ST. AUGUSTIN ON THE PSALMS. PSALMS CXLVI TO CL. PRAYER OF ST. AUGUSTIN.
PSALM CXLVI.(4)
1. ... Behold the Psalm soundeth; it is the voice of some one (and that
some one are ye, if ye will), of some one encouraging his soul to praise God, and
saying to himself, "Praise the Lord, O my soul" (ver. 1). For sometimes in the
tribulations and temptations of this present life, whether we will or no, our
soul is troubled; of which troubling he speaketh in another Psalm.(5) But to
remove this troubling, he suggesteth joy; not as yet in reality, but in hope; and
saith to it when troubled and anxious, sad and sorrowing, "Hope in God, for I
will yet confess to Him." ...
2. But who saith it, and to whom saith he it? What shall we say, brethren?
Is it the flesh that saith, "Praise thou the Lord, O my soul"? And can the
flesh suggest good counsel to the soul? However much the flesh be conquered, and
subjected as a servant to us through strength which the Lord imparteth, that it
serve us entirely as a bond slave, enough for us that it hinder us not. ... For
the body, inasmuch as it is the body, is even beneath the soul; and every
soul, however vile, is found more excellent than the most excellent body. And let
not this seem to you to be wonderful, that even any vile and sinful soul is
better than any great and most surpassing body. It is better, not in deserts, but
in nature. The soul indeed is sinful, is stained with certain defilements of
lusts; yet gold, though rusted, is better than the most polished lead. Let your
mind then run over every part of creation, and ye will see that what we are
saying is not incredible, that a soul, however blameable, is yet more praiseworthy
than a praiseworthy body. There are two things, a soul and a body. The soul I
chide, the body I praise: the soul I chide, because it is sinful; the body I
praise, because it is sound. Yet it is in its own kind that I praise the soul, and
in its own kind that I blame the soul: and so in its own kind I praise the
body, or blame it. If you ask me which is better, what I have blamed or what I have
praised, wondrous is the answer thou wilt receive. ... So you speak of the
best horse and the worst man: yet thou preferrest the man thou findest fault with
to the horse thou praisest. ... The nature of the soul is more excellent than
the nature of the body: it surpasseth it by far, it is a thing spiritual,
incorporeal, akin to the substance of God. It is somewhat invisible, it ruleth the
body, moveth the limbs, guideth the senses, prepareth thoughts, putteth forth
actions, taketh in images of countless things; who is there, in short, beloved
brethren, who may suffice for the praises of the soul? And yet such is the grace
given to it, that this man saith, "Praise the Lord, O my soul." ... It is not
the flesh that saith it. Let the body be angel-like, still it is inferior to the
soul, it cannot give advice to its superior. The flesh when duly obedient is
the handmaid of the soul: the soul rules, the body obeys; the soul commands, the
body performs; how then can the flesh give this advice to the soul? Is it then
perchance the soul herself, who saith to herself, and in a manner commandeth
herself, and exhorteth and asketh herself? For through certain passions in one
part of her nature she wavered; but in another part, which they call the
reasonable mind, the wisdom whereby she thinks, clinging to God, and now sighing
towards Him, she perceives that certain inferior parts of her are troubled by
worldly emotions, and by a certain excitement of earthly desires, betake them to
outward things, leaving God who is within; so she recalleth herself from things
outward to inward, from lower to higher, and says, "Praise the Lord, O my soul."
... The soul itself giveth itself counsel from the light of God by the
reasonable mind, whereby it conceiveth the wisdom fixed in the everlasting nature of its
Author. It readeth there of somewhat to be feared, to be praised, to be loved,
to be longed for, and sought after: as yet it graspeth it not, it
comprehendeth it not; it is, as it were, dazzled with brightness; it has not strength to
abide there. Therefore it gathers itself, as it were, into a sound state, and
saith, "Praise the Lord, O my soul." ... And then the soul, weighed down, as it
were, and unable to stand up as is fitting, answereth the mind, "I will praise
the Lord in my life" (ver. 2). What is, "in my life"? Because now I am in my
death. Therefore first encourage thyself, and say, "Praise the Lord, O my soul."
Thy soul answereth thee, I do praise so far as I can, slightly, poorly, weakly.
Wherefore? Because, "while we are in the body, we are absent from the Lord."(1)
...
3. "In my life." Now what has it? It might answer thee, "My death."
Whence, "My death"? because I am absent from the Lord. For if to cling to Him is
life, to depart from Him is death. But what comforteth thee? Hope. Now thou livest
in hope: in hope praise, in hope sing. Thy death is from the sadness of this
life, thou livest in hope of a future life. And how wilt thou praise thy Lord? "I
will sing unto my God, as long as I have my being." What sort of praise is
this, "I will sing unto my God as long as I have being"? Behold, my brethren, what
sort of being this will be; where there will be everlasting praise, there will
be also everlasting being. Behold, now thou hast being: dost thou sing unto
God as long as thou hast being? Behold, thou wast singing, and hast turned
thyself away to some business, thou singest no longer, yet thou hast being: thou hast
being, yet thou singest not. It may be also thy desire turneth thee to
somewhat; not only dost thou not sing, but thou even offendest His ears, yet thou hast
being. What praise will that be, when thou praisest as long as thou bast
being? But what meaneth, "as long as I have being"? Will there be any time when he
will not be? Nay, rather, that "long" will be everlasting, and therefore it will
be truly "long." For whatever hath end in time, however prolonged it is, is
yet not "long." ...
4. "Put not your trust in princes" (ver. 3). Brethren, here we receive a
mighty task; it is a voice from heaven, from above it soundeth to us. For now
through some kind of weakness the soul of man, whensoever it is in tribulation
here, despaireth of God, and chooseth to rely on man. Let it be said to one
when set in some affliction, "There is a great man, by whom thou mayest be set
free;" he smileth, he rejoiceth, he is lifted up. But if it is said to him, "God
freeth thee," he is chilled, so to speak, by despair. The aid of a mortal is
promised, and thou rejoicest; the aid of the Immortal is promised, and art thou
sad? It is promised thee that thou shalt be freed by one who needeth to be freed
with thee, and thou exultest, as at some great aid: thou art promised that
Liberator, who needeth none to free Him, and thou despairest, as though it were but
a fable. Woe to such thoughts: they wander far; truly there is sad and great
death in them. Approach, begin to long, begin to seek and to know Him by whom
thou wast made. For He will not leave His work, if He be not left by His work.
5. ... "His breath shall go forth, and he shall return to his earth: in
that day shall all his thoughts perish" (ver. 4). Where is swelling? where is
pride? where is boasting? But perhaps he will have passed to a good place, if
indeed he have passed. For I know not whither he who spake thus hath passed. For he
spake in pride; and I know not whither such men pass, save that I look into
another Psalm, and see that their passage is an evil one. "I beheld the wicked
lifted up above the cedars of Libanus, and I passed by, and, lo, he was not; and
I sought him, and his place was not found."(1) The good man, who passed by, and
found not the wicked, reached a place where the wicked is not. Wherefore,
brethren, let us all listen: brethren, beloved of God, let us all listen; in
whatsoever tribulation, in whatsoever longing for the heavenly gift, "let us not
trust in princes, nor in sons of men, in whom is no salvation." All this is mortal,
fleeting, perishable.
What then must we do, if we are not to hope in sons of men, nor in
princes? What must we do? "Blessed is he whose Helper is the God of Jacob" (ver. 5):
not this man or that man; not this angel or that angel; but," blessed is he
whose Helper is the God of Jacob:" for to Jacob also so great an Helper was He,
that of Jacob He made him Israel. O mighty help! now he is Israel, "seeing God."
While then thou art placed here, and a wanderer not yet seeing God, if thou hast
the God of Jacob for thy Helper, from Jacob thou wilt become Israel, and wilt
be "seeing God," and all toil and all groans shall come to an end, gnawing
cares shall cease, happy praises shall succeed. "Blessed is he whose Helper is the
God of Jacob;" of this Jacob. Wherefore is he happy? Meanwhile, while yet
groaning in this life, "his hope is in the Lord his God." ... Who is this, "Lord his
God"? ... "To us there is one God, the Father, of whom are all things, and one
Lord Jesus Christ, through whom are all things."(2) Therefore let Him be thy
hope, even the Lord thy God; in Him let thy hope be. His hope too is in the lord
his god, who worshippeth Saturn; his hope is in the lord his god, who
worshippeth Neptune or Mercury; yea more, I add, who worshippeth his belly, of whom is
said, "whose god is their belly."(3) The one is the god of the one, the other
of the other. Who is this "blessed" one? for "his hope is in the Lord his God."
But who is He? "Who made heaven and earth, the sea, and all that is in them"
(ver. 6). My brethren, we have a great God; let us bless His holy Name, that He
hath deigned to make us His possession. As yet thou seest not God; thou canst
not fully love what as yet thou seest not. All that thou seest, He hath made.
Thou admirest the world; why not the Maker of the world? Thou lookest up to the
heavens, and art amazed: thou considerest the whole earth, and tremblest; when
canst thou contain in thy thought the vastness of the sea? Look at the countless
number of the stars, look at all the many kind of seeds, all the different
sorts of animals, all that swimmeth in the water, creepeth on the earth, flieth in
the sky, hovereth in the air; how great are all these, how beautiful, how
fair, how amazing! Behold, He who made all these, is thy God. Put thy hope in Him,
that thou mayest be happy. "His hope is in the Lord his God." Observe, my
brethren, the mighty God, the good God, who maketh all these things. ... If he
mentioned these things only, perhaps thou wouldest answer me, "God, who made heaven
and earth and sea, is a great God: but doth He think of me ?" It would be said
to thee, "He made thee." How so? am I heaven, or am I earth, or am I sea?
Surely it is plain; I am neither heaven, nor earth, nor sea: yet I am on earth. At
least thou grantest me this, that thou art on earth. Hear then, that God made
not only heaven and earth and sea: for He "made heaven and earth and sea, and all
that is in them." If then He made all that is in them, He made thee also. It
is too little to say, thee; the sparrow, the locust, the worm, none of these did
He not make, and He careth for all. His care refers not to His commandment,
for this commandment He gave to man alone. ... As regards then the tenor of the
commandment, "God doth not take care for oxen:"(4) as regards His providential
care of the universe, whereby He created all things, and ruleth the world,
"Thou, Lord, shall save both man and beast." Here perhaps some one may say to me,
"God careth not for oxen," comes from the New Testament: "Thou, Lord, shalt save
both man and beast," is from the Old Testament. There are some who find fault
and say, that these two Testaments agree not with one another. ... Let us hear
the Lord Himself, the Chief and Master of the Apostles: "Consider," saith He,
"the fowls of the air; they sow not, neither do they reap, nor gather into
barns, and your heavenly Father feedeth them."(5) Therefore even beside men, these
animals are objects of care to God, to be fed, not to receive a law. As far
then as regards giving a law, "God careth not for oxen:" as regards creating,
feeding, governing, ruling, all things have to do with God. "Are not two sparrows
sold for one farthing?" saith our Lord Jesus Christ, "and one of them shall not
fall to the ground without the will of your Father: how much better are ye than
they."(6) Perhaps thou sayest, God counteth me not in this great multitude.
There follows here a wondrous passage in the Gospel: "the hairs of your head are
all numbered."(7)
6. Who keepeth truth for ever." What "truth for ever"? what "truth" doth
He "keeps" and wherein doth "He keep it for ever"? "Who executeth judgment for
them that suffer wrong" (ver. 7). He avengeth them that suffer wrong. There
cometh at once to thee the voice of the Apostle: "now therefore there is altogether
a fault among you, that ye go to law one with another: why do ye not rather
suffer wrong?"(1) He urged thee not to suffer annoyance, but to suffer wrong: for
not every annoyance is wrong. For whatever thou sufferest lawfully is not a
wrong; lest perchance thou shouldest say, I also am among those who have suffered
wrong, for I have suffered such a thing in such a place, and such a thing for
such a reason. Consider whether thou hast suffered a wrong. Robbers suffer many
things, but they suffer no wrong. Wicked men, evil doers, house-breakers,
adulterers, seducers, all these suffer many evils, yet is there no wrong. It is one
thing to suffer wrong; it is another to suffer tribulation, or penalty, or
annoyance, or punishment. Consider where thou art; see what thou hast done; see
why thou art suffering; and then thou seest what thou art suffering. Right and
wrong are contraries. Right is what is just. For not all that is called right, is
right. What if a man lay down for you unjust right? nor indeed is it to be
called right, if it is unjust. That is true right, which is also just. Consider
what thou hast done, not what thou art suffering. If thou hast done right, thou
art suffering wrong; if thou hast done wrong, thou art suffering right. ...
