HOMILIES OF ST. JOHN CHRYSOSTOM ON THE EPISTLE OF ST. PAUL THE APOSTLE TO THE
EPHESIANS, HOMILIES I TO IV (CHAPTERS 1 & 2)
HOMILIES OF ST. JOHN CHRYSOSTOM,
ARCHBISHOP OF CONSTANTINOPLE,
ON THE EPISTLE OF ST. PAUL THE APOSTLE
TO THE EPHESIANS
THE ARGUMENT.
Ephesus is the metropolis of Asia. It was dedicated to Diana, whom
especially they worshipped there as their great goddess. Indeed so great was the
superstition of her worshippers, that when her temple was burnt, they would not so
much as divulge the name of the man who burnt it.
The blessed John the Evangelist spent the chief part of his time there: he
was there when he was banished,[1] and there he died. It was there too that
Paul left Timothy, aS he says in writing to him, "As I exhorted thee to tarry at
Ephesus. (1 Tim. 1: 3.)
Most of the philosophers also, those more particularly who flourished in
Asia, were there; and even Pythagoras himself is said to have come from thence;
perhaps because Samos, whence he really came, is an island of Ionia.[2] It was
the resort also of the disciples of Parmenides, and Zeno, and Democritus, and
you may see a number of philosophers there even to the present day.
These facts I mention, not merely as such, but with a view of showing that
Paul would needs take great pains and trouble in writing to these Ephesians.
He is said indeed to have entrusted them, as being persons already
well-instructed, with his profoundest conceptions; and the Epistle itself is full of sublime
thoughts and doctrines.[3]
He wrote the Epistle from Rome, and, as he himself informs us, in bonds.
"Pray for me, that utterance may be given unto me, in opening my mouth to make
known with boldness the mystery of the Gospel, for which I am an ambassador in
chains." (Eph. vi: 19.) It abounds with sentiments of overwhelming loftiness and
grandeur. Thoughts which he scarcely so much as utters any where else, he here
plainly declares i as when he says, "To the intent that now unto the
principalities and the powers in the heavenly places might be made known through the
Church the manifold wisdom of God." (Eph. iii: 10.) And again; "He raised us up
with him, and made us to sit with him in heavenly places. (Eph. ii: 6.) And
again; "Which in other generations was not made known unto the sons of men, as it
hath now been revealed unto His holy apostles and prophets in the Spirit, that
the Gentiles are fellow-heirs, and fellow-partakers of the promise in Christ."
(Eph. iii: 5.)
HOMILY I
CHAPTER I.
Verses 1--2. "Paul, an apostle of Christ Jesus through the will of God, to the
saints which are at Ephesus,[1] and the faithful in Christ Jesus. Grace to
you, and peace, from God our Father, and the Lord Jesus Christ."
Observe, he applies the word "through" to the Father. But what then? Shall
we say that He is inferior? Surely not.
"To the saints, "saith he, "which are at Ephesus, and the faithful in
Christ Jesus."
Observe that he calls saints, men with wives, and children, and domestics.
For that these are they whom he calls by this name is plain from the end of
the Epistle, as, when he says, "Wives, be in subjection unto your own husbands."
(Eph. v: 22. ) And again, "Children, obey your parents: "( Eph. vi: 1. ) and,
"Servants, be obedient to your masters." (Eph. vi: 5. ) Think how great is the
indolence that possesses us now, how rare is any thing like virtue now and how
great the abundance of virtuous men must have been then, when even secular men
could be called "saints and faithful." "Grace to you, and peace, from God our
Father; and the Lord Jesus Christ." "Grace" is his word; and he calls God,
"Father," since this name is a sure token of that gift of grace. And how so? Hear
what he saith elsewhere; "Because ye are sons, God sent forth the Spirit of His
Son into our hearts, crying, Abba, Father." (Gal. iv: 6.)
"And from the Lord Jesus Christ."
Because for us men Christ was born, and appeared in the flesh.
