HOMILIES OF ST. JOHN CHRYSOSTOM, ADDRESSED TO THE PEOPLE OF ANTIOCH,
CONCERNING THE STATUES (HOMILIES III, IV & V)
HOMILY III.
On the departure of Flavian,(1) Bishop of Antioch, who was gone on an embassy
to the Emperor Theodosius, on behalf of the city. Of the dignity of the
Priesthood. What is true fasting. Slander worse than devouring the human body. And
finally of those who had been put to death on account of the sedition; and against
those who complained that many innocent persons were apprehended.
1. WHEN I took on that throne, deserted and bereft of our teacher, I
rejoice and weep at the same time. I weep, because I see not our father with us! but
I rejoice that he hath set out on a journey for our preservation; that he is
gone to snatch so great a multitude from the wrath of the Emperor! Here is both
an ornament to you, and a crown to him! An ornament to you, that such a father
hath been allotted to you; a crown to him, because he is so affectionate
towards his children, and hath confirmed by actual deeds what Christ said. For having
learnt that "the good shepherd layeth down his life for the sheep,"(2) he took
his departure; venturing his own life for us all, notwithstanding there were
many things to hinder his absence, and enforce his stay. And first, his time of
life, extended as it is to the utmost limits of old age; next, his bodily
infirmity, and the season of the year, as well as the necessity for his presence at
the holy festival; and besides these reasons, his only sister even now at her
last breath! He has disregarded, however, the ties of kindred, of old age, of
infirmity, and the severity of the season, and the toils of the journey; and
preferring you and your safety above all things, he has broken through all these
restraints. And, even as a youth, the aged man is now hastening along, borne upon
the wings of zeal! For if Christ (saith he) gave Himself for us, what excuse
or pardon should we deserve, having undertaken the charge of so numerous a
people, if we were not ready to do and to suffer anything for the security of those
committed into our hands. For if (continues he) the patriarch Jacob, when in
charge of flocks, and feeding brute sheep, and having to give account to man,
passed sleepless nights, and bore heat and cold, and all the inclemency of the
elements, to the end that not one of those animals might perish, much less doth it
become us, who preside over those, who are not irrational, but spiritual
sheep; who are about to give an account of this charge, not to man, but to God, to
be slack in any respect, or shrink from anything which might benefit the flock.
Besides, in proportion as the latter flock is superior to the former; men to
brutes, and God to men; so it behoves us to manifest a greater and more intense
anxiety and diligence. He knows well that his concern is now, not for one city
only, but for the whole of the East. For our city is the head and mother of all
that lie towards the East. For this reason he would encounter every danger, and
nothing would avail to detain him here.
2. On this account I trust that there may be a good hope; for God will not
disdain to took upon such earnestness and zeal, nor will He suffer his servant
to return without success. I know that when he has barely seen our pious
Emperor, and been seen by him, he will be able at once by his very countenance to
allay his wrath. For not only the words of the saints, but their very
countenances are full of grace. And he is a person too endowed with abundant wisdom; and
being well skilled in the divine laws, he will say to him as Moses said to God,
"Yet now, if thou wilt forgive their sin;--and if not, slay me together with
them."(1) For such are the bowels of the saints, that they think death with their
children sweeter than life without them. He will also make the special season
his advocate and shelter himself behind the sacred festival of the Passover;
and will remind the Emperor of the season when Christ remitted the sins of the
whole world. He will exhort him to imitate his Lord. He will also remind him of
that parable of the ten thousand talents, and the hundred pence. I know the
boldness of our father, that he will not hesitate to alarm him from the parable,
and to say, "Take heed lest thou also hear it said in that day, 'O thou wicked
servant, I forgave thee all that debt, because thou desirest me; you ought also
to forgive thy fellow-servants!'(2) Thou dost to thyself a greater benefit than
them, since by pardoning these few offences thou gainest an amnesty for
greater." To this address he will add that prayer, which those who initiated him into
the sacred mystery taught him to offer up, and say, "Forgive us our debts, as
we forgive our debtors."(3)
3. He will moreover inform him, that the offence was not common to the
whole city, but the deed of certain strangers and adventurers, men that act upon
no deliberate plan, but with every sort of audacity and lawlessness; and that it
would not be just for the disorderly conduct of a few to extirpate so great a
city, and to punish those who had done no wrong; and that even though all had
been transgressors, they had paid a sufficient punishment, being consumed by
fear so many days, and expecting every day to be put to death, and being exiles
and fugitives; thus living more wretchedly than condemned criminals, carrying
their life in their hands, and having no confidence of escape! "Let this
punishment (he will say) suffice. Carry not thy resentment further! Make the Judge above
merciful to thyself, by humanity towards thy fellow-servants! Think of the
greatness of the city, and that the question now is not concerning one, or two, or
three, or ten souls, but of a vast multitude too numerous to be reckoned up!
It is a question which affects the capital of the whole world. This is the city
in which Christians were first called by that name.(4) Honor Christ. Reverence
the city which first proclaimed that name, so lovely and sweet to all! This
city hath been the tabernacle of Apostles; the dwelling place of the just! And now
this is the first and only instance of insurrection against its rulers; and
all past time will bear favourable witness to the manners of the city. For had
the people been continually given to sedition, it might have been necessary to
make an example of such iniquity; but if this hath happened only once in all
time, it is plain that the offence has not arisen from the habit of the city, but
that it was the transgression of those who had in an evil hour by mere random
chance arrived there.
4. These things and more than these the priest will say with still greater
boldness; and the Emperor will listen to them; and one is humane, and the
other is faithful; so that on both sides we entertain favourable hopes. But much
more do we rely upon the mercy of God, than upon the fidelity of our Teacher and
the humanity of the Emperor. For whilst the Emperor is supplicated, and the
priest is supplicating, He Himself will interpose, softening the heart of the
Emperor, and exciting the tongue of the priest; facilitating his
utterance;--preparing the mind of the other to receive what is said and with much indulgence, to
accede to the petitions. For our city is dearer to Christ than all others both
because of the virtue of our ancestors, and of your own. And as Peter was the
first among the apostles to preach Christ, so as I said before, this city was
the first of cities that adorned itself by assuming the Christian appellation, as
a sort of admirable diadem. But if where only ten just men were found, God
promised to save all who dwelt therein, why should we not expect a favourable
issue, and become assured of all our lives, when there are not only ten, twenty, or
twice so many only, but far more; who are serving God with all strictness.
5. I have heard many saying, "The threats of a king are like the wrath of
a lion;"(1) being full of dejection and lamentation. What then should we say to
such? That He who said, "The wolves and the lambs shall feed together; and the
leopard shall lie down with the kid, and tile lion shall eat straw like the
ox,"(2) will be able to convert the lion into a mild lamb. Let us therefore
supplicate Him; let us send an embassy to Him; and He will doubtless allay the
Emperor's wrath, and deliver us from the impending distress. Our Father hath gone
thither on this embassy. Let us go on embassy from hence to the Majesty of
heaven! Let us assist him by prayers! The community of the Church can do much, if
with a sorrowful soul, and with a contrite spirit, we offer up our prayers! It is
unnecessary to cross the ocean, or to undertake a long journey. Let every man
and woman among us, whether meeting together at church, or re maining at home,
call upon God with much earnestness, and He will doubtless accede to these
petitions.
Whence does this appear evident? Because He is exceedingly desirous, that
we should always take refuge in Him, and in everything make our requests unto
Him; and do nothing and speak nothing without Him. For men, when we trouble them
repeatedly concerning our affairs, become slothful and evasive, and conduct
themselves unpleasantly towards us; but with God it is quite the reverse. Not
when we apply to him continually respecting our affairs, but when we fail to do
so, then is he especially displeased. Hear at least what He reproves the Jews
for, when He says, "Ye have taken counsel, but not of Me, and made treaties,(3)
but not by My Spirit."(4) For this is the custom of those who love; they desire
that all the concerns of their beloved should be accomplished by means of
themselves; and that they should neither do anything, nor say anything, without them.
On this account did God not only on that occasion, but again elsewhere,
uttering a reproof, speak the same language. "They(5) have reigned, but not by Me;
they have ruled, and they made it not known to Me."(6) Let us not then be slow to
take refuge in Him continually: and whatever be the evil, it will in any case
find its appropriate solution.
6. Doth a man affright you? Hasten to the Lord above, and thou wilt suffer
no evil. Thus the ancients had release from their calamities; and not men
only, but also women. There was a certain Hebrew woman, Esther was her name. This
Esther rescued the whole people of the Jews, when they were about to be
delivered over to destruction, by this very method. For when the Persian king gave
orders that all the Jews should be utterly destroyed, and there was no one who was
able to stand in the way of his wrath, this woman having divested herself of
the splendid robe, and clothed herself with sackcloth and being besprinkled with
ashes, supplicated the merciful God to go in with her to the king; and offering
up her prayer to Him, these were the words she uttered, "O Lord, make my words
acceptable,(7) and put eloquent speech in my mouth."(8) Let this be the prayer
which we offer to God for our Teacher. For if a woman, supplicating on behalf
of the Jews, prevailed to allay the wrath of a barbarian, much rather will our
Teacher, entreating on behalf of so great a city, and in conjunction with so
great a Church, be able to persuade this most mild and merciful Emperor. For if
he hath received authority to loose sins committed against God, much more will
he be able to take away and blot out those which have been committed against a
man. He is also himself a ruler and a ruler of more dignity than the other. For
the sacred laws take and place under his hands even the royal head. And when
there is need of any good thing from above, the Emperor is accustomed to fly to
the priest: but not the priest to the Emperor. He(9) too hath his breast-plate,
that of righteousness.(1) He too hath his girdle, that of truth, and sandals
(2) of much greater dignity, those of the Gospel of peace. He too hath a sword,
not of iron, but of the Spirit; he too hath a crown resting on his head. This
panoply is the more splendid. The weapons are grander, the license of speech
greater,(3) and mightier(4) the strength. So that from the weight of his authority,
and from his own greatness of soul; and more than all the rest, from the hope
which he has in God, he will address the Emperor with much freedom and much
discretion.
7. Let us not then despair of our safety, but let us pray; let us make
invocation; let us supplicate; let us go on embassy to the King that is above with
many tears! We have this fast too as an ally, and as an assistant in this good
intercession. Therefore, as when the winter is over and the summer is
appearing, the sailor draws his vessel to the deep; and the soldier burnishes his arms,
and makes ready his steed for the battle; and the husbandman sharpens his
sickle; and the traveller boldly undertakes a long journey, and the wrestler strips
and bares himself for the contest. So too, when the fast makes its appearance,
like a kind of spiritual summer, let us as soldiers burnish our weapons; and
as husbandmen let us sharpen our sickle; and as sailors let us order our
thoughts against the waves of extravagant desires; and as travellers let us set out on
the journey towards heaven; and as wrestlers let us strip for the contest. For
the believer is at once a husbandman, and a sailor, and a soldier, a wrestler,
and a traveller. Hence St. Paul saith, "We wrestle not against flesh and
blood, but against principalities, against powers. Put on therefore the whole armour
of God."(5) Hast thou observed the wrestler? Hast thou observed the soldier?
If thou art a wrestler, it is necessary for thee to engage in the conflict
naked. If a soldier, it behoves thee to stand in the battle line armed at all
points. How then are both these things possible, to be naked, and yet not naked; to
be clothed, and yet not clothed! How? I will tell thee. Divest thyself of
worldly business, and thou hast become a wrestler. Put on the spiritual armour, and
thou hast become a soldier. Strip thyself of worldly cares, for the season is
one of wrestling. Clothe thyself with the spiritual armour, for we have a heavy
warfare to wage with demons. Therefore also it is needful we should be naked, so
as to offer nothing that the devil may take hold of, while he is wrestling
with us; and to be fully armed at all points, so as on no side to receive a deadly
blow. Cultivate thy soul. Cut away the thorns. Sow the word of godliness.
Propagate and nurse with much care the fair plants of divine wisdom, and thou hast
become a husbandman. And Paul will say to thee, "The husbandman that laboureth
must be first partaker of the fruits. He too himself practised this art.
Therefore writing to the Corinthians, he said, "I have planted, Apollos watered, but
God gave the increase."(7) Sharpen thy sickle, which thou hast blunted through
gluttony--sharpen it by fasting. Lay hold of the pathway which leads towards
heaven; rugged and narrow as it is, lay hold of it, and journey on. And how
mayest thou be able to do these things? By subduing thy body, and bringing it into
subjection. For when the way grows narrow, the corpulence that comes of gluttony
is a great hindrance. Keep down the waves of inordinate desires. Repel the
tempest of evil thoughts. Preserve the bark; display much skill, and thou hast
become a pilot. But we shall have the fast for a groundwork and instructor in all
these things.
