HOMILIES OF ST. JOHN CHRYSOSTOM ON THE GOSPEL ACCORDING TO ST. MATTHEW,
HOMILIES XXXIX & XLIII (MATT. 12)
HOMILY XXXIX.
MATT. XII. 1.
"At that time Jesus went on the Sabbath day through the corn; and His
disciples were a hungered, and began to pluck the(1) ears of corn, and to eat." But
Luke saith, "On a double Sabbath."(2) Now what is a double Sabbath? When the
cessation from toil is twofold, both that of the regular Sabbath, and that of
another feast coming upon it. For they call every cessation from toil, a sabbath.
But why could He have led them away from it, who foreknew all, unless it
had been His will that the Sabbath should be broken? It was His will indeed, but
not simply so; wherefore He never breaks it without a cause, but giving
reasonable excuses: that He might at once bring the law to an end, and not startle
them. But there are occasions on which He even repeals it directly, and not with
circumstance: as when He anoints with the clay the eyes of the blind man;(3) as
when He saith, "My Father worketh hitherto, and I work."(4) And He doth so, by
this to glorify His own Father, by the other to soothe the infirmity of the
Jews. At which last He is laboring here, putting forward as a plea the necessity
of nature; although in the case of acknowledged sins, that could not of course
ever be an excuse. For neither may the murderer make his anger a plea, nor the
adulterer allege his lust, no, nor any other excuse; but here, by mentioning
their hunger, He freed them from all blame.
But do thou, I pray thee, admire the disciples, how entirely they control
themselves, and make no account of the things of the body, but esteem the table
of the flesh a secondary thing, and though they have to struggle with
continual hunger, do not even so withdraw themselves. For except hunger had sorely
constrained them, they would not have done so much as this.
What then do the Pharisees? "When they saw it," it is said, "they said
unto Him, Behold, Thy disciples do that which is not lawful to do upon the Sabbath
day."(5)
Now here indeed with no great vehemence yet surely that would have been
consistent n them),--nevertheless they are not vehemently provoked, but simply
find fault. But when He stretched out the withered hand and healed it,(6) then
they were so infuriated, as even to consult together about slaying and destroying
Him. For where nothing great and noble is done, they are calm; but where they
see any made whole, they are savage, and fret themselves, and none so
intolerable as they are: such enemies are they of the salvation of men.
How then doth Jesus defend His disciples? "Have ye not read," saith He,
"what David did in the temple,(7) when he was an hungered, himself and all they
that were with him? how he entered into the house of God, and did eat the
show-bread, which was not lawful for him to eat, neither for them which were with
him, but only for the priests?"(8)
Thus, whereas in pleading for His disciples, He brings forward David; for
Himself, it is the Father.(9)
And observe His reproving manner: "Have ye not read what David did?" For
great indeed was that prophet's glory, so that Peter also afterwards pleading
with the Jews, spake on this wise, "Let me freely speak unto you of the patriarch
David, that he is both dead and buried."(10)
But wherefore doth He not call him by the name of his rank, either on this
occasion or afterwards? Perhaps because He derived His race from him.
Now had they been a candid sort of persons, He would have turned His
discourse to the disciples' suffering from hunger; but abominable as they were and
inhuman, He rather rehearses unto them a history.
But Mark saith, "In the days of Abiathar the High Priest:"(11) not stating
what was contrary to the history, but implying that he had two names; and adds
that "he gave unto him,"(1) indicating that herein also David had much to say
for himself, since even the very priest suffered him; and not only suffered,
but even ministered unto him. For tell me not that David was a prophet, for not
even so was it lawful, but the privilege was the priests': wherefore also He
added, "but for the priests only." For though he were ten thousand times a
prophet, yet was he not a priest; and though he were himself a prophet, yet not so
they that were with him; since to them too we know that he gave.
"What then," it might be said, "were they all one with David?" Why talk to
me of dignity, where there seems to be a transgression of the law, even though
it be the constraint of nature? Yea, and in this way too He hath the more
entirely acquitted them of the charges, in that he who is greater is found to have
done the same.
"And what is this to the question," one may say; "for it was not surely
the Sabbath, that he transgressed?" Thou tellest me of that which is greater, and
which especially shows the wisdom of Christ, that letting go the Sabbath, He
brings another example greater than the Sabbath. For it is by no means the same,
to break in upon a day, and to touch that holy table, which it was not lawful
for any man to touch. Since the Sabbath indeed hath been violated, and that
often; nay rather it is continually being violated, both by circumcision, and by
many other works; and at Jericho(2) too one may see the same to have happened;
but this happened then only. So that He more than obtains the victory. How then
did no man blame David, although there was yet another ground of charge heavier
than this, that of the priests' murder, which had its origin from this? But He
states it not, as applying himself to the present subject only.
2. Afterwards again He refutes it in another way also. For as at first He
brought in David, by the dignity of the person quelling their pride; so when He
had stopped their mouths, and had put down their boasting, then He adds also
the more appropriate refutation. And of what sort is this? "Know ye not, that in
the temple the priests profane the Sabbath, and are blameless?"(3) For in that
other instance indeed, saith He, the emergency made the relaxation, but here
is the relaxation even without emergency. He did not however at once thus refute
them but first by way of permission, afterwards as insisting upon his
argument. Because it was meet to draw the stronger inference last, although the former
argument also had of course its proper weight.
For tell me not, that it is not freeing one's self from blame, to bring
forward another who is committing the same sin. For when the doer incurs no
blame, the act on which he hath ventured becomes a rule for others to plead.
Nevertheless He was not satisfied with this, but subjoins also what is
more decisive, saying that the deed is no sin at all; and this more than anything
was the sign of a glorious victory, to point to the law repealing itself, and
in two ways doing so, first by the place, then by the Sabbath; or rather even in
three ways, in that both the work is twofold. that is done, and with it goes
also another thing, its being done by the priests; and what is yet more, that it
is not even brought as a charge. "For they," saith He, "are blameless."
Seest thou how many points He hath stated? the place; for He saith, "In
the temple;" the persons, for they are "the priests;" the time, for He saith,
"the Sabbath;" the act itself, for "they profane;" (He not having said, "they
break," but what is more grievous, "they profane;") that they not only escape
punishment, but are even free from blame, "for they," saith He, "are blameless."
Do not ye therefore account this, He saith, like the former instance. For
that indeed was done both but once, and not by a priest, and was of necessity;
wherefore also they were deserving of excuse; but this last is both done every
Sabbath, and by priests, and in the temple, and according to the law. And
therefore again not by favor, but in a legal way, they are acquitted of the charges.
For not at all as blaming them did I so speak, saith He, nor yet as freeing
them from blame in the way of indulgence, but according to the principle of
justice.
And He seems indeed to be defending them, but it is His disciples whom He
is clearing of the alleged faults. For when He saith, "those are blameless," He
means, "much more are these."
"But they are not priests." Nay, they are greater than priests. For the
Lord of the temple Himself is here: the truth, not the type. Wherefore He said
also,
"But I say unto you, That in this place is one greater than the temple."(5)
Nevertheless, great as the sayings were which they heard, they made no
reply, for the salvation of men was not their object.
Then, because to the hearers it would seem harsh, He quickly draws a veil
over it, giving His discourse, as before, a lenient turn, yet even so
expressing Himself with a rebuke. "But if ye had known what this meaneth, I will have:
mercy and not sacrifice, ye would not have condemned the guiltless."(2)
Seest thou how again He inclines His speech to lenity, yet again shows
them to be out of the reach of lenity? "For ye would not have condemned," saith
He, "the guiltless." Before indeed He inferred the same from what is said of the
priests, in the words, "they are guiltless;" but here He states it on His own
authority; or rather, this too is out of the law, for He was quoting a prophetic
saying.(3)
3. After this He mentions another reason likewise; "For the Son of man,"
saith He, "is Lord of the Sabbath day;"(4) speaking it of Himself. But Mark
relates Him to have said this of our common nature also; for He said, "The Sabbath
was made for man, not man for the Sabbath."(5)
Wherefore then was he punished that was gathering the sticks?(6) Because
if the laws were to be despised even at the beginning, of course they would
scarcely be observed afterwards.
For indeed the Sabbath did at the first confer many and great benefits;
for instance, it made them gentle towards those of their household, and humane;
it taught them God's providence and the creation, as Ezekiel saith;(7) it
trained them by degrees to abstain from wickedness, and disposed them to regard the
things of the Spirit.
For because they could not have borne it,(8) if when He was giving the law
for the Sabbath, He had said, "Do your good works on the Sabbath, but do not
the works which are evil," therefore He restrained them from all alike for, "Ye
must do nothing at all," saith He: and not even so were they kept in order.
But He Himself, in the very act of giving the law of the Sabbath, did even
therein darkly signify that He will have them refrain from the evil works only, by
the saying, "Ye must do no work, except what shall be done for your life."(9) And
in the temple too all went on, and with more diligence and double toil.(10)
Thus even by the very shadow He was secretly opening unto them the truth.
Did Christ then, it will be said, repeal a thing so highly profitable? Far
from it; nay, He greatly enhanced it. For it was time for them to be trained
in all things by the higher rules, and it was unnecessary that his hands should
be bound, who was freed from wickedness, winged for all good works; or that men
should hereby learn that God made all things; or that they should so be made
gentle, who are called to imitate God's own love to mankind (for He saith, "Be
ye merciful, as your Heavenly Father");(11) or that they should make one day a
festival, who are commanded to keep a feast all their life long; ("For let us
keep the feast," it is said, "not with old leaven, neither with leaven of malice
and wickedness; but with unleavened bread of sincerity and truth");(12) as
neither need they stand by an ark and a golden altar, who have the very Lord of all
for their inmate, and in all things hold communion with Him; by prayer, and by
oblation, and by scriptures, and by almsgiving, and by having Him within them.
Lo now, wily is any Sabbath required, by him who is always keeping the feast,
whose conversation is in Heaven?
4. Let us keep the feast then continually, and do no evil thing; for this
is a feast: and let our spiritual things be made intense, while our earthly
things give place: and let us rest a spiritual rest, refraining our hands from
covetousness; withdrawing our body from our superfluous and unprofitable toils,
from such as the people of the Hebrews did of old endure in Egypt. For there is
no difference betwixt us who are gathering gold, and those that were bound in
the mire, working at those bricks, and gathering stubble, and being beaten. Yea,
for now too the devil bids us make bricks, as Pharaoh did then. For what else
is gold, than mire? and what else is silver, than stubble? Like stubble, at
least, it kindles the flame of desire; like mire, so doth gold defile him that
possesses it.
Wherefore He sent us, not Moses from the wilderness, but His Son from
Heaven. If then, after He is come, thou abide in Egypt, thou wilt suffer with the
Egyptians: but if leaving that land thou go up with the spiritual lsrael, thou
shalt see all the miracles.
