ST. AUGUSTIN: TEN HOMILIES ON THE FIRST EPISTLE OF JOHN. HOMILIES IX TO X.
HOMILY IX.
- JOHN IV 17-21
"Herein is love made perfect in us, that we may have boldness in the day
of judgment: because as He is, so are we in this world. There is no fear in
love; but perfect love casteth out fear: because fear hath torment. He that feareth
is not made perfect in love. Let us love Him, because He first loved us. If a
man say, I love God, and hateth his brother, he is a liar: for he that loveth
not his brother whom he seeth, how can he love God whom he seeth not? And this
commandment have we from Him, That he who loveth God love his brother also."
1. YE remember, beloved, that of the epistles of John the apostle the last
past remains to be handled by us and expounded to you, as the Lord vouchsafes.
Of this debt then we are mindful: and ye ought to be mindful of your claim.
For indeed this same charity, which in this epistle is chiefly and almost alone
commended, at once maketh us most faithful in paying our debts, and you most
sweet in exacting your rights. I have said, most sweet in exacting, because where
charity is not, he that exacts is bitter: but where charity is, both he that
exacts is sweet, and he of whom it is exacted, although he undertakes some labor,
yet charity makes the very labor to be almost no labor, and light. Do we not
see how, even in dumb and irrational animals, where the love is not spiritual
but carnal and natural, with great affection the mother yields herself to her
young ones when they will have the milk which is their right: and however
impetuously the suckling rushes at the teats, yet that is better for the mother than
that it should not suck nor exact that which of love is due? Often we see great
calves driving their heads at the cow's udders with a force that almost lifts up
the mother's body, yet does she not kick them off; nay, if the young one be
not there to suck, the towing of the dam calls for it to come to the teats. If
then there be in us that spiritual charity of which the apostle saith, "I became
small in the midst of you even as a nurse cherishing her young ones;"(1) we
love you the more when ye are exacting. We like not the sluggish, because for the
languid ones we are afraid. We have been obliged, however, to intermit the
continuous reading of this epistle, because of certain stated lessons coming
between, which must needs be read on their holy days, and the same preached upon. Let
us now come back to the order which was interrupted; and what remains, holy
brethren, receive ye with all attention. I know not whether charity could be more
magnificently commended to us, than that it should be said, "Charity is
God."(2) Brief praise, yet mighty praise: brief in utterance, mighty in meaning! How
soon is it said, "Love is God!" This also is short: if thou count it, it is
one: if thou weigh it, how great is it! "Love is God, and he that dwelleth,"
saith he, "in love, dwelleth in God, and God dwelleth in him." Let God be thy
house, and be thou an house of God; dwell in God, and let God dwell in thee. God
dwelleth in thee, that He may hold thee: thou dwellest in God, that thou mayest
not fall; for thus saith the apostle of this same charity "Charity never
falleth."(1) How should He fall whom God holdeth?
2. "Herein is our love made perfect in us that we may have boldness in the
day of judgment: because as He is, so are we in this world."(2) He tells how
each may prove himself, what progress charity has made in him or rather what
progress he has made in charity. For if charity is God, God is capable neither of
proficiency nor of deficiency: that charity is said to be making proficiency in
thee, means only that thou makest proficiency in it. Ask therefore what
proficiency thou hast made in charity, and what thine heart will answer thee, that
thou mayest know the measure of thy profiting. For he has promised to show us in
what we may know Him, and hath said, "In this is love made perfect in us."
Ask, in what? "That we have boldness in the day of judgment." Whoso hath boldness
in the day of judgment, in that man is charity made perfect. What is it to
have boldness in the day of judgment? Not to fear lest the day of judgment should
come. There are men who do not believe in a day of judgment; these cannot have
boldness in a day which they do not believe will come. Let us pass these: may
God awaken them, that they may live; why speak we of the dead? They do not
believe that there will be a day of judgment; they neither fear nor desire what
they do not believe. Some man has begun to believe in a day of judgment: if he has
begun to believe, he has also begun to fear. But because he fears as yet,
because he hath not yet boldness in the day of judgment, not yet is charity in that
man made perfect. But for all that, is one to despair? In whom thou seest the
beginning, why despairest thou of the end? What beginning do I see? (sayest
thou.) That very fear. Hear the Scripture: "The fear of the Lord is the beginning
of wisdom."(3) Well then, he has begun to fear the day of judgment: by fearing
let him correct himself, let him watch against his enemies, i.e. his sins; let
him begin to come to life again inwardly, and to mortify his members which are
upon the earth, as the apostle saith, "Mortify your members which are upon the
earth."(4) By the members upon earth he means spiritual wickedness:(5) for he
goes on to expound it, "Covetousness, uncleanness,"(6) and the rest which he
there follows out. Now in proportion as this man who has begun to fear the day of
judgment, mortifies his members which are upon the earth, in that proportion
the heavenly members rise up and are strengthened. But the heavenly members are
all good works. As the heavenly members rise up, he begins to desire that which
once he feared. Once he feared lest Christ should come and find in him the
impious whom He must condemn; now he longs for Him to come, because He shall find
the pious man whom He may crown. Having now begun to desire Christ's coming, the
chaste soul which desires the embrace of the Bridegroom renounces the
adulterer, becomes a virgin within by faith, hope, and charity. Now hath the man
boldness in the day of judgment: he fights not against himself when he prays, "Thy
kingdom come."(7) For he that fears test the kingdom of God should come, fears
lest his prayer be heard. How can he be said to pray, who fears lest his prayer
be heard? But he that prays with boldness of charity, wishes now that He may
come. Of this same desire said one in the Psalm, "And thou, Lord, how long? Turn,
Lord, and deliver my soul."(8) He groaned at being so put off. For there are
men who with patience submit to die; but there are some perfect who with patience
endure to live. What do I mean? When a person still desires this life, that
person, when the day of death comes, patiently endures death: he struggles
against himself that he may follow the will of God, and in his mind desires that
which God chooseth, not what man's will chooseth: from desire of the present life
there comes a reluctance against death, but yet he takes to him patience and
fortitude, that he may with an even mind meet death; he dies patiently. But when a
man desires, as the apostle saith, "to be dissolved and to be with Christ,"(9)
that person, not patiently dies, but patiently lives, delightedly dies. See
the apostle patiently living, i.e. how with patience he here, not loves life, but
endures it. "To be dissolved," saith be, "and to be with Christ, is far
better: but to continue in the flesh is necessary for your sakes." Therefore,
brethren, do your endeavor, settle it inwardly with yourselves to make this your
concern, that ye may desire the day of judgment. No otherwise is charity proved to
be perfect, but only when one has begun to desire that day. But that man desires
it, who hath boldness in it, whose conscience feels no alarm in perfect and
sincere charity.
3. "In this is His love perfected in us, that we may have boldness in the
day of judgment." Why shall we have boldness? "Because as He is are we also in
this world." Thou hast heard the ground of thy boldness: "Because as He is,"
saith the apostle, "are we also in this world." Does he not seem to have said
something impossible? For is it possible for man to be as God? I have already
expounded to you that "as" is not always said of equality, but is said of a certain
resemblance. For how sayest thou, As I have ears, so has my image? Is it quite
so? and yet thou sayest "so, as." If then we were made after God's image, why
are we not so as God? Not unto equality, but relatively to our measure. Whence
then are we given boldness in the day of judgment? "Because as He is, are we
also in this world." We must refer this to the same charity, and understand what
is meant. The Lord in the Gospel saith, "If ye love them that love you, what
reward shall ye have? do not the publicans this?"(1) Then what would He have us
do? "But I say unto you, Love your enemies, and pray far them that persecute
you." If then He bids us love our enemies, whence brings He an example to set
before us? From God Himself: for He saith, "That ye may be the children of your
Father which is in heaven." How doth God this? He loveth His enemies, "Who maketh
His sun to rise upon the good and the bad, and raineth upon the just and the
unjust." If this then be the perfection unto which God inviteth us, that we love
our enemies as He loved His; this is our boldness in the day of judgment, that
"as He is, so are we also in this world:" because, as He loveth His enemies in
making His sun to rise upon good and bad, and in sending rain upon the just and
unjust, so we, since we cannot bestow upon them sun and rain, bestow upon them
our tears when we pray for them.
