COMMENTARY OF ST. JOHN CHRYSOSTOM ON THE EPISTLE TO THE ROMANS, HOMILIES XVII
TO XIX (ROM. 10 & 11)
HOMILY XVII.
ROM. X. 1.
"Brethren, my heart's desire and prayer to God for them is, that they might be
saved."
HE is now going again to rebuke them more vehemently than before.(*)
Wherefore he again does away with every suspicion of hatred, and makes a great
effort beforehand to correct misapprehension. Do not then, he says, mind words or
accusations, but observe that it is not in any hostile spirit that I say this.
For it is not likely that the same person should desire their salvation, and not
desire it only, but even pray for it, and yet should also hate them, and feel
aversion to them. For here he calls his exceeding desire, and the prayer which
he makes (<greek>eudokian</greek>), "heart's desire." For it is not the being
freed from punishment only, but that they may also be saved, that he makes so
great a point of, and prays for. Nor is it from this only, but also from the
sequel that he shows the good-will that he hath towards them. For from what is open
to him, as far as he can, he forces his way, and is contentious to find out
some shadow at least of an excuse for them. And he hath not the power, being
overcome by the nature of the facts.
Ver. 2. "For I bear them record," says he, " that they have a zeal of God,
but not according to knowledge."
Ought not this then to be a ground for pardoning and not for accusing
them? For if it is not of man[1] that they are separated, but through zeal, they
deserved to be pitied rather than punished. But observe how adroitly he favors
them in the word, and yet shows their unseasonable obstinacy.
Ver. 3. "For they being ignorant," he says, "of God's righteousness."
Again the word would lead to pardon. But the sequel to stronger
accusation, and such as does away with defence of any kind.
"And going about," he says, "to establish their own righteousness, have
not submitted themselves unto the righteousness of God."
And these things he says to show, that it was from a petulancy and love of
power that they erred, rather than from ignorance, and that not even this
righteousness from the deeds of the Law did they establish. (Matt. xxi. 38; John.
xii. 19, 42.) For saying "going about to establish" is what one would do to show
this. And in plain words indeed he has not stated this (for he has not said,
that they fell short of both righteousnesses), but he has given a hint of it in
a very judicious manner, and with the wisdom so befitting him. For if they are
still "going about" to establish that, it is very plain that they have not yet
established it. If they have not submitted themselves to this, they have fallen
short of this also. But he calls it their "own righteousness," either because
the Law was no longer of force, or because it was one of trouble and toil. But
this he calls God's righteousness, that from faith, because it comes entirely
from the grace from above, and because men are justified in this case, not by
labors, but by the gift of God. But they that evermore resisted the Holy Ghost,
and vexatiously tried to be justified by the Law, came not over to the faith.
But as they did not come over to the faith, nor receive the righteousness
thereupon ensuing, and were not able to be justified by the Law either, they were
thrown out of all resources.
Ver. 4. "For Christ is the end of the Law for righteousness to every one
that believeth.
See the judgment of Paul. For as he had spoken of a righteousness, and a
righteousness, lest they of the Jews which believed should seem to have the one
but be excluded from the other, and to be accused of lawlessness (for even
these there was no less cause to fear about as being still newly come in), and lest
Jews should again expect to achieve it, and should say, Though we have not at
present fulfilled it, yet we certainly will fulfil it, see what ground he
takes. He shows that there is but one righteousness, and that has its full issue[2]
in this, and that he that hath taken to himself this, the one by faith, hath
fulfilled that also. But he that rejects this, falls short as well of that also.
For if Christ be "the end of the Law," he that hath not Christ, even if he seem
to have that righteousness, hath it not. But he that hath Christ, even though
he have not fulfilled the Law aright, hath received the whole. For the end of
the physician's art is health. As then he that can make whole, even though he
hath not the physician's art, hath everything; but he that knows not how to heal,
though he seem to be a follower of the art, comes short of everything: so is
it in the case of the Law and of faith. He that hath this hath the end of that
likewise, but he that is without this is an alien from both. For what was the
object of the Law? To make man righteous. But it had not the power, for no one
fulfilled it. This then was the end of the Law and to this it looked throughout,
and for this all its parts were made, its feasts, and commandments, and
sacrifices, and all besides, that man might be justified. But this end Christ gave a
fuller accomplishment of through faith.(*) Be not then afraid, he says, as if
transgressing the Law in having come over to the faith. For then dost thou
transgress it, when for it thou dost not believe Christ. If thou believest in Him,
then thou hast fulfilled it also, and much more then it commanded. For thou hast
received a much greater righteousness. Next, since this was an assertion, he
again brings proof of it from the Scriptures.
Ver. 5. "For Moses," he says, "describeth the righteousness which is of
the Law."
What he means is this. Moses showeth us the righteousness ensuing from the
Law, what sort it is of, and whence. What sort is it then of, and what does it
consist in? In fulfilling the commandments. "He (R. T. the man), that doeth
these things," He says, "shall live by (or in), them." (Lev. xviii. 5.) And there
is no other way of becoming righteous in the Law save by fulfilling the whole
of it. But this has not been possible for any one, and therefore this
righteousness has failed them. (<greek>diapeptwken</greek>). But tell us, Paul, of the
other righteousness also, that which is of grace. What is that then, and of what
does it consist? Hear the words in which he gives a clear sketch of it. For
after he had refuted[1] the other, he next goes on to this, and says,
Ver. 6, 7, 8, 9. "But the righteousness which is of faith speaketh on this
wise, Say not in thine heart, Who shall ascend into heaven (that is, to bring
Christ down from above): or, Who shall descend into the deep? (that is, to
bring up Christ again from the dead.) But what saith it? The word is nigh thee,
even in thy mouth, and in thy heart, that is, the word of faith which we preach.
That if thou shalt confess with thy mouth the Lord Jesus, and shalt believe in
thine heart that God hath raised Him from the dead, thou shall be saved.
To prevent the Jews then from saying, How came they who had not found the
lesser righteousness to find the greater? he gives a reason there was no
answering, that this way was easier than that. For that requires the fulfilment of
all things (for when thou doest all, then thou shall live): but the righteousness
which is of faith doth not say this, but what? "It thou confess with thy mouth
the Lord Jesus, and believe in thy heart that God hath raised Him from the
dead, thou shalt be saved." Then again that we may not seem to be making it
contemptible by showing it to be easy and cheap?[2] observe how he expands his
account of it. For he does not come immediately to the words just given, but what
does he say? "But the righteousness which is of faith saith on this wise; Say not
in thine heart, Who shall go up into heaven? (that is, to bring Christ down);
or, Who shall descend into the deep? (that is, to bring up Christ again from the
dead.") For as to the virtue manifested in works there is opposed a
listlessness, which relaxeth our labors,[3] and it requireth a very wakeful soul not to
yield to it: thus, when one is required to believe, there are reasonings which
confuse and make havoc of the minds of most men, and it wants a soul of some
vigor to shake them thoroughly off. And this is just why he brings the same before
one. And as he did in Abraham's case, so he does here also. For having there
shown that he was justified by faith, lest he should seem to have gotten so
great a crown by a mere chance, as if it were a thing of no account, to extol the
nature of faith, he says, "Who against hope believed in hope, that he might
become the father of many nations. And being not weak in faith, he considered his
own body now dead, and the deadness of Sarah's womb. He staggered not at the
promise of God through unbelief; but was strong in faith, giving glory to God; and
being fully persuaded that what He had promised He was able also to perform"
(Rom. iv. 18-21): so he showed that there is need of vigor, and a lofty soul,
that takes in things beyond expectation, and stumbles not at appearances. This
then he does here also, and shows that it requires a wise mind, and a spirit
heavenly (Gr. heaven-reaching) and great. And he does not say merely, "Say not,"
but, "Say not in thine heart," that is, do not so much as think of doubting and
saying with thyself, And how can this be? You see that this is a chief
characteristic of faith, to leave all the consequences[4] of this lower world, and so to
seek for that which is above nature, and to cast out the feebleness of
calculation, and so to accept everything from the Power of God. The Jews, however, did
not merely assert this, but that it was not possible to be justified by faith.
But himself turns even what had taken place to another account, that having
shown the thing to be so great, that even after it had taken place it required
faith, he might seem with good reason to bestow a crown on these: and he uses the
words which are found in the Old Testament, being always at pains to keep
quite clear of the charges of love of novelties, and of opposition to it. For this,
which he here says of faith, Moses says to them of the commandment,[1] so
showing that they had enjoyed at God's hand a great benefit. For there is no need
to say, he means, that one must go up to heaven, or cross a great sea, and then
receive the commandments, but things so great and grand hath God made of easy
access to us. And what meaneth the phrase, "The Word is nigh thee?" That is, It
is easy. For in thy mind and in thy tongue is thy salvation. There is no long
journey to go, no seas to sail over, no mountains to pass, to get saved. But if
you be not minded to cross so much as the threshold, you may even while you sit
at home be saved. For "in thy mouth and in thy heart" is the source of
salvation. And then on another score also he makes the word of faith easy, and says,
that "God raised Him from the dead." For just reflect upon the worthiness of the
Worker, and you will no longer see any difficulty in the thing. That He is
Lord then, is plain from the resurrection. And this he said at the beginning even
of the Epistle. "Which was declared to be the Son of God with power ... by the
resurrection from the dead." (Rom. i. 4.) But that the resurrection is easy
too, has been shown even to those who are very unbelieving, from the might of the
Worker of it. Since then the righteousness is greater, and light and easy to
receive, is it not a sign of the utmost contentiousness to leave what is light
and easy, and set about impossibilities? For they could not say that it was a
thing they declined as burdensome. See then how he deprives them of all excuse.
For what do they deserve to have said in their defence, who choose what is
burdensome and impracticable, and pass by what is light, and able to save them, and
to give them those things which the Law could not give? All this can come only
from a contentious spirit, which is in a state of rebellion against God. For the
Law is galling (<greek>epakqhs</greek>), but grace is easy. The Law, though
they dispute never so much, does not save; Grace yieldeth the righteousness
resulting from itself, and that from the Law likewise. What plea then is to rescue
them, since they are disposed to be contentious against this, but cling to that
to no purpose whatever? Then, since he had made a strong assertion, he again
confirms it from the Scripture.[*]
Ver. 11-13. "For the Scripture saith, "he proceeds, "Whosoever believeth
on Him, shall not be ashamed. For there is no difference between the Jew and the
Greek; for the same Lord over all is rich unto all that call upon Him. For
whosoever shall call upon the Name of the Lord shall be saved."