Yet not even this suffices for salvation. For we must not only be
delivered out of Egypt, but we must also enter into the promise. Since the Jews too, as
Paul saith, both went through the Red Sea,(13) and ate manna, and drank
spiritual drink, but nevertheless they all perished.
Lest then the same befall us also, let us not be slow, neither draw back;
but when thou hearest wicked spies even now bringing up an evil report against
the strait and narrow way, and uttering the same kind of talk as those spies of
old, let not the multitude, but Joshua, be our pattern, and Caleb the son of
Jephunneh; and do not thou give up, until thou have attained the promise, and
entered into the Heavens.
Neither account the journey to be difficult. "For if when we were enemies,
we were reconciled to God, much more, being reconciled, shall we be saved."(1)
"But this way," it will be said, "is strait and narrow." Well, but the former,
through which thou hast come, is not strait and narrow only, but even
impassable, and full of savage wild beasts. And as there was no passing through the Red
Sea, unless that miracle had been wrought, so neither could we, abiding in our
former life, have gone up into Heaven, but only by baptism intervening. Now if
the impossible hath become possible, much more will the difficult be easy.
"But that," it will be said, "was of grace only." Why, for this reason
especially thou hast just cause to take courage. For if, where it was grace alone,
He wrought with you; will He not much more be your aid, where ye also show
forth laborious works? If He saved thee, doing nothing, will He not much more help
thee, working?
Above(2) indeed I was saying, that from the impossibilities thou oughtest
to take courage about the difficulties also; but now I add this, that if we are
vigilant, these will not be so much as difficult. For mark it: death is
trodden under foot, the devil hath fallen, the law of sin is extinguished, the grace
of the Spirit is given, life is contracted into a small space, the heavy
burdens are abridged.
And to convince thee hereof by the actual results, see how many have
overshot the injunctions of Christ; and art thou afraid of that which is just their
measure? What plea then wilt thou have, when others are leaping beyond the
bounds, and thou thyself too slothful for what is enacted?
Thus, thee we admonish to give alms of such things as thou hast, but
another hath even stripped himself of all his possessions: thee we require to live
chastely with thy wife, but another hath not so much as entered into marriage:
and thee we entreat not to be envious, but another we find giving up even his
own life for charity: thee again we entreat to be lenient in judgments, and not
severe to them that sin, but another, even when smitten, hath turned the other
cheek also.
What then shall we say, I pray thee? What excuse shall we make, not doing
even these things, when others go so far beyond us? And they would not have
gone beyond us, had not the thing been very easy. For which pines away, he who
envies other men's blessings, or he who takes pleasure with them, and rejoices?
Which eyes all things with suspicion and continual trembling, the chaste man, or
the adulterer? Which is cheered by good hopes, he that spoils by violence, or
he that shows mercy, and imparts of his own to the needy?
Let us then bear in mind these things, and not be torpid in our career for
virtue's sake; but having stripped ourselves with all readiness for these
glorious wrestlings, let us labor for a little while, that we may win the perpetual
and imperishable crowns; unto which may we all attain, by the grace and love
towards man of our Lord Jesus Christ, to whom be glory and might forever and
ever. Amen.
HOMILY XL.
MATT, XII. 9, 10.
"And when He was departed thence, He went into their synagogue: and, behold, a
man which had his hand withered."
AGAIN He heals on a Sabbath day, vindicating what had been done by His
disciples. And the other evangelists indeed say, that He "set" the man "in the
midst," and asked them, "If it was lawful to do good on the Sabbath days."(1)
See the tender bowels of the Lord. "He set him in the midst," that by the
sight He might subdue them; that overcome by the spectacle they might cast away
their wickedness, and out of a kind of shame towards the man, cease from their
savage ways. But they, ungentle and inhuman, choose rather to hurt the fame of
Christ, than to see this person made whole: in both ways betraying their
wickedness; by their warring against Christ, and by their doing so with such
contentiousness, as even to treat with despite His mercies to other men.
And while the other evangelists say, He asked the question, this one
saith, it was asked of Him. "And they asked Him," so it stands, "saying, Is it
lawful to heal on the Sabbath days? that they might accuse Him."(2) And it is likely
that both took place. For being unholy wretches, and well assured that He
would doubtless proceed to the healing, they hastened to take Him beforehand with
their question, thinking in this way to hinder Him. And this is why they asked,
"Is it lawful to heal on the Sabbath days?" not for information, but that "they
might accuse Him." Yet surely the work was enough, if it were really their
wish to accuse Him; but they desired to find a handle in His words too, preparing
for themselves beforehand an abundance of arguments.
But He in His love towards man doth this also: He answers them, teaching
His own meekness, and turning it all back upon them; and points out their
inhumanity. And He "setteth" the man "in the midst;" not in fear of them, but
endeavoring to profit them, and move them to pity.
But when not even so did He prevail with them, then was He grieved, it is
said, and wroth with them for the hardness of their heart, and He saith,
"What man is there among you that shall have one sheep, and if this fall
into a pit on the Sabbath days, will he not lay hold of it, and lift it out? How
much then is a man better than a sheep?(3) Wherefore it is lawful to do
well(4) on the Sabbath days."(5)
Thus, lest they have ground of obstinacy, and of accusing him again of
transgression, He convicts them by this example. And do thou mark, I pray thee,
how variously and suitably in each case, He introduces His pleas for the breaking
of the sabbath. Thus, first, in the case of the blind man,(6) He cloth not so
much as defend Himself to them, when He made the clay: and yet then also were
they blaming Him; but the manner of the creation was enough to indicate the Lord
and Owner(7) of the law. Next, in the case of the paralytic, when he carried
his bed, and they were finding fault,(8) He defends Himself, now as God, and
now as man; as man, when He saith, "If a man on the Sabbath day receive
circumcision, that the law should not be broken;" (and He said not "that a man should be
profiled"); "are ye angry at me, because I have made a man every whir whole on
the Sabbath day?"(9) As God again, when He saith, "My Father worketh hitherto,
and I work."(10)
But when blamed for His disciples, He said, "Have ye not read what David
did, when he was an hungered, himself and they that were with him, how he
entered into the house of God, and did eat the show-bread? He brings forward the
priests also.
And here again; "Is it lawful to do good on the Sabbath days, or to do
evil?(12) Which of you shall have one sheep?" For He knew their love of wealth,
that they were all taken up with it, rather than with love of mankind. And indeed
the other evangelist. saith,(1) that He also looked about upon them when
asking these questions, that by His very eye He might win them over; but not even
so did they become better.
And yet here He speaks only; whereas elsewhere in many cases He heals by
laying on of hands also. But nevertheless none of these things made them meek;
rather, while the man was healed, they by his health became worse.
For His desire indeed was to cure them before him, and He tried
innumerable ways of healing, both by what He did in their presence, and by what He said:
but since their malady after all was incurable, He proceeded to the work. "Then
saith He to the man, Stretch forth thine hand. And he stretched it forth, and
it was restored whole, like as the other."(2)
2. What then did they? They go forth, it is said, and take counsel
together to slay Him. For "the Pharisees," saith the Scripture, "went out and held a
council against Him, how they might destroy Him."(3) They had received no
injury, yet they went about to slay Him. So great an evil is envy. For not against
strangers only, but even against our own, is it ever warring. And Mark saith,
they took this counsel with the Herodians.(4)
What then doth the gentle and meek One? He withdrew, on being aware of it.
"But when Jesus knew their devices,(5) He withdrew Himself," it is said, "from
them"(6) Where now are they who say, miracles ought to be done? Nay, by these
things He signified, that the uncandid soul is not even thereby persuaded; and
He made it plain that His disciples too were blamed by them without cause. This
however we should observe, that they grow fierce especially at the benefits
done to their neighbors; and when they see any one delivered either from disease
or from wickedness, then is the time for them to find fault, and become wild
beasts. Thus did they calumniate Him, both when He was about to save the
harlot, and when He was eating with publicans, and now again, when they saw the hand
restored.
But do thou observe, I pray thee, how He neither desists from His tender
care over the infirm, and yet allays their envy. "And great multitudes(7)
followed Him, and He healed them all; and He charged them that were healed, that they
should make Him known to no man."(8) Because, while the multitudes everywhere
both admire and follow Him, they desist not from their wickedness.
Then, lest thou shouldest be confounded at what is going on, and at their
strange frenzy, He introduces the prophet also, foretelling all this. For so
great was the accuracy of the prophets, that they omit not even these things, but
foretell His very journeyings, and changes of place, and the intent with which
He acted therein; that thou mightest learn, how they spake all by the Spirit.
For if the secrets of men cannot by any art be known, much more were it
impossible to learn Christ's purpose, except the Spirit revealed it.(9)
What then saith the prophet? Nay, it is subjoined: "That it might be
fulfilled which was spoken by Esaias the Prophet, saying, Behold my servant, whom I
have chosen; my beloved, in whom my soul is well pleased. I will put my Spirit
upon Him, and He shall show judgment to the Gentiles. He shall not strive nor
cry,(10) neither shall any man hear His voice in the streets. A bruised reed
shall He not break, and smoking flax shall He not quench, till He send forth
judgment unto victory. And in His name shall the Gentiles trust."(11)
The prophet celebrates His meekness, and His unspeakable power, and opens
to the Gentiles "a great door and effectual;" he foretells also the ills that
are to overtake the Jews, and signifies His unanimity with the Father. For
"behold," saith He, "my servant, whom I have chosen, my beloved, in whom my soul is
well pleased." Now if He chose Him, not as an adversary doth Christ set aside
the law, nor as being an enemy of the lawgiver, but as having the same mind with
Him, and the same objects.
Then proclaiming His meekness, he saith, "He shall not strive nor cry."
For His desire indeed was to heal in their presence; but since they thrust Him
away, not even against this did He contend.
And intimating both His might, and their weakness, he saith, "A bruised
reed shall He not break." For indeed it was easy to break them all to pieces like
a reed, and not a reed merely, but one already bruised.
"And smoking flax shall He not quench." Here he sets forth both their
anger that is kindled, and His might that is able to put down their anger, and to
quench it with all ease; whereby His great mildness is signified.
What then? Shall these things always be? And will He endure them
perpetually, forming such frantic plots against Him? Far from it; but when He hath
performed His part, then shall He execute the other purposes also. For this He
declared by saying "Till He send forth judgment unto victory: and in His name shall
the Gentiles trust." As Paul likewise saith, "Having in a readiness to revenge
all disobedience, when your obedience is fulfilled."(1)
But what is, "when He sends forth judgment unto victory?" When He hath
fulfilled all His own part, then, we are told, He will bring down upon them His
vengeance also, and that a perfect vengeance. Then shall they suffer His terrors,
when His trophy is gloriously set up, and the ordinances that proceed from Him
have prevailed, and He hath left them no plea of contradiction, however
shameless. For He is wont to call righteousness, "judgment."
But not to this will His dispensation be confined, to the punishment of
unbelievers only, but He will also win to Himself the whole world. Wherefore He
added, "And in His name shall the Gentiles trust."