8. I speak not, indeed, of such a fast as most persons keep, but of real
fasting; not merely an abstinence from meats; but from sins too. For the nature
of a fast is such, that it does not suffice to deliver those who practise it,
unless it be done according to a suitable law.(8) "For the wrestler," it is
said, "is not crowned unless he strive lawfully."(9) To the end then, that when we
have gone through the labour of fasting, we forfeit not the crown of fasting,
we should understand how, and after what manner, it is necessary to conduct this
business; since that Pharisee also fasted,(10) but afterwards went down empty,
and destitute of the fruit of fasting. The Publican fasted not; and yet he was
accepted in preference to him who had fasted; in order that thou mayest learn
that fasting is unprofitable, except all other duties follow with it. The
Ninevites fasted, and won the favour of God.(1) The Jews, fasted too, and profited
nothing, nay, they departed with blame.(2) Since then the danger in fasting is
so great to those who do not know how they ought to fast, we should learn the
laws of this exercise, in order that we may not "run uncertainly," nor "beat the
air," nor while we are fighting contend with a shadow. Fasting is a medicine;
but a medicine, though it be never so profitable, becomes frequently useless
owing to the unskilfulness of him who employs it. For it is necessary to know,
moreover, the time when it should be applied, and the requisite quantity of it;
and the temperament of body that admits it; and the nature of the country, and
the season of the year; and the corresponding diet; as well as various other
particulars; any of which, if one overlooks, he will mar all the rest that have
been named. Now if, when the body needs healing, such exactness is required on
our part, much more ought we, when our care is about the soul, and we seek to
heal the distempers of the mind, to look, and to search into every particular
with the utmost accuracy.
9. Let us see then how the Ninevites fasted, and how they were delivered
from that wrath--"Let neither man nor beast, herd nor flock, taste anything,"(3)
saith (the prophet). What sayest thou? Tell me--must even the irrational
things fast, and the horses and the mules be covered with sackcloth? "Even so," he
replies. For as when, at the decease of some rich man, the relatives clothe not
only the men servants and maid servants, but the horses also with sackcloth,
and give orders that they should follow the procession to the sepulchre, led by
their grooms; thus signifying the greatness of the calamity, and inviting all to
pity; thus also, indeed, when that city was about to be destroyed, even the
irrational nature was enveloped in sackcloth, and subjected to the yoke of
fasting. "It is not possible," saith he, "that irrational creatures should learn the
wrath of God by means of reason; let them be taught by means of fasting, that
this stroke is of divine infliction. For if the city should be overturned, not
only would it be one common sepulchre for us, the dwellers therein, but for
these likewise. Inasmuch then as these would participate in the punishment, let
them also do so in the fast. But there was yet another thing which they aimed at
in this act, which the prophets also are wont to do. For these, when they see
some dreadful chastisement proceeding from heaven, and those who are to be
punished without anything to say for themselves;--laden with shame,--unworthy of the
least pardon or excuse:--not knowing what to do, nor from whence they may
procure an advocacy for the condemned, they have recourse to the things irrational;
and describing their death in tragical fashion, they make intercession by
them, putting forward as a plea their pitiable and mournful destruction. When
therefore, aforetime, famine had seized upon the Jews, and a great drought oppressed
their country, and all things were being consumed, one of the prophets spoke
thus, "The young heifers leaped in their stalls; the herds of oxen wept, because
there was no pasture; all the cattle of the field looked upward to Thee,
because the streams of waters were dried up."(4) Another prophet bewailing the evils
of drought again speaks to this effect: "The hinds calved in the fields and
forsook it, because there was no grass. The wild asses did stand in the forests;
they snuffed up the wind like a dragon; their eyes did fail, because there was
no grass."(5) Moreover, ye have heard Joel saying to-day, "Let the bridegroom
go forth of his chamber, and the bride out of her closet;--the infants that suck
the breast."(6) For what reason, I ask, does he call so immature an age to
supplication? Is it not plainly for the very same reason? For since all who have
arrived at the age of manhood, have inflamed and provoked God's wrath, let the
age, saith he, which is devoid of transgressions supplicate Him who is provoked.
10. But, as I said before, we may see what it was that dissolved such
inexorable wrath. Was it, forsooth, fasting only and sackcloth? We say not so; but
the change of their whole life. Whence does this appear? From the very language
of the prophet. For he who hath discoursed of the wrath of God, and of their
fasting,(7) himself too, when speaking of the reconciliation, and teaching us
the cause of the reconciliation, speaks to this effect; "And God saw their
works."(8) What kind of works? That they had fasted? That they had put on sackcloth?
Nothing of the sort: but passing all these points in silence, he adds, "That
they turned every one from their evil ways, and the Lord repented of the evil
that He had said He would do unto them." Seest thou, that fasting did not rescue
from this danger, but it was the change of life, which rendered God propitious
and kind to these barbarians?
11. I have said these things, not that we may disparage fasting, but that
we may honour fasting; for the honour of fasting consists not in abstinence
from food, but in withdrawing from sinful practices; since he who limits his
fasting only to an abstinence from meats, is one who especially disparages it. Dost
thou fast? Give me proof of it by thy works! Is it said by what kind of works?
If thou seest a poor man, take pity on him! If thou seest in enemy, be
reconciled to him! If thou seest a friend gaining honour, envy him not If thou seest a
handsome woman, pass her by! For let not the mouth only fast, but also the
eye, and the ear, and the feet, and the hands, and all the members of our bodies.
Let the hands fast, by being pure from rapine and avarice. Let the feet fast,
by ceasing from running to the unlawful spectacles. Let the eyes fast, being
taught never(1) to fix themselves rudely upon handsome countenances, or to busy
themselves with strange beauties. For looking is the food of the eyes, but if
this be such as is unlawful or forbidden, it mars the fast; and upsets the whole
safety of the soul; but if it be lawful and safe, it adorns fasting. For it
would be among things the most absurd to abstain from lawful food because of the
fast, but with the eyes to touch even what is forbidden. Dost thou not eat flesh?
Feed not upon lasciviousness by means of the eyes. Let the ear fast also. The
fasting of the ear consists in refusing to receive evil speakings and
calumnies. "Thou shalt not receive a false report,"(2) it says.
12. Let the mouth too fast from disgraceful speeches and railing. For what
doth it profit if we abstain from birds and fishes;(3) and yet bite and devour
our brethren? The evil speaker eateth the flesh of his brother, and biteth the
body of his neighbour. Because of this Paul utters the fearful saying, "If ye
bite and devour one another, take heed that ye be not consumed one of
another."(4) Thou hast not fixed thy teeth in the flesh, but thou hast fixed the slander
in the soul, and inflicted the wound of evil suspicion; thou hast harmed, in a
thousand ways, thyself and him, and many others, for in slandering a neighbour
thou hast made him who listens to the slander worse;(5) for should he be a
wicked man, he becomes more careless when he finds a partner in his wickedness;
and should he be a just man, he is lifted to arrogance, and puffed up; being led
on by the sin of others to imagine great things concerning himself. Besides,(6)
thou hast struck at the common welfare of the Church; for all those who hear
not only accuse the supposed sinner, but the reproach is fastened on the
Christian community; neither dost thou hear the unbelievers saying, "Such a person is
a fornicator, or a libertine;" but instead of the individual who hath sinned,
they accuse all Christians. In addition to this,(7) thou hast caused the glory
of God to be blasphemed; for as His Name is glorified when we have good report,
so when we sin, it is blasphemed and insulted!
13. A fourth reason is, that thou hast disgraced him who is ill reported;
and hast thus rendered him more shameless than he was, by placing him in a
state of enmity and hostility. Fifthly, thou hast made thyself liable to
chastisement and vengeance; by involving(8) thyself in matters which in no way concerned
thee. For let not any one tell me in reply, "Then I am an evil speaker when I
speak falsely, but if I speak what is true, I cease to be so." Although it be
with truth thou speakest evil, this also is a crime. For that Pharisee spake evil
of the Publican with truth; but nevertheless this availed him not. For was not
the latter, I ask, a publican and a sinner? It is manifest to every one that
he was a publican. But at the same time inasmuch as the Pharisee spoke ill of
him, he departed from the temple with the loss of every advantage. Dost thou wish
to correct a brother? Weep; pray unto God; taking him apart, admonish,
counsel, entreat him! So also Paul did, "Lest," saith he, "when I come again, my God
will humble me among you, and I shall bewail many which have sinned already, and
have not repented of the uncleanness and fornication and lasciviousness which
they have committed."(9) Show thy charity towards the sinner. Persuade him that
it is from care and anxiety for his welfare, and not from a wish to expose
him, that thou puttest him in mind of his sin. Take hold of his feet; embrace him;
be not ashamed, if thou truly desirest to cure him. Physicians too do things
of this sort, oftentimes, when their patients are hard to please;(1) by embraces
and entreaties they at length persuade them to take a salutary medicine. Thus
also do thou. Show the wound to the priest;(2) that is the part of one who
cares for him, and provides for him, and is anxious on his behalf.
14. But not only do I now admonish the evil speakers; but those besides,
who hear others ill spoken of, I exhort to stop up their ears, and to imitate
the prophet who saith, "Whoso privily slandereth his neighbour, him will I
punish."(3) Say to thy neighbour, "Hast thou any one to praise or highly to commend?
I open my ears, to receive the fragrant oil; but if thou hast any evil to say,
I block up the entrance to thy words,--for I am not to admit dung and dirt.
What profit doth it afford me to learn that such a one is a bad man? The greatest
injury indeed results from this, and the worst loss!" Say to him, "Let us be
anxious about our own faults; how we may render up an account of our own
transgressions; and exhibit this sort of curiosity and meddlesome activity respecting
our own lives. What excuse or pardon shall we find; whilst we never even take
into consideration our own affairs, but thus inquisitively pry into those of
others!" And as it is mean and extremely disgraceful to peer into a house, and to
observe what is within as one passes, so also to make inquisition into another
man's life is the last degree of illiberality. But what is yet more ridiculous
is, that those who lead this sort of life, and are neglectful of their own
affairs, when they have mentioned any of these secret matters, beseech and adjure
him who has heard it, not to mention it more to any other person; thus making it
plain that they have done an action which deserves censure. For if thou
beseechest him to tell this to no other person, much more did it not become thee to
tell these things first to him. The matter was safe while in thy possession; now,
after betraying it, thou art grown anxious for its safety. If thou art
desirous that it be not carried abroad to another,(4) do not thyself tell it. But
when thou hast betrayed the custody of the matter to another, thou doest what is
superfluous and useless, in charging him, and putting him on oath for the safety
of what has been spoken.
15. "But it is sweet to slander." Nay, it is sweet not to speak evil. For
he that hath spoken evil is henceforth contentious; he is suspicious and he
fears, repents, and gnaws his own tongue. Being timorous and trembling, lest at
any time, what he said should be carried to others, and bring great peril, and
useless and needless enmity, on the sayer. But he who keeps the matter to
himself, will spend his days in safety, with much pleasantness. "Thou hast heard a
word," we read, "let it die with thee; and be bold; it will(5) not burst thee."(6)
What is the meaning of this? "let it die with thee?" Extinguish it; bury it;
neither permit it to go forth, nor even to move at all; but, as the best course,
be careful not to tolerate others in the practice of evil speaking. And should
you perchance, at any time receive an impression from it, bury it, destroy
what has been uttered, deliver it over to oblivion; in order that you may become
like those who have not heard it; and spend the present life with much peace and
security. Should the slanderers learn that we abhor them more than those do
whom they accuse, they themselves will henceforth abandon this evil habit, and
correct the sin; and will afterwards applaud, and proclaim us as those who were
their saviours and benefactors. For, as to speak well, and to applaud, is the
beginning of friendship, so to speak ill and to calumniate, has been the
beginning and foundation of enmity, and hatred, and a thousand quarrels. From nothing
else have our own affairs been more neglected, than from the habit of prying
into and meddling with the concerns of others; for it is not possible for one who
is given to evil speaking, and busying himself with other men's lives, ever to
look after his own life. His whole study being expended upon meddling with
other men's matters, all those which belong to himself must of necessity be left at
hazard and neglected. For it is well if one who spends all his leisure on the
anxious consideration of his own sins, and the judgment of them, can make any
progress. But when thou art always busy about other men's matters, when wilt
thou pay any heed to thy own evils?