4. Now therefore concerning this same boldness, let us see what he says.
Whence do we understand that charity is perfect? "There is no fear in
charity."(2) Then what say we of him that has begun to fear the day of judgment? If
charity in him were perfect, he would not fear. For perfect charity would make
perfect righteousness, and he would have nothing to fear: nay rather he would have
something to desire; that iniquity may pass away, and God's kingdom come. So
then, "there is no fear in charity." But in what charity? Not in charity begun: in
what then? "But perfect charity," saith he, "casteth out fear." Then let
fear make the beginning, because "the fear of the Lord is the beginning of
wisdom." Fear, so to say, prepares a place for charity. But when once charity has
begun to inhabit, the fear which prepared the place for it is cast out. For in
proportion as this increases, that decreases: and the more this comes to be within,
is the fear cast out. Greater charity, less fear; less charity, greater fear.
But if no fear, there is no way for charity to come in. As we see in sewing,
the thread is introduced by means of the bristle;(3) the bristle first enters,
but except it come out the thread does not come into its place: so fear first
occupies the mind, but the fear does not remain there, because it enters only in
order to introduce charity. When once there is the sense of security in the
mind, what joy have we both in this world and in the world to come! Even in this
world, who shall hurt us, being full of charity? See how the apostle exults
concerning this very charity: "Who shall separate us from the charity of Christ?
shall tribulation, or distress, or persecution, or famine, or nakedness, or peril,
or sword?"(4) And Peter saith: "And who is he that will harm you, if ye be
followers s of that which is good?--There is no fear in love; but perfect love
casteth out fear: because fear hath torment."(6) The consciousness of sins
torments the heart: justification has not yet taken place. There is that in it which
itches, which pricks. Accordingly in the Psalm what saith he concerning this
same perfection of righteousness? "Thou hast turned for me my mourning into joy:
Thou hast put off my sackcloth, and girded me with gladness; to the end that my
glory may sing to thee, and that I be not pricked."(2) What is this, "That I be
not pricked?" That there be not that which shall goad my conscience. Fear doth
goad: but fear not thou: charity enters in, and she heals the wound that fear
inflicts. The fear of God so wounds as doth the leech's knife;(8) it takes away
the rottenness, and seems to make the wound greater. Behold, when the
rottenness was in the body, the wound was less, but perilous: then comes the knife; the
wound smarted less than it smarts now while the leech is cutting it. It smarts
more while he is operating upon it than it would if it were not operated upon;
it smarts more under the healing operation, but only that it may never smart
when the healing is effected. Then let fear occupy thine heart, that it may
bring in charity; let the cicatrice succeed to the leech's knife. He is such an
Healer, that the cicatrices do not even appear: only do thou put thyself under His
hand. For if thou be without fear, thou canst not be justified. It is a
sentence pronounced by the Scriptures; "For he that is without fear, cannot be
justified."(1) Needs then must fear first enter in, that by it charity may come. Fear
is the healing operation: charity, the sound condition. "But he that feareth
is not made perfect in love." Why? "Because fear hath torment;" just as the
cutting of the surgeon's knife hath torment.
5. But there is another sentence, which seems contrary to this if it have
not one that understands.(2) Namely, it is said in a certain place of the
Psalms, "The fear of the Lord is chaste, enduring forever."(3) He shows us an
eternal fear, but a chaste. But if he there shows us an eternal fear, does this
epistle perchance contradict him, when it saith, "There is no fear in love, but
perfect love casteth out fear?" Let us interrogate both utterances of God. One is
the Spirit, though the books two, though the mouths two though the tongues two.
For this is said by the mouth of John, that by the mouth of David: but think
not that the Spirit is more than one. If one breath fills two pipes [of the
double-flute], cannot one Spirit fill two hearts, move two tongues? But if two pipes
filled by one breathing sound in unison, can two tongues filled with the
Spirit or Breathing of God make a dissonance? There is then an unison there, there
is a harmony, only it requires one that can hear. Behold, this Spirit of God
hath breathed into and filled two hearts, hath moved two tongues: and we have
heard from the one tongue, "There is no fear in love; but perfect love casteth out
fear;" we have heard from the other, "The fear of the Lord is chaste, enduring
for ever." How is this? The notes seem to jar. Not so: rouse thine ears: mark
the melody. It is not without cause that in the one place there is added that
word, chaste, in the other it is not added: but because there is one fear
which is called chaste, and there is another fear which is not called chaste. Let
us mark the difference between these two fears, and so understand the harmony of
the flutes. How are we to understand, or how to distinguish? Mark, my beloved.
There are men who fear God, lest they be cast into hell, lest haply they burn
with the devil in everlasting fire. This is the fear which introduces charity:
but it comes that it may depart. For if thou as yet fearest God because of
punishments, not yet dost thou love Him whom thou in such sort fearest. Thou dost
not desire the good things, but art afraid of the evil things. Yet because thou
art afraid of the evil things, thou correctest thyself and beginnest to desire
the good things. When once thou hast begun to desire the good, there shall be
in thee the chaste fear. What is the chaste fear? The fear lest thou lose the
good things themselves. Mark! It is one thing to fear God lest He cast thee into
hell with the devil, and another thing to fear God lest He forsake thee. The
fear by which thou fearest lest thou be cast into hell with the devil, is not
yet chaste; for it comes not from the love of God, but from the fear of
punishment: but when thou fearest God lest His presence forsake thee, thou embracest
Him, thou longest to enjoy God Himself.
6. One cannot better explain the difference between these two fears, the
one which charity casteth out, the other chaste, which endureth for ever, than
by putting the case of two married women, one of whom, you may suppose, is
willing to commit adultery, delights in wickedness, only fears lest she be condemned
by her husband. She fears her husband: but because she yet loves wickedness,
that is the reason why she fears her husband. To this woman, the presence of her
husband is not grateful but burdensome; and if it chance she live wickedly,
she fears her husband, lest he should come. Such are they that fear the coming of
the day of judgment. Put the case that the other loves her husband, that she
feels that she owes him chaste embraces, that she stains herself with no
uncleanness of adultery; she wishes for the presence of her husband. And how are these
two fears distinguished? The one woman fears, the other also fears. Question
them: they seem to make one answer: question the one, Dost thou fear thine
husband? she answers, I do. Question the other, whether she fears her husband; she
answers, I do fear him. The voice is one, the mind diverse. Now then let them be
questioned, Why? The one saith, I fear my husband, lest he should come: the
other saith, I fear my husband, lest he depart from me. The one saith, I fear to
be condemned: the other, I fear to be forsaken. Let the like have place in the
mind of Christians, and thou findest a fear which Jove casteth out, and another
fear, chaste, enduring for ever.