You see how he produces witnesses, whether to the faith, or to the
confession of it. For the words, "Every one that believeth," point out the faith. But
the words, "Whosoever shall call upon," set forth confession. Then again to
proclaim the universality of the grace, and to lay their boasting low, what he had
before demonstrated at length, he here briefly recalls to their memory,
showing again that there is no difference between the Jew and the uncircumcised. "For
there is," he says, "no difference between the Jew and the Greek." And what he
had said about the Father, when he was arguing this point, that he says here
about the Son. For as before he said in asserting this, "Is He the God of the
Jews only? Is He not of the Gentiles also? Yes, of the Gentiles also: seeing it
is one God" (Rom. iii. 29, 30):--So he says here also, "For the same Lord over
all is rich unto all (and upon all)." (Rom. iii. 22.) You see how he sets Him
forth as exceedingly desiring our salvation, since He even reckons this to be
riches to Himself; so that they are not even now to despair, or fancy that,
provided they would repent, they were unpardonable. For He who considereth it as
riches[2] to Himself to save us, will not cease to be rich. Since even this is
riches, the fact of the gift being shed forth unto all. For since what distresseth
him the most was, that they, who were in the enjoyment of a prerogative over
the whole world, should now by the faith be degraded front these thrones, and be
no wit better off than others, he brings the Prophets in constantly as
foretelling, that they would have equal honor with them. "For whosoever," he says,
"believeth on Him shall not be ashamed" (Is. xxviii. 16); and, "Whosoever shall
call upon the Name of the Lord shall be saved." (Joel ii. 32.) And the "whosoever"
is put in all cases, that they might not say aught in reply. But there is
nothing worse than vainglory. For it was this, this most especially, which proved
their ruin. Whence Christ also said to them, "How can ye believe, which receive
glory one of another, and seek not the glory which cometh of God only?" (John
v. 44.) This, with ruin, exposes men also to much ridicule and before the
punishment in the other world involves them in ills unnumbered in this. And if it
seem good, that you may learn this clearly, leaving for the present the heavens
which that puts us out of, and the hell which it thrusts us into, let us
investigate the whole matter as here before us. What then can be more wasteful than
this? what more disgraceful, or more offensive? For that this disorder is a
wasteful one is plain from the people who spend to no purpose whatsoever on theatres
horse-races, and other such irrelevant expenditures: from those that build the
fine and expensive houses, and fit up everything in a useless style of
extravagance, on which I must not enter in this discourse. But that a person diseased
in this way must needs be extravagant, and expensive, and rapacious, and
covetous, anybody can see. For that he may have food to give the brute, he thrusteth
his hand into the substance of others. And why do I talk of substance? It is not
money only but souls also that this fire devoureth, and it worketh not death
here only, but also hereafter. For vanity is the mother of hell, and greatly
kindleth that fire, and the venomous worm. One may see that it hath power even
over the dead. And what can be worse than this? For the other passions are put an
end to by death, but this even after death shows its force, and strives to
display its nature even in the dead corpse. For when men give orders on their
death-bed to raise to them fine monuments, which will waste all their substance, and
take pains to lay out beforehand a vast extravagance in their funeral, and in
their lifetime insult the poor that come to them for a penny and a single loaf,
but when they are dead give a rich banquet to the worm, why seek any more
exorbitant thraldom to the disease? From this mischief also irregular loves are
conceived. For there are many whom it is not the beauty of the appearance, nor the
desire of lying with her, but the wish to boast that "I have made conquest of
such an one," hath even drawn into adultery. And why need I mention the other
mischiefs that spring of this? For I had rather be long (3 Mss.
<greek>dihnekws</greek>) the slave of ten thousand savages, than of vanity once. For even they
do not put such commands Upon their captives, as this vice lays upon its
votaries. Because it says, Be thou every one's slave, be he nobler or be he lower
than thyself. Despise thy soul, neglect virtue, laugh at freedom, immolate thy
salvation, and if thou doest any good thing, do it not to please God, but to
display it to the many, that for these things thou mayest even lose thy crown. And
if thou give alms, or if thou fast, undergo the pains, but take care to lose
the gain. What can be more cruel than these commands? Hence grudging beareth
sway, hence haughtiness, hence covetousness, the mother of evils. For the swarm of
domestics, and the black servants liveried in gold, and the hangers on, and the
flatterers, and the silver-tinselled chariots, and the other absurdities
greater than these, are not had for any pleasure's sake or necessity, but for mere
vanity. Yes, one will say, but that this affliction is an evil, anybody can see;
but how we are to keep quite clear of it, this is what you should tell us.
Well then, in the first place, if you persuade yourself that this disorder is a
baneful one, you will have made a very good beginning towards correcting it. For
when a man is sick, he speedily sends for the physician, if he be first made
acquainted with the fact that he is sick. But if thou seekest for another way
besides to escape from hence, look to God continually, and be content with glory
from Him; and if thou find the passion tickling thee, and stirring thee to tell
thy well-doings to thy fellow-servants, bethink thyself next, that after
telling them thou gainest nothing. Quench the absurd desire, and say to thy soul, Lo,
thou hast been so long big with thy own well-doings to tell them, and thou
hast not had the courage to keep them to thyself, but hast blabbed them out to
all. What good then hast thou gotten from this? None at all, but loss to the
utmost, and avoidance of all that had been gathered together with much labor. And
besides this, consider another thing also, which is, that most men's opinion is
perverted, and not perverted only, but that it withers away so soon. For
supposing they do admire you for the time, when the occasion has gone by they will
have forgotten it all, and have taken away from thee the crown God had given, and
have been unable to secure to thee that from themselves. And yet if this were
abiding, it were a most miserable thing to exchange that for this. But when even
this hath gone, what defence shall we be able to make for betraying the
abiding one for the sake of the unabiding one, for losing such blessings for the sake
of credit with a few? And indeed even if they who praise were numerous, even
for this they were to be pitied, and the more so the more numerous those who do
it. But if thou art surprised at what I have said, hear Christ giving His
sentence in this way, "Woe unto you, when all men speak well of you." (Luke vi. 26.)
And so indeed it should seem. For if in every art you look to the workmen
(<greek>dhmiourgous</greek>) in it to be judges of it, how come you to trust the
proving of virtue to the many, and not most of all to Him Who knoweth it more
surely then any, and is best able to applaud[1] and to crown it? This saying then,
let us inscribe both on our walls and our doors and our mind, and let us keep
constantly saying to ourselves, "Woe unto us, when all men speak well of us."
For even they that so speak slander one afterward as a vain person, and fond of
honor, and covetous of their good word. But God doeth not so. But when He seeth
thee coveting the glory that cometh of Him, then He will praise thee most, and
respect (<greek>qaumasetai</greek> om. in most Mss.) thee, and proclaim thee
conqueror. Not so man; but, when he finds thee slavish instead of free, by
gratifying thee often by bare words with false praise, he snatches from thee thy
true meed, and makes thee more of a menial than a purchased slave. For those last
men get to obey them after their orders, but thou even without orders makest
thyself a slave. For thou dost not even wait to hear something from them, but if
thou merely knowest wherein thou mayest gratify them, even without their
command thou doest all. What hell then should we not deserve, for giving the wicked
pleasure, and courting their service before they give orders, while we will not
hearken to God, even when He every day commands and exhorts us? And yet if thou
art covetous of glory and praise, avoid the praise that cometh of men, and
then thou wilt attain to glory. Turn aside from fair speeches, and then thou wilt
obtain praises without number both from God and from men. For there is no one
we are used to give so much glory to, as the man who looks down upon glory, or
to praise and respect so much as the man who thinks scorn of getting respected
and praised. And if we do so, much more will the God of the universe. And when
He glorifieth thee and praiseth thee, what man can be more justly pronounced
blessed? For there is not a greater difference between glory and disgrace, than
between the glory from above and that of men. Or rather, there is a much greater,
aye an infinite difference. For if this, even when it does not get put beside
any other, is but a base and uncomely one, when we come to scrutinize it by the
other's side, just consider how great its baseness will be found to be! For as
a prostitute stands at her place[2] and lets herself out to any one, so are
they that be slaves of vanity. Or rather, these be more base than she. For that
sort of women do in many instances treat those enamoured of them with scorn. But
you prostitute yourself to everybody, whether runaway slaves, or thieves, or
cut-purses (for it is of these and such as these that the play-houses that
applaud you consist), and those whom as individuals you hold to be nothing worth,
when in a body, you honor more than your own salvation and show yourself less
worthy of honor than any of them. For how can you be else than less worthy, when
you stand in need of the good word of others, and fancy that you have not enough
by yourself, unless you receive the glory that cometh of others? Do you not
perceive, pray, beside what I have said, that as you are an object of notice, and
known to every body, if you should commit a fault, you will have accusers
unnumbered; but if unknown, you will remain in security? Yes, a man may say, but
then if I do well I shall have admirers unnumbered. Now the fearful thing is,
that it is not only when you sin, but even when you do aright, that the disorder
of vanity does you mischief, in the former case subverting thousands, in the
present bereaving thee entirely of thy reward. It is then a sad thing, and replete
with disgrace of every kind, to be in love with glory even in civil matters.
But when even in spiritual you are in the same plight what excuse is there left
remaining for you, when you are not minded to yield God even as much honor as
you have yourself from your servants? For even the slave "looketh to the eyes of
his master" (Ps. cxxiii. 2), and the hireling to his employer, who is to pay
him wages, and the disciple to his master. But you do just the contrary. Having
left the God that hired thee, even thy Master, thou lookest to thy
fellow-servants; and this knowing that God remembers thy well-doings even after this life,
but man only for the present. And when thou hast spectators assembled in
Heaven, thou art gathering together spectators upon earth. And where the wrestler
struggles, there he would be honored; but thou, while thy wrestling is above, art
anxious to gain thee a crown below. And what can be worse than madness like
this? But let us look, if it seem proper, at the crowns also. For one is formed by
haughtiness, and a second by grudging against another, and a third by
dissimulation and flattery, another again by wealth, and another by servile
obsequiousness. And like as children at their childish play put crowns of grass upon one
another, and many a time laugh at him that is crowned behind his back; thus now
also they that pass their praises upon thee, many a time joke by themselves at
their putting the grass upon us. And would it were grass only! But now the
crown is laden with much mischief, and ruins all our well-doings. Taking then the
vileness of it into consideration, flee from the damage entailed. For how many
would you have to praise you? A hundred? or twice, or thrice, or four times as
many? Or rather, if you please, put them at ten times or twenty times as many,
and let there be two or four thousand, or if you will, even ten thousand to
applaud you. Still these be no better than so many daws cawing from above. Or
rather taking the assemblage of the angels into consideration, these will seem more
vile than even worms, and their good word of not so much solidity as a cobweb,
or a smoke, or a dream. Hear then how Paul, who saw through these things
thoroughly, is so far from seeking after them, that he even deprecates them, in the
words "But God forbid that I should glory, save in the cross of Christ." (Gal.
vi. 14.) This glory then be thou also emulous of, that thou mayest not provoke
the Master, because in so doing thou art insulting God, and not thyself alone.
For if thou even wert a painter, and hadst some pupil, and he were to omit
showing thee his practice of the art, but set forth his painting publicly just to
any body that chanted to observe it, thou wouldest not take it quietly. But if
this even with thy fellow-servants were an insult, how much more with the Master!
But if you have a mind to learn on other grounds to feel scorn for the thing,
be of a lofty mind, laugh at appearances, increase thy love of real glory, be
filled with a spiritual temper, say to thy soul as Paul did, "Knowest thou not
that we shall judge angels?" (1 Cor. vi. 3) and having by this roused it up, go
on to rebuke it, and say, Thou that judgest the angels, wilt thou let thyself
be judged of off-scourings, and be praised with dancers, and mimics, and
gladiators, and horse-drivers? For these men do follow after applause of this sort.
But do thou poise thy wing high above the din of these, and emulate that citizen
of the wilderness, John, and learn how he was above regarding the multitude,
and did not turn him to look at flatterers, but when he saw all the dwellers in
Palestine poured forth about him, and wondering, and astonished at him, he was
not puffed up with such honor as this, but rose up against them, and discoursing
to his great concourse as if to one youth, he thus rebuked them and said, "Ye
serpents, ye generation of vipers!" (Matt. iii. 7.) Yet it was for him that
they had run together, and left the cities, in order to see that holy personage,
and still none of these things unnerved him. For he was far above glory, and
free from all vanity. So also Stephen, when he saw the same people again, not
honoring him, but mad upon him, and gnashing their teeth, being lifted above their
wrath, said, "Ye stiff-necked and uncircumcised in heart." (Acts vii. 51.) Thus
also Elias, when those armies were present, and the king, and all the people,
said, "How long halt ye upon both your hips?" (1 Kings xviii. 21, LXX. true
sense of "halt.") But we flatter all, court all, with this servile obsequiousness
buying their honor. Wherefore all things are turned upside down, and for this
favor[1] the business of Christianity is betrayed, and everything neglected for
the opinion of the generality. Let us then banish this passion, and then we
shall have a right notion of liberty, and of the haven, and the calm. For the vain
man is ever like persons in a storm, trembling, and fearing, and serving a
thousand masters. But he that is clear of this thraldom, is like men in havens,
enjoying a liberty untainted. Not so that person, but as many acquaintances as he
has, so many masters has he, and he is forced to be a slave to all of them.