16. Let us flee then, beloved, let us flee slander! knowing that it is the
very gulph of Satan, and the place where he lurks with his snares. For in
order that we may be careless of our own state, and may thus render our account
heavier, the devil leads us into this custom. But more than this it is not only
a very serious matter, that we shall hereafter have to give account of what we
have spoken, but that we shall make our own offences the heavier by these
means; depriving ourselves of all excuse. For he who scans with bitterness the
conduct of others, can never obtain pardon for the sins committed by himself. For
God will determine the sentence, not only from the nature of our transgressions,
but from the judgment which thou hast passed upon others. Therefore He gave the
admonition, "Judge not, that ye be not judged."(1) For the sin, of whatever
kind, will not there appear any more such as it was when committed, but will
receive a great and unpardonable addition from the judgment passed by thee upon thy
fellow servants. For as he who is humane, and merciful, and forgiving, cuts
away the greater mass of his sins, so he who is bitter, and cruel, and
implacable, greatly increases the magnitude of his own offences. Let us then expel from
our mouth all slander, knowing that if we do not abstain from it, though we
might feed upon ashes, this austerity would avail us nothing. "For not that which
entereth into, but that which cometh out of the mouth defileth the man."(2) If
any one were to stir up a cesspool, when you were passing, say, would you not
reproach and rate the man who did it? This then also do with respect to the
slanderer. For the stirred cesspool does not so grossly offend the sense of those
who smell that ill savour, as the stirring up other men's sins, and the exposure
of an impure life, offends and disturbs the soul of those who hear of it.
Therefore let us abstain from evil speaking, from foul language, from blasphemy; and
let us not speak ill of our neighbour, nor of God!
17. For many of our evil speakers have run into such madness, as to lift
up their own tongue from their fellow servants against their Master. But how
great an evil this is, you may learn from the affairs in which we are now
involved. A man is insulted, and, lo! we are all fearing and trembling, both those who
were guilty of the insult, and those who are conscious of nothing of the kind!
But God is insulted every day! Why do I say every day?--every hour rather, by
the rich, by the poor, by those who are at ease, by the afflicted, by those who
calumniate, and those who are calumniated, and yet no one ever hears a word of
this! Therefore He has permitted our fellow servant(3) to be insulted, in order
that from the danger which has happened through this insult, thou mayest learn
the benignity of the Lord! And notwithstanding that this is our first and only
offence, we do not on that account expect to gain an excuse, or pardon. But we
provoke God every day, and we show no signs of returning to Him, and yet He
endures it with all long-suffering! Seest thou then how great the benignity of
the Lord is? Yet, in this present outrage, those who had done amiss were taken
and thrust into prison, and paid the penalty; nevertheless we are still in fear,
for he who has been insulted has not as yet heard(4) what has taken place, nor
pronounced sentence, and we are all trembling. But God every day hears of the
insults offered Him, and no one heeds it, although God is thus merciful and
loving toward man. With Him it suffices only to acknowledge the sin, and so to
cancel the accusation. But with man it is altogether the reverse. When those who
have sinned confess, then they are punished the more; which indeed has happened
in the present instance. And some have perished by the sword, some by fire;
some given to wild beasts, and not men only, but children. And neither this
immaturity of age, nor the tumult of the people, nor the circumstance that they were
infuriated by demons when they perpetrated these deeds;(5) nor that the
exaction was thought to be intolerable;(6) nor poverty, nor having offended in company
with all; nor promising that they would never hereafter dare to repeat such
deeds; nor anything else, could at all rescue them; but they were led away to the
pit,(7) without reprieve; armed soldiers conducting and guarding them on
either side, lest any one should carry off the criminals; whilst mothers also
followed afar off, seeing their children beheaded, but not daring to bewail their
calamity; for terror conquered grief, and fear overcame nature! And just as when
men beholding from the land those who are shipwrecked, are deeply distressed,
but are not able to approach and to rescue the drowning, so too here, the mothers
restrained through fear of the soldiers, as it were by so many waves, not only
dared not go near to their children, and rescue them from condemnation, but
were afraid even to shed tears?
18. Assuredly ye gather from thence the mercy of God, how unspeakable, how
boundless, how transcending all description! Here indeed the person who has
been insulted is of the same nature;(1) and only once in all his lifetime has
experienced this; and then it was not done to his face; nor while he was present
to see or hear it; and nevertheless, none of those who perpetrated these deeds
obtained pardon. But with regard to God nothing of the kind can be said; for the
interval between man and God, is so great, as no language can at all express;
and throughout every day He is insulted, although present, and seeing and
hearing it: and yet He sends not forth the lightning, nor commands the sea to
overflow the land, and submerge all men; nor does He bid the earth to cleave asunder
and swallow up all the contumelious; but He forbears, and suffers long, and
still offers to pardon those who have insulted Him, if they only repent and
promise to do these things no more! Truly now is the season to proclaim "Who can
utter the mighty acts of the Lord? who can show forth all His praise?"(2) How many
men have not only cast down, but also trodden under foot the images of God! For
when thou throttlest a debtor, when thou strippest him, when thou draggest him
away(3) thou tramplest under foot God's image. Hear for a certainty Paul
saying, that "a man ought not to cover his head, forasmuch as he is the image and
glory of God."(4) And again, hear God Himself saying, "Let us make man in Our
Image, after Our likeness."(5) But if thou sayest that man is not of the same
substance as God,--what matters that? For neither was the brazen statue of the same
substance as the Emperor; yet nevertheless, they who defied it paid the
penalty. Thus also with regard to mankind, if men are not of the same substance as
God, (as indeed they are not), still they have been called His image; and it were
fitting they should receive honour on account of the appellation. But thou for
the sake of a little gold dose trample them under foot, dose throttle them,
and drag them away; and hast not to this day in any wise paid the penalty!
19. May there be then speedily some favourable and propitious change! This
certainly I foretell and testify, that although this cloud should pass away,
and we yet remain in the same condition of listlessness, we shall again have to
suffer much heavier evils than those we are now dreading; for I do not so much
fear the wrath of the Emperor, as your own listlessness. Surely it is not
sufficient by way of apology that we supplicate(6) two or three days, but it is
necessary that we should make a change in our whole life,(7) and that whilst
abstaining from wickedness we should persevere continually in virtue. For as those
who are sickly, unless they keep up a constant regimen, would find no advantage
by their observing a two or three days' discipline; so those who are in sin, if
they do not exercise sobriety at all times, will find no benefit in two or
three days' amendment. For as it is said, that he who is washed, and is again
afterwards polluted with the mire, hath gained nothing; so he who has repented for
three days, and has again returned to his former state, has accomplished
nothing. Let us not therefore, now act as we have always. done hitherto. For many
times, when we have been surprised by earthquakes, as well as famine and drought,
after becoming more sober and gentle for three or four days, we did but return
again to the former course. For this cause our present troubles have happened.
But if we have not done so before; yet, now at least let us all persevere in the
same piety; let us preserve the same meekness, that we may not again need
another stroke. Was not God able to have prevented what has taken place? He did,
however, permit it, that He might make those who despised Him more sober-minded,
through dread of a fellow-servant!
20. But let not any one say that many of the guilty escaped, and that
many of the innocent incurred punishment. For I hear of numerous persons who
frequently say this; not only in the case of the present sedition, but also in many
other circumstances of this. nature. What then should I reply to those who make
such observations? Why, that if he who was captured was innocent of the
present sedition, he had wrought some other transgression before this still more
grievous, for which, not having afterwards repented, he has paid the penalty at the
present time. For thus is the custom of God to deal with us. When we sin, He
does not straightway visit the transgression, but lets it pass, giving us
space(8) for repentance, in order that we may be amended and converted. But if,
because we have not paid the penalty, we suppose that the offence too is blotted
out, and make light of it; then somewhere, where we think not of it, we are sure
afterwards to be punished. And this takes place in order that, when we sin and
are not punished, we may not be free from fear, unless we amend, knowing that we
shall certainly fall into punishment where we do not expect it. So that if
thou sinnest, beloved, and art not punished, do not grow presumptuous, but for
this very cause be the more alarmed, knowing that it is an easy matter with God to
recompense again when he pleases. For this reason then he hath not punished
thee, that thou mightest receive space for repentance. Let us not therefore say,
that such a person whilst innocent incurred punishment; and another whilst
guilty escaped, for he who incurred it, being guiltless, as I observed, paid the
punishment of other transgressions; and he who now escapes it, if he repents not,
will be captured in another snare. If our minds are thus disposed, we shall
never forget our own sins, but, always fearful and trembling lest we should have
to pay the penalty, we shall readily recollect them. For nothing is so apt to
bring sin to remembrance as punishment and chastisement. And this is shown by
Joseph's brethren. For when they had sold the just man, and thirteen years had
passed away, suspecting they had fallen into punishment, and fearing for their
lives, they remembered their sin, and said one to another, "We are verily guilty
concerning our brother Joseph."(1) Seest thou, how fear brought their guilt to
recollection? And yet when they were sinning they perceived it not, but when
they were fearful of being punished, then they remembered it? Knowing, therefore,
all these things, let us make a change and amendment of our lives; and let us
think of religion and virtue, before we think of deliverance from the impending
distress.
21. And in the meanwhile I desire to fix three precepts in your mind, to
the end that you may accomplish me these during: the fast,--viz. to speak ill
of no one; to hold no one for an enemy; and to expel from the mouth altogether
the evil custom of oaths. Anti as when we hear that some money tax is imposed,
each one going within, and calling his wife and children and servants, considers
and consults with them how he may pay this tribute, so also let us do with
respect to these spiritual precepts. Let every one when he has returned home call
together his wife and children, and let him say, that a spiritual tribute was
imposed this day: a tribute by which there will be some deliverance and removal
of these evils; a tribute which does not make those who pay it poor, but
richer; that is to say, to have no enemy, to speak evil of no man, and to swear not
at all. Let us consider; let us think; let us resolve how we may fulfill these
precepts. Let us exert every endeavour. Let us admonish each other. Let us
correct each other, that we may not go to the other world as debtors, and then,
needing to borrow of others, suffer the fate of the foolish virgins, and fall from
immortal salvation. If we thus set our lives in order, I warrant you and
promise, that from this there will be deliverance from the present calamity, and a
removal of these dreadful ills; and what is greater than all, there will be the
enjoyment of the good things to come. For it were fitting that I should commit
to you the whole body of virtue; but I think it the best method of correction,
to take the laws by parts, and reduce them to practice, and then to proceed to
others. For as in a given field, the husbandman, digging it all up piecemeal,
gradually comes to the end of his task; so we too if we make this rule for
ourselves, in any wise to reduce to a correct practice these three precepts during
the present Lent, and to commit them to the safe custody of good habit, we shall
proceed with greater ease to the rest; and by this means arriving at the summit
of spiritual wisdom, we shall both reap the fruit of a favourable hope in the
present life; and in the life to come we shall stand before Christ with great
confidence, and enjoy those unspeakable blessings; which, God grant, we may all
be found worthy of, through the grace and loving kindness of Jesus Christ our
Lord, with Whom be glory to the Father and the Holy Spirit forever and ever.
Amen.
HOMILY IV.
An exhortation to the people respecting fortitude and patience, from the
examples of Job and the Three Children in Babylon. The Homily concludes with an
address on the subject of abstaining from oaths.
1. BLESSED be God! who hath comforted your sorrowing souls, and stayed
your agitated spirits! For that ye have received no small consolation is evident
by the desire and readiness to listen which ye are now showing. For it is
impossible that a soul in anguish, and oppressed with the cloud of despondency,
should have power to hear with readiness anything that is spoken. But I see you are
attending to us with much good will, and with an intense earnestness; and that
you have shaken off gloomy thoughts, and put aside the sense of present
distress, in your affectionate desire of listening. For this cause, I thank God
heartily together with you, that the calamity has not overmatched your philosophy;
nor fear relaxed your vigour; nor tribulation quenched your alacrity; nor danger
dried up your zeal: nor the fear of men overcome the desire for God; nor the
difficulty of the times overthrown your earnestness; nay, so far from
overthrowing, it has strengthened it; so far from slackening, it has given it more
intensity; so far from quenching, has kindled it the more. The forum is indeed
empty, but the church is filled; the former supplies material for melancholy, the
latter is an occasion of joy and spiritual gladness! When therefore, beloved,
you betake yourself to the forum, and the sight of the solitude calls forth a
groan, fly back to thy Mother, and straightway she will console thee with the
multitude of her offspring and will show thee the chorus of the Brethren complete,
and will drive away all thy despondency! For in the city we are as earnestly
longing to see human beings, as those who inhabit the deserts; but when we take
refuge in the church, we are straitened for room by the multitude. And as when
the sea is in uproar, and rendered furious by the violent tempest, fear
compels all to fly for refuge from without into the harbour; so also now, the
waves of the forum, and the tempest of the city, drives together every one from
all sides into the church, and by the bond of love knits the members close to one
another.