7. "Who giveth food to the hungry." Behold, from thee I look for nothing:
"God giveth food to the hungry." Who are "the hungry"? All. What is, all? To
all things that have life, to all men He giveth food: doth He not reserve some
food for His beloved? If they have another kind of hunger, they have also another
kind of food. Let us first enquire what their hunger is, and then we shall
find their food. "Blessed are they that hunger and thirst after righteousness, for
they shall be filled."(2) We ought to be God's hungry ones. ... "The Lord
looseth them that are lettered; the Lord lifteth up them that are dashed down; the
Lord maketh wise them that are blind" (ver. 8). Perfectly hath he by this last
sentence explained to us all the preceding ones: lest perchance, when he had
said, "the Lord looseth them that are fettered," we should refer it to those
fettered ones, who for some crime are bound in irons by their masters: and in that
he said, "He lifteth up them that are dashed down," there should occur to our
minds some one stumbling or falling, or thrown from a horse. There is another
kind of fall, there are other kinds of fetters, just as there is other darkness
and other light. Whereas he said, "He maketh the blind wise;" he would not say,
He enlightened the blind, lest thou shouldest understand this also in reference
to the flesh, as the man was enlightened by the Lord, when He anointed his
eyes with clay made with spittle, and so healed him: that thou mightest not look
for anything of this sort, when He is speaking of spiritual things, he pointeth
to a sort of light of wisdom, wherewith the blind are enlightened. Therefore in
the same way as the blind are enlightened with the light of wisdom, so are the
fettered set free, and those who are dashed down are lifted up. Whereby then
have we been fettered? whereby dashed down? Our body was once an ornament to us:
now, we have sinned, and thereby have had fetters put on us. What are our
fetters? Our mortality. ... "The Lord loveth the righteous." And who are the
"righteous"? How far are they righteous now? Just as thou hast; "the Lord, guardeth
proselytes" (ver. 9). "Proselytes" are strangers. Every Church of the Gentiles
is a stranger. For it cometh in to the Fathers, not sprung of their flesh, but
their daughter by imitating them. Yet the Lord, not any man, guardeth them.
"The orphan and widow He will take up." Let none think that He taketh up the
orphan for his inheritance, or the widow for any business of hers. True, God doth
help them; and in all the duties of the human race, he doeth a good work, who
taketh care of an orphan, who abandoneth not a widow: but in a certain way we are
all orphans, not because our Father is dead, but because He is absent.(3). ...
8. "And the way of sinners He shall root out." What is, "the way of
sinners"? To mock at these things which we say. "Who is an orphan, who a widow? What
kingdom of heaven, what punishment of hell is there? These are fables of the
Christians. To what I see, to that will I live: "let us eat and drink, for
tomorrow we die."(4) Beware lest such men persuade you of aught: let them not enter
through your ears into your heart; let them find thorns in your ears: let him,
who seeketh to enter thus, go away pierced: for "evil communications corrupt
good manners."(5) But here perhaps thou wilt say, "Wherefore then are they
prosperous? Behold, they worship not God, and commit every kind of evil daily: yet
they abound in those things, through want of which I toil." Be not envious against
sinners. What they receive, thou seest; what is in store for them, seest thou
not? ... Wilt thou not believe even the Lord thy God, who saith, "Broad and
spacious is the way that leadeth to destruction, and many there be that walk by
it"?(6) This "way the Lord will root out." And, when "the way of sinners" has
been "rooted out," what remaineth for us? "Come, ye blessed of My father, enjoy
the Kingdom;"(1) "The Lord shall reign for ever" (ver. 10). "O Sion, thy God"
shall reign for ever; surely thy God will not reign without thee. "For generation
and generation." He hath said it twice, because he could not say it for ever.
And think not that eternity is bounded by finite words. The word eternity
consists of four syllables; in itself it is without end. It could not be commended to
thee, save thus," for generation and generation." Too little hath he said: if
he spoke it all day long, it were too narrow: if he spoke it all his life, must
he not at length hold his peace? Love eternity: without end shalt thou reign,
if Christ be thine End, with whom thou shalt reign for ever and ever. Amen.
PSALM CXLVII.(2)
1. It is said to us," Praise the Lord" (ver. 1). This is said to all
nations, not to us alone. And these words, sounded forth through separate places by
the Readers, each Church heareth separately; but the one same Voice of God
proclaimeth unto all, that we praise Him. And as though we asked wherefore we ought
to praise the Lord, behold what reason he hath brought forward: "Praise the
Lord," he saith, "for a Psalm is good." Is this all the reward of them that
praise? ... The "Psalm "is praise of God. This then he saith, "Praise the Lord,
for it is good to praise the Lord." Let us not thus pass over the praise of the
Lord. It is spoken, and hath passed: it is done, and we are silent: we have
praised, and then rested; we have sung, and then rested. We go forth to some
business which awaits us, and when other employments have found us, shall the praise
of God cease in us? Not so: thy tongue praiseth but for a while, let thy life
ever praise. Thus then "a Psalm is good."
2. For a "Psalm" is a song, not any kind of song, but a song to a
psaltery. A psaltery is a kind of instrument of music, like the lyre and the harp, and
such kinds of instruments, which were invented for music. He therefore who
singeth Psalms, not only singeth with his voice, but with a certain instrument
besides, which is called a psaltery, he accompanieth his voice with his hands. Wilt
thou then sing a Psalm? Let not thy voice alone sound the praises of God; but
let thy works also be in harmony with thy voice. ... To please then the ear,
sing with thy voice; but with thy heart be not silent, with thy life be not
still. Thou devisest no fraud in thy heart: thou singest a Psalm to God. When thou
eatest and drinkest, sing a Psalm: not by intermingling sweet sounds suited to
the ear, but by eating and drinking moderately, frugally, temperarely: for thus
saith the Apostle, "whether ye eat or drink, or whatever ye do, do all to the
glory of God."(3) ... If by immoderate voracity thou exceedest the due bounds
of nature, and gluttest thyself in excess of wine, however great praises of God
thy tongue sound, yet thy life blasphemeth Him. After food and drink thou liest
down to sleep: in thy bed neither commit any pollution, nor go beyond the
license given by the law of God: let thy marriage bed be kept chaste with thy wife:
and if thou desire to beget children, yet let there not be unbridled
sensuality of lust: in thy bed give honour to thy wife,(4) for ye are both members of
Christ, both made by Him, both renewed by His Blood: so doing thou praisest God,
nor will thy praise be altogether silent. What, when sleep has come over thee?
Let not an evil conscience rouse thee from rest: so doth the innocence of thy
sleep praise God. ...
3. "Let praises be pleasant to our God." How? If He be praised by our good
lives. Hear that then praise will be pleasant to Him. In another place it is
said, "Praise is not seemly in the mouth of a sinner."(5) If then in the mouth
of a sinner praise is not seemly, neither is it pleasant, for that only is
pleasant which is seemly. ... For praise may be pleasant to a man, when he heareth
one praising with neat and clever sentiments, and with a sweet voice; but "let
praise be pleasant to our God," whose ears are open not to the mouth, but to
the heart; not to the tongue, but to the life of him that praiseth.
4. Who is "our God," that praise should be pleasant to Him? He maketh
Himself sweet to us, He commendeth Himself to us; thanks to His condescension. ...
"But God commendeth His love to us" ... "in that, while we were yet sinners,
Christ died for us."(6) ... Let us see whether it be the commendation which the
Apostle speaketh of, that Christ died for the sinners and ungodly: "the Lord
who buildeth up Jerusalem, and gathereth the dispersions of Israel" (ver. 2).
For the people of Jerusalem are the people of Israel. It is Jerusalem "eternal in
the heavens," whereof the Angels are citizens also. ... All the citizens
then of that city, through "seeing God," rejoice in that great and wide and
heavenly city; they gaze upon God Himself. But we are wanderers from that city,
driven out by sin, that we should not remain there; weighed down by mortality, that
we should not return thither. God looked back on our wandering, and He who
"buildeth up Jerusalem," restored the part that had fallen. How restored He the
part that bad fallen? ... He sent then to our captive estate His Son as a
Redeemer. Take with Thee, said He, a bag, bear therein the price of the captives. For
He put on Him our mortal flesh, and therein was the Blood, by the shedding of
which we were to be redeemed. With that Blood He "gathered the dispersions of
Israel." And if He gathered them that before were dispersed, how must we strive
that they be gathered who now are dispersed? If the dispersed have been gathered,
that in the Hand of the Builder they might be fashioned into the building, how
should they be gathered who through disquiet have fallen from the Hand of the
Builder? Behold whom we praise; behold to whom we owe praise all our life long.
5. How doth He gather? What doeth He in order to gather? "Who healeth the
bruised in heart" (ver. 3). Behold the way in which the dispersions of Israel
are gathered, by the healing of the bruised in heart. They who are not of a
bruised heart, are not healed. What is to bruise the heart? Let it be known,
brethren, let it be done, that ye may be able to be healed. For it is told in many
other places of Scripture; ... "the sacrifice of God is a troubled spirit, a
bruised and contrite heart God will not despise." He healeth then the bruised in
heart, for He draweth nigh unto them to heal them; as is said in another place,
"the Lord is nigh unto them who have bruised their heart."(1) Who are they that
have "bruised their heart"? The humble. Who are they that have not "bruised
their heart"? The proud. The bruised heart shall be healed, the puffed up heart
shall be dashed down. For for this purpose perhaps is it dashed down, that being
bruised it may be healed. Let not our heart then, brethren, desire to be set
upright, before it be upright. It is ill for that to be uplifted which is not
first corrected. ...
6. What are the means whereby He "bindeth up their bruises"? Just as
physicians bind up fractures. For sometimes (observe this, beloved; it is well known
to those who have observed it, or have heard it from physicians), sometimes
when limbs are sound, but are crooked and distorted, physicians break them in
order to set them straight, and make a new wound, because the soundness which was
distorted was amiss. ...
7. What are these means whereby He bindeth? The sacraments of this present
life, whereby in the mean time we obtain our comfort: and all the words we
speak to you, words which sound and pass away, all that is done in the Church in
this present time, are the means whereby "He bindeth up our bruises." For just
as, when the limb has become perfectly sound, the physician taketh off the
bandage; so in our own city Jerusalem, when we shall have been made equal to the
Angels, think ye that we shall receive there, what we have received here? Will it
be needful then that the Gospel be read to us, that our faith may abide? or
that hands be laid upon us by any Bishop? All these are means of binding up
fractures; when we have attained perfect soundness, they will be taken off; but we
should never attain it, if they were not bound up.
