HOMILIES OF ST. JOHN CHRYSOSTOM ON THE FIRST EPISTLE OF ST. PAUL THE APOSTLE
TO THE CORINTHIANS, HOMILIES VIII TO XI (1 COR. 3 & 4)
HOMILY VIII.
COR. iii. 1--3.
"And I, brethren, could not speak unto you as unto spiritual, but as unto
Carnal, as unto babes in Christ. I fed you with milk, and not with meat: for ye
were not yet able to bear it; nay, not even now are ye able. For ye are yet
carnal."
After having overturned the philosophy which is from without, and cast
down all its arrogance, he comes unto another argument. For it was likely that
they would say, "If we were putting forth the opinions of Plato, or of Pythagoras,
or any other of the philosophers, reason were thou shouldest draw out such a
long discourse against us. But if we announce the things of the Spirit, for what
reason dost thou turn and toss up and down (<greek>anw</greek>
<greek>cai</greek> <greek>catw</greek> <greek>strefeis</greek>) the wisdom which is from
without?"
Hear then how he makes his stand against this. "And I, brethren, could not
speak unto you as unto spiritual." Why, in the first place, says he, though
you had been perfect in spiritual things also, not even so ought you to be
elated; for what you preach is not your own, nor such as yourselves have found from
your own means. But now even these things ye know not as ye ought to know them,
but ye are learners, and the last of all. Whether therefore the Gentile wisdom
be the occasion of your high imaginations; that hath been proved to be nothing,
nay, in regard to spiritual things to be even contrary unto us: or if it be on
account of things spiritual, in these, too, ye come short and have your place
among the hindmost. Wherefore he saith, "I could not speak unto you as unto
spiritual." He said not, "I did not speak," lest the thing might seem to proceed
from his grudging them somewhat; but in two ways he brings down their high
spirit; first, because they knew not the things that are perfect; next, because
their ignorance was owing to themselves: yea, in a third way besides these, by
pointing out that "not even now are they able [to bear it]." For as to their want
of ability at first, that perhaps arose from the nature of the case. In fact,
however, he does not leave them even this excuse. For not through any inability
on their part to receive high doctrines, doth he say they received them not, but
because they were "carnal." However, in the beginning this was not so
blame-worthy; but that after so long a time, they had not yet arrived at the more
perfect knowledge, this was a symptom of most utter dulness.
It may be observed, that he brings the same charge against the Hebrews,
not however, with so much vehemence. For those, he saith, are such, partly
because of tribulation: but these, because of some appetite for wickedness. Now the
two things are not the same. He implies too, that in the one case he was
intending rebuke, in the other rather stirring them up, when he spake these words of
truth. For to these Corinthians he saith, "Neither yet now are ye able;" but
unto the others (Heb. vi 1.) "Wherefore let us cease to speak of the first
principles of Christ, and press on unto perfection:" and again, (Ib. v. 9.) "we are
persuaded better things concerning you, and things which accompany salvation,
though we thus speak."
[2.] And how calleth he those "carnal," who had attained so large a
measure of the Spirit; and into whose praises, at the beginning he had entered so
much at large? Because they also were carnal, unto whom the Lord saith, (St. Matt.
vii. 22, 23.) "Depart from Me, ye workers of iniquity, I know you not;" and
yet they both cast out devils, and raised the dead, and uttered prophecies. So
that it is possible even for one who wrought miracles to be carnal. For so God
wrought by Balaam, and unto Pharaoh He revealed things to come, and unto
Nebuchadnezzar; and Caiaphas prophesied, not knowing what he said; yea, and some others
cast out devils in His name, though they were (Luke ix. 49.) "not with Him;"
since not for the doers' sake are these things done, but for others' sake: nor
is it seldom, that those who were positively unworthy have been made
instrumental to them. Now why wonder, if in the case of unworthy men these things are done
for others' sake, seeing that so it is, even when they are wrought by saints?
For Paul saith, (1 Cor. iii. 22.) "All things are yours; whether Paul, or
Apollos, or Cephas, or life, or death:" and again, (Eph. iv. 11, 12) "He gave some
Apostles, and some Prophets, and some Pastors and Teachers, for the perfecting
of the saints, unto the work of ministering." For if it were not so, there would
have been no security against universal corruption. For it may be that rulers
are wicked and polluted, and their subjects good and virtuous; that laymen may
live in piety, and priests in wickedness; and there could not have been either
baptism, or the body of Christ, or oblation, through such, if in every instance
grace required merit. But as it is, God uses to work even by unworthy persons,
and in no respect is the grace of baptism damaged by the conduct of the
priest: else would the receiver suffer loss. Accordingly, though such things happen
rarely, still, it must be owned, they do happen. Now these things I say, lest
any one of the bystanders busying himself about the life of the priest, should be
offended as concerning the things solemnized (<greek>ta</greek>
<greek>teloumena</greek>). "For man introduceth nothing into the things which are set before
us(1), but the whole is a work of the power of God, and He it is who initiates
(<greek>o</greek> <greek>mustagwgwn</greek>) you into the mysteries."
[3.] "And I, brethren, could not speak unto you as unto spiritual, but as
unto carnal. I fed you with milk, and not with meat. For ye were not able [to
bear it.]"
For lest he should seem to have spoken ambitiously
(<greek>filotimias</greek> <greek>eneca</greek>, to obtain favor) these things which he hath just
spoken; "the spiritual man judgeth all things," and, "he himself is judged of no
man," and, "we have the mind of Christ;" with a view also to repress their pride:
observe what he saith. "Not on this account," saith he, "was I silent, because
I was not able to tell you more, but because 'ye are carnal: neither yet now
are ye able.' "
Why said he not, "ye are not willing," but "ye are not able?" Even because
he put the latter for the former. For as to the want of ability, it arises
from the want of will. Which to them indeed is a matter of accusation, but to
their teacher, of excuse. For if they had been unable by nature, one might perhaps
have been forgiven them but since it was from choice, they were bereft of all
excuse. He then speaks of the particular point also which makes them carnal.
"For whereas there is among you strife, and jealousy, and division, are ye not
carnal and walk as men?" Although he had fornications also and uncleannesses of
theirs to speak of, he sets down rather that offence which he had been a good
while endeavoring to correct. Now if "jealousy" makes men carnal, it is high time
for us to bewail bitterly, and to clothe ourselves with sackcloth and lie in
ashes. For who is pure from this passion? Except indeed I am but conjecturing the
case of others from myself. If "jealousy" maketh men "carnal," and suffereth
them not to be "spiritual," although they prophesy and show forth other
wonderful works; now, when not even so much grace is with us, what place shall we find
for our own doings; when not in this matter alone, but also in others of
greater moment, we are convicted
[4. ] From this place we learn that Christ had good reason for saying,
(St. John iii. 20.) "He that doeth evil cometh not to light;" and that unclean
life is an obstacle to high doctrines, not suffering the clear-sightedness of the
understanding to shew itself. As then it is not in any case possible for a
person in error, but living uprightly, to remain in error; so it is not easy for
one brought up in iniquity, speedily to look up to the height of the doctrines
delivered to us, but he must be clean from all the passions who is to hunt after
the truth: for whoso is freed from these shall be freed also from his error and
attain unto the truth. For do not, I beseech you, think that abstinence merely
from covetousness or fornication may suffice thee for this purpose. Not so.
All must concur in him that seeketh the truth. Wherefore saith Peter, (Acts x.
34, 35.) "Of a truth I perceive that God is no respecter of persons; but in every
nation he that feareth Him, and worketh righteousness, is acceptable to Him:"
that is, He calls and attracts him unto the truth. Seest thou not Paul, that he
was more vehement than any one in warring and persecuting? yet because he led
an irreproachable life, and did these things not through human passion, he was
both received, and reached a mark beyond all. But if any one should say, "How
doth such a one, a Greek, who is kind, and good, and humane, continue in error?"
this would be my answer: He hath some other passion, vainglory, or indolence
of mind, or want of carefulness about his own salvation, accounting that all
things which concern him are drifted along loosely and at random.(1) Peter calls
the man irreproachable in all things one that "worketh righteousness," [and Paul
says] "touching the righteousness which is in the law found blameless." Again,
"I give thanks to God, whom I serve from my forefathers with a pure
conscience," (2 Tim. i. 3.) How then, you will say, were unclean persons considered
worthy of the Gospel? Because they wished and longed for it. Thus the one sort,
though in error, are attracted by Him, because they are clean from passions; the
others, of their own accord approaching, are not thrust back. Many also even from
their ancestors have received the true religion.
[5.] Ver. 3. "For whereas there is among you jealousy and strife."
At this point he prepares himself to wrestle with those whose part was
obedience: for in what went before he hath been casting down the rulers of the
Church, where he said that wisdom of speech is nothing worth. But here he strikes
at those in subjection, in the words,
Ver. 4. "For when one saith, I am Paul, and I of Apollos, are ye not
carnal?"
And he points out that this, so far from helping them at all or causing
them to acquire any thing, had even become an obstacle to their profiting in the
greater things. For this it was which brought forth jealousy, and jealousy had
made them "carnal;" and the having become "carnal" left them not at liberty to
hear truths of the sublimer sort.
Ver. 5. "Who then is Paul, and who is Apollos?"
In this way, after producing and proving his facts, he makes his
accusation henceforth more openly. Moreover, he employs his own name, doing away all
harshness and not suffering them to be angry at what it is said. For if Paul is
nothing and murmur not, much less ought they to think themselves ill used. Two
ways, you see, he has of soothing them; first by bringing forward his own person,
then by not robbing them of all as if they contributed nothing. Rather he
allows them some small portion: small though it be, he does allow it. For having
said, "Who is Paul, and who Apollos," he adds, "but ministers by whom ye
believed." Now this in itself is a great thing, and deserving of great rewards:
although in regard of the archetype and the root of all good, it is nothing. (For not
he that "ministers" to our blessings, but he that provides and gives them, he
is our Benefactor.) And he said not, "Evangelists," but "Ministers," which is
more. For they had not merely preached the Gospel, but had also ministered unto
us; the one being a matter of word only, while the other hath deed also. And so,
if even Christ be a minister only of good things, and not the root Himself and
the fountain, (I mean, of course, in that He is a Son,) observe to what an
issue this matter is brought. (<greek>pou</greek> <greek>to</greek>
<greek>pragma</greek> <greek>catagetai</greek>. "how deep and high it is made to go.") How
then, you will ask, doth he say that He "was made a Minister of Circumcision?
(Rom. xv. 8.) He is speaking in that place of His secret dispensation in the
Flesh, and not in the same sense which we have now mentioned. For there, by
"Minister," he means "Fulfiller," (<greek>plhrwthn</greek>,i.e. of types), and not one
that of his own store gives out the blessings.