2. Let us then give thanks to God even for these things, that we have
reaped so much fruit from the tribulation; that we have received so great an
advantage from the trial. If there were no trial, there would be no crown; if there
were no wrestlings, there would be no prize; if there were no lists(1) marked
out, there would be no honours; if there were no tribulation, there would be no
rest; if there were no winter, there would be no summer. And this may be
observed, not only amongst men, but even with the very seeds; for if, in that case,
we expect the ear of corn to spring and flourish, there must be much rain, much
gathering of the clouds, and much frost; and the time of sowing is also a rainy
season. Since therefore the winter, a winter not of the elements, but of
souls, has now set in, let us too sow in this winter that we may reap in the summer;
let us sow tears, that we may reap gladness. This is not my word, it is a
prophetic promise, "They who sow in tears, shall reap in joy."(2) The rain which
cometh down, doth not so make the seeds to sprout and grow, as the shower of
failing tears maketh the seed of godliness to spring up and flourish. This it is
that cleanseth the soul; watereth the mind, and causeth the growing, germ of
doctrine to push rapidly forwards. For this reason also, it is needful to plough up
a deep furrow. This the Prophet signified when he spoke thus, "Break up your
fallow ground, and sow not among thorns."(3) Therefore, as when he who has set
the plough on the field, turns up the earth from below, preparing beforehand a
safe lodgment for the seeds, in order that they may not lie dispersed over the
surface, but may be hidden in the very womb of the earth, and deposit their
roots in safety: so also it is our business to act; and making use of the plough of
tribulation to break up the depth of the heart. For another Prophet admonishes
of this, when he says, "Rend your hearts and not your garments."(4) Let us
then rend our hearts, that if any evil plant, any treacherous thought be present
in us, we may tear it up by the roots, and provide a pure soil for the seeds of
godliness. For if we do not now break up the fallow ground; if we do not now
sow; if we do not now water it with tears, whilst it is a time of tribulation and
fasting, when shall we ever be brought to compunction? Will it be when we are
at ease, and in luxury? But this is impossible. For ease and luxury generally
lead to indolence, just as tribulation leads back again to diligence; and
restores to itself the mind that had wandered abroad, and been dreaming after a
multitude of objects.
3. Let us not then grieve on account of this despondency, but even give
thanks to God, for great is the gain that comes of tribulation. The husbandman,
when he has sown the seed he had gathered with so much labour, prays that a
shower may come; and the ignorant man, looking on, will be surprised at all that
takes place; and perhaps say to himself, "what can this man be doing? He is
scattering what he has collected; and not only scattering, but he is also mixing it
up in the earth with much industry, so that it will be no easy matter for him
to collect these together again; and besides mixing them with the earth, he is
moreover desiring a heavy rain, so that all he has cast therein will rot, and
become mire." Such a person is also terrified when he observes the thunders
bursting through the clouds, and the lightnings striking downwards. But not so the
farmer. He is glad and rejoices whilst beholding the heavy rain. For he does not
regard what is present, but awaits the future. He does not attend to the
thunderings, but is reckoning the number of his sheaves. He thinks not of the
decaying seed, but of the flourishing ears of corn; not of the tedious ram, but of
the delightful dust of the threshing floor. Thus indeed, also, should we regard,
not our present tribulation, nor the pain of it, but the benefit that may arise
from it--the fruit that it will bring forth. Let us wait for the sheaves of
the threshing floor; for if we be sober, we shall be able to collect much fruit
from the present time, and to fill the granaries of our minds. If we be sober,
we shall not only be far from taking any harm from this trouble, but we shall
also reap innumerable benefits. But should we be slothful, even tranquillity will
destroy us! Either of these things is injurious to him who takes no heed; but
they both profit him who lives with strictness. And even as gold if it be
covered with water, still shows its own proper beauty, and although it should fall
into the furnace, would again come forth brighter than before; but on the other
hand, should clay or grass be mixed with water, the one dissolves and the other
corrupts; and should they fall into the fire, the one is parched and the
other is burnt up; so also in truth it is with the just man and the sinner! For
should the former enjoy repose, he remains illustrious, even as gold is when
immersed in water; and though he falls into trial, he becomes the more illustrious,
like gold when subjected to the test of fire; but the sinner, if he obtains
rest, is enervated and corrupted like the grass and the clay, when they come in
contact with water; and should he undergo trial, he is burnt up and destroyed, in
the same way as the grass and the clay are by the action of fire!
4. Let us not then be out of heart for the present evils; for if thou hast
any sins(1) remaining, they will disappear, and easily be burnt up by the
tribulation; but if thou possessest virtue, thou wilt become thereby more
illustrious and distinguished; for if thou art continually vigilant and sober, thou wilt
be superior to all injury. For it is not the nature of the trials, but the
listlessness of those who are tried, that is apt to cause their overthrow. So that
if thou desirest to rejoice, and to enjoy ease and pleasure, seek neither for
pleasure nor ease, but seek for a soul full of patience, and one that is able
to manifest fortitude; since if thou hast not this, not only will trial put thee
to shame, but repose will destroy and overthrow thee yet more signally. For to
prove that it is not the attack of evils, but the listlessness of the mind
which subverts our salvation, hear what Christ saith: "Whosoever heareth these
sayings of mine, and doeth them, I will liken him unto a wise man, which built his
house upon a rock; and the rain descended, and the floods came, and the winds
blew, and beat upon that house; and it fell not, for it was founded upon a
rock." And again: "Every one who heareth these sayings of mine, and doeth them not,
shall be likened unto a foolish man, which built his house upon the sand; and
the rain descended, and the floods came, and the winds blew, and beat upon that
house; and it fell, and great was the fall of it."(2) Do you perceive that it
was not the attack of these trials that produced the overthrow, but the folly
of the builders? For there was rain there, and there was rain here; there were
floods there, and there were floods here; here the beating of winds, and there
again the same. The one man built a house, and the other built a house. The
building was the same; the trials were the same; but the end was not the same;
because there was not the same foundation. For the folly of the builder, not the
nature of the trials, caused the fall of the building; otherwise the house that
was founded upon the rock should have fallen, whereas nothing of that kind
befell it. But do not suppose that these things were spoken merely of a house; for
the discourse relates to a soul, giving proof by its works that it hears the
divine word, or rejects it. Thus Job builded up his soul. The rain descended;--for
the fire fell from heaven and devoured all his flocks; the floods came;--the
frequent,--the constant,--the successive messengers of his calamities, telling
him of the destruction of his herds--of his camels--of his children. The winds
blew,--the bitter words of his wife:--"Curse God," she said, "and die."(1) Yet
the house fell not: the soul was not supplanted: the just man did not blaspheme;
but even gave thanks thus, saying, "The Lord gave and the Lord hath taken
away. As it pleased the Lord, so is it come to pass."(2) Seest thou that not the
nature of the trials, but the negligence of the indolent, is wont to cause the
overthrow? since tribulation makes the strong man stronger. Who saith this? It is
the man who lived in tribulation, the blessed Paul; he speaks thus:
"Tribulation worketh patience, and patience probation, and probation hope."(3) And even
as the violence of the wind, when it rushes upon strong trees, and sways them in
all directions, does not root them up, but renders them still firmer and
stronger by these attacks; so the soul that is holy, and lives in a religious state,
is not supplanted by the inroads of trial and tribulation, but stimulated
thereby to more patience; even as the blessed Job, whom they made more illustrious
and honourable.
5. At the present time then, a man is angry with us, a man of like
passions, and of like soul, and we are afraid: but in the case of Job it was an evil
and malignant demon who was angry; nay, he was not simply angry, but set in
motion all sorts of machinations, and brought forward every stratagem; and yet even
with all he could not conquer the fortitude of the just man. But here is a
man, who is at one time angry, at another time is reconciled; and we are
nevertheless dead with fear. On that occasion it was a devil that waged war, who is
never reconciled to human nature, but has engaged in a war without treaty, and a
battle without truce against our race; yet nevertheless, the just man laughed his
darts to scorn. What apology then, or what pardon can be ours, if we cannot
sustain a human trial; we who are taught such spiritual wisdom under grace; when
this man before grace, and before the Old Testament, endured this most grievous
war so nobly! These things, beloved, we should therefore always discourse of
with one another; and by words of this kind encourage ourselves. For ye are
witnesses, and your conscience is a witness how much gain we have already received
from this trial! The dissolute man hath now become sober; the bold man meek;
the slothful man active. They who never at any time saw a church, but constantly
spent their time at the theatre. now remain in the church the whole day long.
Tell me then, dost thou grieve on this account, that God hath made thee earnest
through fear; that He hath led thee by tribulation to a sense of thine own
safety? But is thy conscience pained? Yea, is thy mind pierced every day as with a
dart, expecting death, and the greatest wrath? Nevertheless, from thence too
we shall gain a great advance toward virtue, if our piety is made more earnest
by means of the distress. For God is able to free you from all these evils this
day. But not until He sees that you are purified; not until He sees that a
conversion has taken place, and a repentance firm and unshaken, will He entirely
remove the tribulation. The goldsmith, until he perceives the gold well refined,
will not draw it out from the furnace; and even so God will not take away this
cloud before He hath thoroughly amended us. For He Himself who hath permitted
this trial, knows the time for removing it. So it is also with one who plays the
harp; he neither overstrains the string, lest he break it, nor relaxes it too
much, lest he mar the consonance of its harmony. Thus does God act. He neither
places our souls in a state of constant repose, nor of lengthened tribulation;
making use of both these at His discretion; for he neither suffers us to enjoy
continual repose, lest we should grow listless, nor on the other hand does he
permit us to be in constant tribulation, lest we sink under it, and become
desperate.
6. Let us then leave to Him the time for the removal of our evils; let us
only pray; let us live in piety: for this is our work, to turn to virtue; but
to set us free from these evils is God's work! For indeed He is more
desirous to quench this fire than thou who art tried by it: but He is waiting for thy
salvation. As tribulation then came of rest, so also after tribulation, rest
must be expected. For neither is it always winter, nor always summer; neither are
there always waves, nor always a calm; neither always night, nor always day.
Thus tribulation is not perpetual, but there will be also repose; only in our
tribulation, let us give thanks to God always. For the three youths were cast
into the furnace, and did not even for this forget their piety; neither did the
flames affright them, but more earnestly than men sitting in a chamber, and
suffering nothing to alarm them, did they, whilst encircled by the fire, send up to
heaven those sacred prayers(1)--therefore the fire became a wall unto them, and
the flame a robe; and the furnace was a fountain; and whereas it received them
bound, it restored them free. It received bodies that were mortal, but
abstained from them as if they had been immortal! It knew their nature, yet it
reverenced their piety! The tyrant bound their feet, and their feet bound the
operation of the fire! O marvellous thing! The flame loosed those who were bound, and
was itself afterwards bound by those who had been in bonds; for the piety of the
youths changed the nature of things; or rather it did not change the nature,
but, what was far more wonderful, it stayed the operation of them, even whilst
their nature remained. For it did not quench the fire, but though burning, made
it powerless. And it was truly marvellous and unaccountable, that this not
only happened with respect to the bodies of these saints, but also with respect to
their garments, and their shoes. And as it was in the case of the Apostles,
the garments of Paul expelled diseases and demons,(2) and the shadow(3) of
Peter(4) put death to flight; so indeed also in this case the shoes of these youths
extinguished the power of the fire.
7. I know not how I should speak, for the wonder surpasses all
description! The force of the fire was both quenched and not quenched: for whilst it came
in contact with the bodies of these saints, it was quenched; but when it was
needful to burst their bonds, it was not quenched; wherefore it broke their
bonds, but touched not their ancles.(5) Do you see how very near it was? Yet the
fire was not deceived, and dared not penetrate within the bonds. The tyrant bound,
and the flame set loose; that thou mightest learn at once the fierceness of
the barbarian, and the submissiveness of the element. For what reason did he
bind, when he was about to cast into the fire? In order that the miracle might be
the greater; that the sign might be the more unaccountable; that thou mayest not
suppose that the things seen were an optical delusion. For if that fire had
been no fire, it would not have consumed the bands; and what is much more, it
would not have seized upon the soldiers who were placed without the furnace; but
as the case was, it showed its power upon those without; but towards those
within, its submissiveness. But observe, I pray, in everything, how the devil by
the very same means with which he fights with the servants of God, pulls down his
own power; not intentionally, but because the wisdom and abundant contrivance
of God turns all his weapons and devices upon his own head; which assuredly
happened on that occasion. For the devil at that time inspiring the tyrant,
neither suffered the heads of the saints to be cut off with the sword, nor that they
should be delivered to wild beasts, nor punished in any such manner; but that
they should be thrown into the fire; to the end that not even any relics of
these saints should remain, their bodies being altogether consumed, and their ashes
being mingled with the ashes of the fagots. But God accordingly employed this
very circumstance for the taking away of impiety(6) And how? I will tell you.
