LECTURES OR TRACTATES ON THE GOSPEL ACCORDING TO ST. JOHN. TRACTATES CXXII TO
CXXIV.
TRACTATE CXXII.
CHAPTER XX. 30, 31, AND XXI. 1-11.
1. After telling us of the incident in connection with which the disciple
Thomas had offered to his touch the places of the wounds in Christ's body, and
saw what he would not believe, and believed, the evangelist John interposes
these words, and says: "And many other signs truly did Jesus in the presence of
His disciples, which are not written in this book: but these are written that ye
may believe that Jesus is the Christ, the Son of God; and that believing ye may
have life through His name." This paragraph indicates, as it were, the end of
the book; but there is afterwards related how the Lord manifested Himself at
the sea of Tiberias, and in the draught of fishes made special reference to the
mystery of the Church, as regards its future character, in the final
resurrection of the dead. I think, therefore, it is fitted to give special prominence
thereto, that there has been thus interposed, as it were, an end of the book, and
that there should be also a kind of preface to the narrative that was to follow,
in order in some measure to give it a position of greater eminence. The
narrative itself begins in this way: "After these things Jesus showed Himself again
to the disciples at the sea of Tiberias; and on this wise showed He (Himself).
There were together Simon Peter, and Thomas called Didymus, and Nathanael of
Cana in Galilee, and the sons of Zebedee, and two other of His disciples. Simon
Peter saith unto them, I go a fishing.They say unto him, We also go with thee."
2. The inquiry is usually made in connection with this fishing of the
disciples, why Peter and the sons of Zebedee returned to what they were before
being called by the Lord; for they were fishers when He said to them, "Come after
me, and I will make you fishers of men."(1) And they put such reality into
their following of Him then, that they left all in order to cleave to Him as their
Master: so much so, that when the rich man went away from Him in sorrow,
because of His saying to him, "Go sell that thou hast, and give to the poor, and thou
shall have treasure in heaven, and come follow me," Peter said unto Him, "Lo,
we have forsaken all, and followed Thee."(2) Why is it then that now, by the
abandonment as it were of their apostleship, they become what they were, and seek
again what they had forsaken, as if forgetful of the words they had once
listened to, "No man, putting his hand to the plough, and looking back, is fit for
the kingdom of heaven"?(3) Had they done so when Jesus was lying in the grave,
before He rose from the dead,--which of course they could not have done, as the
day whereon He was crucified kept them all in closest attention till His
burial, which took place before evening; while the next day was the Sabbath, when it
was unlawful for those who observed the ancestral custom to work at all; and on
the third day the Lord rose again, and recalled them to the hope which they
had not yet begun to entertain regarding Him;--yet had they then done so, we
might suppose it had been done under the influence of that despair which had taken
possession of their minds. But now, after His restoration to them alive from
the tomb, after the most evident truth of His revivified flesh offered to their
eyes and hands, not only to be seen, but also to be touched and handled; after
inspecting the very marks of the wounds, even to the confession of the Apostle
Thomas, who had previously declared that he would not otherwise believe; after
the reception by His breathing on them of the Holy Spirit, and after the words
poured from His lips into their ears, "'As the Father hath sent me, even so send
I you: whose soever sins ye remit, they are remitted unto them; and whose
soever ye retain, they are retained:" they suddenly become again what they had
been, fishers, not of men, but of fishes.
3. We have therefore to give those who are disturbed by this the answer,
that they were not prohibited from seeking necessary sustenance by their manual
craft, when lawful in itself, and warranted so long as they preserved their
apostleship intact, if at any time they had no other means of gaining a
livelihood. Unless any one have the boldness to imagine or to affirm, that the Apostle
Paul attained not to the perfection of those who left all and followed Christ,
seeing that, in order not to become a burden to any of those to whom he preached
the gospel, be worked with his own hands for his support:(1) wherein we find
rather the fulfillment of his own words, "I labored more abundantly than they
all;" and to which he added, "yet not I, but the grace of God that was with
me:"(2) to make it manifest that this also was to be imputed to the grace of God,
that both with mind and body he was able to labor so much more abundantly than
they all, that he neither ceased from preaching the gospel, nor drew, like them,
his present support out of the gospel; while he was sowing it much more widely
and fruitfully through multitudes of nations where the name of Christ had never
previously been proclaimed. Whereby he showed that living, that is, deriving
their subsistence, by the gospel, was not imposed on the apostles as a necessity,
but conferred on them as a power. And of this power the same apostle makes
mention when he says: "If we have sown to you spiritual things, is it a great
thing if we reap your carnal things? If others are partakers of this power among
you, are not we rather? But," he adds, "we have not used this power." And a
little afterwards he says: "They who serve the altar are partakers with the altar:
even so hath the Lord ordained, that they who preach the gospel should live of
the gospel; but I have used none of these things." It is clear enough,
therefore, that it was not enjoined on the apostles, but put in their power, not to find
their living otherwise than by the gospel, and of those to whom by preaching
the gospel they sowed spiritual things, to reap their carnal things; that is, to
take their bodily support, and, as the soldiers of Christ, to receive the
wages due to them, as from the inhabitants of provinces subject to Christ.(3) Hence
that same illustrious soldier had said a little before, in reference to this
matter, "Who goeth a warfare any time at his own charges?"(4) Which he
nevertheless did himself; for he labored more abundantly than they all. If, then, the
blessed Paul--that he might not use with them the power which he certainly
possessed along with the other preachers of the gospel, but went a warfare at his
own charges, that the Gentiles, who were utterly averse to the name of Christ,
might not take offense at his teaching, as something offered them for a money
equivalent,--in a way very different from that in which he had been educated,
learned an altogether new art, that while the teacher supports himself with his own
hands, none of his hearers might be burdened; how much rather did the blessed
Peter, who had beforetimes been a fisherman, do what he was already acquainted
with, if at that present time he found no other means of gaining a livelihood?
4. But some one will reply, And why did he not find them, when the Lord
had promised, saying, "Seek first the kingdom and righteousness of God, and all
these things shall be added unto you"?(5) Precisely also in this very way did
the Lord fulfill His promise. For who else placed there the fishes that were to
be caught, but He, who, we are bound to believe, threw them into the penury
that compelled them to go a fishing, for no other reason than that He wished to
show them the miracle He had prepared, that so He might both feed the preachers
of His gospel, and at the same time enhance that gospel itself, by the great
mystery which He was about to impress on their minds by the number of the fishes?
And on this subject we also ought now to be telling you what He Himself has set
before us.
5. "Simon Peter," therefore, "saith, I go a fishing." Those who were with
him "say unto him, We also go with thee. And they went forth, and entered into
a ship; and that night they caught nothing. But when the morning was now come,
Jesus stood on the shore; but the disciples knew not that it was Jesus. Then
Jesus saith unto them, Children, have ye any meat? They answered Him, No. He
saith unto them, Cast the net on the right side of the ship, and ye shall find.
