ST. AUGUSTIN ON THE PSALMS. PSALMS LXIX TO LXXI.
PSALM LXIX.[24]
1. We have been born into this world, and added to the people of God, at
that period wherein already the herb from a grain of mustard seed hath spread
out its branches; wherein already the leaven, which at first was contemptible,
hath leavened three measures,[25] that is, the whole round world repeopled by the
three sons of Noe:[26] for from East and West and North and South shall come
they that shall sit down with the Patriarchs,[27] while those shall have been
driven without, that have been born of their flesh and have not imitated their
faith. Unto his glory then of Christ's Church our eyes we have opened; and that
barren one, for whom joy was proclaimed and foretold, because she was to have
more sons than she that had the husband?[28] her we have found to be such an one
as hath forgotten the reproaches and infamy of her widowhood: and so we may
perhaps wonder when we chance to read in any prophecy the words of Christ's
humiliation, or our own. And it may be, that we are less affected by them; because we
have not come at that time when these things were read with zest, in that
tribulation abounded. But again if we think of the abundance of tribulations, and
observe the way wherein we are walking (if indeed we do walk in it), how narrow
it is, and how through straits and tribulations it leadeth unto rest
everlasting,[29] and how that very thing which in human affairs is called felicity, is
more to be feared than misery; since indeed misery ofttimes doth bring out of
tribulation a good fruit, but felicity doth corrupt the soul with a perverse
security, and giveth place for the Devil the Tempter--when, I say, we shall have
judged prudently and rightly, as the salted victim[30] did, that "human life upon
earth is trial,"[31] and that no one is at all secure, nor ought to be secure,
until he be come to that country, whence no one that is a friend goeth forth,
into which no one that is an enemy is admitted, even now in the very glory of
the Church we acknowledge the voices of our tribulation: and being members of
Christ, subject to our Head in the bond of love, and mutually supporting one
another, we will say from the Psalms, that which here we have found the Martyrs
said, who were before us; that tribulation is common to all men from the beginning
even unto the end. ...
2. The Title of the Psalm is: "Unto the end, in behalf of those that shall
be changed, to David himself." Now of the change for the better hear thou; for
change either is for the worse or for the better. ... That we have been
changed then for the worse, to ourselves let us ascribe: that for the better we are
changed, let us praise God. "For those," then," that shall be changed," this
Psalm is. But whence hath this change been made but by the Passion of Christ? The
very word Pascha in Latin is interpreted passage. For Pascha[1] is not a Greek
word but a Hebrew. It soundeth indeed in the Greek language like Passion,
because <greek>pacsein</greek> signifieth to suffer: but if the Hebrew expression be
examined, it pointeth to something else. Pascha doth intimate passage. Of
which even John the Evangelist hath admonished us, who (just before the Passion
when the Lord was coming to the supper wherein He set forth the Sacrament of His
Body and Blood) thus speaketh: "But when there had come the hour, wherein Jesus
was to pass from this world to the Father."[2] He hath expressed then the
"passage" of the Pascha. But unless He passed Himself hence to the Father, who came
for our sake, how should we have been able to pass hence, who have not come
down for the sake of taking up anything, but have fallen? But He Himself fell
not; He but came down, in order that He might raise up him that had fallen. The
passage therefore both of Him and of us is hence to the Father, from this
world to the kingdom of Heaven, from life mortal to life everlasting, froth life
earthly to life heavenly, from life corruptible to life incorruptible, from
intimacy with tribulations to perpetual security. Accordingly, "In behalf of them
that shall be changed," the Psalm's title is. The cause therefore of our change,
that is, the very Passion of the Lord and our own voice in tribulations in the
text of the Psalm let us observe, let us join in knowing, join in groaning, and
in hearing, in joint-knowing, joint-groaning, let us be changed, in order that
there may be fulfilled in us the Title of the Psalm, "In behalf of them that
shall be changed."
3. "Save me, O God, for the waters have entered in even unto my soul"
(ver. 1). That grain is despised now, that seemeth to give forth humble words. In
the garden it is buried, though the world will admire the greatness of the herb,
of which herb the seed was despised by the Jews. For in very deed observe ye
the seed of the mustard, minute, dull coloured, altogether despicable, in order
that therein may be fulfilled that which hath been said, We have seen Him, and
He had neither form nor comeliness.[3] But He saith, that waters have come in
even unto His soul; because those multitudes, which under the name of waters He
hath pointed out, were able so far to prevail as to kill Christ. ... Whence
then doth He so cry out, as though He were suffering something against His will,
except because the Head doth prefigure the Members? For He suffered because He
willed: but the Martyrs even though they willed not; for to Peter thus He
foretold his passion: "When thou shalt be old," He saith, "another shall gird thee,
and lead thee whither thou wilt not."[4] For though we desire to cleave to
Christ, yet we are unwilling to die: and therefore willingly or rather patiently we
suffer, because no other passage is given us, through which we may cleave to
Christ. For if we could in any other way arrive at Christ, that is, at life
everlasting, who would be willing to die? For while explaining our nature, that is,
a sort of association of soul and body, and in these two parts a kind of
intimacy of gluing and fastening together, the Apostle saith, that "we have a House
not made with hands, everlasting in the Heavens:"[5] that is, immortality
prepared for us, wherewith we are to be clothed at the end, when we shall have risen
from the dead; and he saith, "Wherein we are not willing to be stripped, but to
be clothed upon, that the mortal may be swallowed up of life."[6] If it might
so be, we should so will, he saith, to become immortal, as that now that same
immortality might come, and now as we are it should change us, in order that
this our mortal body by life should be swallowed up, and the body should not be
laid aside through death, so as at the end again to have to be recovered.
Although then from evil to good things we pass, nevertheless the very passage is
somewhat bitter, and hath the gall which the Jews gave to the Lord in the Passion,
hath something sharp to be endured, whereby they are shown that gave Him vinegar
to drink.[7] ... For here both sweet are temporal pleasures, and bitter are
temporal tribulations: but who would not drink the cup of tribulation temporal,
fearing the fire of hell; and who would not contemn the sweetness of the world,
longing for the sweetness of life eternal? From hence that we may be delivered
let us cry: lest perchance amidst oppressions we consent to iniquity, and truly
irreparably we be swallowed up.
4. Fixed I am in the clay of the deep, and there is no substance" (ver.
2). What called the clay? Is it those very persons that have persecuted? For out
of clay man hath been made.[1] But these men by falling from righteousness have
become the clay of the deep, and whosoever shall not have consented to them
persecuting and desiring to draw him to iniquity, out of his clay doth make gold.
For the clay of the same shall merit to be converted into a heavenly form,[2]
and to be made associate of those of whom saith the Title of the Psalm, "in
behalf of them that shall be changed." But at the time when these were the clay of
the deep. I stuck in them: that is, they held Me, prevailed against Me, killed
Me. "Fixed" then "I am in the clay of the deep, and there is no substance."
What is this, "there is no substance "? Can it be that clay itself is not a
substance? What is then, "fixed I am"? Can it be that Christ hath thus stuck? Or
hath He stuck, and was not, as hath been said in the book of Job, "the earth
delivered into the hands of the ungodly man"?[3] Was He fixed in body, because it
could be held, and suffered even crucifixion? For unless with nails He had been
fixed, crucified He had not been. Whence then "there is no substance"? Is that
clay not a substance? But we shall understand, if it be possible, what is, "and
there is no substance," if first we shall have understood what is a substance.
For there is substance spoken of even of riches, as we say, he hath substance,
and he hath lost substance. ...
5. God is a sort of substance: for that which is no substance, is nothing
at all. To be a substance then is to be something. Whence also in the Catholic
Faith against the poisons of certain heretics thus we are builded up, so that
we say, Father and Son and Holy Spirit are of one substance. What is, of one
substance? For example, if gold is the Father, gold is also the Son, gold also the
Holy Spirit. Whatever the Father is because He is God, the same is the Son,
the same the Holy Spirit. But when He is the Father, this is not what He is. For
Father He is called not in reference to Himself, but in reference to the Son:
but in reference to Himself God He is called. Therefore in that He is God, by
the same He is a substance. And because of the same substance the Son is, without
doubt the Son also is God. But yet in that He is Father, because it is not
the name of the substance, but is referred to the Son; we do not say that the Son
is Father in the same manner as we say the Son is God. Thou askest what the
Father is; we answer, God. Thou askest what is the Father and the Son: we answer,
God. If questioned of the Father alone, answer thou God: if questioned of
both, not Gods, but God, answer thou. We do not reply as in the case of men, when
thou inquirest what is father Abraham, we answer a man; the substance of him
serveth for answer: thou inquirest what is his son Isaac, we answer, a man; of the
same substance are Abraham and Isaac: thou inquirest what is Abraham and
Isaac, we answer not man, but men. Not so in things divine. For so great in this
case is the fellowship of substance, that of equality it alloweth, plurality
alloweth not. If then it shall have been said to thee, when thou tellest me that the
Son is the same as the Father, in fact the Son also is the Father; answer
thou, according to the substance I have told thee that the Son is the same as the
Father, not according to that term which is used in reference to something else.
For in reference to Himself He is called God, in reference to the Father is
called Son. And again, the Father in reference to Himself is called God, in
reference to the Son He is called Father. The Father as He is called in reference to
the Son, is not the Son: the Son as He is called in reference to the Father,
is not the Father: what the Father is called in reference to Himself and the Son
in reference to Himself, the same is Father and Son, that is, God. What is
then, "there is no substance"? After this interpretation of substance, how shall
we be able to understand this passage of the Psalm, "Fixed I am in the clay of
the deep, and there is no substance"? God made man,[4] He made substance; and O
that he had continued in that which God made Him! If man had continued in that
which God made him, in him would not have been fixed He whom God begot. But
moreover because through iniquity man fell from the substance wherein he was
made[5] (for iniquity itself is no substance; for iniquity is not a nature which God
formed, but a perverseness which man made); the Son of God came to the clay of
the deep, and was fixed; and that was no substance wherein He was fixed,
because in the iniquity of them He was fixed. "All things by Him were made, and
without Him there was made nothing."[6] All natures by Him were made, iniquity by
Him was not made, because iniquity was not made.[7] Those substances by Him were
made, which praise Him. The whole creation praising God is commemorated by
the, three children in the furnace,[8] and from things earthly to things heavenly,
or from things heavenly to things earthly reacheth the hymn of them praising
God. Not that all these things have sense to praise; but because all things
being well meditated upon, do beget praise, and the heart by considering creation
is fulfilled to overflowing with a hymn to the Creator. All things do praise
God, but only the things which God hath made. Do ye observe in that hymn that
covetousness praiseth God? There even the serpent praiseth God, covetousness
praiseth not. For all creeping things are there named in the praise of God: there are
named all creeping things; but there are not there named any vices. For vices
out of ourselves and out of our own will we have: and vices are not a
substance. In these was fixed the Lord, when He suffered persecution: in the vice of the
Jews, not in the substance of men which by Him was made.
6. "I have come into the depth of the sea, and the tempest hath made Me to
sink down." Thanks to the mercy of Him who came into the depth of the sea, and
vouchsafed to be swallowed by the sea whale, but was vomited forth the third
day.[1] He came into the depth of the sea, in which depth we were thrust down,
in which depth we had suffered shipwreck: He came thither Himself, and the
tempest made Him to sink down: for there He suffered waves, those very men;
tempests, the voices of men saying, "Crucify, Crucify."[2] Though Pilate said, I find
not any cause in this Man why He should be killed: there prevailed the voices of
them, saying, "Crucify, Crucify." The tempest increased, until He was made to
sink down that had come into the depth of the sea. And the Lord suffered in the
hands of the Jews that which He suffered not when upon the waters He was
walking:[3] the which not only He had riot suffered Himself, but had not allowed
even Peter to suffer it.
7. "I have laboured, crying, hoarse have become my jaws" (ver. 3). Where
was this? When was this? Let us question the Gospel. For the Passion of our Lord
in this Psalm we perceive. And, indeed, that He suffered we know; that there
came in waters even unto His Soul, because peoples prevailed even unto His
death, we read, we believe; in the tempest that He was sunk down, because tumult
prevailed to His killing, we acknowledge: but that He laboured in crying, and that
His jaws were made hoarse, not only we read not, but even on the contrary we
read, that He answered not to them a word, in order that there might be
fulfilled that which in another Psalm hath been said, "I have become as it were a man
not hearing, and having not in his mouth reproofs."[4] And that which in Isaiah
hath been prophesied," like a sheep to be sacrificed He was led, and like a
lamb before one shearing Him, so He opened not His mouth."[5] If He became like a
man not hearing, and having not in His mouth reproofs, how did He labour
crying, and how were His jaws made hoarse? Is it that He was even then silent,
because He was hoarse with having cried so much in vain? And this indeed we know to
have been His voice on the Cross out of a certain Psalm:' "0 God, My God, why
hast Thou forsaken Me?"[6] But how great was that voice, or of how long duration,
that in it His jaws should have become hoarse? Long while He cried, "Woe unto
you, Scribes and Pharisees:"[7] long while He cried, "Woe unto the world
because of offences."[8] And truly hoarse in a manner He cried, and therefore was not
understood, when the Jews said, What is this that He saith? "Hard is this
saying, who is able to hear it?"[9] We know not what He saith. He said all these
words: but hoarse were His jaws to them that understood not His words. "Mine eyes
have failed from hoping in My God." Far be it that this should be taken of the
person of the Head: far be it that His eyes should have failed from[10] hoping
in His God: in whom rather there was God reconciling the world to Himself,[11]
and Who was the Word made flesh and dwelled in us, so that not only God was in
Him, but also He was Himself God. Not so then: the eyes of Himself, our Head,
failed not from hoping in His God: but the eyes of Him have failed in His Body,
that is, in His members. This voice is of the members, this voice is of the
Body, not of the Head. How then do we find it in His Body and members? ...
8. Thus "there have been multiplied above the hairs of My head they that
hate Me gratis" (ver. 4). How multiplied? So as that they might add to
themselves even one out of the twelve[12] "There have been multiplied above the hairs of
My head they that hate Me for nought." With the hairs of His head He hath
compared His enemies. With reason they were shorn when in the place of Calvary He
was crucified.[13] Let the members accept this voice, let them learn to be hated
gratis. For now, O Christian, if it must needs be that the world hate thee,
why dost thou not make it hate thee gratis, in order that in the Body of thy Lord
and in this Psalm sent before concerning Him, thou mayest acknowledge thy own
voice? How shall it come to pass that the world hate thee gratis? If thou no
wise huttest any one, and art still hated: for this is gratis, without cause. ...