Fire is accounted by the Persians to be a god; and the barbarians, who inhabit
that country even now honour it with much worship. God, therefore, being
desirous to pull up by the roots the material of impiety, permitted the punishment to
take this form, in order that He might give the victory to His servants before
the eyes of all these fire-worshippers; persuading them by the plain fact, that
the gods of the Gentiles are in dread not of God only, but even of the
servants of God.
8. Consider, moreover, how the crown of this victory was woven by the
adversaries, and the enemies themselves were made witnesses of this trophy. For
"Nebuchadnezzar," it says, "sent to gather together the princes, the governors,
and the captains, the judges, the sheriffs, and all the rulers of the provinces,
to come to the dedication of the image, and they were all gathered
together."(7) The enemy prepares the theatre, and he himself collects together the
spectators, and prepares the lists; a theatre too, not of chance persons, or of some
private individuals, but of all those who were honourable and in authority, to
the end that their testimony may be worthy of credit with the multitude. They
had come summoned for one thing; but they all departed having beheld another
thing. They came in order to worship the image; and they departed, having derided
the image, and struck with wonder at the power of God, through the signs which
had taken place with respect to these young men. And observe, where the field
for this display was spread out. No city, nor select enclosure furnished room for
this theatre of the whole world, but smooth and naked plains. For in the plain
of Dura, outside the city, he set up the image, and the herald came and cried,
"To you it is commanded, O people, nations, and languages, that at what time
ye hear the sound of the cornet, flute, harp, sackbut, psaltery, dulcimer, and
all kinds of music, ye fall down and worship the golden image;" (for a fall
indeed it was to worship the idol) "and whoso falleth not down, and worshippeth,
shall the same hour be cast into the midst of a burning fiery furnace."(1) Seest
thou how difficult these struggles are made; how irresistible the snare; and
how deep the gulph, and a precipice on either hand? But be not afraid. In
whatever degree the enemy increases his machinations, so much the more does he display
the courage of the young men. For this reason is there this symphony of so
many musicians; for this reason the burning furnace; in order that both pleasure,
and fear, may besiege the souls of those present. Is there any one of harsh and
unyielding character among them? "Let the melody of every kind of music,"
saith he, "enchant and soften him." But is he superior to this artifice, "let the
sight of the flame affright and astound him." Thus was fear as well as pleasure
present; the one entering to assault the soul by the ears, the other by the
eyes. But the noble character of these youths was not by any such means to be
conquered; but even as, when they fell into the fire, they mastered the flames,
even so they derided all desire and all fear. For it was for them the devil had
prepared all these things beforehand. For he had no doubts of his own subjects,
but was exceedingly confident that no one would resist the royal mandate. But
when all fell down, and were subdued, then the youths alone are led into the
midst; in order that from this too the conquest may become the more illustrious,
they alone conquering and being proclaimed victors among so vast a multitude. For
this would not have been so surprising if they had acted courageously at the
first, when as yet no one had been overthrown. But the greatest, and most
astonishing fact was, that the multitude of those who fell down, neither affrighted,
nor enfeebled them. They did not say to themselves any such things as many are
ofttimes wont to say; "If we were the first, and the only persons to worship
the image, this would have been a sin: but if we do this with so many myriads,
who will not make allowance? who will not think us worthy of defence?" nothing of
that sort did they say or think, when they beheld the prostrate forms(2) of so
many tyrants.(3) Consider thou also with me the wickedness of those who were
their accusers, and how maliciously and bitterly they brought the accusation!
"There are," say they, "certain Jews whom thou hast set up over the works of the
province of Babylon."(4) They did not merely make mention of the nation, but
they also bring to mind their honourable condition, that they may inflame the
wrath of the king; almost as if they had said, "These slaves, these captives, who
are without a city, thou hast made rulers over us. But they shew contempt for
such honour, and treat insolently him who has given them this honour! Therefore
they say this; "The Jews whom thou hast set over the works of the province of
Babylon, obey not thy decree, nor serve thy gods."(4) The accusation becomes
their greatest praise; and the crimes imputed, their encomium; a testimony indeed
that is indubitable, since their enemies bring it forward. What then does the
king? He commands that they should be brought into the midst, so that he may
affright them in every way. But nothing dismayed them, neither the wrath of the
king, nor their being left alone in the midst of so many, nor the sight of the
fire, nor the sound of the trumpet, nor the whole multitude looking fire at them;
for deriding all these things, as if they were about to be cast into a cool
fountain of water, they entered the furnace uttering that blessed sentence, "We
will not serve thy gods, nor worship the golden image which thou hast set
up."(5)
9. I have not referred to this history without reason, but that ye may
learn that whether it be the wrath of a king, or the violence of soldiers, or the
envy of enemies, or captivity, or destitution, or fire, or furnace, or ten
thousand terrors, nothing will avail to put to shame or terrify a righteous man.
For if where the king was godless the youths were not dismayed at the tyrant's
wrath, how much more ought we to be confident, having an emperor who is humane
and merciful, and to express thankfulness to God for this tribulation, knowing
from what has now been said, that tribulations render men more illustrious both
in the presence of God and of man, if they know how to bear them with fortitude!
For indeed if these had not been made slaves, we should not have known their
freedom! If they had not been captives, we should not have learned their
nobility of soul! If they had not been exiles from their country below, we should not
have known the excellency of their citizenship above! If the earthly king had
not been angry with them, we should not have known the favour with which they
were regarded by the heavenly King!
10. Thou too then, if thou hast Him for thy Friend, be not despairing,
although thou fallest into the furnace: and in like manner if He be angry, think
not thou art safe though thou be in Paradise. For Adam indeed was in Paradise,
yet, when he had provoked God, Paradise profited him nothing. These youths were
in the furnace; yet, since they were approved, the furnace injured them not at
all. Adam was in Paradise, but when he was supine, he was supplanted! Job sat
down on the dunghill, yet, since he was vigilant he prevailed! Yet how much
better was Paradise than a dunghill! still the excellency of the place benefitted
in no degree the inhabitant; forasmuch as he had betrayed himself; as likewise
indeed the vileness of the place did to one no injury, who was fortified on
every side with virtue. As to ourselves then, let us fortify our souls; for if the
loss of wealth should threaten us, or even death, and yet no one can rob us of
our religion, we are the happiest of men, Christ commended this when he said,
"Be ye wise as serpents."(1) For just as he exposes the whole body in order that
he may save the head,(2) so also do thou. Although it should be necessary to
expose wealth, or the body, or the present life, or all things, for the purpose
of preserving thy religion; be not cast down! For if thou depart hence in
possession of that, God will restore to thee all things with more abundant
splendour, and will raise again thy body with greater glory; and instead of riches,
there will be the good things that surpass all power of description. Did not Job
sit naked on a dunghill, sustaining a life more grievous than ten thousand
deaths? Yet since he did not cast away his piety, all his former things came back to
him in greater abundance, soundness and beauty of body; his full band of
children; his possessions; and what was greater than all, the splendid crown of his
patience. For as it happens with trees, should any one pluck away the fruit and
the leaves together; should he even cut off all the branches letting the root
only remain; the tree will rise again entire, with greater beauty, so indeed is
it also with us. If the root of piety remain, although wealth be taken away,
although the body destroyed, all things again revert to us with greater glory
than before. Casting away therefore all anxiety and superfluous care, let us
return to ourselves; and let us adorn the body and the soul with the ornament of
virtue; converting our bodily members into instruments of righteouness and not
instruments of sin.
11. And first of all, let us discipline our tongue to be the minister of
the grace of the Spirit, expelling from the mouth all virulence and malignity,
and the practice of using disgraceful words. For it is in our power to make each
one of our members an instrument of wickedness, or of righteousness. Hear then
how men make the tongue an instrument, some of sin, others of righteousness!
"Their tongue is a sharp sword."(3) But another speaks thus of his own tongue:
"My tongue(4) is the pen of a ready writer."(5) The former wrought destruction;
the latter wrote the divine law. Thus was one a sword, the other a pen, not
according to its own nature, but according to the choice of those who employed it.
For the nature of this tongue and of that was the same, but the operation was
not the same. And again, as to the mouth likewise, we may see this same thing.
For these had a mouth full of filth and of wickedness, therefore against such
it is said by way of accusation, "Their mouth is full of cursing and
bitterness;"(6) not such was his, but "My mouth shall speak of wisdom, and the meditation
of my heart shall be of understanding."(7) Again, there were others who had
their hands full of iniquity, and accusing these he said, "Iniquities are in their
hands, and their right hand is filled with gifts."(1) But he himself had hands
practised in nothing but in being stretched out towards heaven. Therefore he
said of these too, "The lifting up of my hands (let it be) an evening
sacrifice."(2) The same may also be perceived with reference to the heart; for their
heart indeed was foolish, but this man's was true; hence he speaks of them thus,
"Their heart is vain;" but of his own, "My heart is inditing of a good
matter."(3) And as to the ear, one may see that the case is the same; for some have a
sense of bearing like that of beasts, which is not to be charmed or moved to pity;
and reproaching such the Psalmist says, "They are like the deaf adder, that
stoppeth her ears."(4) But his ear was the receptacle of the divine words, and
this he again makes manifest, when he says, "I will incline mine ear to a
parable, I will open my dark speech upon the harp."(5)
12. Knowing these things then, let us fortify ourselves with virtue on all
sides, and thus we shall avert the wrath of God, and let us make the members
of the body instruments of righteousness; and let us discipline eyes, and mouth,
and hands, and feet, and heart, and tongue, and the(6) whole body, to be
employed only in the service of virtue. And let us remember those three precepts, of
which I discoursed(7) to your Charity, exhorting you to consider no one as an
enemy, nor to speak evil of any one of those who have aggrieved you; and to
expel from your mouth the evil custom of oaths. And with respect to the two former
precepts, we will discourse to you on another occasion; but we shall speak to
you during the whole of the present week respecting oaths; thus beginning with
the easier precept. For it is no labour at all to overcome the habit of
swearing, if we would but apply a little endeavour, by reminding each other; by
advising; by observing; and by requiring those who thus forget themselves, to render
an account, and to pay the penalty. For what advantage shall we gain by
abstinence from meats, if we do not also expel the evil habits of the soul? Lo, we
have spent the whole of this day fasting; and in the evening we shall spread a
table, not such as we did on yester-eve, but one of an altered and more solemn
kind.(8) Can any one of us then say that he has changed his life too this day;
that he has altered his ill custom, as well as his food? Truly, I suppose not! Of
what advantage then is our fasting? Wherefore I exhort(9) and I will not cease
to exhort, that undertaking each precept separately, you should spend two or
three days in the attainment of it; and just as there are some who rival one
another in fasting, and shew a marvellous emulation in it; (some indeed who spend
two whole days without food; and others who, rejecting from their tables not
only the use of wine, and of oil, but of every dish, and taking only bread and
water, persevere in this practice during the whole of Lent); so, indeed, let us
also contend mutually with one another in abolishing the frequency(10) of oaths.
For this is more useful than any fasting; this is more profitable than any
austerity. And this same care which we display in abstaining from food, let us
exhibit with respect to abstinence from oaths; since we shall be chargeable with
the reproach of extreme folly, while we regard not things that are forbidden, and
expend all our care upon things indifferent; for to eat is not forbidden, but
to swear is forbidden; we, however, abstaining from those things that are
permitted, daringly venture upon those things that are forbidden! On this account I
beseech your Charity to make some change, and to let the beginning of it be
visible from this day. For if we spend the whole of the present fast with such
zeal, having in this week attained the practice of not swearing at all; and in the
following having extinguished wrath; and in that which succeeds it, having
pulled up evil-speaking by the roots; and after that, having amended what yet
remains; thus going forward in our course, we shall come by little and little to
the very summit of virtue; and we shall escape the present danger; and shall make
God propitious; and the multitude will come back again to our city; and we
shall teach the fugitives that we are to place our hopes of safety neither in
security of place, nor in flight and retirement; but in piety of soul, and in
virtue of manners. And thus shall we obtain the good things of this and of the
future life; which, God grant! we my all be found worthy of, by the grace and
loving-kindness of our Lord Jesus Christ, through whom and with whom be glory to the
Father, together with the Holy Ghost, now and for ever and ever. Amen.