They cast therefore, and now they were not able to draw it for the multitude of
fishes. Therefore that disciple whom Jesus loved saith unto Peter, It is the
Lord. When Simon Peter heard that it was the Lord, he girt his coat unto him, for
he was naked, and did cast himself into the sea. And the other disciples came in
a little ship (for they were not far from the land, but as it were two hundred
cubits), dragging the net with fishes. As soon then as they were come to land,
they saw a fire of coals laid, and a fish laid thereon, and bread. Jesus saith
unto them, Bring of the fish which ye have now caught. Simon Peter went up,
and drew the net to land full of great fishes, an hundred and fifty and three:
and for all there were so many, yet was not the net broken."
6. This is a great mystery in the great Gospel of John; and to commend it
the more forcibly to our attention, the last chapter has been made its place of
record. Accordingly, inasmuch as there were seven disciples taking part in
that fishing, Peter, and Thomas, and Nathaneal, and the two sons of Zebedee, and
two others whose names are withheld, they point, by their septenary number, to
the end of time. For there is a revolution of all time in seven days. To this
also pertains the statement, that when the morning was come, Jesus stood on the
shore; for the shore likewise is the limit of the sea, and signifies therefore
the end of the world. The same end of the world is shown also by the act of
Peter, in drawing the net to land, that is, to the shore. Which the Lord has
Himself elucidated, when in a certain other place He drew His similitude from a
fishing net let down into the sea: "And they drew it," He said, "to the shore." And
in explanation of what that shore was, He added, "So will it be in the end of
the world."(1)
7. That, however, is a parable in word, not one embodied in outward
action; and just as in the passage before us the Lord indicated by an outward action
the kind of character the Church would have in the end of the world, so in the
same way, by that other fishing, He indicated its present character. In doing
the one at the commencement of His preaching and this latter after His
resurrection, He showed thereby in the former case that the capture of fishes signified
the good and bad presently existing in the Church; but in the latter, the good
only, whom it will contain everlastingly, when the resurrection of the dead
shall have been completed in the end of this world. Furthermore, on that previous
occasion Jesus stood not, as here, on the shore, when He gave orders for the
taking of the fish, but "entered into one of the ships, which was Simon's, and
prayed him that he would thrust out a little from the land; and He sat down
therein, and taught the crowds. And when He had left speaking, He said unto Simon,
Launch out into the deep, and let down your nets for a draught." There also they
put the fishes that were caught into the ship, and did not, as here, draw the
net to the shore. By these signs, and any others that may be found, on the
former occasion the Church was prefigured as it exists in this world, and on the
other, as it shall be in the end of the world: the one accordingly took place
before, and the other subsequently to the resurrection of the Lord; because there
we were signified by Christ as called, and here as raised from the dead. On
that occasion the nets are not let down on the right side, that the good alone
might not be signified, nor on the left, test the application should be limited to
the bad; but without any reference to either side, He says, "Let down your
nets for a draught," that we may understand the good and bad as mingled together:
while on this He says, "Cast the net on the right side of the ship," to signify
those who stood on the right hand, the good alone. There the net was broken on
account of the schisms that were meant to be signified; but here, as then
there will be no more schisms in that supreme peace of the saints, the evangelist
was entitled to say, "And for all they were so great," that is, so large, "yet
was not the net broken;" as if with reference to the previous time when it was
broken, and a commendation of the good that was here in comparison with the evil
that preceded. There the multitude of fishes caught was so great, that the two
vessels were filled and began to sink,(2) that is, were weighed down to the
point of sinking; for they did not actually sink, but were in extreme jeopardy.
For whence exist in the Church the great evils under which we groan, save from
the impossibility of withstanding the enormous multitude that, almost to the
entire subversion of discipline, gain an entrance, with their morals so utterly at
variance with the pathway of the saints? Here, however, they cast the net on
the right side, "and now they were not able to draw it for the multitude of
fishes." What is meant by the words, "Now they were not able to draw it," but this,
that those who belong to the resurrection of life, that is to say, to the
right hand, and depart this life within the nets of the Christian name, will be
made manifest only on the shore, in other words, when they shall rise from the
dead at the end of the world? Accordingly, they were not able to draw the nets so
as to discharge into the vessel the fishes they had caught, as was done with
all of those wherewith the net was broken, and the boats laden to sinking. But
the Church possesses those right-hand ones after the close of this life in the
sleep of peace, lying hid as it were in the deep, till the net reach the shore
whither it is being drawn, as it were two hundred cubits. And as on that first
occasion it was done by two vessels, with reference to the circumcision and the
uncircumcision; so in this place, by the two hundred cubits, I am of opinion
that there is symbolized, with reference to the elect of both classes, the
circumcision and the uncircumcision, as it were two separate hundreds; because the
number that passes to the right hand is represented summarily by hundreds. And
last of all, in that former fishing the number of fishes is not expressed, as if
the words were there acted on that were uttered by the prophet, "I have declared
and spoken; they are multiplied beyond number:"(1) while here there are none
beyond calculation, but the definite number of a hundred and fifty and three;
and of the reason of this number we must now, with the Lord's help, give some
account.