9. "O God, Thou hast known mine improvidence" (ver. 5). Again out of the
mouth of the Body. For what improvidence is there in Christ? Is He not Himself
the Virtue of God, and the Wisdom of God? Doth He call this His improvidence,
whereof the Apostle speaketh, "the foolishness of God is wiser than men"?[1] Mine
improvidence, that very thing which in Me they derided that seem to themselves
to be wise, Thou hast known why it was done. For what was so much like
improvidence, as, when He had it in His power with one word to lay low the
persecutors, to suffer Himself to be held, scourged, spit upon, buffeted, with thorns to
be crowned, to the tree to be nailed? It is like improvidence, it seemeth a
foolish thing; but this foolish thing excelleth all wise men. Foolish indeed it is:
but even when grain falleth into the earth, if no one knoweth the custom of
husbandmen, it seemeth foolish. ... Improvidence it appeareth; but hope maketh it
not to be improvidence. He then spared not Himself: because even the Father
spared Him not, but delivered Him up for us all.[2] And of the Same, "Who loved
me," saith the Apostle, "and delivered up Himself for me:"[3] for except a grain
shall have fallen into the land so that it die, fruit, He saith, it will not
yield.[4] This is the improvidence. "And my transgressions from Thee are not
concealed." It is plain, clear, open, that this must be perceived to be out of the
mouth of the Body. Transgressions none had Christ: He was the bearer of
transgressions, but not the committer. "Are not concealed:" that is, I have confessed
to Thee, all my transgressions, and before my mouth Thou hast seen them in my
thought, hast seen the wounds which Thou wast to heal. But where? Even in the
Body, in the members: in those believers out of whom there was now cleaving to
Him that member, who was confessing his sins.
10. "Let them not blush in[5] Me, that wait for Thee, O Lord, Lord of
virtues" (ver. 6). Again, the voice of the Head, "Let them not blush in Me:" let it
not be said to them, Where is He on whom ye were relying? Let it not be said
to them, Where is He that was saying to you, Believe yet[6] God, and in Me
believe?[7] "Let them not blush in Me, that wait for Thee," O Lord, Lord of
virtues. Let them not be confounded concerning Me, that seek Thee, O God of Israel."
This also may be understood of the Body, but only if thou consider the Body of
Him not one man: for in truth one man is not the Body of Him, but a small
member, but the Body is made up of members. Therefore the full Body of Him is the
whole Church. With reason then saith the Church, "Let them not blush in Me, that
wait for Thee, O Lord, Lord of virtues." ...
11. "For because of Thee I have sustained upbraiding, shamelessness hath
covered my face" (ver. 7). No great thing is that which is spoken of in "I have
sustained:" but that which is spoken of in "for Thy sake I have sustained," is.
For if thou sustainest because thou hast sinned; for thine own sake thou
sustainest, not for the sake of God. For to you what glory is there, saith Peter, if
sinning ye are punished, and ye bear it? But if thou sustainest because thou
hast kept the commandment of God, truly for the sake of God thou sustainest; and
thy reward remaineth for everlasting, because for the sake of God thou hast
sustained revilings.[8] For to this end He first sustained in order that we might
learn to sustain. ..."Shamelessness hath covered my face." Shamelessness is
what? Not to be confused. Lastly, it seemeth to be as it were a fault, when we
say, the man is shameless. Great is the shamelessness of the man, that he doth
not blush. Therefore shamelessness is a kind of folly. A Christian ought to have
this shamelessness, when he cometh among men to whom Christ is an offence. If
he shall have blushed because of Christ, he will be blotted out from the book of
the living. Thou must needs therefore have shamelessness when Thou art reviled
because of Christ; when they say, Worshipper of the Crucified, adorer of Him
that died ill, venerator of Him that was slain! here if thou shalt blush thou
art a dead man. For see the sentence of Him that deceiveth no one. "He that shall
have been ashamed of Me before men, I will also be ashamed of him before the
Angels of God."[9] Watch therefore thyself whether there be in thee
shamelessness; be thou boldfaced,[10] when thou hearest a reproach concerning Christ; yea
be boldfaced. Why fearest thou for thy forehead which thou hast armed with the
sign of the Cross? ...
12. "An alien I have become to My brethren, and a stranger to the sons of
My mother" (ver. 8). To the sons of the Synagogue He became a stranger. ... Why
so? Why did they not acknowledge? Why did they call Him an alien? Why did they
dare to say, we know not whence He is? "Because the zeal of Thine House hath
eaten Me up:" that is, because I have persecuted in them their own iniquities,
because I have not patiently borne those whom I have rebuked, because I have
sought Thy glory in Thy House, because I have scourged them that in the Temple
dealt unseemly:[11] in which place also there is quoted, "the zeal of Thine House
hath eaten Me up." Hence an alien, hence a Stranger; hence, we know not whence
He is. They would have acknowledged whence I am, if they had acknowledged that
which Thou hast commanded. For if I had found them keeping Thy commandments,
the zeal of Thine House would not have eaten Me up. "And the reproaches of men
reproaching Thee haven fallen upon Me." Of this testimony Paul the Apostle hath
also made use (there hath been read but now the very lesson), and saith,
"Whatsoever things aforetime have been written, have been written that we might be
instructed."[1] ... Why "Thee"? Is the Father reproached, and not Christ Himself?
Why have "the reproaches of men reproaching Thee fallen upon Me"? Because, "he
that hath known Me, hath known the Father also:"[2] because no one hath reviled
Christ without reviling God: because no one honoureth the Father, except he
that honoureth the Son also.[3]
13. "And I have covered in fasting My Soul, and it became to Me for a
reviling" (ver. 10). His fasting was, when there fell away all they that had
believed in Him; because also it was His hunger, that men should believe in Him:
because also it was His thirst, when He said to the woman, I thirst, "give Me to
drink:"[4] yea for her faith He was thirsting. And from the Cross when He was
saying, "I thirst,"[5] He was seeking the faith of them for whom He had said,
"Father, forgive them, for they know not what they do."[6] But what did those men
give to drink to Him thirsty? Vinegar. Vinegar is also called old.[7] With
reason of the old man they gave to drink, because they willed not to be new. Why
willed they not to become new? Because to the title of this Psalm whereon is
written, "For them that shall be changed," they belonged not. Therefore, "I have
covered in fasting My Soul." Lastly, He put from Him even the gall which they
offered: He chose rather to fast than to accept bitterness. For they enter not into
His Body that are embittered,[8] whereof in another place a Psalm saith, "They
that are embittered shall not be exalted in themselves."[9] Therefore, "I have
covered in fasting My Soul: and it became to Me for a reviling." This very
thing became to Me for a reviling, that I consented not to them, that is, from
them I fasted. For he that consenteth not to men seducing to evil, fasteth from
them; and through this fasting earneth reviling, so that he is upbraided because
he consenteth not to the evil thing.
14. "And I have set sackcloth my garment" (ver. 11). Already before[10] we
have said something of the sackcloth, from whence there is this, "But I, when
they were troubling Me, was covering myself with sackcloth, and was humbling My
Soul in fasting. I have set sackcloth for My garment:" that is, have set
against them My flesh, on which to spend their rage, I have concealed My divinity.
"Sackcloth," because mortal the flesh was: in order that by sin He might condemn
sin in the flesh.[11] "And I have set sackcloth my garment: and I have been
made to them for a parable," that is, for a derision. It is called a parable,
whenever a comparison is made concerning some one, when he is evil spoken of. "So
may this man perish," for example, "as that man did," is a parable: that is, a
comparison and likeness in cursing. "I have been made to them," then, "for a
parable."
15. "Against Me were reviling they that were sitting in the gate" (ver.
12). "In the gate" is nothing else but in public. "And against Me they were
chanting,[12] they that were drinking wine." Do ye think, brethren, that this hath
befallen Christ alone? Daily to Him in His members it happeneth: whenever
perchance it is necessary for the servant of God to forbid excess of wine and
luxuries in any village or town, where there hath not been heard the Word of God, it
is not enough that they sing, nay more even against him they begin to sing, by
whom they are forbidden to sing. Compare ye now His fasting and their wine.
16. "But I with My prayer with Thee,[13] O Lord" (ver. 13). But I was with
Thee. But how? With Thee by praying. For when thou art evil spoken of, and
knowest not what thou mayest do; when at thee are hurled reproaches, and thou
findest not any way of rebuking him by whom they are hurled; nothing remaineth for
thee but to pray. But remember even for that very man to pray. "But I with my
prayer with Thee, O Lord. It is the time of Thy good pleasure, O God." For
behold the grain is being buried, there shall spring up fruit. "It is the time of
Thy good pleasure, O God." Of this time even the Prophets have spoken, whereof
the Apostle maketh mention: "Behold now the time acceptable, behold now the day
of salvation."[14] "It is the time of Thy good pleasure, O God. In the multitude
of Thy mercy." This is the time of good pleasure, "in the multitude of Thy
mercy." For if there were not a multitude of Thy mercy, what should we do for the
multitude of our iniquity? "In the multitude of Thy mercy; Hearken to me in the
truth of Thy Salvation." Because He hath said, "of Thy mercy," he hath added
truth also: for "mercy and truth" are all the ways of the Lord.[15] Why mercy?
In forgiving sins. Why truth? In fulfilling the promises.
17. "Save Thou Me from the mire, that I may not stick" (ver. 14). From
that whereof above he had spoken, "Fixed I am in the clay of the deep, and there
is no substance."[1] Furthermore, since ye have duly received the exposition of
that expression, in this place there is nothing further for you to hear
particularly. From hence he saith that he must be delivered, wherein before he said
that he was fixed: "Save Thou Me from the mire, that I may not stick." And he
explaineth this himself: "Let Me be rescued from them that hate Me." They were
themselves therefore the clay wherein he had stuck. But the following perchance
suggesteth itself. A little before he had said, Fixed I am; now he saith, Save
Thou Me from the mire, that I may not stick:" whereas after the meaning of what
was said before he ought to have said, Save Thou Me from the mire where I had
stuck, by rescuing Me, not by causing that I stick not. Therefore He had stuck in
flesh, but had not stuck in spirit. He saith this, because of the infirmity of
His members. Whenever perchance thou art seized by one that urgeth thee to
iniquity, thy body indeed is taken, in regard to the body thou art fixed in the
clay of the deep: but so long as thou consentest not, thou hast not stuck; but if
thou consentest, thou hast stuck. Let then thy prayer be in that place, in
order that as thy body is now held, so thy soul may not be held, so thou mayest be
free in bonds.
18. "Let not the tempest of waters drown Me" (ver. 15). But already he had
been drowned. "I have come into the depth of the sea," thou hast said, and
"the tempest hath drowned Me," thou hast said. It hath drowned after the flesh,
let it not drown after the Spirit. They to whom was said, If they shall have
persecuted you in one city, flee ye into another;[2] had this said to them, that
neither in flesh they should stick, nor in spirit. For we must not desire to
stick even in flesh; but as far as we are able we ought to avoid it. But if we
shall have stuck, and shall have fallen into the hands of sinners: then in body we
have stuck, we are fixed in the clay of the deep, it remaineth to entreat for
the soul that we stick not, that is, that we consent not, that the tempest of
water drown us not, so that we go into the deep of the clay. "Neither let the
deep swallow Me, nor the pit close her mouth upon Me." What is this, brethren?
What hath he prayed against? Great is the pit of the depth of human iniquity:
every one, if he shall have fallen into it, will fall into the deep. But yet if a
man being there placed confesseth his sins to his God, the pit will not shut her
mouth upon him: as is written in another Psalm, "From the depths I have cried
to Thee, O Lord; Lord, hearken unto my voice."[3] But if there is done in him
that which another passage of Scripture saith, "When a sinner shall have come
into the depth of evil things, he will despise,"[4] upon him the pit hath shut
her mouth. Why hath she shut her mouth? Because she hath shut his mouth. He hath
lost confession, really dead he is, and there is fulfilled in him that which
elsewhere is spoken of," From a dead man, as from one that is not, there
perisheth confession."[5]...
19. "Hearken unto me, O Lord, for sweet is Thy mercy" (ver. 16). He hath
given this as a reason why He ought to be hearkened unto, because sweet is the
mercy of God. ... To a man set in trouble the mercy of God must needs be sweet.
Concerning this sweetness of the mercy of God see ye what in another place the
Scripture saith: "Like rain in drought, so beautiful is the mercy of God in
trouble."[6] That which there he saith to be "beautiful," the same he saith here
to be "sweet." Not even bread would be sweet, unless hunger had preceded.
Therefore even when the Lord permitteth or causeth us to be in any trouble, even then
He is merciful: for He doth not withdraw nourishment, but stirreth up longing.
Accordingly what saith he now, "Hearken to me, O Lord, for sweet is Thy
mercy"? Now do not Thou defer hearkening, in so great trouble I am, that sweet to me
is Thy mercy. For to this end Thou didst defer to succour, in order that to me
that wherewith Thou didst succour might be sweet: but now no longer is there
cause why Thou must defer; my trouble hath arrived at the appointed measure of
distress, let Thy mercy come to do the work of goodness. "After the multitude of
Thy pities have regard unto me:" not after the multitude of my sins.
20. "Turn not away Thy face from Thy child"[7] (ver. 17). And this is a
commending of humility; "from Thy child," that is, "from Thy little one:" because
now I have been rid of pride through the discipline of tribulation, "turn not
away Thy face from Thy child." This is that beautiful mercy of God, whereof he
spake above. For in the following verse he explaineth that whereof he spake:
"For I am troubled, speedily hearken Thou unto me." What is "speedily"? Now there
is no cause why Thou must defer it: I am troubled, my affliction hath gone
before; let Thy mercy follow.
21. "Give heed to my soul, and redeem her," doth need no exposition: let
us see therefore what followeth. "Because of mine enemies deliver me" (ver. 18).
This petition is evidently wonderful, neither briefly to be touched upon, nor
hastily to be skipped over; truly wonderful: "Because of mine enemies deliver
me." What is, "Because of mine enemies deliver me"? ... I see no reason for this
petition, "Because of mine enemies deliver me:" unless we understand it of
something else, which when I shall have spoken by the help of the Lord, He shall
judge in you, that dwelleth in you.[1] There is a kind of secret deliverance of
holy men: this for their own sakes is made. There is one public and evident:
this is made because of their enemies, either for their punishment, or for their
deliverance. For truly God delivered not the brothers in the book of Maccabees
from the fires of the persecutor.[2] ... But again the Three Children openly
were delivered from the furnace of fire;[3] because their body also was rescued,
their safety was public. The former were in secret crowned, the latter openly
delivered: all however saved. ... There is then a secret deliverance, there is
an open deliverance. Secret deliverance doth belong to the soul, open
deliverance to the body as well. For in secret the soul is delivered, openly the body.
Again, if so it be, in this Psalm the voice of the Lord let us acknowledge: to
the secret deliverance doth belong that whereof he spake above," Give heed to my
soul, and redeem her." There remaineth the body's deliverance: for on His
arising and ascending into the Heavens, and sending the Holy Ghost from above, there
were converted to His faith they that at His death did rage, and out of
enemies they were made friends through His grace, not through their righteousness.[4]
Therefore he hath continued, "Because of mine enemies deliver me. Give heed to
my soul," but this in secret: but "because of mine enemies deliver" even my
body. For mine enemies it will profit nothing if soul alone Thou shalt have
delivered; that they have done something, that they have accomplished something,
they will believe. "What profit is there in my blood, while I go down into
corruption?"[5] Therefore "give heed to my soul, and redeem her," which Thou alone
knowest: secondly also, "because of mine enemies deliver me," that my flesh may
not see corruption.