7. Let us speak then first to these who fear God, just in the manner of
that woman who delights in wickedness; namely, she fears her husband test he
condemn her; to such let us, first speak. O soul, which fearest God lest He condemn
thee, just as the woman fears, who delights in wickedness: fears her husband,
lest she be condemned by her husband as thou art displeased at this woman, so
be displeased at thyself. If perchance thou hast a wife, wouldest thou have thy
wife fear thee thus, that she be not condemned by thee i that delighting in
wickedness, she should be repressed only by the weight of the fear of thee, not by
the condemnation of her iniquity? Thou wouldest have her chaste, that she may
love thee, not that she may fear thee. Show thyself such to God, as thou
wouldest have thy wife be to thee. And if thou hast not yet a wife, and wishest to
have one, thou wouldest have her such. And yet what are we saying, brethren? That
woman, whose fear of her husband is, to be condemned by her husband, perhaps
does not commit adultery, lest by some means or other it come to her husband's
knowledge, and he deprive her of this temporal light of life: now the husband
can be deceived and kept in ignorance; for he is but human, as she is who can
deceive him. She fears him, from whose eyes she can be hid: and dost thou not fear
the face ever upon thee of thine Husband? "The countenance of the Lord is
against them that do evil."(1) She catches at her husband's absence, and haply is
incited by the delight of adultery; and yet she saith to herself, I will not do
it: he indeed is absent, but it is hard to keep it from coming in some way to
his knowledge. She restrains herself, lest it come to the knowledge of a mortal
man, one who, it is also possible, may never know it, who, it is also possible,
may be deceived, so that he shall esteem a bad woman to be good, esteem her to
be chaste who is an adulteress: and dost thou not fear the eyes of Him whom no
man can deceive? thou not fear the presence of Him who cannot be turned away
from thee? Pray God to look upon thee, and to turn His face away from thy sins;
"Turn away Thy face from my sins."(2) But whereby dost thou merit that He
should turn away His face from thy sins. if thou turn not away thine own face from
thy sins? For the same voice saith in the Psalm: "For I acknowledge mine
iniquity, and my sin is ever before me."(3) Acknowledge thou, and He forgives.(4)
8. We have addressed that soul which hath as yet the fear which endureth
not for ever, but which love shuts out and casts forth: let us address that also
which hath now the fear which is chaste, enduring for ever. Shall we find that
soul, think you, that we may address it? think you, is it here in this
congregation? is it, think you, here in this chancel?(5) think you, is it here on
earth? It cannot but be, only it is hidden. Now is the winter: within is the
greenness in the root. Haply we may get at the ears of that soul. But wherever that
soul is, oh that I could find it, and instead of its giving ear to me, might
myself give ear to it! It should teach me something, rather than learn of me! An
holy soul, a soul of fire, and longing for the kingdom of God: that soul, not I
address, but God Himself doth address, and thus consoleth while patiently it
endures to live here on earth: "Thou wouldest that I should even now come, and I
know that thou wishest I should even now come: I know what thou art, such that
without fear thou mayest wait for mine advent; I know that is a trouble to
thee: but do thou even longer wait, endure; I come, and come quickly." But to the
loving soul the time moves slowly. Hear her singing, like a lily as she is from
amid the thorns; hear her sighing and saying, "I will sings and will understand
in a faultless(6) way: when will thou come unto me?"(7) But in a faultless way
well may she not fear; because "perfect love casteth out fear." And when He is
come to her embrace, still she fears, but(8) in the manner of one that feels
secure. What does she fear? She will beware and take heed to herself against her
own iniquity, that she sin not again: not test she be cast into the fire, but
lest she be forsaken by Him. And there shall be in in her--what? the "chaste
fear, enduring for ever." We have heard the two flutes sounding in unison. That
speaks of fear, and this speaks of fear: but that, of the fear with which the
soul fears test she be condemned; this, of the fear with which the soul fears
lest she be forsaken.(9) That is the fear which charity casteth out: this, the
fear that endureth for ever.
9. "Let us love,(10) because He first loved us."(11) For how should we
love, except He had first loved us? By loving we became friends: but He loved us
as enemies, that we might be made friends. He first loved us, and gave us the
gift of loving Him. We did not yet love Him: by loving we are made beautiful. If
a man deformed and ill-featured love a beautiful woman, what shall he do? Or
what shall a woman do, if, being deformed and ill-featured and
black-complexioned, she love a beautiful man? By loving can she become beautiful? Can he by
loving become handsome? He loves a beautiful woman, and when he sees himself in a
mirror, he is ashamed to lift up his face to her his lovely one of whom he is
enamored. What shall he do that he may be beautiful? Does he wait for good looks
to come? Nay rather, by waiting old age is added to him, and makes him uglier.
There is nothing then to do, there is no way to advise him, but only that he
should restrain himself, and not presume to love unequally: or if perchance he
does love her, and wishes to take her to wife, in her let him love chastity, not
the face of flesh. But our soul, my brethren, is unlovely by reason of iniquity:
by loving God it becomes lovely. What a love must that be that makes the lover
beautiful! But God is always lovely, never unlovely, never changeable. Who is
always lovely first loved us; and what were we when He loved us but foul and
unlovely? But not to leave us foul; no, but to change us, and of unlovely make us
lovely. How shall we become lovely? By loving Him who is always lovely. As the
love increases in thee, so the loveliness increases: for love is itself the
beauty of the soul. "Let us love, because He first loved us." Hear the apostle
Paul: "But God showed His love in us, in that while we were yet sinners, Christ
died for us:"(1) the just for the unjust, the beautiful for the foul. How find
we Jesus beautiful? "Thou art beauteous in loveliness surpassing the sons of
men; grace is poured upon thy lips."(2) Why so? Again see why it is that He is
fair; "Beauteous in loveliness surpassing the sons of men:" because "In the
beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God."(3) But in
that He took flesh, He took upon Him, as it were, thy foulness, i.e. thy
mortality, that He might adapt Himself to thee, and become suited to thee, and stir
thee up to the love of the beauteousness within. Where then in Scripture do we
find Jesus uncomely and deformed, as we have found Him comely and "beauteous in
loveliness surpassing the sons of men?" where find we Him also deformed? Ask
Esaias: "And we saw Him, and He had no form nor comeliness."(4) There now are two
flutes which seem to make discordant sounds: howbeit one Spirit breathes into
both. By this it is said, "Beauteous in loveliness surpassing the sons of men:"
by that it is said in Esaias, "We saw Him, and He had no form nor comeliness."
By one Spirit are both flutes filled, they make no dissonance. Turn not away
thine ears, apply the understanding. Let us ask the apostle Paul, and let him
expound to us the unison of the two flutes, Let him sound to us the note,
"Beauteous in loveliness surpassing the sons of men.--Who, being in the form of God,
thought it not robbery to be equal with God."(5) Let him sound to us also the
note, "We saw Him, and He had no form nor comeliness.--He made Himself of no
reputation, taking upon Him the form of a servant, made in the likeness of men, and
in fashion found as man. He had no form nor comeliness," that He might give
thee form and comeliness. What form? what comeliness? The love which is in
charity:(6) that loving, thou mayest run;(7) running, mayest love. Thou art fair now:
but stay not thy regard upon thyself, lest thou lose what thou hast received;
let thy regards terminate in Him by whom thou wast made fair. Be thou fair only
to the end He may love thee. But do thou direct thy whole aim to Him, run thou
to Him, seek His embraces, fear to depart from Him; that there may be in thee
the chaste fear, which endureth for ever. "Let us love, because He first loved
us."
10. "If any man say, I love God."(8) What God?(9) wherefore love we?
"Because He first loved us," and gave us to love. He loved us ungodly, to make us
godly; loved us unrighteous, to make us righteous; loved us sick, to make us
whole. Ask each several man; let him tell thee if he love God. He cries out, he
confesses: I love, God knoweth. There is another question to be asked. "If any man
say, I love God, and hateth his brother, he is a liar." By what provest thou
that he is a liar? Hear. "For he that loveth not his brother whom he seeth, how
can he love God whom he seeth not?" What then? does he that loves a brother,
love God also? He must of necessity love God, must of necessity love Him that is
Love itself. Can one love his brother, and not love Love? of necessity he must
love Love. What then? because he loves Love, does it follow that he loves God?
Certainly it does follow. In loving Love, he loves God. Or hast thou forgotten
what thou saidst a little while ago, "Love is God"?(1) If "Love is God," whoso
loveth Love, loveth God. Love then thy brother, and feel thyself assured. Thou
canst not say, "I love my brother, but I do not love God." As thou liest, if
thou sayest" I love God," when thou lovest not thy brother, so thou art deceived
when thou sayest, I love my brother, if thou think that thou lovest not God.
Of necessity must thou who lovest thy brother, love Love itself: but "Love is
God:" therefore of necessity must he love God, whoso loveth his brother. But if
thou love not the brother whom thou seest, how canst thou love God whom thou
seest not? Why does he not see God? Because he has not Love itself. That he does
not see God, is, because he has not love: that he has not love, is, because he
loves not his brother. The reason then why he does not see God, is, that he has
not Love. For if he have Love, he sees God, for "Love is God:" and that eye is
becoming more and more purged by. love, to see that Unchangeable Substance, in
the presence of which he shall always rejoice, which he shall enjoy to
everlasting, when he is joined with the angels. Only, let him run now, that he may at
last have gladness in his own country. Let him not love his pilgrimage, not love
the way: let all be bitter save Him that calleth us, until we hold Him fast,
and say what is said in the Psalm: "Thou hast destroyed all that go a-whoring
from Thee"(2)--and who are they that go a-whoring? they that go away and love the
world: but what shall thou do? he goes on and says:--"but for me it is good to
cleave to God." All my good is, to cling unto God, freely. For if thou
question him and say, For what dost thou cling to Him? and he should say, That He may
give me--Give thee what? It is He that made the heaven, He that made the earth:
what shall He give thee? Already thou are cleaving to Him: find something
better, and He shall give it thee.