8. For if we determine on the number that should indicate the law, what
else can it be but ten? For we have absolute certainty that the Decalogue of the
law, that is, those ten well-known precepts, were first written by the finger
of God on two tables of stone.(2) But the law, when it is not aided by grace,
maketh transgressors, and is only in the letter, on account of which the apostle
specially declared, "The letter killeth, but the spirit giveth life."(3) Let
the spirit then be added to the letter, lest the letter kill him whom the spirit
maketh not alive, and let us work out the precepts of the law, not in our own
strength, but by the grace of the Saviour. But when grace is added to the law,
that is, the spirit to the letter, there is, in a kind of way, added to ten
the number of seven. For this number, namely seven, is testified by the documents
of holy writ given us for perusal, to signify the Holy Spirit. For example,
sanctity or sanctification properly pertains to the Holy Spirit, whence, as the
Father is a spirit, and the Son a spirit, because God is a spirit,(4) so the
Father is holy and the Son holy, yet the Spirit of both is called peculiarly by
the name of the Holy Spirit. Where, then, was there the first distinct mention of
sanctification in the law but on the seventh day? For God sanctified not the
first day, when He made the light; nor the second, when He made the firmament;
nor the third, when He separated the sea from the land, and the land brought
forth grass and timber; nor the fourth, wherein the stars were created; nor the
fifth, wherein were created the animals that live in the waters or fly in the
air; nor the sixth, when the terrestrial living soul and man himself were
created; but He sanctified the seventh day, wherein He rested from all His works.(5)
The Holy Spirit, therefore, is aptly represented by the septenary number. The
prophet Isaiah likewise says, "The Spirit of God shall rest on Him;" and
thereafter calls our attention to that Spirit in His septenary work or grace, by
saying, "The spirit of wisdom and understanding, the spirit of counsel and might, the
spirit of knowledge and piety; and He shall be filled with the spirit of the
fear of God."(6) And what of the Revelation? Are they not there called the seven
Spirits of God,(7) while there is only one and the same Spirit dividing to
every one severally as He will?(8) But the septenary operation of the one Spirit
was so called by the Spirit Himself, whose own presence in the writer led to
their being spoken of as the seven Spirits. Accordingly, when to the number of
ten, representing the law, we add the Holy Spirit as represented by seven, we
have seventeen; and when this number is used for the adding together of every
several number it contains, from 1 up to itself, the sum amounts to one hundred and
fifty-three. For if you add 2 to 1, you have 3 of course; if to these you add
3 and 4, the whole makes 10; and then if you add all the numbers that follow up
to 17, the whole amounts to the foresaid number; that is, if to 10, which you
had reached by adding all together from 1 to 4, you add 5, you have 15; to
these add 6, and the result is 21; then add 7, and you have 28; to this add 8, and
9, and 10, and you get 55; to this add 11 and 12, and 13, and you have 91; and
to this again add 14, 15, and 16, and it comes to 136; and then add to this the
remaining number of which we have been speaking, namely, 17, and it will make
up the number of fishes. But it is not on that account merely a hundred and
fifty-three saints that are meant as hereafter to rise from the dead unto life
eternal, but thousands of saints who have shared in the grace of the Spirit, by
which grace harmony is established with the law of God, as with an adversary; so
that through the life-giving Spirit the letter no longer kills, but what is
commanded by the letter is fulfilled by the help of the Spirit, and if there is
any deficiency it is pardoned. All therefore who are sharers in such grace are
symbolized by this number, that is, are symbolically represented. This number
has, besides, three times over, the number of fifty, and three in addition, with
reference to the mystery of the Trinity; while, again, the number of fifty is
made up by multiplying 7 by 7, with the addition of 1, for 7 times 7 make 49. And
the 1 is added to show that there is one who is expressed by seven on account
of His sevenfold operation; and we know that it was on the fiftieth day after
our Lord's ascension that the Holy Spirit was sent, for whom the disciples were
commanded to wait according to the promise.(1)
9. It was not, then, without a purpose that these fishes were described as
so many in number, and so large in size, that is, as both an hundred and
fifty-three, and large. For so it is written, "And He drew the net to land full of
great fishes, an hundred and fifty and three." For when the Lord said, "I am
not come to destroy the law, but to fulfill "because about to give the Spirit,
through whom the law might be fulfilled, and to add thereby, as it were, seven to
ten; after interposing a few other words He proceeded, "Whosoever therefore
shall break one of these least commandments, and shall teach men so, he shall
be called the least in the kingdom of heaven: ] but whosoever shall do and teach
them. the same shall be called great in the kingdom of heaven. The latter,
therefore, may possibly belong to the number of great fishes. But he that is the
least, who undoes in deed what he teaches in word, may be in such a church as
is signified by that first capture of fishes, which contains both good and bad,
for it also is called the kingdom of heaven, as He says, "The kingdom of heaven
is like unto a net that was cast into the sea, and gathered of ever kind;"(2)
where He wishes the good as well as the bad to be understood, and of whom He
declares that they are yet to be separated on the shore, to wit, at the end of
the world. And lastly, to show that those least ones are reprobates who teach by
word of mouth the good which they undo by their evil lives, and that they will
not be even the least, as it were, in the life that is eternal, but will have
no place there at all; after saying, "He shall be called the least in the
kingdom of heaven," He immediately added, "For I say unto you, That except your
righteousness shall exceed [the righteousness] of the scribes and Pharisees, ye
shall not enter into the kingdom of heaven."(3) Such, doubtless--these scribes and
Pharisees--are those who sit in Moses' seat, and of whom He says, "Do ye what
they gay, but do not what they do; for they say, and do not."(4) They teach in
sermons what they undo by their morals. It therefore follows that he who is
least in the kingdom of heaven, as the Church now exists, shall not enter into the
kingdom of heaven, as the Church shall be hereafter; for by teaching what he
himself is in the habit of breaking, he can have no place in the company of those
who do what they teach, and therefore will not be in the number of great
fishes, seeing it is he "who shall do and teach that shall be called great in the
kingdom of heaven." And because he will be great here, therefore shall he be
there, where he that is least shall not be. Yea, so great will they certainly be
there, that he who is less there is greater than the greatest here.(5) And yet
those who are great here, that is, who do the good that they teach in that
kingdom of heaven into which the net gathereth good and bad, shall be greater still
in that eternal state of the heavenly kingdom,--those, I mean, who are indicated
by the fishes here as belonging to the right hand and to the resurrection of
life. We have still to discourse, as God shall grant us ability, on the meal
that the Lord took with those seven disciples, and on the words He spake after the
meal, as well as on the close of the Gospel itself; but these are topics that
cannot be included in the present lecture.
TRACTATE CXXIII.
CHAPTER XXI. 12-19.
1. With this third manifestation of Himself by the Lord to His disciples
after His resurrection, the Gospel of the blessed Apostle John is brought to a
close, of which we have already lectured through the earlier part as we were
able, on to the place where it is related that an hundred and fifty-three fishes
were taken by the disciples to whom He showed Himself, and for all they were so
large, yet were not the nets broken. What follows we have now to take into
consideration, and to discuss as the Lord enables us, and as the various points may
appear to demand. When the fishing was over, "Jesus saith unto them, Come
[and] dine. And none of those who sat down dared to ask Him, Who art Thou? knowing
that it was the Lord." If, then, they knew, what need was there to ask? and if
there was no need wherefore is it said, "they dared not," as if there were
need, but, from some fear or other, they dared not? The meaning here, therefore,
is: so great was the evidence of the truth that Jesus Himself had appeared to
these disciples, that not one of them dared not merely to deny, but even to doubt
it; for had any of them doubted it, he ought certainly to have asked. In this
sense, therefore, it was said, "No one dared to ask Him, Who art Thou?" as if it
were, No one dared to doubt that it was He Himself.