22. "Thou knowest my reproach, and my confusion, and my shame" (yet. 19).
What is reproach? What is confusion? What shame? Reproach is that which the
enemy casteth in the teeth. Confusion is that which gnaweth the conscience. Shame
is that which causeth even a noble brow to blush, because of the upbraiding
with a pretended crime. There is no crime; or even if there is a crime, it doth
not belong to him, against whom it is alleged: but yet the infirmity of the human
mind ofttimes is made ashamed even when a pretended crime is alleged; not
because it is alleged, but because it is believed. All these things are in the Body
of the Lord. For confusion in Him could not be, in whom guilt was not found.
There was alleged as a crime against Christians, the very fact that they were
Christians. That indeed was glory: the brave gladly received it, and so received
it as that they blushed not at all for the Lord's name. For fearlessness had
covered the face of them, having the effrontery of Paul, saying, "for I blush not
because of the Gospel: for the virtue of God it is for salvation to every one
believing."[6] O Paul, art not thou a venerator of the Crucified? Little it is,
he saith, for me not to blush for it: nay, therein alone I glory, wherefore
the enemy thinketh me to blush. "But from me far be it to glory, save in the
Cross of Jesus Christ, through whom to me the world is crucified, and I to the
world."[7] At such a brow as this then reproach alone could be hurled. For neither
could there be confusion in a conscience already made whole, nor shame in a
brow so free. But when it was being alleged against certain that they had slain
Christ, deservedly they were pricked through with evil conscience, and to their
health confounded and converted, so that they could say, "Thou hast known my
confusion." Thou therefore, O Lord, hast known not only my reproach but also my
confusion, in certain shame also: who, though in me they believe, publicly blush
to confess me before ungodly men, human tongue having more influence with them
than promise divine. Behold ye therefore them: even such are commended to God,
not that so He may leave them, but that by aiding them He may make them
perfect. For a certain man believing and wavering hath said, "I believe, O Lord, help
Thou mine unbelief."[8]
23. "In Thy sight are all they that trouble Me" (ver. 20). Why I have
reproach, Thou knowest; why confusion, "Thou knowest; why shame, Thou knowest:
therefore deliver Thou me because of mine enemies, because Thou knowest these
things of me, they know not; and thus, because they are themselves in Thy sight, not
knowing these things, they will not be able to be either confounded or
corrected, unless openly Thou shalt have delivered me because of mine enemies.
"Reproach my heart hath expected, and misery." What is, "hath expected"? Hath foreseen
these things as going to be, hath foretold them as going to be. For He came
not for any other purpose. If He had been unwilling to die, neither would He have
willed to be born: for the sake of resurrection He did both. For there were
two particular things known to us among mankind, but one thing unknown. For we
knew that men were born and died: that they rose again and lived for everlasting
we knew not. That He might show to us that which we knew not, He took upon Him
the two things which we knew. To this end therefore He came. "Reproach my heart
hath expected and misery." But the misery of whom? For He expected misery, but
rather of the crucifiers, rather of the persecutors, that in them should be
misery, in Him mercy. For pitying the misery of them even while hanging on the
Cross, He saith, "Father, forgive them, for they know not what they do."[1] What
then did it profit, that I expected? That is, what did it profit that I
foretold? What did it profit that I said to this end I had come? I came to fulfil that
which I said, "I waited for one that together should be made sorrowful, and
there was not; and men comforting, and I found not:" that is, there was none. For
that which in the former verse He said, "I waited for one that together should
be made sorrowful," the same is in the following verse, "and men comforting."
But that which in the former verse is, "and there was not;" the same in the
following verse is, "and I found not." Therefore another sentence is not added,
but the former is repeated. Which sentence if we reconsider, a question may
arise. For were His disciples nowise made sorrowful when He was led to the Passion,
when on the tree hanged, when dead? So much were they made sorrowful, that Mary
Magdalene, who first saw Him, rejoicing told them as they were mourning what
she had seen.[2] The Gospel speaketh of these things: it is not our presumption,
not our suspicion: it is evident that the disciples grieved, it is evident
that they mourned. Strange women were weeping, when to the Passion He was being
led, unto whom turning He saith, "Weep ye, but for yourselves, do not for Me."[3]
... Peter certainly loved very much, and without hesitation threw himself to
walk on the waves,[4] and at the voice of the Lord he was delivered: and though
following Him when led to the Passion, with the boldness of love, yet being
troubled, thrice he denied Him. Whence, except because an evil thing it seemed to
him to die? For he was shunning that which he thought an evil thing. This then
even in the Lord he was lamenting, which he was himself shunning. On this
account even before he had said, "Far be it from Thee, O Lord, merciful be Thou to
Thyself: there shall not come to pass this thing:"[5] at which time he merited
to hear, "Satan;" after that he had heard, "Blessed art thou, Simon Bar-Jona."
Therefore in that sorrowfulness which the Lord felt because of those for whom He
prayed, "Father, forgive them, for they know not what they do:"[1] no
companion He found. "And I waited for one that together should be made sorrowful, and
there was not." There was not at all. "And men comforting, and I found not." Who
are men comforting? Men profiting. For they comfort us, they are the comfort
of all preachers of the Truth.
24. "And they gave for My food gall, and in My thirst they gave Me vinegar
to drink" (ver. 22). This was done indeed to the letter. And the Gospel
declareth this to us. But we must understand, brethren, that the very fact that I
found not comforters, that the very fact that I found not one that together should
be made sorrowful, this was My gall, this to Me was bitter, this was vinegar:
bitter because of grief, vinegar because of their old man. For we read, that to
Him indeed gall was offered, as the Gospel speaketh; but for drink, not for
food.[6] Nevertheless, we must so take and consider that when fulfilled, which
here had been before predicted, "They gave for My food gall:" and in that very
action, not only in this saying, we ought to seek for a mystery, at secret things
to knock, to enter the rent veil of the Temple, to see there a Sacrament, both
in what there hath been said and in what there hath been done. "They gave," He
saith, "for My food gall:" not the thing itself which they gave was food, for
it was drink: but "for food they gave it." Because already the Lord had taken
food, and into it there had been thrown gall. But He had taken Himself pleasant
food, when He ate the Passover with His disciples: therein He showed the
Sacrament of His Body.[7] Unto this food so pleasant, so sweet, of the Unity of
Christ, of which the Apostle maketh mention, saying, "For one bread, One Body, being
many we are;"[8] unto this pleasant food who is there that addeth gall, except
the gainsayers of the Gospel, like those persecutors of Christ? For less the
Jews sinned in crucifying Him walking on earth, than they that despise Him
sitting in Heaven. That which then the Jews did, in giving above the food which He
had already taken that bitter draught to drink, the same they do that by evil
living bring scandal upon the Church: the same do embittered heretics, "But let
them not be exalted in their own selves."[9] They give gall after so delectable
meat. But what doth the Lord? He admitteth them not to His Body. In this
mystery, when they presented gall, the Lord Himself tasted, and would not drink.[6]
If we did not suffer them, neither at all should we taste: but because it is
necessary to suffer them, we must needs taste. But because in the members of
Christ such sort cannot be, they can be tasted, received into the Body they cannot
be. "And they gave for My food gall, and in My thirst they gave Me vinegar to
drink." I was thirsting, and vinegar I received: that is, for the faith of them I
longed, and I found oldness.
25. "Let the table of them be made in their own presence for a trap" (ver.
23). Like the trap which for Me they set, in giving Me such a draught, let
such a trap be for them. Why then, "in their own presence"? "Let the table of them
be made for a trap," would have been sufficient. They are such as know their
iniquity, and in it most obstinately do persevere: in their own presence there
is made a trap for them. These are they that, being too destructive, "go down
into Hell alive."[1] Lastly, of persecutors what hath been said? Except that the
Lord were in us, perchance alive they had swallowed us up.[2] What is alive?
Consenting to them, and knowing that we ought not to consent to them. Therefore
in their own presence there is made a trap, and they are not amended. Even
though in their own presence there is a trap, let them not fall into it. Behold they
know the trap, and thrust out foot, and bow their necks to be caught. How much
better were it to turn away from the trap, to acknowledge sin, to condemn
error, to be rid of bitterness, to pass over into the Body of Christ, to seek the
Lord's glory! But so much prevaileth presumption of mind, that even in their own
presence the trap is, and they fall into it. "Let the eyes of them be
darkened, that they see not,"[3] followeth here: that whereas without benefit they have
seen, it may chance to them even not to see. "Let the table of them,"
therefore, "be made in their own presence for a trap." It is not from one wishing, but
from one prophesying: not in order that it may come to pass, but because it
will come to pass. This we have often remarked, and ye ought to remember it: lest
that which the prescient mind saith in the Spirit of God, it should seem with
ill will to imprecate. ... Let it then be done to them, "both for a requital and
for a stumbling-block." And is this by any means unjust? It is just. Why? For
it is "for a requital." For not anything would happen to them, which was not
owed. "For a requital" it is done, "and for a stumbling-block:" for they are
themselves a stumbling-block to themselves. "Let the eyes of them be darkened, that
they see not, and the back of them alway bow Thou down" (ver. 24). This is a
consequence. For they, whose eyes have been darkened that they see not, it
followeth, must have their back bowed down. How so? Because when they have ceased to
take knowledge of things above, they must needs think of things below. He that
well heareth, "lift up the heart," a bowed back hath not. For with stature
erect he looketh for the hope laid up for him in Heaven; most especially if he
send before him his treasure, whither his heart followeth.[4] But, on the other
hand, they perceive not the hope of future life; already being blinded, they
think of things below: and this is to have a bowed back: from which disorder the
Lord delivered that woman. For Satan hath bound her eighteen years, and her that
was bowed down[5] He raised up:[6] and because on the Sabbath He did it, the
Jews were scandalized; suitably were they scandalized at her being raised up,
themselves being bowed. "Pour forth upon them Thine anger, and let ; the
indignation of Thine anger overtake them" (ver. 25), are plain words: but nevertheless,
in "overtake them" we perceive them as it were fleeing. But whither are they to
flee? Into Heaven? Thou art there. Into Hell? Thou art present. Their wings
they will not take to fly straight:[7] "Let the indignation of Thine anger
overtake them," let it not permit them to escape.
26. "Let the habitation of them become forsaken"[8] (ver. 26). This is now
evident. For in the same manner as He hath mentioned not only a secret
deliverance of His, saying, "Give heed to My soul, and redeem her;"[9] but also one
open after the body, adding, "because of mine enemies deliver me:" so also to
these men He foretelleth how there are to be certain secret misfortunes, whereof a
little before He was speaking. ... For the blindness of the Jews was secret
vengeance: but the open was what? "Let their habitation become forsaken, and in
their tabernacles let there not be any one to inhabit." There hath come to pass
this thing in the very city Jerusalem, wherein they thought themselves mighty
in crying against the Son of God, "Crucify, Crucify;"[10] and in prevailing
because they were able to kill Him that raised dead men. How mighty to themselves,
how great, they seemed! There followed afterwards the vengeance of the Lord,
stormed was the city, utterly conquered the Jews, slain were I know not how many
thousands of men. No one of the Jews is permitted to come thither now: where
they were able to cry against the Lord, there by the Lord they are not permitted
to dwell. They have lost the place of their fury: and O that even now they
would know the place of their rest! What profit to them was Caiaphas in saying,"
"If we shall have let go this man thus, there will come the Romans, and take
away from us both place and kingdom"?[1] Behold, both they did not let Him go
alive, and He liveth: and there have come the Romans, and have taken from them both
place and kingdom. But now we heard, when the Gospel was being read,
"Jerusalem, Jerusalem, how often would I have gathered together thy sons, as a hen her
chickens under her wings, and thou wouldest not? Behold there is left to you
your house forsaken."[2]
27. Why so? "For Him whom Thou hast smitten they have themselves
persecuted, and upon the pain of my wounds they have added" (ver. 27). How then have
they sinned if they have persecuted one by God smitten? What sin is ascribed to
their mind? Malice. For the thing was done in Christ which was to be. To suffer
indeed He had come, and He punished him through whom He suffered. For Judas the
traitor was punished, and Christ was crucified: but us He redeemed by His
blood, and He punished him in the matter of his price. For he threw down the price
of silver, for which by him the Lord had been sold;[3] and he knew not the price
wherewith he had himself by the Lord been redeemed.[4] This thing was done in
the case of Judas. But when we see that there is a sort of measure of requital
in all men, and that not any one can be suffered to rage more than he hath
received power to do: how have they "added," or what is that smiting of the Lord?
Without doubt He is speaking in the person of him from whom He had received a
body, from whom He had taken unto Him flesh, that is in the person of mankind, of
Adam himself who was smitten with the first death because of his sin.[5]
Mortal therefore here are men born, as born with their punishment: to this
punishment they add, whosoever do persecute men. For now here man would not have had to
die, unless God had smitten him. Why then dost thou, O man, rage more than
this? Is it little for a man that some time he is to die? Each one of us therefore
beareth his punishment: to this punishment they would add that persecute us.
This punishment is the smiting of the Lord. For the Lord smote man with the
sentence: "What day ye shall have touched it," He saith, "with death ye shall
die."[6] Out of this death He had taken upon Him flesh, and our old man hath been
crucified together with Him.[7] By the voice of that man He hath said these words,
"Him whom Thou hast smitten they have themselves persecuted, and upon the pain
of My wounds they have added." Upon what pain of wounds? Upon the pain of sins
they have themselves added. For sins He hath called His wounds. But do not
look to the Head, consider the Body; according to the voice whereof hath been said
by the Same in that Psalm, wherein He showed there was His voice, because in
the first verse thereof He cried from the Cross, "God, My God, look upon Me, why
hast Thou forsaken Me?"[8] There in continuation He saith, "Afar from My
safety are the words of Mine offences." ...
28. "Lay Thou iniquity upon their iniquity" (ver. 28). What is this? Who
would not be afraid? To God is said, "Lay Thou iniquity upon their iniquity."
Whence shall God lay iniquity? For hath He iniquity to lay? For we know that to
be true which hath been spoken through Paul the Apostle, "What then shall we
say? Is there anywise iniquity with God? Far be it."[9] Whence then, "Lay Thou
iniquity upon iniquity"? How must we understand this? May the Lord be with us,
that we may speak, and because of your weariness may be able to speak briefly.