How then are we to get free from this hard bondage? It is by growing enamoured of
another glory, which is really glory. For as with those that are enamoured of
persons, the sight of some handsomer one doth by its being seen take them off
from the first: so with those that court the glory which cometh from us men, the
glory from heaven, if it gleameth on them, has power to lead them off from
this. Let us then look to this, and become thoroughly acquainted with it, that by
feeling admiration of its beauty, we may shun the hideousness of the other, and
have the benefit of much pleasure by enjoying this continually. Which may we
all attain to by the grace and love toward man, etc.
HOMILY XVIII.
ROM. X. 14, 15.
"How then shall they call on Him in Whom they have not believed? and how shall
they believe in Him of Whom they have not heard? and how shall they hear
without a preacher? and how shall they preach except they be sent? as it is written."
HERE again he takes from them all excuse. For since he had said, "I bear
them record that they have a zeal of God, but not according to knowledge," and
that "being ignorant of God's righteousness, they submitted not themselves" to
it: he next shows, that for this ignorance itself they were punishable before
God. This he does not say indeed so, but he makes it good by carrying on his
discourse in the way of question, and so convicting them more clearly, by framing
the whole passage out of objections and answers. But look further back. The
Prophet, saith he, said, "Whosoever shall call upon the Name of the Lord shall be
saved." Now somebody might say perhaps, "But how could they call upon Him Whom
they had not believed? Then there is a question from him after the objection;
And why did they not believe? Then an objection again. A person certainly may
say, And how could they believe, since they had not heard? Yet hear they did, he
implies. Then another objection again. "And how could they hear without a
preacher?" Then an answer again. Yet preach they did, and there were many sent forth
for this very purpose. And whence does it appear that these are those persons
sent? Then he brings the prophet in next, who says, "How beautiful are the feet
of them that preach the Gospel of peace, and bring glad tidings of good
things!" (Is. iii. 7.) You see how by the kind of preaching he points out the
preachers. For there was nothing else that these men went about telling everywhere, but
those unspeakable good things, and the peace made by God with men. And so by
disbelieving, it is not we, he implies, whom you disbelieve, but Isaiah the
prophet, who spake many years ago, that we were to be sent, and to preach, and to
say what we do say. If the being saved, then, came of calling upon Him, and
calling upon Him from believing, and believing from hearing, and hearing from
preaching, and preaching from being sent, and if they were sent, and did preach, and
the prophet went round with them to point them out, and proclaim them, and say
that these were they whom they showed of so many ages ago, whose feet even
they praised because of the matter of their preaching; then it is quite clear that
the not believing was their own fault only. And that because God's part had
been fulfilled completely.[*]
Ver. 16, 17. "But they have not all obeyed the Gospel. For Esaias saith,
Lord, who hath believed our report? So then faith cometh by hearing, and hearing
by the word of God." (ib. liii. 1.)
Since they pressed him with another objection again to this effect, that
if these were the persons sent upon the mission by God, all ought to have
hearkened to them: observe Paul's judgment, and see how he shows that this very thing
which made the confusion, did in fact do away with confusion and
embarrassment. What offends you, O Jew, he would say, after so great and abundant evidence,
and demonstration of the points? that all did not submit to the Gospel? Why
this very thing, when taken along with the others, is of force to certify thee of
the truth of my statements, even in that some do not believe. For this too the
prophet foretold Notice his unspeakable wisdom too; how he shows more than they
were looking for, or expected him to have to say in reply. For what is it that
you say? he means. Is it that all have not believed the Gospel? Well! Isaiah
foretold this too from of old. Or rather, not this only, but even much more than
this. For the complaint you make is Why did not all believe? But Isaiah goes
further than this. For what is it he says? "Lord, who hath believed our report?
Then since he had rid himself of this embarrassment. by making the Prophet a
bulwark against them, he again keeps to the line he was before upon. For as he
had said that they must call upon Him, but that they who call must believe, and
they who believe must hear first, but they who are to hear must have preachers,
and the preachers be sent, and as he had shown that they were sent, and had
preached; as he is going to bring in another objection again, taking occasion
first of another quotation from the Prophet, by which he had met the objection a
little back, he thus interweaves it, and connects it with what went before. For
since he had produced the Prophet as saying, "Lord, who hath believed our
report" (<greek>akoh</greek>)? he happily seizes on the quotation, as proving what he
says, "So then faith cometh by hearing" (<greek>akohs</greek>). And this he
makes not a mere naked statement. But as the Jews were forever seeking a sign,
and the sight of the Resurrection, and were gaping after the thing much; he says,
Yet the Prophet promised no such thing, but that it was by hearing that we
were to believe. Hence he makes this good first, and says, "so then faith cometh
by hearing." And then since this seemed a mean thing to say, see how he elevates
it. For he says, I was not speaking of mere hearing, nor of the need of
hearing men's words and believing them, t but I mean a great sort of hearing. For the
hearing is "by the word of God." They were not speaking their own, but they
were telling what they learnt from God. And this is a higher thing than miracles.
For we are equally bound to believe and to obey God, whether speaking or
working miracles.[1] Since both works and miracles come of His words. For both the
heaven and everything else was established in this way. (Ps. xxxiii. 6-8.)
After showing then that we ought to believe the prophets, who always speak God's
words, and not to look after anything more, he proceeds next to the objection I
mentioned, and says,
Ver. 18. "But I say, Have they not heard?"
What, he means, if the preachers were sent, and did preach what they were
bid, and these did not hear? Then comes a most perfect reply to the objection.
"Yes, verily, their sound went into all the earth, and their words unto
the ends of the world."[2]
What do you say? he means. They have not heard? Why the whole world, and
the ends of the earth, have heard. And have you, amongst whom the heralds abode
such a long time, and of whose land they were, not heard? Now can this ever be?
Sure if the ends of the world heard, much more must you. Then again another
objection.
Ver. 19. "But I say, Did not Israel know?"
For what if they heard, he means, but did not know what was said, nor
understand that these were the persons sent? Are they not to be forgiven for their
ignorance? By no means. For Isaiah had described their character in the words,
"How beautiful are the feet of them that preach the Gospel of peace." (Is. lii.
7.) And before him the Lawgiver himself. Hence he proceeds.
"First Moses saith, I will provoke you to jealousy by them that are no
people, and by a foolish nation I will anger you. (Deut. xxxii. 21.)
And so they ought even from him to have been able to distinguish the
preachers, not from the fact of these disbelieving only, not from the fact of their
preaching peace, not from the fact of their bringing the glad tidings of those
good things, not from the word being sown in every part of the world, but from
the very fact of their seeing their inferiors, those of the Gentiles, in
greater honor. For what they had never heard, nor their forefathers, that wisdom did
these[3] on a sudden embrace (<greek>efilssofoun</greek>). And this was a mark
of such intense honor, as should gall them, and lead them to jealousy, and to
recollection of the prophecy of Moses, which said, "I will provoke you to
jealousy by them that are no people." For it was not the greatness of the honor
alone that was enough to throw them upon jealousy, but the fact too that a nation
had come to enjoy these things which was of so little account that it could
hardly be considered a nation at all. "For I will provoke you to jealousy, by them
which are no nation, and by a foolish nation will I anger you." For what more
foolish than the Greeks (Heathen, see pp. 373, 377)? or what of less account?
See how by every means God had given from of old indications and clear signs of
these times, in order to remove their blindness. For it was not any little
corner in which the thing was done, but in land, and in sea, and in every quarter of
the globe. And they saw those in the enjoyment of countless blessings now, who
had formerly been objects of their contempt. One should consider then that
this is that people of which Moses said, "I will provoke you to jealousy by them
that are no people, and by a foolish nation will I anger you." Was it Moses only
then that said this? No, for Isaiah also after Him saith so. And this is why
Paul said, "First Moses," to show that a second will come who says the same
things in a clearer and plainer way. As then he says above, that Esaias crieth, so
too here.
Ver. 20. "But Esaias is very bold, and saith."
Now what he means is something of this kind. He put a violence on himself,
and was ambitious to speak, not some thing veiled over, but to set things even
naked before your eyes, and choosing rather to run (Origen in loc.) into
dangers from being plain spoken, than by looking to his own safety, to leave you any
shelter for your impenetrableness; although it was not the manner of prophecy
to say this so clearly; but still to stop your mouths most completely, he tells
the whole beforehand clearly and distinctly. The whole! what whole? Why your
being cast out, and also their being brought in; speaking as follows, "I was
found of them that sought Me not, I was made manifest of them that asked not after
Me." (Is. lxv. 1.) Who then are they that sought not? who they that asked not
after Him? Clearly not the Jews, but they of the Gentiles, who hitherto had not
known Him. As then Moses gave their characteristic mark in the words, "no
people" and "a foolish nation," so here also he takes the same ground to point them
out from, viz. their extreme ignorance. And this was a very great blame to
attach to the Jews, that they who sought Him not found Him, and they who sought
Him lost Him.
Ver. 21. "But unto Israel He saith, All the day long have I stretched
forth My hands l unto a disobedient and gainsaying people." (Is. lxv. 2.)
Observe now that difficulty, which so many I make a subject of question,
is discovered laid up from of old in the words of the Prophet, and with a clear
solution to it too. And what is this? You heard Paul say before. "What shall we
say then? That the Gentiles which followed not after righteousness have
attained unto righteousness. But Israel which followed after the law of righteousness
hath not attained to the law of righteousness." (Rom. ix. 30, 31.) This Esaias
also says here. For to say, "I was found of them that sought me not, I was
made manifest unto them which asked not after me," is the same with saying, "that
the Gentiles which followed not after righteousness have attained unto
righteousness." Then to show that what was happening was not of God's grace only, but
also of the temper of those who came to Him, as also the casting off of the
others came of the disputatiousness of those who disobeyed, hear what he proceeds
with. "But to Israel He saith, All the day long have I stretched forth My hands
to a disobedient and gainsaying people;" here meaning by the day the whole
period of the former dispensation. But the stretching out of the hands, means
calling and drawing[1] them to Him, and inviting them. Then to show that the fault
was all their own, he says "to a disobedient and gainsaying people." You see
what a great charge this is against them! For they did not obey Him even when He
invited them, but they gainsaid Him, and that when they saw Him doing so, not
once or twice or thrice, but the whole period. But others who had never known
Him, had the power to draw Him to them. Not that he says they themselves had the
power to do it, but to take away lofty imaginings even from those of the
Gentiles, and to show that it was His grace that wrought the whole, He says, I was
made manifest, and I was found. It may be said, Were they then void of everything?