Further, he said not, "Those who guide you into the Faith," but "those by
whom ye believed;" again attributing the greater share to themselves, and
indicating by this also the subordinate class of ministers (<greek>tous</greek>
<greek>diaconus</greek> <greek>canteuqen</greek> <greek>dhlwn</greek>). Now if they
were ministering to another, how come they to seize the authority for
themselves? But I would have you consider how in no wise he lays the blame on them as
seizing it for themselves, but on those who endow them with it. For the
ground-work of the error lay in the multitude; since, had the one fallen away, the
other would have been broken up. Here are two points which he has skilfully
provided for: in that first he hath prepared, as by mining(<greek>uporuxas</greek>,)
in the quarter where it was necessary to overthrow the mischief; and next, on
their side, in not attracting ill-will, nor yet making them more contentious.
Ver. 5. "Even as Christ (<greek>o</greek> K<greek>urios</greek>, rec.
text.) gave to every man."
For not even this small thing itself was of themselves, but of God, who
put it into their hands. For lest they might say, What then? are we not to love
those that minister unto us? Yea, saith he; but you should know to what extent.
For not even this thing itself is of them, but of God who gave it.
Ver. 6. "I planted, Apollos watered, but God gave the increase."
That is, I first cast the word into the ground; but, in order that the
seeds might not wither away through temptations, Apollos added his own part. But
the whole was of God.
[6.] Ver. 7. "So then, neither is he that planteth any thing, neither he
that watereth, but God that giveth the increase."
Do you observe the manner in which he soothes them, so that they should
not be too much irritated, on hearing, "Who is this person," and "Who is that?"
"Nay, both are invidious, namely, both the saying, 'Who is this person? Who the
other,'" and the saying, that "neither he that planteth nor he that watereth is
any thing." How then does he soften these expressions? First, By attaching the
contempt to his own person, "Who is Paul, and who Apollos?" and next, by
referring the whole to God who gave all things. For after he had said, "Such a
person planted," and added, "He that planteth is nothing," he subjoined, "but God
that giveth the increase." Nor does he stop even here, but applies again another
healing clause, in the words.
Ver. 8. "He that planteth and he that watereth, are one."
For by means of this he establishes another point also, viz. that they
should not be exalted one against another. His assertion, that they are one,
refers to their inability to do any thing without "God that giveth the increase."
And thus saying, he permitted not either those who labored much to lift
themselves up against those who had contributed less; nor these again to envy the
former. In the next place, since this had a tendency to make men more indolent, I
mean, all being esteemed as one, whether they have labored much or little; observe
how he sets this right, saying, "But each shall receive his own reward
according to his own labor." As if he said, "Fear not, because I said, Ye are one;
for, compared with the work of God, they are one; howbeit, in regard to labors,
they are not so, but "each shall receive his own reward."
Then he smooths it still more, having succeeded in what he wished; and
gratifies them, where it is allowed, with liberality.
Ver. 9. For we are God's fellow-workers: "ye are God's husbandry, God's
building."
Seest thou how to them also he hath assigned no small work, having before
laid it down that the whole is of God? For since he is always persuading them
to obey those that have the rule over them, on this account he abstains from
making very light of their teachers.
"Ye are God's husbandry."
For because he had said, "I planted," he kept to the metaphor. Now if ye
be God's husbandry, it is right that you should be called not from those who
cultivate you, but from God. For the field is not called the husbandman's, but the
householder's.
"Ye are God's building."
Again, the building is not the workman's, but the master's. Now if ye be a
building, ye must not be forced asunder: since this were no building. If ye be
a farm, ye must not be divided, but be walled in with a single fence, namely,
unanimity.
Ver. 10. "According to the Grace of God which was given unto me, as a wise
master-builder I laid a foundation."
In this place he calls himself wise, not exalting himself, but to give
them an ensample, and to point out that this is a wise man's part, to lay a
foundation. You may observe as one instance of his modest bearing, that in speaking
of himself as wise, he allowed not this to stand as though it were something of
his own; but first attributing himself entirely unto God, then and not till
then calls himself by that name. For, "according to the Grace of God," saith he,
"which was given unto me." Thus, at once he signifies both that the whole is of
God; and that this most of all is Grace, viz. the not being divided, but
resting on One Foundation.
[7.] "Another buildeth thereon; but let each man take heed how he buildeth
thereon."
Here, I think, and in what follows, he puts them upon their trial
concerning practice, after that he had once for all knit them together and made them
one.
Ver. 11. "For other foundation can no man lay than that is laid, which is
Jesus Christ."
I say, no man can lay it so long as he is a master-builder; but if he lay
it, (<greek>tiqh</greek> conj. for <greek>teqh</greek>. Douncoeus ap. Savil.
viii. not. p. 261.) he ceases to be a master-builder.
See how even from men's common notions he proves the whole of his
proposition. His meaning is this: "I have preached Christ, I have delivered unto you
the foundation. Take heed how you build thereon, lest haply it be in vainglory,
lest haply so as to draw away the disciples unto men." Let us not then give heed
unto the heresies. "For other foundation can no man lay than that which is
laid." Upon this then let us build, and as a foundation let us cleave to it, as a
branch to a vine; and let there be no interval between us and Christ. For if
there be any interval, immediately we perish. For the branch by its adherence
draw m the fatness, and the building stands because it is cemented together.
Since, if it stand apart it perishes, having nothing whereon to support itself. Let
us not then merely keep hold of Christ, but let us be cemented to Him, for if
we stand apart, we perish. "For they who withdraw themselves far from Thee,
shall perish;" (Ps. lxxiii, 27. Sept.) so it is said. Let us cleave then unto Him,
and let us cleave by our works. "For he that keepeth my commandments, the same
abideth in Me" (John xiv. 21. in substance.) And accordingly, there are many
images whereby He brings us into union. Thus, if you mark it, He is "the Head,"
we are "the body:" can there be any empty interval between the head and body? He
is "a Foundation," we "a building:" He "a Vine," we "branches:" He "the
Bridegroom," we "the bride:" He "the Shepherd," we "the sheep;" He is "the Way," we
"they who walk therein." Again, we are "a temple," He "the Indweller:" He "the
First-Begotten," we "the brethren:" He "the Heir," we "the heirs together with
Him:" He "the Life," we "the living:" He "the Resurrection," we "those who rise
again:" He "the Light," we "the enlightened." All these things indicate unity;
and they allow no void interval, not even the smallest. For he that removes but
to a little distance will go on till he has become very far distant. For so
the body, receiving though it be but a small cut by a sword, perishes: and the
building, though there be but a small chink, falls to decay: and the branch,
though it be but a little while cut off from the root, becomes useless. So that
this trifle is no trifle, but is even almost the whole. Whensoever then we commit
some little fault or even negligence, let us not overlook that little; since
this, being disregarded, quickly becomes great. So also when a garment hath begun
to be torn and is neglected, it is apt to prolong its rent all throughout; and
a roof, when a few tiles have fallen, being disregarded, brings down the whole
house.
[8.] These things then let us bear in mind, and never slight the small
things, lest we fall into those which are great. But if so be that we have
slighted them and are come into the abyss of evils, not even when we are come there
let us despond, lest we fall into recklessness (<greek>carhbarian</greek>). For
to emerge from thence is hard ever after, for one who is not extremely watchful;
not because of the distance alone, but of the very position, too, wherein we
find ourselves. For sin also is a deep, and is wont to bear down and crush. And
just as those who have fallen into a well cannot with ease get out, but will
want others to draw them up; so also is he that is come into any depth of sins.
To such then we must lower ropes and draw them up. Nay rather, we need not
others only, but ourselves also, that we for our part may fasten on ourselves and
ascend, I say not so much as we have descended, but much further, if we be
willing: for why? God also helpeth: for He willeth not the death of a sinner so much
as his conversion. Let no one then despair; let no one have the feeling of the
ungodly; for to them properly belongs this kind of sin: "an ungodly man having
come into any depth of evils, makes light of it(1)." So that it is not the
multitude of men's sins which causes their despair, but their ungodly mind.
Shouldest thou then have gone all lengths in wickedness, yet say unto
thyself, God is loving unto men and he desires our salvation: for "though your sins
be as scarlet, I will whiten you as snow," (Is. i. 10. Sept.) saith He; and
unto the contrary habit I will change you. Let us not therefore give up in
despair; for to fall is not so grievous, as to lie where we have fallen; nor to be
wounded so dreadful, as after wounds to refuse healing. "For who shall boast
that he has his heart chaste? or who shall say confidently that he is pure from
sin?" (Prov. xx. 9. Sept.) These things I say not to make you morenegligent, but
to prevent your despairing.
Wouldest thou know how good our Master is? The Publican went up full of
ten thousand wickednesses, and saying only, "Be merciful unto me," went down
justified. (St. Luke xviii. 13, 14.) Yea, God saith by the prophet, "Because of sin
for some little season I grieved him, (Is. lvii. 17, 18. Sept.) and I saw that
(<greek>eidon</greek> not in Sept.) he was grieved and went sorrowful, and I
healed his ways" (<greek>iasamhn</greek> <greek>auton</greek>, Sept.) What is
there equal to this loving-kindness? On condition (<greek>inastugnaoh</greek> .
See St. John viii. 56. <greek>ina</greek> <greek>idh</greek> <greek>thn</greek>
<greek>hmeran</greek>) of his "being but sorrowful," so he speaks, "I forgave
him his sins." But we do not even this: wherefore we especially provoke God to
wrath. (For he, who by little things even is made propitious, when He meets not
with so much as these, is of course indignant and exacts of us the last
penalty; for this comes of exceeding contempt.) Who is there, for instance, that hath
ever become melancholy for his sins? Who hath bemoaned himself? Who hath beaten
his breast? Who hath taken anxious thought? Not one, to my thinking. But days
without number do men weep for dead servants; for the loss of money: while as
to the soul which we are ruining day by day, we give it not a thought. How
then wilt thou be able to render God propitious, when thou knowest not even that
thou hast sinned?
"Yea," saith some one, "I have sinned." "Yea," is thy word to me with the
tongue: say it to me with thy mind, and with the word mourn heavily, that thou
mayest have continual cheerfulness. Since, if we did grieve for our sins, if we
mourned heavily over our offences, nothing else could give us sorrow, this one
pang would expel all kinds of dejection. Here then is another thing also which
we should gain by our thorough confession; namely, the not being overwhelmed
(<greek>baptizesqai</greek>)with the pains of the present life, nor puffed up
with its splendors. And in this way, again, we should more entirely propitiate
God; just as by our present conduct we provoke Him to anger. For tell me, if thou
hast a servant, and he, after suffering much evil at the hands of his
fellow-servants, takes no account of any one of the rest, but is only anxious not to
provoke his master; is he not able by this alone to do away thine anger? But
what, if his offenses against thee are no manner of care to him, while on those
against his fellow-servants he is full of thought; wilt thou not lay on him the
heavier punishment? So also God doeth: when we neglect His wrath, He brings it
upon us more heavily; but when we regard it, more gently. Yea, rather, He lays
it on us no more at all. He wills that we should exact vengeance of ourselves
for our offences, and thenceforth He doth not exact it Himself. For this is why
He at all threatens punishment; that by fear He may destroy contempt; and when
the threat alone is sufficient to cause fear in us, He doth not suffer us to
undergo the actual trial. See, for instance, what He saith unto Jeremiah, (Jer.
vii. 17, 18. Sept. transposing the first and second clauses.) "Seest thou not
what they do? Their fathers light a fire, their children gather sticks together,
their women knead dough." It is to be feared lest the same kind of thing be said
also concerning us. "Seest thou not what they do? No one seeketh the things of
Christ, but all their own. Their children run into uncleanness, their fathers
into covetousness and rapine, their wives so far from keeping back their
husbands from the pomps and vanities of life, do rather sharpen their appetites for
them." Just take your stand in the market place; question the comers and goers,
and not one wilt thou see hastening upon a spiritual errand, but all running
after carnal things. How long ere we awake from our surfeiting?. How long are we
to keep sinking down into deep slumber? Have we not had our fill of evils?