Their iniquity was that they killed a just Man: there was added another, that they
crucified the Son of God. Their raging was as though against a man: but "if
they had known, the Lord of Glory they had never crucified."[10] They with their
own iniquity willed to kill as it were a man: there was laid iniquity upon
their own iniquity, so that the Son of God they should crucify. Who laid this
iniquity upon them? He that said, "Perchance they will reverence My Son,"[11] Him I
will send. For they were wont to kill servants sent to them, to demand rent and
profit. He sent the Son Himself, in order that Him also they might kill. He
laid iniquity upon their own iniquity. And these things did God do in wrath, or
rather in just requital? For, "May it be done to them," He saith, "for a
requital and for a stumbling-block."[12] They had deserved to be so blinded as not to
know the Son of God. And this God did, laying iniquity upon their iniquity; not
in wounding, but in not making whole. For in like manner as thou increasest a
fever, increasest a disorder, not by adding disorder, but by not relieving: so
because they were of such sort as that they merited not to be healed, in their
very naughtiness in a manner they advanced; as it is said, "But evil men and
wicked doers advance for the worse:"[13] and iniquity is laid upon their own
iniquity. "And let them not enter in[14] Thy righteousness." This is a plain thing.
29. "Let them be blotted out from the book of the living" (ver. 29). For
had they been some time written therein? Brethren, we must not so take it, as
that God writeth any one in the book of life, and blotteth him out. If a man
said, "What I have written I have written,"[1] concerning the title where it had
been written, "King of the Jews:" doth God write any one, and blot him out? He
foreknoweth, He hath predestined all before the foundation of the world that are
to reign with His Son in life everlasting.[2] These He hath written down, these
same the Book of Life doth contain. Lastly, in the Apocalypse, what saith the
Spirit of God, when the same Scripture was speaking of the oppressions that
should be from Antichrist? "There shall give consent[3] to him all they that have
not been written in the book of life."[4] So then without doubt they will not
consent that have been written. How then are these men blotted out from that
book wherein they were never written? This hath been said according to their own
hope, because they thought of themselves that they were written. What is, "let
them be blotted out from the book of life"? Even to themselves let it be
evident, that they were not there. By this method of speaking hath been said in
another Psalm, "There shall fall from Thy side a thousand, and tens of thousands from
on Thy right hand:"[5] that is, many men shall be offended, even out of that
number who thought that they would sit with Thee, even out of that number who
thought that they would stand at Thy right hand, being severed from the left-hand
goats:[6] not that when any one hath there stood, he shall afterwards fall, or
when any one with Him hath sat, he shall be cast away; but that many men were
to fall into scandal, who already thought themselves to be there, that is, many
that thought that they would sit with Thee, many that hoped that they would
stand at the right hand, will themselves fall. So then here also they that hoped
as though by the merit of their own righteousness themselves to have been
written in the book of God, they to whom is said, "Search the Scriptures, wherein ye
think yourselves to have life eternal:"[7] when their condemnation shall have
been brought even to their own knowledge, shall be effaced from the book of the
living, they shall know themselves not to be there. For the verse which
followeth explaineth what hath been said: "And with just men let them not be
written." I have said then "Let them be effaced," according to their hope but according
to Thy justice I say what?
30. "Poor and sorrowful I am" (ver. 30). Why this? Is it that we may
acknowledge that through bitterness of soul this poor One doth speak evil? For He
hath spoken of many things to happen to them. And as if we were saying to Him,
"Why such things?"--"Nay, not so much!" He answereth, "poor and sorrowful I am."
They have brought Me to want, unto this sorrow they have set Me down, therefore
I say these words. It is not, however, the indignation of one cursing, but the
prediction of one prophesying. For He was intending to recommend to us certain
things which hereafter He saith of His poverty and His sorrow, in order that
we may learn to be poor and sorrowful. For, "Blessed are the poor, for theirs is
the kingdom of Heaven."[8] And," Blessed are they that mourn, for they shall
be comforted." This therefore He doth Himself before now show to us: and so,
"poor and sorrowful I am." The whole Body of Him saith this. The Body of Christ in
this earth is poor and sorrowful. But let Christians be rich. Truly if
Christians they are, they are poor; in comparison with the riches celestial for which
they hope, all their gold they count for sand. "And the health of Thy
countenance, O God, hath taken Me up." Is this poor One anywise forsaken? When dost thou
deign to bring near to thy table a poor man in rags? But again, this poor One
the health of the countenance of God hath taken up: in His countenance He hath
hidden His need. For of Him hath been said, "Thou shalt hide them in the hiding
place of Thy countenance."[9] But in that countenance what riches there are
would ye know? Riches here give thee this advantage, that thou mayest dine on
what thou wilt, whenever thou wilt: but those riches, that thou mayest never
hunger. "The health of Thy countenance, O God, hath taken Me up." For what purpose?
In order that no longer I may be poor, no longer sorrowful? "I will praise the
name of the Lord with a song, I will magnify Him in praise" (ver. 31). Now it
hath been said, this poor One praiseth the name of the Lord with a song, he
magnifieth Him in praise. When would He have ventured to sing, unless He had been
refreshed from hunger? "I will magnify Him with praise." O vast riches! What
jewels of God's praise hath he brought out of his inward treasures! These are my
riches! "The Lord hath given, the Lord hath taken away."[10] Then miserable he
hath remained? Far be it. See the riches: "As it hath pleased the Lord, so hath
been done, be the name of the Lord blessed."
31. "And it shall please God:" that I shall praise Him, shall please:
"above a new calf, bearing horns and hoofs." More grateful to Him shall be the
sacrifice of praise than the sacrifice of a calf. "The sacrifice of praise shall
glorify me."[11] "Immolate to God the sacrifice of praise."[12] So then His
praise going forth from my mouth shall please God more than a great victim led up to
His altar. ... Therefore above this calf my praising shall please Thee, such
as hereafter will be, after poverty and sorrow, in the eternal society of
Angels, where neither adversary there shall be in battle to be tossed, nor sluggard
from earth to be stirred up. "Let the needy see and rejoice" (ver. 32). Let them
believe, and in hope be glad. Let them be more needy, in order that they may
deserve to be filled: lest while they belch out pride's satiety, there be denied
them the bread whereon they may healthily live. "Seek the Lord," ye needy,
hunger ye and thirst;[1] for He is Himself the living bread that came down from
Heaven.[2] "Seek ye the Lord, and your soul shall live." Ye seek bread, that your
flesh may live: the Lord seek ye, that your soul may live.[3]
32. "For the Lord hath hearkened to the poor" (ver. 33). He hath hearkened
to the poor, and He would not have hearkened to the poor, unless they were
poor. Wilt thou be hearkened to? Poor be thou: let sorrow cry out from thee, and
not fastidiousness. "And His fettered ones He hath not despised." Being offended
at His servants, He hath put them in fetters: but them crying from the fetters
He hath not despised. What are these fetters? Mortality, the corruptibleness
of the flesh are the fetters wherewith we have been bound. And would ye know the
weight of these fetters? Of them is said, "The body which is corrupted
weigheth down the soul."[4] Whenever men in the world will to be rich, for these
fetters they are seeking rags. But let the rags of the fetters suffice: seek so much
as is necessary for keeping off want, but when thou seekest superfluities,
thou longest to load thy fetters. In such a prison then let the fetters abide even
alone. "Sufficient for the day be the evil thereof."[5] "Let there praise Him
heavens and earth, sea and all things creeping in them" (ver. 34). The true
riches of this poor man are these, to consider the creation, and to praise the
Creator. "Let there praise Him heavens and earth, sea and all things creeping
therein." And doth this creation alone praise God, when by considering of it God is
praised?
33. Hear thou another thing also: "for God shall save Sion" (ver. 35). He
restoreth His Church, the faithful Gentiles He doth incorporate with His
Only-Begotten; He beguileth not them that believe in Him of the reward of His
promise. "For God shall save Sion; and there shall be builded the cities of Juda."
These same are the Churches. Let no one say, when shall it come to pass that there
be builded the cities of Juda? O that thou wouldest acknowledge the Edifice,
and be a living stone, that thou mightest enter into Her. Even now the cities of
Juda are being built. For Juda is interpreted confession. By confession of
humility there are being builded the cities of Juda: in order that there may
remain without the proud, who blush to confess. "For God shall save Sion." What
Sion? Hear in the following words: "and the seed of His servants shall possess Her,
and they that love His name shall dwell therein" (ver. 36). ...
PSALM LXX.[6]
1. Thanks to the "Corn of wheat,"[7] because He willed to die and to be
multiplied: thanks to the only Son of God, our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ, who
disdained not to undergo our death, in order that He might make us worthy of
His life. Behold Him that was single until He went hence; as He said in another
Psalm, "Single I am until I go hence;" [8] for He was a single corn of wheat in
such sort as that He had in Himself a great fruitfulness of increase; in how
many corns imitating the Passion of Him we exult, when we celebrate the
nativities of the Martyrs! Many therefore members of Him, under one Head our Saviour
Himself, being bound together in the bond of love and peace (as ye judge it fit
that ye know, for ye have often heard), are one man: and of the same, as of one
man, the voice is ofttimes heard, in the Psalms, and thus one crieth as though
it were all, because all in one are one. ...
2. There is then in this Psalm the voice of men troubled, and so indeed of
Martyrs amid sufferings in peril, but relying on their own Head. Let us hear
them, and speak with them out of sympathy of heart, though it be not with
similarity of suffering. For they are already crowned, we are still in peril: not
that such sort of persecutions do vex us as have vexed them, but worse perchance
in the midsts of all kinds of so great scandals. For our own times do more
abound in that woe, which the Lord cried: "Woe to the world because of scandals."[9]
And," Because iniquity hath abounded, the love of man shall wax cold."[10] For
not even that holy Lot at Sodom suffered corporal persecution from any one, or
had it been told him that he should not dwell there:[11] the persecution of
him were the evil doings of the Sodomites. Now then that Christ sitteth in
Heaven, now that He is glorified, now that necks of kings are made subject to His
yoke, and their brows placed beneath His sign, now that not any one remaineth to
dare openly to trample upon Christians, still, however, we groan amid
instruments and singers, still those enemies of the Martyrs, because with words and steel
they have no power, with their own wantonness do persecute them. And O that we
were sorrowing for Heathens alone: it would be some sort of comfort, to wait
for those that not yet have been signed with the Cross of Christ; when they
should be signed, and when, by His authority attached, they should cease to be mad.
We see besides men wearing or their brow the sign of Him, at the same time on
that same brow wearing the shamelessness of wantonness, and on the days and
celebrations of the Martyrs not exulting but insulting. And amid these things we
groan, and this is our persecution, if there is in us the love which saith, "Who
is weak, and I am not weak? Who is scandalized, and I burn not?"[1] Not any
servant of God, then, is without persecution: and that is a true saying which the
Apostle saith, "But even all men that will to live godly in Christ, shall
suffer persecution."[2].
3. "O God, to my aid make speed" (ver. 1). For need we have for an
everlasting aid in this world. But when have we not? Now however being in tribulation,
let us especially say, "O God, to my aid make speed." "Let them be confounded
and fear that seek my soul." Christ is speaking: whether Head speak or whether
Body speak; He is speaking that hath said, "Why persecutest thou Me?"[3] He is
speaking that hath said, "Inasmuch as ye have done it to one of the least of
Mine, to Me ye have done it."[4] The voice then of this Man is known to be of the
whole man, of Head and of Body: that need not often be mentioned, because it
is known. "Be they confounded," he saith, "and fear that seek my soul." In
another Psalm He saith, "I was looking unto the right and saw, and there was not one
that would know Me flight hath perished from Me, and there is not one to seek
out My soul."[5] There of persecutors He saith, that there was not one to seek
out His soul: but here, "Let them be confounded and fear that seek My soul."
... And where is that which thou hast heard from thy Lord, "Love ye your enemies,
do good to them that hate you, and pray for them that persecute you "?[6]
Behold thou sufferest persecution, and cursest them from whom thou sufferest: how
dost thou imitate the Passions of thy Lord that have gone before, hanging on the
cross and saying, "Father, forgive them, for they know not what they do."[7]
To persons saying such things the Martyr replieth and saith, thou hast set
before me the Lord, saying, "Father, forgive them, for they know not what they do:"
understand thou my voice also, in order that it may be thine too: for what have
I said concerning mine enemies? "Let them be confounded and fear." Already
such vengeance hath been taken on the enemies of the Martyrs. That Saul that
persecuted Stephen, he was confounded and feared. He was breathing out
slaughters,[8] he was seeking some to drag and slay: a voice having been heard from above,
"Saul, Saul, why persecutest thou Me,"[3] he was confounded and laid low, and he
was raised up to obedience, that had been inflamed unto persecuting. This then
the Martyrs desire for their enemies, "Let them be confounded and fear." For
so long as they are not confounded and fear, they must needs defend their
actions: glorious they think themselves, because they hold, because they bind,
because they scourge, because they kill, because they dance, because they insult, and
because of all these doings they be some time confounded and fear.[9] For if
they be confounded, they will also be converted: because converted they cannot
be, unless they shall have been confounded and shall have feared. Let us then
wish these things to our enemies, let us wish them without fear. Behold I have
said, and let me have said it with you, may all that still dance and sing and
insult the Martyrs "be confounded and fear :" at last within these walls
confounded may they beat their breasts!
4. "Let them be turned away backward and blush that think evil things to
me" (ver. 2). At first there was the assault of them persecuting, now there hath
remained the malice of them thinking. In fact, there are in the Church
distinct seasons of persecutions following one another.[10] There was made an assault
on the Church when kings were persecuting: and because kings had been foretold
as to persecute and as to believe, when one had been fulfilled the other was to
follow. There came to pass also that which was consequent; kings believed,
peace was given to the Church, the Church began to be set in the highest place of
dignity, even on this earth, even in this life: but there is not wanting the
roar of persecutors, they have turned their assaults into thoughts. In these
thoughts, as in a bottomless pit, the devil hath been bound," he roareth and
breaketh not forth. For it hath been said concerning these times of the Church, "The
sinner shall see, and shall be angry."[12] And shall do what? That which he did
at first? Drag, bind, smite? He doeth not this. What then? "With his teeth he
shall gnash, and shall pine away." And with these men the Martyr is, as it
were, angry, and yet for these men the Martyr prayeth. For in like manner as he
hath wished well to those men concerning whom he hath said, "Let them be
confounded and fear that seek nay soul:"[1] so also now, "Let them be turned backward,
and blush, that think evil things to me." Wherefore? In order that they may not
go before, but follow. For he that censureth the Christian religion, and on his
own system willeth to live, willeth as it were to go before Christ, as though
He indeed had erred and had been weak and infirm, because He either willed to
suffer or could suffer in the hands of the Jews; but that he is a clever man for
guarding against all these things; in shunning death, even in basely lying to
escape death, and slaying his soul that he may live in body, he thinketh
himself a man of singular and prudent measures. He goeth before in censuring Christ,
in a manner he outstrippeth Christ: let him believe in Christ, and follow
Christ. For that which had been desired but now for persecutors thinking evil
things, the same the Lord Himself said to Peter. Now in a certain place Peter willed
to go before the Lord. ... A little before, "Blessed art thou, Simon Bar-Jona,
for flesh and blood hath not revealed it to thee, but My Father which is in
Heaven:" now in a moment, "Go back behind Me, Satan."[2] What is, "Go back behind
Me"? Follow Me. Thou wiliest to go before Me, thou wiliest to give Me counsel,
it is better that thou follow My counsel: this is, "go back," go back behind
Me. He is silencing one outstripping, in order that he may go backward; and He is
calling him Satan, because he willeth to go before the Lord. A little before,
"blessed;" now, "Satan." Whence a little before, "blessed"? Because, "to thee,"
He saith, "flesh and blood hath not revealed it, but My Father which is in
Heaven." Whence now, "Satan"? Because "thou savourest not," He saith, "the things
which are of God, but the things which are of men." Let us then that would duly
celebrate the nativities of the Martyrs, long for the imitation of the
Martyrs; let us not wish to go before the Martyrs, and think ourselves to be of better
understanding than they, because we shun sufferings in behalf of righteousness
and faith which they shunned not. Therefore be they that think evil things,
and in wantonness feed their hearts, "turned backward and blush." Let them hear
from the Apostle afterwards saying, "But what fruit had ye some time in those
things at which ye now blush?"