Then, to inform thee that this too is according to the purpose of the
Father, in the beginning the prophet had assured us of this likewise, together with
what had gone before; saying, "My well-beloved, in whom my soul is well
pleased." For of the well-beloved it is quite evident that He did these things also
according to the mind of the beloved.(2)
3. "Then they brought unto Him one possessed with a devil, blind and dumb,
and He healed him, insomuch that the blind and dumb both spake and saw."(3)
O wickedness of the evil spirit! he had barred up both entrances, whereby
that person should have believed, as well sight as hearing; nevertheless, both
did Christ open.
"And all the people were amazed, saying, Is not this the Son of David?(4)
But the Pharisees said, This fellow doths not cast out devils, but by
Beelzebub, the prince of the devils."(6)
And yet what great thing had been said? Nevertheless, not even this did
they endure: to such a degree, as I have already remarked, are they ever stung by
the good works done to their neighbors, and nothing grieves them so much as
the salvation of men. And yet He had actually retired, and had given room for
their passion to subside; but the evil was again rekindled, because a benefit was
again conferred; and the evil spirit was not so indignant as they. For he
indeed departed from the body, and gave place and fled away, uttering no sound; but
these were endeavoring now to slay, now to defame Him. That is, their first aim
not succeeding, they would fain hurt His good name.
Such a thing is envy, than which no worse evil can exist. For the
adulterer indeed enjoys some pleasure, such as it is, and in a short time accomplishes
his proper sin; but the envious man punishes himself, and takes vengeance upon
himself more than on the person whom he envies, and never ceases from his sin,
but is continually engaged in the commission thereof. For as a sow in mire, and
evil spirits in our hurt, so also doth he delight in his neighbor's ills; and
if anything painful take place, then is he refreshed, and takes breath;
accounting the calamities of others his own joys, and the blessings of others his own
ills; and he considers not what pleasure may accrue to himself, but what pain
to his neighbor. These men therefore were it not meet to stone and beat to
death, like mad dogs, like destroying demons, like the very furies?
For as beetles feed on dung, so do these men on the calamities of others,
being a sort of common foes and enemies of our nature. And whereas the rest of
mankind pity even a brute when it is killed, dost thou, on seeing a man receive
benefits, become like a wild beast, tremble, and turn pale? Why, what can be
worse than this madness? Therefore, you see, whoremongers and publicans were
able to enter into the kingdom, but the envious, being within it, went out: For
"the children of the kingdom," it is said, "shall be cast out."(7) And the
former, once freed from their present wickedness, attained to things which they never
looked for, while these latter lost even the good things which they had; and
very reasonably. For this turns a man into a devil, this renders one a savage
demon. Thus did the first murder arise; thus was nature forgotten; thus the earth
defiled; thus afterwards did it open its mouth, to receive yet living, and
utterly destroy, Dathan, and Korah, and Abiram, and all that multitude.(8)
4. But to declaim against envy, one may say, is easy; but we ought to
consider also how men are to be freed from the disease. How then are we to be rid
of this wickedness? If we bear in mind, that as he who hath committed
fornication cannot lawfully enter the church, so neither he that envies; nay, and much
less the latter than the former. For as things are, it is accounted even an
indifferent thing; wherefore also it is little thought of; but if its real badness
be made evident, we should easily refrain from it.
Weep then, and groan; lament, and entreat God. Learn to feel and to repent
for it, as for a grievous sin. And if thou be of this mind, thou wilt quickly
be rid of the disease.
And who knows not, one may say, that envy is an evil thing? No one indeed
is ignorant of it: yet they have not the same estimation of this passion as of
adultery and fornication. When, at least, did any one condemn himself bitterly
for having envied? when did he entreat God concerning this pest, that He would
be merciful to him? No man at any time: but if he shall fast and give a little
money to a poor man, though he be envious to the thousandth degree, he counts
himself to have done nothing horrid, held as he is in subjection by the most
accursed passion of all. Whence, for example, did Cain become such as he was?
Whence Esau? Whence the children of Laban? Whence the sons of Jacob? Whence Korah
Dathan, and Abiram, with their company? Whence Miriam? Whence Aaron? Whence the
devil himself?
Herewith consider this also; that thou injurest not him whom thou enviest,
but into thyself thou art thrusting the sword. For wherein did Cain injure
Abel? Did he not even against his own will send him the more quickly into the
kingdom? but himself he pierced through with innumerable evils. Wherein did Esau
harm Jacob? Did not Jacob grow wealthy, and enjoy unnumbered blessings; while he
himself both became an outcast from his father's house, and wandered in a
strange land, after that plot of his?(1) And wherein did Jacob's sons again make
Joseph the worse, and this, though they proceeded even unto blood? had not they to
endure famine, and encounter peril to the utmost, whereas he became king of
all Egypt? For the more thou enviest, the more dost thou become a procurer of
greater blessing to the object of thine envy. For there is a God who beholds these
things; and when He sees him injured, that doeth no injury, him He exalts the
more, and so makes him glorious, but thee He punishes.
For if them that exult over their enemies, He suffer not to go unpunished
("For rejoice not," it is said, "when thine enemies fall, lest at any time the
Lord see it, and it displease Him"(2)); much more such as envy those who have
done no wrong.
Let us then extirpate the many-headed wild beast. For in truth many are
the kinds of envy. Thus, if he that loves one that is a friend to him hath no
more than the publican,(3) where shall he stand who hates him that doeth him no
wrong? and how shall he escape hell,(4) becoming worse than the heathens?
Wherefore also I do exceedingly grieve, that we who are commanded to copy the angels,
or rather the Lord of the angels, emulate the devil. For indeed there is much
envy, even in the church; and more among us, than among those under authority.
Wherefore we must even discourse unto ourselves.
5. Tell me then, why dost thou envy thy neighbor? Because thou seest him
reaping honor, and words of good report? Then dost thou not bear in mind how
much evil honors bring on the unguarded? lifting them up to pride, to vainglory,
to arrogance, to contemptuousness; making them more careless? and besides these
evils, they wither also lightly away. For the most grievous thing is this, that
the evils arising therefrom abide immortal, but the pleasure at the moment of
its appearing, is flown away. For these things then dost thou envy? tell me.
"But he hath great influence with the Ruler, and leads and drives all
things which way he will, and inflicts pain on them that offend him, and benefits
his flatterers, and hath much power." These are the sayings of secular persons,
and of men that are riveted to the earth. For the spiritual man nothing shall
be able to hurt.
For what serious harm shall he do to him? vote him out of his office? And
what of that? For if it be justly done, he is even profited; for nothing so
provokes God, as for one to hold the priest's office unworthily. But if unjustly,
the blame again falls on the other, not on him; for he who hath suffered
anything unjustly, and borne it nobly, obtains in this way the greater confidence
towards God.
Let us not then aim at this, how we may be in places of power, and honor,
and authority, but that we may live in virtue and self denial. For indeed
places of authority persuade men to do many things which are not approved of God;
and great vigor of soul is needed, in order to use authority aright. For as he
that is deprived thereof, practises self restraint, whether with or against his
will, so he that enjoys it is in some such condition, as if any one living with
a graceful and beautiful damsel were to receive rules never to look upon her
unchastely. For authority is that kind of thing. Wherefore many, even against
their will, hath it induced to show insolence; it awakens wrath, and removes the
bridle from the tongue, and tears off the door of the lips; fanning the soul as
with a wind, and sinking the bark in the lowest depth of evils. Him then who is
in so great danger dost thou admire, and sayest thou he is to be envied? Nay,
how great madness is here! Consider, at any rate (besides what we have
mentioned), how many enemies and accusers, and how many flatterers this person hath
besieging him. Are these then, I pray thee, reasons for calling a man happy? Nay,
who can say so?
"But the people," you say, "hold high account of him." And what is this?
For the people surely is not God, to whom he is to render account: so that in
naming the people, thou art speaking of nothing else than of other breakers, and
rocks, and shoals, and sunken ridges. For to be in favor with the people, the
more it makes a man illustrious, the greater the dangers, the cares, the
despondencies it brings with it. For such an one has no power at all to take breath or
stand still, having so severe a master. And why say I, "stand still and take
breath"? Though such an one have never so many good works, hardly doth he enter
into the kingdom. For nothing is so wont to overthrow(1) men, as the honor
which comes of the multitude, making them cowardly, ignoble, flatterers, hypocrites.
Why, for instance, did the Pharisees say that Christ was possessed? Was it
not because they were greedy of the honor of the multitude?
And whence did the multitude pass the right judgment on Him? Was it not
because this disease had no hold on them? For nothing, nothing so much tends to
make men lawless and foolish, as gaping after the honor of the multitude.
Nothing makes them glorious and immoveable, like despising the same.
Wherefore also great vigor of soul is needed for him who is to hold out
against such an impulse, and so violent a blast. For as when things are
prosperous, he prefers himself to all, so when he undergoes the contrary, he would fain
bury himself alive: and this is to him both hell, and the kingdom, when he hath
come to be overwhelmed by this passion.
Is all this then, I pray thee, matter of envyings, and not rather of
lamentations and tears? Every one surely can see. But thou doest the same, in
envying one in that kind of credit, as if a person, seeing another bound and scourged
and torn by innumerable wild beasts, were to envy him his wounds and stripes.
For in fact, as many men as the multitude comprises, so many bonds also, so
many tyrants hath he: and, what is yet more grievous, each of these hath a
different mind: and they all judge whatever comes into their heads concerning him that
is a slave to them, without examining into anything; but whatever is the
decision of this or that person, this they also confirm.
What manner of waves then, what tempest so grievous as this? Yea, such a
one is both puffed up in a moment by the pleasure, and is under water again
easily, being ever in fluctuation, in tranquillity never. Thus, before the time of
the assembly, and of the contests in speaking, he is possessed with anxiety and
fear; but after the assembly he is either dead with despondency, or rejoices
on the contrary without measure; a worse thing than sorrow. For that pleasure is
not a less evil than sorrow is plain from the effect it has on the soul; how
light it makes it, and unsteady, and fluttering.
And this one may see even from those of former times. When, for instance,
was David to be admired; when he rejoiced, or when he was in anguish? When, the
people of the Jews? groaning and calling upon God, or exulting in the
wilderness, and worshipping the calf? Wherefore Solomon too, who best of all men knew
what pleasure is, saith, "It is better to go to the house of mourning, than to
the house of laughter."(2) Wherefore Christ also blesses the one, saying,
"Blessed are they that mourn,"(3) but the other sort He bewails, saying, "Woe unto
you that laugh, for ye shall weep."(4) And very fitly. For in delight the soul is
more relaxed and effeminate, but in mourning it is braced up, and grows sober,
and is delivered from the whole swarm of passions, and becomes higher and
stronger.
Knowing then all these things, let us shun the glory that comes from the
multitude, and the pleasure that springs therefrom, that we may win the real and
everlasting glory; unto which may we all attain, by the grace and love towards
man of our Lord Jesus Christ, to whom be glory and might, forever and ever.