8. "Who telleth the number of the stars, and calleth them all by their
names" (ver. 4). What great matter is it for God to "tell the number of the
stars"! Men even have endeavoured to do this; whether they have been able to achieve
it, is their concern; they would not however attempt it, did they not think
that they should achieve it. Let us leave alone what they can do, and how far they
have attained; for God I think it no great matter to count all the stars. Or
doth He perhaps go over the number, lest He should forget it? Is it any great
thing for God to number the stars, by whom "the very hairs of your head are
numbered"?(2) The stars are certain lights in the Church comforting our
night;all--of whom the Apostle saith, "In the didst of a crooked and perverse generation,
among whom ye shine as lights in the world, holding the Word of life."(3) These
stars God counteth; all who shall reign with Him, all who are to be gathered
into the Body of His only-begotten Son, He hath counted, and still counteth
them. Whoso is unworthy, is not even counted. Many too have believed, or rather
may, with a kind of shadowy appearance of faith, have attached themselves to His
people: yet He knoweth what He counteth, what He winnoweth away. For so great is
the height of the Gospel, that it hath come to pass as was said, "I have
declared, and have spoken: they are multiplied above number:"(4) there are then
among the people certain supernumeraries, so to speak. What do I mean by
supernumeraries? More than will be there. Within these walls are more than will be in the
kingdom of God, in the heavenly Jerusalem; these are above the number. Let
each one of you consider whether he shineth in darkness, whether he refuseth to be
led astray by the dark iniquity of the world; if he be not led astray, nor
conquered, he will be, as it were, a star, which God already humbereth. "And
calling them all by their names," he saith. Herein is our whole reward. We may have
certain names with God, that God know our names, this we ought to wish, for
this to act, for this to busy ourselves, as far as we are able; not to rejoice in
other things, not even in certain spiritual gifts. ... When the disciples
returned from their mission exulting, and saying, "Lord, even the devils are
subject unto us in Thy Name"(1)--then He (knowing that many would say, "have we not
in Thy Name cast out devils?" to whom He should say, "I know you not") said,
"In this rejoice not, that the devils are subject unto you; but rather rejoice,
because your names are written in heaven."(2)
9. "Great is our Lord" (ver. 5). The Psalmist is filled with joy, he hath
poured out his words wonderfully: yet somewhat he was unable to speak, and how
availed he to think on it? "And great is His power, and of His understanding is
no numbering" He who "numbereth the stars," Himself cannot be numbered. Who
can expound this? who can worthily even imagine what is meant by, "and of His
understanding is no number"? ... Whatsoever then that is infinite this world
containeth, though it be infinite to man, yet is not to God: too little is it to
say, to God: even by the angels it is numbered. His understanding surpasses all
calculators; it cannot be counted by us. Numbers themselves who numbereth? What
than is there with God? wherewith made He all things, and where made He all
things, to whom it is said, "Thou hast arrayed all things in measure, number, and
weight"?(3) Or who can number, or measure, or weigh, measure and number and
weight themselves, wherein God hath ordered all things? Therefore, "of His
understanding is no number." Let human voices be hushed, human thoughts still: let them
not stretch themselves out to incomprehensible things, as though they could
comprehend them, but as though they were to partake of them, for partakers we
shall be. ... Partakers then we shall be: let none doubt it: Scripture saith it.
And of what shall we be partakers, as though these were parts in God, as though
God were divided into parts? Who then can explain how many become partakers of
one single substance? Require not then that which I think ye see cannot fitly
be said: but return to the healing of the Saviour, bruise your heart. He will
guide it, He will bind it up where it is broken, He will make it perfectly sound;
and then those things will not be impossible with us, which now are
impossible. For it is good that he confess weakness, who desireth to attain to the divine
nature.
10. "The Lord taketh up the gentle" (ver. 6). For example; thou
understandest not, thou failest to understand, canst not attain: honour God's Scripture,
honour God's Word, though it be not plain: in reverence wait for understanding.
Be not wanton to accuse either the obscurity or seeming contradiction of
Scripture. There is nothing in it contradictory: somewhat there is which is obscure,
not in order that it may be denied thee, but that it may exercise him that
shall afterward receive it. When then it is obscure, that is the Physician's
doing, that thou mayest knock. He willed that thou shouldest be exercised in
knocking; He willed it, that He might open to thee when thou knockest. By knocking
thou shalt be exercised; exercised, thou shalt be enlarged; enlarged, thou shall
contain what is given. Be not then indignant for that it is shut; be mild, be
gentle. Kick not against what is dark, nor say, It were better said, if it were
said thus. For how canst thou thus say, or judge how it is expedient it be said?
It is said as it is expedient it be said. Let not the sick man seek to amend
his remedies: the Physician knoweth how to temper them: believe Him who careth
for thee. Therefore what cometh next? ... "The Lord taketh up the gentle, but
humbleth the sinners even to the ground," he intended a certain sort of sinners
to be understood, from the gentleness mentioned first. By sinners then in this
place, we understand the fierce, and those who are not gentle. Wherefore doth He
"humble them even to the l earth"? They carp at objects of understanding, they
shall perceive only things earthly.(4)
11. "Begin to the Lord in confession" (ver. 7). Begin with this, if thou
wouldest arrive at a clear understanding of the truth. If thou wilt be brought
from the road of faith to the profession of the reality, "begin in confession."
First accuse thyself: accuse thyself, praise God. What after confession ? Let
good works follow. "Sing unto our God upon the harp." What is, "Upon the harp"?
As I have already explained, just like the Psalm upon the psaltery, so also is
the "harp:" not with voice only, but with works.
12. ... "Who covereth the heaven with clouds, who prepareth rain for the
earth" (ver. 8). Now thou art alarmed, because thou canst not see the heaven:
when it hath rained thou shalt gather fruit, and shalt see clear sky. Perhaps our
God hath done this. For had we not the obscurity of Scripture as an occasion,
we should not say to you those things wherein ye rejoice. This then perhaps is
the rain whereat ye rejoice. It would not be possible for it to be expressed to
you by our tongue, were it not that God covereth with clouds of figures the
heaven of the Scriptures. For this purpose willed He that the words of the
Prophets should be obscure, that the servants of God might afterwards have that by
interpreting which they might flow over the ears and hearts of men, that they
might receive from the clouds of God the fatness of spiritual joy. "Who maketh
grass to grow upon the mountains, and herb for the service of men." Behold the
fruit of the rain. "Who maketh," saith he, "grass to grow upon the mountains."
Doth it not also grow upon the low ground? Yes, but it is a great thing that it
groweth "on the mountains." ... For nothing could be more barren than the hard
mountains. "And herb for the service of men." What "service"? Listen to Paul
himself. "And ourselves," saith he, "your servants for Jesus Christ's sake."(1) He
who said," If we have sown unto you spiritual things, is it a great thing if we
reap your carnal things?" yet said, that he was a "servant." For we are your
servants, brethren. Let none of us speak of himself, as though he were greater
than you. We shall be greater if we are more humble. "But whosoever will be
great among you" (it is the Lord's saying), "shall be your servant."(2) Paul the
Apostle, indeed, living by his own labour, refused even to receive "the grass of
the mountains;" he chose to want; nevertheless, the mountains gave "grass."
Because he chose not to receive, ought the mountains therefore not to give, and so
to remain barren? Fruit is due to the rain, food is due to the servant, as the
Lord saith, "Eat such things as they give you:" and that they should not think
that they gave aught of their own, He added, "for the labourer is worthy of
his hire."(3)
13. ... Just now has been read, "Give to every one that asketh of
thee;"(4) and in another place Scripture s saith, "Let alms sweat in thy hand, till
thou findest a righteous man to whom to give it." One there is who seeketh thee,
another thou oughtest to seek. Leave not indeed him who seeketh thee empty, for,
"give to every one that asketh of thee;" yet still there is another whom thou
oughtest to seek; "find a righteous man to whom to give it." Ye will never do
this, unless ye have somewhat set aside from your substance, each what pleaseth
him according to the needs of his family, as a sort of debt to be paid to the
treasury. If Christ have not a state(6) of His own, neither hath He a treasury?
. . . Cut off then and prune off some fixed s sum either from thy yearly
profits or thy daily gains, else thou seemest as it were to give of thy capital, and
thy hand must needs hesitate, when thou puttest it forth to that which thou
hast not vowed. Cut off some part of thy income; a tenth if thou choosest, though
that is but little. For it is said that the Pharisees gave a tenth; "I fast
twice in the week, I give tithes of all that I possess."(9) And what saith the
Lord? "Except your righteousness exceed the righteousness of the Scribes and
Pharisees, ye shall not enter into the kingdom of heaven."(10) He whose
righteousness thou oughtest to exceed, giveth a tenth: thou givest not even a thousandth.
How wilt thou surpass him whom thou matchest not? "Who prepareth rain for the
earth."
14. "And giveth unto the cattle their food" (ver. 9). These are the cattle
he meaneth, even God's flocks. God defraudeth not His flock of their food
through men, for whose "service He maketh the grass to grow." "And to the young of
the ravens that call upon Him." Shall we perchance think this, that the ravens
call upon God to give them their food? Think not that the unreasoning creature
calls upon God: no creature knows how to call upon God, save the reasonable
alone. Consider it as spoken in a figure, lest thou think, as some evil men say,
that the souls of men migrate into cattle, dogs, swine, ravens. Give this no
place in your hearts or in your faith. The soul of man is made after the image of
God: He will not give His image to dog or swine. Who are "the young of the ,
ravens"? The Israelites used to say that they alone were righteous, because to
them the Law had been given: all other men of every nation they used to call
sinners. And in truth all nations were given up to sin, to idolatry, to the worship
of stones and stocks: but did they continue so? Although the ravens
themselves, our fathers, did not, yet we, "the young of the ravens," do call upon God." .
. . For "the young of the ravens," who seemed to worship the images of their
forefathers, have advanced, and turned to God. And now thou hearest "the young
of the ravens" calling upon the one God. What then? Sayest thou to "the young of
the ravens, "hast thou left thy father?" Plainly I have, saith he; for he is a
raven who calls not upon God.I, "the young of the raven," do call upon God.
15. "In the power of an horse He will not take pleasure" (ver. 10). The
power "of an horse" is pride. For the horse seemeth adapted as it were to bear a
man aloft, that he may be more uplifted as he goes. And in truth he has a neck
which typifieth a sort of pride. Let not men exalt themselves upon their worth,
let them not think themselves uplifted by their distinctions; let them beware
test they be thrown by an untamed horse.(1)..."Nor in the tabernacle of a man
will He delight." For the tabernacle of the Lord is the Holy Church spread
throughout the whole world. Heretics, separating themselves from the Church's
tabernacles, have set up tabernacles for themselves. For if perchance it be the lot
of any, who is good and pious, who confesseth his own weakness, who is "the
young of a raven that calleth on God," not to enjoy worldly distinction, he goeth
not out of the Church, he setteth not up for himself a tent outside the Church,
wherein God will not delight. But what saith he? "I have chosen to be cast away
in the house of God, rather than to dwell in the tents of sinners."(2)
16. But what addeth he? "The Lord will delight in them that fear Him, and
in them that hope in His mercy" (ver. 11). A robber is feared, and a wild beast
is feared, and an unjust and powerful man is much feared. "The Lord will
delight in them that hope in His mercy." Behold, Judas, who betrayed our Lord,
feared, but he did not hope in His mercy. ... It is well indeed that thou hast
feared, but only if thou trustedst in His mercy, whom thou hast feared. He in
despair "went and hanged himself." In such wise then fear the Lord, that thou trust
in His mercy. ...
17. "Praise in unison, O Jerusalem, thy God" (ver. 12). Abiding yet in
captivity, they behold those flocks, or rather, the one flock of all its citizens,
gathered from all sides into that city; they see the joy of the mass, now
after threshings and winnowings placed in the garner, fearing nothing, suffering no
toil nor trouble; and, as yet abiding here, in the midst of the threshing they
send forward their joy of hope, and pant for it, joining as it were their
hearts to the Angels of God, and to that people which shall abide with them in joy
for ever. For what wilt thou then do, O Jerusalem? Surely toil and groaning
will pass away. What wilt thou do? wilt thou plough, or sow, or plant vines, or
make voyages, or trade? What wilt thou do? Will it still be thy duty to be
engaged in the works thou now doest, good though they are, and spring from mercy?