By no means, for the taking of the things found, and the getting a knowledge
of what was manifested to them, was what they contributed themselves.[2] Then to
prevent these saying, But why wast Thou not made manifest to us also? he sets
down what is more than this, that I not only was made manifest, but I even
continue with My hands stretched out, inviting them, and displaying all the concern
of an affectionate father, and a mother that is set on her child. See how he
has brought us a most lucid answer to all the difficulties before raised, by
showing that it was from their own temper that ruin had befallen them, and that
they are wholly undeserving of pardon. For though they had both heard and
understood what was said, still not even then were they minded to come to Him. And
what is far more, He did not cause them to hear these things and to understand
them only, but a thing which hath more force to rouse them up and draw them to
Him, when they were disobedient and gain-saying, He added to the others. Now what
is this? It is His exasperating them, and making them jealous. For ye know the
domineering might of the passion, and how great the power is which jealousy is
naturally possessed of for bringing all disputatiousness to an end, and rousing
those who have grown remiss. And why need one say this of man when in brutes
without reason, and children before they are of full age, the power it shows is
so great? For a child often will not submit to its father when it is called,
but continues obstinate. But when another child has notice taken of it, then it
even though not called comes to its father's bosom, and what calling could not
do, provoking to jealousy will. This then God also did. For He not only called
and stretched out His hands, but stirred up in them the feeling of jealousy
also, by bringing those far inferior to them (a thing which makes men excessively
jealous) not into their good things, but (what was a much stronger step, and
makes the feeling even more domineering,) into much greater good things, and of
greater necessity than theirs, and such as they had never even fancied in a
dream. But still they did not submit. What pardon then do they deserve who exhibit
such excessive obstinacy? None. Yet this he does not say himself, but leaves it
to the consciences of his hearers, to gather it from the conclusion of what he
had stated, and again also confirms it by what he goes on to in his usual
wisdom. And this he did also above, by introducing objections both in the case of
the Law (see on Rom. vii. 7, PP. 420, I) and of the people, which presented an
accusation beyond the true one; and then in the answer, which was to overthrow
this, yielding as much as he pleased, and as the case allowed, so as to make
what he was saying not unwelcome.And this he doth here, writing as follows: Chap.
xi. ver. 1 "I say then, Hath God cast away His people whom He foreknew? God
forbid."[*]
And he introduces the form a person would use in doubt, as though taking
occasion from what had been said, and after making this alarming statement, by
the denial of it he causes the sequel to be allowed with readiness; and what by
all the former arguments he had been laboring to show that he makes good here
also. What then is this? That even if there be but a few saved, the promise yet
stands good. This is why he does not merely say "people," but "people which He
foreknew." Then proceeding with the proof that the "people" were not cast off,
"For I also am an Israelite, of the seed of Abraham, of the tribe of Benjamin."
I, he says, the instructor, the preacher. Now since this seemed contrary
to what was said before in the words, "Who hath believed our report ?" and, "All
the day long have I stretched forth My hands to a disobedient and gainsaying
people;" and, "I will provoke you to jealousy by them which are no people;" he
was not satisfied with the deprecation, nor with having said, "God forbid," but
makes it good by taking it up again and saying, "God hath not east away His
people." But this is not a confirmation, men may say, but an assertion. Observe
then the confirmation, both the first, and that which follows it. For the first
is that he was himself of that race. But He would not, if on the point of
casting them off, have chosen from them him to whom He entrusted all the preaching,
and the affairs of the world, and all mysteries, and the whole economy. This
then is one proof, but the next, after it, is his saying, that "people whom He
foreknew," that is, who He knew clearly were suited to it, and would receive the
faith. (Pococke on Hos. p. 23. See Acts ii. 41; iv. 4; xxi. 20.) For three,
five, even ten thousand were believers from among them. And so to prevent any from
saying, Art thou the people, then? And because thou hast been called, hath the
nation been called? he proceeds.
Ver. 2. "He hath not cast off His people, whom He foreknew."
As though he said, I have with me three, five, or ten thousand. What then?
has the people come to be [1] three, five, or ten thousand? that seed that
compared with the stars of heaven for multitude, or the sand of the sea? Is this
the way you deceive us and put a cheat upon us, by making the whole people
thyself and the few that are with thee; and didst thou inflate us with idle hopes,
and say that the promise has been fulfilled, when all are lost, and the
salvation comes down to a few? This is all bombast and vanity! we cannot away with such
sophistry as this Now, that they may not say this, see how in the sequel he
proceeds to the answer, not giving the objection indeed, but before it grounding
the answer to it upon ancient history. What then is the answer ?
Ver. 2-5. "Wot ye not," he says, "what the Scripture saith of Elias? how
he (so most; Mss. Sav. who) maketh intercession to God against Israel, saying,
Lord, they have killed Thy prophets, and digged down Thine altars; and I am left
alone, and they seek my life. But what saith the answer of God unto him? I
have reserved to Myself seven thousand men, who have not bowed the knee to the
image of Baal. Even so then at this present time also, there is a remnant
according to the election of grace."
What he means is nearly this. "God hath not cast off His people." For had
He done so, He would have admitted none of them. But if He did admit some, He
hath not cast them off. Still it is said, if He had not cast off, He would have
admitted all. This does not follow; since in Elijah's time the part to be saved
had come down to "seven thousand:" and now also there are probably many that
believe. But if you do not know who they are, this is no wonder, for that
prophet, who was so great and good a man, did not know. But God ordered things for
Himself when even the prophet knew them not. But consider his judgment. Now in
proving what was before him, he covertly augments the charge against them. For
this is why he gave the whole passage, that he might parade before them their
untowardness, and show that they had been so from of old. For if he had not wished
this, but had directed his whole attention to prove that the people lay in the
few, he would have said that even in Elijah's time, seven thousand were left.
But now he reads to them the passage further back, as having been throughout at
pains to show that it was no strange thing that they did with Christ, and the
Apostles, but their habitual practice. For to prevent their saying that it was
as a deceiver we put Christ to death, and as impostors that we persecute the
Apostles, he brings forward the text which says, "Lord, they have killed Thy
prophets, and digged down thine altars." (1 Kings xix. 14.) Then in order not to
make his discourse galling to them, he attaches another reason to the bringing
forward of the text. For he quotes it not as if it was on purpose to accuse them,
but as if intent upon showing some other things. And he leaves them without
any excuse even by what had before been done. For observe how strong the
accusation is even from the person speaking. For it is neither Paul, nor Peter, nor
James, nor John, but one whom they held in the greatest estimation, the chief of
the Prophets, the friend of God, a man who had been so very zealous [2] in their
behalf as even to be given up to hunger for them, who even to this day hath
never died. What then doth this man say? "Lord, they have killed Thy prophets,
and digged down Thine altars; and I am left alone, and they seek my life." What
could be more brutal cruelty than this? For when they should have besought
pardon for the offences they had already committed., they were minded even to kill
him. And all these things put them quite beyond pardon. For it was not during
the prevalence of the famine, but when the season was favorable, and their shame
was done away, and the devils (i.e. false gods) had been put to shame, and the
power of God had been shown, and the king had bowed beneath it, that they
committed these audacities, passing from murder to murder, and making away with
their teachers, and such as would bring them to a better mind. What then could they
have to say to this? Were they too deceivers? Were they too impostors? Did
they not know whence they were either? But they distressed you. Yes, but they also
told you goodly things. But what of the altars? the altars too did not surely
distress you? Did they too exasperate you? See of what obstinacy, of what
insolence they were ever yielding proofs! This is why in another passage too Paul
says, when writing to the Thessalonians, "Ye also have suffered like things of
your own countrymen. even as they have of the Jews, who both killed the Lord, and
their own prophets, and have persecuted us, and please not God, and are
contrary to all men (1 Thess. ii. 14, 15); which is what he says here too, that they
both digged down the altars, and killed the prophets. But what saith the answer
of God unto him? "I have reserved to Myself seven thousand men who have not
bowed the knee to the image of Baal." (1 Kings xix. 18.) And what has this to do
with the present subject? some may say. It hath a great deal to do with the
present subject. For he shows here that it is the worthy that God useth to save
even if the promise be made to the whole nation. And this he pointed out above
when he said, "Though the number of the children of Israel be as the sand of the
sea, a remnant shall be saved." And, "Except the Lord of Sabaoth had left us a
seed, we should have become as Sodoma." (Rom. ix. 27, 29.) And he points it out
from this passage also. Wherefore he proceeds to say, "Even so then at this
present time also, there is a remnant according to the election of grace."
Observe that each word maintains its own rank, showing at once God's grace, and the
obedient temper of them that receive salvation. For by saying election, he
showed the approval of them, but by saying grace, he showed the gift of God.
Ver. 6. "And if by grace, then it is no more of works, otherwise grace is
no more grace: but if it be of works, then is it no more grace, [1] otherwise
work is no more work."
He again springs upon the disputatiousness of the Jews, in what has just
been quoted; and on this ground bereaves them of excuse. For you cannot, he
means, so much as say, that the Prophets called indeed, and God invited, and the
state of things cried aloud, and the provoking to jealousy was enough to draw us
to Him, but what was enjoined was grievous, and this is why we could not draw
nigh, since we had a display of works demanded of us, and laborious well-doings.
For you cannot even say this. For how should God have demanded this of you,
when this would just throw His grace into the shade? And this he said out of a
wish to show that He was most desirous that they might be saved. (Dent. v. 29.)
For not only would their salvation be easily brought about, but it was also
God's greatest glory to display His love toward man. Why then are you afraid of
drawing nigh, since you have no works demanded of you? Why are you bickering and
quarrelsome, when grace is before you, and why keep putting me the Law forward
to no purpose whatsoever? For you will not be saved by that, and will mar this
gift also; since if you pertinaciously insist on being saved by it, you do away
with this grace of God. Then that they might not think this strange, having
first taken those seven thousand; he said that they were saved by grace. For when
he says, "Even so then at this present time also there is a remnant according
to the election of grace;" he shows that they also were saved by grace. And not
hereby only, but likewise by saying, "I have reserved unto. Myself." For this
is the language of One Who showeth that He Himself was the chief Contributor.
And if by grace, it will be said, how came we all not to be saved? Because ye
would not. For grace, though it be grace, saves the willing, not those who will
not have it, and turn away from it, who persist in fighting against it, and
opposing themselves to it. Observe how throughout the point he is proving is, "Not
as though the Word of God had taken none effect," by showing that the worthy
were those to whom the promise came, and that these, few though they be, may yet
be the people of God; and indeed he had stated it in the beginning of the
Epistle with much force, where he says, "For what if some did not believe" (Rom. iii.
3), and did not even stop at this, but proceeded, "Yea, let God be true, and
every man a liar." (ib. 4.) And here again he confirms it another way, and shows
the force of grace, and that always the one were being saved, the other
perished. Let us then give thanks, that we belong to them that are being saved, and
not having been able to save ourselves by works, were saved by the gift of God.
But in giving thanks, let us not I do this in words only, but in works and
actions. For this is the genuine thanksgiving, when we do those things whereby God
is sure to be glorified, and flee from those from which we have been set free.
For if we, after insulting the King, instead of being punished have been
honored, and then go and insult Him afresh, since we are detected in the utmost
ingratitude, we should with justice have to suffer the utmost punishment, one
greater far than the former. For the former insolence did not show us so ungrateful
as that committed after honor and much attention shown us. Let us then flee
those things from which we have been set free, and not give thanks with our mouths
only, lest it be said of us also, "This people honoreth Me with their lips,
but with their heart is far from Me." (Is. xxix. 13.) For how is it else than
unseemly, when the "heavens declare the glory of God" (Ps. xix. 1), and thou, for
whom the heavens were made that glorify Him, doest such things that through
thee the God that made thee is blasphemed? It is for this that not only he that
blasphemeth, but thyself also, wilt be liable to punishment. For the heavens also
do not glorify God by sending forth a voice but by putting others upon doing
it at the sight of them, and yet they are said "to declare the glory of God."
Thus too they that furnish a life to be wondered at, even though they hold their
peace, yet glorify God, when others through them glorify Him. For He is not so
much reverenced because of the heaven, as of a spotless life. When then we are
discoursing with the Gentiles, we cite (4 Mss. read or point to the reading,
"let us not cite") not the heavens before them, but the men, whom though they
were in worse plight than brutes, He hath persuaded to be the Angels' competitors.