Ver. 3. "Blessed[2] be the God," he saith, "and Father of our Lord Jesus
Christ."
Observe; The God of Him that was Incarnate[3]. And though thou wilt not,
The Father of God the Word.
Ver. 3. "Who hath blessed us with every spiritual blessing in the heavenly
places in Christ."
He is here alluding to the blessings of the Jews[4]; for that was blessing
also, but it was not spiritual blessing. For how did it run? "The Lord bless
thee, He will bless the fruit of thy body;" (Deut. vii: 13.) and "He will bless
thy going out and thy coming in." (Deut. xxviii: 4.) But here it is not thus,
but how? "With every spiritual blessing." And what lackest thou yet? Thou art
made immortal, thou art made free, thou art made a son, thou art made righteous,
thou art made a brother, thou art made a fellow-heir, thou reignest with
Christ, thou art glorified with Christ; all things are freely given thee. "How,"
saith he, "shall He not also with Him freely give us all things?" (Rom. viii: 32.)
Thy First-fruits is adored by Angels, by the Cherubim, by the Seraphim! What
lackest thou yet? "With every spiritual blessing." There is nothing carnal here.
Accordingly He excluded all those former blessings, when He said, "In the world
ye have tribulation," (John xvi: 33.) to lead us on to these. For as they who
possessed carnal things were unable to hear of spiritual things, so they who
aim at spiritual things cannot attain to them unless they first stand aloof from
carnal things.
What again is "spiritual blessing in the heavenly places?" It is not upon
earth, he means, as was the case with the Jews. "Ye shall eat the good of the
land." (Isa. i: 19.) "Unto a land flowing with milk and honey." (Ex. iii: 8.)
"The Lord shall bless thy land." (Deut. vii: 13.) Here we have nothing of this
sort, but what have we? "If a man love Me, he will keep My word, and I and My
Father will come unto him, and make our abode with him." (Jo. xiv: 23.) "Every one
therefore which heareth these words of Mine, and doeth them, shall be likened
unto a wise man which built his house upon the rock, and the floods came, and
the winds blew, and beat upon that house, and it fell not, for it was founded
upon the rock." (Mat. vii: 24, 25.) And what is that rock but those heavenly
things which are above the reach of every change? "Every one therefore who," saith
Christ, "shall confess Me before men him will I also confess before My Father
which is in Heaven: But whosoever shall deny Me, him will I also deny." (Mat.
x: 32, 33.) Again, "Blessed are the pure in heart, for they shall see God."
(Mat. v: 8.) And again, "Blessed are the poor in spirit, for theirs is the kingdom
of Heaven." (Mat. v: 3.) And again, "Blessed are ye which are persecuted for
righteousness sake, for great is your reward in Heaven." (Mat. v: 11, 12.)
Observe, how every where He speaketh of Heaven, no where of earth, or of the things
on the earth.[1] And again, "Our citizenship is in Heaven, from whence also we
wait for a Saviour the Lord Jesus Christ." (Phil. iii: 20. ) And again, "Not
setting your mind on the things that are on the earth, but on the things which
are above." (Col. iii: 30.)
"In Christ."
That is to say, this blessing was not by the hand of Moses, but by Christ
Jesus: so that we surpass them not only in the quality of the blessings, but in
the Mediator also. As moreover he saith in the Epistle to the Hebrews; "And
Moses indeed was faithful in all his house as a servant, for a testimony of those
things which were afterward to be spoken; but Christ as a Son over His house,
whose house are we." (Heb. iii: 5-6.)
Ver. 4. "Even as," he proceeds, "He chose us in Him before the foundation
of the world, that we should be holy and without blemish before Him in love."