Consider thy numbers, consider on all sides thy company: see whether any hungers,
for thee to give bread to; see whether any thirsts, for thee to give a cup of
cold water to; see whether any is a stranger, for thee to take in; see whether
any is sick, for thee to visit; see whether any is at strife, for thee to
reconcile him; see whether any is dying, for thee to bury him. What then wilt thou
do? "Praise in unison, O Jerusalem, thy God." Behold, this is thy business. As is
wont to be said in inscriptions, "Use it and be happy."(3)
18. Be ye Jerusalem; remember of whom it is said, "Lord, in Thy city their
image Thou shall bring to nought."(4) These are they who now rejoice in such
pomps; among them are they who have not come hither to-day because there is a
show. To whom is it a gift?(5) to whom is it a loss? or why is it a gift? why is
it a loss? For not they only who exhibit such shows are smitten with loss, but
with much greater loss are they smitten who delight in gazing on them. The
former have their chest drained of its gold, the latter have their breast robbed of
the riches of righteousness. Most of the exhibiters of shows have to mourn for
selling their estates; how ought the sinners to mourn, for losing their souls:
Was it then for this that the Lord cried out on the Lord's Day, "Watch ye,"
that to-day men should watch in this way. I beseech you, ye citizens of
Jerusalem, I beseech you by the peace of Jerusalem, by the Redeemer, the Builder, the
Ruler of Jerusalem, that ye address your prayers to God for them. May they see,
may they feel, that they are trifling; and, intent as they are on the sights
which please them, may at length look on themselves, and be displeased. For in
many we rejoice that this has already been done: and once we too sat there and
were mad: and how many think we now sit there, who shall yet be, not only
Christians, but also Bishops! From what is past, we conjecture what is to be: from what
has already been done, we announce beforehand what God will do. Let your
prayers be wakeful, ye groan not for nothing. Certainly they who have already
escaped, praying for those who are still in danger, because they too having been
among those in danger, are heard; and God shall drag His people out of the
captivity of Babylon; by all means He shall redeem and deliver them, and the number of
the saints who bear the image of God shall be perfected. ... "Praise in
unison," because thou consistest of many: "praise," because thou hast been made
one.(6) "We being many," saith the Apostle, "are one in Christ."(7) As then we are
many, "we praise in unison;" as we are one, we "praise." The same are many and
one, because He in whom they are one(6) is ever One.(8)
19. Wherefore, saith this Jerusalem, do I praise m unison the Lord, and,
as Sion, praise my God? Jerusalem is the same as Sion. For different reasons has
it the two names. Jerusalem meaneth "visions of peace;" Sion meaneth
"watching."(1) See whether these words do not sound like sights;(2) that the Gentiles
may not think that they have sights and we haste none. Sometimes after the
theatre or amphitheatre breaks up, when the crowd of lost ones begins to be vomited
forth from that den, sometimes, retaining in their minds images of their vain
amusements, and feeding their memory with things not only useless but even
hurtful, rejoicing in them as if they were sweet, while they are really deadly; they
see often, it may be, the servants of God pass by, they recognise them by their
garb or headdress, or they know them by sight,(3) and they say to one another,
or inwardly, "Wretched people, how much they lose!" Brethren, let us return
their good will (for they do mean it well) with prayers to the Lord. They wish
us well; but "he that loveth iniquity, hateth his own soul."(4) If he hateth his
own soul, how shall he love my soul? Yet with a perverse, and empty, and vain
good will, if indeed it may be called good will, they grieve that we lose what
they love: let us pray that they lose not what we love. Behold of what
character that Jerusalem is to be which he exhorteth to praise, or rather foreseeth
will praise. For the praises of that city, when we shall see and love and praise,
will not need to be urged on and stirred up by the voice of prophecy; but the
Prophets now say this, to drink in as far as while they remain in this flesh
they can, the future joys of the blessed, and then giving them forth into our
ears, to arouse in us love of that city. Let us burn with longing, let us not be
slothful in spirit. "Praise thy God, O Sion."
20. He saith, "He hath made strong the bars of thy gates" (ver. 13). The
making bars strong is not for open gates, but shut ones, wherefore most
manuscripts read, "He hath made strong the bolts s of thy gates." Observe, beloved. He
biddeth Jerusalem when closed in to praise the Lord. We praise in unison now,
we praise now; but it is amid offences. Many where we wish not, enter in: many
though we wish it not, go out: therefore offences are frequent. "And because
iniquity hath abounded," saith the Truth," the love of many waxeth cold:"(6)
because men come in whom we cannot discern, because men go out whom we cannot
retain. Wherefore is this? Because not yet is there perfection, not yet is there the
bliss that shall be. Wherefore is this? Because as yet it is the
threshing-floor, not yet the garner. What therefore will be then, save no fear that aught of
this kind will happen? He said not only, He hath set, but, "He hath made strong
the bars of thy gates." Let none. go out, let none come in. Let none go out,
we rejoice: let none come in, we fear. Nay, fear not this: when thou hast
entered it will be said: only be thou in the number of virgins, who carried their oil
with them. ...
21. "He hath blessed thy children within thee." Who? He "who hath set
peace as thy borders." How ye all exult!(7) Love peace, my brethren. Greatly are we
delighted, when the love of peace crieth from your hearts. How greatly doth it
delight you! I had said nothing: I had explained nothing: I but read the
verse, and ye shouted. What was it that shoutedin you? The love of peace. ...
children of the kingdom, O citizens of Jerusalem, in Jerusalem is the vision of
peace: and all who love peace are blest in her, and they enter in, when the doors
are being shut, and the bars made strong. This, which when but named ye so love
and esteem, this follow after, this long for: this love in your home, in your
business, in your wives, in your sons, in your slaves, in your friends, in your
enemies. ...
22. What ye cried out a while ago at the very mention of peace, ye cried
from longing: your cry was from thirst, not from fulness; for there will be
perfect righteousness where will be perfect peace. Now we hunger and thirst after
righteousness. "They shall be filled."(8) How shall they be filled? When we have
arrived at peace. Therefore when he had said, "Who hath set peace for thy
borders," because there is fulness and no want, he added at once, "and filleth thee
with the fat of wheat" (ver. 14). ...
23. "Who sendeth forth His Word to the earth" (ver. 15). Behold, on earth
we toil, weary, fainting, sluggish, cold: when should we be raised up to the
fat of wheat that satisfieth, did not He send His Word to the earth, whereby we
were weighed down, to the earth, whereby we were hindered from returning? He
sent. His Word, He deserted us not even in the wilderness, He rained manna from
heaven. "Who sendeth forth His Word to the earth;" and to earth His Word came.
How? or what is His Word? "Even unto swiftness His Word runneth." He said not,
"His Word is swift," but, "His Word runneth even unto swiftness." Let us
understand, my brethren: He could not have chosen a better word. He who is hot grows
hot by heat, he who is cold grows cold by cold, he who is swift becometh swift by
swiftness. ... To what degree then doth it run? "Even to swiftness." Increase
as much as you will the swiftness of the Word, and say, It is as swift as this
or that, as birds, as the winds, as the Angels; is any of these as great as
swiftness itself, "even unto swiftness"? What is swiftness itself, brethren? It is
everywhere; it is not in part. This belongeth to the Word of God, not to be in
part, to be everywhere by Himself the Word, whereby He is "the Power of God
and the Wisdom of God,"(1) before He had taken flesh upon Him. If we think of God
in the Form of God, the Word equal to the Father, this is the Wisdom of God,
of which is said, "It reacheth from one end to the other mightily."(2) What
mighty speed! "It reacheth from one end to the other mightily." ...
24. We then are burdened by the sluggishness of this cold body, and the
bonds of this earthly and corruptible life; have we no hope of receiving "the
Word," which "runneth even unto swiftness"? or hath abandoned us, though by the
body we are depressed to the lowest depths? Did not He predestinate us, before we
were born in this mortal and sluggish body? He then, who predestinated us,
gave snow to the earth, even ourselves. For now let us come to those somewhat
obscure verses of the Psalm, let those entanglements begin to be unrolled. Behold,
we are sluggish on this earth, and are as it were frozen here. And just as
happens to the flakes of snow, for they freeze above, then fall down; so as love
groweth cold, human nature falleth down to this earth, and involved in a sluggish
body becometh like snow. But in that snow are predestined sons of God. For,
"He giveth snow like wool" (ver. 16). What is "like wool"? It meaneth, of the
snow which He hath given, of these, who are as yet slow in spirit and cold, whom
He hath predestinated, He is about to make somewhat. For wool is the material of
a garment: when we see wool, we look on it as a sort of preparation for a
garment. Therefore since He hath predestinated these, who at present are cold and
creep on earth, and as yet glow not with the spirit of love (for as yet He
speaketh of predestination), God hath given these as a sort of wool: He is about to
make of them a garment. Rightly did the "raiment" of Christ "shine" on the
mountain, "like snow."(3) The raiment of Christ did shine like snow, as though of
that snow a garment had already been made: of which wool, that is, of the snow
which He gave like wool, they being as yet predestined, were sluggish: but wait,
see what followeth. Since He gave them as wool, a garment is made of them. For
as the Church is called the Body of Christ, so is the Church also called the
garment of Christ: hence cometh that which is said by the Apostle, "that He
might present it to Himself a glorious Church, not having spot or wrinkle."(4) Let
Him then present unto Himself a glorious Church, not having spot or wrinkle;
let Him make Himself a garment of that wool, which He had predestinated in the
snow. While men are yet unbelieving. and cold, and sluggish, let Him make a
garment of this wool. That it may be washed from spots, let it be cleansed by faith:
that it may have no wrinkle, let it be stretched out upon the cross. ...
25. "He scattereth mist like ashes." "He scattereth," saith the Psalmist,
"mist like ashes." Who? He "who giveth snow like wool." For whom He
predestined, He calleth to repentance; for "whom He predestined, them He also called." But
"ashes" are connected with repentance. Hear Him calling to repentance, when He
upbraided certain cities, saying, "Woe unto thee, Chorazin! woe unto thee,
Bethsaida! for if the mighty works which have been done in you had been done in
Tyre and Sidon, they had long ago repented in dust and ashes."(5) Therefore, "He
scattereth mist like ashes." What is, "He scattereth mist like ashes"? When a
man is called to learn about God, and it is said to him, "Receive the truth;" he
beginneth to wish to receive the Truth, but is not able; he seeth that He is
under a sort of darkness, which before he saw not. ... Wander not in the mist,
follow in faith. But forasmuch as thou endeavourest to see and art not able,
repent of thy sins, for mist is scattered like ashes. Repent thee now of having
been obstinate against God, repent of having followed thine own evil ways. Thou
hast come into this state where it is difficult for thee to see the vision of
bliss, and the mist will be healthful to thee, which God scattereth like ashes.
Thou thyself art as yet a mist, but like ashes. For they that are penitent, as
yet roll themselves in ashes, my brethren, testifying, as it were, that they are
like it, saying unto God, "I am ashes." For a certain Scripture saith, "I have
despised myself, and wasted away, I have reckoned myself earth and ashes."(6)
This is the humility of the penitent. When Abraham speaketh to his God, and
wisheth the burning of Sodore to be disclosed to him, he saith, "I am but earth
and ashes."(7) How hath this humility ever been found m great and holy men!
26. "Who sendeth His crystal like morsels of bread" (ver. 17). We need not
spend our toil again in saying what crystal is. We have already said it, and I
do not think that ye, beloved, have forgotten it. What is then, "He sendeth
His crystal like morsels of bread"? What is "crystal"? It is very hard, it is
very tightly congealed; it can not, like snow, be easily melted. Snow, hardened by
many years' duration, and by the succession of ages, is called "crystal," and
this "He sendeth like morsels of bread." What meaneth this? They were too
hard, no longer fit to be compared to snow, but to crystal; but they too are
predestinated and called, and some of them even so as to feed others, to be useful to
others also. And what need is there to enumerate many, whom we happen to know,
this one and that one? Every one when he thinks can recall to mind how
hardened and obstinate some of those whom he knows have been, how they have struggled
against the truth; yet now they preach the truth, they have been made morsels
of bread. Who is that one Bread? "We being many," saith the Apostle, "are one
Body in Christ;"(1) he saith also, "we being many are one Bread and one Body."(2)
If then the whole Body of Christ is one Bread, the members of Christ are
morsels of Bread. Of some that are hard He maketh members of Himself, and useful for
feeding others. ... Behold, the Apostle Paul was a crystal, hard, resisting
the truth, crying out against the Gospel, hardening himself, as it were, against
the sun. ... Since then he was crystal, he appeared clear and white, but he was
hard and very cold. How was he bright and white? "An Hebrew of the Hebrews; as
touching the law, a Pharisee." Behold the brightness of crystal. Now hear the
hardness of crystal. "As touching zeal, persecuting the Church"(3) of Christ.
Among the stoners of the holy martyr Stephen, was he, hard, perhaps harder than
all. "For he kept the raiment of all who were stoning,"(4) so that he stoned by
the hands of all.
27. Thus then we see "the snow, the mist, the crystal:" it is good that He
blow and thaw them. For if He blow not, if He Himself thaw not the hardness of
this ice, "in the face of His cold who shall stand?" He abandoneth a sinner,
behold, He calleth him not; behold, He openeth not his perception; behold, He
poureth not in grace; let the man thaw himself, if he can, from the ice of folly.
He cannot. Wherefore can he not? "In the face of His cold who shall stand?"
Behold him then growing harder, and saying, "O wretched man that I am! who shall
deliver me from the body of this death?" Behold, I am growing cold, behold, I
am growing hard, what heat shall thaw me that I may run? "Who shall deliver me
from the body of this death?. ... In the face of His cold who shall stand?" And
who shall free himself, if God abandon him? Who is it that freeth? "The grace
of God, through Jesus Christ our Lord."(5) Are we then to despair? God forbid.
