so many thousand men with five or seven loaves,
he walked not upon the sea, he commanded not the winds and the waves. None of
these things did John, and in all he said he bore witness to this man. By
lamp-light we may advance to the day. "John did no miracle: but all things that John
spake of this man were true." Here are those who apprehended in a different
way from the Jews. The Jews wished to apprehend one who was departing from them,
these apprehended one who remained with them. In a word, what is it that
follows? "And many believed on Him."
TRACTATE XLIX.
CHAPTER XI. 1--54.
1. Among all the miracles wrought by our Lord Jesus Christ, the
resurrection of Lazarus holds a foremost place in preaching. But if we consider
attentively who did it, our duty is to rejoice rather than to wonder. A man was raised
up by Him who made man: for He is the only One of the Father, by whom, as you
know, all things were made. And if all things were made by Him, what wonder is it
that one was raised by Him, when so many are daily brought into the world by
His power? It is a greater deed to create men than to raise them again from the
dead. Yet He deigned both to create and to raise again; to create all, to
resuscitate some. For though the Lord Jesus did many such acts, yet all of them are
not recorded; just as this same St. John the evangelist himself testifies, that
Christ the Lord both said and did many things that are not recorded;(1) but
such were chosen for record as seemed to suffice for the salvation of believers.
Thou hast just heard that the Lord Jesus raised a dead man to life; and that is
sufficient to let thee know that, were He so pleased, He might raise all the
dead to life. And, indeed this very work has He reserved in His own hands till
the end of the world. For while you have heard that by a great miracle He raised
one from the tomb who had been dead four days, "the hour is coming," as He
Himself saith, "in the which all that are in the graves shall hear His voice, and
shall come forth." He raised one who was putrid, and yet in that putrid carcase
there was still the form of limbs; but at the last day He will by a word
reconstitute ashes into human flesh. But it was needful then to do only some such
deeds, that we, receiving them as tokens of His power, may put our trust in Him,
and be preparing for that resurrection which shall be to life and not to
judgment. So, indeed, He saith, "The hour is coming, in the which all that are in the
graves shall hear His voice, and shall come forth; they that have done good,
unto the resurrection of life; and they that have done evil, unto the
resurrection of damnation."(2)
2. We have, however, read in the Gospel of three dead persons who were
raised to life by the Lord, and, let us hope, to some good purpose. For surely the
Lord's deeds are not merely deeds, but signs. And if they are signs, besides
their wonderful character, they have some real significance: and to find out
this in regard to such deeds is a somewhat harder task than to read or hear of
them. We were listening with wonder, as at the sight of some mighty miracle
enacted before our eyes, in the reading of the Gospel, how Lazarus was restored to
life. If we turn our thoughts to the still more wonderful works of Christ, every
one that believeth riseth again: if we all consider, and understand that more
horrifying kind of death, every one who sinneth dies.(3) But every man is afraid
of the death of the flesh; few, of the death of the soul. In regard to the
death of the flesh, which must certainly come some time, all are on their guard
against its approach: this is the source of all their labor. Man, destined to
die, labors to avert his dying; and yet man, destined to live for ever, labors not
to cease from sinning. And when he labors to avoid dying, he labors to no
purpose, for its only result will be to put off death for a while, not to escape
it; but if he refrain from sinning, his toil will cease, and he shall live for
ever. Oh that we could arouse men, and be ourselves aroused along with them, to
be as great lovers of the life that abideth, as men are of that which passeth
away ! What will a man not do who is placed under the peril of death? When the
sword was overhanging their heads, men have given up every means of living they
had in reserve. Who is there that has not made an immediate surrender of all, to
escape being slain? And, after all, he has perhaps been slain. Who is there
that, to save his life, has not been willing at once to lose his means of living,
and prefer a life of beggary to a speedy death? Who has had it said to him, Be
off to sea if you would escape with your life, and has delayed to do so? Who
has had it said to him, Set to work if you would preserve your life, and has
continued a sluggard? It is but little that God requires of us, that we may live
for ever: and we neglect to obey Him. God says not to thee, Lose all you have,
that you may live a little time oppressed with toil; but, Give to the poor of
what you have, that you may live always exempt from labor. The lovers of this
temporal life, which is theirs, neither when, nor as long as they wish, are our
accusers; and we accuse not ourselves in turn, so sluggish are we, so lukewarm
about obtaining eternal life, which will be ours if we wish it, and will be
imperishable when we have it; but this death which we fear, notwithstanding all our
reluctance, will yet be ours in possession.