HOMILY V.
The exhortation of the last Homily is Continued in this. The people are
exhorted to bear with fortitude the impending wrath of the Emperor. The cases of Job
and the Ninevites are referred to as examples. It is shewn that men ought not
to fear death, but sin. What it is to die miserably is explained; and the Homily
concludes with an earnest dissuasive against the use of oaths.
1. THE discourse concerning the three young men, and the Babylonian
furnace, did, as it would seem, yesterday give no small comfort to your Charity; and
still more the example in the case of Job, and that dunghill more to be
venerated than any kingly throne. For from seeing a royal throne no advantage results
to the spectators, but only a temporary pleasure, which has no profit; but from
the sight of Job's dunghill, one may derive every kind of benefit, yea, much
divine wisdom and consolation, in order to patience. Therefore to this day many
undertake a long pilgrimage,(1) even across the sea, hastening from the
extremities of the earth, as far as Arabia, that they may see that dunghill; and
having beheld it, may kiss the land, which contained the wrestling-ground(2) of such
a victor, and received the blood that was more precious than all gold! For the
purple shines not so brilliantly, as did that body when dyed(3) not in
another's blood, but in its own! Even those very wounds were more precious than all
manner of jewels! For the nature of pearls is of no help to our life; nor do they
satisfy any necessary want on the part of those who have them. But those
wounds are a consolation for all sadness; and that thou mayest learn this to be the
truth, suppose any one were to lose a beloved and only son. Shew him ten
thousand pearls, and you will not console his grief, or lighten his anguish; but
recall to his mind the wounds of Job, and thou wouldest easily be able to minister
comfort by speaking thus: "Why sorrowest thou, O man? Thou hast lost one son;
but that blessed man, after he had been bereaved of the whole family of his
children, both received a plague in his own flesh, and sat down naked upon the
dunghill, streaming with gore from every part, and his flesh gradually wasting
away; even he who was just, and true, so devout a man, who stained from every evil
deed, and had even God for a witness to his virtue." By speaking thus thou
wouldest extinguish all the sufferer's sadness, and remove all his distress. Thus
the wounds of the just man become more useful than pearls!
2. Figure to yourselves then this wrestler; and imagine that you see that
dunghill, and himself sitting in the midst of it! That golden statue! set with
gems! I know not how to express it: for I am unable to find any material so
precious as to compare it with that body stained with blood! So far above every
substance, however costly, was the nature of that flesh, beyond all comparison
more precious, and those wounds more splendid than the sun's beams; for these
illumine the eyes of the body; but those enlighten the eyes of the mind! those
struck the devil with utter blindness! Therefore it was, that after that blow, he
started back and appeared no more. And do thou, O beloved, learn thence too
what advantage there is in tribulation! For when the just man was rich, and
enjoyed ease, he had the means of accusing him. However falsely, yet still he had it
in his power to say, "Doth Job serve thee for nought?" But after he had
stripped him and made him poor, he dared not even open his mouth any more. When he was
wealthy, he prepared to wrestle with him, and threatened to overthrow him; but
when he had made him poor, and taken away all he had, and thrown him into the
deepest distress, then he started back. When indeed his body was sound, he
lifted up his hands against him,(4) but when he had battered his flesh, then he
fled,--defeated! Seest thou how to the vigilant, poverty is much better and more
beneficial than riches; and infirmity and sickness, than health; and trial, than
tranquillity; inasmuch as it makes the combatants more illustrious and
vigorous?
3. Who hath seen or heard of such an astonishing contest? The fighters in
worldly contests, when they have battered the heads of their adversaries, are
then victorious, and are crowned! But this adversary, when he had battered the
body of the just man, perforating it with ulcers of every kind, and had reduced
him to great weakness, was then conquered, and drew back. Even when he had
pierced his ribs in every direction, he was no gainer thereby; for he spoiled him
not of his hidden treasure, but he made him more conspicuous to us; and through
that piercing he gave to all the privilege to look into his interior, and to
discern completely the whole of his wealth! When he expected to prevail, then he
withdrew with much ignominy, and never again uttered a syllable! What is the
matter, O devil? For what cause withdrawest thou? Was not everything done that
thou chosest? Hast thou not taken away his flocks, his herds, his droves of
horses and of mules? Hast thou not also destroyed his troop of children? and
battered his flesh to pieces. For what reason with-drawest thou? "Because," saith he,
"every thing I chose(1) is come to pass, and yet that which I most desired
should come to pass, and for which I did all those things, is not come to pass; he
hath not blasphemed! For it was in order to this, continues he, that I was
doing all those things; and as this is not come to pass, I am no gainer by having
deprived him of his wealth; or by the destruction of his children; or by the
plague inflicted upon his body; but the reverse of what I purposed hath come to
pass; I have made my enemy more illustrious; I have added lustre to his
reputation." Perceivest thou, O beloved, how great was the reward of tribulation? His
body was fair and sound before, but it became more venerable, when pierced
through and through by these wounds! And thus wool, fair as it is before the dyeing,
when it becomes purple, takes an indescribable beauty, and an additional grace.
But if he had not stripped him, we should not have known the good condition(2)
of the victor; if he had not pierced the body with ulcers, the rays within
would not have shone forth. If he had not made him sit down upon a dunghill, we
should not have known his wealth. For a king sitting on a throne is not so
illustrious, as this man was notable and conspicuous, whilst sitting upon his
dunghill! For after the royal throne, comes death; but after that dunghill, the
kingdom of heaven!
4. Collecting then all these reasons, let us raise ourselves from the
dejection which oppresses us. For I have laid these histories before you, not that
ye may applaud what is spoken, but that ye may imitate the virtue and the
patience of such noble men; that ye may learn from the very facts, that there is
nothing of human ills to be dreaded, save sin only; neither poverty, nor disease,
nor insult, nor malicious treatment, nor ignominy, nor death, which is
accounted the worst of all evils. To those who love spiritual wisdom, such things are
only the names of calamities; names which have no substantial reality. But the
true calamity consists in offending God, and in doing aught which is displeasing
to Him. For tell me, what is there in death. which is terrible? Is it because
it transports thee more quickly to the peaceful haven, and to that life which
is free from tumult? Although man should not put thee to death, will not the
very law of nature, at length stealing upon thee, separate the body from the soul;
and if this event which we fear does not happen now, it will happen shortly.
5. I speak thus, not anticipating any dread or melancholy event:(3) God
forbid! But because I am ashamed for those who are afraid of death. Tell me,
whilst expecting such good things as "eye hath not seen, nor ear heard, nor have
entered the heart of man,"(4) dost thou demur about this enjoyment, and art
negligent and slothful; and not only slothful, but fearful and trembling? And is it
not shameful that thou art distressed on account of death, whereas Paul groaned
on account of the present life, and writing to the Romans said, "The creation
groaneth together, and ourselves also which have the first fruits of the Spirit
do groan."(5) And he spoke thus, not as condemning the things present, but
longing for the things to come. "I have tasted," saith he, "of the grace, and I do
not willingly put up with the delay.(6) I have the first fruits of the Spirit,
and I press on towards the whole. I have ascended to the third heaven; I have
seen that glory which is unutterable; I have beheld the shining palaces; I have
learnt what joys I am deprived of, while I linger here, and therefore do I
groan." For suppose any one had conducted thee into princely halls, and shewn thee
the gold everywhere glittering on the walls, and all the rest of the glorious
show; if from thence he had led thee back afterward to a poor man's hut, and
promised that in a short time he would bring thee back to those palaces, and
world there give thee a perpetual mansion; tell me, wouldest thou not indeed
languish with desire, and feel impatient, even at these few days? Thus think then of
heaven, and of earth, and groan with Paul, not because of death, but because of
the present life!
6. But grant me, saith one, to be like Paul, and I shall never be afraid
of death. Why, what is it that forbids thee, O man, to become like Paul? Was he
not a poor man? Was he not a tent maker? Was he not a man of humble position?
For if he had been rich and high born, the poor, when called upon to imitate his
zeal, would have had their poverty to plead; but now thou canst say nothing of
this sort. For this man was one who exercised a manual art, and supported
himself too by his daily labours. And thou, indeed, from the first hast inherited
true religion from thy fathers; and from thy earliest age hast been nourished in
the study of the sacred writings; but he was "a blasphemer, and a persecutor,
and injurious,"(1) and ravaged the Church! Nevertheless, he so changed all at
once, as to surpass all in the vehemence of his zeal, and he cries out, saying,
"Be ye imitators of me, even as I also am of Christ."(2) He imitated the Lord;
and wilt not thou who hast been educated in piety from the first, imitate a
fellow-servant; one who by conversion was brought to the faith at a later period
of life? Knowest thou not, that they who are in sins are dead whilst they live;
and that they who live(3) in righteousness, although they be dead, yet they
live?(4) And this is not my word. It is the declaration of Christ speaking to
Martha, "He that believeth in me though he were dead yet shall he live."(5) Is our
doctrine, indeed, a fable? If thou art a Christian, believe in Christ; if thou
believest in Christ, shew me thy faith by thy works.(6) But how mayest thou
shew this? By thy contempt of death: for in this we differ from the unbelievers.
They may well fear death; since they have no hope of a resurrection. But thou,
who art travelling toward better things, and hast the opportunity of meditating
on the hope of the future; what excuse hast thou, if whilst assured of a
resurrection, thou are yet at the same time as fearful of death, as those who
believe not the resurrection?
7. But I have no fear of death, says one, nor of the act of dying, but of
a miserable death, of being beheaded. Did John then, I ask, die miserably? for
he was beheaded. Or did Stephen die miserably? for he was stoned; and all the
martyrs have thus died wretchedly, according to this objection: since some have
ended their lives by fire; and others by the sword; and some cast into the
ocean; others down a precipice; and others into the jaws of wild beasts, have so
come by their death. To die basely, O man, is not to come to one's end by a
violent death, but to die in sin! Hear, at least, the prophet moralising on this
very matter, and saying,"The death of sinners is evil."(7) He does not say that a
violent death is evil; but what then? "The death of sinners is evil."(8) And
justly so; for after the departure from this life, there is an intolerable
punishment; undying vengeance, the envenomed worm; the fire unquenchable, the outer
darkness, the chains indissoluble; the gnashing of teeth, the tribulation, and
the anguish, and the eternal justice.(9)
8. Since therefore such evils await sinners, what advantage can it be to
them, though they should end their days at home, and in their bed? Even so, on
the other hand, it can do no harm to the righteous to lay down the present life
through sword, or steel, or fire when they are to depart to the good things
that are immortal.Truly "the death of sinners is evil." Such a death was that of
the rich man, who despised Lazarus. He, when he had terminated his life by a
natural end, at home and on his bed, and with his relatives about him,
experienced after his departure to the other world a fiery torment; nor was he able to
obtain there even a little comfort, out of all the pleasure he had enjoyed in the
present life! But not so was it with Lazarus; for when lying upon the
pavement, while the dogs came and licked his sores, he had suffered a violent death
(for what could be more painful than hunger?), but on his departing hence he
enjoyed eternal blessings, luxuriating in the bosom of Abraham! In what respect,
then, did it injure him that he died a violent death? or what did it profit the
rich man, that he died not with violence?
9. But, says some one, "We have no fear of dying by violence, but of dying
unjustly; and of being punished in a similar way with the guilty,--we who have
had nothing to do with the crimes of which we are suspected." What sayest
thou, tell me? Art thou afraid of dying unjustly, and wouldest thou wish to die
justly. But who is there so wretched and miserable, that when he had the
alternative of dying unjustly, would rather depart by an act of justice? For if it be
necessary to fear death, it is necessary to fear it when it comes upon us justly;
since he indeed who dies unjustly, is by this very means made a partaker with
all the saints. For many of those who were approved and distinguished by God,
have been subjected to an unjust end; and first of all Abel. For it was not that
he had sinned against his brother, or done Cain any harm; but inasmuch as he
had honoured God, therefore was he slaughtered. But God permitted it. Was it,
think you, because He loved him, or because He hated him? Most clearly, because
He loved him, and wished to make his crown the brighter, by that most unjust
murder. Seest thou then, that it becomes us not to be afraid of dying by violence;
nor yet of dying unjustly; but of dying in a state of sin? Abel died unjustly.
