HOMILIES OF ST. JOHN CHRYSOSTOM ON THE SECOND EPISTLE OF ST. PAUL THE APOSTLE
TO THE CORINTHIANS, HOMILIES XXII TO XXV (2 COR. 10 & 11)
HOMILY XXII.
2 COR. x. 7.
"Ye look at the things that are before your face. If any man trusteth in
himself that he is Christ's, let him consider this again with himself that even as
he is Christ's, so also are we."
What one may especially admire in Paul amongst other things is this, that
when he has fallen upon an urgent necessity for exalting himself, he manages
both to accomplish this point, and also not to appear offensive to the many on
account of this egotism; a thing we may see particularly in his Epistle to the
Galatians. For having there fallen upon such an argument, he provides for both
these points; a matter of the very utmost difficulty and demanding much prudence;
he is at once modest and says somewhat great of himself. And observe how in
this place also he makes it of great account, "Ye look at the things that are
before your face." Behold here also prudence. For having rebuked those that
deceived them, he confined not his remarks to them, but he leaps away from them to
these too; and he does so constantly. For, in truth, he scourgeth not those only
that lead astray(1), but the deceived also. For had he let even them go without
calling them to an account(2), they would not so easily have been reformed by
what was said to the others; but would have been greatly elated even, as not
being amenable to accusations. Therefore he scourgeth them also. And this is not
all that is to be admired in him, but this farther, that he rebukes either
party in a manner suitable to each. Hear at least what he says to these, "Ye look
at the things that are before your face." The accusation is no light one; but a
mark of men exceedingly easy to be deceived. Now what he says is this, 'ye test
by what appear, by things carnal, by things bodily.' What is meant by 'what
appear?' If one is rich, if one is puffed up, if one is surrounded by many
flatterers, if one says great things of himself, if one is vain-glorious, if one
makes a pretence of virtue without having virtue, for this is the meaning of, "ye
look at the things that are before your face."
"If any man trust in himself that he is Christ's, let him consider this
again with himself, that even as he is Christ's, even so also are we." For he
does not wish to be vehement at the beginning, but he increases and draws to a
head(3) by little and little. But observe here how much harshness and covert
meaning there is. He shows this by using the words "with himself." For he saith, '
Let him not wait to learn this from us; that is, by our rebuke of himself,' but
"let him consider this with himself, that even as he is Christ's, so also are
we;" not that he was Christ's in such manner as the other was, but, "that even
as he is Christ's, so l also am I Christ's. Thus far the community holds good:
for it is not surely the case that he indeed is Christ's, but I some other's.
Then having laid down this equality between them, he goes on to add wherein he
exceeded, saying,
Ver. 8. "For though I should glory somewhat abundantly concerning our
authority which the Lord gave for building you up, and not for casting you down, I
shall not be put to shame.
For since he was going to say somewhat great, observe how he softens it.
For nothing doth so offend the majority of hearers as for any one to praise
himself. Wherefore to cut at the root of this offensiveness, he says, "For though I
should glory somewhat abundantly." And he did not say, 'if any man trust that
he is Christ's let him think that he is far short of us. For I possess much
authority from Him, so as to punish and to kill whomsoever I choose;' but what?
"For though I should glory even somewhat abundantly." And yet he possessed more
than can be told, but nevertheless he lowers it in his way of speaking. And he
said not, 'I glory,' but, "if I should glory," if I should choose to do so: at
once both showing modesty, and declaring his superiority. If therefore he says,
"I should glory concerning the authority which the Lord gave me." Again, he
ascribes the whole to Him, and makes the gift common. "For building up, and not
for casting down." Seest thou how again he allays the envy his praises might give
rise to, and draws the hearer over to himself by mentioning the use for which
he received it? Then why doth he say, "Casting down imaginations?" Because this
is itself an especial form of building up, the removing of hindrances, and
detecting the unsound, and laying the true together in the building. For this end
therefore we received it, that we might build up. But if any should spar and
battle with us, and be incurable, we will use that other power also,
destroying(1) and overthrowing him. Wherefore also he says, "I shall not be put to shame,"
that is, I shall not be proved a liar or a boaster.
[2.] Ver. 9, 10, 11. "But that l may not seem as if I would terrify you:
for his letters, say they, are weighty and strong: but his bodily presence is
weak, and his speech of no account. Let such a one reckon this, that what we are
in word by letters when we are absent, such are we also in deed when we are
present."
What he says is this: 'I could boast indeed, but that they may not say the
same things again, to wit, that I boast in my letters, and am contemptible
when present, I will say nothing great.' And yet afterwards he did say something
great, but not about this power by which he was formidable, but about
revelations and at greater lengths about trials. ' Therefore, that I may not seem to be
terrifying you, "let such an one reckon this, that what we are by letters when
we are absent, such are we also in deed when we are present.'" For since they
said, 'he writes great things of himself, but when he is present he is worthy of
no consideration,' therefore he says these things, and those again in a
moderated form. For he did not say, ' as we write great things, so when we are present
we also do great things,' but in more subdued phrase. For when he addressed
himself to the others indeed, he stated it with vehemency, saying, "I beseech you
that I may not when present show courage with the confidence wherewith I think
to be bold against some :" but when to these, he is more subdued. And
therefore he says, ' what we are when present, such too when absent, that is, lowly,
modest, no where boasting. And it is plain from what follows,
Ver. 12. "For we are not bold to number, or compare in ourselves(2) with
some that commend themselves."
Here he both shows that those false Apostles are boasters and say great
things of themselves: and ridicules them as commending themselves. 'But we do no
such thing: but even if we shall do any thing great, we refer all unto God, and
compare ourselves with one another.' Wherefore also he added,
"But they themselves measuring themselves by themselves and comparing
themselves among themselves are without understanding." Now what he says is this: '
we do not compare ourselves with them, but with one another.' For further on
he says, "in nothing am I behind the very chiefest Apostles;" (Chap. xii. x 11.
) and in the former Epistle, "I labored more abundantly than they all;" (1 Cor.
xv. 10.) and again, "Truly the signs of an Apostle were wrought among you in
all patience." (Chap. xii. 12.) 'So that we compare ourselves with ourselves,
not with those that have nothing: for such arrogance cometh of folly.' Either
then he says this with reference to himself, or with reference to them, that ' we
dare not compare ourselves with those who contend with one another and boast
great things and do not understand:' that is, do not perceive how ridiculous they
are in being thus arrogant, and in exalting themselves amongst one another.
Ver. 13. "But we will not glory beyond our measure:" as they do.
For it is probable that in their boasting they said, 'we have converted
the world, we have reached unto the ends of the earth,' and vented many other
such like big words. 'But not so we,' he says,
"But according to the measure of the province which God apportioned to us
as a measure, to reach even unto you." So that his humility is evident on
either hand, both in that he boasted nothing more than he had wrought, and that he
refers even this itself to God. For, "according to the measure of the province,"
saith he, "which God apportioned to us, a measure to reach even unto you."
Just as if portioning out a vine to husbandmen, even so He meted out unto us. As
far then as we have been counted worthy to attain to, so far we boast.
Ver. 14. ''For we stretch not ourselves overmuch, as though we reached not
unto you: for we came even as far as unto you in preaching the Gospel of
Christ."
Not simply 'we came,' but, 'we announced, we preached, we persuaded, we
succeeded.' For it is probable that they having merely come to the disciples of
the Apostles, ascribed the whole to themselves, from their bare presence among
them. ' But not so we: nor can any one say that we were not able to come as far
as to you, and that we stretched our boasting as far as to you in words only;
for we also preached the word to you.'
[3.] Ver. 15, 16. "Not glorying beyond" our "measure, '' that is, "in
other men's labors, but having hope that as your faith groweth, we shall be
magnified in you according to our province unto further abundance, so as to preach.
the Gospel even unto the parts beyond you, and not to glory in another's province
in regard of things ready to our hand."
He sets forth a large accusation of them on these grounds, both that they
boasted of things without their measure, and of other men's labors; and that
whilst the whole of the toil was the Apostles', they plumed themselves upon their
labors. 'But we,' says he, ' showed these things in our deeds. We will not
imitate those men therefore, but will say such things where our deeds bear us
witness. And why,' saith he, 'do I say, you?' "for I have hope that as your faith
groweth;" for he doth not assert absolutely, preserving his own character, but,
'I hope,' he says, ' if you make progress, that our province will be extended
even farther, "to preach the Gospel in the regions beyond." For we shall advance
farther yet,' he says, 'so as to preach and labor, not so as to boast in words
of what other men have labored.' And well did he call it "province and
measure," as though he had come into possession of the world, and a rich inheritance;
and showing that the whole was wholly God's. 'Having then such works,' he says,
'and expecting greater, we do not boast as they do who have nothing, nor do we
ascribe any part to ourselves, but the whole to God. Wherefore also he adds,
Ver. 17. "He that glorieth, let him glory in the Lord." This also, he
saith, accrueth to us from God. Ver. 18. "For not he that commendeth himself is
approved, but whom the Lord commendeth."