His meaning is somewhat of this sort. Through whom He hath blessed us, through
Him He hath also chosen us. And He, then, it is that shall bestow upon us all
those rewards hereafter. He is the very Judge that shall say, "Come, ye blessed
of my Father, inherit the kingdom prepared for you from the foundation of the
world." (Mat. xxv: 34.) And again, "I will that where I am they will also be
with Me." (John xvii: 24.) And this is a point which he is anxious to prove. in
almost all his Epistles, that ours is no novel system, but that it had thus been
figured from the very first, that it is not the result of any change of
purpose, but had been in fact a divine dispensation and fore-ordained.And this is a
mark of great solicitude for us.
What is meant by, "He chose us in Him?" By means of the faith which is in
Him, Christ, he means, happily ordered this for us before we were born; nay
more, before the foundation of the world. And beautiful is that word "foundation,"
as though he were pointing to the world as cast down from some vast height.
Yea, vast indeed and ineffable is the height of God, so far removed not in place
but in incommunicableness of nature; so wide the distance between creation and
Creator t A word which heretics may be ashamed to hear.[2]
But wherefore hath He chosen us? "That we should be holy and without a
blemish before Him." That you may not then, when you hear that "He hath chosen
us," imagine that faith alone is sufficient, he proceeds to add life and conduct.
To this end, saith he, hath He chosen us, and on this condition, "that we
should be holy and without blemish." And so formerly he chose the Jews. On what
terms? "This nation, saith he, hath He chosen from the rest of the nations."
(Deut. xiv: 2.) Now if men in their choices choose what is best, much more doth God.
And indeed the fact of their being chosen is at once a token of the loving
kindness of God, and of their moral goodness.[3] For by all means would he have
chosen those who were approved. He hath Himself rendered us holy, but then we
must continue holy. A holy man is he who is a partaker of faith; a blameless man
is he who leads an irreproachable life. It is not however simply holiness and
irreproachableness that He requires, but that we should appear such "before Him."
For there are holy and blameless characters, who yet are esteemed as such only
by men those who are like whited sepulchres, and like such as wear sheep's
clothing. It is not such, however, He requires, but such as the Prophet speaks of;
"And according to the cleanness of my hands." (Ps. xviii: 24.) What cleanness?
That which is so "in His eyesight." He requires that holiness on which the eye
of God may look.
Having thus spoken of the good works of these, he again recurs to His
grace. "In love," saith he, "having predestinated us." Because this comes not of
any pains, nor of any good works of ours, but of love; and yet not of love alone,
but of our virtue also. For if indeed of love alone, it would follow that all
must be saved; whereas again were it the result of our virtue alone, then were
His coming needless, and the whole dispensation. But it is the result neither
of His love alone, nor yet of our virtue, but of both. "He chose us," saith the
Apostle; and He that chooseth, knoweth what it is that He chooseth. "In
love,"[1] he adds, "having foreordained us;" for virtue would never have saved any
one, had there not been love. For tell me, what would Paul have profited, how
would he have exhibited what he has exhibited, if God had not both called him from
the beginning, and, in that He loved him, drawn him to Himself? But besides,
His vouchsafing us so great privileges, was the effect of His love, not of our
virtue. Because our being rendered virtuous, and believing, and coming nigh unto
Him, even this again was the work of Him that called us Himself, and yet,
notwithstanding, it is ours also. But that on our coming nigh unto Him, He should
vouchsafe us so high privileges, as to bring us at once from a state of enmity,
to the adoption of children, this is indeed the work of a really transcendent
love.
Ver. 4, 5. "In love,"[1] saith he, "having foreordained us unto adoption
as sons through Jesus Christ unto Himself."
Do you observe how that nothing is done without Christ? Nothing without
the Father? The one hath predestinated, the other hath brought us near. And these
words he adds by way of heightening the things which have been done, in the
same way as he says also elsewhere, "And not only so, but we also rejoice in God,
through our Lord Jesus Christ." (Rom. v: II.) For great indeed are the
blessings bestowed, yet are they made far greater in being bestowed through Christ;
because He sent not any servant, though it was to servants He sent, but the
Only-begotten Son Himself.
Ver. 5. "According to the good pleasure," he continues, "of His will."