3. If, then, the Lord in the greatness of His grace and mercy raiseth our
souls to life, that we may not die for ever, we may well understand that those
three dead persons whom He raised in the body, have some figurative
significance of that resurrection of the soul which is effected by faith: He raised up the
ruler of the synagogue's daughter, while still lying in the house;(1) He
raised up the widow's young son, while being carried outside the gates of the
city;(2) and He raised up Lazarus, when four days in the grave. Let each one give
heed to his own soul: in sinning he dies: sin is the death of the soul. But
sometimes sin is committed only in thought. Thou hast felt delight in what is evil,
thou hast assented to its commission thou hast sinned; that assent has slain
thee but the death is internal, because the evil thought had not yet ripened into
action. The Lord intimated that He would raise such a soul to life, in raising
that girl, who had not yet been carried forth to the burial, but was lying dead
in the house, as if sin still lay concealed. But if thou hast not only
harbored a feeling of delight in evil, but hast also done the evil thing, thou hast,
so to speak, carried the dead outside the gate: thou art already without, and
being carried to the tomb. Yet such an one also the Lord raised to life. and
restored to his widowed mother. If thou hast sinned, repent, and the Lord will
raise thee up, and restore thee to thy mother Church. The third example of death is
Lazarus. A grievous kind of death it is, and is distinguished as a habit of
wickedness. For it is one thing to fall into sin, another to form the habit of
sinning. He who falls into sin, and straightway submits to correction, will be
speedily restored to life; for he is not yet entangled in the habit, he is not
yet laid in the tomb. But he who has become habituated to sin, is buried, and has
it properly said of him, "he stinketh;" for his character, like some horrible
smell, begins to be of the worst repute. Such are all who are habituated to
crime, abandoned in morals. Thou sayest to such an one, Do not so. But when wilt
thou be listened to by one on whom the earth is thus heaped, who is breeding
corruption, and pressed down with the weight of habit? And yet the power of Christ
was not unequal to the task of restoring such an one to life. We know, we have
seen, we see every day men changing the very worst of habits, and adopting a
better manner of life than that of those who blamed them. Thou detestedst such a
man: look at the sister of Lazarus herself (if, indeed, it was she who
anointed the Lord's feet with ointment, and wiped with her hair what she had washed
with her tears), who had a better resurrection than her brother; she was
delivered from the mighty burden of a sinful character. For she was a notorious sinner;
and had it said of her, "Her many sins are forgiven her, for she has loved
much."(3) We see many such, we know many: let none despair, but let none presume
in himself. Both the one and the other are sinful. Let thine unwillingness to
despair take such a turn as to lead thee to make choice of Him in whom alone thou
mayest well presume.
4. So then the Lord also raised Lazarus to life. You have heard what type
of character he represents; in other words, what is meant by the resurrection
of Lazarus. Let us now, therefore, read over the passage; and as there is much
in this lesson clear already, we shall not go into any detailed exposition, so
as to take up more thoroughly the necessary points. "Now a certain man was sick,
[named] Lazarus, of Bethany, the town of Mary and Martha, his sisters." In the
previous lesson you remember that the Lord escaped from the hands of those who
sought to stone Him, and went away beyond Jordan, where John baptized.(4) When
the Lord therefore had taken up His abode there, Lazarus fall sick in Bethany,
which was a town lying close to Jerusalem.
5. "But Mary was she who anointed the Lord with ointment, and wiped His
feet with her hair, whose brother Lazarus was sick. Therefore his sisters sent
unto Him, saying." We now understand whither it was they sent, namely, where the
Lord was; for He was away, as you know, beyond the Jordan. They sent messengers
to the Lord to tell Him that their brother was ill. He delayed to heal, that
He might be able to raise to life. But what was the message sent by his sisters?
"Lord, behold, he whom Thou lovest is sick." They did not say, Come; for the
intimation was all that was needed for one who loved. They did not venture to
say, Come and heal him: they ventured not to say, Command there, and it shall be
done here. And why not so with them, if on these very grounds the centurion's
faith was commended? For he said, "I am not worthy that Thou shouldest enter
under my roof; but speak the word only, and my servant shall be healed."(1) No
such words said these women, but only, "Lord, behold, he whom Thou lovest is
sick." It is enough that Thou knowest; for Thou art not one that loveth and
forsaketh. But says some one, How could a sinner be represented by Lazarus, and be so
loved by the Lord? Let him listen to Him, when He says, "I came not to call the
righteous, but sinners."(2) For had not God loved sinners, He would not have
come down from heaven to earth.
6. "But when Jesus heard [that], He said, This sickness is not unto death,
but for the glory of God, that the Son of God may be glorified." Such a
glorifying of Himself did not add to His dignity, but benefited us. Hence He says,
"is not unto death," because even that death itself was not unto death, but
rather unto the working of a miracle whereby men might be led to faith in Christ,
and so escape the real death. And mark how the Lord, as it were indirectly,
called Himself God, for the sake of some who deny that the Son is God. For there are
heretics who make such a denial, that the Son of God is God. Let them hearken
here: "This sickness" He says. "is not unto death, but for the glory of God."