[9.] And yet one might think that even without words experience itself is
sufficient to teach you the nothingness of things present. and their utter
meanness. At all events, there have been men, who, exercising mere heathen wisdom
and knowing nothing of the future, because they had proved the great
worthlessness of present things, have left them on this account alone. What pardon then
canst thou expect to obtain, grovelling on the ground and not despising the
little things and transient for the sake of the great and everlasting: who also
hearest God Himself declaring and revealing these things unto thee, and hast such
promises from Him? For that things here have no sufficient power to detain a
man, those have shewn who even without any promise of things greater have kept
away from them. For what wealth did they expect that they came to poverty? There
was none. But it was from their knowing full well that such poverty is better
than wealth. What sort of life did they hope for that they forsook luxury, and
gave themselves up unto severe discipline? Not any. But they had become aware of
the very nature of things; and perceived that this of the two is more suitable,
both for the strict training of the soul, and for the health of the body.
These things then duly estimating, and revolving with ourselves
continually the future blessings, let us withdraw from this present world that we may
obtain that other which is to come; through the favor and loving kindness of our
Lord Jesus Christ, with Whom to the Father and the Holy Ghost &c., &c.
HOMILY IX.
- COR. iii., 12--15.
"If any man build upon this foundation gold, silver, costly stones, wood, hay,
stubble; each man's work shall be made manifest: for the day shall declare it,
because it is revealed in fire; and the fire shall prove each man's work of
what sort it is. If any man's work abide which he built thereon, he shall receive
a reward. If any man's work shall be burned, he shall suffer loss: but he
himself shall be saved; yet so as through fire."
THIS is no small subject of enquiry which we propose, but rather about
things which are of the first necessity and which all men enquire about; namely,
whether hell fire have any end. For that it hath no end Christ indeed declared
when he said, "Their fire shall not be quenched, and their worm shall not die.
[Mark viii. 44, 46, 48.](3)
Well: I know that a Chill comes over you (<greek>narkate</greek>) on
hearing these things; but what am I to do? For this is God's own command,
continually to sound these things in your ears, where He says, "Charge this people;
(Fors. Exod. xix. 10. 20. <greek>diamarturai</greek>, Sept. here
<greek>diasteilai</greek>,) and ordained as we have been unto the ministry of the word, we must
give pain to our hearers, not willingly but on compulsion. Nay rather, if you
will, we shall avoid giving you pain. For saith He, (Rom. xiii. 3, in substance.)
"if thou do that which is good, fear not:" so that it is possible for you to
hear me not only without ill-will, but even with pleasure.
As I said then; that it hath no end, Christ has declared. Paul also saith,
in pointing out the eternity of the punishment, that the sinners "shall pay
the penalty of destruction, and that for ever" (2, Thes. i. 9.) And again, (1
Cor. vi. 9.) "Be not deceived; neither fornicators. nor adulterers, nor
effeminate, shall inherit the the kingdom of God." And also unto the Hebrews he saith,
(Heb. xii. 14.) "Follow peace with all men, and the sanctification without which
no man shall see the Lord." And Christ also, to those who said, "In thy Name we
have done many wonderful works," saith, "Depart from Me, I know you not, ye
workers of iniquity" (St. Matt. vii. 22.) And the virgins too who were shut out,
entered in no more. And also about those who gave Him no food, He saith, (St.
Matt. xxv. 46.) "They shall go away into everlasting punishment."
[2.] And say not unto me, "where is the rule of justice preserved entire,
if the punishment hath no end?" Rather, when God doeth any thing, obey His
decisions and submit not what is said to human reasonings. But moreover, how can it
be any thing else than just for one who hath experienced innumerable blessings
from the beginning, and then committed deeds worthy of punishment, and neither
by threat nor benefit improved at all, to suffer punishment? For if thou
enquire what is absolute justice; it was meet that we should have perished
immediately from the beginning, according to the definition of strict justice. Rather
not even then according to the rule of justice only; for the result would have
had in it kindness too, if we had suffered this also. For when any one insults
him that hath done him no wrong, according to the rule of justice he suffers
punishment: but when it is his benefactor, who, bound by no previous favor,
bestowed innumerable kindnesses, who alone is the Author of his being, who is God, who
breathed his soul into him, who gave ten thousand gifts of grace, whose will
is to take him up into heaven;--when, I say, such an one, after so great
blessings, is met by insult, daily insult, in the conduct of the other party; how can
that other be thought worthy of pardon? Dost thou not see how He punished Adam
for one single sin?
"Yes," you will say; "but He had given him Paradise and caused him to
enjoy much favor." Nay, surely it is not all as one, for a man to sin in the
enjoyment of security and ease, and in a state of great affliction. In fact, this is
the dreadful circumstance that thy sins are the sins of one not in any Paradise
but amid the innumerable evils of this life; that thou art not sobered even by
affliction, as though one in prison should still practise his crime. However,
unto thee He hath promised things yet greater than Paradise. But neither hath
He given them now, least He should unnerve thee in the season of conflicts; nor
hath He been silent about them, lest He should quite cast thee down with thy
labors. As for Adam, he committed but one sin and brought on himself certain
death; whereas we commit ten thousand transgressions daily. Now if he by that one
act brought on himself so great an evil and introduced death; what shall not we
suffer who continually live in sins, and instead of Paradise, have the
expectation of heaven?
The argument is irksome and pains the hearer: were it only by my own
feelings, I know this. For indeed my heart is troubled and throbs; and the more I
see the account of hell confirmed, the more do I tremble and shrink through fear.
But it is necessary to say these things lest we fall into hell. What thou
didst receive was not paradise, nor trees and plants, but heaven and the good
things in the heavens. Now if he that had received less was comdemned, and no
consideration exempted him, much more shall we who have sinned more abundantly, and
have been called unto greater things, endure the woes without remedy.
Consider, for example, how long a time, but for one single sin, our race
abides in death. Five thousand years(1) and more have passed, and death hath not
yet been done away, on account of one single sin. And we cannot even say that
Adam had heard prophets, that he had seen others punished for sins, and it was
meet that he should have been terrified thereby and corrected, were it only by
the example. For he was at that time first, and alone; but nevertheless he was
punished. But thou canst not have anything of this sort to advance, who after
so many examples art become worse; to whom so excellent a Spirit hath been
vouch-safed, and yet thou drawest upon thyself not one sin, nor two, nor three, but
sins without number! For do not, because the sin is committed in a small
moment, calculate that therefore the punishment also must be a matter of a moment.
Seest thou not those men, who for a single theft or a single act of adultery,
committed in a small moment of time, oftentimes have spent their whole life in
prisons, and in mines, struggling with continual hunger and every kind of death?
And there was no one to set them at liberty, or to say, "The offence took place
in a small moment of time; the punishment too should have its time equivalent
to that of the sin."
[3.] But, "They are men," some one will say, "who do these things; as for
God, He is loving unto men." Now, first of all, not even men do these things in
cruelty, but in humanity. And God Himself, as He is loving unto men," in the
same character doth He punish sins. (Sirac. xvi. 12.) "For as His mercy is
great, so also is His reproof." When therefore thou sayest unto me, "God is loving
unto men," then thou tellest me of so much the greater reason for punishing:
namely, our sinning against such a Being. Hence also Paul said, (Heb. x. 31.) "It
is a fearful thing to fall into the hands of the living God." Endure I beseech
you, the fiery force of the words, for perhaps--perhaps you will have some
consolation from hence! Who among men can punish as God has punished? when He
caused a deluge and entire destruction of a race so numerous; and again, when, a
little while after, He rained fire from above, and utterly destroyed them all?
What punishment from men can be like that? Seest thou not that the punishment even
in this world is almost eternal? Four thousand years have passed away, and the
punishment of the Sodomites abideth at its height. For as His mercy is great,
so also is His punishment.
Again: if He had imposed any burdensome or impossible things, one might
perhaps have been able to urge difficulty of the laws: but if they be extremely
easy, what can we say for our not regarding even these? Suppose thou art unable
to fast or to practice virginity; although thou art able if thou wilt, and they
who have been able are a condemnation to us. But, however, God hath not used
this strictness towards us; neither hath He enjoined these things nor laid them
down as laws, but left the choice to be at the discretion of the hearers.
Nevertheless, thou art able to be chaste in marriage; and thou art able to abstain
from drunkenness. Art thou unable to empty thyself of all thy goods? Nay surely
thou art able; and they who have done so prove it. But nevertheless He hath not
enjoined this, but hath commanded not to be rapacious, and of our means to
assist those who are in want. But if a man say, I cannot even be content with a
wife only, he deceiveth himself and reasoneth falsely; and they condemn him who
without a wife lives in chastity. But how, tell me, canst thou help using
abusive words? canst thou not help cursing? Why, the doing these things is irksome,
not the refraining from them. What excuse then have we for not observing
precepts so easy and light? We cannot name any at all. That the punishment then is
eternal is plain from all that hath been said.
[4.] But since Paul's saying appears to some to tell the other way, come
let us bring it forward also and search it out thoroughly. For having said, "If
any man's work abide which he hath built thereon, he shall receive a reward;
and if any man's work shall be burned, he shall suffer loss," he adds, "but
himself shall be saved, yet so as through fire." What shall we say then to this? Let
us consider first what is "the Foundation," and what "the gold," and what "the
precious stones," and what "the hay," and what the "stubble."
"The Foundation," then, he hath himself plainly signified to be Christ,
saying, "For other foundation can no man lay than that which is laid, which," he
saith "is Jesus Christ."
Next, the building seems to me to be actions. Although some maintain that
this also is spoken concerning teachers and disciples and concerning corrupt
heresies: but the reasoning doth not admit it. For if this be it, in what sense,
while "the work is destroyed," is the "builder" to be "saved," though it be
"through fire?" Of right, the author ought rather of the two to perish; but now it
will be found that the severer penalty is assigned to him who hath been built
into the work. For if the teacher was the cause of the wickedness, he is worthy
to suffer severer punishment: how then shall he be "saved?" If, on the
contrary, he was not the cause but the disciples became such through their own
perverseness, he is no whit deserving of punishment, no, nor yet of sustaining loss:
he, I say, who builded so well. In what sense then doth he say, "he shall suffer
loss?"