He did not say, we are so, "but whom the Lord commendeth. Seest thou how
modestly he speaks? But if as he proceeds he stirreth up loftier words, wonder
not, for this also cometh of Paul's prudence. For if he had gone on in every
part to speak lowly words, he would not have hit these men so effectually, nor
have extricated the disciples from their error. For it is possible both by modesty
ill-timed to do harm, and by saying something admirable of one's self at a
proper time to do good. As therefore he also did. For there was no little danger
in the disciples being persuaded into any mean opinion of Paul. Not that Paul
sought the glory that cometh of men. For had he sought this, he would not have
kept silence so long on those great and marvellous matters of "fourteen years
ago;" (Chap. xii. 20) nor would he, when necessity was laid upon him, have so
shrunk back and hesitated to speak of them; very evidently he would not even then
have spoken, had he not been compelled. Certainly then it was not from a desire
after the glory which cometh from men that he said these things, but out of
tender care for the disciples. For since they cast reproaches(1) at him as a
braggart, and as boastful in words but able to show nothing in deeds, he is
compelled subsequently to come to those revelations. Although he had it in his power to
convince them by his deeds, at the time when he said these things: yet he
still persists, nevertheless, in using menaces in words. For he was most especially
free from vain-glory; and this his whole life proves, both before and after
this. For instance, it was because of this that he changed all at once; and
having changed, confounded the Jews and cast away all that honor he had from them,
although he was himself their head and their champion. But he considered none of
those things when he had found the truth; but took instead their insults and
contumely; for he looked to the salvation of the many, thinking this everything.
For he that thinketh nothing of hell nor of heaven nor of ten thousand worlds
in regard of his longing after Christ, how should he hunt after the glory which
cometh from the many? By no means; but he is even very lowly when he may be
so, and brands(2) his former life with infamy when he calls himself, "a
blasphemer, and a persecutor, and injurious." (1 Tim. i. 13.) And his disciple Luke too
says many things of him, evidently having learnt them from himself, himself
displaying fully(3) his former life no less than that after his conversion.
[4.] Now I say these things, not that we may hear merely, but that we may
learn also. For if he remembered those transgressions before the Laver,
although they were all effaced, what forgiveness can we have who are unmindful of
those after the Laver ourselves? What sayest thou, O man? Thou hast offended God,
and dost thou forget? This is a second offence, a a second enmity. Of what sins
then dost thou ask forgiveness? Of those which thou even knowest not thyself?
Surely, (for is it not so?) thou art deeply anxious and thoughtful how thou
mayest give account of them, thou who dost not so much as care to remember them,
but sportest with what is no sporting matter. But there will come a time when our
sport can go on no longer. For we must needs die: (for the great insensibility
of the many obliges me to speak even of things that are evident:) and must
needs rise again, and be judged, and be punished; nay rather this needs not, if we
choose. For those other things are not at our own disposal; neither our end,
nor our resurrection, nor our judgment, but at our Lord's; but our suffering
punishment or not is at our own disposal; for this is of those things that may or
may not happen(4). But if we choose, we shall make it of the number of
impossible things; just as Paul, as Peter, as all the saints did; for it is even
impossible for them to be punished. If therefore we have a mind, it is in like manner
impossible also that we should suffer ought. For even if we have offended in
ten thousand things, it is possible to recover ourselves so long as we are here.
Let us then recover ourselves: and let the old man consider that in a little
while hence he will depart, since he took his pleasure long enough in his
lifetime; (although what sort of pleasure is this, to live in wickedness? but for the
present I so speak in respect to his way of thinking;) let him consider,
besides, that it is possible for him in a short time to wash away all. The young man
again, let him also consider the uncertainty of death, and that oftentimes,
when many older persons continued here, the young were carried off before them.
For, for this reason, that we may not make traffic(1) of our death, it is left
in uncertainty. Wherefore also a certain wise man adviseth, saying, "Make no
tarrying to turn unto the Lord, and put not off from day to day: for thou knowest
not what to-morrow shall bring forth." (Ecclus. v. 7; Prov. xxvii. 1) For by
putting off there is danger and fear; but by not putting off manifest and secure
salvation. Hold fast then by virtue. For so, even if thou have departed young,
thou hast departed in safety; and if thou shouldst come to old age, thou shalt
arrive Eat death] with great provision made, and shaft have a double feast all
thy life long; both in that thou abstainest from vice, and layest hold on
virtue. Say not, ' there will come a time when it may be well to turn,' for this
language provokes God exceedingly. And why so? Because He hath promised thee
countless ages, but thou art not even willing to labor during this present life,
this short life that dureth but a season; but art so indolent and unmanly as to
seek a shorter even than this. Are there not the same revellings daily? Are there
not the same tables, the same harlots, the same theatres, the same wealth? How
long wilt thou love those things as though they were aught? How long will thy
appetite for evil remain insatiate? Consider that as often as thou hast
fornicated, so often hast thou condemned thyself. For such is the nature of sin: once
committed, the Judge hath also passed his sentence. Hast thou been drunken,
been gluttonous, or robbed ? Hold now, turn right back, acknowledge it to God as a
mercy that He snatched thee not away in the midst of thy sins; seek not yet
another set time(2) wherein to work evil. Many have been snatched away in the
midst of their covetousness, and have departed to manifest punishment. Fear lest
thou also shouldest suffer this, and without excuse. `But God gave to many a set
time for confession in extreme old age.' What then? Will He give it to thee
also? ' Perhaps He will,' says one. Why sayest thou 'perhaps,' and ' sometimes,'
and ' often? ' Consider that thou art deliberating about thy soul, and put also
the contrary case, and calculate, and say, ' But what if He should not give it
?' 'But what if He should give it? ' saith he. God hath indeed given it; but
still this supposition is safer and more profitable than that. For if thou
begin now, thou hast gained all, whether thou hast a set time granted thee or not;
but if thou art always putting off, for this very cause perhaps thou shalt not
have one given thee. When thou goest out to battle, thou dost not say, ' there
is no need to make my will, perhaps I shall come back safe ;' nor dost thou
when deliberating about marriage, say ' suppose I take a poor wife, many have even
m this way got rich contrary to expectation;' nor when building a house, '
suppose I lay a rotten foundation, many houses have stood even so;' yet in
deliberating about the soul, thou leanest on things more rotten still; urging thy
'perhaps,' and 'often,' and 'sometimes,' and trustest thyself to these
uncertainties. 'Nay,' saith one, 'not to an uncertainty, but to the mercy of God, for God
is merciful.' I know it too; but still this merciful God snatched those away of
whom I spoke. And what if after thou hast had time given thee, thou shalt still
continue as thou weft? for this sort of man will be listless even in old age.
' Nay,' he said, ' not so.' For this mode of reasoning even after the eighty
years desireth ninety, and after the ninety an hundred, and after the hundred
will be yet more indisposed to act. And so the whole of life will have been
consumed in vain, and what was spoken of the Jews will happen also to thee; "Their
days were consumed in vanity." (Ps. lxxviii. 33.) And would that in vanity only,
and not unto evil also. For when we have departed thither bearing the heavy
burden of our sins, this will be unto evil also. For we shall carry away fuel for
the fire and a plentiful feast for the worm. Wherefore I pray and conjure you
to halt at length in noble wise, and to desist from wickedness, that we may also
obtain the promised good things: whereunto may we all attain, through the
grace and love towards men of our Lord Jesus Christ, with Whom to the Father,
together with the Holy Spirit, be glory, might, honor, now and ever, and world
without end. Amen.
HOMILY XXIII.
2 COR. xi. 1.
"Would that ye could bear with me in a little foolishness and, indeed ye do
bear with me." (*)
BEING about to enter upon his own praises he uses much previous
correction. And he does this not once or twice, although the necessity of the subject,
and what he had often said, were sufficient excuse for him. For he that
remembereth sins which God remembered not, and who therefore saith that he was unworthy
of the very name of the Apostles, even by the most insensate is seen clearly
not to be saying what he is now going to say, for the sake of glory. For if one
must say something startling, even this would be especially injurious to his
glory, his speaking something about himself; and to the more part it is offensive.
But nevertheless he regarded not timidly any of these things, but he looked to
one thing, the salvation of his hearers. But still in order that he might not
cause harm to the unthinking by this, by saying, I mean, great things of
himself, he employs out of abundant caution these many preparatory correctives, and
says, "Would that ye could bear with me," whilst I play the fool in some little
things, yea, rather, "ye do indeed bear with me." Beholdest thou wisdom? For
when he says, "would that," it is as putting it at their disposal: but when he
even asserts [that they do], it is as confiding greatly in their affection, and
as declaring that he both loves and is loved. Yea, rather, not from bare love
merely, but from a sort of warm and insane passion he says that they ought to
bear with him even when he plays the fool. And therefore he added, "For I am
jealous over you with a godly jealousy(1)." He did not say, 'for I love you,' but
uses a term far more vehement than this. For those souls are jealous which burn
ardently for those they love, and jealousy can in no other way be begotten than
out of a vehement affection. Then that they may not think, that it is for the
sake of power, or honor, or wealth, or any other such like thing, that he
desires their affection, he added, "with a jealousy of God." For God also is said to
be jealous, not that any i should suppose(2) passion, (for the Godhead is
impassible,) but that all may know that He doeth all things from no other regard
than their sakes over whom He is jealous; not that Himself may gain aught, but
that He may save them. Among men indeed jealousy ariseth not from this cause,
but for the sake of their own repose; not because the beloved ones sustain
outrage, but lest these who love them should be wounded, and be outshone in the good
graces, and stand lower in the affections, of the beloved. But here it is not
so. 'For I care not,' he says, ' for this, lest I should stand lower in your
esteem; but lest I should see you corrupted. For such is God's jealousy; and such
is mine also, intense at once and pure.' Then there is also this necessary
reason;
"For I espoused you to one husband, as a pure virgin." 'Therefore I am
jealous, not for myself, but for him to whom I have espoused you.' For the present
time is the time of espousal, but the time of the nuptials is another; when
they sing, 'the Bridegroom hath risen up.' Oh what things unheard of! In the
world they are virgins before the marriage, but after the marriage no longer. But
here it is not so: but even though they be not virgins before this marriage,
after the marriage they become virgins. So the whole Church is a virgin. For
addressing himself even to all, both husbands and wives, he speaks thus. But let us
see what he brought and espoused us with, what kind of nuptial gifts. Not gold,
not silver, but the kingdom of heaven. Where fore also he said, "We are
ambassadors on behalf of Christ," and beseeches them, when he was about to receive
the Bride. What happened in Abraham's case was a type of this. (Gen. xxiv. 4,
&c.) For he sent his faithful servant to seek a Gentile maiden in marriage; and
in this case God sent His own servants to seek the Church in marriage for His
son, and prophets from of old saying, "Hearken, O daughter, and consider, and
forget thine own people and thy father's house, and the King shall desire thy
beauty." (Ps. xlv. 10, 11.) Seest thou the prophet also espousing? seest thou the
Apostle too expressing the same thing himself with much boldness, and saying, "I
espoused you to one husband that I might present you as a pure virgin to
Christ?" Seest thou wisdom again? For having said, 'Ye ought to bear with me,' he
did not say, ' for I am your teacher and I speak not for mine own sake:' but he
uses this expression which invested them with especial dignity, placing himself
in the room of her who promotes a match, and them in the rank of the bride; and
he adds these words;
Ver. 3. "But I fear lest by any means, as the serpent beguiled Eve through
his subtlety, so your minds should be corrupted from the simplicity that is
toward Christ(1)."