11. "For he that loveth not his brother whom he seeth, how can he love God
whom he seeth not? And this commandment have we from Him, that he who loveth
God love his brother also."(3) Marvellous fine talk it was, that thou didst say,
"I love God," and hatest thy brother! O murderer, how lovest thou God? Hast
thou not heard above in this very epistle, "He that hateth his brother is a
murderer"?(4) Yea, but I do verily love God, however I hate my brother. Thou dost
verily not love God, if thou hate thy brother. And now I make it good by another
proof. This same apostle hath said, "He gave us commandment that we should
love one another." How canst thou be said to love Him whose commandment thou
hatest? Who shall say, I love the emperor, but I hate his laws? In this the emperor
understands whether thou love him, that his laws be observed throughout the
provinces. Our Emperor's law, what is it? "A new commandment give I unto you, that
ye love one another."(5) Thou sayest then, that thou lovest Christ: keep His
commandment, and love thy brother. But if thou love not thy brother, how canst
thou be said to love Him whose commandment thou despisest?-Brethren, I am never
satiated in speaking of charity in the name of the Lord. In what proportion ye
have an insatiable desire of this thing, in that proportion we hope the thing
itself is growing in you, and casting out fear, that so there may remain that
chaste fear which is for ever permanent. Let us endure the world, enclure
tribulations, endure the stumbling-blocks of temptations. Let us not depart from the
way; let us hold the unity of the Church, hold Christ, hold charity. Let us not
be plucked away from the members of His Spouse, not be plucked away from
faith, that we may glory in His coming: and we shall securely abide in Him, now by
faith, then by sight, of whom we have so great earnest, even the gift of the
Holy Spirit.
HOMILY X.
- JOHN V. 1-3.
"Whosoever believeth that Jesus is the Christ is born of God: and every
one that loveth Him that begat Him, loveth Him also that is begotten of Him. By
this we know that we love the children of God, because we love God, and do His
commandments. For this is the love of God that we keep His commandments."
1. I SUPPOSE ye remember, those of you who were present yesterday, to what
place in the course of this epistle our exposition has reached: namely, "He
that loveth not his brother whom he seeth, how can he love God whom he seeth not?
And this commandment have we from Him, That he who loveth God, love his
brother also."(1) Thus far we discoursed. Let us see then what comes next in order.
"Whosoever believeth that Jesus is the Christ is born of God."(2) Who is he that
believeth not that Jesus is the Christ? He that does not so live as Christ
commanded. For many say, "I believe:" but faith without works saveth not. Now the
work of faith is Love, as Paul the apostle saith, "And faith which worketh by
love."(3) Thy past works indeed, before thou didst believe, were either none, or
if they seemed good, were nothing worth. For if they were none, thou wast as a
man without feet, or with sore feet unable to walk: but if they seemed good,
before thou didst believe, thou didst run indeed, but by running aside from the
way thou wentest astray instead of coming to the goal. It is for us, then,
both to run, and to run in the way. He that runs aside from the way, runs to no
purpose, or rather runs but to toil. He goes the more astray, the more he runs
aside from the way. What is the way by which we run? Christ hath told us, "I am
the Way."(4) What the home to which we run? "I am the Truth." By Him thou
runnest, to Him thou runnest, in Him thou restest. But, that we might run by Him, He
reached even unto us: for we were afar off, foreigners in a far country. Not
enough that we were in a far country, we were feeble also that we could not stir.
A Physician, He came to the sick: a Way, He extended Himself to them that were
in a far country. Let us be saved by Him, let us walk in Him. This it is to
"believe that Jesus is the Christ," as Christians believe, who are not Christians
only in name, but in deeds and in life, not as the devils believe. For "the
devils also believe and tremble,"(5) as the Scripture tells us. What more could
the devils believe, than that they should say, "We know who thou art, the Son of
God?"(6) What the devils said, the same said Peter also. When the Lord asked
them who He was, and whom did men say that He was, the disciples made answer to
Him, "Some say that thou art John the Baptist; some, Elias; and others,
Jeremias, or one of the prophets. He saith unto them, But whom say ye that I am? And
Peter answered and said, Thou art the Christ, the Son of the Living God."(7) And
this he heard from the Lord: "Blessed art thou, Simon Barjona; for flesh and
blood hath not revealed it unto thee, but my Father which is in heaven." See
what praises follow this faith. "Thou art Peter, and upon this rock I will build
my Church." What meaneth, "Upon this rock I will build my Church"? Upon this
faith; upon this that has been said, "Thou art the Christ, the Son of the Living
God. Upon this rock," saith He, "I will build my Church." Mighty praise! So
then, Peter saith, "Thou art the Christ, the Son of the Living God:" the devils
also say, "We know who thou art, the Son of God, the Holy One of God." This Peter
said, this also the devils: the words the same, the mind not the same. And how
is it clear that Peter said this with love? Because a Christian's faith is with
love, but a devil's without love. How without love? Peter said this, that he
might embrace Christ; the devils said it, that Christ might depart from them.
For before they said, "We know who thou art, the Son of God, they said, "What
have we to do with thee? Why art thou come to destroy us before the time?" It is
one thing then to confess Christ that thou mayest hold Christ, another thing to
confess Christ that thou mayest drive Christ from thee. So then ye see, that in
the sense in which he here saith, "Whoso believeth," it is a faith of one's
own, not as one has a faith in common with many. Therefore, brethren, let none of
the heretics say to you, "We also believe." For to this end have I given you
an instance from the case of devils, that ye may not rejoice in the words of
believing, but search well the deeds of the life.
2. Let us see then what it is to believe in Christ; what to believe that
Jesus, He is the Christ. He proceeds: "Whosoever believeth that Jesus is the
Christ, is born of God." But what is it to believe that? "And every one that
loveth Him that begat Him, loveth Him also that is begotten of Him." To faith he
hath straightway joined love, because faith without love is nothing worth. With
love, the faith of a Christian; without love, the faith of a devil: but those who
believe not, are worse than devils, more stupid than devils. Some man will not
believe in Christ: so far, he is not even upon a par with devils. A person
does now believe in Christ, but hates Christ: he hath the confession of faith in
the fear of punishment, not in love of the crown: thus the devils also feared to
be punished. Add to this faith love, that it may become a faith such as the
Apostle Paul speaks of, a "faith which worketh by love:"(1) thou hast found a
Christian, found a citizen of Jerusalem, found a fellow-citizen of the angels,
found a pilgrim sighing in the way: join thyself to him, he is thy
fellow-traveller, run with him, if indeed thou also art this. "Every one that loveth Him that
begat Him, loveth Him also that is begotten of Him." Who "begat"? The Father.
Who "is begotten"? The Son. What saith he then? "Every one that loveth the
Father, loveth the Son."
3. "In this we know that we love the sons of God."(2) What is this,
brethren? Just now he was speaking of the Son of God, not of sons of God: lo, here
one Christ was set before us to contemplate, and we were told, "Whosoever
believeth that Jesus is the Christ is born of God: and every one that loveth Him that
begat," i, e. the Father, "loveth Him also that is begotten of Him," i.e. the
Son, our Lord Jesus Christ. And he goes on: "In this we know that we love the
sons of God;" as if he bad been about to say, "In this we know that we love the
Son of God." He has said, "the sons of God," whereas he was speaking just before
of the Son of God--because the sons of God are the Body of the Only Son of
God, and when He is the Head, we the members, it is one Son of God. Therefore, he
that loves the sons of God, loves the Son of God, and he that loves the Son of
God, loves the Father; nor can any love the Father except he love the Son, and
he that loves the sons, loves also the Son of God. What sons of God? The
members of the Son of God. And by loving he becomes himself a member, and comes
through love to be in the frame of the body of Christ, so there shall be one Christ,
loving Himself. For when the members love one another, the body loves itself.