That is to say, because He earnestly willed it. This is, as one might say,
His earnest desire.[2] For the word "good pleasure" every where means the
precedent will, for there is also another will. As for example, the first will is
that sinners should not perish; the second will is, that, if men become wicked,
they shall perish. For surely it is not by necessity that He punishes them, but
because He wills it. You may see something of the sort even in the words of
Paul, where he says, "I would that all men were even as I myself." (1 Cor. vii:
7.) And again, "I desire that the younger widows marry, bear children." (I Tim.
v: 14.) By "good pleasure" then he means the first will, the earnest will, the
will accompanied with earnest desire, as in case of us, for I shall not refuse
to employ even a somewhat familiar expression, in order to speak with clearness
to the simpler sort; for thus we ourselves, to express the intentness of the
will, speak of acting according to our resolve. What he means to say then is
this, God earnestly aims at, earnestly desires, our salvation. Wherefore then is
it that He so loveth us, whence hath He such affection? It is of His goodness
alone. For grace itself is the fruit of goodness. And for this cause, he saith,
hath He predestinated us to the adoption of children; this being His will, and
the object of His earnest wish, that the glory of His grace may be displayed.
"According to the good pleasure of His will," he proceeds,
Ver. 6. "To the praise of the glory of His grace[3] which He freely
bestowed on us in the Beloved."
That the glory of His grace may be displayed, he saith, which He freely
bestowed on us in the Beloved. Now then if for this He hath shown grace to us, to
the praise of the glory of His grace, and that He may display His grace, let
us abide therein. "To the praise of His glory." What is this? that who should
praise Him? that who should glorify Him? that we, that Angels, that Archangels,
yea, or the whole creation? And what were that? Nothing. The Divine nature
knoweth no want. And wherefore then would He have us praise and glorify Him? It is
that our love towards Him may be kindled more fervently within us. He desireth
nothing we can render; not our service, not our praise, nor any thing else,
nothing but our salvation; this is His object in every thing He does. And he who
praises and marvels at the grace displayed towards himself will thus be more
devoted and more earnest.
"Which He freely bestowed on us," he saith. He does not say, "Which He
hath graciously given us," (<greek>ekarisato</greek>) but, "wherein He hath shown
grace to us." (<greek>ekaritwsen</greek>) That is to say, He hath not only
released us from our sins, but hath also made us meet objects[4] of His love. It is
as though one were to take a leper, wasted by distemper, and disease, by age,
and poverty, and famine, and were to turn him all at once into a graceful
youth, surpassing all mankind in beauty, shedding a bright lustre from his cheeks,
and eclipsing the sun-beams with the glances of his eyes; and then were to set
him in the very flower of his age, and after that array him in purple and a
diadem and all the attire of royalty. It is thus that God hath arrayed and adorned
this soul of ours, and clothed it with beauty, and rendered it an object of His
delight and love. Such a soul Angels desire to look into, yea, Archangels, and
all the holy ones. Such grace hath He shed over us, so dear hath He rendered
us to Himself. "The King," saith the Psalmist, "shall greatly desire thy
beauty." (Ps. xlv: II. ) Think what injurious words we uttered heretofore, and look,
what gracious words we utter now. Wealth has no longer charms for us, nor the
things that are here below, but only heavenly things, the things that are in the
heavens. When a child has outward beauty, and has besides a pervading grace in
all its sayings, do we not call it a beautiful child? Such as this are the
faithful. Look, what words the initiated utter! What can be more beautiful than
that mouth that breathes those wondrous words, and with a pure heart and pure
lips, and beaming with cheerful confidence, partaketh of such a mystical table?
What more beautiful than the words, with which we renounce the service of the
Devil, and enlist in the service of Christ? than both that confession which is
before the Baptismal laver,[1] and that which is after it? Let us reflect as many
of us as have defiled our Baptism, and weep that we may be able again to repair
it.