'For although the destruction be yours [alone], yet is the sorrow mine as
well.' And consider his wisdom. For he does not assert, although they were
corrupted; and so he showed when he said, "When your obedience is fulfilled," (c.
x. 6.) and "I shall bewail many which have sinned already;" (c. xii. 21.) but
still he does not leave them to get shameless. And therefore he says, "lest at
any time." For this neither condemns nor is silent; for neither course were safe,
whether to speak out plainly or to conceal perpetually. Therefore he employs
this middle form, saying, "lest at any time." For this is the language neither
of one that entirely distrusts, nor entirely relies on them, but of one who
stands between these two. In this way then he palliated, but by his mention of that
history threw them into an indescribable terror, and cuts them off from all
forgiveness. For even although the serpent was malignant, and she senseless, yet
did none of these things snatch the woman from punishment. 'Beware then,' he
says, 'lest such be your fate, and there be naught to screen you. For he too
promising greater things, so deceived.' Whence it is plain that these(2) too, by
boasting and puffing themselves up, deceived. And this may be conjectured not
from this place only, but also from what he says afterwards,
Ver. 4. "If he that cometh preacheth another Jesus, whom we did not
preach, or if ye receive a different Spirit which ye did not receive, or a
different Gospel which ye did not accept, ye do well to bear with him."
And he does not say, 'Lest by any means as Adam was deceived:' but shows
that those men(3) are but women who are thus abused, for it is the part of woman
to be deceived. And he did not say, 'so ye also should be deceived:' but
keeping up the metaphor, he says, "so your minds should be corrupted from the
simplicity that is toward Christ." 'From the simplicity, I say, not from wickedness;
neither out of wickedness [is it], nor out of your not believing, but out of
simplicity.' But, nevertheless, not even under such circumstances are the
deceived entitled to forgiveness, as Eve showed. But if this does not entitle to
forgiveness, much more will it not do so, when through vain-glory any is so(4)..
[2.] "For if he that cometh preacheth another Jesus whom we did not
preach:" showing hereby that their deceivers were not Corinthians, but persons from
some other quarter previously corrupted: wherefore he saith, "he that cometh."
"If ye receive a different Spirit, if a different Gospel which ye did not
accept, ye do well to bear" with him. What sayest thou? Thou that saidst to the
Galatians, "If any preach another Gospel to you than that ye have received,
let him be anathema;" dost thou now say, "ye do well to bear" with him? And yet
on this account it were meet not to bear with, but to recoil, from them; but if
they say the same things, it is meet to bear with them. How then dost thou say,
'because they say the same things, it is not meet to bear with them?' for he
says, 'if they said other things, it were meet to bear with them.' Let us then
give good heed, for the danger is great, and the precipice deep, if men run past
this carelessly; and what is here said giveth an entrance to all the heresies.
What then is the sense of these words? Those persons so boasted as if the
Apostles taught incompletely, and they were introducing somewhat more than they.
For it is probable that with much idle talk, they were bringing in senseless
rubbish so as to overlay these doctrines. And therefore he made mention of the
serpent and of Eve who was thus deceived by the expectation of acquiring more. And
alluding to this in the former Epistle also, he said, "Now ye are become rich,
ye have reigned as kings without us;" and again, "we are fools for Christ's
sake, but ye are wise in Christ." (1 Cor. iv. 8; ib. 10.) Since then it was
probable that using the wisdom which is without, they talked much idly, what he says
is this: that ' if these persons said any thing more, and preached a different
Christ who ought to have been preached, but we omitted it, "ye do well to bear"
with them.' For on this account he added, "whom we did not preach." 'But if
the chief points of the faith are the same, what have ye the more of them? for
whatsoever things they may say, they will say nothing more than what we have
said.' And observe with what precision he states the case. For he did not say, 'if
he that cometh saith any thing more;' for they did say something more,
haranguing with more authority and with much beauty of language; wherefore he did not
say this, but what? [If] "he that cometh preacheth another Jesus," a thing which
had no need of that array of words: ''or ye receive a different Spirit," (for
neither was there need of words in this case;) that is to say, 'makes you
richer in grace; ' or "a different Gospel which ye did not accept," (nor did this
again stand in need of words,) "ye do well to bear" with him. But consider, I
pray thee, how he every where uses such a definition as shows that nothing very
great, nor indeed any thing more, had been introduced by them. For when he had
said, "If he that cometh preacheth another Jesus," he added, "whom we did not
preach;" and "ye receive a different Spirit," he subjoined, "which ye did not
receive; or a different Gospel," he added, "which ye did not accept," by all these
showing that it is meet to attend to them, not simply if they say something
more, but if they said any thing more which ought to have been said and was by us
omitted. But if it ought not to have been said, and was therefore not said by
us; or if they say only the same things as we, why gape ye so admiringly(1) upon
them? 'And yet if they say the same things,' saith one, 'wherefore dost thou
hinder them?' Because that using hypocrisy, they introduce strange doctrines.
This however for the present he doth not say, but afterwards asserts it, when he
says, "They fashion themselves into Apostles of Christ;" (Ver. 13.) for the
present he withdraws the disciples from their authority by less offensive
considerations; and this not out of envy to them, but to secure these. Else why does he
not hinder Apollos, who was, however, a "learned man, and mighty in the
Scriptures;" (Acts xviii. 24; 1 Cor. xvi. 12) but even beseeches him, and promises he
will send him? Because together with his learning he preserved also the
integrity of the doctrines; but with these it was the reverse. And therefore he wars
with them and blames the disciples for gaping admiringly upon them, saying, 'if
aught that should have been said we omitted and they supplied, we do not
hinder you from giving heed to them: but if all has been fully completed by us and
nothing left deficient, whence is it that they caught you?' Wherefore also he
adds,
Ver. 5. "For I reckon that I am not a whit behind the very chiefest
Apostles," no longer making comparison of himself with them, but with Peter and the
rest. 'So that if they know more than I do, [they know more] than they also.'
And observe how here also he shows modesty. For he did not say, 'the Apostles
said nothing more than I,' but what? "I reckon," so I deem, "that I am not a whit
behind the very chiefest Apostles." For since this also appeared to bespeak an
inferiority in him, that those having preceded him were of greater name; and
more respect was entertained for them, and these persons were intending to foist
themselves in; therefore he makes this comparison of himself with them with the
dignity(2) that becomes him. Therefore he also mentions them with encomiums,
not speaking simply of "the Apostles," but "the very chiefest," meaning Peter
and James and John.
[3.] Ver. 6. "But though I be rude in speech, yet am I not in knowledge."
For since those that corrupted the Corinthians had the advantage in this,
that they were not rude; he mentions this also, showing that he was not ashamed
of, but even prided himself upon it. And he said not, "But though I be rude in
speech," yet so also are they(3), for this would have seemed to be accusing
them as well as himself, and exalting these: but he overthrows the thing itself,
the wisdom from without. And indeed in his former Epistle he contends even
vehemently about this thing, saying that it not only contributes nothing to the
Preaching, but it even throws a shadow on the glory of the Cross; (1 Cor. ii. 1.)
for he says, "I came net with excellency of speech or of wisdom unto you, lest
the cross of Christ should be made void; (1 Cor. i. 17.) and many other things
of the same kind; because "in knowledge" they were "rude," which is also the
extremest form of rudeness. When therefore it was necessary to institute a
comparison in those things which were great, he compares himself with the Apostles:
but when to show that which appeared to be a deficiency, he no longer does this,
but grapples with the thing itself and shows that it was a superiority. And
when indeed no necessity urged him, he says that he is "the least of the
Apostles," and not worthy even of the title; but here again when occasion called, he
says that he is "not a whit behind the very chiefest Apostles." For he knew that
this would most advantage the disciples. Wherefore also he adds,
"Nay, in every thing we have made it manifest among all men to you ward."
For here again he accuses the false Apostles as "walking in craftiness." (Chap.
iv. 2.) And he said this of himself before also, that he did not live after
the outward appearance, nor preach "handling the word deceitfully (ibid.) and
corrupting it. But those men were one thing and appeared another. But not so he.
Wherefore also he every where assumes a high tone, as doing nothing with a view
to men's opinion nor concealing aught about himself. As he also said before,
"by the manifestation of the truth commending ourselves to every man's
conscience," (ibid.) so now again he saith "in every thing we have made it manifest to
you." But what does this mean? 'We are rude,' he said, 'and do not conceal it: we
receive from some persons and we do not keep it secret. We receive then from
you, and we pretend not that we do not receive, as they do when they receive,
but we make every thing that we do manifest unto you;' which was the conduct of
one that both had exceeding confidence in them, and told them every thing truly.