"And whether one member suffer, all the members suffer with it; or one member
be honored, all the members rejoice with it."(3) And then he goes on to say,
"Now ye are the body of Christ, and members." John was speaking just before of
brotherly love, and said, "He that loveth not his brother whom he seeth, how can
he love God whom he seeth not?"(4) But if thou lovest thy brother, haply thou
lovest thy brother and lovest not Christ? How should that be, when thou lovest
members of Christ? When therefore thou lovest members of Christ, thou lovest
Christ; when thou lovest Christ, thou lovest the Son of God; when thou lovest the
Son of God, thou lovest also the Father. The love therefore cannot be separated
into parts. Choose what thou wilt love; the rest follow thee. Suppose thou say,
I love God alone, God the Father. Thou liest: if thou lovest, thou lovest Him
not alone; but if thou lovest the Father, thou lovest also the Son. Behold,
sayest thou, I love the Father, and I love the Son: but this only, the Father God
and the Son God, our Lord Jesus Christ, who ascended into heaven, and sitteth
at the right hand of the Father, that Word by which all things were made, and
"the Word was made flesh, and dwelt in us:" this alone I love. Thou liest; for
if thou lovest the Head, thou lovest also the members; but if thou lovest not
the members, neither lovest thou the Head. Dost thou not quake at the voice
uttered by the Head from Heaven on behalf of His members, "Saul, Saul, why
persecutest thou ME?"(5) The persecutor of His members He called His persecutor: His
lover, the lover of His members. Now what are His members, ye know, brethren: none
other than the Church of God. "In this we know that we love the sons of God,
in that we love God." And how? Are not the sons of God one thing, God Himself
another? But he that loves God, loves His precepts. And what are the precepts of
God? "A new commandment give I unto you, that ye love one another."(6) Let none
excuse himself by another love, for another love; so and so only is it with
this love: as the love itself is compacted in one, so all that hang by it doth it
make one, and as fire melts them down into one. It is gold: the lump is molten
and becomes some one thing. But unless the fervor of charity be applied, of
many there can be no melting down into one. "That we love God," by this "know we
that we love the sons of God."
4. And by what do we know that we love the sons of God? By this, "that we
love God, and do His commandments." We sigh here, by reason of the hardness of
doing the commandments of God. Hear what follows. O man, at what toilest thou
in loving? In loving avarice. With toil is that loved which thou lovest: there
is no toil in loving God. Avarice will enjoin thee labors, perils, sore
hardships and tribulations; and thou wilt do its bidding. To what end? That thou mayest
have that with which thou shalt fill thy chest, and lose thy peace of mind.
Thou didst feel thyself haply more secure before thou hadst it, than since thou
didst begin to have. See what avarice has enjoined thee. Thou hast filled thine
house, and art in dread of robbers; hast gotten gold, lost thy sleep. See what
avarice has enjoined thee. Do, and thou didst. What does God enjoin thee! Love
me. Thou lovest gold, thou wilt seek gold, and perchance not find it: whoso
seeks me, I am with him. Thou wilt love honor, and perchance not attain unto it:
who ever loved me, and did not attain? God saith to thee, thou wouldest make
thee a patron, or a powerful friend: thou seekest a way to his favor by means of
another inferior. Love me, saith God to thee: favor with me is not had by making
interest with some other: thy love itself makes me present to thee. What
sweeter than this love, brethren? It is not without reason that ye heard just now in
the Psalm, "The unrighteous told me of delights,(1) but not as is Thy law, O
Lord."(2) What is the Law of God? The commandment of God. What is the
commandment of God? That "new commandment," which is called new because it maketh new: "A
new commandment give I unto you, that ye love one another."(3) Hear because
this is the law of God. The apostle saith, "Bear ye one another's burdens, and so
shall ye fulfill the law of Christ."(4) This, even this, is the consummation
of all our works; Love. In it is the end: for this we run: to it we run; when we
are come to it, we shall rest.
5. Ye have heard in the Psalm, "I have seen the end of all perfection.(5)
He hath said, I have seen the end of all perfection: what had he seen? Think
we, had he ascended to the peak of some very high and pointed mountain, and
looked out thence and seen the compass of the earth, and the circles of the round
world, and therefore said, "I have seen the end of all perfection"? If this be a
thing to be praised, let us ask of the Lord eyes of the flesh so sharp-sighted,
that we shall but require some exceeding high mountain on earth, that from its
summit we may see the end of all perfection. Go not far: lo, I say to thee, it
is here; ascend the mountain, and see the end. Christ is the Mountain; come to
Christ: thou seest thence the end of all perfection. What is this end? Ask
Paul: "But the end of the, commandment is charity, from a pure heart, and a good
conscience, and faith unfeigned:"(6) and in another place, "Charity is the
fullness," or fulfillment, "of the law." What so finished and terminated as
"fullness"? For, brethren, the apostle here uses end in a way of praise. Think not of
consumption, but of consummation. For it is in one sense that one says, I have
finished my bread, in another, I have finished my coat. I have finished the
bread, by eating it: the coat, by making it. In both places the word is "end,"
"finish:" but the bread is finished by its being consumed, the coat is finished by
being made: the bread, so as to be no more; the coat, so as to be complete.
Therefore in this sense take ye also this word, end, when the Psalm is read and ye
hear it said, "On the end, a Psalm of David."(7) Ye are for ever hearing this
in the Psalms, and ye should know what ye hear. What meaneth, "On the
end"?--"For Christ is the end of the law unto every one that believeth."(8) And what
meaneth, "Christ is the end"? Because Christ is God, and "the end of the
commandment is charity," and "Charity is God:" because Father and Son and Holy Ghost
are One. There is He the End to thee; elsewhere He is the Way. Do not stick fast
in the way, and so never come to the end. Whatever else thou come to, pass
beyond it, until thou come to the end. What is the end? It is good for me to "hold
me fast in God."(9) Hast thou laid fast hold on God? thou hast finished the
way: thou shall abide in thine own country. Mark well! Some man seeks money: let
not it be the end to thee: pass on, as a traveller in a strange land. But if
thou love it, thou art entangled by avarice; avarice will be shackles to thy feet:
thou canst make no more progress. Pass therefore this also: seek the end. Thou
seekest health of the body: still do not stop there. For what is it, this
health of the body, which death makes an end of, which sickness debilitates, a
feeble, mortal, fleeting thing? Seek that, indeed, lest haply ill-health hinder thy
good works: but for that very reason, the end is not there, for it is sought
in order to something else. Whatever is sought in order to something else, the
end is not there: whatever is loved for its own sake, and freely, the end is
there. Thou seekest honors; perchance seekest them in order to do something, that
thou mayest accomplish something, and so please God: love not the honor itself,
lest thou stop there. Seekest thou praise? If thou seek God's, thou doest
well; if thou seek thine own, thou doest ill; thou stoppest short in the way. But
behold, thou art loved, art praised: think it not joy when in thyself thou art
praised; be thou praised in the Lord, that thou mayest sing, "In the Lord shall
my soul be praised."(1) Thou deliverest some good discourse, and thy discourse
is praised. Let it not be praised as thine, the end is not there. If thou set
the end there, there is an end of thee: but an end, not that thou be perfected,
but that thou be consumed. Then let not thy discourse be praised as coming from
thee, as being thine. But how praised? As the Psalm saith, "In God will I
praise the discourse, in God will I praise the word."(2) Hereby shall that which
there follows come to pass in thee: "In God have I hoped, I will not fear what
man can do unto me."(3) For when all things that are thine are praised in God, no
fear lest thy praise be lost, since God faileth not. Pass therefore this also.
6. See, brethren, how many things we pass, in which is not the end. These
we use as by the way; we take as it were our refreshment at the halting places
on our journey, and pass on.(4) Where then is the end? "Beloved, we are sons of
God, and it hath not yet up, peared what we shall be;"(5) here is this said,
in this epistle. As yet then, we are on the way; as yet, wherever we come, we
must pass on, until we attain unto some end. "We know that when He shall appear,
we shall be like Him, for we shall see Him as He is. That is the end; there
perpetual praising, there Alleluia(6) always without fail. This, then is the end
he has spoken of in the Psalm: "I have seen the end of all perfection:"(7) and
as though it were said to him, What is the end thou hast seen? "Thy commandment,
exceeding broad." This is the end: the breadth of the commandment. The breadth
of the commandment is charity, because where charity is, there are no straits.
In this breadth. this wide room, was the apostle when he said, "Our mouth is
open to you, O ye Corinthians, our heart is enlarged: ye are not straitened in
us."(8) In this, then, is "Thy commandment exceeding broad." What is the broad
commandment? "A new commandment give I unto you, that ye love one another."