For what glory? For the glory of what God? Hear what follows: "That the Son of
God may be glorified." "This sickness," therefore, He says, "is not unto death.
but for the glory of God, that the Son of God maybe glorified thereby." By
what? By that sickness.
7. "Now Jesus loved Martha, and her sister Mary, and Lazarus." The one
sick, the others sad, all of them beloved: but He who loved them was both the
Saviour of the sick, nay more, the Raiser of the dead and the Comforter of the sad.
"When He heard therefore that he was sick, He abode then two days still in the
same place." They sent Him word: He abode where He was: and the time ran on
till four days were completed. And not in vain, were it only that perhaps, nay
that certainly, even the very number of days has some sacramental significance.
"Then after that He saith again to His disciples, Let us go into Judea:" where
He had been all but stoned, and from which He had apparently departed for the
very purpose to escape being stoned. For as man He departed; but returned as if
in forgetfulness of 'all infirmity, to show His power. "Let us go," He said,
"into Judea."
8. And now see how the disciples were terrified at His words. "The
disciples say unto Him, Master, the Jews of late sought to stone Thee, and goest Thou
thither again? Jesus answered, Are there not twelve hours in the day? "What
means such. an answer? They said to Him, "The Jews of late sought to stone Thee,
and goest Thou thither again" to be stoned? And the Lord, "Are there not twelve
hours in the day? if any man walk in the day, he stumbleth not, because he
seeth the light of this world: but if he walk in the night, he stumbleth, because
there is no light in him." He spoke indeed of the day, but to our understanding
as if it were still the night. Let us call upon the Day to chase away the
night, and illuminate our hearts with the light. For what did the Lord mean? As far
as I can judge, and as the height and depth of His meaning breaks into light,
He wished to argue down their doubting and unbelief. For they wished by their
counsel to keep the Lord from death, who had come to die, to save themselves from
death. In a similar way also, in another passage, St. Peter, who loved the
Lord, but did not yet fully understand the reason of His coming, was afraid of His
dying, and so displeased the Life, to wit, the Lord Himself; for when He was
intimating to the disciples what He was about to suffer at Jerusalem at the
hands of the Jews, Peter made reply among the rest, and said, "Far be it from Thee,
Lord; pity Thyself: this shall not be unto Thee." And at once the Lord
replied, "Get thee behind me, Satan: for thou savorest not the things that be of God,
but those that be of men." And yet a little before, in confessing the Son of
God, he had merited commendation: for he heard the words, "Blessed art thou,
Simon Bar-jona: for flesh and blood hath not revealed it unto thee, but my Father
who is in heaven."(3) To whom He had said, "Blessed art thou," He now says, "Get
thee behind me, Satan;" because it was not of himself that he was blessed. But
of what then? "For flesh and blood hath not revealed it unto thee, but my
Father who is in heaven." See, this is how thou art blessed, not from anything that
is thine own, but from that which is mine. Not that I am the Father, but that
all things which the Father hath are mine.(1) But if his blessedness came from
the Lord's own working, from whose [working] came he to be Satan? He there
tells us: for He assigned the reason of such blessedness, when He said, "Flesh and
blood hath not revealed this unto thee, but my Father who is in heaven:" that
is the cause of thy blessedness. But that I said, "Get thee behind me, Satan,
hear also its cause. For thou savorest not the things that be of God, but those
that be of men." Let no one then flatter himself: in that which is natural to
himself he is Satan, in that which is of God he is blessed. For all that is of
his own, whence comes it, but from his sin? Put away the sin, which is thine own.
Righteousness, He saith, belongeth unto me. For what hast thou that thou didst
not receive?(2) Accordingly, when men wished to give counsel to God. disciples
to their Master, servants to their Lord, patients to their Physician, He
reproved them by saying, "Are there not twelve hours in the day? If any man walk in
the day, he stumbleth not." Follow me, if ye would not stumble: give not
counsel to me, from whom you ought to receive it. To what, then, refer the words,
"Are there not twelve hours in the day"? Just that to point Himself out as the
day, He made choice of twelve disciples. If I am the day, He says, and you the
hours, is it for the hours to give counsel to the day? The day is followed by the
hours, not the hours by the day. If these, then, were the hours, what in such a
reckoning was Judas? Was he also among the twelve hours? If he was an hour, he
had light; and if he had light, how was the Day betrayed by him to death? But
the Lord, in so speaking, foresaw, not Judas himself, but his successor. For
Judas, when he fell, was succeeded by Matthias, and the duodenary number
preserved.(3) It was not, then, without a purpose that the Lord made choice of twelve
disciples, but to indicate that He Himself is the spiritual Day. Let the hours
then attend upon the Day, let them preach the Day, be made known and illuminated
by the Day, and by the preaching of the hours may the world believe in the
Day. And so in a summary way it was just this that He said: Follow me, if ye would
not stumble.