Cain lived, groaning and trembling! Which then, I would ask, was the more
blessed of the two; he who went to rest in righteousness, or he who lived in sin;
he who died unjustly, or he who was justly punished? Would you have me declare
unto your Charity, whence it is that we are afraid of death? The love of the
kingdom hath not penetrated us, nor the desire of things to come inflamed us:
otherwise we should despise all present things, even as the blessed Paul did. Add
to this, on the other hand, that we do not stand in awe of hell; therefore death
is terrible. We are not sensible of the unsufferable nature of the punishment
there; therefore, instead of sin, we fear death; since if the fear of the one
held possession of our souls, the fear of the other would not be able to enter.
10. And this I will endeavour to make manifest, not from anything of a
remote nature, but from what is at our own doors; and from the events which have
happened among us in these days. For when the Emperor's letter came, ordering
that tribute to be imposed which was thought to be so intolerable, all were in a
tumult; all quarrelled with it; thought it a sore grievance, resented it; and
when they met one another said, "Our life is not worth living, the city is
undone;--no one will be able to stand under this heavy burden;" and they were
distressed as if placed in the extremest danger. After this, when the rebellion was
actually perpetrated, and certain vile, yea, thoroughly vile persons, trampling
under foot the laws, threw down the statues, and involved all in the utmost
peril; and now that we are in fear for our very lives, through the indignation of
the Emperor, this loss of money no longer stings us. But instead of such
complaints, I hear from all a language of a different kind. "Let the Emperor take our
substance, we will gladly be deprived of our fields and possessions, if any
one will but ensure us safety for the bare body." As therefore, before the fear
of death pressed upon us, the loss of our wealth tormented us; and after these
lawless outrages had been perpetrated, the fear of death succeeding, expelled
the grief for that loss; so if the fear of hell had held possession of our souls,
the fear of death would not have possessed them. But even as it is with the
body, when two kinds of pain seize upon us, the more powerful usually overshadows
the weaker one, so also would it now happen; if the dread of future punishment
remained in the soul, that would overshadow all human fear. So that if any one
endear-ours always to have the remembrance of hell, he will deride every kind
of death; and this will not only deliver him from the present distress, but
will even rescue him from the flame to come. For he who is always afraid of hell,
will never fall into the fire of hell; being made sober by this continual fear!
11. Permit me, that I now say to you at a fitting time, "Brethren, be not
children in understanding; howbeit in malice be ye children."(1) For this is a
childish terror of ours, if we fear death, but are not fearful of sin. Little
children too are afraid of masks, but fear not the fire. On the contrary, if
they are carried by accident near a lighted candle, they stretch out the hand
without any concern towards the candle and the flame; yet a mask which is so
utterly contemptible terrifies them; whereas they have no dread of fire, which is
really a thing to be afraid of. Just so we too have a fear of death, which is a
mask that might well be despised; but have no fear of sin, which is truly
dreadful; and, even as fire, devours the conscience! And this is wont to happen not on
account of the nature of the things, but by reason of our own folly; so that
if we were once to consider what death is, we should at no time be afraid of it.
What then, I pray you, is death? Just what it is to put off a garment. For the
body is about the soul as a garment; and after laying this aside for a short
time by means of death, we shall resume it again with the more splendour. What
is death at most? It is a journey for a season; a sleep longer than usual! So
that if thou fearest death, thou shouldest also fear sleep! If for those who are
dying thou art pained, grieve for those too who are eating and drinking, for as
this is natural, so is that! Let not natural things sadden thee; rather let
things which arise from an evil choice make thee sorrowful. Sorrow not for the
dying man; but sorrow for him who is living in sin!
12. Would you have me mention another reason on account of which we fear
death? We do not live with strictness, nor keep a clear conscience; for if this
were the case nothing would alarm us, neither death, nor famine, nor the loss
of wealth, nor anything else of this kind. For he who lives virtuously, cannot
be injured by any of these things, or be deprived of his inward pleasure. For
being supported by favourable hopes, nothing will be able to throw him into
dejection. What is there that any one can possibly effect, by which he can cause the
noble-minded man to become sorrowful? Take away his riches? He has yet wealth
that is in the heavens! Cast him out of his country? He will take his journey
to(1) that city which is above! Load him with fetters? He has still his
conscience free, and is insensible to the external chain! Put his body to death? Yet he
shall rise again! And as he who fights with a shadow, and beaten the air, will
be unable to hit any one; so he who is at war with the just man, is but
striking at a shadow, and wasting his own strength, without being able to inflict any
injury upon him. Grant me then to be sure of the kingdom of heaven; and, if
thou wishest, slay me this day. I shall be thankful to thee for the slaughter;
forasmuch as thou sendest me quickly to the possession of those good things!
"This, however," says some one, "is what we especially lament, that hindered as we
are by the multitude of our sins, we shall not attain to that kingdom." Such
being the case then, leave off lamenting death, and lament thy sins, in order
that thou mayest be freed from them! Grief, indeed, hath had its existence, not
that we should sorrow for the loss of wealth, nor for death, nor for anything
else of that kind, but that we may employ it for the taking away of our sins.(2)
And I will make the truth of this evident by an example. Healing medicines(3)
have been made for those diseases only which they are able to remove; not for
those which are in no respect assisted by them. For instance (for I wish to make
the matter still plainer), the medicine which is able to benefit a malady of the
eyes only, and no other disease, one might justly say was made only for the
sake of the eyes; not for the stomach, nor for the hands, nor any other member.
Let us then transfer this argument to the subject of grief; and we shall find,
that in none of those things which happen to us, is it of any advantage, except
to correct sin; whence it is apparent that it hath had its existence only for
the destruction of this. Let us now take a survey of each of those evils which
befall us, and let us apply despondency as a remedy, and see what sort of
advantage(4) results from it.
13. Some one is mulcted in property: he becomes sad, but this does not
make good his loss. Some one hath lost a son: he grieves, but he cannot raise the
dead, nor benefit the departed. Some one hath been scourged, beaten, and
insulted; he becomes sorrowful. This does not recall the insult. Some one falls into
sickness, and a most grievous disease; he is dejected. This does not remove his
disease, but only makes it the more grievous. Do you see that in none of these
cases does sadness answer any useful purpose? Suppose that any one hath
sinned, and is sad. He blots out the sin; he gets free from the transgression. How is
this shewn? By the declaration of the Lord; for, speaking of a certain one who
had sinned, He said, "Because of his iniquity I made him sad for a while; and
I saw that he was grieved, and he went on heavily; and I healed his ways."(5)
Therefore also Paul saith, "Godly sorrow worketh repentance unto salvation not
to be repented of."(6) Since then what I have said clearly shews, that neither
the loss of riches, nor insult, nor abuse, nor stripes, nor sickness, nor death,
nor any other thing of that kind can possibly be relieved by the interference
of grief, but sin only can it blot out and do away, it is evident that this is
the only reason why it hath its existence. Let us therefore no more grieve for
the loss of wealth, but let us grieve only when we commit sin. For great in
this case is the gain that comes of sorrow. Art thou amerced? Be not dejected, for
thus thou wilt not be at all benefited. Hast thou sinned? Then be sorry: for
it is profitable; and consider the skill and wisdom of God. Sin hath brought
forth for us these two things, sorrow and death. For "in the day thou eatest," He
saith, "thou shall surely die;" and to the woman, "In sorrow thou shall bring
forth children."(1) And by both of these things he took away sin, and provided
that the mother should be destroyed by her offspring. For that death as well as
grief takes away sin, is evident, in the first place, from the case of the
martyrs;(2) and it is plain too from what Paul saith to those who had sinned,
speaking on this wise, "For this cause many are weak and sickly among you, and many
sleep."(3) Inasmuch, he observes, as ye have sinned, ye die, so that ye are
freed from sin by death. Therefore ne goes on to say, "For if we would judge
ourselves, we should not be judged. But when we are judged, we are chastened of the
Lord, that we should not be condemned with the world."(4) And even as the worm
is brought forth from the wood, and devours the wood; and a moth consumes the
wool, from whence it originates; so grief and death were born of sin, and devour
sin.
14. Let us not then fear death, but let us only fear sin, and grieve on
account of this. And these things I speak, not anticipating any thing fearful,
God forbid! but wishing you when alarmed to be always thus affected, and to
fulfil the law of Christ in very deed. For "he," saith Christ, "that taketh not his
cross, and followeth after Me, is not worthy of Me."(5) This He said, not that
we should bear the wood upon our shoulders, but that we should always have
death before our eyes. Even so as Paul, that is, died daily, and laughed at death,
and despised the present life. For indeed thou art a soldier, and standest
continually at arms; but a soldier who is afraid of death, will never perform a
noble action. Thus then neither will a Christian man, if fearful of dangers,
perform anything great or admirable; nay, besides this, he will be apt to be easily
vanquished. But not so is it with the man who is bold and lofty minded. He
remains impregnable and unconquerable. As then the Three Children, when they feared
not the fire, escaped from the fire, so also we, if we fear not death, shall
entirely escape from death. They feared not the fire (for it is no crime to be
burnt), but they feared sin, for it is a crime to commit impiety. Let us also
imitate these and all such, and let us not be afraid of dangers, and then we
shall pass safely through them.
15. As for me, "I am not a prophet nor the son of a prophet,"(6) yet I
understand clearly thus much of the future, and I proclaim, both loudly and
distinctly, that if we become changed, and bestow some care upon our souls, and
desist from iniquity, nothing will be unpleasant or painful. And this I plainly know
from the love of God toward man, as well as from those things which He hath
done for men, and cities, and nations, and whole populations. For He threatened
the city of Nineveh, and said, "There are yet three days,(7) and Nineveh shall
be overthrown."(8) What then, I ask, Was Nineveh overthrown? Was the city
destroyed? Nay, quite the contrary; it both arose, and became still more
distinguished; and long as is the time which has elapsed, it has not effaced its glory, but
we all still celebrate and admire it even to this day.(9) For from that time
it hath been a sort of excellent haven for all who have sinned, not suffering
them to sink into desperation, but calling all to repentance; and by what it did,
and by what it obtained of God's favour, persuading men never to despair of
their salvation, but exhibiting the best life they can,(10) and setting before
them a(11) good hope, to be confident of the issue as destined in any wise to be
favourable. For who would not be stirred up on hearing of such an example, even
if he were the laziest of mortals?
16. For God even preferred that His own prediction should fall to the
ground, so that the city should not fall. Or rather, the prophecy did not even so
fall to the ground. For if indeed while the men continued in the same
wickedness, the sentence had not taken effect, some one perhaps might have brought a
charge against what was uttered. But if when they had changed, and desisted from
their iniquity, God also desisted from His wrath, who shall be able any longer to
find fault with the prophecy, or to convict the things spoken of falsehood.
The same law indeed which God had laid down from the beginning, publishing it to
all men by the prophet, was on that occasion strictly observed. What then is
this law? "I shall speak a sentence," saith He, "concerning a nation or a
kingdom, to pluck up, and to pull down, and to destroy it; and it shall be, that if
they repent of their evil, I will also repent · of the wrath which I said I
would do unto them."(1) Guarding then this law, he saved those who were converted
and released from His wrath those who desisted from their wickedness. He knew
the virtue of the barbarians; therefore He hastened the prophet thither. Thus was
the city agitated at the time, when it heard the prophet's voice, but instead
of being injured it was benefited by fear. For that fear was the cause of its
safety. The threatening effected the deliverance from the peril. The sentence of
overthrow put a stop to the overthrow. O strange and astonishing event! the
sentence threatening death, brought forth life! The sentence after it was
published became cancelled; the very opposite to that which takes place among
temporal judges! for in their case the proclamation of the sentence causes it to
become valid, is fully to ratify it; but on the contrary, with God, the publication
of the sentence, caused it to be cancelled. For if it had not been published,
the offenders would not have heard; and if they had not heard, they would not
have repented, and if they had not repented,(2) they would not have warded off
the punishment, nor would they have obtained that astonishing deliverance. For
how is it less than astonishing, when the judge declares sentence, and the
condemned discharge the sentence by their repentance! They, indeed, did not flee from
the city as we are now doing, but remaining in it they caused it to stand. It
was a snare, and they made it a fortification! It was a gulph, and a precipice,
and they turned it into a tower of safety! They had heard that the buildings
would fall, and yet they fled not from the buildings, but they fled from their
sins. They did not depart each from his house as we do now, but each departed
from his evil way; for, said they, "why should we think the walls have brought
forth the wrath? we are the causes of the wound; we then should provide the
medicine." Therefore they trusted for safety, not to a change of habitations,(3) but
of habits.(4)
17. Thus did the barbarians! and are we not ashamed, and ought we not to
hide our faces, whilst instead of changing our habits, as they did, we change
only our habitations; privily removing our goods, and doing the deeds of men that
are drunken? Our Master is angry with us; and we, neglecting to appease His
wrath, carry about our household stuff from place to place, and run hither and
thither, seeking where we may deposit our substance; while we ought rather to
seek where we may deposit our soul in safety; or rather, it behoveth us not to
seek, but to entrust its safety to virtue and uprightness of life. For when we
were angry and displeased with a servant, if he, instead of defending himself
against our displeasure, went down to his apartment, and collecting together his
clothes, and binding up together all his movables, meditated a flight, we could
not tamely put up with this contempt. Let us then desist from this unseasonable
endeavour, and let us each say to God, "Whither shall I go from Thy Spirit, and
whither shall I flee from Thy presence?"(5) Let us imitate the spiritual
wisdom of the barbarians. They repented even on uncertain grounds! For the sentence
had no such clause, "If ye turn and repent, I will set up the city;" but
simply, "Yet three days, and Nineveh shall be overthrown."(6) What then said they?