Wherefore he also calls them witnesses, saying now, "among all men to
you-ward," and also before, "For we write none other things unto you, than what ye read
or even acknowledge." (Chap. i. 13.)
[4.] Then after he had defended his own conduct he goes on next to say
with severity,
Ver. 7. "Or did I commit a sin in abasing myself that ye might be exalted?"
And in explanation of this, he adds,
Ver. 8. "I robbed other churches, taking wages of them that I might
minister unto you."
What he says is this; 'I lived in straitness;' for this is the force of
"abasing myself." 'Can you then lay this to my charge? and do ye therefore lift
up yourselves against me, because I abased myself by begging, by enduring
straits, by suffering, by hungering, that ye might be exalted?' And how were they
exalted by his being in straits? They were more edified and were not offended;
which also might [well] be a very great accusation of them and a reproach of their
weakness; that it was not possible in any other way to lead them on than by
first abasing himself. 'Do ye then lay it to my charge that I abased myself? But
thereby ye were exalted.' For since he said even above that they accused him,
for that when present he was lowly, and when absent bold, in defending himself
he here strikes them again, saying, ' this too was for your sakes.'
"I robbed other churches." Here finally he speaks reproachfully, but his
former words prevent these from seeming offensive; for he said, "Bear with me in
a little foolishness:" and before all his other achievements makes this his
first boast. For this worldly men look to especially, and on this also those his
adversaries greatly prided themselves. Therefore it is that he does not first
enter on the subject of his perils, nor yet of his miracles, but on this of his
contempt of money, because they prided themselves on this; and at the same time
he also hints that they were wealthy. But what is to be admired in him is
this, that when he was able to say that he was even supported by his own hands, he
did not say this; but says that which especially shamed them and yet was no
encomium on himself, namely, 'I took from others.' And he did not say "took," but
"robbed," that is, 'I stripped them, and made them poor.' And what surely is
greater, that it was not for superfluities, but for his necessities, for when he
says 'wages,' he means necessary subsistence. And what is more grievous yet,
"to minister unto you." We preach to you; and when I ought to be supported by
you, I have enjoyed this at others' hands. The accusation is twofold, or rather
three-fold; that when both living amongst them and ministering to them, and
seeking necessary support, he had others supplying his wants. Great the excess, of
the one negligence, of the other in zeal! For these sent to him even when at a
great distance, and those did not even support him when amongst them.
[5.] Then because he had vehemently scourged them, he quietly again
relaxes the vehemence of his rebuke, saying,
Ver. 9. "And when I was present with you, and was in want, I was not a
burden on any man."
For he did not say, 'ye did not give to me,' but, 'I did not take,' for as
yet he spares them. But nevertheless even in the subduedness of his language
he covertly strikes them again, for the word, "present," is exceedingly
emphatic, and so is "in want." For that they might not say, 'what matter then, if you
had [enough]?' he added, "and was in want."
"I was not a burden" on you. Here again he hits them gently, as making
such contributions reluctantly, as feeling them a burden. Then comes the reason
also, full of accusation and fraught with jealousy. Wherefore also he introduced
it, not in the way of a leading point(1), but as informing them whence and by
whom he was supported, so as to stimulate them again, in an unsuspicious way, as
to the point of alms-giving;
"For the measure of my want," he says, "the brethren which came from
Macedonia supplied." Seest thou how he provokes them again, by bringing forward
those that had ministered to him? For inspiring them first with a desire of knowing
who these could be, when he said, "I robbed other churches;" he then mentions
them also by name; which would incite them also unto almsgiving. For he thus
persuades those who had been beaten [by them] in the matter of supporting the
Apostle, not to be also beaten in the succor they gave to the poor. And he says
this also in his Epistle to the Macedonians themselves, "For in my necessities ye
sent unto me once and again, even in the beginning of the Gospel;" (Philipp.
iv. 16, 15.) which point also was a very great commendation of them, that from
the very beginning they shone forth. But observe how everywhere he mentions his
"necessity," and no where a superfluity. Now therefore by saying "present," and
in "want" he showed that he ought to have been supported by the Corinthians;
and by the words, "they supplied the measure of my want," he shows that he did
not so much as ask. And he assigns a reason which was not the real one. What
then is this? That he had received from others; "for," says he, "the measure of my
want those that came supplied." 'For this reason,' he says, 'I was not a
burden; not because I had no confidence in you.' And yet it is for this latter
reason that he so acts, and he shows it in what follows; but does not say it
plainly, but throws it into the shade(1), leaving it to the conscience of his hearers.
And he gives proof of it covertly in what follows, by saying,
"And in every" thing "I kept myself from being burdensome, and so will I
keep" myself. "For think not," says he, "that I say these things that I may
receive." Now the words "so will I keep myself," are severer, if he has not
even yet confidence in them; but once for all had given up the idea of
receiving aught from them. He shows, moreover, that they even considered this to be
a burden; wherefore he said, "I have kept myself from being burdensome, and so
will I keep myself." He says this in his former Epistle also, "I write not this
that it may be so done unto me; for" it were "good for me rather to die, than
that any man should make my glorying void." (1 Cor. ix. 15.) And here again, "I
have kept myself from being burdensome unto you, and so will I keep" myself.
[6.] Then, that he may not seem to speak these things for the sake of
winning them on the better [to do this], he saith,
Ver. 10. "As the truth of Christ is in me." 'Do not think that I therefore
have spoken, that I may receive, that I may the rather draw you on: for,'
saith he, "as the truth is in me,
"No man shall stop me of this glorying in the regions of Achaia." For that
none should think again that he is grieved at this, or that he speaks these
things in anger, he even calls the thing a "glorying." And in his former Epistle
too he dressed it out(2) in like terms. For so that he may not wound them there
either, he says, "What then is my reward?" "That when I preach the Gospel, I
may make the Gospel of Christ without charge." (1 Cor. ix. 18.) And as he there
calls it "reward," so doth he here "glorying," that they may not be excessively
ashamed at what he said, as if he were asking and they gave not to him. 'For,
what, if even ye would give?' saith he, 'Yet I do not accept it.' And the
expression, "shall not stop me," is a metaphor taken from rivers, or from the
report, as if running every where, of his receiving nothing. 'Ye stop not with your
giving this my freedom of speech.' But he said not, 'ye stop not,' which would
have been too(3) cutting, but it "no man shall stop me in the regions of
Achaia." This again was like giving them a fatal blow, and exceedingly apt to deject
and pain them, since they were the only persons he refused [to take from]. 'For
if he made that his boast, it were meet to make it so every where: but if he
only does so among us, perchance this is owing to our weakness." Lest therefore
they should so reason and be dejected, see how he corrects this.
Ver. 11. "Wherefore? because I love you not? God knoweth."
Quickly [is it done], and by an easy method(4). But still, not even so
did he rid them of those charges. For he neither said, 'ye are not weak,' nor
yet, 'ye are strong;' but, "I love you," which very greatly aggravated the
accusation against them. For the not receiving from them, because they felt it an
exceeding grievance, was a proof of special love toward them. So he acted in two
contrary ways out of love; he both did receive, and did not receive: but this
contrariety was on account of the disposition of the givers. And he did not say,
'I therefore do not take of you, because I exceedingly love you,' for this would
have contained an accusation of their weakness and have thrown them into
distress; but he turned what he said to another reason. What then is this?
Ver. 12. "That I may cut on occasion from them that desire an occasion;
that wherein they glory, they may be found even as we."
For since this they sought earnestly, to find some handle(5) against
him, it is necessary to remove this also. For this is the one point on which they
pique themselves. Therefore that they might not have any advantage whatever,
it was necessary to set this right; for in other things they were inferior. For,
as I have said, nothing doth so edify worldly people as the receiving nothing
from them. Therefore the devil in his craftiness dropped this bait especially,
when desirous to injure them in other respects. But it appears to me that this
even was in hypocrisy. And therefore he did not say, 'wherein they have well
done,' but what? "wherein they glory;" which also was as jeering at their
glorying; for they gloried also of that which they were not. But the man of noble
spirit not only ought not to boast of what he has not, but not even of what he
possesses; as this blessed saint was wont to do, as the patriarch Abraham did,
saying, "But I am earth and ashes." (Gen. xviii. 27.) For since he had no sins to
speak of, but shone with good works; having run about in every direction and
found no very great handle against himself, he betakes himself to his nature; and
since the name of "earth" is in some way or other one of dignity, he added to
it that of "ashes." Wherefore also another saith, "Why is earth and ashes
proud?" (Ecclus. x. 9.)
[7.] For tell me not of the bloom of the countenance, nor of the uplifted
neck, nor of the mantle, and the horse, and the followers; but reflect where
all these things do end, and put that to them. But and if thou tell me of what
appears to the eye, I too will tell thee of things in pictures, brighter far than
these. But as we do not admire those for their appearance, as seeing what
their nature is, that all is clay; so therefore let us not these either, for these
too are but clay. Yea rather, even before they are dissolved and become dust,
show me this uplifted [neck] a prey to fever and gasping out life; and then will
I discourse with thee and will ask, What has become of all that profuse
ornament? whither has that crowd of flatterers vanished, that attendance of slaves,
that abundance of wealth and possessions? What wind hath visited and blown all
away? Nay, even stretched upon the bier, he beareth the tokens of that wealth
and that pride; a splendid garment thrown over him, poor and rich following him
forth, the assembled crowds breathing words of good omen(1). Surely this also is
a very mockery; howbeit even this besides is presently proved naught, like a
blossom that perishes. For when we have passed over the threshold of the city
gates, and after having delivered over the body to the worms, return, I will ask
thee again, where is that vast crowd gone to? What has become of the clamor
and uproar? where are the torches? where the bands of women? are not these
things, then, a dream? And what too has become of the shouts? where are those many
lips that cried, and bade him 'be of good cheer, for no man is immortal?' These
things ought not now to be said to one that heareth not, but when he made prey
of others, when he was overreaching, then with a slight change should it have
been said to him, `Be not of good cheer, no man is immortal; hold in thy madness,
extinguish thy lust;' but `Be of good cheer' is for the injured party. For to
chant such things over this man now, is but like men exulting over him and
speaking irony; for he ought not for this now to be of good cheer, but to fear and
tremble.