Amen.
HOMILY XLI.
MATT. XII. 25, 26.
"And Jesus knew their thoughts, and said unto them, Every kingdom divided
against itself shall be brought to desolation; and every city or house divided
against itself, shall not stand: and if Satan cast out Satan, he is divided against
himself; how shall then his kingdom stand?"
Even before now they had accused Him of this, that "by Beelzebub He
casteth out the devils."(1) But whereas then He did not rebuke them, allowing them
both to know His power by His more numerous miracles, and by His teaching to
learn His majesty: now, since they continued saying the same, He proceeds also to
rebuke them, showing His Godhead by this first, that He made their secrets
public; and secondly, by the very act of casting out the devils with ease.
And indeed the accusation too was very shameless. Because, as I have said,
envy seeks not what to say, but only that it may say somewhat. Yet for all
that, not even so did Christ despise them, but defends Himself with the
forbearance proper to Him, teaching us to be meek to our enemies; and though they say
such things, as we are neither conscious of, nor have they any the least
probability, not to be disturbed, nor troubled, but with all long suffering to render
them an account. This then He did most especially on that very occasion,
affording the strongest proof, that the things were false that were said by them. For
neither was it a demoniac's part to exhibit so much meekness; it was not a
demoniac's part to know men's secrets.
For, in truth, both because of the exceeding impudence of such a
suspicion, and because of the fear of the multitude, they durst not publicly make these
charges, but were turning them in their mind. But He, to show them that He knew
all that likewise, doth not set down the accusation, nor doth He expose their
wickedness; but the refutation He adds, leaving it to the conscience of them
that bad said it to convict them. For on one thing only was He bent, to do good
to them that were sinning, not to expose them.
Yet surely, if He had been minded to extend his speech in length, and to
make them ridiculous, and withal to have exacted of them also the most extreme
penalty, there was nothing to hinder Him. Nevertheless He put aside all these
things, and looked to one object only, not to render them more contentious, but
more candid, and so to dispose them better toward amendment.
How then doth He plead with them? Not by allegation out of the Scriptures
(for they would not so much as attend, but were sure rather to distort their
meaning), but by the events of ordinary life. For "every kingdom," saith He,
"divided against itself shall not stand; and a city and a house, if it be divided,
is soon dissolved."(2)
For the wars from without are not so ruinous as the civil ones. Yea, and
this is the case in bodies too; it is the case even in all things; but for this
time He takes His illustration from those that are more publicly known.
And yet, what is there more powerful on earth than a kingdom? Nothing, but
nevertheless it perishes if in dissension. And if in that case one throw the
blame on the great burden of the affairs thereof, as breaking down by its own
weight; what wouldest thou say of a city? and what of a house? Thus, Whether it
be a small thing, or a great, if at dissension with itself, it perishes. If then
I, having a devil, do by him cast out the devils, there is dissension and
fighting among devils, and they take their stand one against another. But if they
stand one against another, their strength is wasted and destroyed. "For if Satan
cast out Satan" (and He said not "the devils," implying their great unanimity
one with another), "he is then divided against himself;" so He speaks. But if
he be divided, he is become weaker, and is ruined; and if he be ruined, how can
he cast out another?
Seest thou how great the absurdity of the accusation, how great the folly,
the inconsistency? Since it is not for the same persons to say first, that He
stands, and casts out devils, and then to say, that He stands by that, which it
was likely would be the cause of His undoing.
2. This then being the first refutation, the next after it is that which
relates to the disciples. For not always in one way only, but also in a second
and third, He solves their objections, being minded most abundantly to silence
their shamelessness. Which sort of thing He did also with respect to the
Sabbath, bringing forward David, the priests, the testimony that saith, "I will have
mercy, and not sacrifice," the cause of the Sabbath, for which it was ordained;
"for the Sabbath," saith He," was for man."(1) This then He doth in the
present case also: where after the first He proceeds to a second refutation, plainer
than the former.
"For if I," saith He, "by Belezebub cast out devils, by whom do your sins
cast them out?"(2)
See here too His gentleness. For He said not, "my disciples," nor, "the
apostles," but "your sons;" to the end that if indeed they were minded to return
to the same nobleness(3) with them, they might derive hence a powerful spring
that way; but if they were uncandid, and continued in the same course, they
might not thenceforth be able to allege any plea, though ever so shameless.
But what He saith is like this, "By whom do the apostles cast them out?"
For in fact they were doing so already, because they had received authority from
Him, and these men brought no charge against them; their quarrel not being
with the acts, but with the person only. As then it was His will to show that
their. sayings arose only from their envy against Him, He brings forward the
apostles; thus: If I so cast them out, much more those, who have received their
authority from me. Nevertheless, no such thing have ye said to them. How then bring
ye these charges against me, the author of their doings, while acquitting them
of the accusations? This, however, will not free you from your punishment,
rather it will condemn you the more. Therefore also He added, "They shall be your
judges." For when persons from among you, and having been practised in these
things, both believe me and obey, it is most clear that they will also condemn
those who are against me both in deed and word.
"But if I cast out devils by the Spirit of God, then the Kingdom of God is
come unto you."(4)
What means "the Kingdom"? "My coming." See how again He conciliates and
soothes them, and draws them to the knowledge of Himself, and signifies that they
are warring with their own good, and contentious against their own salvation.
"For whereas ye ought to rejoice," saith He, "and leap for joy, that One is
come bestowing those great and unutterable blessings, hymned of old by the
prophets, and that the time of your prosperity is at hand; ye do the contrary; so far
from receiving the blessings, you do even speak ill of them, and frame
accusations that have no real being."
Now Matthew indeed saith, "If I by the Spirit of God cast out"; but Luke,
"If I by the finger of God cast out the devils:"(5) implying that to cast out
devils is a work of the greatest power, and not of any ordinary grace. And He
means indeed that from these things they should infer and say, If this be so,
then the Son of God is come. This, however, He saith not, but in a reserved way,
and so as not to be galling to them, He darkly intimates it by saying, "Then the
kingdom of God is Come unto you."
Seest thou exceeding wisdom? By the very things which they were blaming,
He showed His presence shining forth.
Then, to conciliate them, He said not simply, "The Kingdom is come," but,
"unto you,"(6) as though He had said, To you the good things are come;
wherefore then feel displeased at your proper blessings? why war against your own
salvation? This is that time, which the prophets long ago foretold: this, the sign
of that advent which was celebrated by them, even these things being wrought by
divine power. For the fact indeed, that they are wrought, yourselves know; but
that they are wrought by divine power, the deeds themselves cry out. Yea, and
it is impossible that Satan should be stronger now; rather he must of absolute
necessity be weak. But it cannot be, that he who is weak should, as though he
were strong, cast out the strong devil.
Now thus speaking He signified the power of charity, and the weakness of
separation and contentiousness. Wherefore He was Himself also continually
charging His disciples, on every occasion, concerning charity, and teaching them that
the devil, to subvert it, leaves nothing undone.
3. Having then uttered His second refutation, He adds also a third, thus
saying:
"How can one enter into the strong man's house, and spoil his goods,
except he first bind the strong man, and then spoil his goods?"(7)
For that Satan cannot possibly cast out Satan is evident from what hath
been said; but that neither in any other way is it possible to cast him out,
except one first get the better of him, this too is acknowledged by all.
What then is established hereby? The former statement, with more abundant
evidence. "Why, I am so far," saith He, "from using the devil as an ally, that
I make war upon him, and bind him; and an infallible proof thereof is the
plundering of his goods." See how the contrary is proved, of what they were
attempting to establish. For whereas they wished to show, that not by His own power
doth He cast out devils, He shows that not only the devils, but even their very
chief leader is held by Him bound with all authority; and that over him, before
them, did He prevail by His own power. And this is evident from the things that
are done. For if he be the prince, and they subjects, how, except he were
worsted, and made to bow down, could they have been spoiled?
And here His saying seems to me to be a prophecy likewise. For not only, I
suppose, are the evil spirits the goods of the devil, but also the men that
are doing his works. Therefore to declare that He doth not only cast out devils,
but also will drive away all error from the world, and will put down his
sorceries, and make all his arts useless, He said these things.
And He said not, He will take away, but "He will spoil," to express what
is done with authority. But He calls him "strong," not because he is so by
nature, God forbid, but declaring his former tyranny, which arose from our
remissness.
4. "He that is not with me is against me, and he that gathereth not with
me scattereth abroad."(1)
Behold also a fourth refutation. For what is my desire? saith He. To bring
men to God, to teach virtue, to proclaim the kingdom. What, that of the devil,
and the evil spirits? The contrary to these. How then should he that gathers
not with me, nor is at all with me, be likely to co-operate with me? And why do
I say co-operate? Nay, on the contrary, his desire is rather to scatter abroad
my goods. He then who is so far from cooperating that he even scatters abroad,
how should he have exhited such unanimity with me, as with me to cast out the
devils?
Now it is a natural surmise that He said this not of the devil only, but
Himself also of Himself, as being for His part against the devil, and scattering
abroad his goods. And how, one may say, is he that is not with me against me?
By this very fact, of his not gathering. But if this be true, much more he that
is against him. For if he that doth not co-operate is an enemy, much more he
that wages war.
But all these things He saith, to indicate His enmity against the devil,
how great and unspeakable it is. For tell me, if thou must go to war with any
one, he that is not willing to fight on thy side, by this very fact is he not
against thee? And if elsewhere He saith, "He that is not against you is for
you,"(2) it is not contrary to this. For here He signified one actually against them,
but there He points to one who in part is on their side: "For they cast out
devils," it is said "in Thy name."(3)
But to me He seems here to be hinting also at the Jews, setting them on
the devil's side. For they too were against Him, and were scattering what He
gathered. As to the fact that He was hinting at them also, He declared it by
speaking thus,
"Therefore I say unto you, that all manner of sin and blasphemy shall be
forgiven unto men."(4)
5. Thus having defended Himself, and refuted their objection, and proved
the vanity of their shameless dealings, He proceeds to alarm them. For this too
is no small part of advice and correction, not only to plead and persuade, but
to threaten also; which He doth in many passages, when making laws and giving
counsel.
And though the saying seem to have much obscurity, yet if we attend, its
solution will prove easy.
First then it were well to listen to the very words: "All manner of sin
and blasphemy shall be forgiven unto men; but the blasphemy of the Holy Ghost
shall not be forgiven unto them. And whosoever speaketh a word against the Son of
Man, it shall be forgiven him; but whosoever speaketh against the Holy Ghost,
it shall not be forgiven him, neither in this world, neither in the world to
Come. "(5)
What now is it that He affirms? Many things have ye spoken against me;
that I am a deceiver, an adversary of God. These things I forgive you on your
repentance, and exact no peualty of you; but blasphemy against the Spirit shall not
be forgiven, no, not to those who repent. And how can this be right? For even
this was forgiven upon repentance. Many at least of those who said these words
believed afterward, and all was forgiven them. What is it then that He saith?