9. "And after that He saith unto them, Our friend Lazarus sleepeth; but I
go, that I may awake him out of sleep." It was true what He said. To his
sisters he was dead, to the Lord he was asleep. He was dead to men, who could not
raise him again; but the Lord aroused him with as great ease from the tomb as one
arouseth a sleeper from his bed. Hence it was in reference to His own power
that He spoke of him as sleeping: for others also, who are dead, are frequently
spoken of in Scripture as sleeping; as when the apostle says, "But I would not
have you to be ignorant, brethren, concerning those who are asleep, that ye
sorrow not, even as others who have no hope."(4) Therefore he also spoke of them as
sleeping, because foretelling their resurrection. And so, all the dead are
sleeping, both good and bad. But just as, in the case of those who sleep and waken
day by day, there is a great difference as to what they severally see in their
sleep: some experience pleasant dreams; others. dreams so frightful that the
waking are afraid to fall asleep for fear of their recurrence: so every
individual sleeps and wakens in circumstances peculiar to himself. And there is a
difference as to the kind of custody one may be placed in, who is afterwards to be
taken before the judge. For the kind of custody in which men are placed depends
on the merits of the case: some are required to be guarded by lictors, an office
humane and mild, and becoming a citizen; others are given up to
subordinates;(5) some, again, are sent to prison: and in the prison itself all are not thrust
together into its lowest dungeons, but dealt with in proportion to the merits
and superior gravity of the charges. As, then, there are different kinds of
custody among those engaged in official life, so there are different kinds of
custody for the dead, and differing merits in those who rise again. The beggar was
taken into custody, so was the rich man: but the one into Abraham's bosom; the
other, where he thirsted, and found not a drop of water.(6)
10. Therefore, to make this the occasion of instructing your Charity, all
souls have, when they quit this world, their different receptions. The good
have joy; the evil, torments. But when the resurrection takes place, both the joy
of the good will be fuller and the torments of the wicked heavier, when they
shall be tormented in the body. The holy patriarchs, prophets, apostles, martyrs,
and good believers, have been received into peace; but all of them have still
in the end to receive the fulfillment of the divine promises; for they have
been promised also the resurrection of the flesh, the destruction of death, and
eternal life with the angels. This we have all to receive together; for the rest,
which is given immediately after death, every one, if worthy of it, receives
when he dies. The patriarchs first received it--think only from what they rest;
the prophets afterwards; more recently the apostles; still more lately the holy
martyrs, and day by day the good and faithful. Thus some have now been in that
rest for long, some not so long; others for fewer years, and others whose
entrance therein is still less than recent. But when they shall wake from this
sleep, they shall all together receive the fulfillment of the promise.
11. "Our friend Lazarus sleepeth; but I go, that I may awake him out of
sleep. Then said His disciples"--according to their understanding they
replied--"Lord, if he sleep, he shall do well." For the sleep of the sick is usually a
sign of returning health. "Howbeit Jesus spake of his death, but they thought
that He spake of the taking of rest in sleep. Then said Jesus unto them
plainly,"--for He said somewhat obscurely, "He sleepeth; "--therefore He said plainly,
"Lazarus is dead. And I am glad for your sakes that I was not there, to the
intent ye may believe." I even know that he is dead, and I was not there: for he had
been reported not as dead, but sick. But what could remain hid from Him who
had created it, and into whose hands the soul of the dying man had departed? This
is why He said," I am glad for your sakes that I was not there, to the intent
ye may believe;" that they might now begin to wonder that the Lord could assert
his death, which He had neither seen nor heard of. For here we ought specially
to bear in mind that as yet the disciples themselves, who already believed in
Him, had their faith built up by miracles: not that a faith, utterly wanting
till then, might begin to exist; but that what had previously come into being
might be increased; although He made use of such an expression as if only then
they would begin to believe. For He said not, "I am glad for your sakes," that
your faith may be increased or confirmed; but, "that ye may believe;" which is to
be understood as meaning, that your faith may be fuller and more vigorous.
12. "Nevertheless, let us go unto him. Then said Thomas, who is called
Didymus, unto his fellow disciples, Let us also go, that we may die with Him.
Therefore Jesus came, and found that he had [lain] in the grave four days already."