Charity, then, is not straitened. Wouldest thou not be straitened here on earth?
Dwell in the broad room. For whatever man may do to thee, he shall not straiten
thee; because thou lovest that which man cannot hurt: lovest God, lovest the
brotherhood, lovest the law of God, lovest the Church Of God: it shall be for
ever. Thou laborest here on earth, but thou shall come to the promised enjoyment.
Who can take from thee that which thou lovest? If no man can take from thee that
which thou lovest, secure thou sleepest: or rather secure thou warchest, lest
by sleeping thou lose that which thou lovest. For not without reason is it
said, "Enlighten mine eyes, lest at any time I sleep in death."(9) They that shut
their eyes against charity, fall asleep in the lusts of carnal delights. Be
wakeful, therefore. For then are the delights, to eat, to drink, to wanton in
luxury, to play, to hunt; these vain pomps all evils follow. Are we ignorant that
they are delights? who can deny that they delight? But more beloved is the law of
God. Cry against such. persuaders: "The unrighteous have told me of delights:
but not so as is thy law, O Lord."(10) This delight remaineth. Not only
remaineth as the goal to which thou mayest come, but also calleth thee back when thou
fleest.
7. "For this is the love of God, that we keep His commandments."(11)
Already ye have heard, "On these two commandments hang all the law and the
prophets." See how He would not have thee divide thyself over a multitude of pages: "On
these two commandments hang all the law and the prophets." On what two
commandments? "Thou shall love the Lord thy God with all thy heart, and with all thy
soul, and with all thy mind. And, thou shall love thy neighbor as thyself. On
these two commandments hang all the law and the prophets."(12) See here of what
commandments this whole epistle talks. Therefore hold fast love, and set your
minds at rest. Why fearest thou lest thou do evil to some man? Who does evil to
the man he loves? Love(1) thou: it is impossible to do this without doing good.
But it may be, thou rebukest? Kindness(2) does it, not fierceness. But it may be
thou beatest? For discipline thou dost this; because thy kindness of love(3)
will not let thee leave him undisciplined. And indeed there come somehow these
different and contrary results, that sometimes hatred uses winning ways, and
charity shows itself fierce. A person hates his enemy, and feigns friendship for
him: he sees him doing some evil, he praises him: he wishes him to go headlong,
wishes him to go blind over the precipice of his lusts, haply never to return;
he praises him, "For the sinner is praised in the desires of his soul;"(4) he
applies to him the unction of adulation; behold, he hates, and praises. Another
sees his friend doing something of the same sort; he calls him back; if he will
not hear, he uses words even of castigation, he scolds, he quarrels:(5) there
are times when it comes to this, that one must even quarrel! Behold, hatred
shows itself winningly gentle, and charity quarrels! Stay not thy regard upon the
words of seeming kindness, or the seeming cruelty of the rebuke; look into the
vein(6) they come from; seek the root whence they proceed. The one is gentle
and bland that he may deceive, the other quarrels that he may correct. Well then,
it is not for us, brethren, to enlarge your heart: obtain from God the gift to
love one another. Love all men, even your enemies, not because they are your
brethren, but that they may be your brethren; that ye may be at all times on
fire with brotherly love, whether toward him that is become thy brother, or
towards thine enemy, so that, by being beloved, he may become thy brother.
Wheresoever ye love a brother, ye love a friend. Now is he with thee, now is he knit to
thee in unity, yea catholic unity. If thou art living aright, thou lovest a
brother made out of an enemy. But thou lovest some man who has not yet believed
Christ, or, if he have believed, believes as do the devils: thou rebukest his
vanity. Do thou love, and that with a brotherly love: he is not yet a brother, but
thou lovest to the end he may be a brother. Well then, all our love is a
brotherly love, towards Christians, towards all His members. The discipline of
charity, my brethren, its strength, flowers, fruit, beauty, pleasantness, food,
drink, meat, embracing, hath in it no satiety. If it so delight us while in a
strange land, in our own country how shall we rejoice!
8. Let us run then, my brethren, let us run, and love Christ. What Christ?
Jesus Christ. Who is He? The Word of God. And how came He to the sick? "The
Word was made flesh, and dwelt in us."(7) It is complete then, which the
Scripture foretold, "Christ must suffer, and rise again the third day from the
dead."(8) His body, where is it? His members, where toil they? Where must thou be, that
thou mayest be under thine Head? "And that repentance and remission of sins be
preached in His name through all nations, beginning at Jerusalem."(9) There
let thy charity be spread abroad. Christ saith, and the Psalm, i.e. the Spirit of
God, "Thy commandment is exceeding broad:" and for-sooth some man will have
charity to be confined to Africa! Extend thy charity over the whole earth if thou
wilt love Christ, for Christ's members are over all the earth. If thou lovest
but a part, thou art divided: if thou art divided, thou art not in the body; if
thou art not in the body, thou art not under the Head. What profiteth it thee
that thou believest(10) and blasphemest? Thou adorest Him in the Head,
blasphemest Him in the Body. He loves His Body. If thou hast cut thyself off from His
Body, the Head hath not cut itself off from its Body. To no purpose dost thou
honor me, cries thine Head to thee from on high, to no purpose dost thou honor
me. It is all one as if a man would kiss thine head and tread upon thy feet:
perchance with nailed boots he would crush thy feet, while he will clasp thy head
and kiss it: wouldest thou not cry out in the midst of the words with which he
honors thee, and say, What art thou doing, man? thou treadest on me. Thou
wouldest not mean, Thou treadest on my head; for the head he honored; but more would
the head cry out for the members trodden upon, than for itself because it was
honored. Does not the head itself cry out, I will none of thine honor; do not
tread on me? Now say if thou canst, How have I trodden upon thee? say that to the
head: I wanted to kiss thee, I wanted to embrace thee. But seest thou not, O
fool, that what thou wouldest embrace does in virtue of a certain unity, which
knits the whole frame together, reach to that which thou treadest upon?
Above(11) thou honorest me, heneath(12) thou treadest upon me. That on which thou
treadest pains more than that which thou honorest rejoiceth. In what sort does the
tongue cry out? "It hurts me." It saith not, "It hurts my foot," but, "It hurts
me," saith it. O tongue, who has touched thee? who has struck? who has goaded?
who has pricked? No man, but I am knit together with the parts that are trodden
upon. How wouldest thou have me not be pained, when I am not separate?
9. Our Lord Jesus Christ, then, ascending into heaven on the fortieth day,
did for this reason commend to us His Body where it would continue to lie,
because He saw that many would honor Him for that He is ascended into heaven: and
saw that their honoring Him is useless if they trample upon His members here on
earth. And lest any one should err, and, while he adored the Head in heaven
should trample upon the feet on earth, He told us where would be His members. For
being about to ascend, He spake His last words on earth: after those same
words He spake no more on earth. The Head about to ascend into heaven commended to
us His members on earth and departed. Thenceforth thou findest not Christ
speaking on earth; thou findest Him speaking, but from heaven. And even from heaven,
why? Because His members on earth were trodden upon. For to the persecutor
Saul He said from on high, "Saul, Saul, why persecutest thou me?"(1) I am ascended
into heaven, but still I lie on earth: here I sit at the right hand of the
Father, but there I yet hunger, thirst, and am a stranger. In what manner then did
He commend to us His Body, when about to ascend into heaven? When the
disciples asked Him, saying, "Lord, wilt thou at this time present(2) thyself, and when
shall be the kingdom of Israel?"(3) He made answer, now at the point to
depart, "It is not for you to know the time which the Father hath put in His own
power: but ye shall receive strength of the Holy Ghost coming upon you, and ye
shall be witnesses to me." See where His Body is spread abroad, see where He will
not be trodden upon: "Ye shall be witnesses to me, unto Jerusalem, and unto
Judea, and even unto all the earth." Lo, where I lie that am ascending! For I
ascend, because I am the Head: my Body lies yet beneath. Where lies? Throughout the
whole earth. Beware thou strike not, beware thou hurt not, beware thou trample
not: these be the last words of Christ about to go into heaven. Look at a sick
man languishing on his bed, lying in his house, and worn out with sickness, at
death's door, his soul as it were even now between his teeth: who, anxious, it
may be, about something that is dear to him, which he greatly loves, and it
comes into his mind, calls his heirs, and says to them, I pray you, do this. He,
as it were, detains his soul by a violent effort, that it may not depart ere
those words be made sure. When he has dictated those last words, he breathes out
his soul, he is borne a corpse to the sepulchre. His heirs, how do they remember
the last words of the dying man? How, if one should stand up and say to them,
Do it not: what would they say? "What? shall I not do that which my father, in
the act of breathing out his soul, commanded me with his last breath, the last
word of his that sounded in my ears when my father was departing this life?