That this sin is above all things unpardonable. Why so? Because Himself indeed
they knew not, who He might be, but of the Spirit they received ample
experience. For the prophets also by the Spirit said whatever they said; and indeed all
in the Old Testament had a very high notion of Him.
What He saith, then, is this: Be it so: ye are offended at me, because of
the flesh with which I am encompassed: can ye say of the Spirit also, We know
it not? And therefore is your blasphemy unpardonable, and both here and
hereafter shall ye suffer punishment. For many indeed have been punished here only (as
he who had committed fornication,(1) as they who partook unworthily of the
mysteries,(1) amongst the Corinthians); but ye, both here and hereafter.
Now as to your blasphemies against me, before the cross, I forgive them:
and the daring crime too of the cross itself; neither shall ye be condemned for
your unbelief alone. (For neither had they, that believed before the cross,
perfect faith. And on many occasions He even charges them to make Him known to no
man before the Passion; and on the cross He said that this sin was forgiven
them.) But as to your words touching the Spirit, they wilt have no excuse. For in
proof that He is speaking of what was said of Him before the crucifixion, He
added, "Whosoever shall speak a word against the Son of Man, it shall be forgiven
him; but whosoever shall speak against the Holy Ghost," there is no more
forgiveness. Wherefore? Because this is known to you; and the truths are notorious
which you harden yourselves against. For though ye say that ye know not me; yet
of this surely ye are not ignorant, that to cast out devils, and to do cures,
is a work of the Holy Ghost. It is not then I only whom ye are insulting, but
the Holy Ghost also. Wherefore your punishment can be averted by no prayers,
neither here nor there.
For so of men, some are punished both here, and there, some here only,
some there only, others neither here nor there. Here and there, as these very men
(for both here did they pay a penalty, when they suffered those incurable ills
at the taking of their city, and there shall they undergo a very grievous one),
as the inhabitants of Sodom; as many others. There only, as the rich man who
endured the flames,(2) and had not at his command so much as a drop of water.
Here, as he that had committed fornication amongst the Corinthians. Neither here
nor there, as the apostles, as the prophets, as the blessed Job; for their
sufferings were not surely in the way of punishment, but as contests and wrestlings.
Let us labor, therefore, to be of the same part with these: or if not with
these, at least with them that wash away their sins here. For fearful indeed
is that other judgment, and inexorable the vengeance, and incurable the
punishment.
6. But if thou desire not to be punished even here, pass judgment on
thyself, exact thine own penalty. Listen to Paul, when he saith, "If we would judge
ourselves, we should not be judged."(3) If thou do this, proceeding in order
thou shall even arrive at a crown.
But how are we to exact our own penalty? one may ask. Lament, groan
bitterly, humble, afflict thyself, call to remembrance thy sins in their particulars.
This thing is no small torture to a man's soul. If any man hath been in a
state of contrition, he knows that the soul is punished by this more than anything.
If any hath been living in remembrance of sins, he knows the anguish thence
arising. Therefore doth God appoint righteousness as a reward for such
repentance, saying, "Be thou first to tell thy sins, that thou mayest be justified."(4)
For it is not, it is not indeed, a small step towards amendment, to lay together
all our sins, and to be continually revolving and reckoning them up with their
particulars. For he that is doing this will be so heart-broken, as not to
think himself worthy so much as to live; and he that thinks thus, will be tenderer
than any wax. For tell me not of acts of fornication only, nor of adulteries,
nor of these things that are manifest, and acknowledged amongst all men: but lay
together also thy secret crafts, and thy false accusations, and thine evil
speakings, and thy vain gloryings, and thine envy, and all such things. For
neither will these bring a trifling punishment. For the reviler too shall fall into
hell; and the drunkard hath no part in the kingdom; and he that lovest not his
neighbor so offends God, as to find no help even in his own martyrdom; and he
that neglects his own hath denied the faith, and he who overlooks the poor is
sent into the fire.
Account not then these things to be little, but put all together, and
write them as in a book. For if thou write them down, God blots them out; even as
on the other hand, if thou omit writing them, God both inscribes them, and
exacts their penalty. It were then far better for them to be written by us, and
blotted out above, than on the contrary, when we have forgotten them, for God to
bring them before our eyes in that day.
Therefore that this may not be so, let us reckon up all with strictness,
and we shall find ourselves answerable for much. For who is clear from
covetousness? Nay, tell me not of the quantity, but since even in a small amount we
shall pay the same penalty, consider this and repent. Who is rid of all insolence?
Yet this casts into hell. Who hath not secretly spoken evil of his neighbor?
Yet this deprives one of the Kingdom.(1) Who hath not been self-willed? Yet this
man is more unclean than all. Who hath not looked with unchaste eyes? Yet this
is a complete adulterer. Who hath not been "angry with his brother without a
cause"? Yet such an one is "in danger of the council." Who hath not sworn? Yet
this thing is of the evil one. Who hath not forsworn himself? but this man is
something more than of the evil one. Who hath not served mammon? but this man is
fallen away from the genuine service of Christ.
I have also other things greater than these to mention: but even these are
enough, and able, if a man be not made of stone, nor utterly past feeling, to
bring him to compunction. For if each one of them casts into hell, what will
they not bring to pass when all are met together?
How then can one be saved? it may be asked. By application of the
countervailing remedies: alms, prayers, compunction, repentance, humility, a contrite
heart, contempt of possessions. For God hath marked out for us innumerable ways
of salvation, if we be willing to attend. Let us then attend, and let us every
way cleanse out our wounds, showing mercy, remitting our anger against them
that have displeased us, giving thanks for all things to God, fasting according to
our power, praying sincerely, "making unto ourselves friends of the mammon of
unrighteousness."(2) For so shall we be able to obtain pardon for our offenses,
and to win the promised good things; whereof may we all be counted worthy, by
the grace and love toward man of our Lord Jesus Christ, to whom be glory and
might forever and ever. Amen.
HOMILY XLII.
MATT. XII. 33
"Either make the tree good, and his fruit good, or else make the tree corrupt,
and hisfruit corrupt; for the tree is known by his fruit."
AGAIN in another way He shames them, and is not content with His former
refutations. But this He doth, not freeing Himself from accusations, (for what
went before was quite enough), but as wishing to amend them.
Now His meaning is like this: none of you hath either found fault about
the persons healed, as not being healed; nor hath said, that it is an evil thing
to deliver one from a devil. For though they had been ever so shameless, they
could not have said this.
Since therefore they brought no charge against the works, but were
defaming the Doer of them, He signifies that this accusation is against both the
common modes of reasoning, and the congruity of the circumstances. A thing of
aggravated shamelessness, not only to interpret maliciously, but also to make up such
charges as are contrary to men's common notions.
And see how free He is from contentiousness. For He said not, "Make the
tree good, forasmuch as the fruit also is good;" but, most entirely stopping
their mouths, and exhibiting His own considerateness, and their insolence, He
saith, Even if ye are minded to find fault with my works, I forbid it not at all,
only bring not inconsistent and contradictory charges. For thus were they sure to
be most clearly detected, persisting against what was too palpable. Wherefore
to no purpose is your maliciousness, saith He, and your self-contradictory
statements. Because in truth the distinction of the tree is shown by the fruit, not
the fruit by the tree; but ye do the contrary. For what if the tree be the
origin of the fruit; yet it is the fruit that makes the tree to be known. And it
were consistent, either in blaming us to find fault with our works too, or
praising these, to set us who do them free from these charges. But now ye do the
contrary; for having no fault to find with the works, which is the fruit, ye pass
the opposite judgment upon the tree, calling me a demoniac; which is utter
insanity.
Yea, and what He had said before,(1) this He establishes now also; that a
good tree cannot bring forth evil fruit, nor again can the converse be. So that
their charges were against all consistency and nature.
Then since He is arguing not for Himself, but for the Spirit, He hath
dealt out His reproof even as a torrent, saying, "O generation of vipers, how can
ye, being evil, speak good things?"(2)
Now this is at once to accuse, and to give demonstration of His own
sayings from their case. For behold, saith He, ye being evil trees, cannot bring
forth good fruit. I do not then marvel at your talking thus: for ye were both ill
nurtured, being of wicked ancestors, and ye have acquired a bad mind.
And see how carefully, and without any hold for exception, He hath
expressed His accusations: in that He said not, "How can ye speak good things, being a
generation of vipers? (for this latter is nothing to the former): but, "How
can ye, being evil, speak good things?"
But He called them "broods of vipers," because they prided themselves on
their forefathers. To signify therefore that they had no advantage thereby, He
both casts them out from their relationship to Abraham, and assigns them
forefathers of kindred disposition, having stripped them of that ground of
illustriousness.
"For out of the abundance of the heart the mouth speaketh." Here again He
indicates His Godhead, which knew their secrets: and that not for words only,
but also for wicked thoughts, they shall suffer punishment; and that He knows it
all, as God. And He saith, that it is possible even for men to know these
things; for this is a natural consequence, that when wickedness is overflowing
within, its words should be poured forth through the lips. So that when thou
hearest a man speak wicked words, do not suppose only so much wickedness to be in him
as the words display, but conjecture the fountain to be much more abundant;
for that which is spoken outwardly, is the superabundance of that which is within.
See how vehemently He reprehends them. For if what they had said is so
evil, and is of the very mind of the devil, consider the root and well-spring of
their words, how far that must reach. And this is naturally the case; for while
the tongue through shame often pours not forth all its wickedness at once, the
heart having no human witness, fearlessly gives birth to whatever evils it
will; for of God it hath not much regard.(3) Since then men's sayings come to
examination: and are set before all, but the heart is concealed; therefore the evils
of the former grow less, while those of the latter increase. But when that
within is multiplied, all that hath been awhile hidden comes forth with a violent
gushing. And as persons vomiting strive at first to keep down the humors that
force their way out, but, when they are overcome, cast forth much abomination;
so do they that devise evil things, and speak ill of their neighbors.
"A good man out of his good treasure," saith He, "bringeth forth good
things, and an evil man out of his evil treasure bringeth forth evil things."(4)
For think not by any means, saith He, that it is so in respect of
wickedness only, for in goodness also the same occurs: for there too the virtue within
is more than the words without. By which He signified, that both they were to
be accounted more wicked than their words indicated, and Himself more perfectly
good than His sayings declared. And He calls it "a treasure," indicating its
abundance.
Then again He fences them in with great terror. For think not at all,
saith He, that the thing stops at this, that is, at the condemnation of the
multitude; nay, for all that do wickedly in such things shall suffer the utmost
punishment. And He said not, "ye," partly in order to instruct our whole race, partly
to make His saying the less burdensome.
"But I say unto you," this is His word, "that every idle word that men
shall speak, they shall give account thereof in the day of judgment."(1)
And that is idle, which is not according to the fact, which is false,
which hath in it unjust accusation; and some say, that which is vain also, for
instance, provoking inordinate laughter, or what is filthy, and immodest, and
coarse.