Much might be said of the four days, according to the wont of the obscure
passages of Scripture, which bear as many senses as there is diversity of those who
understand them. Let us express also our opinion of what is meant by one four
days dead. For as in the former case of the.. blind man we understand in a way
the human race, so in the case of this dead man many perhaps are also to be
understood; for one thing may be signified by different figures. When a man is
born, he is born already in a state of death; for he inherits sin from Adam. Hence
the apostle says: " By one man sin entered into the world, and death by sin;
and so that passed upon all men, wherein all have sinned."(1) Here you have one
day of death because man inherits it from the seed stock of death. Thereafter
he grows, and begins to approach the years of reason that he may know the law of
nature, which every one has had implanted in his heart: What thou wouldst not
have done to thyself, do not to another. Is this learned from the pages of a
book, and not in a measure legible in our very nature? Hast thou any desire to be
robbed? Certainly not. See here, then, the law in thy heart: What thou art
unwilling to suffer, be unwilling to do. This law also is transgressed by men; and
here, then, we have the second day of death. The law was also divinely given
through Moses, the servant of God; and therein it is said," Thou shall not kill;
thou shall not commit adultery; thou shall not bear false witness; honor thy
father and mother; thou shall not covet thy neighbor's property; thou shall not
covet thy neighbor's wife."(2) Here you have the written law, and it also is
despised: this is the third day of death. What remains? The gospel also comes,
the kingdom of heaven is preached, Christ is everywhere published; He threatens
hell, He promises eternal life; and that also is despised. Men transgress the
gospel; and this is the fourth day of death. Now he deservedly stinketh. But is
mercy to be denied to such? God forbid; for to raise such also from the dead,
the Lord thinks it not unfitting to come.
13. "And many of the Jews had come to Martha and Mary, to comfort them
concerning their brother. Then Martha, as soon as she heard that Jesus was coming,
went and met Him; but Mary sat [still] in the house. Then said Martha unto
Jesus, Lord, if Thou badst been here, my brother had not died. But I know that
even now, whatsoever Thou wilt ask of God, God will give it Thee:" She did not
say, But even now I ask Thee to raise my brother to life again. For how could she
know if such a resurrection would be of benefit to her brother? She only said,
I know that Thou canst, and whatsoever Thou art pleased, Thou doest: for Thy
doing it is dependent on Thine own judgment, not on my presumption. "But even now
I know that, whatsoever Thou wilt ask of God, God will give it Thee."
14 "Jesus saith unto her, Thy brother shall rise again." This was
ambiguous. For He said not, Even now I will raise thy brother; but, "Thy brother shall
rise again. Martha saith unto Him, I know that he shall rise again in the
resurrection, at the last day." Of that resurrection I am sure, but uncertain about
this. "Jesus saith unto her, I am the resurrection." Thou sayest, My brother
shall rise again at the last day: true; but by Him, through whom he shall rise
then, can he rise even now, for "I," He says, "am the resurrection and the life."
Give ear, brethren, give ear to what He says. Certainly the universal
expectation of the bystanders was that Lazarus, one who had been dead four days,' would
live again; let us hear, and rise again. How many are there in this audience
who are crushed down under the weighty mass of some sinful habit! Perhaps some
are hearing me to whom it may be said, "Be not drunk with wine, wherein is
excess;"(2) and they say, We cannot. Some others, it may be, are nearing me, who are
unclean, and stained with lusts and crimes, and to whom it is said, Refrain
from such conduct, that ye perish not; and they reply, We cannot give up our
habits. O Lord, raise them again. "I am," He says, "the resurrection and the life."
The resurrection because the life.
15. "He that believeth in me, though he were dead, yet shall he live: and
whosoever liveth and believeth in me shall never die." What meaneth this? "He
that believeth in me, though he were dead," just as Lazarus is dead, "yet shall
he live;" for He is not the God of the dead, but of the living. Such was the
answer He gave the Jews concerning their fathers, long ago dead, that is,
concerning Abraham, and Isaac, and Jacob: I am the! God of Abraham, and the God of
Isaac, and! the God of Jacob: He is not the God of the dead, but of the living;
for all live unto u Him."(3) Believe then, and though thou wert dead, yet shalt
thou live: but if thou believest not, even while thou livest thou art dead. Let
us prove this likewise, that if thou believest not, though thou belivest thou
art dead. To one who was delaying to follow Him, and saying, "Let me first go
and bury my father," the Lord said, "Let the dead bury their dead; but come thou
and follow me."(4) There was there a dead man requiring to be buried, there
were there also dead men to bury the dead: the one was dead in the flesh, the
others in soul. And how comes death on the soul? When faith is wanting. How comes
death on the body? When the soul is wanting. Therefore thy soul's soul is faith.
"He that believeth in me," says Christ, though he were dead in the flesh, yet
shall he live in the spirit; till the flesh also rise again, never more to die.