For it goeth on, "He shall send out His Word, and melt them" (ver. 18). Let not
then the snow despair, nor the mist, nor the crystal. For of the snow, as of
wool, a garment is being made. That mist findeth safety in repentance: for,
"whom He predestinated, them He also called." But even though they be the very
hardest among the predestinated, though they have been for a long time hardening,
and are become crystal, they will not be hard to the mercy of God. "He shall
send out His Word, and melt them." What is "melt"? Understand not "melt" in an ill
sense: it meaneth, He shall liquefy, He shall thaw them. For they are hard
through pride. Rightly is pride called also dulness: for whatever is dull, is also
cold. ... Despair not even of the crystal. Hear a saying of the crystal. "Who
before was a blasphemer, and a persecutor, and injurious."(6) But whereof ore
doth God melt the crystal? That the snow despair not of itself. For he saith,
"For this cause I obtained mercy, that in me first Jesus Christ might show forth
all long-suffering, for a pattern to them that hereafter should believe on Him
unto eternal life."(7) God then calleth unto the Gentiles, "Be melted, O
crystal; come, ye snows." "His Spirit shall blow, and the waters shall flow." Lo,
the" crystal" and the "snows" are melted, they turn into water, "let them that
thirst, come and drink."(8) Saul, hard as crystal, persecuted Stephen unto death;
Paul, now in the living water,(9) calleth the Gentiles to the Fount. ...
28. "Announcing His Word unto Jacob, His Righteousnesses and Judgments
unto Israel" (ver. 19). What" Righteousnesses," what "Judgments"? Because whatever
mankind had suffered here before, when it was "snow" and "mist" and "crystal,"
it suffered for the deserts of its pride and uplifting against God. Let us go
back to the origin of our fall, and see that most truly is it sung in the
Psalm, "Before I was troubled I went wrong."(10) But he who says, "Before I was
troubled I went wrong," saith also, "It is good for me that Thou hast humbled me,
that I may learn Thy Righteousnesses."(11) These righteousnesses Jacob learnt
from God, who made him to wrestle with an Angel; under the guise of which Angel,
God Himself wrestled with him He held Him, he exerted violence to hold Him he
prevailed to hold Him: He caused Himself to be held, in mercy, not in weakness.
Jacob therefore wrestled, and prevailed: he held Him and when he seemed to have
conquered Him asked to be blessed of Him? How did he understand with Whom he
had wrestled, Whom he had held? Wherefore did he wrestle violently, and hold
Him? Because "the kingdom of heaven suffereth violence, and the violent take it by
force."(13) Wherefore then did he wrestle? Because it is with toil. Wherefore
do we with difficulty hold, what we so easily lose? Lest, easily getting back
what we have lost, we learn to lose that which we hold. Let man have toil to
hold: he will hold firmly, what he has only held after toil. These His judgments
therefore God manifested to Jacob and Israel. ...
29. "He hath not done so to the whole race" (ver. 20). Let none deceive
you: it is not announced to any nation, this judgment of God; namely, how the
righteous and the unrighteous suffer, how all suffer for their deserts, how the
righteous themselves are freed by the grace of God, not in their own merits. This
is not announced to the whole race, but only to Jacob, only to Israel. What
then do we, if He hath not announced it to the whole race, but only to Jacob,
only to Israel? Where will we be? In Jacob. "He hath not manifested His judgments
to them." To whom? To all nations. How then are the "snows" called, when the
crystal is melted? How are the nations called, now Paul is justified? How, save
to be in Jacob? The wild olive is cut off from its stock, to be grafted into the
olive: now they belong to the olive, no longer ought they to be called
nations,(1) but one nation in Christ, the nation of Jacob, the nation of Israel ...
What is Israel? "Seeing God." Where shall he see God? In peace. What peace? The
peace of Jerusalem; for, saith he, "He hath set peace for thy borders." There
shall we praise: there shall we all be one, in One, unto One: for then, though
many, we shall not be scattered.
PSALM CXLVIII. (2)
1. The subject of our meditation in this present life should be the
praises of God; for the everlasting exaltation of our life hereafter will be the
praise of God, and none can become fit for the life hereafter, who hath not
practised himself for it now. So then now we praise God, but we pray to Him too. Our
praise is marked by joy, our prayer by groans. ... On account of these two
seasons, one, that which now is in the temptations and tribulations of this life,
the other, that which is to be hereafter in everlasting rest and exultation; we
have established also the celebration of two seasons, that before Easter and
that after Easter. That which is before Easter signifieth tribulation, in which we
now are; that which we are now keeping after Easter, signifieth the bliss in
which we shall hereafter be. The celebration then which we keep before Easter is
what we do now: by that which we keep after Easter we signify what as yet we
have not. Therefore we employ that time in fastings and prayer, this present
time we spend in praises, and relax our fast. This is the Halleluia which we sing,
which, as you know, meaneth (in Latin), Praise ye the Lord. Therefore that
period is before the Lord's Resurrection, this, after His Resurrection: by which
time is signified the future hope which as yet we have not: for what we
represent after the Lord's Resurrection, we shall have after our own. For in our Head
both are figured, both are set forth. The Baptism of the Lord setteth forth to
us this present life of trial, for in it we must toil, be harassed, and, at
last, die; but the Resurrection and Glorification of the Lord setteth forth to us
the life which we are to have hereafter, when He shall come to recompense due
rewards, evil to the evil, good to the good. And now indeed all the evil men sing
with us, Halleluia; but, if they persevere in their wickedness, they may utter
with their lips the song of our life hereafter; but the life itself, which
will then be in the reality which now is typified, they cannot obtain, because
they would not practise it before it came, and lay hold on what was to come.
2. "Halleluia." "Praise the Lord," thou sayest to thy neighbour, he to
thee: when all are exhorting each other, all are doing what they exhort others to
do. But praise with your whole selves: that is, let not your tongue and voice
alone praise God, but your conscience also, your life, your deeds. For now, when
we are gathered together in the Church, we praise: when we go forth each to
his own business, we seem to cease to praise God. Let a man not cease to live
well, and then he ever praiseth God. ... It is impossible for a man's acts to be
evil, whose thoughts are good. For acts issue from thought: nor can a man do
anything or move his limbs to do aught, unless the bidding of his thought precede:
just as in all things which ye see done throughout the provinces, whatsoever
the Emperor biddeth goeth forth from the inner part of his palace throughout the
whole Roman Empire.(3) How great commotion is caused at one bidding by the
Emperor as he sits in his palace! He but moveth his lips, when he speaketh: the
whole province is moved, when what he speaketh is being executed. So in each
single man too, the Emperor is within, his seat is in the heart. If he be good and
biddeth good things, good things are done: if he be bad and biddeth evil
things, evil things are done. When Christ sitteth there, what can He bid, but what is
good? When the devil is the occupant, what can he bid, but evil? But God hath
willed that it should be in thy choice for whom thou wilt prepare room, for
God, or for the devil: when thou hast prepared it, he who is occupant will also
rule. Therefore, brethren, attend not only to the sound; when ye praise God,
praise with your whole selves: let your voice, your life, your deeds, all sing.
3. "Praise ye the Lord from heaven" (ver. 1). As though he had found
things in heaven holding their peace in the praise of the Lord, he exhorteth them to
arise and praise. Never have things in heaven held their peace in the praises
of their Creator, never have things on earth ceased to praise God. But it is
manifest that there are certain things which have breath to praise God in that
disposition wherein God pleaseth them. For no one praiseth aught, save what
pleaseth him. And there are other things which have not breath of life and
understanding to praise God, but yet, because they also are good, and duly arranged in
their proper order, and form part of the beauty of the universe, which God
created, though they themselves with voice and heart praise not God, yet when they
are considered by those who have understanding, God is praised in them; and, as
God is praised in them, they themselves too in a manner praise God.(1) ...
4. "Praise ye the Lord from heaven: praise Him in the high places."(2)
First he saith, "from heaven," then from earth; for it is God that is praised, who
made heaven and earth. All in heaven is calm and peaceful; there is ever joy,
no death, no sickness, no vexation; there the blessed ever praise God; but we
are still below: yet, when we think how God is praised there, let us have our
heart there, and let us not hear to no purpose, "Lift up your hearts." Let us
lift up our heart above, that it become not corrupted on earth: for we take
pleasure in what the Angels do there. We do it now in hope: hereafter we shall in
reality, when we have come thither. "Praise Him" then "in the high places."
5. "Praise Him, all ye angels of His, praise Him, all His powers" (ver.
2). ". Praise Him, sun and moon; praise Him, all ye stars and light" (ver. 3).
"Praise Him, ye heaven of heavens, and waters that are above the heavens" (ver.
4). "Let them praise the Name of the Lord" (ver. 5). When can he unfold all in
his enumeration? Yet he hath in a manner touched upon them all summarily, and
included all things in heaven praising their Creator. And as though it were said
to him, "Why do they praise Him? what hath He conferred on them, that they
should praise Him?" he goeth on, "for He spake, and they were made; He commanded,
and they were created." No wonder if the works praise the Worker, no wonder if
the things that are made praise the Maker, no wonder if creation praise its
Creator. In this Christ also is mentioned, though we seem not to have heard His
Name. ... By what were they made? By the Word?(3) How doth he show in this Psalm,
that all things were made by the Word? "He spake, and they were made; He
commanded, and they were created." No one speaketh, no one commandeth, save by word.
6. "He hath established them for the age, and for age upon age" (ver. 6).
All things m heaven, all things above, all powers and angels, a certain city on
high, good, holy, blessed; from whence because we are wanderers, we are
wretched; whither because we are to return, we are blessed in hope; whither when we
shall have returned, we shall be blessed indeed; "He hath given them a law which
shall not pass away." What sort of command, think ye, have things in heaven
and the holy angels received? What sort of command hath God given them? What, but
that they praise Him? Blessed are they whose business is to praise God! They
plough not, they sow not, they grind not, they cook not; for these are works of
necessity, and there is no necessity there. They steal not, they plunder not,
they commit no adultery; for these are works of iniquity, and there is no
iniquity there. They break not bread for the hungry, they clothe not the naked, they
take not in the stranger, they visit not the sick, they set not at one the
contentious, they bury not the dead; for these are works of mercy, and there there
is no misery, for mercy to be shown to. O blessed they! Think we that we too
shall be like this? Ah! let us sigh, let us groan in sighing. And what are we,
that we should be there? mortal, outcast, abject, earth and ashes! But He, who
hath promised, is almighty. ...
7. Let him then turn himself to things on earth too, since he hath already
spoken the praises of things in heaven. "Praise ye the Lord from the earth"
ever. 7). For wherewith began he before? "Praise ye the Lord from heaven:" and he
went through things in heaven: now hear of things on earth. "Dragons and all
abysses." "Abysses" are depths of water: all the seas, and this atmosphere of
clouds, pertain to the "abyss." Where there are clouds, where there are storms,
where there is rain, lightning, thunder, hail, snow, and all that God willeth
should be done above the earth, by this moist and misty atmosphere, all this he
hath mentioned under the name of earth, because it is very changeable and
mortal; unless ye think that it raineth from above the stars.(4) All these things
happen here, close to the earth. Sometimes even men are on the tops of mountains,
and see the clouds beneath them, and often it raineth: and all commotions
which arise from the disturbance of the atmosphere, those who watch carefully see
that they happen here, in this lower part of the universe. ... Thou seest then
what kind all these things are, changeable, troublous, fearful, corruptible: yet
they have their place, they have their rank, they too in their degree fill up
the beauty of the universe, and so they praise the Lord. He turns then to them,
as though He would exhort them too, or us, that by considering them we may
praise the Lord. "Dragons" live about the water, come out from caverns, fly
through the air; the air is set in motion by them: "dragons" are a huge kind of
living creatures, greater there are not upon the earth. Therefore with them he
beginneth, "Dragons and all abysses." There are caves of hidden waters, whence
springs and streams come forth: some come forth to flow over the earth, some flow
secretly beneath; and all this kind, all this damp nature of waters, together
with the sea and this lower air, are called abyss, or "abysses," where dragons
live and praise God. What? Think we that the dragons form choirs, and praise God?
Far from it. But do ye, when ye consider the dragons, regard the Maker of the
dragon, the Creator of the dragon: then, when ye admire the dragons, and say,
"Great is the Lord who made these," then the dragons praise God by your voices.
8. "Fire, hail, snow, ice, wind of storms, which do His word" (ver. 8).