From this it is plain that the discourse is about actions. For since he
means next in course to put out his strength against the man who had committed
fornication, he begins high up and long beforehand to lay down the preliminaries.
For he knew how while discussing one subject, in the very discourse about that
thing to prepare the grounds of another to which he intends to pass on. For so
in his rebuke for not awaiting one another at their meals, he laid the grounds
of his discourse concerning the mysteries. And also because now he is
hastening on towards the fornicator, while speaking about the "Foundation," he adds,
"Know ye not that ye are the Temple of God? and that the Spirit of God dwelleth
in you? If any man destroy (<greek>Fqeirh</greek>, rec. version, "defile.") the
Temple of God, him will God destroy." Now these things, he said, as beginning
now to agitate with fears the soul of him that had been unchaste.
[5.] Ver. 12. "If any man build upon this foundation, gold, silver, costly
stones, wood, hay, stubble." For after the faith there is need of edification:
and therefore he saith elsewhere, "Edify one another with these words."
(perhaps 1 Thess. v. 11; iv. 5.) For both the artificer and the learner contribute to
the edifying. Wherefore he saith, "But let every man take heed how he buildeth
thereon." (1 Cor. iii. 10.) But if faith had been the subject of these
sayings, the thing affirmed is not reasonable. For in the faith all ought to be equal,
since "them is but one faith;" (Eph. iv. 5.) but in goodness of life it is not
possible that all should be the same. Because the faith is not m one case
less, in another more excellent, but the same in all those who truly believe. But
in life there is room for some to be more diligent, others more slothful; some
stricter, and others more ordinary; that some should have done well in greater
things, others in less; that the errors of some should have been more grievous,
of others less notable. On this account he saith, "Gold, silver, costly stones,
wood, hay, stubble,--every man's work shall be made manifest: "--his conduct;
that is what he speaks of here:--"If any man's work abide which he built
thereupon, he shall receive a reward; if any man's work shall be burned, he shall
suffer loss." Whereas, if the saying related to disciples and teachers, he ought
not to "suffer loss" for disciples refusing to hear. And therefore he saith,
"Every man shall receive his own reward according to his own labor" not according
to the result, but according to "the labor." For what if the hearers gave no
heed? Wherefore this passage also proves that the saying is about actions.
Now his meaning is this: If any man have an ill life with a right faith,
his faith shall not shelter him from punishment, his work being burnt up. The
phrase, "shall be burned up," means, "shall not endure the violence of the fire."
But just as if a man having golden armor on were to pass through a river of
fire, he comes from crossing it all the brighter; but if he were to pass through
it with hay, so far from profiling, he destroys himself besides; so also is the
case in regard of men's works. For he doth not say this as if he were
discoursing of material things being burnt up, but with a view of making their fear
more intense, and of shewing how naked of all defence he is who abides in
wickedness. Wherefore he said, "He shall suffer loss:" lo, here is one punishment: "but
he himself shall be saved, but so as by fire;" lo, again, here is a second.
And his meaning is, "He himself shall not perish in the same way as his works,
passing into nought, but he shall abide in the tire.(1)
[6.] "He calleth it, however, "Salvation," you will say; why, that is the
cause of his adding, "so as by fire:" since we also used to say, "It is
preserved in the fire," when we speak of those substances which do not immediately
burn up and become ashes. For do not at sound of the word fire imagine that those
who are burning pass into annihilation. And though he call such punishment
Salvation, be not astonished. For his custom is in things which have an ill sound
to use fair expressions, and in good things the contrary. For example, the word
"Captivity" seems to be the name of an evil thing, but Paul has applied it in a
good sense, when he says, "Bringing into captivity every thought to the
obedience of Christ."(2 Cor. x. 5.) And again, to an evil thing he hath applied a
good word, saying, "Sin reigned," (Rom. v. 21.) here surely the term "reigning" is
rather of auspicious sound. And so here in saying, "he shall be saved," he
hath but darkly hinted at the intensity of the penalty: as if he had said, "But
himself shall remain forever in punishment." He then makes an inference, saying,
[7.] Ver. 16. "Know ye not that ye are the Temple of God?" For since he
had discoursed in the section before, concerning those who were dividing the
Church, he thenceforward attacks him also who had been guilty of uncleanness; not
indeed as yet in plain terms but in a general way; hinting at his corrupt mode
of life and enhancing the sin, by the Gift which had been already given to him.
Then also he puts all the rest to shame, arguing from these very blessings
which they had already: for this is what he is ever doing, either from the future
or from the past, whether grievous or encouraging. First, from things future;
"For the day shall declare it, because it is revealed by fire." Again, from
things already come to pass; "Know ye not that ye are the Temple of God, and the
Spirit of God dwelleth in you?"
Ver. 17. "If any man destroy the Temple of God, him will God destroy."
Dost thou mark the sweeping vehemence of his words? However, so long as the person
is unknown, what is spoken is not so invidious, all dividing among themselves
the fear of rebuke.
"Him will God destroy," that is, will cause him to perish. And this is not
the word of one denouncing a curse, but of one that prophesieth.
"For the Temple of God is holy:" but he that hath committed fornication is
profane.
Then, in order that he might not seem to spend his earnestness upon that
one, in saying, "for the Temple of God is holy," he addeth, "which ye are."
[8.] Ver. 18. "Let no man deceive himself." This also is in reference to
that person, as thinking himself to be somewhat and flattering himself on
wisdom. But that he might not seem to press on him at great length in a mere
digression; he first throws him into a kind of agony and delivers him over unto fear,
and then brings back his discourse to the common fault, saying, "If any man
among you seemeth to be wise in this world, let him become a fool, that he may
become (<greek>genhtai</greek>. rec. vers. "be.") wise." And this(1) he doth
afterwards with great boldness of speech, as having sufficiently beaten them downs,
and shaken with that fear the mind not of that unclean person only, but of all
the hearers also: so accurately does he measure the reach of what he has to
say. For what if a man be rich, what if he be noble; he is viler than all the
vile, when made captive by sin. For as if a man were a king and enslaved to
barbarians, he is of all men most Wretched, so also is it in regard to sin: since sin
is a barbarian, and the soul which hath been once taken captive she knoweth not
how to spare, but plays the tyrant to the ruin of all those who admit her.
[9.] For nothing is so inconsiderate as sin: nothing so senseless, so
utterly foolish and outrageous. All is overturned and confounded and destroyed by
it, wheresoever it may alight. Unsightly to behold, disgusting and grievous. And
should a painter draw her picture(3), he would not, methinks, err in
fashioning her after this sort. A woman with the form of a beast, savage, breathing
flames, hideous, black; such as the heathen poets depict their Scyllas. For with
ten thousand hands she lays hold of our thoughts, and comes on unexpected, and
tears everything in pieces, like those dogs that bite slily.
But rather, what need of the painter's art, when we should rather bring
forward those who are made after sin's likeness?
Whom then will ye that we should portray first? The covetous and
rapacious? And what more shameless than those eyes? What more immodest, more like a
greedy dog? For no dog keeps his ground with such shameless impudence as he when he
is grasping at all men's goods. What more polluted than those hands? What more
audacious than that mouth, swallowing all down and not satisfied? Nay, look
not on the countenance and the eyes as being a a man's. For such looks belong not
to the eyes of men. He seeth not men as men; he seeth not the heaven as
heaven. He does not even lift up his head unto the Lord; but all is money in his
account. The eyes of men are wont to look upon poor persons in affliction, and to
be softened; but these of the rapacious man, at sight of the poor, glare like
wild beasts'. The eyes of men do not behold other men's goods as if they were
their own, but rather their own as others; and they covet not the things given to
others, but rather exhaust upon others their own means: but these are not
content unless they take all men's property. For it is not a man's eye which they
have, but a wild beast's. The eyes of men endure not to see their own body
stripped of clothing, (for it is their own, though in person it belong to others,)
but these, unless they strip every one and lodge all men's property in their own
home, are never cloyed; yea rather they never have enough. Insomuch that one
might say that their hands are not wild beasts' only, but even far more savage
and cruel than these. For bears and wolves when they are satiated leave off their
kind of eating: but these know not any satiety. And yet for this cause God
made us hands, to assist others, not to plot against them. And if we were to use
them for that purpose, better had they been cut off and we left without them.
But thou, if a wild beast rend a sheep, art grieved; but when doing the same unto
one of thine own flesh and blood, thinkest thou that thy deed is nothing
atrocious? How then canst thou be a man? Seest thou not that we call a thing humane,
when it is full of mercy and loving-kindness? But when a man doth any thing
cruel or savage, inhuman is the title we give to such a one. You see then that
the stamp of man as we portray him is his showing mercy; of a beast the contrary;
according to constant saying, "Why, is a man a wild beast, or a dog?" (vid. 2
Kings viii. 13.) For men relieve poverty; they do not aggravate it. Again these
men's mouths are the mouths of wild beasts; yea rather these are the fiercer
of the two. For the words also, which they utter, emit poison, more than the
wild beasts' teeth, working slaughter. And if one were to go through all
particulars, one should then see clearly how inhumanity turns those who practise it from
men into beasts.
[10.] But were he to search out the mind also of that sort of people, he
would no longer call them beasts only, but demons. For first, they are full of
great cruelty and of hatred against their "fellow-servant: (St. Mat. xviii. 33.)
and neither is love of the kingdom there, nor fear of hell; no reverence for
men, no pity, no Sympathy: but shamelessness and audacity, and contempt of all
things to come. And unto them the words of God concerning punishment seem to be
a fable, and His threats mirth. For such is the mind of the covetous man. Since
then within they are demons, and without, wild beasts; yea, worse than wild
beasts; where are we to place such as they are? For that they are worse even than
wild beasts, is plain from this. The beasts are such as they are by nature:
but these, endowed by nature with gentleness, forcibly strive against nature to
train themselves to that which is savage. The demons too have the plotters among
men to help them, to such an extent that if they had no such aid, the greater
part of their wiles against us would be done away: but these, when such as they
have spitefully entreated are vying with them, still try to be more spiteful
then they. Again, the devil wages war with man, not with the demons of his own
kind: but he of whom we speak is urgent in all ways to do harm to his own
kindred and family, and doth not even reverence nature.
I know that many hate us because of these words; but I feel no hatred
towards them; rather I pity and bewail those who are so disposed. Even should they
choose to strike, I would gladly endure it, if they would but abstain from this
their savage mind. For not I alone, but the prophet also with me, banisheth
all such from the family of men saying, (Ps. xlix. 20. Sept. <greek>tois</greek>
<greek>anohtois</greek>) "Man being in honor hath no understanding, but is like
unto the senseless beasts."
Let us then become men at last, and let us look up unto heaven; and that
which is according to His image, (Colos. iii. 10.) let us receive and recover:
that we may obtain also the blessings to come through the grace and
loving-kindness of our Lord Jesus Christ, with Whom to the Father and the Holy Spirit be
glory, power, honor, now and always, and unto everlasting ages. Amen.
HOMILY X.
- COR. iii. 18, 19.