2. "And Jesus cometh, and taketh bread, and giveth them, and fish
likewise." We are likewise told here, you see, on what they dined; and of this dinner
we also will say something that is sweet and salutary, if we, too, are made by
Him to partake of the food. It is related above that these disciples, when they
came to the land, "saw a fire of coals laid, and a fish laid thereon, and
bread." Here we are not to understand that the bread also was laid upon the coals,
but only to supply, They saw. And if we repeat this verb in the place where it
ought to be supplied, the whole may read thus: They saw coals laid, and fish
laid thereon, and they saw bread. Or rather in this way: They saw coals laid, and
fish laid thereon; they saw a so bread. At the Lord's command they likewise
brought of the fishes which they themselves had caught; and although their
doing so might not be actually stated by the historian, yet there has been no
silence in regard to the Lord's command. For He says, "Bring of the fishes which ye
have now caught." And when we have such certainty that He gave the order, will
any suppose that they failed to obey it? Of this, therefore, the Lord prepared
the dinner for these His seven disciples, namely, of the fish which they had
seen laid upon the coals, with an addition thereto from those which they had
caught, and of the bread which we are told with equal distinctness that they had
seen. The fish roasted is Christ having suffered; He Himself also is the bread
that cometh down from heaven.(1) With Him is incorporated the Church, in order
to the participation in everlasting blessedness. For this reason is it said,
"Bring of the fish which ye have now caught," that all of us who cherish this hope
may know that we ourselves, through that septenary number of disciples whereby
our universal community may in this passage be understood as symbolized,
partake in this great sacrament, and are associated in the same blessedness. This is
the Lord's dinner with His own disciples, and herewith John, although having
much besides that he might say of Christ, brings his Gospel, with profound
thought and an eye to important lessons, to a close. For here the Church, such as it
will be hereafter among the good alone, is signified by the draught of an
hundred and fifty-three fishes; and to those who so believe, and hope, and love,
there is demonstrated by this dinner their participation in such supereminent
blessedness.
3. "This was now," he says, "the third time that Jesus showed Himself to
His disciples after that He was risen from the dead." And this we are to refer
not to the manifestations themselves, but to the days that is to say, taking the
first day when He rose again, and the [second] eight days after, when the
disciple Thomas saw and believed, and [the third] on this day when He so acted in
connection with the fishes, although how many days afterwards it was that He did
so we are not told); for on that first day He was seen more than once, as is
shown by the collated testimonies of all the evangelists: but, as we have said,
it is in accordance with the days that His manifestations are to be calculated,
making this the third; for that [manifestation] is to be reckoned the first,
and all one and the same, as included in one day, however often and to however
many He showed Himself on the day of His resurrection; the second eight days
afterwards, and this the third, and thereafter as often as He pleased on to the
fortieth day, when He ascended into heaven, although all of them have not been
recorded in Scripture.
4. "So when they had dined, He saith to Simon Peter, Simon, [son] of John,
lovest thou me more than these? He saith unto Him, Yea, Lord; Thou knowest
that I love Thee. He saith unto him, Feed my lambs. He saith to him again, Simon,
[son] of John, lovest thou me? He saith unto Him, Yea, Lord; Thou knowest that
I love Thee. He saith unto Him, Feed my lambs. He saith unto him the third
time, Simon, [son] of John, lovest thou me? Peter was grieved because He said unto
him the third time, Lovest thou me? And he said unto Him, Lord, Thou knowest
all things; Thou knowest that I love Thee. He saith unto him, Feed my sheep.
Verily, verily, I say unto thee, When thou wast young thou girdedst thyself, and
walkedst whither thou wouldest: but when thou shall be old, thou shalt stretch
forth thy hands, and another shall gird thee, and carry thee whither thou wilt
not. And this spake He, signifying by what death he should glorify God." Such was
the end reached by that denier and lover; elated by his presumption,
prostrated by his denial, cleansed by his weeping, approved by his confession, crowned
by his suffering, this was the end he reached, to die with a perfected love for
the name of Him with whom, by a perverted forwardness, he had promised to die.
He would do, when strengthened by His resurrection, what in his weakness he
promised prematurely. For the needful order was that Christ should first die for
Peter's salvation, and then that Peter should die for the preaching of Christ.
The boldness thus begun by human temerity was an utter inversion of the order
that had been instituted by the Truth. Peter thought to lay down his life for
Christ,(1) the one to be delivered in behalf of the Deliverer, seeing that Christ
had come to lay down His life for all His own, including Peter also, which, you
see, was now done. Now and henceforth a true, because graciously bestowed,
strength of heart may be assumed for incurring death itself for the name of the
Lord, and not a false one presumptuously usurped through an erroneous estimate of
ourselves. Now there is no need that we should any more fear the passage out
of the present life, because in the Lord's resurrection we have a foregoing
illustration of the life to come. Now thou hast cause, Peter, to be no longer
afraid of death, because He liveth whom thou didst mourn when dead, and whom in thy
carnal love thou didst try to hinder from dying in our behalf.(2) Thou didst
dare to step in before the Leader, and thou didst tremble before His persecutor:
now that the price has been paid for thee, it is thy duty to follow the Buyer,
and follow Him even to the death of the cross. Thou hast heard the words of Him
whom thou hast already proved to be truthful; He Himself hath foretold thy
suffering, who formerly foretold thy denial.