And if even this advice is now of no use to him since he has run his
course, yet at least let those of the rich who labor under the same disease, and
follow him to the tomb, hear it. For although beforehand through the intoxication
of wealth, they have no such thing in mind, yet at that season when the sight
of him that is laid out even confirms what is said, let them be sober, let them
be instructed: reflecting that yet a little while and they will come that shall
bear them away to that fearful account, and to suffer the penalty of their
acts of rapacity and extortion. 'And what is this to the poor?' saith one. Why, to
many this also is a satisfaction, to see him that hath wronged them punished.
'But tons it is no satisfaction, but the escaping suffering ourselves.' I
praise you exceeedingly and approve of you in that ye exult not over the calamities
of others, but seek only your own safety. Come then, I will ensure(2) you this
also. For if we suffer evil at the hands of men, we cut off no small part of
our debt by bearing what is done to us nobly. We receive therefore no injury; for
God reckons the ill-treatment towards our debt, not according to the principle
of justice but of His loving-kindness; and because He succored not him that
suffered evil. 'Whence doth this appear?' saith one. The Jews once suffered evil
at the hand of the Babylonians; and God did not prevent it: but they were
carried away, children and women; yet afterwards did this captivity become a
consolation to them in respect of(3) their sins. Therefore He saith to Isaiah,
"Comfort ye, comfort ye My people, ye priests: speak unto the heart of Jerusalem, for
she hath received of the Lord's hand double for sins." (Is. xl. 1, 2.) And
again; "Grant us peace, for Thou hast repaid us every thing." (ib. xxvi. 12, LXX.)
And David saith; "Behold mine enemies, for they are multiplied; and forgive all
my sins." (Ps. xxv. 19, 18.) And when he bore with Shimei cursing him, he
said, "Let him alone, that the Lord may see my abasement, and requite me good for
this day." (2 Sam. xvi. 11, 12.) For when He aideth us not when we suffer wrong,
then most of all are we advantaged; for He sets it to the account of our sins,
if we bear it thankfully.
[8.] So that when thou seest a rich man plundering spoor, leave him that
suffereth wrong, and weep for the plunderer. For the one putteth off filth, the
other bedaubeth himself with more filth. Such was the fate of Elisha's servant
in the story of Naaman (2 Kings v. 20, &c.) For though he took not by violence,
yet he did a wrong; for to get money by deceit is a wrong. What then befel?
With the wrong he received also the leprosy; and he that was wronged was
benefited, but he that did the wrong received the greatest possible harm. The same
happens now also in the case of the soul. And this is of so great force that often
by itself it hath propitiated God; yea though he who suffereth evil be unworthy
of aid; yet when he so suffers in excess, by this alone he draweth God unto
the forgiveness of himself, and to the punishment of him that did the wrong.
Wherefore also God said of old to the heathen, "I indeed delivered them over unto a
few things, but they have set themselves on together unto evil things;" (Zech.
i. 15. LXX.) they shall suffer ills irremediable(1). For there is nothing, no,
nothing, that doth so much exasperate God as rapine and violence and
extortion. And why forsooth? Because it is very easy to abstain from this sin. For here
it is not any natural desire that perturbeth the mind, but it ariseth from
wilful negligence(2). How then doth the Apostle call it, "a root of evils." (1 Tim.
vi. 10.) Why, I say so too, but this root is from us, and not from the nature
of the things. And, if ye will,let us make a comparison and see which is the
more imperious, the desire of money or of beauty(3); for that which shall be
found to have struck down great men is the more difficult to master. Let us see
then what great man the desire of money ever got possession of. Not one; only of
exceeding pitiful and abject persons, Gehazi, Ahab, Judas, the priests of the
Jews: but the desire for beauty overcame even the great prophet David. And this I
say, not as extending forgiveness to those who are conquered by such a lust,
but rather, as preparing them to be watchful. For when I have shown the strength
of the passion, then, most especially, I show them to be deprived of every
claim to forgiveness. For if indeed thou hadst not known the wild beast, thou
wouldest have this to take refuge in; but now, having known, yet falling into it,
thou wilt have no excuse. After him(4), it took possession of his son still more
completely. And yet there was never man wiser than he, and all other virtue
did he attain; still, however, he was seized so violently by this passion, that
even in his vitals he received the wound. And the father indeed rose up again
and renewed the struggle, and was crowned again; but the son showed nothing of
the kind.
Therefore also Paul said, "It is better to marry than to burn:"(1 Cor.
vii. 9.) and Christ, "He that is able to receive it, let him receive it." (Matt.
xiv. 12.) But concerning money He spake not so, but, "whoso hath forsaken" his
goods "shall receive an hundredfold. "(ib. 29.) 'How then,' saith one, 'did He
say of the rich, that they shall hardly obtain the kingdom?' Again implying
their weakness of character; not the imperiousness of money, but their utter
slavery. And this is evident also from the advice which Paul gave. For from that lust
he leads men quite away, saying. "But they that desire to be rich fall into
temptation ;"(1 Tim. vi. 9.) but in the case of the other not so; but having
separated them "for a season" only, and that by "consent," he advises to 'come
together again' (1 Cor. vii. 5.) For he feared the billows of lust lest they should
occasion a grievous shipwreck. This passion is even more vehement(5) than
anger. For it is not possible to feel anger when there is nothing(6) provoking it,
but a man cannot help desiring even when the face which moveth to it is not
seen. Therefore this passion indeed He did not cut off altogether, but added the
words, "without a cause." (Matt. v. 22. ) Nor again did He abolish all desire,
but only that which is unlawful, for he saith, "Nevertheless, because of
desires(7), let every man have his own wife." (1 Cor. vii. 2.) But to lay up
treasure He allowed not, either with cause or without. For those passions were
implanted in our nature for a necessary end; desire, for the procreation of children,
and anger, for the succor of the injured, but desire of money not so. Therefore
neither is the passion natural to us. So then if thou art made captive by it,
thou wilt suffer so much the more the vilest punishment. Therefore surely, it
is, that Paul, permitting even a second marriage, demands in the case of money
great strictness, saying, "Why not rather take wrong? why not rather be
defrauded?" (1 Cor. vi. 7.) And when treating of virginity, he says, "I have no
commandment," (ib. vii. 25.)and "I speak this for your profit, not that I may cast a
snare upon you;" (ib. 35.) but when his discourse is of money, he says, "Having
raiment and food, let us be therewith content." (1 Tim. vi. 8. ) `How then is
it,' saith one, ' that by this, more than the other, are many overcome?'
Because they stand not so much on their guard(1) against it as against lasciviousness
and fornication; for if they had thought it equally dangerous, they would not,
perhaps, have been made its captives. So also were those wretched virgins cast
out of the bridechamber, because that, having struck down the great adversary,
they were wounded(2) by one weaker, and who was nothing. (Mat. xxv. 1, &c.)
Besides this, one may say further, that if any, subduing lust, is overcome by
money, often(3) he does not in fact subdue lust, but has received from nature the
gift of suffering no great uneasiness of that sort; for all are not equally
inclined to it. Knowing then these things, and revolving frequently with ourselves
the example of the virgins, let us shun this evil wild beast. For if virginity
profited them nothing, but after countless toils and labors they perished
through the love of money, who shall deliver us if we fall into this passion?
Wherefore I beseech you to do all you can, both that ye be not taken captive by it,
and that if taken, ye continue not in captivity, but break asunder those hard
bonds. For so shall we be able to secure a footing in heaven and to obtain the
countless good things; whereunto may all we attain, through the grace and love
towards men of our Lord Jesus Christ, with Whom to the Father, with the Holy
Ghost, be glory, might, honor, now and for ever, and world without end. Amen.
HOMILY XXIV.
2 COR. xi. 13.
"Forsuch are false apostles, deceitful workers, fashioning themselves into
Apostles of Christ."
WHAT sayest thou? they that preach Christ, they that take not money, they
that bring not in a different gospel, "false apostles?" 'Yes,' he saith, and
for this very reason most of all, because they make pretense of all these things
for the purpose of deceiving. "Deceitful workers," for they do work indeed, but
pull up what has been planted. For being well aware that otherwise they would
not be well received, they take the mask of truth and so enact the drama of
error. 'And yet,' saith one, 'they take no money.' That they may take greater
things; that they may destroy the soul. Yea rather, even that was a falsehood; and
they took money but did it secretly: and he shows this in what follows. And
indeed he already hinted this where he said, "that wherein they glory, they may be
found even as we:"(Ver. 12.) in what follows, however, he hinted it more
plainly, saying, "If a man devour you, if a man take you captive, if a man exalt
himself, ye bear with him. "(Ver. 20.) But at present he accuses them on another
account, saying," fashioning themselves." They had only a "fashion;" the skin of
the sheep was but outside clothing(4). Ver. 14, 15. "And no marvel; for if
even Satan fashioneth himself into an angel of light, is it a great thing if his
ministers also fashion themselves as ministers of righteousness?"