5. What followeth? "Let them be turned away forthwith blushing, that say
to me, Well, well" (ver. 3). Two are the kinds of persecutors, revilers and
flatterers. The tongue of the flatterer doth more persecute than the hand of the
slayer: for this also the Scripture hath called a furnace. Truly when the
Scripture was speaking of persecution, it said, "Like gold in a furnace it hath proved
them" (speaking of Martyrs being slain), "and as the holocaust's victim it
hath received them."[3] Hear how even the tongue of flatterers is of such sort:
"The proving," he saith, "of silver and of gold is fire; but a man is proved by
the tongue of men praising him."[4] That is fire, this also is fire: out of both
thou oughtest to go forth safe. The censurer hath broken thee, thou hast been
broken in the furnace like an earthen vessel. The Word hath moulded thee, and
there hath come the trial of tribulation: that which hath been formed, must
needs be seasoned; if it hath been well moulded, there hath come the fire to
strengthen. Whence He said in the Passion, "Dried up like a potsherd hath been My
virtue."[5] For Passion and the furnace of tribulation had made Him stronger. ...
6. And what cometh to pass when they are all turned back and blush,
whether it be they that seek my soul, or they that think evil things to me, or they
that with perverse and feigned benevolence with tongue would soften the stroke
which they inflict, when they shall have been themselves turned away and
confounded; there shall come to pass what? "Let them exult and be joyous in Thee:" not
in me, not in this man or in that man; but in whom they have been made light
that were darkness. "Let them exult and be joyous in Thee, all that seek Thee"
(ver. 4). One thing it is to seek God, another thing to seek man. "Let them be
joyous that seek Thee." They shall not be joyous then that seek themselves,[6]
whom Thou hast first sought before they sought Thee. Not yet did that sheep seek
the Shepherd, it had strayed from the flock, and He went down to it;[7] He
sought it, and carried it back upon His shoulders. Will He despise thee, O sheep,
seeking Him, who hath first sought thee despising Him and not seeking Him? Now
then begin thou to seek Him that first hath sought thee, and hath carried thee
back on His shoulders. Do thou that which He speaketh of, "They that are My
sheep hear My voice, and follow Me."[8] If then thou seekest Him that first hath
sought thee, and hast become a sheep of His, and thou hearest the voice of thy
Shepherd, and followest Him; see what He showeth to thee of Himself, what of His
Body, in order that as to Himself thou mayest not err, as to the Church thou
mayest not err, that no one may say to thee, that is Christ which is not Christ,
or that is the Church which is not the Church. For many men have said that
Christ had no flesh, and that Christ hath not risen in His Body: do not thou
follow the voices of them. Hear thou the voice of Himself the Shepherd, that was
clothed with flesh, in order that He might seek lost flesh. He hath risen again,
and He saith, "Handle ye and see; for a spirit hath not flesh and bones as ye
see Me have."[1] He showeth Himself to thee, the voice of Him follow thou. He
showeth also the Church, that no one may deceive thee by the name of Church. "It
behoved," He saith, "Christ to suffer, and to rise again from the dead the third
day, and that there should be preached repentance and remission of sins
through all nations, beginning with Jerusalem."[2] Thou hast the voice of Thy
Shepherd, do not thou follow the voice of strangers:[3] and a thief thou shalt not
fear, if thou shalt have followed the voice of the Shepherd. But how shalt thou
follow? If thou shalt neither have said to any man, as if it were by his own
merit, Well, well: nor shalt have heard the same with joy, so that thy head be not
made fat with the oil of a sinner.[4] "Let all them exult and be joyous in
Thee, that seek Thee; and let them say"--let them say what, that exult? "Be the
Lord alway magnified!" Let all them say this, that exult and seek Thee. What? "Be
the Lord alway magnified; yea, they that love Thy salvation." Not only, "Be the
Lord magnified;" but also, "alway." ... A sinner thou art, be He magnified in
order that He may call; thou confessest, be He magnified in order that He may
forgive: now thou livest justly, be He magnified in order that He may direct:
thou perseverest even unto the end, be He magnified in order that He may glorify.
"Be the Lord," then, "alway magnified; yea, they love His saving health." For
from Him they have salvation, not from themselves. The saving health of the
Lord our God, is the Saviour our Lord Jesus Christ: whosoever loveth the Saviour,
confesseth himself to have been made whole; whosoever confesseth himself to
have been made whole, confesseth himself to have been sick.[5] Not their own
saving health, as if they could save themselves of themselves: not as it were the
saving health of a man, as though by him they could be saved. "Do not," he saith,
"confide in princes, and in the sons of men, in whom there is no safety."[6]
Why so? "Of the Lord is safety, and upon Thy people is Thy blessing."[7]
7. Behold, "Be the Lord magnified:" wilt thou never, wilt thou nowhere? In
Him was something, in me nothing: but if in Him is whatsoever I am, be He, not
I. But thou then what? "But I am needy and poor" (ver. 5). He is rich, He
abounding, He needing nothing. Behold my light, behold whence I am illumined; for I
cry, "Thou shalt illumine my candle, O Lord."[8] What then of thee? "But I am
needy and poor." I am like an orphan, my soul is like a widow destitute and
desolate: help I seek, alway mine infirmity I confess. There have been forgiven me
my sins, now I have begun to follow the commandments of God: still, however, I
am needy and poor. Why still needy and poor? Because "I see another law in my
members fighting against the law of my mind."[9] Why needy and poor? Because,
"blessed are they that hunger and thirst after righteousness."[10] Still I
hunger, still I thirst: my fulness hath been put off, not taken away. "O God, aid
Thou me." Most suitably also Lazarus is said to be interpreted, "one aided:" that
needy and poor man, that was transported into the bosom of Abraham;[11] and
beareth the type of the Church, which ought alway to confess that she hath need
of aid. This is true, this is godly. "I have said to the Lord, My God Thou art."
Why? "For my goods Thou needest not."[12] He needeth not us, we need Him:
therefore He is truly Lord. For thou art not the very true Lord of thy servant:
both are men, both needing God. But if thou supposest thy servant to need thee, in
order that thou mayest give him bread; thou also needest thy servant, in order
that he may aid thy labours. Each one of you doth need the other. Therefore
neither of you is truly lord, and neither of you truly servant. Hear thou the
true Lord, of whom thou art the true servant: "I have said to the Lord, My God
Thou art." Why art Thou Lord? "Because my goods Thou needest not"? But what of
thee? "But I am needy and poor." Behold the needy and poor: may God feed, may God
alleviate, may God aid: "O God," he saith, "aid Thou me."
8. "My helper and deliverer art Thou; O Lord, delay not." Thou art the
helper and deliverer: I need succour, help Thou; entangled I am, deliver Thou. For
no one will deliver from entanglings except Thee. There stand round about us
the nooses of divers cares, on this side and on that we are torn as it were with
thorns and brambles, we walk a narrow way, perchance we have stuck fast in the
brambles: let us say to God, "Thou art my deliverer." He that showed us the
narrow way? hath taught us to follow it. ...
9. What is, "delay not"? Because many men say, it is a long time till
Christ comes. What then: because we say, "delay not," will He come before He hath
determined to come? What meaneth this prayer, "delay not"? May not Thy coming
seem to me to be too long delayed. For to thee it seemeth a long time, to God it
seemeth not long, to whom a thousand years are one day, or the three hours of a
watch.[1] But if thou shalt not have had endurance, late for thee it will be:
and when to thee it shall be late, thou wilt be diverted from Him, and wilt be
like unto those that were wearied in the desert, and hastened to ask of God the
pleasant things which He was reserving for them in the Land; and when there
were not given on their journey the pleasant things, whereby perchance they would
have been corrupted, they murmured against God, and went back in heart unto
Egypt:[2] to that place whence in body they had been severed, in heart they went
back. Do not thou, then, so, do not so: fear the word of the Lord, saying,
"Remember Lot's wife."[3] She too being on the way, but now delivered from the
Sodomites, looked back; in the place where she looked back, there she remained: she
became a statue of salt, in order to season thee. For to thee she hath been
given for an example, in order that thou mayest have sense, mayest not stop
infatuated on the way. Observe her stopping and pass on: observe her looking back,
and do thou be reaching forth unto the things before, as Paul was.[4] What is
it, not to look back. "Of the things behind forgetful," he saith. Therefore thou
followest, being called to the heavenly reward, whereof hereafter thou wilt
glory. For the same Apostle saith, "There remaineth for me a crown of
righteousness, which in that day the Lord, the just Judge, shall render to me."[5]
PSALM LXXI.[6]
1. In all the holy Scriptures the grace of God that delivereth us
commendeth itself to us, in order that it may have us commended. This is sung of in
this Psalm, whereof we have undertaken to speak. ... This grace the Apostle
commendeth: by this he got to have the Jews for enemies, boasting of the letter of
the law and of their own justice. This then commending in the lesson which hath
been read, he saith thus: "For I am the least of the Apostles, that am not
worthy to be called an Apostle, because I persecuted the Church of God."[7] "But
therefore mercy," he saith, "I obtained, because ignorant I did it in
unbelief."[8] Then a little afterwards, "Faithful the saying is, and worthy of all
acceptation, that Christ Jesus came into the world to save sinners, of whom I am
first."[9] Were there before him not any sinners? What then, was he the first then?
Yea, going before all men not in time, but in evil disposition. "But
therefore," he saith, "mercy I obtained," in order that in me Christ Jesus might show
all long-suffering, for the imitation of those that shall believe in Him unto
life eternal: that is, every sinner and unjust man, already despairing of himself,
already having the mind of a gladiator,[10] so as to do whatsoever he willeth,
because he must needs be condemned, may yet observe the Apostle Paul, to whom
so great cruelty and so very evil a disposition was forgiven by God; and by not
despairing of himself may he be turned unto God. This grace God doth commend
to us in this Psalm also. ...
2. The title then of this Psalm is, as usual, a title intimating on the
threshold what is being done in the house: "To David himself for the sons of
Jonadab, and for those that were first led captive." Jonadab (he is commended to us
in the prophecy of Jeremiah) was a certain man, who had enjoined his sons not
to drink wine, and not to dwell in houses, but in tents. But the commandment of
the father the sons kept and observed, and by this earned a blessing from the
Lord.[11] Now the Lord had not commanded this, but their own father. But they
so received it as though it were a commandment from the Lord their God; for even
though the Lord bad not commanded that they should drink no wine and should
dwell in tents; yet the Lord had commanded that sons should obey their father. In
this case alone a son ought not to obey his father, if his father should have
commanded anything contrary to the Lord his God. For indeed the father ought
not to be angry, when God is preferred before him. But when a father doth command
that which is not contrary to God; he must be heard as God is: because to obey
one's father God hath enjoined. God then blessed the sons of Jonadab because
of their obedience, and thrust them in the teeth of His disobedient people,
reproaching them, because while the sons of Jonadab were obedient to their father,
they obeyed not their God. But while Jeremiah was treating of these topics, he
had this object in regard to the people of Israel, that they should prepare
themselves to be led for captivity into Babylon, and should not hope for any other
thing, but that they were to be captives. The title then of this Psalm seemeth
from thence to have taken its hue, so that when he had said, "Of the sons of
Jonadab;" he added, "and of them that were first led captive:" not that the sons
of Jonadab were led captive, but because to them that were to be led captive
there were opposed the sons of Jonadab, because they were obedient to their
father: in order that they might understand that they had been made captive,
because they were not obedient to God. It is added also that Jonadab is interpreted,
"the Lord's spontaneous one." What is this, the Lord's spontaneous one? Serving
God freely with the will. What is, the Lord's spontaneous one? "In me are, O
God, Thy vows, which I will render of praise to Thee." What is, the Lord's
spontaneous one? "Voluntarily I will sacrifice to Thee."[2] For if the Apostolic
teaching admonisheth a slave to serve a human master, not as though of necessity,
but of good will, and by freely serving make himself in heart free; how much
more must God be served with whole and full and free will, who seeth thy very
will? ... The first man made us captive, the second man hath delivered us from
captivity. "For as in Adam all die, so also in Christ all shall be made alive."
But in Adam they die through the flesh's nativity, in Christ they are delivered
through the heart's faith. It was not in thy power not to be born of Adam: it
is in thy power to believe in Christ. Howsoever much then thou shall have willed
to belong to the first man, unto captivity thou wilt belong. And what is,
shall have willed to belong? or what is, shalt belong? Already thou belongest: cry
out, "Who shall deliver me from the body of this death?"[3] Let us hear then
this man crying out this.
3. "O God, in Thee I have hoped, O Lord, I shall not be confounded for
everlasting" (ver. 1). Already I have been confounded, but not for everlasting.
For how is he not confounded, to whom is said, "What fruit had ye in these things
wherein ye now blush?"[4] What then shall be done, that we may not be
confounded for everlasting? "Draw near unto Him, and be ye enlightened, and your faces
shall not blush."[5] Confounded ye are in Adam, withdraw from Adam, draw near
unto Christ, and then ye shall not be confounded. "In Thee I have hoped, O Lord,
I shall not be confounded for everlasting." If in myself I am now[6]
confounded, in Thee I shall not be confounded for everlasting.
4. "In Thine own righteousness deliver me, and save me" (ver. 2). Not in
mine own, but in Thine own: for if in mine own, I shall be one of those whereof
he saith, "Being ignorant of God's righteousness, and their own righteousness
willing to establish, to the righteousness of God they were not made
subject."[7] Therefore, "in Thine own righteousness," not in mine. For mine is what?
Iniquity hath gone before. And when I shall be righteous, Thine own righteousness it
will be: for by righteousness given to me by Thee I shall be righteous; and it
shall be so mine, as that it be Thine, that is, given to me by Thee. For I
believe on Him that justifieth an ungodly man, so that my faith is counted for
righteousness.[8]Even so then the righteousness shall be mine, not however as
though mine own, not as though by mine own self given to myself: as they thought
who through the letter made their boast, and rejected grace. ... It is a small
thing then that thou acknowledge the good thing which is in thee to be from God,
unless also on that account thou exalt not thyself above him that hath not yet,
who perchance when he shall have received, will outstrip thee. For when Saul
was a stoner of Stephen,[9] how many were the Christians of whom he was
persecutor! Nevertheless, when he was converted, all that had gone before he surpassed.