5. But first the Lord asks what He knew, and that not once, but a second
and a third time, whether Peter loved Him; and just as often He has the same
answer, that He is loved, while just as often He gives Peter the same charge to
feed His sheep. To the threefold denial there is now appended a threefold
confession, that his tongue may not yield a feebler service to love than to fear, and
imminent death may not appear to have elicited more from the lips than present
life. Let it be the office of love to feed the Lord's flock, if it was the
signal of fear to deny the Shepherd. Those who have this purpose in feeding the
flock of Christ, that they may have them as their own, and not as Christ's, are
convicted of loving themselves, and not Christ, from the desire either of
boasting, or wielding power, or acquiring gain, and not from the love of obeying,
serving, and pleasing God. Against such, therefore, there stands as a wakeful
sentinel this thrice inculcated utterance of Christ, of whom the apostle complains
that they seek their own, not the things that are Jesus Christ's.(3) For what
else mean the words, "Lovest thou me? Feed my sheep," than if it were said, If
thou lovest me, think not of feeding thyself, but feed my sheep as mine, and not
as thine own; seek my glory in them, and not thine own; my dominion, and not
thine; my gain, and not thine; lest thou be found in the fellowship of those who
belong to the perilous times, lovers of their own selves, and all else that is
joined on to this beginning of evils? For the apostle, after saying, "For men
shall be lovers of their own selves," proceeded to add, "Lovers of money,
boastful, proud, blasphemers, disobedient to parents, unthankful, wicked,
irreligious, without affection, false accusers, incontinent, implacable, without kindness,
traitors, heady, blinded;(1) lovers of pleasures more than of God; having a
form of godliness, but denying the power thereof."(2) All these evils flow from
that as their fountain which he stated first, "lovers of their own selves." With
great propriety, therefore, is Peter addressed, "Lovest thou me?" and found
replying, "I love Thee:" and the command applied to him, "Feed my lambs," and
this a second and a third time We have it also demonstrated here that love and
liking are one and the same thing; for the Lord also in the last question said not
Diligis me? but, Amas me? Let us, then, love not ourselves, but Him; and in
feeding His sheep, let us be seeking the things which are His, not the things
which are our own. For in some inexplicable way, I know not what, every one that
loveth himself, and not God, loveth not himself; and whoever loveth God, and not
himself, he it is that loveth himself. For he that cannot live by himself will
certainly die by loving himself; he therefore loveth not himself who loves
himself to his own loss of life. But when He is loved by whom life is preserved, a
man by not loving himself only loveth the more, when it is for this reason
that he loveth not himself [namely] that he may love Him by whom he lives. Let not
those, then, who feed Christ's sheep be "lovers of their own selves," test
they feed them as if they were their own, and not His, and wish to make their own
gain of them, as "lovers of money;" or to domineer over them, as "boastful;" or
to glory in the honors which they receive at their hands, as "proud;" or to go
the length even of originating heresies, as "blasphemers;" and not to give
place to the holy fathers, as those who are "disobedient to parents;" and to
render evil for good to those who wish to correct them, because unwilling to let
them perish, as "unthankful;" to slay their own souls and those of others, as
"wicked;" to outrage the motherly bowels of the Church, as "irreligious;" to have
no sympathy with the weak, as those who are "without affection;" to attempt to
traduce the character of the saints, as "false accusers;" to give loose reins to
the basest lusts, as "incontinent;" to make lawsuits their practice, as
"implacable;" to know nothing of loving service, as those who are "without kindness;"
to make known to the enemies of the godly what they are well aware ought to be
kept secret, as "traitors;" to disturb human modesty by shameless discussions,
as "heady;" to understand neither what they say nor whereof they affirm,(3) as
"blinded;" and to prefer carnal delights to spiritual joys, as those who are
"lovers of pleasures more than lovers of God." For these and such like vices,
whether all of them meet in a single individual, or whether some dominate in one
and others in another, spring up in some form or another from this one root,
when men are "lovers of their own selves." A vice which is specially to be
guarded against by those who feed Christ's sheep, lest they be seeking their own, not
the things that are Jesus Christ's, and be turning those to the use of their
own lusts for whom the blood of Christ was shed. Whose love ought, in one who
feedeth His sheep, to grow up unto so great a spiritual fervor as to overcome
even the natural fear of death, that makes us unwilling to die even when we wish
to live with Christ. For the Apostle Paul also says that he had a desire to be
dissolved, and to be with Christ,(4) and yet he groans, being burdened, and
wishes not to be unclothed, but clothed upon, that mortality may be swallowed up of
life.(5) And so to His present lover the Lord said, "When thou shall be old,
thou shall stretch forth thy hands, and another shall gird thee, and carry thee
whither thou wouldest not. For this He said to him, signifying by what death he
should glorify God." "Thou shall stretch forth thy hands," He said; in other
words, thou shall be crucified. But that thou mayest come to this, "another
shall gird thee, and carry thee," not whither thou wouldest, but "whither thou
wouldest not." He told him first what would happen, and then how it should come to
pass. For it was not after being crucified, but when actually about to be
crucified, that he was carried whither he would not; for after being crucified he
went his way, not whither he would not, but rather whither he would. And though
when set free from the body he wished to be with Christ, yet, were it only
possible, he had a desire for eternal life apart from the grievousness of death, to
which grievous experience he was unwillingly carried, but from it [when all was
over] he was willingly carried away; unwillingly he came to it, but willingly
he conquered it, and left this feeling of infirmity behind that makes every one
unwilling to die,--a feeling so permanently natural, that even old age itself
was unable to set the blessed Peter free from its influence, even as it was
said unto him, "When thou shalt be old," thou shall be led "whither thou wouldest
not." For our consolation the Saviour Himself transfigured also the same
feeling in His own person when He said, "Father, if it be possible, let this cup pass
from me;"(1) and He certainly had come to die without having any necessity,
but only the willingness to die, with power to lay down His life, and with power
to take it again. But however great be the grievousness of death, it ought to
be overcome by the power of that love which is felt to Him who, being our life,
was willing to endure even death in our behalf. For if there were no
grievousness, even of the smallest kind, in death, the glory of the martyrs would not be
so great. But if the good Shepherd, who laid down His own life for His
sheep,(2) has raised up so many martyrs for Himself out of the very sheep, how much
more ought those to contend to death for the truth, and even to blood against sin,
who are entrusted by Him with the feeding, that is, with the teaching and
governing of these very sheep? And on this account, along with the preceding
example of His own passion, who can fail to see that the shepherds ought all the more
to set themselves closely to imitate the Shepherd, if He was so imitated even
by many of the sheep under whom, as the one Shepherd and in the one flock, the
shepherds themselves are likewise sheep? For He made all those His sheep for
[all of] whom He died, because He Himself also became a sheep that He might
suffer for all.
TRACTATE CXXIV.
CHAPTER XXI. 19-25.
1. It is no unimportant question why the Lord, when He manifested Himself
for the third time to the disciples, said unto the Apostle Peter, "Follow me;"
but of the Apostle John, "Thus I wish him to remain(1) till I come, what is
that to thee?" To the discussion or solution of this question, according as the
Lord shall grant us ability we devote the last discourse of this work When the
Lord, then, had announced beforehand to Peter by what death he was to glorify
God, "He saith unto him, Follow me. Then Peter, turning about, seeth the disciple
whom Jesus loved following; who also leaned on His breast at supper, and said,
Lord, which is he that shall betray Thee? Peter, therefore, seeing him, saith
to Jesus, Lord, and what [of] this man? Jesus saith unto him, Thus do I wish him
to remain till I come, what is that to thee? Follow thou me. Then went this
saying abroad among the brethren, that that disciple dieth not: yet Jesus said
not unto him, He dieth not; but, Thus do I wish him to remain till I come, what
is that to thee?" You see the great extent in this Gospel of a question which,
by its depth, must exercise in no ordinary way the mind of the inquirer. For
why is it said to Peter, "Follow me," and not to the others who were likewise
present? Surely the disciples followed Him also as their Master. But if it is to
be understood only in reference to his suffering, was Peter the only one that
suffered for the truth of Christianity? Was there not present there amongst those
seven, another son of Zebedee, the brother of John, who, after His ascension,
is plainly recorded to have been slain by Herod?(2) But some one may say that,
as James was not crucified, it was properly enough said to Peter, "Follow me,"
inasmuch as he underwent not only death, but, like Christ, even the death of
the cross. Be it so, if no other explanation can be found that is more
satisfactory. Why, then, was it said of John, "Thus do I wish him to remain till I come,
what is that to thee?" and the words repeated, "Follow thou me," as if that
other, therefore, were not to follow, seeing He wished him to remain till He
comes. Who can readily believe that anything else was meant than what the brethren
who lived at the time believed, namely, that that disciple was not to die, but
to abide in this life till Jesus came? But John himself removed such an idea, by
giving a flat contradiction to the report that the Lord had said so. For why
should he add, "Jesus saith not, He dieth not," save to prevent what was false
from taking hold of the hearts of men?