"For by thy words thou shall be justified, and by thy words thou shall be
condemned."(2)
Seest thou how far the tribunal is from invidiousness? how favorable the
account required? For not upon what another hath said of thee, but from what
thou hast thyself spoken, will the Judge give His sentence; which is of all things
the very fairest: since surely with thee it rests, either to speak, or not to
speak.
2. Wherefore not those that are slandered, but the slanderers, have need
to be anxious and to tremble. For the former are not constrained to answer for
themselves touching the evil things which are said of them, but the latter will,
for the evil they have spoken; and over these impends the whole danger. So
that the persons censured should be without anxiety, not being to give account of
the evil that others have said; but the censurers have cause to be in anxiety,
and to tremble, as being themselves to be dragged before the judgment-seat in
that behalf. For this is indeed a diabolical snare, and a sin having in it no
pleasure, but harm only. Yea, and such an one is laying up an evil treasure in
his soul. And if he that hath an evil humor in him doth himself first reap the
fruits of the malady, much more he that is treasuring up in himself what is more
bitter than any bile, I mean, wickedness, will suffer the utmost evils,
gathering unto himself a grievous disease. And it is evident from the things that He
vomits out. For if they pain others so much, far more the soul that gives them
birth.
Thus the plotter destroys himself first; just as he that treads(3) on fire
burns up himself, and he that smites adamant spites himself, and he that kicks
against the pricks draws blood from himself. For somewhat of this kind is he
that knows how to suffer wrong, and to bear it manfully; he is adamant, and the
pricks, and fire; but he that hath used himself to do wrong is feebler than any
clay.
Not therefore to suffer wrong is evil, but to do it, and not to know how
to bear being wronged. For instance, how great wrongs did David endure! How
great wrongs(4) did Saul commit! Which then was the stronger and happier? which the
more wretched and miserable? was it not he that did wrong? And mark it. Saul
had promised, if David should slay the Philistine, to take him for his son-in
law, and to give him his daughter with great favor. He slew the Philistine; the
other broke his engagements, and so far from bestowing her, did even go about to
slay him. Which then became the more glorious? Was not the one choking with
despair and the evil demon, while the other shone brighter than the sun with his
trophies, and his loyalty to God? Again, before the choir of the women, was not
me one suffocated with envy, while the other enduring all in silence, won all
men, and bound them unto himself? And when he had even gotten him into his
hands, and spared him, which again was happy? and which wretched? which was the
weaker? which the more powerful? Was it not this man, who did not avenge himself
even justly? And very naturally. For the one had armed soldiers, but the other,
righteousness, that is more mighty than ten thousand armies, for his ally and
helper. And for this reason, though unjustly conspired against, he endured not
to slay him even justly. For he knew by what had taken place before, that not to
do evil, but to suffer evil, this is what makes men more powerful. So it is
with bodies also, so also with trees.
And what did Jacob? Was he not injured by Laban, and suffered evil? Which
then was the stronger? he that had gotten the other into his hands, and durst
not touch him, but was afraid and trembling;(5) or he whom we see without arms
and soldiers proving more terrible to him than innumerable kings?
But that I may give you another demonstration of what I have said, greater
than this, let us again in the instance of David himself try the reasoning on
the opposite side. For this man who being injured was so strong, afterwards
upon committing an injury became on the contrary the weaker party. At least, when
he had wronged Uriah, his position was changed again, and the weakness passed
to the wrong doer, and the might to the injured; for he being dead laid waste
the other's house. And the one being a king, and alive, could do nothing, but the
other, being but a soldier, and slain, turned upside down all that pertained
to his adversary.
Would ye that in another way also I should make what I say plainer? Let us
look into their case, who avenge themselves even justly. For as to the wrong
doers, that they are the most worthless of all men, warring against their own
soul; this is surely plain to every one.
But who avenged himself justly, yet kindled innumerable ills, and pierced
himself through with many calamities and sorrows? The captain of David's host.
For he both stirred up a grievous war, and suffered unnumbered evils; not one
whereof would have happened, had he but known how to command himself.(1)
Let us flee therefore from this sin, and neither in words nor deeds do our
neighbors wrong. For He said not, If thou slander, and summon a court of
justice, but simply, If thou speak evil, though within thyself, even so shall thou
suffer the utmost punishment. Though it be true which thou hast said, though
thou have spoken upon conviction, even so shall vengeance come upon thee. For not
according to what the other hath done, but according to what thou hast spoken,
will God pass sentence; "for by thy words thou shall be condemned," saith He.
Art thou not told that the Pharisee also spake the truth, and affirmed what was
manifest to all men, without discovering what was hidden? Nevertheless, he paid
the utmost penalty.
But if we ought not to accuse men of things which are acknowledged, much
less of those which are disputed; nay, for the offender hath a judge. Do not
now, I warn thee, seize upon the privilege of the Only Begotten. For Him is the
throne of judgment reserved.
3. Wouldest thou however be a judge? Thou hast a court of judgment which
hath great profit, and bears no blame. Make consideration, as judge, to sit down
upon thy conscience, and bring before it all thy transgressions, search out
the sins of thy soul, and exact with strictness the account thereof, and say,
"wherefore didst thou dare to do this and that?" And if she shun these, and be
searching into other men's matters, say to her, "Not about these am I judging
thee, not for these art thou come here to plead. For what, if such a one be a
wicked man? Thou, why didst thou commit this and that offense? Answer for thyself,
not to accuse; look to thine own matters, do not those of others." And be thou
continually urging her to this anxious trial. Then, if she have nothing to say,
but shrink back, wear her out with the scourge, like some restless and unchaste
handmaid. And this tribunal do thou cause to sit every day, and picture the
river of fire, the venomous worm, the rest of the torments.
And permit her not to be with the devil any more, nor bear with her
shameless sayings, "he comes to me, he plots against me, he tempts me;" but tell her,
"If thou weft not willing, all that would be to no purpose." And if she say
again, "I am entangled with a body, I am clothed with flesh, I dwell in the
world, I abide on earth;" tell her, "All these are excuses and pretexts. For such an
one too was encompassed with flesh, and such another dwelling in the world,
and abiding on earth, is approved; and thou thyself too, when thou doest well,
doest it encompassed with flesh." And if she be pained at hearing this, take not
off thine hand; for she will not die, if thou smite her, but thou wilt save her
from death. And if she say again, "Such an one provoked me," tell her, "But it
is in thy power not to be provoked; often at least thou hast restrained thine
anger." And if she say, "The beauty of such a woman moved me;" tell her, "Yet
wast thou able to have mastered thyself." Bring forward those that have got the
better, bring forward the first woman, who said, "The serpent beguiled me,(2)
and yet was not acquitted of the blame.
And when thou art searching out these things, let no man be present, let
no man disturb thee; but as the judges sit under curtains to judge, so do thou
too, instead of curtains, seek a time and place of quiet. And when after thy
supper thou art risen up, and art about to lie down, then hold this thy judgment;
this is the time convenient for thee, and the place, thy bed, and thy chamber.
This the prophet likewise commanded, saying, "For the things which ye say in
your hearts, be ye moved to compunction upon your beds."(3) And for small
offenses require great satisfaction, that unto the great thou mayest never even
approach. If thou do this every day, thou wilt with confidence stand at that fearful
judgment-seat.
In this way Paul became clean; therefore also he said, "For if we judged
ourselves, we should not be judged."(4) Thus did Job cleanse his sons.(5) For he
that offered sacrifices for secret sins, much more did he require an account
of such as were manifest.
4. But we do not so, but altogether the contrary. For as soon as we are
laid down to rest, we rather think over all our worldly maters; and some
introduce unclean thoughts, some usuries, and contracts, and temporal cares.
And if we have a daughter, a virgin, we watch her strictly; but that which
is more precious to us than a daughter, our soul, her we suffer to play the
harlot and defile herself, introducing to her innumerable wicked thoughts. And
whether it be the love of covetousness, or that of luxury, or that of fair
persons, or that of wrath, or be it what you will else that is minded to come in, we
throw open the doors, and attract and invite it, and help it to defile our soul
at its leisure. And what can be more barbarous than this, to overlook our soul
that is more precious than all, abused by so many adulterers, and so long
companying with them, even until they are sated? which will never be. So it is,
therefore, that when sleep overtakes us, then only do they depart from her; or
rather not even then, for our dreams and imaginations furnish her with the same
images. Whence also, when day is come, the soul stored with such images often
falls away to the actual performance of those fancies.
And thou, while into the apple of thine eye thou sufferest not so much as
a grain of dust to enter, dost thou pass unnoticed thy soul, gathering to
itself a heap of so great evils? When shall we then be able to clear out this filth,
which we are daily laying up within us? when to cut up the thorns? when to sow
the seed? Knowest thou not that henceforth the time of harvest is at hand? But
we have not yet so much as ploughed our fields. If then the husbandman should
come and find fault, what shall we say? and what answer shall we make? That no
man gave us the seed? Nay, this is sown daily. That no man, then, hath cut
up the thorns? Nay, every day we are sharpening the sickle. But do the necessary
engagements of life distract thee? And why hast thou not crucified thyself to
the world? For if he that repays that only, which is given him, is wicked,
because he did not double it; he that hath wasted even this, what will be said to
him? If that person was bound, and cast out where is gnashing of teeth, what
shall we have to suffer, who, when numberless motives are drawing us toward
virtue, shrink back and are unwilling?
For what is there, that hath not enough in it to persuade thee? Seest thou
not the vileness of the world, the uncertainty of life, the toil, the sweat,
for things present? What? is it the case that virtue must be toiled for, but may
vice be had without toil? If then both in the one and in the other there is
toil, why didst thou not choose this, which hath so great profit?
Or rather, there are some parts of virtue, which are free even from toil.
For what kind of toil is it, not to calumniate, not to lie, not to swear, to
lay aside our anger against our neighbor? Nay, on the contrary, to do these
things is toilsome, and brings much anxiety.
What plea then shall we have, what excuse, not doing right even in these
matters? For hereby it is plain, that out of remissness and sloth the more
toilsome duties also altogether escape us.
All these things let us consider; let us flee vice, let us choose virtue,
that we may attain both unto the good things that are present, and unto those
that are to come, by the grace and love towards man of our Lord Jesus Christ, to
whom be glory and might forever and ever. Amen.
HOMILY XLIII.
MATT. XII. 38, 39.
"Then certain of the Scribes and Pharisees answered Him, saying, Master, we
would see a sign from Thee. But He answered and said;(1) An evil and adulterous
generation seeketh after a sign, and there shall no sign be given to it, but the
sign of the Prophet Jonas."
COULD then anything be more foolish than these men (not more impious
only), who after so many miracles, as though none had been wrought, say, "We would
see a sign from Thee?" With what intent then did they so speak? That they might
lay hold of Him again. For since by His words He had stopped their mouths, once
and twice and often, and had checked their shameless tongue, they come to His
works again. At which also the evangelist marvelling again, said,
"Then certain of the scribes answered Him, asking a sign."