Therefore say thou to God that which thou hearest in the Psalm, "In Thee I
have hoped, O Lord, I shall not be confounded for everlasting: in Thine own
righteousness," not in mine, "deliver me, and save me." "Incline unto me Thine ear."
This also is a confession of humility. He that saith, "Incline unto me," is
confessing that he is lying like a sick man laid at the feet of the Physician
standing. Lastly, observe that it is a sick man that is speaking: "Incline unto me
Thine ear, and save me."
5. "Be Thou unto me for a protecting God" (ver. 3). Let not the darts of
the enemy reach unto me: for I am not able to protect myself. And a small thing
is "protecting:" he hath added, "and for a walled place, that Thou mayest save
me." "For a walled place" be Thou to me, be Thou my walled place. ... Behold,
God Himself hath become the place of thy fleeing unto, who at first was the
fearful object of thy fleeing from. "For a walled place," he saith, be Thou to me,
"that Thou mayest save me." I shall not be safe except in Thee: except Thou
shalt have been my rest, my sickness shall not be able to be made whole. Lift me
from the earth; upon Thee I will lie, in order that I may rise unto a walled
place. What can be better walled? When unto that place thou shalt have fled for
refuge, tell me what adversaries thou wilt dread? Who will lie in wait, and come
at thee? A certain man is Said from the summit of a mountain to have cried out,
when an Emperor was passing by, "I speak not[10] of thee:" the other is said
to have looked back and to have said, "Nor I of thee." He had despised an
Emperor with glittering arms, with mighty army. From whence? From a strong place. If
he was secure on a high spot of earth, how secure art thou on Him by whom
heaven and earth were made? I, if for myself I shall have chosen another place,
shall not be able to be safe. Choose thou indeed, O man, if thou shalt have found
one, a place better walled. There is not then a place whither to flee from Him,
except we flee to Him. If thou wilt escape Him angry, flee to Him appeased.
"For my firmament and my refuge Thou art." "My firmament" is what? Through Thee I
am firm, and by Thee I am firm. "For my firmament and my refuge Thou art:" in
order that I may be made firm by Thee, in whatever respects I shall have been
made infirm in myself, I will flee for refuge unto Thee. For firm the grace of
Christ maketh thee, and immovable against all temptations of the enemy. But there
is there too human frailness, there is there still the first captivity, there
is there too the law in the members fighting against the law of the mind, and
willing to lead captive in the law of sin:[1] still the body which is corrupt
presseth down the soul.[2] Howsoever firm thou be by the grace of God, so long as
thou still bearest an earthly vessel, wherein the treasure of God is,
something must be dreaded even from that same vessel of clay.[3] Therefore" my
firmament Thou art," in order that I may be firm in this world against all temptations.
But if many they are, and they trouble me: "my refuge Thou art." For I will
confess mine infirmity, to the end that I may be timid like a "hare," because I
am full of thorns like a "hedgehog." And as in another Psalm is said, "The rock
is a refuge for the hedgehogs and the hares:"[4] but the Rock was Christ.[5]
6. "O God, deliver me from the hand of the sinner" (ver. 4). Generally,
sinners, among whom is toiling he that is now to be delivered from captivity: he
that now crieth, "Unhappy man I, who shall deliver me from the body of this
death? The grace of God through Jesus Christ our Lord."[6] Within is a foe, that
law in the members; there are without also enemies: unto what cryest thou? Unto
Him, to whom hath been cried, "From my secret sins cleanse me, O Lord, anti
from strange sins spare Thy servant."[7] ... But these sinners are of two kinds:
there are some that have received Law, there are others that have not
received: all the heathen have not received Law, all Jews and Christians have received
Law. Therefore the general term is sinner; either a transgressor of the Law, if
he hath received Law; or only unjust without Law, if he hath not received the
Law. Of both kinds speaketh the Apostle, and saith, "They that without Law have
sinned, without Law shall perish, and they that in the Law have sinned, by the
Law shall be judged."[8] But thou that amid both kinds dost groan, say to God
that which thou hearest in the Psalm, "My God, deliver me from the hand of the
sinner." Of what sinner? "From the hand of him that transgresseth the Law, and
of the unjust man." He that transgresseth the Law is indeed also unjust; for
not unjust he is not, that transgresseth the Law: but every one that
transgresseth the Law is unjust, not every unjust man doth transgress the Law. For, "Where
there is not a Law," saith the Apostle, "neither is there transgression."[9]
They then that have not received Law, may be called unjust, transgressors they
cannot be called. Both are judged after their deservings. But I that from
captivity will to be delivered through Thy grace, cry to Thee, "Deliver me from the
hand of the sinner." What is, from the hand of him? From the power of him, that
while he is raging, he lead me not unto consenting with him; that while he
lieth in wait, he persuade not to iniquity. "From the hand of the sinner and of the
unjust man." ...
7. Lastly, there followeth the reason why I say this: "for Thou art my
patience" (ver. 5). Now if He is patience rightly, He is that also which
followeth, "O Lord, my hope from my youth." My patience, because my hope: or rather my
hope, because my patience. "Tribulation," saith the Apostle, "worketh patience,
patience probation, but probation hope, but hope confoundeth not."[10] With
reason in Thee I have hoped, O Lord, I shall not be confounded for everlasting. "O
Lord, my hope from my youth." From thy youth is God thy hope? Is He not also
from thy boyhood, and from thine infancy? Certainly, saith he. For see what
followeth, that thou mayest not think that I have said this, "my hope from my
youth," as if God noways profiled mine infancy or my boyhood; hear what followeth:
"In Thee I have been strengthened from the womb." Hear yet: "From the belly of
my mother Thou art my Protector" (ver. 6). Why then, "from my youth," except it
was the period from which I began to hope in Thee? For before in Thee I was not
hoping, though Thou wast my Protector, that didst lead me safe unto the time,
when I learned to hope in Thee. But from my youth I began in Thee to hope, from
the time when Thou didst arm me against the Devil, so that in the girding of
Thy host being armed with Thy faith, love, hope, and the rest of Thy gifts, I
waged conflict against Thine invisible enemies, and heard from the Apostle,
"There is not for us a wrestling against flesh and blood, but against
principalities, and powers," etc.[11] There a young man it is that doth fight against these
things: but though he be a young man, he falleth, unless He be the hope of Him
to whom he crieth, "O Lord, my hope from my youth." "In Thee is my singing
alway." Is it only from the time when I began to hope in Thee until now? Nay, but
"alway." What is, "alway"? Not only in the time of faith, but also in the time of
sight. For now, "So long as we are in the body we are absent from the Lord:
for by faith we walk, not by sight: "[1] there will be a time when we shall see
that which being not seen we believe: but when that hath been seen which we
believe, we shall rejoice: but when that hath been seen which they believed not,
ungodly men shall be confounded. Then will come the substance whereof there is
now the hope. But, "Hope which is seen is not hope. But if that which we see not
we hope for, through patience we wait for it."[2] Now then thou groanest, now
unto a place of refuge thou runnest, in order that thou mayest be saved; now
being in infirmity thou entreatest the Physician: what, when thou shall have
received perfect soundness also, what when thou shall have been made "equal to the
Angels of God,"[3] wilt thou then perchance forget that grace, whereby thou hast
been delivered? Far be it.
8. "As it were a monster I have become unto many" (ver. 7). Here in time
of hope, in time of groaning, in time of humiliation, in time of sorrow, in time
of infirmity, in time of the voice from the fetters--here then what? "As it
were a monster I have become unto many." Why, "As it were a monster"? Why do they
insult me that think me a monster? Because I believe that which I see not. For
they being happy in those things which they see, exult in drink, in
wantonness, in chamberings, in covetousness, in riches, in robberies, in secular
dignities, in the whitening of a mud wall, in these things they exult: but I walk in a
different way, contemning those things which are present, and fearing even the
prosperous things of the world, and secure in no other thing but the promises
of God. And they, "Let us eat and drink, for to-morrow we die."[4] What sayest
thou? Repeat it: "let us eat," he saith, "and drink." Come now, what hast thou
said afterwards? "for to-morrow we die." Thou hast terrified, not led me astray.
Certainly by the very thing which thou hast said afterwards, thou hast
stricken me with fear to consent with thee. "For to-morrow we die," thou hast said:
and there hath preceded, "Let us eat and drink." For when thou hadst said, "Let
us eat and drink;" thou didst add, "for to-morrow we die." Hear the other side
from me, "Yea let us fast and pray, 'for to-morrow we die.' " I keeping this
way, strait and narrow, "as it were a monster have become unto many: but Thou art
a strong helper." Be Thou with me, O Lord Jesus, to say to me, faint not in the
narrow way, I first have gone along it, I am the way itself,[5] I lead, in
Myself I lead, unto Myself I lead home. Therefore though "a monster I have become
unto many;" nevertheless I will not fear, for "Thou art a strong Helper."
9. "Let my mouth be fulfilled with praise, that with hymn I may tell of
Thy glory, all the day long Thy magnificence" (ver. 8). What is "all the day
long"? Without intermission. In prosperity, because Thou dost comfort: in
adversity, because Theu dost correct: before I was in being, because Thou didst make;
when I was in being, because Thou didst give health: when I had sinned,
because Thou didst forgive; when I was converted, because Thou didst help; when I had
persevered, because Thou didst crown.
10. My hope from my youth, "cast me not away in time of old age" (ver. 9).
What is this time of old age? "When my strength shall fail, forsake Thou not
me." Here God maketh this answer to thee, yea indeed let thy strength fail, in
order that in thee mine may abide: in order that thou mayest say with the
Apostle, "When I am made weak, then I am mighty."[6] Fear not, that thou be cast away
in that weakness, in that old age. But why? Was not thy Lord made weak on the
Cross? Did not most mighty men and fat bulls before Him, as though a man of no
strength, made captive and oppressed, shake the head and say, "If Son of God He
is, let Him come down from the Cross"?[7] Has he deserted because He was made
weak, who preferred not to come down from the Cross, lest He should seem not to
have displayed power, but to have yielded to them reviling? What did He
hanging teach thee, that would not come down, but patience amid men reviling, but
that thou shouldest be strong in thy God? Perchance too in His person was said,
"As it were a monster I have become unto many, and Thou art a strong Helper."[8]
In His person according to His weakness, not according to His power; according
to that whereby He had transformed us into Himself, not according to that
wherein He had Himself come down. For He became a monster unto many. And perchance
the same was the old age of Him; because on account of its oldness it is not
improperly called old age, and the Apostle saith, "Our old man hath been crucified
together with Him."[9] If there was there our old man, old age was there;
because old, old age.[10] Nevertheless, because a true saying is, "Renewed as an
eagle's shall be Thy youth ;"[1] He rose Himself the third day, promised a
resurrection at the end of the world. Already there hath gone before the Head, the
members are to follow. Why dost thou fear lest He should forsake thee, lest He
cast thee away for the time of old age, when thy strength shall have failed? Yea
at that time in thee will be the strength of Him, when thy strength shall have
failed.
11. Why do I say this? "For mine enemies have spoken against me, and they
that were keeping watch for My soul, have taken counsel together (ver. 10):
saying, God hath forsaken Him, persecute Him, and seize Him, for there is no one
to deliver Him" (ver. 11). This hath been said concerning Christ. For He that
with the great power of Divinity, wherein He is equal to the Father, had raised
to life dead persons, on a sudden in the hands of enemies became weak, and as if
having no power, was seized. When would He have been seized, except they had
first said in their heart, "God hath forsaken Him?" Whence there was that voice
on the Cross, "My God, My God, why hast Thou forsaken Me?[2] So then did God
forsake Christ, though "God was in Christ reconciling the world to Himself,"[3]
though Christ was also God. out of the Jews indeed according to the flesh, "Who
is over all things, God blessed for ever,"[4]--did God forsake Him? Far be it.
But in our old man our voice it was, because our old man was crucified together
with Him:[5] and of that same our old man He had taken a Body, because Mary
was of Adam. Therefore the very thing which they thought, from the Cross He said,
"Why hast Thou forsaken Me?"[6] Why do these men think Me left alone to their
evil? What is, think Me forsaken in their evil? "For if they had known, the
Lord of glory they had never crucified.[7] Persecute and seize Him." More
familiarly however, brethren, let us take this of the members of Christ, and
acknowledge our own voice in these words: because even He used such words in our person,
not in His own power and majesty; but in that which He became for our sakes,
not according to that which He was, who hath made us.
12. "O Lord, my God, be not far from me" (ver. 12). So it is, and the Lord
is not far off at all. For, "The Lord is nigh unto them that have bruised the
heart."[8] "My God, unto my help look Thou." "Be they confounded and fail that
engage[9] my soul" (ver. 13). What hath he desired? "Be they confounded and
fail." Why hath he desired it? "That engage my soul"? What is, "That engage my
soul "? Engaging as it were unto some quarrel. For they are said to be engaged
that are challenged to quarrel. If then so it is, let us beware of men that engage
our soul. What is, "That engage our soul"? First provoking us to withstand
God, in order that in our evil things God may displease us. For when art thou
right, so that to thee the God of Israel may be good, good to men fight in
heart?[10] When art thou right? Wilt thou hear? When in that good which thou doest, God
is pleasing to thee; but in that evil which thou sufferest, God is not
displeasing to thee. See ye what I have said, brethren, and be ye on your guard
against men that engage your souls. For all men that deal with you in order to make
you be wearied in sorrows and tribulations, have this aim, namely, that God may
be displeasing to you in that which ye suffer, and there may go forth from your
mouth, "What is this? For what have I done?" Now then hast thou done nothing
of evil, and art thou just, He unjust? A sinner I am, thou sayest, I confess,
just I call not myself. But what, sinner, hast thou by any means done so much
evil as he with whom it is well? As much as Gaiuseius?" I know the evil doings of
him, I know the iniquities of him, from which I, though a sinner, am very far;
and yet I see him abounding in all good things, and I am suffering so great
evil things. I do not then say, O God, "what have I done" to Thee, because I have
done nothing at all of evil; but because I have not done so much as to deserve
to suffer these things. Again, art thou just, He unjust? Wake up, wretched man,
thy soul hath been engaged ! I have not, he saith, called myself just. What
then sayest thou? A sinner I am, but I did not commit so great sins, as to
deserve to suffer these things. Thou sayest not then to God, just I am, and Thou art
unjust: but thou sayest, unjust I am, but Thou art more unjust. Behold thy soul
hath been engaged, behold now thy soul wageth war. What? Against whom? Thy
soul, against God; that which hath been made against Him by whom it was made. Even
because thou art in being to cry out against Him, thou art ungrateful. Return,
then, to the confession of thy sickness, and beg the healing hand of the
Physician. Think thou not they are happy who flourish for a time. Thou art being
chastised, they are being spared: perchance for thee chastised and amended an
inheritance is being kept in reserve. ... Lastly, see what followeth, "Let them put
on confusion and shame, that think evil things to me." "Confusion and shame,"
confusion because of a bad conscience, shame because of modesty. Let this
befall them, and they will be good. ...