"Let no man deceive himself. If any man (<greek>en</greek> <greek>umin</greek>
omitted.) thinketh that he is wise in this world, let him become a fool, that
he may become wise. For the wisdom of this world is foolishness with God."
AS I said before, having launched out before the proper time into
accusation of the fornicator, and having half opened it obscurely in a few words, and
made the man's conscience to quail, he hastens again to the battle with heathen
wisdom, and to his accusations of those who were puffed up there-with, and who
were dividing the Church: in order that having added what remained and
completed the whole topic with accuracy, he might thenceforth suffer his tongue to be
carried away with vehement impulse against the unclean person, having had but a
preliminary skirmishing with him in what he had said before. For this, "Let no
man deceive himself," is the expression of one aiming chiefly at him and
quelling him beforehand by fear: and the saying about the "stubble," suits best with
one hinting at him. And so does the phrase, "Know ye not that ye are the
Temple of God, and the Spirit of God dwelleth in you?" For these two things are most
apt to withdraw us from sin; when we have in mind the punishment appointed
for the sin; and when we reckon up the amount of our true dignity. By bringing
forward then "the hay" and "the stubble, "he terrifies; but by speaking of the
dignity of that noble birth which was theirs, he puts them to shame; by the
former striving to amend the more insensible kind, by the latter the more
considerate.
[2.] "Let no man deceive himself; if any man thinketh that he is wise in
this world, let him become a fool."
As he bids one become, as it were, dead unto the world;--and this deadness
harms not at all, but rather profits, being made a cause of life:--so also he
bids him become foolish unto this world, introducing to us hereby the true
wisdom. Now he becomes a fool unto the world, who slights the wisdom from without,
and is persuaded that it contributes nothing towards his comprehension of the
faith. As then that poverty which is according to God is the cause of wealth,
and lowliness, of exaltation, and to despise glory is the cause of glory; so also
the becoming a fool maketh a man wiser than all. For all, with us, goes by
contraries.
Further: why said he not, "Let him put off wisdom," but, "Let him become a
fool?" That he might most exceedingly disparage the heathen instruction. For
it was not the same thing to say, "Lay aside thy wisdom," and, "become a fool."
And besides, he is also training people not to be ashamed at the want of
refinement among us; for he quite laughs to scorn all heathen things. And for the
same sort of reason he shrinks not from the names, trusting as he does to the
power of the things [which he speaks of].
Wherefore, as the Cross, though counted ignominious, became the author of
innumerable blessings, and the foundation and root of glory unspeakable; so
also that which was accounted to be foolishness became unto us the cause of
wisdom. For as he who hath learned anything ill, unless he put away the whole, and
make his soul level and clear, and so offer it to him who is to write on it, will
know no wholesome truth for certain; so also in regard of the wisdom from
without. Unless thou turn out the whole and sweep thy mind clear, and like one that
is ignorant yield up thyself unto the faith, thou wilt know accurately nothing
excellent. For so those also who see imperfectly if they will not shut their
eyes and commit themselves unto others, but will be trusting their own matters
to their own faulty eyesight, they will commit many more mistakes than those who
see not.
But how, you will say, are men to put off this wisdom? By not acting on
its precepts.
[3.] Then, seeing that he bade men so urgently withdraw themselves from
it, he adds the cause, saying, "For the wisdom of this world is foolishness with
God." For not only it contributes nothing, but it even hinders. We must then
withdraw ourselves from it, as doing harm. Dost thou mark with what a high hand
he carries off the spoils of victory, having proved that so far from profiting
us at all, it is even an opponent?
And he is not content with his own arguments, but he has also adduced
testimony again, saying, "For it is written, (Job v. 13.) He taketh the wise in
their own craftiness." By "craftiness," i. e. by their own arms getting the better
of them. For seeing that they made use of their wisdom to the doing away of
all need of God, by it and no other thing He refuted them, shewing that they were
specially in need of God. How and by what method? Because having by it become
fools, by it, as was meet, they were taken. For they who supposed that they
needed not God, were reduced to so great a strait as to appear inferior to
fishermen and unlettered persons; and from that time forth to be unable to do without
them. Wherefore he saith, "In their own craftiness" He took them. For the
saying "I will destroy their wisdom," was spoken in regard to its introducing
nothing useful; but this, "who taketh the wise in their own craftiness, with a view
of shewing the power of God."
Next, he declares also the mode in which God took them, adding another
testimony:
Ver. 20. "For the Lord," saith he, "knoweth the reasonings of men (Ps.
xciv. 11. <greek>anqrwpwn</greek> Sept.) that they are vain." Now when the Wisdom
which is boundless pronounces this edict concerning them, and declares them to
be such, what other proof dost thou seek of their extreme folly? Formen's
judgments, it is true, in many instances fail; but the decree of God is
unexceptionable and uncorrupt in every case.
[4.] Thus having set up so splendid a trophy of the judgment from on high,
he employs in what follows a certain vehemence of style, turning it against
those who were under his ministry, (<greek>arkomenous</greek>) and speaking thus:
Ver. 21. "Wherefore let no man glory in men; for all things are yours." He
comes again to the former topic, pointing out that not even for their
spiritual things ought they to be highminded, as having nothing of themselves. "Since
then the wisdom from without is hurtful, and the spiritual gifts were not given
by you, what hast thou wherein to boast?" And in regard to the wisdom from
without, "Let no man deceive himself," saith he, because they were conceited about
a thing which in truth did more harm than good. But here, inasmuch as the thing
spoken of was really advantageous, "Let no man glory." And he orders his
speech more gently: "for all things are yours."
Ver. 22. "Whether Paul, or Apollos, or Cephas, or the world, or life, or
death, or things present, or things to come, all are yours; and ye are Christ's
and Christ is God's." For because he had handled them sharply, he refreshes
them again. And as above he had said, (1. Cor. iii. 9.) "We are fellow-workers
with God;" and by many other expressions had soothed them: so here too he saith,
"All things are yours; taking down the pride of the teachers, and signifying
that so far from bestowing any favor on them, they themselves ought to be grateful
to the others. Since for their sake they were made such as they were, yea,
moreover, had received grace. But seeing that these also were sure to boast, on
this account he cuts out beforehand this disease too, saying, "As God gave to
every man," (Supr. vi. 5. 6.) and, "God gave the increase:" to the end that
neither the one party might be puffed up as bestowers of good; nor the others, on
their hearing a second time, "All things are yours," be again elated. "For,
indeed, though it were for your sakes, yet the whole was God's doing." And I wish you
to observe how he hath kept on throughout, making suppositions in his own name
and that of Peter.
But what is, "or death?" That even though they die, for your sakes they
die, encountering dangers for your salvation. Dost thou mark how he again takes
down the high spirit of the disciples, and raises the spirit of the teachers? In
fact, he talks with them as with children of high birth, who have preceptors,
and who are to be heirs of all.
We may say also, in another sense, that both the death of Adam was for our
sakes, that we might be corrected; and the death of Christ, that we might be
saved.
"And ye are Christ's; and Christ is God's." In one sense "we are Christ's,
and in another sense "Christ is God's," and in a third sense is "the world
ours." For we indeed are Christ's, as his work: "Christ is God's, as a genuine
Offspring, not as a work: in which sense neither is the world ours. So that though
the saying is the same, yet the meaning is different. For "the world is ours,"
as being a thing made for our sakes: but "Christ is God's," as having Him the
Author of his being, in that He is Father. And "we are Christ's," as having
been formed by Him. Now "if they are yours," saith he, "why have ye done what is
just contrary to this, in calling yourselves after their name, and not after
Christ, and God?"
[5.] C. iv. ver. 1. "Let a man so account of us, as of ministers of
Christ, and stewards of the mysteries of God." After he had cast down their spirit,
mark how again he refreshes it, saying, "as ministers of Christ." Do not thou
then, letting go the Master, receive a name from the servants and ministers.
"Stewards;" saith he, indicating that we ought not to give these things unto all,
but unto whom it is due, and to whom it is fitting we should minister.
Ver. 2. "Moreover it is required in stewards, that a man be found
faithful:" that is, that he do not appropriate to himself his master's goods, that he
do not as a master lay claim for himself but administer as a steward. For a
steward's part is to administer well the things committed to his charge: not to say
that his master's things are his own; but, on the contrary, that his own are
his master's. Let every one think on these things, both he that hath power in
speech and he that possesses wealth, namely, that he hath been entrusted with a
master's goods and that they are not his own; let him not keep them with
himself, nor set them down to his own account; but let him impute them unto God who
gave them all. Wouldest thou see faithful stewards? Hear what saith Peter, "Why
look ye so earnestly on us, as though by our own power or godliness we had made
this man to walk?" (Acts iii. 12.) Unto(1) Cornelius also he saith, "We also
are men of like passions with you:" and unto Christ Himself, "Lo, we have left
all, and followed Thee." (St. Matt. xix. 27.) And Paul, no less, when he had
said, "I labored more abundantly than they all," (I Cor. xv. 10.) added, "yet not
I, but the grace of God which was with me." Elsewhere also, setting himself
strongly against the same persons, he said, "For what hast thou which thou didst
not receive?" (C. iv. 7.) "For thou hast nothing of thine own, neither wealth,
nor speech, nor life itself; for this also is surely the Lord's. Wherefore, when
necessity calls, do thou lay down this also. But if thou dostest on life, and
being ordered to lay it down refusest, thou art no longer a faithful steward."
"And how is it possible, when God calls, to resist?" Well, that is just
what I say too: and on this account do I chiefly admire the loving-kindness of
God, that the things which He is able, even against thy will, to take from thee,
these He willeth not to be paid in (<greek>eisenekqhnai</greek>) by thee
unwillingly, that thou mayest have a reward besides. For instance, He can take away
life without thy consent; but His will is to do so with thy consent, that thou
mayest say with Paul, "I die daily," (1 Cor. xv. 31.) He can take away thy glory
without thy consent, and bring thee low: but He will have it from thee with
thine own goodwill, that thou mayest have a recompense. He can make thee poor,
though unwilling, but He will have thee willingly become such, that He may weave
crowns for thee. Seest thou God's mercy to man? Seest thou our own brutish
stupidity?
What if thou art come to great dignity, and hast at any time obtained some
office of Church government? Be not high-minded. Thou hast not acquired the
glory, but God hath put it on thee. As if it were another's, therefore, use it
sparingly; neither abusing it nor using it upon unsuitable things, nor puffed up,
nor appropriating it unto thyself; but esteem thyself to be poor and
inglorious. For never,--hadst thou been entrusted with a king's purple to keep,--never
would it have become thee to abuse the robe and spoil it, but with the more
exactness to keep it for the giver. Is utterance given thee? Be not puffed up; be
not arrogant; for the gracious gift is not thine. Be not grudging about thy
Master's good, but distribute them among thy fellow-servants; and neither be thou
elated with these things as if they were thine own, nor be sparing as to the
distribution of them. Again, if thou hast children, they are God's which thou
hast. If such be thy thought, thou wilt both be thankful for having them, and if
bereft thou wilt not take it hard. Such was Job when he said, (Job i. 21.) "The
Lord gave, the Lord hath taken away."