And we (1 Ms. "let us") stop their mouths by speaking of this change. For far
better than the heaven is man, and a soul brighter than their beauty may he
possess. For it, though visible for so long a time, did not persuade much. But
Paul, after preaching a short time, drew the whole world unto him. (St. Aug. on
Ps. xix. 4. For he possessed a soul no less than the) heaven, which was able to
draw all men unto him. Our soul is not a match even for the earth: but his is
equal to the heavens. That stands indeed keeping to its own boundary and rule;
but the loftiness of his soul transcended all the heavens, and conversed with
Christ Himself. (2 Cor. x. 15; Rom. xv. 19, etc.) And the beauty of it was so
great, that even God heraldeth it forth. For the stars did the angels marvel at
when they were made. (Job xxxviii. 7.) But this He marvelled at when He saith, "He
is a chosen vessel unto Me." (Acts ix. 15.) And this Heaven doth a cloud many
times overshadow But Paul's soul no temptation overshadowed but even in storms
he was clearer to the sight than the hard sky (<greek>staqeras</greek>
<greek>meshmbrias</greek> at noon, and shone constantly as it had done before the
clouds came on. For the Sun who shone in him sent not forth such rays as to be
over-clouded by the concourse of temptations, but even then shone forth the more.
Wherefore he says, "My grace is sufficient for thee, for My Strength is made
perfect in weakness." (2 Cor. xii. 9.) Let us then strive to be like him, and then
even to what we are this heaven will be as nothing, if we wish it, nor yet the
sun, nor the whole world. For these are for us, and not we for them. Let us
show that we are worthy of having had these made for us. For if we be found
unworthy of these, how shall we be worthy a kingdom? For indeed all that live so as
to blaspheme God are unworthy to see the sun. They who blaspheme Him are
unworthy to enjoy the creatures who glorify Him: since even a son who insulteth his
father is unworthy to be waited upon by the approved servants. Hence these will
enjoy glory, and that great glory; but we shall have to undergo punishment and
vengeance. How miserable then will it be for the creation which was made for
thee to be fashioned "according to the glorious liberty of the children of God,"
(Rom. viii. 21) but for us who were made children of God, through our much
listlessness, to be sent away to destruction and hell, for whose sake the creation
shall enjoy that great festal time? Now to keep this from coming to pass, let
such of us as have a pure soul keep it still such, or rather let us make its
brightness more intense. And let those of us that have a soiled one, not despair.
For "if" (he says) "your sins be as purple, I will make them white as snow. And
if they be as scarlet, I will make them white as wool." (Is. i. 18.) But when
it is God that promiseth, doubt not, but do those things whereby thou mayest
draw to thee these promises. Are they unnumbered, the fearful and outrageous acts
done by thee? And what of this? For hitherto thou art not gone away into the
grave where no man shah confess. (ib. xxxviii. 18; Ps. vi. 5.) Hitherto the arena
(<greek>qeatron</greek>) is not broken up for thee, but thou art standing
within the line, and thou art able even by a struggle at the last to recover all
thy defeats. Thou art not yet come to where the rich man was, for thee to hear it
said, "there is a gulf betwixt you and us." (Luke xvi. 26.) The Bridegroom is
not yet at hand, that one should fear to give you of his oil. Still canst thou
buy and store up. And there is not one yet to say, "Not so; lest there be not
enough for us and and you" (Matt. xxv. 9); but there are many that sell, the
naked, the hungry, the sick, the imprisoned. Give food to these, clothing to
those, visit the sick, and the oil will come more than from fountains. The day of
account is not here. Use the time as need be, and make deductions from the debts,
and to him that oweth "an hundred measures of oil, say, Take thy bill and
write fifty." (Luke xvi. 6.) And with money, and with words) and with every other
thing do in like manner, imitating that steward. And advise this to thyself, and
also to thy relatives, for thou hast still the power of saying so. Thou art
not yet come to the necessity of calling in another in their behalf, but thou
hast power to give advice at once to thyself and to others. (ib. 28.) But when
thou art gone away thither, neither of these things wilt thou have it in thy power
to do at need. And with good reason. For thou who hast had so long a period
fixed thee, and neither done thyself good, nor any else, how when thou art under
the Judge's hands shall thou be able to obtain this grace? Putting all these
things together then, let us cling fast to our own salvation, and not lose the
opportunity of this life present. For it is possible, it is, even at our last
breath to please God. It is possible to gain approval by thy last will, not indeed
in such way as in our lifetime, still it is possible. How, and in what way? If
thou leavest Him among thine heirs, and givest Him also (<greek>kai</greek>
<greek>autw</greek>) a portion of thine whole estate. Hast thou not fed Him in
thy lifetime? At all events when departed, when thou art no longer owner, give
Him a share of thy goods. He is loving unto man, He doth not deal niggardly by
thee. It is a mark to be sure of a greater desire, and so it will be more
rewarded, to feed Him in thy lifetime. But if thou hast not done this, at all events
do the next best thing. Leave Him joint-heir (see p. 384) with thy children, and
if thou art dilatory over this, bethink thyself that His Father made thee
joint-heir with Him, and break down thy inhuman spirit. For what excuse wilt thou
have if thou dost not even make Him a sharer with thy children, who made thee
share the Heaven, and was slain for thee? And yet all that ever He did, He did
not in repayment of a debt, but as bestowing a favor. But you after so great
benefits, have been made a debtor as well. And yet, though things are so, it is as
if receiving a favor, not as demanding payment of a debt, that He crowneth
thee; and this too when what He is to receive is His own. Give then thy money,
which is now no longer of any use to thee, and of which thou art no longer owner
and He will give thee a Kingdom which shall be of service to thee perpetually,
and with it will bestow also the things of this life. For if He be made the
joint-heir of thy children, He doth lighten their orphanage for them, do away with
plots against them, beat off insults, stop the mouths of pettifoggers. And if
they themselves be unable to stand up for their be-queathments, He will Himself
stand up; and not let them be broken through. But if He do even allow this,
then He makes up of Himself all that was ordered in the will with still greater
liberality, because He has been but mentioned in it. Leave Him then thine heir.
For it is to Him that thou art upon the point of going. He will be thy Judge
Himself in the trial for all that hath been done here. But there are some so
miserable and pinched, that though they have no children, still they have not the
courage to do this, but approve of giving that they have to hangers on, and to
flatterers, and to this person and to that, sooner than to Christ, Who hath done
them so great benefits. And what can be more unreasonable than this conduct?
For if one were to compare men of this east to asses, aye, or to stones, one
shall not still be saying anything tantamount to their unreasonableness and
senselessness. Nor could one find a similitude to put before you their madness and
dementedness. For what pardon shall they obtain for not having fed Him in their
lifetime, who, even when they are on the point of departing to Him, have not the
inclination to give Him but a trifle out of those goods, of which they are no
longer the owners, but are of such an inimical and hostile disposition, as not
even to give Him a share in what is useless to themselves? Do you not know how
many of mankind have not even been counted worthy to obtain an end of this kind,
but have been snatched off suddenly? But thee doth God empower to give orders
to thy kindred, and to speak with them about thy property, and set all that is
in thy house in order. What defence then wilt thou have to set up, when even
after receiving this favor from Him, thou hast treacherously given up the
benefit, and art standing as it were in diametrical opposition to thy forefathers in
the faith? For they even in their lifetime sold all, and brought it to the
Apostle's feet. But thou, even at thy death, dost not give any share to them that
need. What is the better part, and gives one much boldness, is to remedy poverty
in one's lifetime. But if thou hast not been minded to do this, at all events
do upon thy death-bed some noble act. For this is not what a strong love for
Christ would do, yet still it is an act of love. For if thou wilt not have the
high place with the Lambs, still even to be after them at all is no light thing,
and so not to be placed with the goats nor on the left hand. But if thou wilt
not do even this, what plea is to rescue thee, when neither the fear of death nor
thy money having become henceforth of no use to thee, nor the leaving of
safety behind thee to thy children, nor the laying up of much pardon there against
the time to come, will make thee merciful to man? Wherefore I advise, as the
best thing, that in your lifetime you give the larger half of your goods to the
poor. But if there be any of so narrow a soul as not to have the heart to do so,
at all events let them by necessity become merciful. For when you were living
as if there were no death, then you clung close to your goods. But now since you
have learnt that you are to die, at least now give over your opinion, and
deliberate about your affairs as one that must die. Or rather as one that ought to
enjoy immortal life for evermore. For if what I am going to say be distasteful,
and big with horror, still it must be said. Reckon with thy slaves the Lord.
Art thou giving thy slaves liberty? Give Christ liberty from famine, from
distress, from imprisonment, from nakedness. Art thou horrified at the words? Is it
not then more horrible when thou dost not even thus much? And here the word
makes thy blood curdle. But when thou art gone to that world, and hast to hear
things far more grievous than these, and seest the tortures which are incurable,
what wilt thou say? To whom wilt thou flee for refuge? Whom wilt thou call to
thy alliance and assistance? Will it be Abraham? He will not hearken to thee. Or
those virgins? They will not give thee of their oil. Thy father then or thy
grandfather? But none even of these, if he be ever so holy, will have it in his
power to reverse that sentence. Weighing then all these things, to Him Who alone
is Lord to blot out the bill against thee and to quench that flame, to Him make
prayer and supplication, and propitiate Him, by now feeding Him and clothing
Him continually: that in this world thou mayest depart with a good hope, and
when thou art there thou mayest enjoy eternal blessings, which may we all attain
to by the grace and love toward man, etc.
HOMILY XIX.
ROM. XI. 7.
"What then? [1] Israel hath not obtained that, which he seeketh for; but the
election hath obtained it and the rest were blinded."
He had said that God did not cast off His people; and to show in what
sense He had not cast them off, he takes refuge in the Prophets again.* And having
shown by them that the more part of the Jews were lost, that he might not seem
to be again bringing forward an accusation of his own, and to make his
discourse offensive, and to be attacking them as enemies, he takes refuge in David and
Isaiah, and says,
Ver. 8. "According as it is written, God hath given them the spirit of
slumber." (Is. xxix. 10.)
Or rather we should go back to the beginning of his argument. Having then
mentioned the state of things in Elijah's time, and shown what grace is, he
proceeds, "What then? Israel hath not obtained that which he seeketh for." Now
this is as much what an accuser would say, as what one who was putting a question.
For the Jew, he means, is inconsistent with himself when he seeketh for
righteousness, which he will not accept. Then to leave them with no excuse, he shows,
from those who have accepted it, their unfeeling spirit, as he says, "But the
election hath obtained it," and they are the condemnation of the others. And
this is what Christ says, "But if I by Beelzebub cast out devils, by whom do your
children cast them out? Wherefore they shall be your judges." (Luke xi. 19.)
For to prevent any one from accusing the nature of the thing, and not their own
temper, he points out those who had obtained it. Hence he uses the word [2]
with great propriety, to show at once the grace from above and the zeal of these.
For it is not to deny free-will that he speaks of their having "obtained" (as
by chance, Gr. <greek>epetuce</greek>) it, but to show the greatness of the good
things, and that the greater part was of grace, though not the whole? For we
too are in the habit of saying, "so and so chanted to get" (same word), "so and
so met with," when the gain has been a great one. Because it is not by man's
labors, but by God's gift, that the greater part was brought about. "And the rest
was blinded."