Wherefore added he here, "which do His word"? Many foolish men, unable to
contemplate and discern creation, in its several places and rank, performing its
movements at the nod and commandment of God think that God doth indeed rule all
things above, but things below He despiseth, casteth aside, abandoneth, so that He
neither careth for them, nor guideth, nor ruleth them; but that they are ruled
by chance, how they can, as they can: and they are influenced by what they say
sometimes to one another: e.g. "If it were God that gave rain, would He rain
into the sea? What sort of providence," they say, "is this? Getulia is thirsty,
and it rains into the sea." They think that they handle the matter cleverly. One
should say to them, "Getulia does at all events thirst, thou dost not even
thirst." For good were it for thee to say to God, "My soul hath thirsted for
Thee."(1) For he that thus argueth is already satisfied; he thinketh himself
learned, he is not willing to learn, therefore he thirsteth not. For if he thirsted,
he would be willing to learn, and he would find that everything happeneth upon
earth by God's Providence, and he would wonder at the arrangement of even the
limbs of a flea. Attend, beloved. Who hath arranged the limbs of a flea and a
gnat, that they should have their proper order, life, motion? Consider one little
creature, even the very smallest, whatever thou wilt. If thou considerest the
order of its limbs, and the animation of life whereby it moveth; how doth it
shun death, love life, seek pleasures, avoid pain, exert divers senses, vigorously
use movements suitable to itself! Who gave its sting to the gnat, for it to
suck blood with? How narrow is the pipe whereby it sucketh! Who arranged all
this? who made all this? Thou art amazed at the smallest things; praise Him that is
great. Hold then this, my brethren, let none shake you from your faith or from
sound doctrine. He who made the Angel in heaven, the Same also made the worm
upon earth: the Angel in heaven to dwell in heaven, the worm upon earth to abide
on earth. He made not the Angel to creep in the mud, nor the worm to move in
heaven. He hath assigned dwellers to their different abodes; incorruption He
assigned to incorruptible abodes, corruptible things to corruptible abodes.
Observe the whole, praise the whole. He then who ordered the limbs of the worm, doth
He not govern the clouds? And wherefore raineth Heinto the sea? As though there
are not in the sea things which are nourished by rain; as though He made not
fishes therein, as though He made not living creatures therein. Observe how the
fishes run to sweet water. And wherefore, saith he, doth He give rain to the
fishes, and sometimes giveth not rain to me? That thou mayest consider that
thou art in a desert region, and in a pilgrimage of life; that so this present
life may grow bitter to thee, that thou mayest long for the life to come: or else
that thou mayest be scourged, punished, amended. And how well doth He assign
their properties to regions. Behold, since we have spoken of Getulia, He raineth
here nearly every year, and giveth corn every year; here the corn cannot be
kept, it soon rotteth, because it is given every year; there, because it is given
seldom, both much is given, and it can be kept for long. But dost thou
perchance think that God there deserteth man, or that they do not there after their
own manner of rejoicing both praise and glorify God? Take a Getulian from his
country, and set him amid our pleasant trees; he will wish to flee away, and
return to his bare Getulia. To all places then, regions, seasons, God hath assigned
and arranged what fits them. Who could unfold it? Yet they who have eyes see
many things therein: when seen, they please; pleasing, they are praised; not they
really, but He who made them; thus shall all things praise God.
9. It was in thought of this that the spirit of the Prophet added the
words, "which do His word." Think not then that these things are moved by chance,
which in every motion of theirs obey God. Whither God willeth, thither the fire
spreads, thither the cloud hurries, whether it carry in it rain, or snow, or
hail. And wherefore cloth the lightning sometimes strike the mountain, yet
strikes not the robber? ... Perhaps He yet seeketh the robber's conversion, and
therefore is the mountain which feareth not smitten, that the man who feareth may be
changed. Thou also sometimes, when maintaining discipline, smitest the ground
to terrify a child. Sometimes too He smiteth a man, whom He will. But thou
say-est to me, Behold, He smiteth the more innocent, and passeth over the more
guilty. Wonder not; death, whencesoever it come, is good to the good man. And
whence dost thou know what punishment is reserved in secret for that more guilty
man, if he be unwilling to be converted? Would not they rather be scorched by
lightning, to whom it shall be said in the end, "Depart into everlasting fire"?(1)
The needful thing is, that thou be guileless. Why so? Is it an evil thing to
die by shipwreck, and a good thing to die by fever? Whether he die in this way or
in that, ask what sort of man he is who dieth; ask whither he will go after
death, not how he is to depart from life. ... Whatever then happeneth here
contrary to our wish, thou wilt know that it happeneth not, save by the will of God,
by His providence, by His ordering, by His nod, by His laws: and if we
understand not why anything is done, let us grant to His providence that it is not done
without reason: so shall we not be blasphemers. For when we begin to argue
concerning the works of God, "why is this?" "why is that?" and, "He ought not to
have done this," "He did this ill;" where is the praise of God? Thou hast lost
thy Halleluia. Regard all things in such wise as to please God and praise the
Creator. For if thou wert to happen to enter the workshop of a smith, thou
wouldest not dare to find fault with his bellows, his anvils, his hammers. But take
an ignorant man, who knows not for what purpose each thing is, and he findeth
fault with all. But if he have not the skill of the workman, and have but the
reasoning power of a man, what saith he to himself? Not without reason are the
bellows placed here: the workman knoweth wherefore, though I know not. In the shop
he dareth not to find fault with the smith, yet in the universe he dareth to
find fault with God. Therefore just as "fire, hail, snow, ice, wind of storms,
which do His word," so all things in nature, which seem to foolish persons to be
made at random, simply "do His word," because they are not made save by His
command.
10. Then he mentioneth, that they may praise the Lord, "mountains and
hills, fruitful trees and all cedars" (ver. 9): "beasts and all cattle, creeping
things, and winged fowls" (ver. 10). Then he goeth to men; "kings of the earth
and all people, princes and all judges of the earth" (ver. 11): "young men and
maidens, old men and young, let them praise the Name of the Lord" (ver. 12).
Ended is the praise from heaven, ended is the praise from earth. "For His Name only
is exalted" (ver. 13). Let no man seek to exalt his own name. Wilt thou be
exalted? Subject thyself to Him who cannot be humbled. "His confession is in earth
and heaven" (ver. 14). What is "His confession"? Is it the confession
wherewith He confesseth? No, but that whereby all things confess Him, all things cry
aloud: the beauty of all things is in a manner their voice, whereby they praise
God. The heaven crieth out to God, "Thou madest me, not I myself." Earth crieth
out, "Thou createdst me, not I myself." How do they cry out? When thou
regardest them, and findest this out, they cry out by thy voice, they cry out by thy
regard. Regard the heavens, it is beautiful: observe the earth, it is beautiful:
both together are very beautiful. He made them, He ruleth them, by His nod they
are swayed, He ordereth their seasons, He reneweth their movements, by Himself
He reneweth them. All these things then praise Him, whether in stillness or in
motion, whether from earth below or from heaven above, whether in their old
state or in their renewal. When thou seest all these things, and rejoicest, and
art lifted up to the Maker, and gazest on" His invisible things understood by
the things which are made,"(2) "His confession is in earth and heaven:" that is,
thou confesseth to Him from things on earth, thou confesseth to Him from things
in heaven. And since He made all things, and nought is better than He,
whatsoever He made is less than He, and whatsoever in these things pleaseth thee, is
less than He. Let not then what He hath made so please thee, as to withdraw thee
from Him who made: if thou lovest what He made, love much more Him who made.
If the things which He hath made are beautiful, how much more beautiful is He
who made them. "And He shall exalt the horn of His people." Behold what Haggai
and Zachariah prophesied. Now the "horn of His people" is humble in afflictions,
in tribulations, in temptations, in beating of the breast; when will He "exalt
the horn of His people"? When the Lord hath come, and our Sun is risen, not the
sun which is seen with the eye, and "riseth upon the good and the evil,"(3)
but That whereof is said, To you that hear God, "the Sun of Righteousness shall
rise, and healing in His wings;"(1) and of whom the proud and wicked shall
hereafter say, "The light of righteousness hath not shined unto us, and the sun of
righteousness rose not upon us."(2) This shall be our summer. Now during the
winter weather the fruits appear not on the stock; thou observest, so to say, dead
trees during the winter. He who cannot see truly, thinketh the vine dead;
perhaps there is one near it which is really dead; both are alike during winter;
the one is alive, the other is dead, but both the life and death are hidden:
summer advanceth; then the life of the one shineth brightly, the death of the other
is manifested: the splendour of leaves, the abundance of fruit, cometh forth,
the vine is clothed in outward appearance from what it hath in its stock.
Therefore, brethren, now we are the same as other men: just as they are born, eat,
drink, are clothed, pass their life, so also do the saints. Sometimes the very
truth deceiveth men, and they say, "Lo, he hath begun to be a Christian: hath he
lost his headache?" or, "because he is a Christian, what gaineth he from me?"
O dead vine, thou observest near thee a vine that is bare indeed in winter, yet
not dead. Summer will come, the Lord will come, our Splendour, that was hidden
in the stock, and then "He shall exalt the horn of His people," after the
captivity wherein we live in this mortal life. ...
11. "An hymn to all His Saints." Know ye what an hymn is? It is a song
with praise of God. If thou praisest God and singest not, thou utterest no hymn:
if thou singest and praisest not God, thou utterest no hymn: if thou praisest
aught else, which pertaineth not to the praise of God, although thou singest and
praisest, thou utterest no hymn. An hymn then containeth these three things,
song, and praise, and that of God. Praise then of God in song is called an hymn.
What then meaneth, "An hymn to all His Saints"? Let His Saints receive an
hymn: let His hints utter an hymn: for this is what they are to receive in the end,
an everlasting hymn. ...
PSALM CXLIX.(3)
1. Let us praise the Lord both in voice, and in understanding, and in good
works; and, as this Psalm exhorteth, let us sing unto Him a new song. It
beginneth: "Sing ye to the Lord a new song. His praise is in the Church of the
Saints" (ver. 1). The old man hath an old song, the new man a new song. The Old
Testament is an old song, the New Testament a new song. In the Old Testament are
temporal and earthly promises. Whoso loveth earthly things singeth an old song:
let him that desireth to sing a new song, love the things of eternity. Love
itself is new and eternal; therefore is it ever new, because it never groweth old.
... And this song is of peace, this song is of charity. Whoso severeth himself
from the union of the saints, singeth not a new song; for he hath followed old
strife, not new charity. In new charity what is there? Peace, the bond of an
holy society, a spiritual union, a building of living stones. Where is this? Not
in one place, but throughout the whole world. This is said in another Psalm,
"Sing unto the Lord, all the earth."(4) From this is understood, that he who
singeth not with the whole earth, singeth an old song, whatever words proceed out
of his mouth. ... We have already said, brethren, that all the earth singeth a
new song. He who singeth not with the whole earth a new song, let him sing what
he will, let his tongue sound forth Halleluia, let him utter it all day and
all night, my ears are not so much bent to hear the voice of the singer, but I
seek the deeds of the doer. For I ask, and say, "What is it that thou singest?"
He answereth, "Halleluia." What is "Halleluia"? "Praise ye the Lord." Come, let
us praise the Lord together. If thou praisest the Lord, and I praise the Lord,
why are we at variance? Charity praiseth the Lord, discord blasphemeth the
Lord." ...
2. The field of the Lord is the world, not Africa. It is not with the
Lord's field, as it is without these fields of ours, where Getulia bears sixty or
an hundred fold, Numidia only ten fold: everywhere fruit is borne to Him, both
an hundred fold, and sixty fold, and thirty fold: only do thou choose what thou
wilt be, if thou thinkest to belong to the Lord's Cross. "The Church" then "of
the saints" is the Catholic Church. The Church of the saints is not the Church
of heretics. The Church of the saints is that which God first prefigured before
it was seen, and then set forth that it might be seen. The Church of the
saints was heretofore in writings, now it is in nations: the Church of the saints
was heretofore only read of, now it is both read of and seen. When it was only
read of, it was believed; now it is seen, and is spoken against. His praise is in
the "children of the kingdom," that is, "the Church of the saints."
3. "Let Israel rejoice in Him who made Him" (ver. 2). What is, "Israel"?