"Then," when? When they ought to be stooping before Him, to admire, to be
amazed and give way, "then" they desist not from their wickedness.
And see their words too, teeming with flattery and dissimulation. For they
thought to draw Him towards them in that way. And now they insult, now they
flatter Him; now calling Him a demoniac, now again "Master," both out of an evil
mind, how contrary soever the words they speak.
Wherefore also He rebukes them severely. And when they were questioning
Him roughly and insulting Him, He reasoned with them gently; when they were
flattering; reproachfully, and with great severity; implying that He is superior to
either passion, and is neither at the one time moved to anger, nor at the other
softened by flattery. And see His reproach, that it is not merely hard words,
but contains a demonstration of their wickedness. For what saith He?
"An evil and adulterous generation seeketh after a sign." Now what He
saith is to this effect: What marvel if ye behave so to me who have been hitherto
unknown to you when even to the Father, of whom ye have had so much experience,
ye have done the very same? forsaking Him, ye have run unto the devils, drawing
to yourselves wicked lovers. With this Ezekiel too was continually upbraiding
them.(1)
Now by these sayings He signified Himself to be of one accord with His
Father, and them to be doing nothing new; He was also unfolding their secrets, how
with hypocrisy and as enemies they were making their demand. Therefore He
called them "an evil generation," because they have been always ungrateful towards
their benefactors; because upon favors they become worse, which belongs to
extreme wickedness.
And He called it "adulterous," declaring both their former and their
present unbelief; whereby He implies Himself again to be equal to the Father, if at
least the not believing Him makes it "adulterous."
2. Then, after His reproach, what saith He? "There shall no sign be given
to it, but the sign of Jonas the prophet." Now is He striking the first note of
the doctrine of His resurrection, and confirming it by the type.
What then? one may say; was no sign given it? None was given to it on
asking. For not to bring in them did He work His signs (for He knew them to be
hardened), but in order to amend others. Either then this may be said, or that they
were not to receive such a sign as that was. For a sign did befall them, when
by their own punishment they learnt His power. Here then He speaks as
threatening, and with this very meaning obscurely conveyed: as if He said, innumerable
benefits have I showed forth, none of these hath drawn you to me, neither were
ye willing to adore my power. Ye shall know therefore my might by the contrary
tokens, when ye shall see your city cast down to the ground, the walls also
dismantled, the temple become a ruin; when ye shall be cast out both from your
former citizenship and freedom, and shall again go about everywhere, houseless and
in exile. (For all these things came to pass after the cross.) These things
therefore shall be to you for great signs. And indeed it is an exceeding great
sign, that their ills remain unchanged; that although ten thousand have attempted
it, no one hath been able to reverse(2) the judgment once gone forth against
them.
All this however He saith not, but leaves it to after time to make it
clear to them, but for the present He is making trial of(3) the doctrine of His
resurrection, which they were to come to know by the things which they should
afterwards suffer.
"For as Jonas," saith He, "was three days and three nights in the whale's
belly, so shall the Son of Man be three days and three nights in the heart of
the earth."(4) Thus, He said not indeed openly that He should rise again, since
they would have even laughed Him to scorn, but He intimated it in such manner,
that they might believe Him to have foreknown it. For as to their being aware
of it, they say to Pilate, "That deceiver said," these are their words, "while
He was yet alive, After three days I will rise again;"(5) and yet we know His
disciples were ignorant of this; even as they had been beforehand more void of
understanding than these: wherefore also these became self-condemned.
But see how exactly He expresses it, even though in a dark saying. For He
said not, "In the earth," but, "In the heart of the earth;" that He might
designate His very sepulchre, and that no one might suspect a mere semblance.(6) And
for this intent too did He allow three days, that the fact of His death might
be believed. For not by the cross only doth He make it certain, and by the
sight of all men, but also by the time of those days. For to the resurrection
indeed all succeeding time was to bear witness; but the cross, unless it had at the
time many signs bearing witness to it, would have been disbelieved; and with
this disbelief would have gone utter disbelief of the resurrection also.
Therefore He calls it also a sign. But had He not been crucified, the sign would not
have been given. For this cause too He brings forward the type, that the truth
may be believed. For tell me, was Jonah in the whale's belly a mere appearance?
Nay, thou canst not say so. Therefore neither was Christ in the heart of the
earth such. For surely the type is not in truth, and the truth in mere appearance.
For this cause we every where show forth His death, both in the mysteries, and
in baptism, and in all the rest. Therefore Paul also cries with a clear voice,
"God forbid that I should glory, save in the cross of our Lord Jesus
Christ."(1)
Whence it is clear, that they who are diseased in Marcion's way are
children of the devil, blotting out these truths, to avoid the annulling whereof
Christ did so many things, while to have them annulled the devil took such manifold
pains: I mean, His cross and His passion.
3. Therefore He said elsewhere also, "Destroy this temple, and in three
days I will raise it up:"(2) and, "The days will come when the Bridegroom shall
be taken away from them:(3) and here, "There shall no sign be given it, but the
sign of Jonas the prophet:" declaring both that He should die(4) for them, and
that they would profit nothing; for this He afterwards declared. Nevertheless,
even with this knowledge He died: so great was His tender care.
For to hinder thy supposing that the result would be such with the Jews as
with the Ninevites; that they would be converted, and that as in their case He
established the tottering city, and converted the barbarians, so these too
should turn unto Him after His resurrection; hear how He declares altogether the
contrary. For that they should reap no good from hence in respect of their own
benefit, but rather suffer incurable ills, this too He went on to declare by the
parable of the evil spirit.
But for the present He is justifying their future sufferings, signifying
that they would suffer justly. For their calamities and their desolation He
represents by that similitude; but up to this time He is indicating the justice of
their having to suffer all these things: which also in the Old Testament was
His wont. Thus when about to destroy Sodom, He first defended Himself to Abraham,
by showing the desolation and rareness of virtue, when indeed not even ten men
were found in so many cities, who had made it their rule to live chastely. And
to Lot also in like manner, He first signifies their inhospitality and their
unnatural lusts, and then He brings the fire on them. And with regard to the
deluge again He did the self-same thing, by His acts excusing Himself to Noah. And
also to Ezekiel s in like manner, when He caused him dwelling in Babylon to
see men's evil deeds in Jerusalem. And yet again to Jeremiah, when He said, "Pray
not," excusing Himself He added, "Seest thou not what they do?"(6) And
everywhere He doeth the selfsame thing, as here also.
For what saith He? "The men of Nineveh shall rise up,(7) and shall condemn
this generation, because they repented at the preaching of Jonas, and, behold,
a greater than Jonas is here."(8)
For he was a servant, but I am the Master; and he came forth from the
whale, but I rose from death; and he proclaimed destruction, but I am come
preaching the good tidings of the kingdom. And they indeed believed without a sign, but
I have exhibited many signs. And they indeed heard nothing more than those
words, but I have given a spring to every kind of self-denial. And he came being
ministered unto, but I the very Master and Lord of all am come not threatening,
not demanding an account, but bringing pardon. And they were barbarians, but
these have conversed with unnumbered prophets. And of him no man had foretold,
but of me all, and the facts agreed with their words. And he indeed, when he was
to go forth, ran away that he might not be ridiculed; but I, knowing that I am
both to be crucified and mocked, am come. And while he did not endure so much
as to be reproached for them that were saved, I underwent even death, and that
the most shameful death, and after this I sent others again. And he was a
strange sort of person, and an alien, and unknown; but I a kinsman after the flesh,
and of the same forefathers. And many more topics too might any one collect,
were he to seek diligently for more.
But He stops not even at this, but adds also another example, saying,
"And the queen of the south shall rise up in judgment(1) with this
generation, and shall condemn them, because she came from the uttermost parts of the
earth to hear the wisdom of Solomon, and behold a greater than Solomon is
here."(2)
This was more than the former. For Jonah went unto them, but the queen of
the south waited not for Solomon to come to her, but went herself unto him,
although she was both a woman, and a barbarian, and at so great a distance, no
threat laid upon her, nor being in fear of death, but simply through the love of
wise words. "But behold even a greater than Solomon is here." For in that case
the woman came, but here I have come. And she indeed rose up from the uttermost
pans of the earth, but I go about cities and villages. And his discourse was of
trees and various kinds of wood, which could do no great good to his visitor:
but mine, of secret things, and most awful mysteries.
4. When therefore He had condemned them, having proved most amply that
they were sinning inexcusably, and that their disobedience arose from their own
perverseness not from their Teacher's inability, and when He had demonstrated
this as well by many other arguments, as also by the Ninevites, and by the queen:
then He speaks also of the punishment that should overtake them, darkly indeed,
yet He doth speak of it, interweaving an intense fear in His narration.
"For when," saith He, "the unclean spirit is gone out of the man, he
walketh through dry places, seeking rest; and finding none, he saith, I will return
to my house from whence I came out; and when he is come, he findeth it empty,
and swept and garnished. Then goeth he, and taketh with himself seven other
spirits more wicked than himself, and they enter in and dwell there, and the last
state of that man is worse than the first. Even so shall it be also unto this
generation."(3)
By this He signifies, that not only in the world to come, but here too
they should suffer most grievously. For since He had said, "The men of Nineveh
shall rise up in judgment, and shall condemn this generation;" lest, on account of
the postponement of the time, they should despise and grow more careless, by
this He brings His terror close upon them. Wherewith the prophet Hosea likewise
threatening them said, that they should be "even as the prophet that is beside
himself, the man that is carried away by a spirit;", that is to say, as the
madmen, and distracted by evil spirits, even the false prophets. For here, by "a
prophet that is beside himself," he means the false prophet, such as are the
augurs. Much to the same effect Christ also tells them, that they shall suffer
the utmost evils.
Seest thou how from everything He urges them to attend to His sayings;
from things present, from things to come; by those who had approved themselves
(the Ninevites, I mean, and that queen), and by the offending Tyrians and
Sodomites? This did the prophets likewise, bringing forward the sons of the
Rechabites,(5) and the bride that forgetteth not her proper ornament and her girdle,(6)
and "the ox that knoweth his owner, and the ass that remembereth his crib."(7)
Even so here too, when He had by a comparison set forth their perverseness, He
speaks afterwards of their punishment also.