This is "he that believeth in me," though he die, "yet shall he live. And
whosoever liveth" in the flesh, "and believeth in me," though he shall die in time
on account of the death of the flesh, "shall never die," because of the life of
the spirit, and the immortality of the resurrection. Such is the meaning of
the words, "And whosoever liveth and believeth in me shall never die. Believest
thou this? She saith unto Him, Yea, Lord, I have believed that Thou art the
Christ, the Son of God, who hast come into the world." When I believed this, I
believed that Thou art the resurrection, that Thou art the life: I believed that he
that believeth in Thee, though he die, yet shall he live; and whosoever liveth
and believeth in Thee, shall never die.
16. "And when she had so said, she went ' her way, and called Mary her
sister silently, saying, The Master is come, and calleth for thee." It is worthy
of notice the way in which the whispering of her voice was denominated silence.
For how could she be silent, when she said, "The Master is come, and calleth
for thee"? It is also to be noticed why it is that the evangelist has not said
where, or when, or how the Lord called for Mary; namely, that in order to
preserve the brevity of the narrative, it may rather be understood from the words of
Martha.
17. "As soon as she heard that, she arose quickly, and came unto Him. For
Jesus was not yet come into the town, but was still in that place where Martha
met Him. The Jews, then, who were with her in the house, and comforted her,
when they saw Mary, that she rose up hastily, and went out, followed her,
saying, She goeth unto the grave, to weep there." What cause had the evangelist to
tell us this? To show us what it was that occasioned the numerous concourse of
people to be there when Lazarus was raised to life. For the Jews, thinking that
her reason for hastening away was to seek in weeping the solace of her grief,
followed her; that the great miracle of one rising again who had been four days
dead, might have the presence of many witnesses.
18. "Then when Mary was come where Jesus was, and saw Him, she fell down
at His feet, saying unto Him, Lord, if Thou hadst been here, my brother had not
died. When Jesus therefore saw her weeping, and the Jews also weeping, who were
with her, He groaned in the spirit, and troubled Himself,(1) and said, Where
have ye laid him?" Something there is, did we but know it, that He has suggested
to us by groaning in the spirit, and troubling Himself. For who could trouble
Him, save He Himself? Therefore, my brethren, first give heed here to the power
that did so, and then look for the meaning. Thou art troubled against thy
will; Christ was troubled because He willed. Jesus hungered, it is true, but
because He willed; Jesus slept, it is true, but because He willed; He was sorrowful,
it is true, but because He willed; He died, it is true, but because He willed:
in His own power it lay to be thus and thus affected or not. For the Word
assumed soul and flesh, fitting on Himself our whole human nature in the oneness of
His person. For the soul of the apostle was illuminated by the Word; so was the
soul of Peter, the soul of Paul, of the other apostles, and the holy
prophets,--the souls of all were illuminated by the Word; but of none was it said, "The
Word was made flesh;"(2) of none was it said," I and the Father are one."(3)
The soul and flesh of Christ is one person with the Word of God, one Christ. And
by this [Word] wherein resided the supreme power, was infirmity made use of at
the beck of His will; and in this way "He troubled Himself."
19. I have spoken of the power: look now to the meaning. It is a great
criminal that is signified by that four days' death and burial. Why is it, then,
that Christ troubleth Himself, but to intimate to thee how thou oughtest to be
troubled, when weighed down and crushed by so great a mass of iniquity? For here
thou hast been looking to thyself, been seeing thine own guilt, been reckoning
for thyself: I have done this, and God has spared me; I have committed this,
and He hath borne with me; I have heard the gospel, and despised it; I have been
baptized, and returned again to the same course: what am I doing? whither am I
going? how shall I escape? When thou speakest thus, Christ is already
groaning; for thy faith is groaning. In the voice of one who groaneth thus, there comes
to light the hope of his rising again. If such faith is within. there is
Christ groaning; for if there is faith in us, Christ is in us. For what else says
the apostle: "That Christ may dwell in your hearts by faith."(4) Therefore thy
faith in Christ is Christ Himself in thy heart. This is why He slept in the ship;
and why, when His disciples were in danger and already on the verge of
shipwreck, they came to Him and awoke Him. Christ arose, laid His commands on the
winds and waves, and there ensued a great calm.(5) So also with thee; the winds
enter thy heart, that is, where thou sailest, where thou passest along this life
as a stormy and dangerous sea; the winds enter, the billows rise and toss thy
vessel. What are the winds? Thou hast received some insult, and art wroth: that
insult is the wind; that anger, the waves. Thou art in danger, thou preparest to
reply, to render cursing for cursing, and thy vessel is already nigh to
shipwreck. Awake the Christ who is sleeping. For thou art in commotion, and making
ready to render evil for evil, because Christ is sleeping in thy vessel. For the
sleep of Christ in thy heart is the forgetfulness of faith. But if thou
arousest Christ, that is, recallest thy faith, what dost thou hear said to thee by
Christ, when now awake in thy heart? I [He says] have heard it said to me, "Thou
hast a devil,"(6) and I have prayed for them. The Lord hears and suffers; the
servant hears and is angry! But thou wishest to be avenged. Why so? I am already
avenged. When thy faith so speaks to thee, command is exercised, as it were,
over the winds and waves, and there is a great calm. As, then, to awaken Christ
in the vessel is just to awaken faith; so in the heart of one who is pressed
down by a great mass and habit of sin, in the heart of the man who has been a
transgressor even of the holy gospel and a despiser of eternal punishment, let
Christ groan, let such a man betake himself to self-accusation. Hear still more:
Christ wept; let man bemoan himself. For why did Christ weep, but to teach man to
weep? Wherefore did He groan and trouble Himself, but to intimate that the
faith of one who has just cause to be displeased with himself ought to be in a
sense groaning over the accusation of wicked works, to the end that the habit of
sinning may give way to the vehemence of penitential sorrow?