13. "But I alway in Thee will hope, and will add to all Thy praise" (ver.
14). What is this? "I will add to all Thy praise," ought to move us. More
perfect wilt thou make the praise of God? Is there anything to be superadded? If
already that is all praise, wilt thou add anything? God was praised in all His
good deeds, in every creature of His, in the whole establishment of all things, in
the government and regulation of ages, in the order of seasous, in the height
of Heaven, in the fruitfulness of the regions of earth, in the encircling of
the sea, in every excellency of the creature everywhere brought forth, in the
sons of men themselves, in the giving of the Law, in delivering His people from
the captivity of the Egyptians, and all the rest of His wonderful works: not yet
He had been praised for having raised up flesh unto life eternal. Be there then
this praise added by the Resurrection of our Lord Jesus Christ: in order that
here we may perceive His voice above all past praise: thus it is that we
rightly understand this also. ...
14. "My mouth shall tell out Thy righteousness" (ver. 15): not mine. From
thence I will add to all Thy praise: because even that I am righteous, if
righteous I am, is Thy righteousness in me, not mine own: for Thou dost justify the
ungodly.[1] "All the day long Thy salvation." What is, "Thy salvation "? Let no
one assume to himself, that he saveth himself, "Of the Lord is Salvation."[2]
Not any one by himself saveth himself, "Vain is man's salvation."[3] "All the
day long Thy Salvation:" at all times. Something of adversity cometh, preach the
Salvation of the Lord: something of prosperity cometh, preach the Salvation of
the Lord. Do not preach in prosperity, and hold thy peace in adversity:
otherwise there will not be that which hath been said, "all the day long." For all
the day long is day together with its own night. Do we when we say, for example,
thirty days have gone by, mention the nights also; do we not under the very
term days include the nights also? In Genesis what was said? "The evening was
made, and the morning was made, one day."[4] Therefore a whole day is the day
together with its own night: for the night doth serve the day, not the day the
night. Whatever thou doest in mortal flesh, ought to serve righteousness: whatever
thou doest by the commandment of God, be it not done for the sake of the
advantage of the flesh, lest day serve night. Therefore all the day long speak of the
praise of God, to wit, in prosperity and in adversity; in prosperity, as though
in the day time; in adversity, as though in the night time: all the day long
nevertheless speak of the praise of God, so that thou mayest not have sung to no
purpose, "I will bless God at every time, alway the praise of Him is in my
mouth."[5] ...
15. Therefore, he saith, "For I have not known tradings."[6] What are
these tradings? Let traders hear and change their life; and if they have been such,
be not such; let them not know what they have been, let them forget; lastly,
let them not approve, not praise; let them disapprove, condemn, be changed, if
trading is a sin. For on this account, O thou trader, because of a certain
eagerness for getting, whenever thou shalt have suffered loss, thou wilt blaspheme;
and there will not be in thee that which hath been spoken of, "all the day long
Thy praise." But whenever for the price of the goods which thou art selling,
thou not only liest, but even falsely swearest; how in thy mouth all the day
long is there the praise of God? While, if thou art a Christian, even out of thy
mouth the name of God is being blasphemed, so that men say, see what sort of men
are Christians ! Therefore if this man for this reason speaketh the praise of
God all the day long, because he hath not known tradings; let Christians amend
themselves, let them not trade. But a trader saith to me, behold I bring indeed
from a distant quarter merchandise unto these places, wherein there are not
those things which I have brought, by which means I may gain a living: I ask but
as reward for my labour, that I may sell dearer than I have bought: for whence
can I live, when it hath been written, "the worker is worthy of his reward"?[7]
But he is treating of lying, of false swearing. This is the fault of me, not
of trading: for I should not, if I would, be unable to do without this fault. I
then, the merchant, do not shift mine own fault to trading: but if I lie, it is
I that lie, not the trade. For I might say, for so much I bought, but for so
much I will sell; if thou pleasest, buy. For the buyer hearing this truth would
not be offended, and not a whit less all men would resort to me: because they
would love truth more than gain. Of this then, he saith, admonish me, that I lie
not, that I forswear not; not to relinquish business whereby I maintain
myself. For to what dost thou put me when thou puttest me away from this? Perchance
to some craft? I will be a shoemaker, I will make shoes for men. Are not they
too liars? are not they too false-swearers? Do they not, when they have
contracted to make shoes for one man, when they have received money from another man,
give up that which they were making, and undertake to make for another, and
deceive him for whom they have promised to make speedily? Do they not often say,
to-day I am about it, to-day I'll get them done? Secondly, in the very sewing do
they not commit as many frauds? These are their doings and these are their
sayings: but they are themselves evil, not the calling which they profess. All evil
artificers, then, not fearing God, either for gain, or for fear of loss or
want, do lie, do forswear themselves; there is no continual praise of God in them.
How then dost thou withdraw me from trading? Wouldest thou that I be a farmer,
and murmur against God thundering, so that, fearing hail, I consult a wizard,
in order to learn what to do to protect me against the weather; so that I desire
famine for the poor, in order that I may be able to sell what I have kept in
store? Unto this dost thou bring me? But good farmers, thou sayest, do not such
things. Nor do good traders do those things. But why, even to have sons is an
evil thing, for when their head is in pain, evil and unbelieving mothers seek
for impious charms and incantations? These are the sins of men, not of things. A
trader might thus speak to me--Look then, O Bishop, how thou understand the
tradings which thou hast read in the Psalm: lest perchance thou understand not,
and yet forbid me trading. Admonish me then how I should live; if well, it shall
be well with me: one thing however I know, that if I shall have been evil, it
is not trading that maketh me so, but my iniquity. Whenever truth is spoken,
there is nothing to be said against it.
16. Let us inquire then what he hath called tradings, which indeed he that
hath not known, all the day long doth praise God. Trading[1] even in the Greek
language is derived from action, and in the Latin from want of inaction: but
whether it be from action or want of inaction, let us examine what it is. For
they that are active traders, rely as it were upon their own action, they praise
their works, they attain not to the grace of God. Therefore traders are opposed
to that grace which this Psalm doth commend. For it doth commend that grace,
in order that no one may boast of his own works. Because in a certain place is
said, "Physicians shall not raise to life,"[2] ought men to abandon medicine?
But what is this? Under this name are understood proud men, promising salvation
to men, whereas "of the Lord is Salvation."[3] ... With reason the Lord drave
from the Temple them to whom He said, "It is written, My House shall be called
the House of prayer, but ye have made it a house of trading; "[4] that is,
boasting of your works, seeking no inaction, nor hearing the Scripture speaking
against your unrest and trading, "be ye still, and see that I am the Lord."[5] ...
17. But there is in some copies, "For I have not known literature." Where
some books have "trading," there others "literature:" how they may accord is a
hard matter to find out; and yet the discrepancy of interpreters perchance
showeth the meaning, introduceth no error. Let us inquire then how to understand
literature also, lest we offend grammarians in the same way as we did traders a
little before: because a grammarian too may live honourably in his calling, and
neither forswear nor lie. Let us examine then the literature which he hath not
known, in whose mouth all the day long is the praise of God. There is a sort of
literature of the Jews: for to them let us refer this; there we shall find
what hath been said: just as when we were inquiring about traders, on the score of
actions and works, we found that to be called detestable trading, which the
Apostle hath branded, saying, "For being ignorant of God's righteousness, and
willing to establish their own, to the righteousness of God they were not made
subject."[6] ... Just as then we found out the former charge against traders,
that is men boasting of action, exalting themselves because of business which
admitteth no inaction, unquiet men rather than good workmen; because good workmen
are those in whom God worketh; so also we find a sort of literature among the
Jews. ... Moses wrote five books: but in the five porches encircling the
pool,[7] sick men were lying, but they could not be healed. See how the letter
remained, convicting the guilty, not saving the unrighteous. For in those five
porches, a figure of the five books, sick men were given over rather than made whole.
What then in that place did make whole a sick man? The moving of the water.
When that pool was moved there went down a sick man, and there was made whole one,
one[8] because of unity: whatsoever other man went down unto that same moving
was not made whole. How then was there commended the unity of the Body crying
from the ends of the earth? Another man was not healed, except again the pool
were moved. The moving of the pool then did signify the perturbation of the
people of the Jews when the Lord Jesus Christ came. For at the coming of an Angel
the water in the pool was perceived to be moved. The water then encircled with
five porches was the Jewish nation encircled by the Law. And in the porches the
sick lay, and in the water alone when troubled and moved they were healed. The
Lord came, troubled was the water; He was crucified, may He come down in order
that the sick man may be made whole. What is, may He come down? May He humble
Himself. Therefore whosoever ye be that love the letter without grace, in the
porches ye will remain, sick ye will be, lying ill, not growing well. ... For the
same figure also it is that Eliseus at first sent a staff by his servant to
raise up the dead child. There had died the son of a widow his hostess; it was
reported to him, to his servant he gave his staff: go thou, he saith, lay it on
the dead child. Did the prophet not know what he was doing? The servant went
before, he laid the staff upon the dead, the dead arose not. "For if there had been
given a law which could have made alive, surely out of the law there had been
righteousness."[1] The law sent by the servant made not alive: and yet he sent
his staff by the servant, who himself afterwards followed, and made alive.[2]
For when that infant arose not, Eliseus came himself, now bearing the type of
the Lord, who had sent before his servant with the staff, as though with the Law:
he came to the child that was lying dead, he laid his limbs upon it. The one
was an infant, the other a grown man: he contracted and shortened in a manner
the size of his full growth, in order that he might fit the dead child. The dead
then arose, when he being alive adapted himself to the dead: and the Master did
that which the staff did not; and grace did that which the letter did not.
They then that have remained in the staff, glory in the letter; and therefore are
not made alive. But I will to glory concerning Thy grace. ... In that same
grace I glorying "literature have not known:" that is, men on the letter relying,
and from grace recoiling, with whole heart I have rejected.
18. With reason there followeth, "I will enter into the power of the
Lord:" not mine own, but the Lord's. For they gloried in their own power of the
letter, therefore grace joined to the letter they knew not. ... But because "the
letter killeth, but the Spirit maketh alive:"[3] "I have not known literature,
and I will enter into the power of the Lord." Therefore this verse following doth
strengthen and perfect the sense, so as to fix it in the hearts of men, and
not suffer any other interpretation to steal in from any quarter. "O Lord, I will
be mindful of Thy righteousness alone" (ver. 16). Ah ! "alone." Why hath he
added "alone," I ask you? It would suffice to say, "I will be mindful of Thy
righteousness." "alone," he saith, entirely: there of mine own I think not. "For
what hast thou which thou hast not received? But if also thou hast received, why
dost thou glory as if thou hast not received."[4] Thy righteousness alone doth
deliver me, what is mine own alone is nought but sins. May I not glory then of
my own strength, may I not remain in the letter; may I reject "literature,"
that is, men glorying of the letter, and on their own strength perversely, like
men frantic, relying: may I reject such men, may I enter into the power of the
Lord, so that when I am weak, then I may be mighty; in order that Thou in me
mayest be mighty, for, "I will be mindful of Thy righteousness alone."
19. "O God, Thou hast taught me from my youth" (ver. 17). What hast thou
taught me? That of Thy righteousness alone I ought to be mindful. For reviewing
my past life, I see what was owing to me, and what I have received instead of
that which was owing to me. There was owing punishment, there hath been paid
grace: there was owing hell, there hath been given life eternal. "O God, Thou hast
taught me from my youth." From the very beginning of my faith, wherewith Thou
hast renewed me, Thou didst teach me that nothing had preceded in me, whence I
might say that there was owing to me what Thou hast given. For who is turned to
God save from iniquity? Who is redeemed save from captivity? But who can say
that unjust was his captivity, when he forsook his Captain and fell off to the
deserter? God is for our Captain,[5] the devil a deserter: the Captain gave a
commandment, the deserter suggested guile:[6] where were thine ears between
precept and deceit? was the devil better than God? Better he that revolted[7] than
He that made thee? Thou didst believe what the devil promised, and didst find
what God threatened. Now then out of captivity being delivered, still however in
hope, not yet in substance, walking by faith, not yet by sight, "O God," he
saith, "Thou hast taught me from my youth." From the time that I have been turned
to Thee,[8] renewed by Thee who had been made by Thee, re-created who had been
created, re-formed who had been formed: from the time that I have been
converted, I have learned that no merits of mine have preceded, but that Thy grace hath
come to me gratis, in order that I might be mindful of Thy righteousness alone.
20. What next after youth? For, "Thou hast taught me," he saith, "from my
youth:" what after youth? For in that same first conversion of thine thou didst
learn, how before conversion thou wast not just, but iniquity preceded, in
order that iniquity being banished, there might succeed love: and having been
renewed into a new man, only in hope, not yet in substance, thou didst learn how
nothing of thy good had preceded, and by the grace of God thou wast converted to
God: now perchance since the time that thou hast been converted wilt thou have
anything of thine own, and on thy own strength oughtest thou to rely? Just as
men are wont to say, now leave me, it was necessary for thee to show me the way;
it is sufficient, i will walk in the way. And he that hath shown thee the way,
"wilt thou not that I conduct thee to the place?" But thou, if thou art
conceited, "let me alone, it is enough, I will walk in the way." Thou art left, and
through thy weakness again thou wilt lose the way. Good were it for thee that He
should have conducted thee, who first put thee in the way. But unless He too
lead thee, again also thou wilt stray: say to Him then, "Conduct me, O Lord, in
Thy way, and I will walk in Thy truth."[1] But thy having entered on the way,
is youth, the very renewal and beginning of the faith. For before thou wast
walking through thy own ways a vagabond; straying through woody places, through
rough places, torn in all thy limbs, thou wast seeking a home, that is, a sort of
settlement of thy spirit, where thou mightest say, it is well; and being in
security mightest say it, at rest from every uneasiness, from every trial, in a
word from every captivity; and thou didst not find. What shall I say? Came there
to thee one to show thee the way? There came to thee the Way itself, and thou
wast set therein by no merits of thine preceding, for evidently thou wast
straying. What, since the time that thou hast set foot therein dost thou now direct
thyself? Doth He that hath taught thee the way now leave thee? No, he saith:
"Thou hast taught me from my youth; and even until now I will tell forth Thy
wonderful works." For a wonderful thing is that which still Thou doest; namely, that
Thou dost direct me, who in the way hast put me: and these are Thy wonderful
works. What dost thou think to be the wonderful works of God? What is more
wonderful among God's wonderful works, than the raising the dead? But am I by any
means dead, thou sayest? Unless dead thou hadst been, there would not have been
said to thee, "Rise, thou that sleepest, and arise from the dead, and Christ
shall enlighten thee."[2] Dead are all unbelievers, all unrighteous men; in body
they live, but in heart they are extinct. But he that raiseth a man dead
according to the body, doth bring him back to see this light and to breathe this air:
but he that raiseth is not himself light and air to him; he beginneth to see,
as he saw before. A soul is not so resuscitated. For a soul is resuscitated by
God; though even a body is resuscitated by God: but God, when He doth
resuscitate a body, to the world doth bring it back: when He doth resuscitate a soul, to
Himself He bringeth it back. If the air of this world be withdrawn, there dieth
body: if God be withdrawn, there dieth soul. When then God doth resuscitate a
soul, unless there be with her He that hath resuscitated, she being
resuscitated liveth not. For He doth not resuscitate, and then leave her to live to
herself: in the same manner as Lazarus, when he was resuscitated after being four
days dead, was resuscitated by the Lord's corporal presence. ... The Lord withdrew
from that same city or from that spot, did Lazarus cease to live? Not so is
the soul resuscitated: God doth resuscitate her, she dieth if God shall have
withdrawn. For I will speak boldly, brethren, but yet the truth. Two lives there
are, one of the body, another of the soul: as the life of the body is the soul,
so the life of the soul is God: in like manner as, if the soul forsake, the body
dieth: so the soul dieth, if God forsake. This then is His grace, namely, that
He resuscitate and be with us. Because then He doth resuscitate us from our
past death, and doth renew in a manner our life, we say to Him, "O God, Thou hast
taught me from my youth." But because He doth not withdraw from those whom He
resuscitateth, lest when He shall have withdrawn from them they die, we say to
Him, "and even until now I will tell forth Thy wonderful works:" because while
Thou art with me I live, and of my soul Thou art the life, which will die if
she be left to herself. Therefore while my life is present, that is, my God,
"even until now," what next?