See how he has been bold enough to tell with his own voice the casting off
of the rest. For he had indeed spoken of it already, but it was by bringing
the prophets in as accusers. But from this point he declares it in his own
person. Still even here he is not content with his own declaration, but brings Isaiah
the prophet in again. For after saying, "were blinded," he proceeds; according
as it is written, God hath given them the spirit of slumber." Now whence came
this blinding? He had indeed mentioned the causes of it before, and turned it
all upon their own heads, to show that it was from their unseasonable obstinacy
that they had to bear this. And now he speaks of it too. For when he says,
"Eyes that they should not see, and ears that they should not hear," he is but
finding fault with their contentious spirit. For when they had "eyes to see" the
miracles, and were possessed of "ears to hear" that marvellous Teaching, they
never used these as were fitting. And the "He gave," do not imagine to mean here
an agency, but a permission only. But. "slumber" (<greek>kataanuxis</greek> lit.
piercing) is a name he here gives to the habit of soul inclinable to the
worse, when incurably and unchangeably so. For in another passage David says, "that
my glory may sing unto Thee, and I may not be put to slumber" (Ps. xxx. 12,
LXX.): that is, I may not alter, may not be changed. For as a man who is hushed to
slumber in a state of pious fear would not easily be made to change his side;
so too he that is slumbering in wickedness would not change with facility. For
to be hushed[1] to slumber here is nothing else but to be fixed and riveted to
a thing. In pointing then to the incurable and unchangeable character of their
spirit, he calls it "a spirit of slumber." Then to show that for this unbelief
they will be most severely punished, he brings the Prophet forward again,
threatening the very things which in the event came to pass.
Ver. 9. "Let their table be made a snare, and a trap, and a
stumbling-block." (Ps. lxix. 22, 23.)
That is, let their comforts and all their good things change and perish,
and let them be open to attack from any one. And to show that this is in
punishment for sins that they suffer this, he adds, "and a recompense unto them."
Ver. 10. "Let their eyes be darkened that they may not see, and bow Thou
down their back alway." Do these things then still require any interpreting? Are
they not plain even to those ever so senseless? And before our words, the very
issue of facts has anticipated us in bearing witness to what was said. For at
what time have they ever been so open to attacks? at what time such an easy
prey? at what time hath He so "bowed down their backs?" At what time have they
been set under such bondage? And what is more, there is not to be any unloosing
from these terrors. And this the prophet hath also hinted. For he does not say
only, "bow Thou down their back," but, "forever bow Thou down." But if thou art
disposed to dispute, O Jew, about the issue, from what hath gone before learn
also the present case. Thou didst go down to Egypt; and two hundred years passed,
and God freed thee speedily from that bondage, and that though thou wert
irreligious, and wentest a whoring with the most baneful whoredom. Thou wast freed
from Egypt, and thou didst worship the calf, thou didst sacrifice thy sons to
Baalpeor, thou didst defile the temple, thou didst go after every sort of vice,
thou didst grow not to know nature itself. The mountains, the groves, the hills,
the springs, the rivers, the gardens didst thou fill with accursed sacrifices,
thou didst slay the prophets, didst overthrow the altars, didst exhibit every
excess of wickedness and irreligion. Still, after giving thee up for seventy
years to the Babylonians, He brought thee back again to thy former freedom, and
gave thee back the temple, and thy country, and thy old form of polity[2] and
there were prophets again, and the gift of the Spirit. Or rather, even in the
season of thy captivity thou wast not deserted, but even there were Daniel, and
Ezekiel, and in Egypt Jeremiah, and in the desert Moses. After this thou didst
revert to thy former vice again, and wast a reveller (<greek>exebakceuqhs</greek>
2 Macc. xiv. 33), therein, and didst change thy manner of life
(<greek>politeian</greek> to the Grecian in the time of Antiochus the impious Dan. viii. 14; 1
Macc. iv. 54). But even then for a three years and a little over only were ye
given up to Antiochus, and then by the Maccabees ye raised those bright
trophies again. But now there is nothing of the sort, for the reverse hath happened
throughout. And this is ground for the greatest surprise, as the vices have
ceased, and the punishment hath been increased, and is without any hope of a change.
For it is not seventy years only that have passed away, nor a hundred, nor yet
twice as many but three hundred, and a good deal over, and there is no finding
even a shadow of a hope of the kind. And this though ye neither are idolaters,
nor do the other audacious acts ye did before. What then is the cause? The
reality hath succeeded to the type, and grace hath shut out the Law. And this the
prophet foretelling from of old said, "And ever bow Thou down their back." See
the minuteness of prophecy, how it foretells their unbelief, and also points
out their disputatiousness, and shows the judgment which should follow, and sets
forth the endlessness of the punishment. For as many of the duller sort,
through unbelief in what was to come to pass, wished to see things to come by the
light of things present, from this point of time God gave proof of His power on
either part, by lifting those of the Gentiles who believed. above the heaven, but
bringing down such of the Jews as believed not to the lowest estate of
desolation, and giving them up to evils not to be ended. Having then urged them
severely both about their not believing, and about what they had suffered and were
yet to suffer, he again allays what he had said by writing as follows:
Ver. 11. "I say then, Have they stumbled, that they should fall? God
forbid."
When he has shown that they were liable to evils without number, then he
devises an allayment. And consider the judgment of Paul. The accusation he had
introduced from the prophets, but the allayment he makes come from himself. For
that they had sinned greatly, he would say, none will gainsay. But let us see
if the fall is of such kind as to be incurable, and quite preclude their being
set up again. But of such kind it is not.[*] You see how he is attacking them[*]
again, and under the expectation of some allayment he proves them guilty of
confessed sins. But let us see what even by way of allayment he does devise for
them. Now what is the allayment? "When the fulness of the Gentiles," he says,
"shall have come in, then shall all Israel be saved," at the time of his second
coming', and the end of the world. Yet this he does not say at once. But since
he had made a hard onset upon them, and linked accusations to accusations,
bringing prophets in after prophets crying aloud against them, Isaiah, Elijah,
David, Moses, Hosea, not once or twice, but several times; lest in this way he
should both by driving these into despair, make a wall to bar their access to the
faith, and should further make such of the Gentiles as believed unreasonably
elated, and they also by being puffed up should take harm in matter of their faith,
he further solaces them by saying, "But rather through their fall salvation is
come unto the Gentiles." But we must not take what is here said literally, but
get acquainted with the spirit and object of the speaker, and what he aimed to
compass. Which thing I ever entreat of your love. For if with this in our
minds we take up what is here said, we shall not find a difficulty in any part of
it. For his present anxiety is to remove from those of the Gentiles the
haughtiness which might spring in them from what he had said. For in this way they too
were more likely to continue unshaken in the faith, when they had learnt to be
reasonable, as also those of the Jews were, when quit of despair, more likely
to come with readiness to grace. Having regard then to this object of his, let
us so listen to all that is said on this passage. What does he say then? And
whence does he show that their fall was not irremediable, nor their rejection
final? He argues from the Gentiles, saying as follows:
"Through their fall salvation is come unto the Gentiles, for to provoke
them to jealousy."
This language is not his own only, but in the Gospels too the parables
mean this. For He who made a marriage feast for His Son, when the guests would not
come, called those in the highways. (Matt. xxii. 9.) And He who planted the
Vineyard, when the husbandmen slew the Heir, let out His Vineyard to others. (ib.
xxi. 38, etc.) And without any parable, He Himself said, "I am not sent but
unto the lost sheep of the House of Israel." (ib. xv. 24.) And to the
Syrophoenician woman, when she persevered, He said somewhat further besides. "It is not
meet," He says, "to take the children's bread, and cast it to the dogs." (ib. xv.
26.) And Paul to those of the Jews that raised a sedition, "It was necessary
that the word of God should first have been spoken unto you: but seeing ye judge
yourselves unworthy, lo, we turn unto the Gentiles." (Acts xiii. 46.) And
throughout it is clear that the natural course of things was this, that they should
be the first to come in, and then those of the Gentiles; but since they
disbelieved, the order was reversed; and their unbelief and fall caused these to be
brought in first. Hence it is that he says, "through their fall salvation is
come to the Gentiles, for to provoke them to jealousy." But if he méntions what
the course of things issued in, as if the chief design of Providence, do not feel
surprised. For he wishes to sob ace their down-stricken souls, and his meaning
is about this. Jesus came to them; they did not receive Him, though He did
countless miracles, but crucified Him. Hence He drew the Gentiles to Him, that the
honor they had, by cutting them to the heart for their insensibility might at
least out of a moroseness against others persuade them to come over. For they
ought to have been first admitted, and then we. And this was why he said, "For
it is the power of God unto salvation unto every one that believeth; to the Jew
first, and also to the Gentile." (Rom. i. 16.) But as they had started off, we
the last became first. See then how great honors he gathers for them even from
this. One that he says, we were then called, when they were not willing; a
second that he says, the reason of our being called was not that we only might be
saved, but that they also, growing jealous at our salvation, might become
better. What does he say then? that if it were not for the Jews' sake, we should not
have been called and saved at all? We should not before them, but in the
regular order. Wherefore also when He was speaking to the disciples, He did not say
barely, "Go to the lost sheep of the House of Israel" (Matt. x. 6), but, "Go
rather to the sheep," to show that to those parts also they must come after these.
And Paul again saith not, "It was necessary that the word of God should have
been spoken unto you," but "should first have been spoken unto you" (Acts xiii.
46), to show that in the second place it must be to us also. And this was both
done and said, that they might not be able, shameless though they were, to
pretend that they were overlooked, and that was why they did not believe. This then
was why Christ, though he knew all things before, yet came to them first.
Ver. 12. "Now if the fall of them be the riches of the world, and the
diminishing of them the riches of the Gentiles, how much more their fulness?"
Here he is speaking to gratify them. For even if these had fallen a
thousand times, the Gentiles would not have been saved unless they had shown faith.
As the Jews likewise would not have perished unless they had been unbelieving
and disputatious. But as I said, he is solacing them now they are laid low,
giving them so much the more ground to be confident of their salvation if they
altered. For if when they stumbled, he says, so many enjoyed salvation, and when
they were cast out so many were called, just consider what will be the case when
they return. But he does not put it thus, When they return. Now he does not say
"how much more their" return, or their altering, or their well-doing, but "how
much more their fulness," that is, when they are all about coming in. And this
he said to show that then also grace and God's gift will do the larger part, or
almost the whole.
Ver. 13, 14. "For I speak to you Gentiles; inasmuch as I am the Apostle of
the Gentiles, I magnify mine office; if by any means I may provoke to
emulation them which are my flesh, and might save some of them."
Again he endeavors much to get himself clear of untoward suspicion. And he
seems to be blaming the Gentiles, and to be humbling their conceits, yet he
gives a gentle provocation to the Jew also. And indeed he goes round about
seeking to veil and allay this great ruin of theirs. But he finds no means of doing
it, owing to the nature of the facts. For from what he had said, they deserved
but the greater condemnation, when those who were far short of them had taken
the good things prepared for them. This is why then he passes from the Jews to
those of the Gentiles, and puts in between his discourse the part about them, as
wishing to show that he is saying all these things in order to instruct them to
be reasonable. For I praise you, he means, for these two reasons one, because
I am necessitated to do so as being your commissioned minister; the other that
through you I may save others. And he does not say, my brethren, my kinsmen;
but, "my flesh." And next, when pointing out their disputations spirit, he does
not say, "if by any means I may" persuade, but, "provoke to jealousy and save ;"
and here again not all, but, "some of them." So hard were they! And even amid
his rebuke he shows again the Gentiles honored, for they are causes of their
salvation, and not in the same way. For they became purveyors of blessings to
them through unbelief, but these to the Jews by faith. Hence the estate of the
Gentiles seems to be at once equal and superior. For what wilt thou say, O Jew?
that if we had not been east out, he would not have been called so soon? This the
man of the Gentiles may say too, If I had not been saved, thou wouldest not
have been moved to jealousy. But if thou wouldest know wherein we have the
advantage, I save thee by believing, but it is by stumbling that thou hast afforded
us an access before thyself. Then perceiving again that he had touched them to
the quick, resuming his former argument, he says,
Ver. 15. "For if the casting away of them be the reconciling of the world,
what shall the receiving of them be but life from the dead?"