For we have all things from Christ. Both existence itself we have through
Him, and life, and breath, and light, and air, and earth. And if He were to
exclude us from any one of these, we are lost and undone. For (1 S. Pet. ii. xx.)
"we are sojourners and pilgrims" And all this about "mine," and "thine," is
bare words only, and doth not stand for things. For if thou do but say the house
is thine, it is a word without a reality: since the very air, earth, matter, are
the Creator's; and so art thou too thyself, who hast framed it; and all other
things also. But supposing the use to be thine, even this is uncertain, not on
account of death alone, but also before death, because of the instability of
things.
[6.] These things then continually picturing to ourselves, let us lead
strict lives; and we shall gain two of the greatest advantages. For first, we
shall be thankful both when we have and when we are bereaved; and we shall not be
enslaved to things which are fleeting by, and things not our own. For whether it
be wealth that He taketh, He hath taken but His own; or honor, or glory, or
the body, or the life itself: be it that He taketh away thy son, it is not thy
son that He hath taken, but His own servant. For thou formedst him not, but He
made him. Thou didst but minister to his appearing; the whole was God's own work.
Let us give thanks therefore that we have been counted worthy to be His
ministers in this matter. But what? Wouldest thou have had him for ever? This again
proves thee grudging, and ignorant that it was another's child which thou hadst,
and not thine own. As therefore those who part resignedly are but aware that
they have what was not theirs; so whoever gives way to grief is in fact counting
the King's property his own. For, if we are not our own, how can they be ours?
I say, we: for in two ways we are His, both on account of our creation, and
also on account of the faith. Wherefore David saith, "My substance is with Thee:"
(Ps. xxxix. 7. <greek>upostasis</greek> Sept. "hope" rec. vers. of. ver. 6;
Ps. cxxxix. 14.) and Paul too, "For in Him we live and move and have our being:"
(Acts xvii. 28.) and plying the argument about the faith, he says, (1 Cor. vi.
19, 20.) "Ye are not your own," and "ye were bought with a price." For all
things are God's. When then He calls and chooses to take, let us not, like grudging
servants, fly from the reckoning, nor purloin our Master's goods. Thy soul is
not thine; and how can thy wealth be thine? How is it then that thou spendest
on what is unnecessary the things which are not thine? Knowest thou not that for
this we are soon to be put on our trial, that is, if we have used them badly?
But seeing that they are not our's but our Master's, it were right to expend
them upon our fellow-servants. It is worth considering that the omission of this
was the charge brought against that rich man: and against those also who had
not given food to the Lord. (St. Luke xvi. 21. St. Matt. xxv. 42.)
[7.] Say not then, "I am but spending mine own, and of mine own I live
delicately." It is not of thine own, but of other men's. Other men's, I say,
because such is thine own choice: for God's will is that those things should be
thine, which have been entrusted unto thee on behalf of thy brethren. Now the
things which are not thine own become thine, if thou spend them upon others: but if
thou spend on thyself unsparingly, thine own things become no longer thine. For
since thou usest them cruelly, and sayest, "That my own things should be
altogether spent on my own enjoyment is fair:" therefore I call them not thine own.
For they are common to thee and thy fellow-servants; just as the sun is common,
the air, the earth, and all the rest. For as in the case of the body, each
ministration belongs both to the whole body and to each several member; but when
it is applied to one single member only, it destroys the proper function of that
very member: so also it comes to pass in the case of wealth. And that what I
say may be made plainer; the food of the body which is given in common to the
members, should it pass into one member, even to that it turns out alien in the
end. For when it cannot be digested nor afford nourishment, even to that part, I
say, it turns out alien. But if it be made common, both that part and all the
rest have it as their own.
So also in regard of wealth. If you enjoy it alone, you too have lost it:
for you will not reap its reward. But if you possess it jointly with the rest,
then will it be more your own, and then will you reap the benefit of it. Seest
thou not that the hands minister, and the mouth softens, and the stomach
receives? Doth the stomach say, Since I have received, I ought to keep it all? Then
do not thou I pray, in regard to riches, use this language. For it belongs to
the receiver to impart. As then it is a vice in the stomach to retain the food
and not to distribute it, (for it is injurious to the whole body,) so it is a
vice in those that are rich to keep to themselves what they have. For this
destroys both themselves and others. Again, the eye receives all the light: but it
doth not itself alone retain it, but enlightens the entire body. For it is not its
nature to keep it to itself, so long as it is an eye. Again, the nostrils are
sensible of perfume; but they do not keep it all to themselves, but transmit it
to the brain, and affect the stomach with a sweet savor, and by their means
refresh the entire man. The feet alone walk; but they move not away themselves
only, but transfer also the whole body. In like manner do thou, whatsoever thou
hast been entrusted withal, keep it not to thyself alone, since thou art doing
harm to the whole and to thyself more than all.
And not in the case of the limbs only may one see this occuring: for the
smith also, if he chose to impart of his craft to no one, ruins both himself and
all other crafts. Likewise the cordwainer, the husbandman, the baker, and
everyone of those who pursue any necessary calling; if he chose not to communicate
to anyone of the results of his art, will ruin not the others only but himself
also with them.
And why do I say, "the rich?" For the poor too, if they followed after the
wickedness of you who are covetous and rich, would injure you very greatly and
soon make you poor; yea rather, they would quite destroy you, were they in
your want unwilling to impart of their own: the tiller of the ground, (for
instance,) of the labor of his hands; the sailor, of the gain from his voyages; the
soldier, of his distinction won in the wars.
Wherefore if nothing else can, yet let this at least put you to shame, and
do you imitate their benevolence. Dost thou impart none of thy wealth unto
any? Then shouldest thou not receive any thing from another: in which case, the
world will be turned upside down. For in every thing to give and receive is the
principle of numerous blessings: in seeds, in scholars, in arts. For if any one
desire tO keep his art to himself, he subverts both himself and the whole
course of things. And the husbandman, if he bury and keep the seeds in his house,
will bring about a grievous famine. So also the rich man, if he act thus in
regard of his wealth, will destroy himself before the poor, heaping up the fire of
hell more grievous upon his own head.
[8.] Therefore as teachers, however many scholars they have, impart some
of their lore unto each; so let thy possession be, many to whom thou hast done
good. And let all say, "such an one he freed from poverty, such an one from
dangers. Such an one would have perished, had he not, next to the grace of God,
enjoyed thy patronage. This man's disease thou didst cure, another thou didst rid
of false accusation, another being a stranger you took in, another being naked
you clothed." Wealth inexhaustible and many treasures are not so good as such
sayings. They draw all men's gaze more powerfully than your golden vestments,
and horses, and slaves. For these make a man appear even odious:
(<greek>forticon</greek>, a conj. of Saville's for <greek>fortica</greek>) they cause him to be
hated as a common foe; but the former proclaim him as a common father and
benefactor. And, what is greatest of all, Favor from God waits on thee in every
part of thy proceedings. What I mean is, let one man say, He helped to portion out
my daughter: another, And he afforded my son the means of taking his station
among men: (<greek>eis</greek> <greek>andras</greek> <greek>emfanhnai</greek>)
another, He made my calamity to cease: another, He delivered me from dangers.
Better than golden crowns are words such as these, that a man should have in his
city innumerable persons to proclaim his beneficence. Voices such as these are
pleasanter far, and sweeter than the voices of the heralds marching before the
archons; to be called saviour, benefactor, defender, (the very names of God;)
and not, covetous, proud, insatiate, and mean. Let us not, I beseech you, let us
not have a fancy for any of these titles, but the contrary. For if these,
spoken on earth, make one so splendid and illustrious; when they are written in
heaven, and God proclaims them on the day that shall come, think what renown, what
splendor thou shalt enjoy! Which may it be the lot of us all to obtain,
through the grace and loving-kindness of our Lord Jesus Christ; with Whom unto the
Father and the Holy Spirit, be glory, power, honor, now and always and unto
everlasting ages. Amen.
HOMILY XI.
- COR. iv. 3, 4.
"But with me it is a very small thing that I should be judged of you, or of
man's judgment: yea I judge not mine own self. For I know nothing against myself,
yet am I not hereby justified: but He that judgeth me is the Lord."
TOGETHER with all other ills, I know not how, there hath come upon man's
nature the disease of restless prying and of unseasonable curiosity, which
Christ Himself chastised, saying, (S. Matt. vii, 1.) "Judge not, that ye be not
judged." A kind of thing, which hath no pleasure as all other sins have, but only
punishment and vengeance. For though we are ourselves full of ten thousand
evils, and bearing the "beams" in our own eyes, we become exact inquisitors of the
offences of our neighbor which are not at all bigger than "motes." And so this
matter at Corinth was failing out. Religious men and dear to God were ridiculed
and cast out for their want Of learning; while others, brimful of evils
innumerable, were classed highly because of their fluent speech. Then like persons
sitting in public to try causes, these were the sort of votes they kept rashly
passing: "such an one is worthy: such an one is better than such another; this man
is inferior to that; that, better than this." And, leaving off to mourn for
their own bad ways, they were become judges of others; and in this way again were
kindling grievous warfare.
Mark then, how wisely Paul corrects them, doing away with this disease.
For since he had said, "Moreover, it is required in stewards that a man be found
faithful," and it seemed as if he were giving them an opening to judge and pry
into each man's life, and this was aggravating the party feeling; lest such
should be the effect on them, he draws them away from that kind of petty
disputation, saying, "With me it is a very small thing that I should be judged of you;"
again in his own person carrying on the discourse.
[2.] But what means, "With me it is a very small thing that I should be
judged of you or of man's day?" (<greek>hmeras</greek>) "I judge myself
unworthy," saith he, "of being judged by you." And why say I, "by you?" I will add, "by
(<greek>cai</greek> <greek>to</greek> [<greek>tou</greek>]) any one else."
Howbeit, let no one condemn Paul of arrogance; though he saith that no man is
worthy to pass sentence concerning him. For first, he saith these things not for his
own sake, but wishing to rescue others from the odium which they had incurred
from the Corinthians. And in the next place, he limits not the matter to the
Corinthians merely, but himself also he deposes from this right of judging;
saying, that to decree such things was a matter beyond his decision. At least he
adds, "I judge not mine own self."
But besides what has been said, we must search out the ground upon which
these expressions were uttered. For he knew well in many cases how to speak with
high spirit: and that, not of pride or arrogance, but of a certain excellent
management [<greek>oiconomias</greek> <greek>arisths</greek>] seeing that in the
present case also he saith this, not as lifting up himself, but as taking down
other men's sails, and earnestly seeking to invest the saints with due honor.
For in proof that he was one of the very humble, hear what he saith, bringing
forward the testimony of his enemies on this point; "His bodily presence is
weak, and his speech of no account; (2 Cor. x. 10.) and again, "Last of all, as to
one born out of due time, He appeared unto me also." (2 Cor. xv. 8.) But
notwithstanding, see this lowly man, when the time called on him, to what a pitch he
raises the spirit of the disciples, not teaching pride but instilling a
wholesome courage. For with these same discoursing he saith, "And if the world shall
be judged by you, are ye unworthy to judge the smallest matters? 1 Cor. vi. 2.