2. But let any one who so listeth still refuse his assent, and declare
that what John asserts is true enough, that the Lord said not that that disciple
dieth not, and yet that this is the meaning of such words as He is here recorded
to have used; and further assert that the Apostle John is still living, and
maintain that he is sleeping rather than lying dead in his tomb at Ephesus. Let
him employ as an argument the current report that there the earth is in sensible
commotion, and presents a kind of heaving appearance, and assert whether it be
steadfastly or obstinately that this is occasioned by his breathing. For we
cannot fail to have some who so believe, if there is no want of those also who
affirm that Moses is alive; because it is written that his sepulchre could not be
found,(1) and that he appeared with the Lord on the mountain along with
Elias,(2) of whom we read that he did not die, but was translated.(3) As if Moses'
body could not have been hid somewhere in such a way as that its position should
altogether escape discovery by men, and be raised up therefrom by divine power
at the time when Elias and he were seen with Christ just as at the time of
Christ's passion many bodies of the saints arose, and after His resurrection
appeared, according to Scripture, to many in the holy city.(4) But still, as I began
to say, if some deny the death of Moses, whom Scripture itself, in the very
passage where we read that his sepulchre could nowhere be found, explicitly
declares to have died; how much more may occasion be taken from these words where the
Lord says, "Thus do I wish him to stay till I come," to believe that John is
sleeping, but still alive, beneath the ground? Of whom we have also the
tradition (which is found in certain apocryphal scriptures), that he was present, in
good health, when he ordered a sepulchre to be made for him; and that, when it
was dug and prepared with all possible care, he laid himself down there as in a
bed, and became immediately defunct: yet as those think who so understand these
words of the Lord, not really defunct, but only lying like one in such a
condition; and, while accounted dead, was actually buried when asleep, and that he
will so remain till the coming of Christ, making known meanwhile the fact of his
life by the bubbling up of the dust, which is believed to be forced by the
breath of the sleeper to ascend from the depths to the surface of the grave. I
think it quite superfluous to contend with such an opinion. For those may see for
themselves who know the locality whether the ground there does or suffers what
is said regarding it, because, in truth, we too have heard of it from those who
are not altogether unreliable witnesses.
3. Meanwhile let us yield to the opinion, which we are unable to refute by
any certain evidence, lest we stir up still another question that may be put
to us, Why the very ground should seem in a kind of way to live and breathe upon
the interred corpse? But can so great a question as the one before us be
settled on such grounds as these, if by a great miracle, such as can be wrought by
the Almighty, the living body lies so long asleep beneath the ground, till the
coming of the end of the world? Nay, rather, does there not arise a wider and
more difficult one, why Jesus bestowed on the disciple, whom He loved beyond the
others to such an extent that he was counted worthy to recline on His breast,
the gift of a protracted sleep in the body, when He delivered the blessed Peter,
by the eminent glory of martyrdom, from the burden of the body itself, and
vouchsafed to him what the Apostle Paul said that he desired, and committed to
writing, namely, "to be let loose, and to be with Christ"?(5) But if, what is
rather to be believed, Saint John declared that the Lord said not, "He dieth not,"
for the very purpose that no such meaning might be attached to the words which
He used; and his body lieth in its sepulchre lifeless like those of others
deceased; it remains, if that really takes place which report has spread abroad
regarding the soil, which grows up anew, though continually carried away, that it
is either so done for the purpose of commending the preciousness of his death,
seeing it wants the commendation of martyrdom (for he suffered not death at a
persecutor's hand for the faith of Christ), or on some other account that is
concealed from our knowledge. Still there remains the question, why the Lord said
of one who was destined to die, "Thus I wish him to remain till I Come."
4. And who, besides, would not be disposed, in the case of these two
apostles, Peter and John, to make this further inquiry, why the Lord loved John
better, when He Himself was better loved by Peter? For wherever John has something
to say of himself, in order that the reference may be understood without any
mention of his name, he adds this, that Jesus loved him, as if he were the only
one so loved, that he might be distinguished by this mark from the others, who
were all of them certainly loved by Christ: and what else, when he so spake, did
he wish to be understood but that he himself was more abundantly loved? and
far be it that he should utter a falsehood. And what greater proof could Jesus
have given of His own greater love to him than that this man, who was only a
partner with the rest of his fellow-disciples in the great salvation, should be the
only one that leaned on the breast of the Saviour Himself? And further, that
the Apostle Peter loved Christ more than the others, may be adduced from many
documentary evidences; but to go no further after others, it is plainly enough
apparent in the lesson almost immediately preceding the present, in connection
with that third manifestation of the Lord, when He put to him the question,
"Lovest thou me more than these?" He knew it, of course, and yet asked, in order
that we also, who read the Gospel, might know Peter's love to Christ, both from
the questions of the One and the answers of the other. But when Peter only
replied, "I love Thee," without adding, "more than these," his answer contained all
that he knew of himself. For he could not know how much He was loved by any
other, not being able to look into that other's heart. But by saying in the
earliest of his answers, "Yea, Lord, Thou knowest," he stated in clear enough terms,
that it was with perfect knowledge of all that the Lord asked what He asked.
The Lord therefore knew, not only that Peter loved Him, but also that he loved
Him more than the others. And yet if we propose to ourselves, in the way of
inquiry, which of the two is the better, he that loveth Christ more or he that
loveth Him less, who will hesitate to answer, he is the better that loveth Him more?
If, on the other hand, we propose this question, which of the two is the
better, he that is loved less or he that is loved more by Christ, without any doubt
we shall reply that he is the better who is loved the more by Christ. In the
comparison therefore which I drew first, Peter is superior to John; but in the
latter, John is preferred to Peter. Accordingly, we have a third to pro pose in
this form: Which of the two disciples is the better, he that loveth Christ less
than his fellow-disciple [does], and is loved more than his fellow-disciple by
Christ? or he who is loved less than his fellow-disciple by Christ, while he,
more than his fellow-disciple, loveth Christ? Here it is that the answer plainly
halts, and the question grows in magnitude. As far. however, as my own wisdom
goes, I might easily reply, that he is the better who loveth Christ the more,
but he the happier who is loved the more by Christ; if only I could thoroughly
see how to defend the justice of our Deliverer in loving him the less by whom He
is loved the more, and him the more by whom He is loved the less.