Yet this again condemns them, since, while others gained by their sins,
they did not profit by other men's well doings. But if he asserts that to be
their doing which necessarily happened, be not surprised: since (as I have said
several times)it is to humble these, and to exhort the other, that he throws his
address into this form. For as I said before, if the Jews had been cast away a
thousand times over, and the Gentiles had not shown faith, they would never have
been saved. But he stands by the feeble party, and gives assistance to the
distressed one. But see also even in his favors to them, how he solaces them in
words only. "For if the casting away of them be the reconciling of the world,"
(and what is this to the Jews?) "what shall the receiving of them be but life
from the dead?" Yet even this was no boon to them, unless they had been
received. But what he means is to this effect. If in anger with them He gave other men
so great gifts, when He is reconciled to them what will He not give? But as
the resurrection of the dead was not by the receiving of them, so neither now
is our salvation through them. But they were cast out owing to their own folly,
but it is by faith that we are saved, and by grace from above. But of all this
nothing can be of service to them, unless they show the requisite faith. Yet
doing as he is wont, he goes on to another encomium, which is not really one, but
which only seems to be, so imitating the wisest physicians, who give their
patients as much consolation as the nature of the sickness allows them. And what
is it that he says?
Ver. 16. "For if the first-fruits be holy, the lump also is holy; and if
the root be holy, so are the branches;"
So calling in this passage by the names of the first-fruit and root
Abraham, and Isaac, and Jacob, the prophets, the patriarchs, all who were of note in
the Old Testament; and the branches, those from them who believed. Then since
the fact met him that many had disbelieved, observe how he undermines
(<greek>upotemnetai</greek>, see p. 345) it again, and says,
Ver. 17. "And if some of the branches be broken off."
And yet above thou didst say that the more part perished, and a few were
saved only. How came it then that speaking of those that perished, thou hast
used a "some," which is indicative of fewness? It is not, he replies, in
opposition to myself, but out of a desire to court and recover those that are
distressed. Observe how in the whole of the passage one finds him working at this object,
the wish to solace them. And if you deny it, many contradictions will follow.
But let me beg you to notice his wisdom, how while he seems to be speaking for
them, and devising a solace for them, he aims a secret blow at them, and shows
that they are devoid of all excuse, even from the "root," from the
"first-fruit." For consider the badness of the branches, which, when they have a sweet
root, still do not imitate it; and the faultiness of the lump, when it is not
altered even by the first-fruit. "And if some of the branches were broken off."
However, the greater part were broken off. Yet, as I said, he wishes to comfort
them. And this is why it is not in his own person, but in theirs, that he brings
in the words used, and even in this gives a secret stroke at them, and shows
them to have fallen from being Abraham's kinsmen. (Matt. iii. 9.) For what he was
desirous of saying was, that they had nothing in common with them. (John viii.
39.) For if the root be holy, and these be not holy, then these are far away
from the root. Then under the appearance of solacing the Jews, he again by his
accusation smiteth them of the Gentiles. For after saying, "And if some of the
branches were broken off," he proceeds.
"And thou being a wild olive wert grafted in."
For the less esteem the man of the Gentiles is of, the more the Jew is
vexed at seeing him enjoy his goods. And to the other, the disgrace of the little
esteem he was of, is nothing to the honor of the change. And consider his
skilfulness. He does not say, "thou weft" planted "in," but "thou weft grafted in,"
by this again cutting the Jew to the heart, as showing that the Gentile man was
standing in his own tree, and himself lying on the ground. Wherefore he does
not stop even here, nor after he had spoken of grafting in does he leave off
(and yet in this he declared the whole matter), but still he dwells over the
prosperous state of the Gentile, and enlarges upon his fair fame in the words, "And
with them partakest of the root and fatness of the olive tree." And he seems
indeed to have viewed him in the light of an addition. But he shows that he was
no whir the worse on that account, but in possession of everything, that the
branch which had come up out of the root had. Lest then on hearing the words, "and
thou weft grafted in," thou shouldest suppose him to be lacking when compared
with the natural branch, see how he makes him equal to it by saying, that "with
them thou partakest of the root and fatness of the olive:" that is, hast been
put into the same noble rank, the same nature. Then in rebuking him, and saying,
Ver. 18. "Boast not against the branches." He seems indeed to be
comforting the Jew, but points out his vileness and extreme dishonor. And this is why he
says not, "boast not," but, "boast not against" do not boast against them so
as to sunder them. For it is into their place that ye have been set, and their
goods that ye enjoy. Do you observe how he seems to be rebuking the one, while
he is sharp upon the other?
"But if thou boast," he says, "thou bearest not the root, but the root
thee."
Now what is this to the branches that are cut off? Nothing. For, as I said
before, while seeming to devise a sort of weak shadow of consolation, and in
the very midst of his aiming at the Gentile, he gives them a mortal blow; for by
saying, "boast not against them," and, "if thou boast, thou bearest not the
root," he has shown the Jew that the things done deserved boasting of, even if it
was not right to boast, thus at once rousing him and provoking him to faith,
and smiting at him, in the attitude of an advocate, and pointing out to him the
punishment he was undergoing, and that other men had possession of what were
their goods.
Ver. 19. "Thou wilt say then," he goes on, "The branches were broken off
that I might be grafted in."
Again he establishes, by way of objection, the opposite to the former
position, to show that what he said before, he had not said as directly belonging
to the subject, but to draw them to him. For it was no longer by their fall that
salvation came to the Gentiles, nor was it their fall that was the riches of
the world. Nor was it by this that we were saved, because they had fallen, but
the reverse. And he shows that the providence in regard to the Gentiles was a
main object, even though he seems to put what he says into another forth. And the
whole passage is a tissue of objections, in which he clears himself of the
suspicion of hatred, and makes his language such as will be acceptable.
Ver. 20. "Well," he praises what they said, then he alarms them again by
saying, "Because of unbelief they were broken off, and thou art grafted in[1] by
faith."
So here another encomium, and for the other party an accusation. But he
again lays their pride low by proceeding to say, "be not high-minded, but fear."
For the thing is not matter of nature, but of belief and unbelief. And he seems
to be again bridling the Gentile, but he is teaching the Jew that it is not
right to cling to a natural kinsmanship. Hence he goes on with, "Be not
high-minded," and he does not say, but be humble, but, fear. For haughtiness genders a
contempt and listlessness. Then as he is going into all the sorrows of their
calamity, in order to make the statement less offensive, he states it in the way
of a rebuke given to the other as follows:
Ver. 21. "For if God spared not the natural branches," and then he does
not say, neither will He spare thee," but "take heed, lest He also spare not
thee." So paring (<greek>upotemnomenos</greek>) away the distasteful from his
statement, representing the believer as in the struggle, he at once draws the others
to him, and humbles these also.
Ver. 22. "Behold therefore the goodness and severity of God: on them which
fell, severity; but toward thee, goodness, if thou continue in His goodness:
otherwise thou also shalt be cut off."
And he does not say, Behold thy well doing, behold thy labors, but,
"Behold the goodness of God" toward man, to show that the whole comes of grace from
above, and to make us tremble. For this reason for boasting should make thee to
fear: since the Lord (<greek>despoths</greek>) hath been good unto thee, do
thou therefore fear. For the blessings do not abide by thee unmovable if thou
turnest listless, as neither do the evils with them, if they alter; "For thou
also," he says, "unless thou continue in the faith, wilt be cut off."
Ver. 23. "And they also, if they abide not in unbelief, shall be grafted
in."
For it was not God that cut them off but they have broken themselves off
and fallen, and he did well to say have[1] broken themselves off. For He hath
never yet so (Say. conj. Ms. corr. <greek>outos</greek>) east them off, though
they have sinned so much and so often. You see what a great thing a man's free
choice is, how great the efficacy of the mind is. For none of these things is
immutable, neither thy good nor his evil. You see too how he raises up even him in
his despondency, and humbles the other in his confidence; and do not thou be
faint at hearing of severity, nor thou be confident at hearing of goodness. The
reason why He cut thee[2] off in severity was, that thou mightest long to come
back. The reason why He showed goodness to thee was, that thou mightest
continue in (he does not say the faith, but) His goodness, that is, if thou do things
worthy of God's love toward man. For there is need of something more than
faith. You see how he suffers, neither these to lie low, nor those to be elated, but
he also provokes them to jealousy, by giving through them a power to the Jew
to be set again in this one's place, as he also had first taken the other's
ground. And the Gentile he put in fear by the Jews, and what had happened to them,
lest they should feel elated over it. But the Jew he tries to encourage by what
had been afforded to the Greek. For thou also, he says, wilt be cut off if
thou growest listless, (for the Jew was cut off), and he will be grafted in if he
be earnest, for thou also wast grafted in. But it is very judicious in him to
direct all he says to the Gentile, as he is always in the habit of doing,
correcting the feeble by rebuking the stronger. This he does in the end of this
Epistle too, when he is speaking of the observance of meats. Then, he grounds this
on what had already happened, not upon what was to come only. And this was more
likely to persuade his hearer. And as he means to enter on consecutiveness of
reasonings, such as could not be spoken against, he first uses a demonstration
drawn from the power of God. For if they were cut off, and cast aside, and
others took precedence of them in what was theirs, still even now despair not.
"For God is able," he says, "to graft them in again," since He doeth
things beyond expectation. But if thou wishest for things to be in order, and
reasons to be consecutive, you have from yourselves a demonstration which more than
meets your wants.
Ver. 24. "For if thou wert cut out of the olive tree, which is wild by
nature, and were grafted contrary to nature into a good olive tree, how much more
shall these, which be the natural branches, be grafted[8] into their own olive
tree."
If then faith was able to do what was contrary to nature, much more will
it that which is according to nature. For if this person, who was cut off from
those by nature his fathers,[4] came contrary to nature unto Abraham, much more
wilt thou be able to recover thine own. For the Gentile's evil lot is according
to nature (he being by nature a wild olive), and the good contrary to nature
(it being contrary to nature for him to be grafted into Abraham), but thy lot on
the contrary is the good by nature. For it is not upon another root, as the
Gentile, but on thine own that thou art to be fixed if thou art minded to come
back. What then dost thou deserve, when after the Gentile had been able to do
what was contrary to nature, thou art not able to do that which is according to
nature, but hast given up even this? Then as he had said "contrary to nature,"
and, "wert grafted in," that you may not suppose the Jew to have the advantage,
he again corrects this by saying that he also is grafted in. "How much more
shall these," says he, "which be the natural branches be grafted into their own
olive-tree?" And again, "God is able to graft them in." And before this he says,
that if they "abide not still in unbelief, they shall be also grafted in." And
when you hear that he keeps speaking of "according to nature," and "contrary to
nature," do not suppose that he means the nature that is unchangeable, but he
tells us in these words of the probable and the consecutive, and on the other
hand of the improbable. For the good things and the bad are not such as[5] are by
nature, but by temper and determination alone. And consider also how
inoffensive he is. For after saying that thou also wilt be cut off, if thou dost not
abide in the faith, and these will be grafted in, if they "abide not still in
unbelief," he leaves that of harsh aspect, and insists on that of kindlier sound,
and in it he ends, putting great hopes before the Jews if they were minded not
to abide so. Wherefore he goes on to say,
Vet. 25. "For I would not, brethren, that ye should be ignorant of this
mystery, lest ye should be wise m your own conceits."