For as the Christian ought to be far removed from arrogance, so also from
flattery and a mean spirit. Thus, if any one says, "I count money as nothing, but all
things here are to me as a shadow, and a dream, and child's play;" we are not
at all to charge him as arrogant; since in this way we shall have to accuse
Solomon himself of arrogance, for speaking austerely (<greek>filosofounta</greek>)
on these things, saying "Vanity of vanities (Eccles. i. 2.) all is vanity."
But God forbid that we should call the strict rule of life by the name of
arrogance. Wherefore to despise these things is not haughtiness, but greatness of
soul; albeit we see kings, and rulers, and potentates, making much of them. But
many a poor man, leading a strict life despises them; and we are not therefore to
call him arrogant but highminded: just as, on the other hand, if any be
extremely addicted to them, we do not call him lowly of heart and moderate, but weak,
and poor spirited, and ignoble. For so, should a son despise the pursuits which
become his father and affect slavish ways, we should not commend him as lowly
of heart, but as base and servile we should reproach him. What we should admire
in him would be, his despising those meaner things and making much account of
what came to him from his father. For this is arrogance, to think one's self
better than one's fellow-servants: but to pass the true sentence on things cometh
not of boasting, but of strictness of life.
On this account Paul also, not to exalt himself, but to humble others, and
to keep down those who were rising up out of their places, and to persuade
them to be modest, said, "With me it is a very small thing that I should be judged
of you or of man's day." Observe how he soothes the other party also. For
whosoever is told that he looks down on all alike, and deigns not to be judged of
any one, will not thenceforth any more feel pain, as though himself were the
only one excluded. For if he had said, "Of you," only, and so held his peace; this
were enough to gall them as if treated contemptuously. But now, by
introducing, "nor yet of man's day," he brought alleviation to the blow; giving them
partners in the contempt. Nay, he even softens this point again, saying, "not even
do I judge myself." Mark the expression, how entirely free from arrogance: in
that not even he himself, he saith, is capable of so great exactness.
[3.] Then because this saying also seemed to be that of one extolling
himself greatly, this too he corrects, saying, "Yet am I not hereby justified."
What then? Ought we not to judge ourselves and our own misdeeds? Yes surely: there
is great need to do this when we sin. But Paul said not this, "For I know
nothing," saith he, "against myself." What misdeed then was he to judge, when he
"knew nothing against himself?' Yet, saith he, "he was not justified." (1 Cor.
vi. 3.) We then who have our conscience filled with ten thousand wounds, and are
conscious to ourselves of nothing good, but quite the contrary; what can we say?
And how could it be, if he knew nothing against himself that he was not
justified? Because it was possible for him to have committed certain sins, not
however, knowing that they were sins. From this make thine estimate how great
shall be the strictness of the future judgment. It is not, you see, as considering
himself unblameable that he saith it is so unmeet for him to be judged by
them, but to stop the mouths of those who were doing so unreasonably. At least in
another place, even though men's sins be notorious, he permits not judgment unto
others, because the occasion required it. "For why dost thou judge thy
brother," saith he, (Rom. xiv. 10.) or, "thou, why dost thou set at nought thy
brother?" For thou wert not enjoined, O man, to judge others, but to test thine own
doings. Why then dost thou seize upon the office of the Lord? Judgment is His,
not thine.
To which effect, he adds, "Therefore judge nothing before the time, until
the Lord come; who will both bring to light the hidden things of darkness, and
make manifest the counsels of the hearts, and then shall each man have his
praise from God." What then? Is it not right that our teachers should do this? It
is right in the case of open and confessed sins, and that with fitting
opportunity, and even then with pain and inward vexation: not as these were acting at
that time, of vain-glory and arrogance. For neither in this instance is he
speaking of those sins which all own to be such, but about preferring one before
another, and making comparisons of modes of life. For these things He alone knows
how to judge with accuracy, who is to judge our secret doings, which of these be
worthy of greater and which of less punishment and honor. But we do all this
according to what meets our eye. "For if in mine own errors," saith he, "I know
nothing clearly, how can I be worthy to pass sentence on other men? And how
shall I who know not my own case with accuracy, be able to judge the state of
others?" Now if Paul felt this, much more we. For (to proceed) he spake these
things, not to exhibit himself as faultless, but to shew that even should there be
among them some such person, free from transgression, not even he would be
worthy to judge the lives of others: and that if he, though conscious to himself of
nothing declare himself guilty, much more they who have ten thousand sins to be
conscious of in themselves.
[4.] Having thus, you see, stopped the mouths of those who pass such
sentences, he travails next with strong feeling ready to break out and come upon the
unclean person. And like as when a storm is coming on, some clouds fraught
with darkness run before it; afterwards, when the crash of the thunders ariseth
and works the whole heavens into one black cloud, then all at once the rain
bursts down upon the earth: so also did it then happen. For though he might in deep
indignation have dealt with the fornicator, he doth not so; but with fearful
words he first represses the swelling pride of the man, since in truth, what had
occurred was a twofold sin, fornication, and, that which is worse than
fornication, the not grieving over the sin committed. For not so much does he bewail
the sin, as him that committed it and did not as yet repent. Thus, "I shall
bewail many of those," saith he, not simply "who have sinned heretofore," but he
adds, "who have not repented of the uncleanness and impurity which they wrought."
(2 Cor. xii. 21.) For he who after sinning hath practised repentance, is a
worthy object not of grief but of gratulations, having passed over into the choir
of the righteous. For, (Is. xliii, 26.) "declare thou thine iniquities first,
that thou mayest be justified:" but if after sinning one is void of shame, he is
not so much to be pitied for falling as for lying where he is fallen.
Now if it be a grievous fault not to repent after sins; to be puffed up
because of sins, what sort of punishment doth it deserve? For if he who is elate
for his good deeds is unclean, what pardon shall he meet with who has that
feeling with regard to his sins?
Since then the fornicator was of this sort, and had rendered his mind so
headstrong and unyielding through his sin, he of course begins by casting down
his pride. And he neither puts the charge first, for fear of making him
hardened, as singled out for accusation before the rest; nor yet later, lest he should
suppose that what related to him was but incidental. But, having first excited
great alarm in him by his plain speaking towards others, then, and not till
then, he goes on to him, in the course of his rebuke to others giving the man's
wilfulness a share beforehand.
For these same words, viz. "I know nothing against myself, yet am I not
hereby justified," and this, "He that judgeth me is the Lord, who will both bring
to light the hidden things of darkness, and make manifest the counsels of the
hearts," glance not lightly both upon that person, and upon such as act in
concert with him and despise the saints. "For what," saith he, "if any outwardly
appear to be virtuous and admirable persons? He, the Judge, is not a discerner of
externals only, but also brings to light all secrets."
[5.] On two accounts you see, or rather on three, correct judgement
belongs not to us. One, because, though we be conscious to ourselves of nothing,
still we need one to reprove our sins with strictness. Another, because the most
part of the things which are done escape us and are concealed. And for a third
besides these, because many things which are done by others seem to us indeed
fair, but they come not of a right mind. Why say ye then, that no sin hath been
committed by this or that person? That such an one is better than such another?
Seeing that this we are not to pronounce, not even concerning him who knows
nothing against himself. For He who discerns secrets, He it is who with certainty
judges. Behold, for example; I for my part know nothing against myself: yet
neither so am I justified, that is, I am not quit of accounts to be given, nor of
charges to be answered. For he doth not say this, "I rank not among the
righteous;" but "I am not pure from sin." For elsewhere he saith also, (Rom. vi. 7,
<greek>dedicaiwtai</greek>, <greek>toutestin</greek> <greek>aphllactai</greek>.)
"He that hath died is justified from sin," that is, "is liberated."
Again, many things we do, good indeed, but not of a right mind. For so we
commend many, not from a wish to render them conspicuous, but to wound others
by means of them. And the thing done indeed is right for the well-doer is
praised; but the intention is corrupt: for it is done of a satanical purpose. For
this one hath often done, not rejoicing with his brother, but desiring to wound
the other party.
Again, a man hath committed a great error; some other person, wishing to
supplant him, says that he hath done nothing, and comforts him forsooth in his
error by recurring to the common frailty of nature. But oftentimes he doth this
from no mind to sympathize, but to make him more easy in his faults.
Again, a man rebukes oftentimes not so much to reprove and admonish, as
publicly to (<greek>ecpompeusai</greek> <greek>cai</greek>
<greek>ectragwdhsai</greek>) display and exaggerate his neighbor' s sin. Our counsels however
themselves men do not know; but, (Rom. viii, 27.) "He that searcheth the hearts,"
knows them perfectly; and He will bring all such things into view at that time.
Wherefore he saith, "Who will bring to light the secret things of darkness and
make manifest the counsels of the hearts."
[6.] Seeing then that not even where we "know nothing against ourselves,"
can we be clean from accusations, and where we do any thing good, but do it not
of a right mind, we are liable to punishment; consider how vastly men are
deceived in their judgments. For all these matters are not be come at by men, but
by the unsleeping Eye alone: and though we may deceive men, our sophistry will
never avail against Him. Say not then, darkness is around me and walls; who
seeth me? For He who by Himself formed our hearts, Himself knoweth all things. (Ps.
cxxxix, 12.) "For darkness is no darkness with Him." And yet he who is
committing sin, well saith, "Darkness is around me and walls;" for were there not a
darkness in his mind he would not have cast out the fear of God and acted as he
pleased. For unless the ruling principle be first darkened, the entrance of sin
without fear is a thing impossible. Say not then, who seeth me? For there is
that (Heb. iv, 12.) "pierceth even unto soul and spirit, joints and marrow;" but
thou seest not thyself nor canst thou pierce the cloud; but as if thou hadst a
wall on all sides surrounding thee, thou art without power to look up unto the
heaven.
For whatsoever sin thou wilt, first let us examine, and thou shalt see
that so it is engendered. For as robbers and they who dig through walls when they
desire to carry off any valuable thing, put out the candle and then do their
work; so also doth men's perverse reasoning in the case of those who are
committing sin. Since in us also surely there is a light, the light of reason, ever
burning. But if the spirit of wickedness coming eagerly on with its strong blast
quench that flame, it straightway darkens the soul and prevails against it, and
despoils it straightway of all that is laid up therein. For when by unclean
desire the soul is made captive, even as a cloud and mist the eyes of the body, so
that desire intercepts the foresight of the mind, and suffers it to see
nothing at any distance, either precipice, or hell, or fear; but thenceforth, having
that deceit as a tyrant over him, he comes to be easily vanquished by sin; and
there is raised up before his eyes as it were a wall without windows, which
suffers not the ray of righteousness to shine in upon the mind, the absurd
conceits of lust enclosing it as with a rampart on all sides. And from that time
forward the unchaste woman is everywhere meeting him: standing present before his
eyes, before his mind, before his thoughts. And as the blind, although they stand
at high noon beneath the very central point of the heaven, receive not the
light, their eyes being fast dosed up; just so these also, though ten thousand
doctrines of salvation sound in their ears from all quarters, having their soul
preoccupied with this passion stop their ears against such discourses. And they
know it well who have made the trial. But God forbid that you should know it
from actual experience.