20. "And He said, Where have ye laid him?" Thou knewest that he was dead,
and art Thou ignorant of the place of his burial? The meaning here is, that a
man thus lost becomes, as it were, unknown to God. I have not ventured to say,
Is unknown--for what is unknown to Him? but, As it were unknown. And how do we
prove this? Listen to the Lord, who will yet say in the judgment, "I know you
not: depart from me." (1) What does that mean, "I know you not"? I see you not in
that light of mine--in that righteousness which I know. So here, also, as if
knowing nothing of such a sinner, He said, "Where have ye laid him?" Similar in
character was God's voice in Paradise after man had sinned: "Adam, where art
thou?" (2) "They say unto Him, Lord, come and see." What means this "see"? Have
pity. For the Lord sees when He pities. Hence it is said to Him, "Look upon my
humility [affliction] and my pain, and forgive all my sins." (4)
21. "Jesus wept. Then said the Jews, Behold how He loved him!""Loved him,"
what does that mean? "I came not to call the righteous, but sinners to
repentance." (3) "But some of them said, Could not this man, who opened the eyes of
the blind, have caused that even this man should not die?" But He, who would do
nought to hinder his dying, had something greater in view in raising him from
the dead.
22. "Jesus therefore again groaning in Himself, cometh to the tomb." May
His groaning have thee also for its object, if thou wouldst re-enter into life!
Every man who lies in that dire moral condition has it said to him, "He cometh
to the tomb." "It was a cave, and a stone had been laid upon it." Dead under
that stone, guilty under the law. For you know that the law, which was given to
the Jews, was inscribed on stone. (5) And all the guilty are under the law: the
right-living are in harmony with the law. The law is not laid on a righteous
man. (6) What mean then the words, "Take ye away the stone"? Preach grace. For
the Apostle Paul calleth himself a minister of the New Testament, not of the
letter, but of the spirit; "for the letter," he says, "killeth, but the spirit
giveth life." (7) The letter that killeth is like the stone that crusheth. "Take ye
away," He saith, "the stone." Take away the weight of the law; preach grace.
"For if there had been a law given, which could have given life, verily
righteousness should be by the law. But the Scripture hath concluded all under sin,
that the promise by faith of Jesus Christ might be given to them that believe."
(8) Therefore "take ye away the stone."
23. "Martha, the sister of him that was dead, saith unto Him, Lord, by
this time he stinketh: for he hath been [dead] four days. (9) Jesus saith unto
her, Have I not said unto thee, that, if thou believest, thou shalt see the glory
of God?" What does He mean by this, "thou shall see the glory of God"? That He
can raise to life even one who is putrid and hath been four days [dead]. "For
all have sinned, and come short of the glory of God; (10) and, "Where sin
abounded, grace also did superabound." (11)
24. "Then they took away the stone. And Jesus lifted up His eyes, and
said, Father, I thank Thee, that Thou hast heard me. And I knew that Thou hearest
me always: but because of the people that stand by I said it, that they may
believe that Thou hast sent me. And when He had thus spoken, He cried with a loud
voice." He groaned, He wept, He cried with a loud voice. With what difficulty
does one rise who lies crushed under the heavy burden of a habit of sinning! And
yet he does rise: he is quickened by hidden grace within; and after that loud
voice he riseth. For what followed? "He cried with a loud voice, Lazarus, come
forth. And immediately he that was dead came forth, bound hand and foot with
bandages; (12) and his face was bound about with a napkin." Dost thou wonder how
he came forth with his feet bound, and wonderest not at this, that after four
days' interment he rose from the dead? In both events it was the power of the
Lord that operated, and not the strength of the dead. He came forth, and yet still
was bound. Still in his burial shroud, he has already come outside the tomb.