"Seeing God." He who seeth God, rejoiceth in Him by whom he was made. What is it
then, brethren? we have said that we belong to the Church of the saints: do we
already see God? and how are we Israel, if we see not? There is one kind of
sight belonging to this present time; there will be another belonging to the time
hereafter: the sight which now is, is by faith; the sight which is to be will
be in reality. If we believe, we see; if we love, we see: see what? God. Ask
John: "God is love;"(1) let us bless His holy Name, and rejoice in God by
rejoicing in love. Whoso hath love, why send we him afar to see God? Let him regard
his own conscience, and there he seeth God. ... "And let the sons of Sion exult
in their King." The sons of the Church are Israel. For Sion indeed was one city,
which fell: amid its ruins certain saints dwelt after the flesh: but the true
Sion, the true Jerusalem (for Sion and Jerusalem are one), is "eternal in the
heavens,"(2) and is "our mother."(3) She it is that hath given us birth, she is
the Church of the saints, she hath nourished us, she, who is in part a pilgrim,
in part abiding in the heavens. In the part which abideth in heaven is the
bliss of angels, in the part which wandereth in this world is the hope of the
righteous. Of the former is said, "Glory to God in the highest;" of the latter,
"and on earth peace to men of good will."(4) Let those then who, being in this
life, groan, and long for their country, run by love, not by bodily feet; let
them seek not ships but wings, let them lay hold on the two wings of love. What
are the two wings of love? The love of God, and of our neighbour. For now we are
pilgrims, we sigh, we groan. There has come to us a letter from our country:
we read it to you. "And the sons of Sion shall exult in their King." The Son of
God, who made us, was made one of us: and He rules us as our King, because He
is our Creator, who made us. But He by whom we were made is the same as He by
whom we are ruled, and we are Christians because He is Christ. He is called
Christ from Chrism, that is, Anointing. ... Give to the Priest somewhat to offer.
What could man find which he could give as a clean victim? What victim? what
clean thing can a sinner offer? O unrighteous, O sinful man, whatever thou offerest
is unclean, and somewhat that is clean must be offered for thee. ... Let then
the Priest that is clean offer Himself, and cleanse thee. This is what Christ
did. He found in man nothing clean for Him to offer for than: He offered Himself
as a clean Victim. Happy Victim, true Victim, spotless Offering. He offered
not then what we gave Him; yea rather, He offered what He took of us, and offered
it clean. For of us He took flesh, and this He offered. But where took He it?
In the womb of the Virgin Mary, that He might offer it clean for us unclean. He
is our King, He is our Priest, in Him let us rejoice.
4. "Let them praise His Name in chorus" (ver. 3). What meaneth "chorus"?
Many know what a "chorus" is: nay, as we are speaking in a town, almost all
know. A "chorus" is the union of singers. If we sing "in chorus," let us sing in
concord. If any one's voice is out of harmony in a chorus of singers, it
offendeth the ear, and throweth the chorus into confusion. If the voice of one echoing
discordantly tronbleth the harmony of them who sing, how doth the discord of
heresy throw into confusion the harmony of them who praise. The whole world is
now the chorus of Christ. The chorus of Christ soundeth harmoniously from east to
west.(5) "Let them sing a psalm unto Him with timbrel and psaltery." Wherefore
taketh he to him the "timbrel and psalter)"? That not the voice alone may
praise, but the works too. When timbrel and psaltery are taken, the hands harmonize
with the voice. So too do thou, whensoever thou singest "Halleluia," deal
forth thy bread to the hungry, clothe the naked, take in the stranger: then doth
not only thy voice sound, but thy hand soundeth in harmony with it, for thy deeds
agree with thy words. Thou hast taken to thee an instrument, and thy fingers
agree with thy tongue. Nor must we keep back the mystical meaning of the
"timbrel and psaltery." On the timbrel leather is stretched, on the psaltery gut is
stretched; on either instrument the flesh is crucified. How well did he "sing a
psalm on timbrel and psaltery," who said, "the world is crucified unto me, and I
unto the world"?(6) This psaltery or timbrel He wishes thee to take up, who
loveth a new song, who teacheth thee, saying to thee, "Whosoever willeth to be My
disciple, let him deny himself, and take up his cross, and follow Me."(7) Let
him not set down his psaltery, let him not set down his timbrel, let him
stretch himself out on the wood, and be dried from the lust of the flesh. The more
the strings are stretched, the more sharply do they sound. The Apostle Paul then,
in order that his psaltery might sound sharply, what said he? "Stretching
forth unto those things which are before," etc.(8) He stretched himself: Christ
touched him; and the sweetness of truth sounded.
5. "For the Lord hath dealt kindly among His people" (ver. 4). What
dealing so kindly, as to die for the ungodly? What dealing so kindly, as with
righteous Blood to blot out the handwriting against the sinner? What dealing so
kindly, as to say, "I regard not what ye were, be ye now what ye were not"? He
dealeth kindly in converting him that was turned away, in aiding him that is
fighting, in crowning the conqueror. "And the meek He shall lift up in salvation." For
the proud too are lifted up, but not in salvation: the meek are lifted in
salvation, the proud in death: that is, the proud lift up themselves, and God
humbleth them: the meek humble themselves, and God lifteth them up.
6. "The saints shall exult in glory" (ver. 5). I would say somewhat
important about the glory of the saints. For there is no one who loveth not glory.
But the glory of fools, popular glory as it is called, hath snares to deceive, so
that a man, influenced by the praises of vain men, shall be willing to live in
such fashion as to be spoken of by men, whosoever they be, in whatsoever way.
Hence it is that men, rendered mad, and puffed up with pride, empty within,
without swollen, are willing ever to ruin their fortunes by bestowing them on
stage-players, actors, men who fight with wild beasts, charioteers. What sums they
give, what sums they spend! They lavish the powers not only of their patrimony,
but of their minds too. They scorn the poor, because the people shouteth not
that the poor should be given to, but the people to shout that the fighter with
wild beasts be given to. When then no shout is raised to them, they refuse to
spend; when madmen shout to them, they are mad too: nay, all are mad, both
performer, and spectator, and the giver. This mad glory is blamed by the Lord, is
offensive in the eyes of the Almighty. ... Thou choosest to clothe the fighter
with wild beasts, who may be beaten, and make thee blush: Christ is never
conquered; He hath conquered the devil, He hath conquered for thee, and to thee, and
in thee; such a conqueror as this thou choosest not to clothe. Wherefore?
Because there is less shouting, less madness about it. They then who delight in such
glory, have an empty conscience. Just as they drain their chests, to send
garments as presents, so do they empty their conscience, so as to have nothing
precious therein.
7. But the saints who "exult in glory," no need is there for us to say how
they exult: just hear the verse of the Psalm which followeth: "The saints
shall exult in glory, they shall rejoice in their beds:" not in theatres, or
amphitheatres, or circuses, or follies, or market places, but "in their chambers."
What is, "in their chambers"? In their hearts.(1) Hear the Apostle Paul exulting
in his closet: "For this is our glory, the testimony of our conscience."(2) On
the other hand, there is reason to fear lest any be pleasing to himself, and so
seem to be proud, and boast of his conscience. For every one ought to exult
with fear, for that wherein he exulteth is God's gift, not his own desert. For
there be many that please themselves, and think themselves righteous; and there
is another passage which goeth against them, which saith, "Who shall boast that
he hath a clean heart, and that he is pure from sin?"(3) There is then, so to
speak, a limit to glorying in our conscience, namely, to know that thy faith is
sincere, thy hope sure, thy love without dissimulation. "The exultations of God
are in their mouths" (ver. 6). In such wise shall they "rejoice in their
closets," as not to attribute to themselves that they are good, but praise Him from
whom they have what they are, by whom they are called to attain to what they
are not, and from whom they hope for perfection, to whom they give thanks,
because He hath begun.
8. "And swords(4) sharpened on both sides in their hands." This sort of
weapon contains a great mystical meaning, in that it is sharp on both sides. By
"swords sharpened on both sides," we understand the Word of the Lord:(5) it is
one sword, but therefore are they called many, because there are many mouths and
many tongues of the saints. How is it two edged? It speaks of things temporal,
it speaks also of things eternal. In both cases it proveth what it saith, and
him whom it strikes, it severeth from the world. Is not this the sword whereof
the Lord said, "I am not come to send peace upon earth, but a sword"?(6)
Observe how He came to divide, how He came to sever. He divideth the saints, He
divideth the ungodly, He severeth from thee that which hindereth thee. The son
willeth to serve God, the father willeth not: the sword cometh, the Word of God
cometh, and severeth the son from the father. ...Wherefore then is it in their
hands, not in their tongues? "And swords," it saith, "sharpened on both sides in
their hands." By "in their hands," he meaneth in power. They received then the
word of God in power, to speak where they would, to whom they would, neither to
fear power, nor to despise poverty. For they had in their hands a sword; where
they would they brandished it, handled it, smote with it: and all this was in
the power of the preachers. For if the Word be not in their hands, why is it
written, "The Word of the Lord was put in the hand of the Prophet Haggai"?(7)
Surely, brethren, God set not His Word in His fingers. What is meant by, "was put in
his hand"? It was put into his power to preach the Word of the Lord. Lastly,
we can understand these "hands" in another way also. For they who spake had the
word of God in their tongues, they who wrote, in their hands.
9. Now, brethren, ye see the saints armed: observe the slaughter, observe
their glorious battles. For if there be a commander, there must be soldiers; if
soldiers, an enemy; if a warfare, a victory. What have these done who had in
their hands swords sharpened on both sides? "To do vengeance on the nations."
See whether vengeance have not been done on the nations. Daily is it done: we do
it ourselves by speaking. Observe how the nations of Babylon are slain. She is
repaid twofold: for so is it written of her, "repay her double for what she
hath done."(1) How is she repaid double? The saints wage war, they draw their
"swords twice sharpened;" thence come defeats, slaughters, severances: how is she
repaid double? When she had power to persecute the Christians, she slew the
flesh indeed, but she crushed not God: now she is repaid double, for the Pagans are
extinguished and the idols are broken. ... And lest thou shouldest think that
men are really smitten with the sword, blood really shed, wounds made in the
flesh, he goeth on and explaineth, "upbraidings among the peoples." What is
"upbraidings"? Reproof. Let the "sword twice sharpened" go forth from you, delay
not. Say to thy friend, if yet thou hast one(2) left to whom to say it, "What kind
of man art thou, who hast abandoned Him by whom thou wast made, and
worshippest what He made? Better is the Workman, than that which He worketh." When he
beginneth to blush, when he beginneth to feel compunction, thou hast made a wound
with thy sword, it hath reached the heart, he is about to die, that he may live.
10. "That they may bind their kings in fetters, and their nobles in bonds
of iron" (ver. 8). "To execute upon them the judgment written" (ver. 9). The
kings of the Gentiles are to be bound in fetters, "and their nobles in fetters,"
and that "of iron." ... For these verses which we are beginning to explain are
obscure. For for this purpose God willed to set down some of His verses
obscurely, not that anything new should be dug out of them, but that what was already
well known, might be made new by being obscurely set forth. We know that kings
have been made Christians; we know that the nobles of the Gentiles have been
made Christians. They are being made so at this day; they have been, they shall
be; the "swords twice sharpened" are not idle in the hands of the saints. How
then do we understand their being bound in fetters and chains of iron? Ye know,
beloved and learned brethren (learned I call you, for ye have been nourished in
the Church, and are accustomed to hear God's Word read),(3) that "God hath
chosen the weak things of the world to confound the strong, and the foolish things
of the world hath God chosen to confound the wise, and things which are not,
just as things which are, that the things which are may be brought to nought."(4)
... It is said by the Lord, "If thou wilt be perfect, go sell all that thou
hast, and give to the poor, and come, follow Me, and thou shall have treasure in
heaven."(5) Many of the nobles did this, but they ceased to be nobles of the
Gentiles, they chose rather to be poor in this world, noble in Christ. But many
retain their former nobility, retain their royal powers, and yet are Christians.
These are, as it were," in fetters and in bonds of iron." How so? they
received fetters, to keep them from going to things unlawful, the "fetters of
wisdom,"(6) the fetters of the Word of God. Wherefore then are they bonds of iron and
not bonds of gold? They are iron so long as they fear: let them love, and they
shall be golden. Observe, beloved, what I say. Ye have heard just now the
Apostle John, "There is no fear in love, but perfect love casteth out fear, because
fear hath torment."(7) This is the bond of iron. And yet unless a man begin
through fear to worship God, he will not attain to love. "The fear of the Lord is
the beginning of wisdom."(8) The beginning then is bonds of iron, the end a
collar of gold. For it is said of wisdom, "a collar of gold around thy neck."(9)
... There cometh to us a man powerful in this world, his wife offendeth him, and
perhaps he hath desired another man's wife who is more beautiful, or another
woman who is richer, he wisheth to put away the one he hath, yet he doeth it not.