[7.] And not only this sin hath these effects, but every misplaced
affection as well. For let us transfer, if you please, the argument from the unchaste
woman unto money, and we shall see here also thick and unbroken darkness. For
in the former case, inasmuch as the beloved object is one and shut up in one
place, the feeling is not so violent; but in the case of money which sheweth
itself every where, in silversmiths' shops, in taverns, in foundries for gold, in
the houses of the wealthy, the passion blows a vehement gale. For when servants
swaggering in the market place, horses with golden trappings, men decked with
costly garments, are seen with desire by him who has that distemper, the darkness
becomes intense which envelopes him. And why speak of houses and silversmiths'
shops? for my part I think that such persons, though it be but in a picture
and image that they see the wealth, are convulsed, and grow wild, and rave. So
that from all quarters the darkness gathers around them. And if they chance to
behold a portraiture of a King, they admire not the beauty of the precious
stones, nor yet the gold, nor the purple robe, but they pine away. And as the
wretched lover before mentioned, though he see but the image of the woman beloved,
cleaveth unto the lifeless thing; so this man also, beholding a lifeless image of
wealth, is more strongly affected in the same way, as being holden of a more
tyrannical passion. And he must henceforth either abide at home, or if he venture
into the Forum, return home with innumerable hurts. For many are the objects
which grieve his eyes. And just as the former seeth nothing else save the woman,
even so the latter hastens by poor persons, and all things else, that he may
not obtain so much as a slight alleviation. But upon the wealthy he steadily
fixeth his eyes; by the sight of them introducing the fire into his own soul
mightily and vehemently. For it is a fire that miserably devours the person that
falls into it; and if no hell were threatened nor yet punishment, this condition
were itself punishment; to be continually tormented and never able to find an
end to the malady.
[8.] Well: these things alone might suffice to recommend our fleeing from
this distemper. But there is no greater evil than inconsideration which causes
men to be rivetted unto things that bring sorrow of heart and no advantage.
Wherefore I exhort that you cut off the passion at its beginning: for just as a
fever on its first attack, does not violently burn up the patients with thirst,
but on its increase and the heightening of its fire causes from that time
incurable thirst; and though one should let them fill themselves full of drink, it
puts not out the furnace but makes it burn fiercer: so also it happens in regard
to this passion; unless when it first invadeth our soul we stop it and shut
the doors; having got in, from that time it makes the disease of those who have
admitted it incurable. For so both good things and bad, the longer they abide in
us, the more powerful they become.
And in all other things too, any one may see that this cometh to pass. For
so a plant but lately set in the ground is easily pulled up; but no more so
when rooted for a long time; it then requires great strength in the lever. And a
building newly put together is easily thrown down by those who push against it;
but once well fixed, it gives great trouble to those who attempt to pull it
down. And a wild beast that hath made his accustomed haunt in certain places for
a long time is with difficulty driven away.
Those therefore who are not yet possessed by the passion in question, I
exhort not to be taken captive. For it is more easy to guard against falling into
it, than having fallen to get away.
[9.] But unto those who are seized by it and broken down, if they will
consent to put themselves into the hands of the WORD of healing, I promise large
hope of salvation, by the Grace of God. For if they will consider those who have
suffered and fallen into that distemper and have recovered, they will have
good hopes respecting the removal of the disease. Who then ever fell into this
disease, and was easily rid of it? That welt-known Zacchaeus. For who could be
more fond of money than a publican? But all at once he became a man of strict
life, (<greek>Filosofos</greek>) and put out all that blaze. Matthew in like
manner: for he too was a publican, living in continual rapine. But he likewise all at
once stripped himself of the mischief, and quenched his thirst, and followed
after spiritual gain. Considering therefore these, and the like to them, despair
not even thou. For if thou wilt, quickly thou shalt be able to recover. And if
you please, according to the rule of physicians, we will prescribe accurately
what thou shouldest do.
It is necessary then, before all other things, to be right in this, that
we never despond, nor despair of our salvation. Next, we must look not only upon
the examples of those who have done well, but also upon the sufferings of
those who have persisted in sin. For as we have considered Zacchaeus, and Matthew,
even so ought we also to take account of Judas, and Gehazi, and Ahar, [perhaps
Achan, Josh. vii.] and Ahab, and Ananias, and Sapphira, in order that by the
one, we may cast out all despair, and by the other cut off all indolence; and
that the soul become not reckless of the remedies suggested. And let us teach them
of themselves to say what the Jews said on that day, approaching unto Peter,
(Acts ii, 37, cf. xvi, 30.) "What must we do to be saved?" And let them hear
what they must do.
[10.] What then must we do? We must know how worthless the things in
question are, and that wealth is a run-away slave, and heartless, and encompasseth
its possessors with ills innumerable. And such words, like charms, let us sound
in their ears continually. And as physicians soothe their patients when they
ask for cold water, by saying that they will give it, making excuses about the
spring, and the vessel, and the fit time, and many more such, (for should they
refuse at once, they make them wild with phrensy,) so let us also act towards the
lovers of money. When they say we desire to be rich, let us not say
immediately that wealth is an evil thing; but let us assent, and say that we also desire
it; but in due time; yea, true wealth; yea, that which hath undying pleasure:
yea, that which is gathered for thyself, and not for others, and those often our
enemies. And let us produce the lessons of true wisdom, and say, we forbid not
riches, but ill-gotten riches. For it is lawful to be rich, but without
covetousness, without rapine and violence, and an ill report from all men. With these
arguments let us first smooth them down, and not as yet discourse of hell. For
the sick man endures not yet such sayings. Wherefore let us go to this world
for all our arguments upon these matters; and say, "Why is it thy choice to be
rich through covetousness? That the gold and the silver may be laid up. for
others, but for thee, curses and accusations innumerable? That he whom you have
defrauded may be stung by want of the very necessaries of life, and bewail
himself, and draw down upon thee the censure of thousands; and may go at fall of
evening about the market place, encountering every one in the alleys, and in utter
perplexity, and not knowing what to trust to even for that one night? For how is
he to sleep after all, with pangs of the belly, restless famine besetting him,
and that often while it is freezing, and the rain coming down on him? And
while thou, having washed, returnest home from the bath, in a glow with soft
raiment, merry of heart and rejoicing, and hastening unto a banquet prepared and
costly: he, driven every where about the market place by cold and hunger, takes his
round, stooping low and stretching out his hands; nor hath he even spirit
without trembling to make his suit for his necessary food to one so full fed and so
bent on taking his ease; nay, often he has to retire with insult. When
therefore thou hast returned home, when thou liest down on thy couch, when the lights
round thine house shine bright, when the table is prepared and plentiful, at
that time call to rememberance that poor miserable man wandering about, like the
dogs in the alleys, in darkness and in mire; except indeed when, as is often
the case, he has to depart thence, not unto house, nor wife, nor bed, but unto a
pallet of straw; even as we see the dogs baying all through the night. And
thou, if thou seest but a little drop failing from the roof, throwest the whole
house into confusion, calling thy slaves and disturbing every thing: while he,
laid in rags, and straw, and dirt, has to bear all the cold.
What wild beast would not be softened by these things? Who is there so
savage and inhuman that these things should not make him mild? and yet there are
some who are arrived at such a pitch of cruelty as even to say that they deserve
what they suffer. Yea, when they ought to pity, and weep, and help to
alleviate men's calamities, they on the contrary visit them with savage and inhuman
censures. Of these I should be glad to ask, Tell me, why do they deserve what they
suffer? Is it because they would be fed and not starve?
No, you will reply; but because they would be fed in idleness. And thou,
dost not thou wanton in idleness? What say I? Art thou not oft-times toiling in
an occupation more grievous than any idleness, grasping, and oppressing, and
coveting? Better were it if thou too wert idle after this sort; for it is better
to be idle in this way, than to be covetous. But now thou even tramplest on the
calamities of others, not only idling, not only pursuing an occupation worse
than idleness, but also maligning those who spend their days in misery.
And let us farther narrate to them the disasters of others; the untimely
bereavements, the dwellers in prison, those who are torn to pieces before
tribunals, those who are trembling for life; the unlooked for widowhood of women; the
sudden reverse of the rich: and with this let us soften their minds. For by
our narrations concerning others, we shall induce them by all means to fear these
evils in their own case too. For when they hear that the son of such an one
who was a covetous and grasping man, or (<greek>h</greek> <greek>tou</greek>
<greek>deinos</greek> instead of <greek>hn</greek>; <greek>tou</greek>
<greek>deinos</greek>) the wife of such an one who did many tyrannical actions, after the
death of her husband endured afflictions without end; the injured persons
setting upon the wife and the children, and a general war being raised from all
quarters against his house; although a man be the most senseless of beings, yet
expecting himself also to suffer the same, and fearing for his own lest they
undergo the same fate, he will become more moderate. Now we find life full of many
such histories, and we shall not be at a loss for correctives of this kind.
But when we speak these things, let us not speak them as giving advice or
counsel, test our discourse become too irksome: but as in the order of the
narrative and by association with something else, let us proceed in each case unto
that kind of conversation, and let us be constantly putting them upon stories
of the kind, permitting them to speak of no subject except these which follow:
How such an one's splendid and famous mansion fell down; How it is so entirely
desolate that all things that were in it have come into the hands of others; How
many trials have taken place daily about this same property, what a stir; How
many of that man's relations (<greek>oicetai</greek>, probably
<greek>oiceioi</greek>) have died either beggars, or inhabitants of a prison.
All these things let us speak as in pity for the deceased, and as
depreciating things present; in order that by fear and by pity we may soften the cruel
mind. And when we see men shrinking into themselves at these narrations, then
and not till then let us introduce to their notice also the doctrine of hell,
not as terrifying these, but in compassion for others. And let us say, But why
speak of things present? For far, indeed, will our concern be from ending with
these; a yet more grievous punishment will await all such persons: even a river
of fire, and a poisonous worm, and darkness interminable, and undying tortures.
If with such addresses we succeed in throwing a spell over them, we shall
correct both ourselves and them, and quickly get the better of our infirmity.
And on that day we shall have God to praise us: as also Paul saith, "And
then shall each man have praise from God." For that which cometh from men, is
both fleeting, and sometimes it proceeds from no good intentions. But that which
cometh from God both abideth continually, and shines out clearly. For when He
who knew all things before their creation, and who is free from all passion,
gives praise, then also the demonstration of our virtue is even unquestionable.
Knowing these things therefore, let us act so as to be praised of God, and
to acquire the greatest blessings; which God grant us all to obtain, through
the grace and loving-kindness of our Lord Jesus Christ, with Whom to the Father
and the Holy Spirit be glory, power, honor, now and always, and unto all the
ages of eternity. Amen.