Meaning by mystery here, that which is unknown and unutterable, and hath
much of wonder and much of what one should not expect about it. As in another
passage too he says, "Behold, I tell you a mystery. We shall not all sleep, but
we shall all be changed." (1 Cor. xv. 51.) What then is the mystery?
"That blindness in part hath happened unto Israel." Here again he levels a
blow at the Jew, while seeming to take down the Gentile. But his meaning is
nearly this, and he had said it before, that the unbelief is not universal, but
only "in part." As when he says, "But if any hath caused grief, he hath not
grieved me, but in part" (2 Cor. if. 5): And, so here too he says what he had said
above, "God hath not cast off His people whom He foreknew" (Rom. xi. 2): and
again, "What then? Have they stumbled that they should fall? God forbid" (ib.
11): This then he says here also; that it is not the whole people that is pulled
up, but many have already believed, and more are likely to believe. Then as he
had promised a great thing, he adduces the prophet in evidence, speaking as
follows. Now it is not for the fact of a blindness having happened that he quotes
the passage (for every one could see that), but that they shall believe and be
saved, he brings Isaiah to witness, who crieth aloud and saith,
Ver. 26. "There shall come out of Sion the Deliverer, and shall turn away
ungodliness from Jacob." (Is. lix. 20.)
Then to give the mark that fixes its sense to salvation, to prevent any
one from drawing it aside and attaching it to times gone by, he says,
Ver. 27. "For this is my covenant unto them,(1) when I shall take away
their sins."
Not when they are circumcised, not when they sacrifice, not when they do
the other deeds of the Law, but when they attain to the forgiveness of sins. If
then this hath been promised, but has never yet happened in their case, nor
have they ever enjoyed the remission of sins by baptism, certainly it will come to
pass. Hence he proceeds,
Ver. 29. "For the gifts and calling of God are without repentance."
And even this is not all he says to solace them, for he uses what had
already come about. And what came in of consequence, that he states as chiefly
intended, putting it in these words,
Ver. 28. "As concerning the Gospel, they are enemies for your sakes: but
as touching the election, they are beloved for the fathers' sakes."
That the Gentile then might not be puffed up, and say, "I am standing, do
not tell me of what would have been, but what has been," he uses this
consideration to bring him down, and says, "As concerning the GOspel, they are enemies
for your sakes." For when you were called they became more captious.
Nevertheless God hath not even now cut short the calling of you, but He waiteth for all
the Gentiles that are to believe to come in, and then they also shall come. Then
he does them another kind favor, by saying, "As touching election, they are
beloved for the fathers sakes." And what is this? for wherein they are enemies,
punishment is theirs: but wherein they are beloved, the virtue of their ancestors
has no influence on them, if they do not believe. Nevertheless, as I said, he
ceaseth not to solace them with words, that he may bring them over. Wherefore
by way of fresh proof for his former assertion, he says,
Ver. 30-32. "For as ye in times past have not believed God, yet have now
obtained mercy through their unbelief; even so have these also now not believed,
that through your mercy they may also obtain mercy. For God hath concluded
them all in unbelief, that He might have mercy upon all."
He shows here that those of the Gentiles were called first. Then, as they
would not come, the Jews were elected, and the same result occurred again. For
when the Jews would not believe, again the Gentiles were brought over. And he
does not stop here, nor does he draw the whole to a conclusion at their
rejection, but at their having mercy shown them again. See how much he gives to those
of the Gentiles, as much as he did to the Jews before. For when ye, he would
say, "in times past did not obey," being of the Gentiles, then the Jews came in.
Again, when these did not obey, ye have come. However, they will not perish
forever. "For God hath concluded them all in unbelief," that is, hath convinced
them, hath shown them disobedient; not that they may remain in disobedience, but
that He may save the one by the captiousness of the other, these by those and
those by these. Now consider; ye were disobedient, and they were saved. Again,
they have been disobedient, and ye have been saved. Yet ye have not been so saved
as to be put away again, as the Jews were, but so as to draw them over through
jealousy while ye abide.
Ver. 33. "Oh, the depth of the riches, both of the wisdom and knowledge of
God! How unsearchable are His judgments!"
Here after going back to former times, and looking back to God's original
dispensation of things whereby the world hath existed up to the present time,
and having considered what special provision He had made for all occurrences, he
is stricken with awe, and cries aloud, so making his hearers feel confident
that certainly that will come to pass which he saith. For he would not have cried
aloud and been awe-struck, unless this was quite sure to come to pass. That it
is a depth then, he knows: but how great, he knows not. For the language is
that of a person wondering, not of one that knew the whole. But admiring and
being awe-struck at the goodliness, so far forth as in him lay, he heralds it forth
by two intensitive words, riches and depth, and then is awestruck at His
having had both the will and the power to do all this, and by opposites effecting
opposites. "How unsearchable are His judgments." For they are not only
impossible to be comprehended, but even to be searched. "And His ways past finding out;"
that is, His dispensations for these also are not only impossible to be known,
but even to be sought into. For even I, he means, have not found out the
whole, but a little part, not all. For He alone knoweth His own clearly. Wherefore
he proceeds:
Vet. 34, 35. "For who hath known the mind of the Lord? or who hath been
His counsellor? Or who hath first given to Him, and it shall be recompensed unto
him again?"
What he means is nearly this: that though He is so wise, yet He has not
His Wisdom from any other, but is Himself the Fountain of good things. And though
He hath done so great things, and made us so great presents, yet it was not by
borrowing from any other that He gave them, but by making them spring forth
from Himself; nor as owing any a return for having received from him, but as
always being Himself the first to do the benefits; for this is a chief mark of
riches, to overflow abundantly, and yet need no aid. Wherefore he proceeds to say,
"For of Him, and through Him, and to Him, are all things." Himself devised,
Himself created, Himself worketh together (Vulg. <greek>sugkratei</greek>, Mss.
<greek>sugkrotei</greek> ). For He is rich, and needeth not to receive from
another. And wise, and needeth no counsellor. Why speak I of a counsellor? To know
the things of Him is no one able, save Himself alone, the Rich and Wise One. For
it is proof of much riches that He should make them of the Gentiles thus well
supplied; and of much wisdom that He should constitute the inferiors of the
Jews their teachers. Then as he was awe-struck he offers up thanksgiving also in
the word, "To Whom be glory forever. Amen.
For when he tells of any great and unutterable thing of this kind, he ends
in wonder with a doxology. And this he does in regard to the Son also. For in
that passage also he went on to the very same thing that he does here. "Of whom
is Christ according to the flesh, Who is over all God blessed forever. Amen.
(Rom. ix. 5.)
Him then let us also imitate, and let us glorify God in all things, by a
heedful way of life, and let us not feel confidence in the virtues of our
ancestry, knowing the example that has been made of the Jews. For this is not,
certainly it is not, the relationship of Christians, for theirs is the kinsmanship of
the Spirit. So the Scythian becometh Abraham's son: and his son on the other
hand more of an alien to him than the Scythian. Let us not then feel confidence
in the well-doings of our fathers (most Mss. "of others"), but if you have a
parent who is a marvel even, fancy not that this will be enough to save you, or
to get you honor and glory, unless you have the relationship of character to
him. So too if you have a bad one, do not think that you will be condemned on this
account, or be put to shame if at least you order your own doings aright. For
what can be less honorable than the Gentiles? still in faith they soon became
related to the Saints. Or what more nearly connected than the Jews? Yet still by
unbelief they were made aliens. For that relationship is of nature and
necessity, after which we are all relations. For of Adam we all sprung, and none can
be more a relation than another, both as regards Adam and as regards Noah, and
as regards the earth, the common mother of all. But the relationship worthy of
honors, is that which does distinguish us from the wicked. For it is not
possible for all to be relations in this way, but those of the same character only.
Nor do we call them brothers who come of the same labor with ourselves, but those
who display the same zeal. In this way Christ giveth men the name of children
of God, and so on the other hand children of the devil, and so too children of
disobedience, of hell, and of perdition likewise. So Timothy was Paul's son
from goodness and was called" mine own son"(1) (1 Tim. i. 2): but of his sister's
son we do not know even the name. And yet the one was by nature related to him,
and still that availed him not. But the other being both by nature and country
far removed from him (as being a native of Lystra), still became most nearly
related. Let us then also become the sons of the Saints, or rather let us become
even God's sons. For that it is possible to become sons of God, hear what he
says, "Be ye therefore perfect, as your father which is in Heaven." (Matt. v.
48.) This is why we call Him Father in prayer, and that not only to remind
ourselves of the grace, but also of virtue, that we may not do aught unworthy of such
a relationship. And how it may be said is it possible to be a son of God? by
being free from all passions, and showing gentleness to them that affront and
wrong us. For thy Father is so to them that blaspheme Him. Wherefore, though He
says various things at various times, yet in no case does He say that ye may be
like your Father, but when He says, "Pray for them that despitefully use you,
do good to them that hate you" (ib. v. 44), then He brings in this as the
reward. For there is nothing that brings us so near to God, and makes us so like
Him, as this well-doing. Therefore Paul also, when he says, "Be ye followers of
God" (Eph. v. 1), means them to be so in this respect. For we have need of all
good deeds, chiefly however of love to man and gentleness, since we need so much
of His love to man ourselves. For we commit many transgressions every day.
Wherefore also we have need to show much mercy. But much and little is not measured
by the quantity of things given, but by the amount of the givers' means. Let
not then the rich be high-minded, nor the poor dejected as giving so little, for
the latter often gives more than the former. We must not then make ourselves
miserable because we are poor, since it makes alms-giving the easier for us. For
he that has got much together is seized with haughtiness, as well as a greater
affection to that (or "lust beyond that") he has. But he that hath but a
little is quit of either of these domineering passions: hence he finds more
occasions for doing well. For this man will go cheerfully into a prison-house, and will
visit the sick, and will give a cup of cold water. But the other will not take
upon him any office of this sort, as pampered up (<greek>flegmainwn</greek>,
by his riches. Be not then out of heart at thy poverty. For thy poverty makes
thy traffic for heaven the easier to thee. And if thou have nothing, but have a
compassionating soul, even this will be laid up as a reward for thee. Hence too
Paul bade us "weep with them that weep" (Rom. xii. 15), and exhorted us to be
to prisoners as though bound with them. (Heb. xiii. 3.) For it is not to them
that weep only that it yieldeth some solace that there be many that compassionate
them, but to them who are in other afflicting circumstances. For there are
cases where conversation has as much power to recover him that is cast down as
money. For this then God exhorts us to give money to them that ask, not merely
with a view to relieve their poverty, but that He may teach us to compassionate
the misfortunes of our neighbors. For this also the covetous man is odious, in
that he not only disregards men in a beggared state, but because he gets himself
trained (<greek>aleifetai</greek>) for cruelty and great inhumanity. And so he
that, for their sakes, thinks little of money, is even on this account an
object of love, that he is merciful and kind to man. And Christ, when He blesseth
the merciful, blesseth and praiseth not those only that give the alms of money,
but those also who have the will to do so. Let us then be so inclinable to
mercy, and all other blessings will follow, for he that hath a spirit of love and
mercy, if he have money, will give it away, or if he see any in distress, will
weep and bewail it; if he fall in with a person wronged, will stand up for him;
if he sees one spitefully entreated, will reach out his hand to him. For as he
has that treasure-house of blessings, a loving and merciful soul, he will make
it a fountain for all his brethren's needs, and will enjoy all he rewards that
are laid up with God (Field with 4 Mss. <greek>tw</greek> <greek>Qew</greek>).
That we then may attain to these, let us of all things frame our souls
accordingly. For so, while in this world, we shall do good deeds without number, and
shall enjoy the crowns to come. To which may we all attain by the grace and love
toward man, etc.