21. "And even unto oldness[3] and old age"[4] (ver. 18). These are two
terms for old age, and are distinguished by the Greeks. For the gravity succeeding
youth hath another name among the Greeks, and after that same gravity the last
age coming on hath another name; for <greek>preQbuths</greek> signifieth
grave, and <greek>gerwn</greek> old. But because in the Latin language the
distinction of these two terms holdeth not, both words implying old age are inserted,
oldness and old age: but ye know them to be two ages. "Thou hast taught me Thy
grace from my youth; and even until now;" after my youth, "I will tell forth Thy
wonderful works," because Thou art with me in order that I may not die, who
hast come in order that I may rise: "and even unto oldness and old age," that is,
even unto my last breath, unless with me Thou shalt have been, there will not
be any merit of mine; may Thy grace alway remain with me. Even one man would
say this, thou, he, I; but because this voice is that of a certain great Man,
that is, of the Unity itself, for it is the voice of the Church; let us
investigate the youth of the Church. When Christ came, He was crucified, dead, rose
again, called the Gentiles, they began to be converted, became Martyrs strong in
Christ, there was shed faithful blood, there arose a harvest for the Church: this
is Her youth. But seasons advancing let the Church confess, let Her say, "Even
until now I will tell forth Thy wonderful works." Not only in youth, when Paul
when Peter, when the first Apostles told: even in advancing age I myself, that
is, Thy Unity, Thy members, Thy Body, "will tell forth Thy marvellous works."
What then? "And even unto oldness and old age," I will tell forth Thy wonderful
works: even until the end of the world here shall be the Church. For if She
were not to be here even unto the end of the world; to whom did the Lord say,
"Behold, I am with you always, even unto the consummation of the world "? Why was
it necessary that these things should be spoken in the Scriptures? Because there
were to be enemies of the Christian Faith who would say, "for a short time are
the Christians, hereafter they shall perish, and there shall come back idols,
there shall come back that which was before. How long shall be the
Christians?"[1] " Even unto oldness and old age:" that is, even unto the end of the world
When thou, miserable unbeliever, dost expect Christians to pass away, thou art
passing away thyself without Christians: and Christians even unto the end of the
world shall endure; and as for thee with thine unbelief when thou shalt have
ended thy short life, with what face wilt thou come forth to the Judge, whom
while thou wast living thou didst blaspheme? Therefore "from my youth, and even
until now, and even unto oldness and old age, O Lord, forsake not me." It will
not be, as mine enemies say, even for a time. "Forsake not me, until I tell forth
Thine arm to every generation that is yet to come." And the Arm of the Lord
hath been revealed to whom?[2] The Arm of the Lord is Christ. Do not Thou then
forsake me: let not them rejoice that say, "only for a set time the Christians
are." May there be persons to tell forth Thine arm. To whom? "To every generation
that is yet to come." If then it be to every generation that is yet to come,
it will be even unto the end of the world: for when the world is ended, no
longer any generation will come on.
22. "Thy power and Thy righteousness" (ver. 19). That is, that I may tell
forth to every generation that is yet to come, Thine arm. And what hath Thine
arm effected? This then let me tell forth, that same grace to every generation
succeeding: let me say to every man that is to be born, nothing thou art by
thyself, on God call thou, thine own are sins, merits are God's:[3] punishment to
thee is owing, and when reward shall have come, His own gifts He will crown,
not thy merits. Let me say to every generation that is to come, out of captivity
thou hast come, unto Adam thou didst belong. Let me say this to every
generation that is to come, that there is no strength of mine, no righteousness of mine;
but "Thy strength and Thy righteousness, O God, even unto the most high mighty
works which Thou hast made." "Thy power and Thy righteousness," as far as
what? even unto flesh and blood? Nay, "even unto the most high mighty works which
Thou hast made." For the high places are the heavens, in the high places are the
Angels, Thrones, Dominions, Principalities, Powers: to Thee they owe it that
they are; to Thee they owe it that they live, to Thee they owe it that
righteously they live, to Thee they owe it that blessedly they live. "Thy power and Thy
righteousness," as far as what? "Even unto the most high mighty works which
Thou hast made." Think not that man alone belongeth to the grace of God. What was
Angel before he was made? What is Angel, if He forsake him who hath created?
Therefore "Thy power and Thy justice even unto the most high mighty works which
Thou hast made."
23. And man exalteth himself: and in order that he may belong to the first
captivity, he heareth the serpent suggesting, "Taste, and ye shall be as
Gods."[4] Men as Gods? "O God, who is like unto Thee?" Not any in the pit, not in
Hell, not in earth, not in Heaven, for all things Thou hast made. Why doth the
work strive with the Maker? "O God, who is like unto Thee?" But as for me, saith
miserable Adam, and Adam is[5] every man, while I perversely will to be like
unto Thee, behold what I have become, so that from captivity to Thee I cry out: I
with whom it was well under a good king, have been made captive under my
seducer; and cry out to Thee, because I have fallen from Thee. And whence have I
fallen from Thee? While I perversely seek to be like unto Thee. ...
24. Ill straying, ill presuming, doomed to die by withdrawing from the
path[6] of righteousness: behold he breaketh the commandment, he hath shaken off
from his neck the yoke of discipline, uplifted with high spirit he hath broken
in sunder the reins of guidance: where is he now? Truly captive he crieth, "O
Lord, who is like unto Thee?" I perversely willed to be like unto Thee, and I
have been made like unto a beast! Under Thy dominion, under Thy commandment, I was
indeed like: "But a man in honour set hath not perceived, he hath been
compared to beasts without sense, and hath been made like unto them."(1) Now out of
the likeness of beasts cry though late and say, "O God, who is like unto Thee?"
25. "How great troubles hast Thou shown to me, many and evil!" (ver. 20).
Deservedly, proud servant. For thou hast willed perversely to be like thy God,
who hadst been made after the image of thy Lord.(2) Wouldest thou have it to be
well with thee, when withdrawing from that good? Truly God saith to thee, if
thou withdrawest from Me, and it is well with thee, I am not thy good. Again, if
He is good, and in the highest degree good, and of Himself to Himself good,
and by no foreign good thing good, and is Himself our chief good; by withdrawing
from Him, what wilt thou be but evil? Also if He is Himself our blessedness,
what will there be to one withdrawing from Him, except misery? Return thou then
after misery, and say, "O Lord, who is like unto Thee? How great troubles hast
Thou shown to me, many and evil!"
26. But this was discipline; admonition, not desertion. Lastly, giving
thanks, he saith what? "And being turned Thou hast made me alive, and from the
bottomless places of the earth again Thou hast brought me back." But when before?
What is this "again"? Thou hast fallen from a high place, O man, disobedient
slave, O thou proud against thy Lord, thou hast fallen. There hast come to pass
in thee," every one that exalteth himself shall be humbled:" may there come to
pass in thee, "every one that humbleth himself shall be exalted."(3) Return thou
from the deep. I return, he saith, I return, I acknowledge; "0 God, who is
like unto Thee? How great troubles hast Thou shown to me, many and evil! and being
turned Thou hast made me alive, and from the bottomless places of the earth
again Thou hast brought me back." "We perceive," I hear. Thou hast brought us
back from the bottomless places of the earth, hast brought us back from the depth
and drowning of sin. But why "again"? When had it already been done? Let us go
on, if perchance the latter parts of the Psalm itself do not explain to us the
thing which here we do not yet perceive, namely, why he hath said "again."
Therefore let us hear: "How great troubles Thou hast shown to me, many and evil!
And being turned Thou hast made me alive, and from the bottomless places of the
earth again Thou hast brought me back." What then? "Thou hast multiplied Thy
righteousness, and being turned Thou hast comforted me, and from the bottomless
places of the earth again Thou hast brought roe back" (ver. 21). Behold a second
"again"! If we labour to unravel this "again" when written once, who will be
able to unravel it when doubled? Now "again" itself is a redoubling, and once
more there is written "again." May He be with us from whom is grace, may there be
with us the arm also which we are telling forth to every generation that is to
come: may He be with us Himself, and as with the key of His Cross open to us
the mystery that is locked up. For it was not to no purpose that when He was
crucified the veil of the temple was rent in the midst, but to show that through
His Passion the secret things of all mysteries were opened.(4) May He then
Himself be with men passing over unto Him, be the veil taken away:(5) may our Lord
and Saviour Jesus Christ tell us why such a voice of the Prophet hath been sent
before, "Thou hast shown to me troubles many and evil: and being turned Thou
hast made me alive, and from the bottomless places of the earth again Thou hast
brought me back." Behold this is the first "again" which hath been written. Let
us see what this is, and we shall see why there is a second "again."
27 .... Therein Christ died, wherein thou art to die: and therein Christ
rose again, wherein thou art to rise again. By His example He taught thee what
thou shouldest not fear, for what thou shouldest hope. Thou didst fear death, He
died: thou didst despair of rising again, He rose again. But thou sayest to
me, He rose again, do I by any means rise again? But He rose again in that which
for thee He received of thee. Therefore thy nature in Him hath preceded thee;
and that which was taken of thee, hath gone up before thee: therein therefore
thou also hast ascended. Therefore He ascended first, and we in Him: because that
flesh is of the human race .... Behold one "again." Hear of its being
fulfilled from the Apostle: "If then ye have risen with Christ, the things which are
above seek ye, where Christ is sitting on the right hand of God; the things which
are above mind ye, not the things which are upon the earth."(6) He then hath
gone before: already we also have risen again, but still in hope. Hear the
Apostle Paul saying this same thing: "Even we ourselves groan in ourselves, looking
for the adoption, the redemption of our body." What is it then that Christ hath
granted to thee? Hear that which followeth: "For by hope we are saved: but
hope which is seen is not hope. For that which a man seeth, why doth he hope for?
But if that which we see not we hope for, through patience we wait for it." We
have been brought back therefore again from the bottomless places in hope. Why
again? Because already Christ had gone before. But because we shall rise again
in substance, for now in hope we are living, now after faith we are walking; we
have been brought back from the bottomless places of the earth, by believing
in Him who before us hath risen again from the bottomless place of the earth
....Thou hast: heard one "again," thou hast heard the other: "again;" one "again"
because of Christ going before; and the other, yet however in hope, and a thing
which remaineth to be in substance. "Thou hast multiplied Thy
righteousness,"(1) already in me believing, already in those that, first have risen again in
hope ...."Thou hast multiplied Thy righteousness, and being turned Thou hast
comforted me:" and because of the body to rise again at the end, "even from the
bottomless places of the earth again Thou hast brought me back.
28. "For I will confess to Thee in the vessels of a Psalm Thy truth" (ver.
22). The vessels of a Psalm are a Psaltery. But what is a Psaltery? An
instrument of wood and strings.(2) What doth it signify? There is some difference
between it and a harp: ... there seemeth to be signified by the Psaltery the
Spirit, by the harp the flesh. And because he had spoken of two bringings back of
ours from the bottomless places of the earth, one after the Spirit in hope, the
other after the body in substance; hear thou of these two: "For I will confess to
Thee in the vessels of a Psalm Thy truth." This after the Spirit: concerning
the body what? "I will psalm to Thee on a harp, Holy One of Israel."
29. Again hear this because of that same "again" and "again." "My lips
shall exult when I shall psalm to Thee" (ver. 23). Because lips are wont to be
spoken of both belonging to the inner and to the outward man, it is uncertain in
what sense lips have been used: there followeth therefore, "And my soul which
Thou hast redeemed." Therefore regarding the inward ups having been saved in
hope, brought back from the bottomless places of the earth in faith and love, still
however waiting for the redemption of our body? we say what? Already he hath
said, "And my soul which Thou hast redeemed." But lest thou shouldest think the
soul alone redeemed, wherein now thou hast heard one "again," "but still," he
saith; why still? "but still my tongue also:" therefore now the tongue of the
body: "all day long shall meditate of Thy righteousness" (ver. 24): that is, in
eternity without end. But when shall this be? Hereafter at the end of the world,
at the resurrection of the body and the changing into the Angelic state.
Whence is it proved that this is spoken of the end, "but still my tongue also all
day long shall meditate of Thy righteousness"? "When they shall have been
confounded and shall have blushed, that seek evil things for me." When shall they be
confounded, when shall they blush, save at the end of the world? For in two ways
they shall be confounded, either when they shall believe in Christ, or when
Christ shall have come. For so long as the Church is here, so long as grain
groaneth amid chaff, so long as wheat groaneth amid tares,(4) so long as vessels of
mercy groan amid vessels of wrath made for dishonour,(5) so long as lily
groaneth amid thorns, there will not be wanting enemies to say," When shall he die,
and his name perish?"(6) "Behold there shall come the time when Christians shall
be ended and shall be no more: as they began at a set time, so even unto a
particular time they shall be." But while they are saying these things and without
end(7) are dying, and while the Church is continuing preaching the Arm of the
Lord s to every generation that is to come; there shall come Himself also at
last in His glory,(9) there shall rise again all the dead, each with his cause:
there shall be severed good men to the right hand, but evil men to the left, and
they shall be confounded that did insult, they shall blush that did mock: and
so my tongue after resurrection shall meditate of Thy righteousness, all day
long of Thy praise, "when they shall have been confounded and shall have blushed,
that seek evil things for me."