Whatever other words of his I may not regard, his last have a stronger hold upon
me: since which I never saw him more, never more heard speech of his. Brethren,
think with Christian hearts; if to the heirs of a man, his words spoken when
about to go to the tomb are so sweet, so grateful, so weighty, what must we
account of the last words of Christ, spoken not when about to go back to the tomb,
but to ascend into heaven! As for the man who lived and is dead, his soul is
hurried off to other places, his body is laid in the earth, and whether these
words of his be done or not, makes no difference to him: he has now something else
to do, or something else to suffer: either in Abraham's bosom he rejoices, or
in eternal fire he longs for a drop of water, while his corpse lies there
senseless in the sepulchre; and yet the last words of the dying man are kept. What
have those to look for, who keep not the last words of Him that sitteth in
heaven, who seeth from on high whether they be despised or not despised? The words of
Him, who said, "Saul, Saul, why persecutest thou ME?" who keeps account, unto
the judgment, of all that He seeth His members suffer?
10. And what have we done, say they? We are the persecuted, not the
persecutors. Ye are the persecutors, O wretched men. In the first place, in that ye
have divided the Church. Mightier the sword of the tongue than the sword of
steel. Agar, Sarah's maid, was proud, and she was afflicted by her mistress for her
pride. That was discipline, not punishment.(4) Accordingly, when she had gone
away from her mistress, what said the angel to her? "Return to thy
mistress."(5) Then, O carnal soul, like a proud bond-woman, suppose thou have suffered any
trouble for discipline' sake, why rarest thou? "Return to thy mistress," hold
fast the peace of the Church.(6) Lo, the gospels are produced, we read where the
Church is spread abroad: men dispute against us, and say to us,
"Betrayers!"(1) Betrayers of what? Christ commendeth to us His Church, and thou believest
not: shall I believe thee, when thou revilest my parents? Wouldest thou that I
should believe thee about the "betrayers"? Do thou first believe Christ. What is
worth believing? Christ is God, thou art man: which ought to be believed first?
Christ has spread His Church abroad over all the earth: I say it--despise me:
the gospel speaks--beware. What saith the gospel? "It behoved Christ to suffer,
and to rise again from the dead on the third day, and that repentance and
remission of sins should be preached in His name."(2) Where remission of sins, there
the Church is. How the Church? Why, to her it was said, "To thee I will give
the keys of the kingdom of heaven, and whatsoever thou shall loose on earth
shall be loosed in heaven, and whatsoever thou shall bind on earth shall be bound
in heaven." 4 Where is this remission of sins spread abroad? "Through all
nations, beginning at Jerusalem." Lo, believe Christ! But, because thou art well
aware that if thou shall believe Christ, thou wilt not have anything to say about
"betrayers," thou wilt needs have me to believe thee when thou speakest evil
against my parents, rather than thyself believe what Christ foretold!
* * * * * * * *
[The remainder of the Homily is wanting in all the manuscripts. It seems
also that St. Augustin was hindered from completing the exposition of the entire
epistle, as he had undertaken to do: at least Possidius specifies this work
under the title, "In Epist. Joannis ad Parthos Tractatus decem," and it is
scarcely likely that the whole of the fifth chapter was expounded in this tenth
Homily. --Of the "Sermons," there are none upon the remaining part of this epistle:
the following extracts from other works of St. Augustin will supply what will
be most desiderated: namely, his exposition of the text on "the Three
Witnesses," of "the sin unto death," and of the twentieth verse].
Contra Maximinum, lib. ii. c. 22 §. 3.
1. Joann. v. 7.8. Tres sunt testes; spiritus, et aqua, et sanguis; et tres
unum sunt.(4)
I would not have thee mistake that place in the epistle of John the
apostle where he saith, "There are three witnesses: the Spirit, and the water, and
the blood: and the three are one." Lest haply thou say that the Spirit and the
water and the blood are diverse substances, and yet it is said, "the three are
one:" for this cause I have admonished thee, that thou mistake not the matter.
For these are mystical expressions,(5) in which the point always to be considered
is, not what the actual things are, but what they denote as signs: since they
are signs of things, and what they are in their essence is one thing, what they
are in their signification another. If then we understand the things
signified, we do find these things to be of one substance. Thus, if we should say, the
rock and the water are one, meaning by the Rock, Christ; by the water, the Holy
Ghost: who doubts that rock and water are two different substances? yet because
Christ and the Holy Spirit are of one and the same nature, therefore when one
says, the rock and the water are one, this can be rightly taken in this behalf,
that these two things of which the nature is diverse, are signs of other
things of which the nature is one. Three things then we know to have issued from the
Body of the Lord when He hung upon the tree: first, the spirit: of which it is
written, "And He bowed the head and gave up the spirit:"(6) then, as His side
was pierced by the spear, "blood and water." Which three things if we look at
as they are in themselves, they are in substance several land distinct, and
therefore they are not one. But if we will inquire into the things signified I by
these, there not unreasonably comes into our thoughts the Trinity itself, which
is the One, Only, True, Supreme God, Father and Son and Holy Ghost, of whom it
could most truly be said, "There are Three Witnesses, and the Three are One:"
so that by the term Spirit we should understand God the Father to be signified;
as indeed it was concerning the worshipping of Him that the Lord was speaking,
when He said, "God is a Spirit:"(7) by the term, blood, the Son; because "the
Word was made flesh:"(8) and by the term water, the Holy Ghost; as, when Jesus
spake of the water which He would give to them that thirst, the evangelist
saith, "But this said He of the Spirit which they that believed on Him were to
receive."(9) Moreover, that the Father, Son, and Holy Ghost are "Witnesses," who
that believes the Gospel can doubt, when the Son saith, "I am one that bear
witness of myself, and the Father that sent me, He beareth witness of me."(10) Where,
though the Holy Ghost is not mentioned, yet He is not to be thought separated
from them. Howbeit neither concerning the Spirit hath He kept silence
elsewhere, and that He too is a witness hath been sufficiently and openly shown. For in
promising Him He said, "He shall bear witness of me." (1) These are the "Three
Witnesses, and the Three are One, because of one substance. But whereas, the
signs by which they were signified came forth from the Body of the Lord, herein
they figured the Church preaching the Trinity, that it hath one and the same
nature: since these Three in threefold manner signified are One, and the Church
that preacheth them is the Body of Christ. In this manner then the three things
by which they are signified came out from the Body: of the Lord: like as from
the Body of the Lord sounded forth the command to "baptize the nations in the
Name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Ghost."(2) "In the name:" not,
In the names: for "these Three are One," and One God is these Three. And if in
any other way this depth of mystery which we read in John's epistle can be
expounded and understood agreeably with the Catholic faith, which neither confounds
nor divides the Trinity, neither believes the substances diverse nor denies
that the persons are three, it is on no account to be rejected. For whenever in
Holy Scriptures in order to exercise the minds of the faithful any thing is put
darkly, it is to be joyfully welcomed if it can be in many ways but not unwisely
ex-pounded.
De Sermone Domini in Monte, lib. i. 22, § 73.
1 Joann. v. 16. Si quis scit peccare fratrem suum peccatum non ad mortem,
postulabit, et dabit illi Dominus vitam qui peccat non ad mortem; est autem
peccatum ad mortem; non pro illo dico ut roget.