5. I shall therefore, in the manifested mercy of Him whose justice is
hidden, set about the discussion, in order to the solution of a question of such
importance, in accordance with the strength which He may graciously bestow: for
hitherto it has only been proposed, not expounded. Let this, then, be the
commencement of its exposition, namely, that we bear in mind that in this corruptible
body, which burdens the soul,(1) we live a miserable life. But we who are now
redeemed by the Mediator, and have received the earnest of the Holy Spirit,
have a blessed life in prospect, although we possess it not as yet in reality. But
a hope that is seen is not hope; for what a man seeth, why doth he yet hope
for? But if we hope for that we see not, then do we with patience wait for it.(2)
And it is in the evils that every one suffers, not in the good things that he
enjoys, that he has need of patience. The present life, therefore, whereof it
is written, "Is not the life of man a term of trial upon earth?"(3) in which we
are daily crying to the Lord, "Deliver us from evil,"(4) a man is compelled to
endure, even when his sins are forgiven him, although it was the first sin that
caused his falling into such misery. For the penalty is more protracted than
the fault; test the fault should be accounted small, were the penalty to end
with itself. On this account it is also, either for the demonstration of our debt
of misery, or for the amendment of our passing life, or for the exercise of the
necessary patience, that man is kept through time in the penalty, even when he
is no longer held by his sin as liable to everlasting damnation. This is the
truly lamentable but unblameable condition of the present evil days we pass in
this mortal state, even while in it we look with loving eyes to the days that
are good. For it comes from the righteous anger of God, whereof the Scriptures
say, "Man, that is born of woman, is of few days and full of anger:"(5) for the
anger of God is not like that of man, the disturbance of an excited man, but the
calm fixing of righteous punishment. In this anger of His, God restraineth
not, as it is written, His tender mercies;(6) but, besides other consolations to
the miserable, which He ceaseth not to bestow on mankind, in the fullness of
time, when He knew that such had to be done, He sent His only-begotten Son,(7) by
whom He created all things, that He might become man while remaining God, and
so be the Mediator between God and men, the man Christ Jesus:(8) that those who
believe in Him, being absolved by the layer of regeneration from the guilt of
all their sins,--to wit, both of the original sin they have inherited by
generation, and to meet which, in particular, regeneration was instituted, and of all
others contracted by evil conduct,--might be delivered from perpetual
condemnation, and live in faith and hope and love while sojourning in this world, and be
walking onward to His visible presence amid its toilsome and perilous
temptations on the one hand, but the consolations of God, both bodily and spiritual, on
the other, ever keeping to the way which Christ has become to them. And
because, even while walking in Him, they are not exempt from sins, which creep in
through the infirmities of this life, He has given them the salutary remedies of
alms whereby their prayers might be aided when He taught them to say, "Forgive
us our debts, as we also forgive our debtors."(1) So does the Church act in
blessed hope through this troublous life; and this Church symbolized in its
generality, was personified in the Apostle Peter, on account of the primacy of his
apostleship. For, as regards his proper personality, he was by nature one man, by
grace one Christian, by still more abounding grace one, and yet also, the first
apostle; but when it was said to him, "I will give unto thee the keys of the
kingdom of heaven, and whatsoever thou shalt bind on earth, shall be bound in
heaven; and whatsoever thou shalt loose on earth, shall be loosed in heaven," he
represented the universal Church, which in this world is shaken by divers
temptations, that come upon it like torrents of rain, floods and tempests, and
falleth not, because it is founded upon a rock (petra), from which Peter received
his name. For petra (rock) is not derived from Peter, but Peter from petra; just
as Christ is not called so from the Christian, but the Christian from Christ.
For on this very account the Lord said, "On this rock will I build my Church,"
because Peter had said, "Thou art the Christ, the Son of the living God."(2) On
this rock, therefore, He said, which thou hast confessed. I will build my
Church. For the Rock (Petra) was Christ;(3) and on this foundation was Peter himself
also built. For other foundation can no man lay than that is laid, which is
Christ Jesus.(4) The Church, therefore, which is rounded in Christ received from
Him the keys of the kingdom of heaven in the person of Peter, that is to say,
the power of binding and loosing sins. For what the Church is essentially in
Christ, such representatively is Peter in the rock (petra); and in this
representation Christ is to be understood as the Rock, Peter as the Church. This Church,
accordingly, which Peter represented, so long as it lives amidst evil, by
loving and following Christ is delivered from evil. But its following is the closer
in those who contend even unto death for the truth. But to the universality s
lot the Church] is it said, "Follow me," even as it was for the same
universality that Christ suffered: of whom this same Peter saith, "Christ suffered for us,
leaving us an example, that we should follow His footsteps."(6) This, then,
you see is why it was said to him, "Follow me." But there is another, an immortal
life, that is not in the midst of evil: there we shall see face to face what
is seen here through a glass and in a riddle,(7) even when much progress is made
in the beholding of the truth. There are two states of life, therefore,
preached and commended to herself from heaven, that are known to the Church, whereof
the one is in faith, the other in sight; one in the temporal sojourn in a
foreign land, the other in the eternity of the [heavenly] abode; one in labor, the
other in repose; one on the way, the other in the fatherland; one in active
work, the other in the wages of contemplation; one declines from evil and makes for
good, the other has no evil to decline from, and has great good to enjoy; the
one fights with a foe, the other reigns without a foe; the one is brave in the
midst of adversities, the other has no experience of adversity; the one is
bridling its carnal lusts, the other has full scope for spiritual delights; the one
is anxious with the care of conquering, the other secure in the peace of
victory; the one is helped in temptations, the other, free from all temptations,
rejoices in the Helper Himself; the one is occupied in relieving the indigent, the
other is there, where no indigence is found; the one pardons the sins of
others, that its own may be pardoned to itself, the other neither has anything to
pardon nor does aught for which pardon has to be asked; the one is scourged with
evils that it may not be elated with good things, the other is free from all
evil by such a fullness of grace that, without any temptation to pride, it may
cleave to that which is supremely good; the one discerneth both good and evil,
the other has only that which is good presented to view: therefore the one is
good, but miserable as yet; the other, better and blessed. This one was signified
by the Apostle Peter, that other by John. The whole of the one is passed here
to the end of this world, and there finds its termination, the other is deferred
for its completion till after the end of this world, but has no end in the
world to come. Hence it is said to the latter, "Follow me;" but of the former,
"Thus I will that he tarry till I come, what is that to thee? follow thou me." For
what means this last? So far as my wisdom goes, so far as I comprehend, what
is it but this, Follow thou me by imitating me in the endurance of temporal
evils; let him remain till I come to restore everlasting good? And this may be
expressed more clearly in this way: Let perfected action, informed by the example
of my passion, follow me; but let contemplation only begun remain [so] till I
come, to be perfected when I come. For the godly plenitude of patience, reaching
forward even unto death, followeth Christ; but the fullness of knowledge
tarrieth till Christ come, to be manifested then. For here the evils of this world
are endured in the land of the dying, while there shall be seen the good things
of the Lord in the land of the living. For in saying, "I wish him to tarry till
I come," we are not to understand Him as meaning to remain on, or abide
permanently, but to wait; seeing that what is signified by him shall certainly not be
fulfilled now, but when Christ is come. But what is signified by him to whom it
was said, "Follow thou me," unless it be done now, will never attain to the
expected end. And in this life of activity. the more we love Christ the more
easily are we delivered from evil. But He loveth us less as we now are, and
therefore delivers from it, that we may not be always such as we are. There, however,
He loveth us more; for we shall not have aught about us to displease Him, or
aught that He will have to separate us from: nor is it for aught else that He
loveth us here but that He may heal and translate us from everything He loveth
not. Here, therefore, the loveth us] less, where He would not have us remain;
there in larger measure, whither He would have us to be passing, and out of that
wherein He would not that we should perish. Let Peter therefore love Him, that we
may obtain deliverance from our present mortality; let John be loved by Him,
that we may be preserved in the immortality to come.