"Who knoweth whether God will repent of the evil He said He would do unto us?"
Who knoweth? They know not the end of the event, and yet they do not neglect
repentance! They are unacquainted with God's method of snewing mercy, and yet they
change upon the strength of uncertainties! For neither was it in their power
to look at other Ninevites who had repented and been saved; nor had they read
prophets; nor had they heard patriarchs; nor had they enjoyed counsel, or
partaken of admonition; nor had they persuaded themselves that they should certainly
propitiate God by repentance. For the threatening did not imply this: but they
were doubtful, and hesitating concerning it; and yet they repented with all
diligence. What reason then shall we have to urge, when those, who had no ground
for confidence as to the issue, are seen to have exhibited so great a change; but
thou who hast ground of confidence in the mercy of God, and who hast
frequently received many pledges of His care, and hast heard prophets, and apostles, and
hast been instructed by actual events; hast yet no emulation to reach the same
measure of virtue as these did! Great assuredly was their virtue! but greater
by far was the mercy of God! and this may be seen from the very greatness of
the threat. For this reason God did not add to the declaration, "But if ye
repent. I will spare:" in order that by setting forth a sentence without limitation,
He might increase the fear and having increased the fear, He might constrain
them more speedily to repentance.
18. The prophet is indeed ashamed, fore-seeing what the issue would be,
and conjecturing that what he had prophesied, would remain unaccomplished; God
however is not ashamed, but is desirous of one thing only, viz. the salvation of
men, and corrects His own servant. For when he had entered the ship, He
straightway there raised a boisterous sea; in order that thou mightest know that where
sin is, there is a tempest; where there is disobedience, there is the swelling
of e waves.(1) The city was shaken because of the sins of the Ninevites; and
the ship was shaken because of the disobedience of the prophet. The sailors
therefore threw Jonah m the deep, and the ship was preserved. Let us then drown our
sins, and our city will assuredly be safe! Flight will certainly be no
advantage to us; for it did not profit him; on the contrary, it did him injury. He
fled from the land indeed, but he fled not from the wrath of God; he fled from the
land, but he brought the tempest after him on the sea; and so far was he from
obtaining any benefit by his flight, that he plunged those also who received
him into the extremest peril. And whilst he sat sailing in the ship, although the
sailors, the pilots, and all the necessary apparatus of the ship were there
present, he was placed in the utmost danger. After, however, having been thrown
out into the deep, and having put away his sin by means of the punishment, he
had been conveyed into that unstable(2) vessel, I mean, the whale's belly, he
enjoyed great security. This was for the purpose of teaching thee, that as no ship
can be of any use to him who is living in sin, so him who has put away his
sin, the sea cannot drown, nor monsters destroy. Of a truth, the waves received,
but they did not suffocate him. The whale received him, but did not destroy him;
but both the animal and the element gave back to God unhurt that, with which
they were entrusted; and by all these things the prophet was taught to be humane
and merciful; and not to be more cruel than wild beasts, or thoughtless
sailors, or unruly waves. For even the sailors did not immediately at first give him
up, but after much compulsion; and the sea and the monster guarded him with
great kindness; all these things being under God's direction.
19. Therefore he came back again; he preached; he threatened; he
persuaded; he preserved; he affrighted; he amended; he established; by one, and that the
first preaching! Many days he needed not, nor continued counsel; but speaking
these simple words only, he brought all to repentance! On this account God did
not lead him directly from the ship into the city; but the sailors committed
him to the sea; the sea to the whale; the whale to God; God to the Ninevites; and
by this long circuit he brought back the fugitive, that he might instruct all,
that it is impossible to fly from the hands of God; that whithersoever any one
may roam, dragging his sin after him, he will have to undergo a thousand
evils; and though no mortal were present, yet on every side the whole creation will
rise up against him with the utmost vehemence! Let us not then provide for our
safety by flight, but by a change of the moral character. Is it for remaining
in the city that God is angry with thee, that thou shouldest fly? It is because
thou hast sinned, that He is indignant. Lay aside therefore the sin, and where
the cause of thy wound lies, thence remove(3) the fountain of the evil. For
the physicians too give us directions to cure contraries by contraries. Is fever,
for instance, produced by a full diet? They subject the disease to the regimen
of abstinence. Does any one fall sick from sadness? They say that mirth is the
suitable medicine for it. Thus also it befits us to act with respect to
diseases of the soul. Hath listlessness excited the wrath? let us shake this off by
zeal, and let us manifest in our conduct a great change. We have the fast, a
very great auxiliary and ally in our warfare; and besides the fast, we have the
impending distress, and the fear of danger. Now then, in season, let us be at
work on the soul; for we shall easily be able to persuade it to whatever we
choose; since he who is alarmed and trembling, and set free from all luxury, and who
lives in terror, is able to practise moral wisdom without difficulty, and to
receive the seeds of virtue with much alacrity.
20. Let us therefore persuade it to make this first change for the better,
by the avoidance of oaths; for although I spake to you yesterday. and the day
before,(1) on this same subject; yet neither to-day, nor to-morrow, nor the day
after, will I desist giving my counsel on this subject. And why do I say
to-morrow and the day following? Until I see that you are amended, I will not
abstain from doing so. If those, indeed, who transgress this law, are not ashamed,
far less should we who bid them not transgress it, feel this frequency of the
admonition to be a matter worthy of shame. For to be continually reminding men of
the same topics is not the fault of the speaker, but of the hearers, needing as
they do perpetual instruction, upon simple and easily-observed precepts. What
indeed is easier than not to swear? It is only a good work of habit. It is
neither labour of the body, nor expenditure of wealth. Art thou desirous to learn
how it is possible to get the better of this infirmity, how it is possible to be
set free from this evil habit? I will tell thee of a particular method by
which if pursued thou wilt certainly master it. If thou seest either thyself or any
other person, whether it be one of thy servants, or of thy children, or thy
wife, ensnared in this vice; when thou hast continually reminded them of it, and
they are not amended, order them to retire to rest supperless;(2) and impose
this sentence upon thyself, as well as upon them, a sentence which will bring
with it no injury, but a gain. For such is the nature of spiritual acts; they
bring profit and a speedy reformation. The tongue when constantly punished, when
straitened by thirst. and pained by hunger, receives a sufficient admonition,
even whilst no one is its monitor; and though we were the most stupid of mortals,
yet when we are thus reminded by the greatness of the punishment during a whole
day, we shall need no other counsel and exhortation.
21. Ye have applauded what I have spoken. But still shew me your applause
too by deeds. Else what is the advantage of our meeting here? Suppose a child
were to go to school every day, yet if he learnt nothing the more for it, would
the excuse satisfy us that he every day went there? Should we not esteem it the
greatest fault, that going there daily, he did it to no purpose. Let us
consider this with ourselves, and let us say to ourselves, For so long a time have we
met together at church, having the benefit of a most solemn Communion,(3)
which has in it much profit; and should we return back again just as we came, with
none of our defects corrected, of what advantage is our coming here? For most
actions are done, not for themselves, but for the effects which follow through
their means; as, for example, the sower does not sow for the mere sake of
sowing, but in order that he may reap too; since if this were not to follow, the
sowing would be a loss, the seeds rotting without any kind of advantage. The
merchant doth not take a voyage merely for sailing's sake, but that he may increase
his substance by going abroad; since, if this be not attained beside, extreme
mischief will result, and the voyage of merchants were but for loss. Let us
indeed consider this in relation to ourselves. We also meet together in the church,
not for the mere purpose of spending time here, but in order that we may
return having gained a great and spiritual benefit. Should we then depart empty, and
without having received any advantage, this our diligence becomes our
condemnation! In order that this may not occur, and extreme mischief result, on
departing from this place, let friends practise with one another; fathers with
children; and masters with servants; and train yourselves to perform the task
assigned you; so that when ye come back again, and hear us giving you counsel on the
same subjects, ye may not be put to shame by an accusing conscience, but may
rejoice. and be glad, whilst ye perceive that ye have accomplished the greatest
part of the admonition.
22. Let us not moralize on these things here only. For this temporary
admonition does not suffice to extirpate the whole evil; but at home also, let the
husband hear of these things from the wife, and the wife from the husband. And
let there be a kind of rivalry among all in endeavouring to gain precedence in
the fulfilment of this law; and let him who is in advance, and hath amended his
conduct, reproach him who is still loitering behind; to the end that he may
stir him up the more by these gibes. He who is deficient, and hath not yet
amended his conduct, let him look at him who hath outstripped him, and strive with
emulation to come up with him quickly. If we take advice on these points, and are
anxiously concerned about them, our other affairs will speedily be well
adjusted. Be thou solicitous about God's business, and he will take care of thine!
And do not say to me, "What if any one should impose upon us the necessity of
taking oaths? What if he should not believe us?" For assuredly, where a law is
transgressed, it is improper to make mention of necessity; forasmuch as there is
but one necessity which cannot be dispensed with, viz. that of not offending
God! This, however, I say further; cut off in the meantime superfluous oaths,
those that are taken uselessly, and without any necessity; those to your own
family, those to your friends, those to your servants; and should you take away
these, you will have no further need of me for the others. For the very mouth that
has been well disciplined to dread and to avoid the frequent oath, should any
one constrain it a thousand times, would never consent to relapse again into the
same habit. On the contrary, as now, with much labor and vast importunity, by
alarming, threatening, exhorting, and counselling, we have scarcely been able to
bring it over to a different habit, so in that case, although any one were to
impose ever so great necessity, he could not possibly persuade to a
transgression of this law. And as a person would never choose to take a particular poison,
however urgent the necessity might be, so neither would he to utter an oath!
23. Should this amendment then take place, it will be an encouragement and
inducement to the attainment of the remaining parts of virtue. For he who has
not accomplished anything at all becomes listless, and quickly falls; but he
who is conscious with himself that he has fulfilled at least one precept, coming
by this to have a good hope, will go on with greater alacrity towards the rest;
so that, after he has reached one, he will presently come to another; and will
not halt until he has attained the crown of all. For if with regard to wealth,
the more any one obtains of it, the more he desires, much rather may this be
seen with reference to spiritual attainments. Therefore I hasten, and am urgent
that this work may take its commencement, and that the foundation of virtue may
be laid in your souls. We pray and beseech, that ye will remember these words,
not only at the present time, but also at home, and in the market, and
wheresoever ye pass your time. Oh! that it were possible for me familiarly to converse
with you!(1) then this long harangue of mine would have been unnecessary. But
now since this may not be, instead of me, remember my words: and while you are
sitting at table, suppose me to enter, and to be standing beside you, and
dinning into you the things I now say to you in this place. And wheresoever there
may be any discourse concerning me among you, above all things remember this
precept, and render me this recompense far my love toward you. If I see that you
have fulfilled it, I have received my full return, and have obtained a sufficient
recompense for my labours. In order then that ye may both render us the more
active, and that yourselves too may be in the enjoyment of a good hope; and may
provide for the accomplishment of the remaining precepts with greater facility;
treasure up this precept in your souls with much care, and ye will then
understand the benefit of this admonition. And since a vestment broidered with gold
is a beautiful and conspicuous object, but seems much more so to us when it is
worn upon our own person; thus also the precepts of God are beautiful when being
praised, but appear far more lovely when they are rightly practised. For now
indeed ye commend what is spoken during a brief moment of time, but if ye reduce
it to practice, you will alike commend both yourselves and us all day long,
and all your lives long. And this is not the grand point, that we shall praise
one another; but that God will accept us; and not only accept us, but will also
reward us with those gifts that are great and unspeakable! Of which may we all
be deemed worthy, through the grace and lovingkindness of our Lord Jesus Christ,
through whom, and with whom, to the Father together with the Holy Ghost, be
glory, now and always, for ever and ever. Amen.