So that if one ought to marvel, this is what he ought to marvel at, and
not at their transformation. For when their teacher dares do any thing, no marvel
that the disciples also follow. But what is "an angel of light?" That hath
free liberty to speak, that standeth near to God. For there are also angels of
darkness; those which be the devil's, those dark and cruel ones. And the devil
hath deceived many so, fashioning himself "into," not becoming, "an angel of
light." So do also do these bear about them the form of an Apostle, not the power
itself, for this they cannot. But nothing is so like the devil(5) as to do things
for display. But what is "a ministry of righteousness?" That which we are who
preach to you a Gospel having righteousness. For he either means this, or else
that they invest themselves with the character of righteous men. How then shall
we know them? "By their works," as Christ said. Wherefore he is compelled to
place his own good deeds and their wickedness side by side, that the spurious
may become evident by the comparison. And when about again to enter upon his own
praises, he first accuses them, in order to show that such an argument was
forced upon him, lest any should accuse him for speaking about himself, and says,
Ver. 16. "Again I say." For he had even already used much preparatory
corrective: 'But nevertheless I am not contented with what I have said, but I say
yet again,'
"Let no man think me foolish." For this was what they did--boasted without
a reason.--But observe, I pray you, how often, when about to enter upon his
own praises, he checks himself(1). 'For indeed it is the act of folly,' he says,
'to boast: but I do it, not as playing the fool, but because compelled. But if
ye do not believe me, but though ye see there is a necessity will condemn me;
not even so will I decline the task(2).' Seest thou how he showed that there was
great necessity for his speaking. For he that shunned not even this suspicion,
consider what violent impulsion to speak he must have undergone, how he
travailed and was constrained to speak. But, nevertheless, even so he employs this
thing with moderation. For he did not say, 'that I may glory.' And when about to
do "a little," again he uses yet another deprecatory expression(3), saying,
Ver. 17. "That which I speak, I speak not after the Lord, but as in
foolishness, in this confidence of glorifying."
Seest thou how glorying is not "after the Lord?" For He saith, "When ye
shall have done all, say, We are unprofitable servants." (Luke xvii. 10.)
Howbeit, by itself indeed it is not "after the Lord," but by the intention it becomes
so. And therefore he said, "That which I speak," not accusing the motive, but
the words. Since his aim is so admirable as to dignify the words also. For as a
manslayer, though his action be of those most strictly forbidden, has often
been approved from the intention; and as circumcision, although it is not 'after
the Lord, has become so from the intention, so also glorying. And wherefore then
does he not use so great strictness of expression? Because he is hastening on
to another point, and he freely gratifies even to superfluity those who are
desirous to find a handle against him, so that he may say only the things that are
profitable; for when said they were enough to extinguish all that suspicion.
"But as in foolishness." Before he says, "Would that ye could bear with me in a
little foolishness,'' (Ver. 4.) but now "as in foolishness;" for the farther he
proceeds, the more he clears his language. Then that thou mayest not think
that he plays the fool on all points, he added, "in this confidence of glorying."
In this particular he means: just as in another place he said, "that we be not
put to shame, "and added, "in this confidence of glorying." (Chap. ix. 4.) And
again, in another place, having said, "Or what I purpose do I purpose according
to the flesh, that with me there should be the yea yea, and the nay nay?"
(Chap. i. 17.) And having shown that he cannot in all cases even fulfil what he
promises, because he does not purpose after the flesh, lest any should make this
suspicion stretch to the doctrine also, he adds, "But as God is faithful our
word towards you was not yea and nay." (Ibid. 18.)
[2.] And observe how after having said so many things before, he again
sets down yet other grounds of excuse, saying further thus,
Ver. 18. "Seeing that many glory after the flesh, I will glory also."
What is, "after the flesh?" Of things external, of high birth, of wealth,
of wisdom, of being circumcised, of Hebrew ancestry, of popular renown. And
behold wisdom. He sets down those things which he shows to be nothings(4), and
then, folly also. For if to glory in what are really good things be folly, much
more is it so [to glory in] those that are nothing. And this is what he calls,
"not after the Lord." For it is no advantage to be a Hebrew, or any such like
things soever. 'Think not, therefore, that I set these down as a virtue; no; but
because those men boast I also am compelled to institute my comparison on these
points.' Which he does also in another place, saying, "If any man thinketh that
he may trust in the flesh, I more:" (Phil. iii. 4.) and there, it is on their
account that trusted in this. Just as if one who was come of an illustrious
race but had chosen a philosophic life, should see others priding themselves
greatly on being well-born; and being desirious of taking down their vanity, should
be compelled to speak of his own distinction; not to adorn himself, but to
humble them; so, truly, does Paul also do. Then leaving those, he empties all his
censure upon the Corinthians, saying,
Ver. 19. "For ye bear with the foolish gladly." 'So that ye are to blame
for this, and more than they. For if ye had not borne with them, and so far as
it lay in them received damage, I would not have spoken a word; but I do it out
of a tender care for your salvation, and in condescension. And behold, how he
accompanies even his censure with praise. For having said, "ye bear with the
foolish gladly;" he added,
"Being wise yourselves." For it was a sign of folly to glory, and on such
matters. And yet it behoved to rebuke them, and say, 'Do not bear with the
foolish;' he does this, however, at greater advantage. For in that case he would
have seemed to rebuke them because he himself was destitute of these advantages;
but now having showed himself to be their superior even in these points, and to
esteem them to be nothing, he corrects them with greater effect. At present,
however, before entering upon his own praises and the comparison, he also
reproaches the Corinthians with their great slavishness, because they were
extravagantly submissive to them. And observe how he ridicules them.
Ver. 20. "For ye bear with a man," he says, "if he devour you."
How then saidst thou, "that wherein they glory, they may be found even as
we?" (Ver. 12. ) Seest thou that he shows that they did take of them, and not
simply take, but even in excess: for the term "devour" plainly shows this,
"If a man bring you into bondage." 'Ye have given away both your money,'
he says, 'and your persons, and your freedom. For this is more than taking of
you; to be masters not only of your money, but of yourselves also.' And he makes
this plain even before, where he says, "If others partake of this right over
you, do not we much more?" (1 Cor. ix. 12.) Then he addeth what is more severe,
saying,
"If a man exalt himself." 'For neither is your slavery of a moderate sort,
nor are your masters gentle, but burdensome and odious.'
"If a man smite you on the face." Seest thou again a further stretch of
tyranny? He said this, not meaning that they were stricken on the face, but that
they spat upon and dishonored them; wherefore he added,
Ver. 21. "I speak by way of disparagement," for ye suffer no whir less
than men smitten on the face. What now can be stronger than this? What oppression
more bitter than this? when having taken from you both your money and your
freedom and your honor, they even so are not gentle towards you nor suffer you to
abide in the rank of servants, but have used you more insultingly than any
bought slave.(*)
"As though we had been weak." The expression is obscure. For since it was
a disagreeable subject he therefore so expressed it as to steal away the
offensiveness by the obscurity. For what he wishes to say is this. 'For cannot we
also do these things? Yes, but we do them not. Wherefore then do ye bear with
these men, as though we could not do these things? Surely it were something to
impute to you that ye even bear with men who play the fool; but that ye do this,
even when they so despise you, plunder you, exalt themselves, smite you, can
admit neither of excuse nor any reason at all. For this is a new fashion of
deceiving. For men that deceive both give and flatter; but these both deceive, and
take and insult you. Whence ye cannot have a shadow of allowance, seeing that ye
spit on those that humble themselves for your sakes that ye may be exalted, but
admire those who exalt themselves that ye may be humbled. For could not we too
do these things? Yes, but we do not wish it, looking to your advantage. For
they indeed sacrificing your interests seek their own, but we sacrificing our own
interests seek for yours.' Seest thou how in every instance, whilst speaking
plainly to them, he also alarms them by what he says. 'For,' he says, 'if it be
on this account that ye honor them, because they smite and insult you, we also
can do this, enslave, smite, exalt ourselves against you.'
[3.] Seest thou how he lays upon them the whole blame, both of their
senseless pride and of what seems to be folly in himself. 'For not that I may show
myself more conspicuous, but that I may set you free from this bitter slavery,
am I compelled to glory some little. But it is meet to examine not simply things
that are said, but, in addition, the reason also. For Samuel also put together
a high panegyric upon himself, when he anointed Saul, saying, "Whose ass have
I taken, or calf, or shoes? or have I oppressed any of you?" (1 Sam. xii. 3,
LXX.) And yet no one finds fault with him. And the reason is because he did not
say it by way of setting off himself; but because he was going to appoint a
king, he wishes under the form of a defence [of himself] to instruct him to be meek
and gentle. And observe the wisdom of the prophet, or rather the loving
kindness of God. For because he wished to turn them from [their design,] bringing
together a number of grievous things he asserted them of their future king, as,
for instance, that he would make their wives grind at the mill, (1 Sam. viii.
11--18.) the men shepherds and muleteers; for he went through all the service
appertaining to the kingdom with minuteness. But when he saw that they would not be
hindered by any of these things, but were incurably distempered; he thus both
spareth them and composeth their king to gentleness. (1 Sam. xii. 5.) Therefore
he also takes him to witness. For indeed no one was then bringing suit or
charge against him that he needed to defend himself, but he said those things in
order to make him better. And therefore also he added, to take down his pride,
"If ye will hearken, ye and your king," (ibid. 14.) such and such good things
shall be yours; "but if ye will not hearken, then the reverse of all." Amos also
said, "I was no prophet, nor the son of a prophet, but only a herdsman, a
gatherer of sycamore fruit. And God took me." (Amos vii. 14, 15.) But he did not say
this to exalt himself, but to step their mouths that suspected him as no
prophet, and to show that he is no deceiver, nor says of his own mind the things
which he says. Again, another also, to show the very same thing, said, "But truly I
am full of power by the spirit and might of the Lord." (Micah iii. 8.) And
David also when he related the matter of the lion and of the bear, (1 Sam. xvii.