But what presses harder upon the present question fin the Lord's command
of praying for enemies and persecutors] is that saying of the apostle John, "If
any man know that his brother sinneth a sin not unto death, he shall ask, and
the Lord will give life to that man who sinneth not unto death: but there is a
sin unto death: not for that do I say that he should ask." For it manifestly
shows that there are some "brethren" whom we are not commanded to pray for,
whereas the Lord bids us pray even for our persecutors. Nor can this question be
solved except we acknowledge, that there are some sins in brethren that are worse
than the sin of enemies in persecuting. That "brethren" mean Christians, may be
proved by many texts of Holy Writ; the plainest, however, is that of the
apostle which he puts thus: "For the unbelieving husband is sanctified in the wife,
and the unbelieving wife is sanctified in the brother."(3) For he has not added
our; but thought it plain enough, when by the term brother he spake of the
Christian that should have an unbelieving wife. And accordingly he says just
afterwards, "But if the unbelieving depart, let her depart: but a brother or sister
is not put under servitude in a matter of this sort." The "sin," therefore, of a
brother, "unto death," I suppose to be when, after the acknowledging of God
through the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ, one fights against the brotherhood,
and is set on by the fire-brands of hatred(4) against the very grace through
which he was reconciled to God.(5) But "a sin not unto death" is when a person,
not having alienated his love from his brother. yet through some infirmity of
mind may have failed to exhibit the due offices of brotherhood. Wherefore, on the
one hand, the Lord on the cross said, "Father, forgive them, for they know not
what they do,"(6) since they had not yet, by being made partakers of the grace
of the Holy Spirit, entered into the fellowship of holy brotherhood; and
blessed Stephen in the Acts of the Apostles prays for them who are stoning him;(7)
because they had not yet believed Christ, and were not fighting against that
grace of communion. On the other hand, the apostle Paul does not pray for
Alexander, and the reason I suppose, is, that this man was a brother, and had sinned
"unto death," i.e. by opposing the brotherhood in a spirit of hatred.(8) Whereas
for such as had not broken off the bonds of love, but had given way through
fear, he prays that they may be forgiven. For so he says: "Alexander the
coppersmith did me much evil: the Lord reward him according to his works: of whom be thou
ware also; for he hath greatly withstood our words."(9) Then he subjoins for
whom he prays, saying, "At my first answer no man stood with me, but all men
forsook me: I pray God that it may not be laid to their charge." This difference
of sins it is that distinguishes Judas with his treason from Peter with his
denial. Not that to him who repenteth there is to be no forgiveness: lest we go
against that sentence of the Lord, in which He commands always to forgive the
brother who asks his brother's forgiveness:(1) but that the mischief of that sin
is, that the man cannot submit to the humiliation of begging for pardon, even
when he is forced by his evil conscience both to acknowledge and to publish his
sin. For when Judas had said, "I have sinned, in that I have betrayed the
innocent blood,"(2) he went and hanged himself in desperation, rather than pray for
forgiveness in humiliation. Wherefore it makes a great difference, what sort of
repentance God forgives. For many are much quicker than others to confess that
they have sinned, and are angry with themselves in such sort that they
vehemently wish they had not sinned, while yet they cannot lay down their pride, and
submit to have the heart humbled and broken so as to implore pardon: a state of
mind which one may well believe to be, for the greatness of their sin, a part of
their already begun damnation.
And this, perhaps, it is "to sin against the Holy Ghost:"(3) i.e. through
malice and envy to fight against brotherly charity after receiving the grace of
the Holy Spirit: that sin which the Lord saith hath no forgiveness, either
here or in the world to come ...... For the Lord in saying to the Pharisees,
"Whosoever shall speak an evil word against the Son of Man,"(4) &c., may have meant
to warn them to come to the grace of God, and having received it, not to sin as
they have now sinned. For now they have spoken an evil word against the Son of
Man, and it may be forgiven them, if they be converted and believe and receive
the Holy Spirit: which when they have received, if they will then have
ill-will against the brotherhood and oppose the grace they have received, there is no
forgiveness for them, either in this world or in the world to come.
Liber de Correptione el Gratia, § 35.
By this grace such is the liberty they receive, that although as long as
they live here they have to fight against the lusts of sins, and are overtaken
by some sins for which they must daily pray, "Forgive us our debts," yet they no
longer serve the sin which is unto death, of which the apostle John saith,
"There is a sin unto death, I do not say that he shall ask for that." Concerning
which sin (since it is not expressed) many different opinions may be formed: but
I affirm that sin to be the forsaking until deaths the "faith which worketh by
love.
Contra Maximinum. lib. ii. c. 14, § 2, 3.
1 Joann. v. 20." Ut simus in vero Filio ejus Jesu Christo; ipse est verus
Deus et vita aeterna."(6)
When ye read, "That we may be in His true Son Jesus Christ," think of the
"true Son" of God. But this Son ye in no wise think to be the true Son of God,
if ye deny Him to be begotten of the substance of the Father. For was He
already Son of Man and by gift of God became Son of God, begotten indeed of God, but
by grace, not by nature? Or, though not Son of Man, yet was He some sort of
creature which, by God's changing it, was converted into Son of God? If you mean
nothing of this sort, then was He either begotten of nothing, or of some
substance. But thou hast relieved us from all fear of having to suppose that you
affirm the Son of God to be of nothing, for thou hast declared that this is not your
meaning. Therefore, He is of some substance. If not of the substance of the
Father, then of what? Tell me. But ye cannot find any other... Consequently, the
Father and the Son are of one and the same substance. This is the Homousion
.... In the Scriptures both you and We read, "That we may be in His true Son Jesus
Christ; He is the true God and Eternal Life." Let both parties yield to such
weighty evidence. Tell us then, whether this "true Son" of God, discriminated as
He is by the property of this name from those who are sons by grace,(1) be of
no substance or of some substance. Thou sayest, "I do not say that He is of no
substance, lest I should say that He is of nothing." He is therefore of some
substance: I ask, of what? If not of the substance of the Father, seek another.
If thou findest not another, as indeed thou canst find none at all, then
acknowledge it to be the Father's, and confess the Son Homousios, "of one substance
with the Father." Flesh is begotten of flesh, the Son of flesh is begotten of the
substance of the flesh. Set: aside corruption, reject from the eye of the mind
all carnal passions, and behold "the invisible things of God understood by the
means of the things that are made."(2) Believe that the Creator who hath given
flesh power to beget flesh, who hath given parents power of the substance of
the flesh to generate "true sons" of flesh, much more had power to beget a "true
Son" of His own substance, and to have one substance with the true Son, the
spiritual incorruption remaining and carnal corruption being altogether alien
therefrom.(3)
Callatio cum Maximino, § 14.
If He is begotten, He is Son: if He is Son, He is the "true Son," because
Only-Begotten. For we also are called sons: He Son by nature, we sons by grace
. . . To say that because He is begotten, He is of another nature, is to deny
that He is the "true Son." Now we have the Scripture: "That we may be in His
true Son Jesus Christ; He is the true God and Eternal Life."(4) Why "true God"?
because "true Son" of God. For if He has given to animals this property, that
what they beget shall be none other than what they themselves are: man begets man,
dog begets dog, and should God not beget God? If then He is of the same
substance, why tallest thou Him less? Is it because when a human father begets a son,
though human beget human, yet greater begets less? If so, then let us wait for
Christ to grow as human beings grow whom human beings beget!(5) But if Christ,
ever since He was begotten (and this was not in time but from eternity), is
what He is, and yet is less than the Father, at that rate the human condition is
the better of the two: for a human being at any rate can grow, and has the
property of sooner or later attaining to the age, to the strength of the father;
but He never: then how is He a "true Son"?
De Trinitate, lib. i. 6, § 9.
And if the Son be not of the same substance as the Father, then is He a
made substance: if a made substance, then not "all things were made by Him:" but,
"all things were made by Him;"(6) therefore, He is of one and the same
substance with the Father. And therefore, not only God, but True (or, Very) God. Which
the same John doth most openly affirm in his epistle: Scimus quod Filius Dei
venerit et dederit nobis intellectum ut cognoscamus verum Deum, et simus in vero
Filio ejus Jesu Christo. Hic est verus Deus et vita aeterna." "We know that
the Son of God is come; and hath given us an understanding that we may (learn to)
know the True God,(7) and may be in His true Son Jesus Christ. This is the
True God and Eternal Life."
10. Hence also by consequence we understand, that what the apostle Paul
saith, "Who only hath immortality,"(8) he saith not merely of the Father, but of
the One and Only God, which the Trinity itself is. For neither is the "Eternal
Life" itself mortal in respect of any mutability: and consequently, since the
Son of God "is Eternal Life," He also is to be understood together with the
Father, where it is said, "Who only hath immortality.