What then can the saying mean? As the possessed, saith He, when delivered
from that infirmity, should they be at all remiss, draw upon themselves their
delusion more grievous than ever: even so is it with you. For before also ye
were possessed by a devil, when ye were worshipping idols, and were slaying your
sons to the devils, exhibiting great madness; nevertheless I forsook you not,
but cast out that devil by the prophets; and again in my own person I am come,
willing to cleanse you more entirely. Since then you will not attend, but have
wrecked yourselves in greater wickedness (for to kill prophets was a crime not
nearly so great and grievous as to slay Him); therefore your sufferings will be
more grievous than the former, those at Babylon, I mean, and in Egypt, and
under the first Antiochus. Because what things befell them in the time of
Vespasian and Titus, were very far more grievous than those. Wherefore also He said,
"There shall be great tribulation, such as never was, neither shall be."(8) But
not this only doth the illustration declare, but that they should be also
utterly destitute of all virtue, and more assailable by the power of the devils, than
at that time. For then even although they sinned, yet were there also among
them such as acted uprightly, and God's providence was present with them, and the
grace of the Spirit, tending, correcting, fulfilling all its part; but now of
this guardianship too they shall be utterly deprived; so He tells them; so that
there is now both a greater scarcity of virtue, and a more intense affliction,
and a more tyrannical operation of the devils.
Ye know accordingly even in our generation, when he who surpassed all in
impiety, I mean Julian, was transported with his fury, how they ranged
themselves with the heathens, how they courted their party. So that, even if they seem
to be in some small degree chastened now, the fear of the emperors makes them
quiet; since, if it were not for that, far worse than the former had been their
daring. For in all their other evil works they surpass their predecessors;
sorceries, magic arts, impurities, they exhibit in great excess. And amongst the
rest, moreover, strong as is the curb which holds them down, they have often made
seditions, and risen up against kings, which has resulted in their being
pierced through with the worst of evils.
Where now are they that seek after signs? Let them hear that a considerate
mind is needed, and if this be wanting, signs are of no profit. See, for
instance, how the Ninevites without signs believed, while these, after so many
miracles, grew worse, and made themselves an habitation of innumerable devils, and
brought on themselves ten thousand calamities; and very naturally. For when a
man, being once delivered from his ills, fails to be corrected, he will suffer
far worse than before. Yea, therefore He said, "he finds no rest," to indicate,
that positively and of necessity such an one will be overtaken by the ambush of
the devils. Since surely by these two things he ought to have been sobered, by
his former sufferings, and by his deliverance; or rather a third thing also is
added, the threat of having still worse to endure. But yet by none of these
were they made better.
5. All this might be seasonably said, not of them only, but of us also,
when after having been enlightened,(1) and delivered from our former ills, we
again cleave unto the same wickedness, for more grievous also thenceforth will be
the punishment of our subsequent sins. Therefore to the sick of the palsy also
Christ said, "Behold, thou art made whole; sin no more, lest a worse thing come
unto thee;"(2) and this to a man who was thirty-eight years in his infirmity.
And what, one might ask, was he to suffer worse than this? Something far worse,
and more intolerable. For far be it from us, that we should endure as much as
we are capable of enduring. For God is at no loss for inflictions. For
according to the greatness of His mercy, so also is His wrath.
With this He charges Jerusalem also by Ezekiel. "I saw thee," saith He,
"polluted in blood; and I washed thee, and anointed thee; and thou hadst renown
for thy beauty; and thou pouredst out thy fornications," saith He, "on those who
dwell near thee,"(3) wherefore also the more grievous are His threatenings to
thee when thou sinnest.
But from hence infer not thy punishment only, but also the boundless
longsuffering of God. How often at least have we put our hands to the same evil
deeds, and yet He suffers long! But let us not be sanguine, but fear; since Pharaoh
too, had he been taught by the first plague, would not have experienced the
later ones; he would not afterwards have been drowned, his host and all together.
And this I say, because I know many, who like Pharaoh are even now saying,
"I know not God,"(4) and making those that are in their power cleave to the
clay and to the bricks. How many, though God bids them assauge their
"threatening,"(5) cannot bear so much as to relax the toil!
"But we have no Red Sea now, to pass through afterwards." But we have a
sea of fire, a sea not like that, either in kind or in size, but far greater and
fiercer, having its waves of fire, of some strange and horrible fire. A great
abyss is there, of most intolerable flame, Since everywhere fire may be seen
roving quickly round, like some savage wild beast. And if here this sensible and
material fire leaped like a wild beast out of the furnace, and sprang upon those
who were sitting without,(6) what will not that other fire do to such as have
fallen into it?
Concerning that day, hear the prophets, saying, "The day of the Lord is
incurable, full of anger and wrath."(7) For there will be none to stand by, none
to rescue, nowhere the face of Christ, so mild and calm. But as those who work
in the mines are delivered over to certain cruel men, and see none of their
friends, but those only that are set over them; so will it be then also: or rather
not so, but even far more grievous. For here it is possible to go unto the
king, and entreat, and free the condemned person: but there, no longer; for He
permits it not, but they continue in the scorching torment,(8) and in so great
anguish, as it is not possible for words to tell. For if, when any are in flames
here, no speech can describe their sharp pangs, much less theirs, who suffer it
in that place: since here indeed all is over in a brief point of time, but in
that place there is burning indeed, but what is burnt is not consumed.
What then shall we do there? For to my self also do I say these things.
6. "But if thou," saith one, "who art our teacher, speakest so of thyself,
I care no more; for what wonder, should I be punished?" Nay, I entreat, let no
man seek this consolation; for this is no refreshment at all. For tell me; was
not the devil an incorporeal power? Was he not superior to men? Yet he fell
away. Is there any one who will derive consolation from being punished along with
him? By no means. What of all who were in Egypt? did they not see those also
punished who were in high places, and every. house in mourning? Were they then
hereby refreshed, and comforted? No surely; and it is manifest by what they did
afterwards, as men tortured by some kind of fire, rising up together against
the king, and compelling him to cast out the people of the Hebrews.
Yea, and very unmeaning is this saying, to suppose that it gives comfort
to be punished with all men, to say, "As all, so I too." For why should I speak
of hell? Think, I pray you, of those that are seized with gout, how, when they
are racked by sharp pain, though you show them ten thousand suffering worse,
they do not so much as take it into their mind. For the intensity of their
anguish allows not their reason any leisure for thinking of others, and so finding
consolation. Let us not then feed ourselves with these cold hopes. For to receive
consolation from the ills of our neighbors, takes place in ordinary
sufferings; but when the torment is excessive, and all our inward parts full of tempest,
and the soul is now come to be unable so much as to know itself, whence shall
it derive consolation? So that all these sayings are an absurdity, and fables of
foolish children. For this, of which thou speakest, takes place in dejection,
and in moderate dejection, when we are told, "the same thing hath befallen such
an one;" but sometimes not even in dejection: now if in that case it hath no
strength, much less in the anguish and burden unspeakable, which "the gnashing
of teeth" indicates.
And I know that I am galling you, and giving you pain by these words; but
what can I do? For I would fain not speak thus, but be conscious of virtue both
in myself, and in all of you; but since we are in sins, the more part of us,
who will grant me ability to pain you indeed, and to penetrate the understanding
of them that hear me? Then might I so be i at rest. But now I fear lest any
despise my sayings, and their punishments become the greater for their
indifferent way of hearing. Since, when a master utters a threat, should one of the
fellow-servants hear and make light of his menace, not without punishment would he
hasten by him, provoked as he is, but rather it would be a ground for
increasing his chastisement. Wherefore I entreat you, let us pierce our own hearts, when
we hear His sayings regarding hell. For nothing is more delightful than this
discourse, by how much nothing is more bitter than the reality. But how
delightful to be told of hell? one may ask. Because it were so far from delight to fall
into hell, which result, our words that appear so galling, keep off. And
before this they furnish another pleasure: in that they brace up our souls, and
make us more reverent, and elevate the mind, and give wings to the thoughts, and
cast out the desires that so mischievously beset us; and the thing becomes a
cure.
7. Wherefore, to proceed, together with the punishment let me speak also
of the shame. For as the Jews shall then be condemned by the Ninevites, so we
too by many that seem beneath us now.
Let us imagine then how great the mockery, how great the condemnation; let
us imagine, and cast some foundation at length, some door of repentance.
To myself I say these things, to myself first I give this advice, and let
no one be angry, as though he were condemned. Let us enter upon the narrow way.
How long shall it be luxury? how long sloth? Have we not had enough of
indolence, mirth, procrastination? Will it not be the same over again, feasting, and
surfeiting, and expense, and wealth, and acquisitions, and buildings? And what
is the end? Death. What is the end? Ashes, and dust, and coffins, and worms.
Let us show forth then a new kind of life. Let us make earth, heaven; let
us hereby show the Greeks, of how great blessings they are deprived. For when
they behold in us good conversation, they will look upon the very face of the
kingdom of Heaven. Yea, when they see us gentle, pure from wrath, from evil
desire, from envy, from covetousness, rightly fulfilling all our other duties, they
will say, "If the Christians are become angels here, what will they be after
their departure hence? if where they are strangers they shine so bright, how
great will they become when they shall have won their native land!" Thus they too
will be reformed, and the word of godliness "will have free course,(1) not less
than in the apostles' times. For if they, being twelve, converted entire cities
and countries; were we all to become teachers by our careful conduct, imagine
how high our cause will be exalted. For not even a dead man raised so
powerfully attracts the Greek, as a person practising self-denial. At that indeed he
will be amazed, but by this he will be profited. That is done, and is past away;
but this abides, and is constant culture to his soul.
Let us take heed therefore to ourselves, that we may gain them also. I say
nothing burdensome. I say not, do not marry. I say not, forsake cities, and
withdraw thyself from public affairs; but being engaged in them, show virtue.
Yea, and such as are busy in the midst of cities, I would fain have more approved
than such as have occupied the mountains. Wherefore? Because great is the
profit thence arising. "For no man lighteth a candle, and setteth it under the
bushel."(1) Therefore I would that all the candles were set upon the candlestick,
that the light might wax great.
Let us kindle then His fire; let us cause them that are sitting in
darkness to be delivered from their error. And tell me not, "I have a wife, and
children belonging to me, and am master of a household, and cannot duly practise all
this." For though thou hadst none of these, yet if thou be careless, all is
lost; though thou art encompassed with all these, yet if thou be earnest, thou
shall attain unto virtue. For there is but one thing that is wanted, the
preparation of a generous mind; and neither age, nor poverty, nor wealth, nor reverse of
fortune, nor anything else, will be able to impede thee. Since in fact both
old and young, and men having wives, and bringing up children, and working at
crafts, and serving as soldiers, have duly performed all that is enjoined. For so
Daniel was young, and Joseph a slave, and Aquila wrought at a craft, and the
woman who sold purple was over a workshop, and another was the keeper of a
prison, and another a centurion, as Cornelius; and another in ill health, as Timothy;
and another a runaway, as Onesimus; but nothing proved an hindrance to any of
these, but all were approved, both men and women, both young and old, both
slaves and free, both soldiers and people.
Let us not then make vain pretexts, but let us provide a thoroughly good
mind, and whatsoever we may be, we shall surely attain to virtue, and arrive at
the good things to come; by the grace and love towards man of our Lord Jesus
Christ, with whom be unto the Father, together with the Holy Ghost. glory, might,
honor, now and ever, and world without end. Amen.