What does it mean? While thou despisest [Christ]. thou liest in the arms of
death; and if thy contempt reacheth the lengths I have mentioned, thou art buried
as well: but when thou makest confession, thou comest forth. For what is this
coming forth, but the open acknowledgment thou makest of thy state, in quitting,
as it were, the old refuges of darkness? But the confession thou makest is
effected by God, when He crieth with a loud voice, or in other words, calleth thee
in abounding grace. Accordingly, when the dead man had come forth, still bound;
confessing, yet guilty still; that his sins also might be taken away, the Lord
said to His servants: "Loose him, and let him go." What does He mean by such
words? Whatsoever ye shall loose on earth shall be loosed in heaven. (1)
25. "Then many of the Jews who had come to Mary, and had seen the things
which Jesus did, believed on Him. But some of them went away to the Pharisees,
and told them what things Jesus had done." All of the Jews who had come to Mary
did not believe, but many of them did. "But some of them," whether of the Jews
who had come, or of those who had believed, "went away to the Pharisees, and
told them what things Jesus had done:" whether in the way of conveying
intelligence, in order that they also might believe, or rather in the spirit of
treachery, to arouse their anger. But whoever were the parties, and whatever their
motive, intelligence of these events was carried to the Pharisees.
26. "Then gathered the chief priests and the Pharisees a council, and
said, What do we?" But they did not say, Let us believe. For these abandoned men
were more occupied in considering what evil they could do to effect His ruin,
than in consulting for their own preservation: and yet they were afraid, and took
counsel of a kind together. For "they said, What do we? for this man doeth many
miracles: if we let him thus alone, all men will believe on him; and the
Romans shall come, and take away both our place and nation." They were afraid of
losing their temporal possessions, and thought not of life eternal; and so they
lost both. For the Romans, after our Lord's passion and entrance into glory, took
from them both their place and nation, when they took the one by storm and
transported the other: and now that also pursues them, which is said elsewhere,
"But the children of the kingdom shall go into outer darkness." (2) But this was
what they feared, that if all believed on Christ, there would be none remaining
to defend the city of God and the temple against the Romans; just because they
had a feeling that Christ's teaching was directed against the temple itself
and their own paternal laws.
27. "And one of them, [named] Caiaphas, being the high priest that same
year, said unto them, Ye know nothing at all, nor consider that it is expedient
for us that one man should die for the people, and that the whole nation perish
not. And this spake he not of himself; but being high priest that year, he
prophesied." We are here taught that the Spirit of prophecy used the agency even of
wicked men to foretell what was future; which, however, the evangelist
attributes to the divine sacramental fact that he was pontiff, which is to say, the
high priest. It may, however, be a question in what way he is called the high
priest of that year, seeing that God appointed one person to be high priest, who
was to be succeeded only at his death by another. But we are to understand that
ambitious schemes and contentions among the Jews led to the appointment
afterwards of more than one, and to their annual turn of service. For it is said also
of Zacharias: "And it came to pass that, while he executed the priest's office
before God in the order of his course, according to the custom of the priest's
office, his lot was to burn incense when he went into the temple of the Lord."
(3) From which it is evident that there were more than one, and that each had
his turn: for it was lawful for the high priest alone to place the incense on
the altar. (4) And perhaps also there were several in actual service in the same
year, who were succeeded next year by several others, and that it fell by lot
to one of them to burn incense. What was it, then, that Caiaphas prophesied?
"That Jesus should die for the nation; and not for the nation only, but that also
He should gather together in one the children of GOd that were scattered
abroad." This is added by the evangelist; for Caiaphas prophesied only of the Jewish
nation, in which there were sheep of whom the Lord Himself had said, "I am not
sent but unto the lost sheep of the house of Israel." (5) But the evangelist
knew that there were other sheep, which were not of this fold, but which had also
to be brought, that there might be one fold and one shepherd. (6) But this was
said in the way of predestination; for those who were still unbelieving were
as yet neither His sheep nor the children of God.
28. "Then, from that day forth, they took counsel together for to put Him
to death. Jesus therefore walked no more openly among the Jews; but went thence
unto a country near to the wilderness, into a city called Ephraim, and there
continued with His disciples." Not that there was any failure in His power, by
which, had He only wished, He might have continued His intercourse with the
Jews, and received no injury at their hands; but in His human weakness He furnished
His disciples with an example of living, by which He might make it manifest
that it was no sin in His believing ones, who are His members, to withdraw from
the presence of their persecutors, and escape the fury of the wicked by
concealment, rather than inflame it by showing themselves openly.