34, &c.) spake not to glorify himself, but to bring about a great and admirable
end. For since it was not believed possible he could conquer the barbarian
unarmed, he that was not able even to bear arms; he was compelled to give proofs of
his own valor. And when he cut off Saul's skirt, he said not what he said out
of display, but to repel an ill suspicion which they had scattered abroad
against him, saying, that he wished to kill him. (1 Sam. xxiv. 4, &c.) It is meet
therefore every where to seek for the reason. For he that looks to the advantage
of his hearers even though he should praise himself, not only deserves not to
be found fault with, but even to be crowned; and if he is silent, then to be
found fault with. For if David had then been silent in the matter of Goliath, they
would not have allowed him to go out to the battle, nor to have raised that
illustrious trophy. On this account then he speaks being compelled; and that not
to his brethren, although he was distrusted by them too as well as by the king;
but envy stopped their ears. Therefore leaving them alone, he tells his tale
to him who was not as yet envious of him.
[4.] For envy is a fearful, a fearful thing, and persuades men to despise
their own salvation. In this way did both Cain destroy himself, and again,
before his time, the devil who was the destroyer of his father. So did Saul invite
an evil demon against his own soul; and when he had invited, he again envied
his physician. For such is the nature of envy; he knew that he was saved, yet he
would rather have perished than see him that saved him had in honor. What can
be more grievous than this passion? One cannot err in calling it the devil's
offspring. And in it is contained the fruit of vainglory, or rather its root also;
for both these evils are wont mutually to produce each other. And thus in
truth it was that Saul even thus envied, when they said, "David smote by ten
thousands," (1 Sam. xviii. 7.) than which what can be more senseless? For why dost
thou envy? tell me! 'Because such an one praised him?' Yet surely thou oughtest
to rejoice; besides, thou dost not know even whether the praise be true. And
dost thou therefore grieve because without being admirable he hath been praised as
such? And yet thou oughtest to feel pity. For if he be good, thou oughtest not
to envy him when praised, but thyself to praise along with those that speak
well of him; but if not such, why art thou galled? why thrust the sword against
thyself? 'Because admired by men?' But men to-day are and to-morrow are not.'
But because he enjoys glory?' Of what sort, tell me? That of which the prophet
says that it is "the flower of grass." (Isa. xl. 6. LXX.) Art thou then therefore
envious because thou bearest no burden, nor carriest about with thee such
loads of grass? But if he seems to thee to be enviable on this account, then why
not also woodcutters who carry burdens every day and come to the city [with
them]? For that burden is nothing better than this, but even worse. For theirs
indeed galls the body only, but this hath oftentimes harmed the soul even and
occasioned greater solicitude than pleasure. And should one have gained renown
through eloquence, the fear he endures is greater than the good report he bears; yea,
what is more, the one is short, the other perpetual. 'But he is in favor with
those in authority?' In that too again is danger and envy. For as thou feelest
towards him, so do many others feel. 'But he is praised continually?' This
produces bitter slavery. For he will not dare to do fearlessly aught of what
according to his judgment he should, lest he should offend those that extol him, for
that distinction is a hard bondage to him. So that the more he is known to, so
many the more masters he has, and his slavery becomes the greater, as masters
of his are found in every quarter. A servant indeed, when he is released from
the eye of his master, both takes breath and lives in all freedom; but this man
meets with masters at every turn, for he is the slave of all that appear in the
forum. And even should some necessary object press, he dares not set foot in
the forum, except it be with his servants following, and his horse, and all his
other show set in array, lest his masters condemn him. And if he sees some
friend of those who are truly so(1), he has not the boldness to talk with him on an
equal footing: for he is afraid of his masters, lest they depose him from his
glory. So that the more distinguished he is, so much the more he is enslaved.
And if he suffer aught that is disagreeable, the insult is the more annoying,
both in that he has more to witness it and it seems to infringe his dignity. It is
not only an insult, but a calamity also, for he has also many who exult at it;
and in like way if he come to the enjoyment of any good thing, he has more
who envy and detract and do their vigilance to destroy him. Is this then a good?
tell me. Is this glory? By no means; but ingloriousness, and slavery, and
bonds, and every burdensome thing one can say. But if the glory that cometh of men
be so greatly to be coveted in thy account, and if it quite disquiets thee that
such and such an one is applauded of the many; when thou beholdest him in the
enjoyment of that applause, pass over in thy thought to the world to come and
the glory which is there. And just as when hurrying to escape the onset of a wild
beast, thou enterest into a cabin and shuttest to the doors; so now also flee
unto the life to come, and that unspeakable glory. For so shalt thou both tread
this under thy feet, and wilt easily lay hold upon that, and wilt enjoy the
true liberty, and the eternal good things; whereunto may we all attain through
the grace and love towards men of our Lord Jesus Christ, with Whom to the Father,
with the Holy Spirit, be glory, might, honor, now and ever, and world without
end. Amen.
HOMILY XXV.
2 COR. xi. 21.
"Yet whereinsoever any is bold, (I speak in foolishness,) I am bold also."
SEE him again drawing back and using depreciation and correctives
beforehand, although he has already even said many such things: "Would that ye could
bear with me in a little foolishness;" (Ver. 1.) and again, "Let no man think me
foolish: if ye do, yet as foolish receive me." (Ver. 16.) "That which I speak,
I speak not after the Lord, but as in foolishness." (Ver. 17.) "Seeing that
many glory after the flesh, I will glory also;" (Ver. 18.) and here again,
"Whereinsoever any is bold, (I speak in foolishness) I am bold also." Boldness and
folly he calls it to speak aught great of himself, and that though there was a
necessity, teaching us even to an excess(1) to avoid any thing of the sort. For if
after we have done all, we ought to call ourselves unprofitable; of what
forgiveness can he be worthy who, when no reason presses, exalts himself and boasts?
Therefore also did the Pharisee meet the fate he did, and even in harbor
suffered shipwreck because he struck upon this rock. Therefore also doth Paul,
although he sees very ample necessity for it, draw back nevertheless, and keep on
observing that such speaking is a mark of foolishness. And then at length he
makes the venture(2), putting forward the plea of necessity, and says,
Ver. 22. "Are they Hebrews? so am I. Are they Israelites? so am I."
For it was not all Hebrews that were Israelites, since both the Ammonites
and Moabites were Hebrews. Wherefore he added somewhat to clear his nobility of
descent, and says,
Ver. 22, 23. "Are they the seed of Abraham? so am I. Are they ministers of
Christ. (I speak as one beside himself,) I more."
He is not content with his former deprecation, but uses it again here
also. "I speak as one beside himself, I more." I am their superior and their
better. And indeed he possessed clear proofs of his superiority, but nevertheless
even so he terms the thing a folly(3). And yet if they were false Apostles, he
heeded not to have introduced his own superiority by way of comparison, but to
have destroyed their claim to "be ministers" at all. Well, he did destroy it,
saying, "False Apostles, deceitful workers, fashioning themselves into Apostles of
Christ," (Ver. 13.) but now he doth not proceed in that way, for his discourse
was about to proceed to strict examination; and no one when an examination is
in hand simply asserts; but having first stated the case in the way of
comparison, he shows it to be negatived by the facts, a very strong negative. But
besides, it is their opinion he gives, not his own assertion, when he says, "Are they
ministers of Christ?" And having said, "I more," he proceeds in his
comparison, and shows that not by bare assertions, but by furnishing the proof that facts
supply, he maintains the impress of the Apostleship. And leaving all his
miracles, he begins with his trials; thus saying,
"In labors more abundantly, in stripes above measure." This latter is
greater than the former; to be both beaten and scourged.
"In prisons more abundantly." Here too again is there an increase. "In
deaths oft." (1 Cor. xv. 31.) For, "I die," saith he, "daily." But here, even in
reality; 'for I have oft been delivered into mortal dangers(4)."
Ver. 24. "Of the Jews five times received I forty stripes save one."
Why, "save one?" There was an ancient law that he who had received more
than the forty should be held disgraced amongst them. Lest then the vehemence and
impetuosity(1) of the executioner by inflicting more than the number should
cause a man to be disgraced, they decreed that they should be inflicted, "save
one," that even if the executioner should exceed, he might not overpass the
forty, but remaining within the prescribed number might not bring degradation on him
that was scourged.
Ver. 25. "Thrice was I beaten with rods once was I stoned, thrice I
suffered shipwreck."
And what has this to do with the Gospel? Because he went forth on long
journeys; and those by sea.
"A night and a day I have been in the deep." Some say this means out on
the open sea, others, swimming upon it, which is also the truer interpretation.
There is nothing wonderful, at least, about the former, nor would he have placed
it as greater than his shipwrecks.
Ver. 26. "In perils of rivers."
For he was compelled also to cross rivers. "In perils of robbers, in
perils in the city, in perils in the wilderness." 'Everywhere were contests set
before me, in places, in countries, in cities, in deserts.'
"In perils from the Gentiles, in perils amongst false brethren."
Behold another kind of warfare. For not only did such as were enemies
strike at him, but those also who played the hypocrite; and he had need of much
firmness, much prudence.
[2.] Ver. 27. "In labor and travail."
Perils succeed to labors, labors to perils, one upon other and
unintermitted, and allowed him not to take breath even for a little.
Ver. 27, 28. "In journeyings often, in hunger and thirst and nakedness,
besides those things that are without."