6. But by this line of argument we have shown why Christ loved John more
than Peter, not why Peter loved Christ more than John. For if Christ loveth us
more in the world to come, where we shall live unendingly with Him, than in the
present, from which we are in the course of being rescued, that we may be
always in the other, it does not follow on that account that we shall love Him less
when better ourselves; since we can in no possible way be better ourselves,
save by loving Him more. Why was it, then, that John loved Him less than Peter, if
he signified that life, wherein He must be more abundantly loved, but because
on that very account it was said, "I will that he tarry," that is wait, "till I
come;" for we have not yet the love itself, which will then be greater far,
but are expecting that future, that we may have it when He shall come? Just as in
his own epistle the same apostle declares, "It has not yet appeared what we
shall be: but we know that, when He shall appear, we shall be like Him; for we
shall see Him as He is."(1) Then accordingly shall we love the more that which we
shall see. But the Lord Himself. in His predestinating knowledge, loveth more
that future life of ours that is yet to come, such as He knows it will be
hereafter in us, in order that by so loving us He may draw us onward to its
possession. Wherefore, as all the ways of the Lord are mercy and truth,(2) we know our
present misery, because we feel it; and therefore we love more the mercy of the
Lord, which we wish to be exhibited in our deliverance from misery, and we ask
and experience it daily, especially in the remission of sins: this it is that
was signified by Peter, as loving more, but less beloved; because Christ
loveth us less in our misery than in our blessedness. But the contemplation of the
truth, such as it then shall be, we love less, because as yet we neither know
nor possess it: this was signified by John as loving less, and therefore waiting
both for that state itself, and for the perfecting in us of that love to Him,
to which He is entitled, till the Lord come; but loved the more, because that it
is, which is symbolized by him, that maketh him blessed.
7. Let no one, however, separate these distinguished apostles. In that
which was signified by Peter, they were both alike; and in that which was
signified by John, they will both be alike hereafter. In their representative
character, the one was following, the other tarrying; but in their personal faith they
were both of them enduring the present evils of the misery here, both of them
expecting the future good things of the blessedness to come. And such is the
case, not with them alone, trot with the holy universal Church, the spouse of
Christ, who has still to be rescued from the present trials, and to be preserved in
the future happiness. And these two states of life were symbolized by Peter and
John, the one by the one, the other by the other; but in this life they both
of them walked for a time by faith, and the other they shall both of them enjoy
eternally by sight. For the whole body of the saints, therefore, inseparably
belonging to the body of Christ, and for their safe pilotage through the present
tempestuous life, did Peter, the first of the apostles, receive the keys of the
kingdom of heaven for the binding and loosing of sins; and for the same
congregation of saints, in reference to the perfect repose in the bosom of that
mysterious life to come did the evangelist John recline on the breast of Christ. For
it is not the former alone but the whole Church, that bindeth and looseth
sins; nor did the latter alone drink at the fountain of the Lord's breast, to emit
again in preaching, of the Word in the beginning, God with God, and those other
sublime truths regarding the divinity of Christ, and the Trinity and Unity of
the whole Godhead. which are to be yet beheld in that kingdom face to face, but
meanwhile till the Lord's coming are only to be seen in a mirror and in a
riddle; but the Lord has Himself diffused this very gospel through the whole world,
that every one of His own may drink thereat according to his own individual
capacity. There are some who have entertained the idea--and those, too, who are
no contemptible handlers of sacred eloquence--that the Apostle John was more
loved by Christ on the ground that he never married a wife, and lived in perfect
chastity from early boyhood.(1) There is, indeed, no distinct evidence of this
in the canonical Scriptures: nevertheless it is an idea that contributes not a
little to the suitableness of the opinion expressed above, namely, that that
life was signified by him, where there will be no marriage.
8. "This is the disciple who testifieth of these things, and wrote these
things; and we know that his testimony is true. And there are also," he adds,
"many other things which Jesus did, the which, if they should be written every
one, I suppose that even the world itself could not contain the books that should
be written." We are not to suppose that in regard to local space the world
would be unable to contain them; for how could they be written in it if it could
not hear them when written? but perhaps it is that they could not be
comprehended by the capacity of the readers: although, while our faith in certain things
themselves remains unharmed, the words we use about them may not unfrequently
appear to exceed belief. This will not take place when anything that was obscure
or dubious is in course of exposition by the setting forth of its ground and
reason, but only when that which is clear of itself is either magnified or
extenuated, Without any real departure from the pathway of the truth to be intimated;
for the words may outrun the thing itself that is indicated only in such a
way, that the will of him that speaketh, but without any intention to deceive, may
be apparent, so that, knowing how far he will be believed, he, orally, either
diminishes or magnifies his subject beyond the limit to which credit will be
given. This mode of speaking is called by the Greek name hyperbole, by the
masters not only of Greek, but also of Latin literature. And this mode is found not
only here, but in several other parts also of the divine literature: as, "They
set their mouths against the heavens;"(2) and, "The top of the hair of such as
go on in their trespasses;"(3) and many others of the same kind, which are no
more wanting in the sacred Scriptures than other tropes or modes of speaking. Of
these I might give a more elaborate discussion, were it not that, as the
evangelist here terminates his Gospel, I am also compelled to bring my discourse to a
close.