He heareth the words of the servant of God, he heareth the Prophet, he heareth
the Apostle, and he doeth it not; he is told by one in whose hands is a "sword
twice sharpened," "Thou shalt not do it: it is not lawful for thee: God
alloweth thee not to put away thy wife, "save for the cause of fornication."(10) He
heareth this, he feareth, and doeth it not. ...Listen, young men; the bonds are
of iron, seek not to set your feet within them; if ye do, ye shall be bound
more tightly with fetters. Such fetters the hands of the Bishop make strong for
you. Do not men who are thus fettered fly to the Church, and are here loosed? Men
do fly hither, desiring to be rid of their wives: here they are more tightly
bound: no man looseth these fetters. "What God joined together, let not man put
asunder."(11) But these bonds are hard. Who but knows it? This hardness the
Apostles grieved at, and said, "If this be the case with a wife, it is not good to
marry."(1) If the bonds be of iron, it is not good to set our feet within
them. And the Lord said, "All men cannot receive this saying, but let him that can
receive it, receive it."(2) "Art thou bound unto a wife? seek not to be freed,"
for thou art bound with bonds of iron. "Art thou free from a wife, seek not a
wife;" bind not thyself with bonds of iron.
11. "To do in them the judgment that is written." This is the judgment
which the saints rio throughout all nations. Wherefore "written"? Because these
things were before written, and now are fulfilled. Behold now they are being
done: erst they were read, and were not done. And he hath concluded thus," this
glory have all His saints." Throughout the whole world, throughout entire nations,
this the saints do, thus are they glorified, thus do they "exalt God with
their mouths," thus do they "rejoice in their beds," thus do they "exult in their
glory," thus are they "lifted up in salvation," thus do they "sing a new song,"
thus in heart and voice and life they say Halleluia. Amen.
PSALM CL.(3)
1. Although the arrangement of the Psalms, which seems to me to contain
the secret of a mighty mystery, hath not yet been revealed unto me, yet, by the
fact that they in all amount to one hundred and fifty, they suggest somewhat
even to us, who have not as yet pierced with the eye of our mind the depth of
their entire arrangement, whereon we may without being over-bold, so far as God
giveth, be able to speak. Firstly, the number fifteen, whereof it is a multiple
this number fifteen, I say, signifieth the agreement of the two Testaments. For
in the former is observed the Sabbath, which signifieth rest; in the latter the
Lord's Day, which signifieth resurrection. The Sabbath is the seventh day, but
the Lord's Day, coming after the seventh, must needs be the eighth, and is also
to be reckoned the first. For it is called the first day of the week,(4) and
so from it are reckoned the second, third, fourth, and so on to the seventh day
of the week, which is the Sabbath. But from Lord's Day to Lord's Day is eight
days, wherein is declared the revelation of the New Testament, which in the Old
was as it were veiled under earthly promises. Further, seven and eight make
fifteen. Of the same number too are the Psalms which are called "of the steps,"
because that was the number of the steps of the Temple. Further too, the number
fifty in itself also containeth a great mystery.(5) For it consisteth of a week
of weeks, with the addition of one as an eighth to complete the number of
fifty. For seven times seven make forty-nine, whereto one is added to make fifty.
And this number fifty is of so great meaning, that it was after the completion of
that number of days from the Lord's Resurrection, that, on the fiftieth day
exactly, the Holy Spirit came upon those who were gathered together in Christ.
And this Holy Spirit is in Scripture especially spoken of by the number seven,
whether in Isaiah or in the Apocalypse, where the seven Spirits of God are most
directly mentioned, on account of the sevenfold operation of one and the
self-same Spirit.(6) And this sevenfold operation is mentioned in Isaiah.(7) ... Hence
also the Holy Spirit is spoken of under the number seven. But this period of
fifty the Lord divided into forty and ten: for on the fortieth day after His
Resurrection He ascended into heaven, and then after ten days were completed He
sent the Holy Spirit: under the number forty setting forth to us the period of
temporal sojourn in this world. For the number four prevaileth in forty; and the
world and the year have each four parts; and by the addition of the number ten,
as a sort of reward added for the fulfilment of the law in good works,
eternity itself is figured. This fifty the number one hundred and fifty containeth
three times, as though it were multiplied by the Trinity. Wherefore for this
reason too we make out that this number of the Psalm is not unsuitable.(8)
2. Now in that some have believed that the Balms are divided into five
books, they have been led by the fact, that so often at the end of Psalms are the
words, "so be it, so be it." But when I endeavoured to make out the principle
of this division, I was not able; for neither are the five parts equal one to
another, neither in quantity of contents, nor yet even in number of Psalms, so as
for each to contain thirty. And if each book end with, "so be it, so be it,"
we may reasonably ask, why the fifth and last book hath not the same conclusion.
We however, following the authority of canonical Scripture, where it is said,
"For it is written in the book of Psalms,"(9) know that there is but one book
of Psalms. And I see indeed how this can be true, and yet the other be true
also, without contravening it. For it may be that there was some custom in Hebrew
literature, whereby that is called one book which yet consists of more than one,
just as of many churches one church consisteth, and of many heavens one
heaven,(1) ... and one land of many lands. For it is our everyday habit to say, "the
globe(2) of the earth," and "the globe of the lands." And when it is said, "It
is written in the book of Psalms," though the customary way of speaking is such
that he seem to have wished to suggest that there is but one book, yet to this
it may be answered, that the words mean "in a book of the Psalms," that is,
"in any one of those five books." And this is in common language so
unprecedented, or at least so rare, that we are only convinced that the twelve Prophets made
one book, because we read in like manner," As it is written in the book of the
Prophets."(3) There are some too who call all the canonical Scriptures
together one book,(4) because they agree in a very wondrous and divine unity. ...
3. Whichever then of these is understood, this book, in its parts of fifty
Psalms each, gives an answer important and very worthy of consideration. For
it seems to me not without significance, that the fiftieth is of penitence, the
hundredth of mercy and judgment, the hundred and fiftieth of the praise of God
in His saints. For thus do we advance to an everlasting life of happiness,
first by condemning our own sins, then by living aright, that, having condemned our
ill life, and lived a good life, we may attain to everlasting life. Our
predestination is not wrought in ourselves, but in secret with Him, in His
foreknowledge.(5) But we are called by the preaching of repentance. We are justified in
the calling of mercy and fear of judgment. He feareth not judgment, who hath
previously attained salvation. Being called, we renounce the devil by repentance,
that we may not continue under his yoke: being justified, we are healed by
mercy, that we may not fear judgment: being glorified, we pass into everlasting
life, where we praise God without end. ... The verse wherewith this Psalm
concludeth is the voice of life everlasting.
4. "Praise the Lord in His saints," that is, in those whom He hath
glorified: "praise Him in the firmament of His power" (ver. 1). "Praise Him in His
deeds of strength;" or, as others have explained it, "in His deeds of power:
praise Him according to the multitude of His greatness" (ver. 2). All these His
saints are; as the Apostle saith, "But we may be the righteousness of God in
Him."(6) If then they be the righteousness of God, which He hath wrought in them, why
are they not also the strength of Christ which He hath wrought in them, that
they should rise again from the dead? For in Christ's resurrection, "strength"
is especially set forth to us, for in His Passion was weakness, as the Apostle
saith.(7) And well doth it say, "the firmament of His power." For it is the
"firmament of His power" that He "dieth no more, death hath no more dominion over
Him."(8) Why should not they also be called "the works of" God's "strength,"
which He hath done in them: yea rather, they themselves are the works of His
strength; just as it is said, "We are the righteousness of God in Him." For what
more powerful than that He should reign for ever, with all His enemies put under
His feet? Why should not they also be "the multitude of His greatness"? not that
whereby He is great, but whereby He hath made them great, many as they are,
that is, thousands of thousands. Just as righteousness too is understood in two
ways, that whereby He is righteous, and that which He worketh in us, so as to
make us His righteousness. These same saints are signified by all the musical
instruments in succession, to praise God in. For what the Psalmist began with,
saying, "Praise the Lord in His saints," that he carrieth out, signifying in
various ways these same saints of His.
5. "Praise Him in the sound of the trumpet" (ver. 3): on account of the
surpassing clearness of note of their praise. "Praise Him in the psaltery and
harp." The psaltery praiseth God from things above, the harp praiseth God from
things below; I mean, from things in heaven, and things in earth, as He who made
heaven and earth. We have already in another Psalm,(9) explained that the
psaltery hath that board, whereon the series of strings rests that it may give a
better sound, above, whereas the harp has it below. "Praise Him in the timbrel and
choir" (ver. 4). The "timbrel" praiseth God when the flesh is now changed, so
that there is in it no weakness of earthly corruption. For the timbrel is made
of leather dried and strengthened. The "choir" praiseth God when society made
peaceful praiseth Him. "Praise Him on the strings and organ." Both psaltery and
harp, which have been mentioned above, have strings. But "organ" is a general
name for all instruments of music, although usage has now obtained that those are
specially called organ which are inflated with bellows: but I do not think
that this kind is meant here.(10) For since organ is a Greek word, applied
generally, as I have said, to all musical instruments, this instrument, to which
bellows are applied, is called by the Greeks by another name: but it being called
organ is rather a Latin and conversational usage. When then he saith, "on the
strings and organ," he seemeth to me to have intended to signify some instrument
which hath strings. For it is not psalteries and harps only that have strings:
but, because in the psaltery, and harp, on account of the sound from things
below and things above, somewhat has been found which can be understood after this
distinction, he hath suggested to us to seek some other meaning in the strings
themselves: for they too are flesh, but flesh now set free from corruption. And
to those, it may be, he added the organ, to signify that they sound not each
separately, but sound together in most harmonious diversity, just as they are
arranged in a musical instrument. For even then the saints of God will have their
differences, accordant, not discordant, that is, agreeing, not disagreeing,
just as sweetest harmony arises from sounds differing indeed, but not opposed to
one another.
6. "Praise Him on the well-sounding cymbals, praise Him on cymbals of
jubilation" (ver. 5). Cymbals touch one another in order to sound, and therefore
are by some compared to our lips. But I think it better to understand that God is
in a manner praised on the cymbal, when each is honoured by his neighbour, not
by himself, and then honouring one another, they give praise to God. But lest
any should under stand such cymbals as sound without life, therefore I think he
added, "on cymbals of jubilation." For "jubilation" that is, unspeakable
praise, proceedeth not, save from life. Nor do I think that I should pass over what
musicians say, that there are three kinds of sounds, by voice, by breath, by
striking: by voice, uttered by throat and windpipe, when man singeth without any
instrument; by breath, as by pipe, or anything of that sort: by striking, as
by harp, or anything of that kind. None then of these kinds is omitted here: for
there is voice in the choir, breath in the trumpet, striking in the harp,
representing mind, spirit, body,(1) but by similitudes, not in the proper sense of
the words. When then he proposed, "Praise God in His saints," to whom said he
this, save to themselves? And in whom are they to praise God, save in
themselves? For ye, saith he, are "His saints;" ye are "His strength," but that which He
wrought in you; ye are "His mighty works, an d the multitude of His greatness,"
which He hath wrought and set forth in you. Ye are "trumpet, psaltery, harp,
timbrel, choir, strings, and organ, cymbals of jubilation sounding well,"
because sounding in harmony. All these are ye: let nought that is vile, nought that
is transitory, nought that is ludicrous, be here thought of. And since to savour
of the flesh is death, "let every spirit praise the Lord" (ver. 6).
PRAYER OF ST. AUGUSTIN.
Which he was wont to use after his Sermons and Lectures. TURN we to the Lord
God, the Father Almighty, and with pure hearts offer to Him, so far as our
meanness can, great and true thanks, with all our hearts praying His exceeding
kindness, that of His good pleasure He would deign to hear our prayers, that by His
Power He would drive out the enemy from our deeds and thoughts, that He would
increase our faith, guide our understandings, give us spiritual thoughts, and
lead us to His bliss, through Jesus Christ His Son our Lord, who liveth and
reigneth with Him, in the Unity of the Holy Spirit, one God, for ever and ever. Amen.