What is left out is more than what is enumerated. Yea rather, one cannot
count the number of those even which are enumerated; for he has not set them
down specifically, but has mentioned those the number of which was small and
easily comprehended, saying, "thrice" and "thrice," (Ver. 25.) and [again] "once ;"
but of the others he does not mention the number because he had endured them
often. And he recounts not their results as that he had converted so many and so
many, but only what he suffered on behalf of the Preaching; at once out of
modesty, and as showing that even should nothing have been gained but labor, even
so his title to wages has been fulfilled.
"That which presseth upon me daily." The tumults, the disturbances, the
assaults(2) of mobs, onsets of cities. For the Jews waged war against this man
most of all because he most of all confounded them, and his changing sides all at
once was the greatest refutation of their madness. And there breathed a mighty
war against him, from his own people, from strangers, from false brethren; and
every where were billows and precipices, in the inhabited world, in the
uninhabited, by land, by sea, without, within. And he had not even a full supply of
necessary food, nor even of thin clothing, but the champion of the world
wrestled in nakedness and fought in hunger; so far was he from enriching himself(3).
Yet he murmured not, but was grateful for these things to the Judge of the
combat.(4)
"Anxiety for all the Churches." This was the chief thing of all, that his
soul too was distracted, and his thoughts divided. For even if nothing from
without had assailed him; yet the war within was enough, those waves on waves,
that sleet of cares, that war of thoughts. For if one that hath charge of but a
single house, and hath servants and superintendents and stewards, often cannot
take breath for cares, though there be none that molests him: he that hath the
care not of a single house, but of cities and peoples and nations and of the
whole world; and in respect to such great concerns, and with so many spitefully
entreating him, and single-handed, and suffering so many things, and so tenderly
concerned as not even a father is for his children--consider what he endured.
For that thou mayest not say, What if he was anxious, yet the anxiety was
slight(5), he added further the intensity of the care, saying,
Ver. 29. "Who is weak, and I am not weak?" He did not say, 'and I share
not in his dejection?' but, 'so am I troubled and disturbed, as though I myself
were laboring under that very affection, that very infirmity.'
"Who is made to stumble, and I burn not?" See, again, how he places before
us the excess of his grief by calling it "burning." 'I am on fire,' 'I am in a
flame,' he says, which is surely greater than any thing he has said. For those
other things, although violent, yet both pass quickly by, and brought with
them that pleasure which is unfading; but this was what afflicted and straightened
him, and pierced his mind through and through; the suffering such things for
each one of the weak, whosoever he might be. For he did not feel pained for the
greater sort only and despise the lesser, but counted even the abject amongst
his familiar friends. Wherefore also he said, "who is weak?" whosoever he may
be; and as though he were himself the Church throughout the world, so was he
distressed for every member.
Ver. 30. "If I must needs glory, I will glory of the things which concern
my weakness."
Seest thou that he no where glorieth of miracles, but of his persecutions
and his trials? For this is meant by "weaknesses." And he shows that his
warfare was of a diversified character(1). For both the Jews warred upon him, and the
Gentiles stood against him, and the false brethren fought with him, and
brethren caused him sorrow, through their weakness and by taking offense:--on every
side he found trouble and disturbance, from friends and from strangers. This is
the especial mark of an Apostle, by these things is the Gospel woven.
Ver. 31, 32. "The God and Father of the Lord Jesus knoweth that I lie not.
The Governor under Aretas the king guarded the city of the Damascenes,
desiring to apprehend me."
What can be the reason that he here strongly confirms and gives assurance
of [his truth], seeing he did not so in respect to any of the former things?
Because, perhaps, this was of older date and not so well known(2); whilst of
those other facts, his care for the churches, and all the rest, they were
themselves cognisant. See then how great the war [against him] was, since on his account
the city was "guarded." And when I say this of the war, I say it of the zeal
of Paul; for except this had breathed intensely, it had not kindled the
governor to so great madness. These things are the part of an apostolic soul, to
suffer so great things and yet in nothing to veer about, but to bear nobly whatever
befalls; yet not to go out to meet dangers, nor to rush upon them. See for
instance here, how he was content to evade the siege, by being "let down through a
window in a basket." For though he were even desirous "to depart hence;" still
nevertheless he also passionately affected the salvation of men. And therefore
he ofttimes had recourse even to such devices as these, preserving himself for
the Preaching; and he refused not to use even human contrivances when the
occasion called for them; so sober and watchful was he. For in cases where evils
were inevitable, he needed only grace; but where the trial was of a measured
character, he devises many things of himself even, here again ascribing the whole to
God. And just as a spark of unquenchable fire, if it fell into the sea, would
be merged as many waves swept over it, yet would again rise shining to the
surface; even so surely the blessed Paul also would now be overwhelmed by perils,
and now again, having dived(3) through them, would come up more radiant,
overcoming by suffering evil.
[3.] For this is the brilliant victory, this is the Church's trophy, thus
is the Devil overthrown when we suffer injury. For when we suffer, he is taken
captive; and himself suffers harm, when he would fain inflict it on us. And
this happened in Paul's case also; and the more he plied him with perils, the more
was he defeated. Nor did he raise up against him only one kind of trials, but
various and diverse. For some involved labor, others sorrow, others fear,
others pain, others care, others shame, others all these at once; but yet he was
victorious in all. And like as if a single soldier, having the whole world
fighting against him, should move through the mid ranks of his enemies, and suffer no
harm: even so did Paul, showing himself singly, among barbarians, among Greeks,
on every land, on every sea, abide unconquered. And as a spark, falling upon
reeds and hay, changes into its own nature the things so kindled; so also did
this man setting upon all make things change over unto the truth; like a winter
torrent, sweeping over all things and overturning every obstacle. And like some
champion who wrestles, runs, and boxes too; or soldier engaged by turns in
storming(4), fighting on foot, on shipboard; so did he try by turns every form of
fight, and breathed out fire, and was unapproachable by all; with his single
body taking possession of the world, with his single tongue putting all to
flight. Not with such force did those many trumpets fall upon the stones of Jericho
and throw them down, as did the sound of this man's voice both dash to the earth
the devil's strong-holds and bring over to himself those that were against
him. And when he had collected a multitude of captives, having armed the same, he
made them again his own army, and by their means conquered. Wonderful was David
who laid Goliah low with a single stone; but if thou wilt examine Paul's
achievements, that is a child's exploit, and great as is the difference between a
shepherd and a general, so great the difference thou shall see here. For this man
brought down no Goliath by the hurling of a stone, but by speaking only he
scattered the whole array of the Devil; as a lion roaring and darting out flame
from his tongue, so was he found by all irresistible; and bounded everywhere by
turns continually; he ran to these, he came to those, he turned about to these,
he bounded away to others, swifter in his attack than the wind; governing the
whole world, as though a single house or a single ship; rescuing the sinking,
steadying the dizzied, cheering the sailors, sitting at the tiller, keeping an
eye to the prow, tightening the yards, handling an oar, pulling at the mast,
watching the sky; being all things in himself, both sailor, and pilot, and pilot's
mate(1), and sail, and ship; and suffering all things in order to relieve the
evils of others. For consider. He endured shipwreck that he might stay the
shipwreck of the world; "a day and a night he passed in the deep," that he might
draw it up(2) from the deep of error; he was "in weariness" that he might refresh
the weary; he endured smiting that he might heal those that had been smitten of
the devil; he passed his time in prisons that he might lead forth to the light
those that were sitting in prison and in darkness; he was "in deaths oft" that
he might deliver from grievous deaths; "five times he received forty stripes
save one" that he might free those that inflicted them from the scourge of the
devil; he was "beaten with rods" that he might bring them under "the rod and the
staff" of Christ; (Ps. xxiii. 4.) he "was stoned," that he might deliver them
from the senseless stones; he "was in the wilderness(3), that he might take
them out of the wilderness; "in journeying," to stay their wanderings and open
the way that leadeth to heaven; he "was in perils in the cities," that he might
show the city which is above; "in hunger and thirst," to deliver from a more
grievous hunger; "in nakedness," to clothe their unseemliness with the robe of
Christ; set upon by the mob, to extricate them from the besetment of fiends; he
burned, that he might quench the burning darts of the devil: "through a window
was let down from the wall," to send up from below those that lay prostrate upon
the ground. Shall we then talk any more, seeing we do not so much as know what
Paul suffered? shall we make mention an y more of goods, or even of wife, or
city, or freedom, when we have seen him ten thousand times despising even life
itself? The martyr dies once for all: but that blessed saint in his one body and
one soul endured so many perils as were enough to disturb even a soul of
adamant; and what things all the saints together have suffered in so many bodies,
those all he himself endured in one: he entered into the world as if a
race-course, and stripped himself of all, and so made a noble stand. For he knew the
fiends that were wrestling with him. Wherefore also he shone forth brightly at once
from the beginning, from the very starting-post, and even to the end he
continued the same; yea, rather he even increased the intensity of his pursuit as he
drew nearer to the prize. And what surely is wonderful is that though suffering
and doing such great things, he knew how to maintain an exceeding modesty. For
when he was driven upon the necessity of relating his own good deeds, he ran
quickly over them all; although he might have filled books without number, had he
wished to unfold in detail(4) every thing he mentioned; if he had specified
the Churches he was in care for, if his prisons and his achievments in them, if
of the other things one by one, the besetments(5), the assaults. But he would
not. Knowing then these things, let us also learn to be modest and not to glory
at any time in wealth or other worldly things, but in the reproaches we suffer
for Christ's sake, and in these, only when need compels; for if there be nothing
urging it, let us not mention these even, (lest we be puffed up,) but our sins
only. For so shall we both easily be released from them and shall have God
propitious to us, and shall attain the life to come; whereunto may we all attain
through the grace and love towards men of our Lord Jesus Christ, with Whom to
the Father, with the Holy Ghost, be glory, might, honor, now and for ever, and
world without end. Amen.