Ver. 6. "In the Beloved,"[2] he saith, "in whom we have[3] our redemption
through His Blood."[4]
And how is this? Not only is there this marvel, that He hath given His
Son, but yet further that He hath given Him in such a way, as that the Beloved One
Himself should be slain!
Yea, and more transcendent still! He hath given the Beloved for them that
were hated. See, how high a price he sets upon us. If, when we hated Him and
were enemies, He gave the Beloved, what will He not do now, when we are
reconciled by Him through grace?
Ver. 7. "The forgiveness," saith he, "of our trespasses."
Again he descends from high to low: first speaking of adoption, and
sanctification, and blamelessness, and then of the Passion, and in this not lowering
his discourse and bringing it down from greater things to lesser, no rather, he
was heightening it, and raising it from the lesser to the greater. For nothing
is so great as that the blood of this Son should be shed for us. Greater this
than both the adoption, and all the other gifts of grace, that He spared not
even the Son. For great indeed is the forgiveness of sins, yet this is the far
greater thing, that it should be done by the Lord's blood. For that this is far
greater than all, look how here again he exclaims,
Ver. 7, 8. "According to the riches of His grace, which He made to abound
toward us."
The abovementioned gifts are riches, yet is this far more so.
"Which,"saith he, "He made to abound toward us." They are both "riches" and "they have
abounded," that is to say, were poured forth in ineffable measure. It is not
possible to represent in words what blessings we have in fact experienced. For riches
indeed they are, abounding riches, and He hath given in abundance riches not
of man but of God, so that on all hands it is impossible that they should be
expressed. And to show us how He gave it to such abundance, he adds,
Ver. 8, 9. "In all wisdom and prudence[5], having made known unto us the
mystery of His will."
That is to say, Making us wise and prudent, in that which is true wisdom,
and that which is true prudence. Strange! what friendship! For He telleth us
His secrets; the mysteries, saith he, of His will, as if one should say, He hath
made known to us the things that are in His heart. For here is indeed the
mystery which is full of all wisdom and prudence. For what will you mention equal to
this wisdom! These that were worth nothing, it hath discovered a way of
raising them to wealth and abundance. What can equal this wise contrivance? He that
was an enemy, he that was hated, he is in a moment lifted up on high. And not
this only,--but, yet more, that it should be done at this particular time, this
again was the work of wisdom; and that it should be done by means of the Cross.
It were matter of long discourse here to point out, how all this was the work
of wisdom, and how He had made us wise. And therefore he repeats again the words,
"According to His good pleasure[6] which He purposed in Him."[7] That is
to say, this He desired, this He travailed for, as one might say, that He might
be able to reveal to us the mystery. What mystery? That He would have man
seated up on high. And this hath come to pass.
Ver. 10. "Unto a dispensation of the fulness of the times to sum up all
things in Christ, the things in the heavens and the things upon the earth, even
in Him."
Heavenly things, he means to say, had been severed from earthly. They had
no longer one Head. So far indeed as the system of the creation went, there was
over all One God, but so far as management of one household went, this, amid
the wide spread of Gentile error, was not the case, but they had been severed
from His obedience.
"Unto a dispensation," saith he, "of the fulness of the times."
The fulness of the times, he calls it. Observe with what nicety he speaks.
And whereas he points out the origination, the purpose, the will, the first
intention, as proceeding from the Father, and the fulfillment and execution as
effected by the agency of the Son, yet no where does he apply to him the term
minister[1].
"He chose us," saith he, "in Him, having foreordained us unto adoption as
sons through Jesus Christ to Himself;" and, "to the praise of the glory of His
grace, in whom we have redemption through His blood,--which He purposed in Him,
unto a dispensation of the fulness of the times, to sum up all things in
Christ;" and no where hath he called Him minister. If however the word "in" and the
word "by" implies a mere minister, look what the matter comes to. Just in the
very beginning of the Epistle, he used the expression "through the will of the
Father." The Father, he means, willed, the Son wrought. But neither does it
follow, that because the Father willed, the Son is excluded from the willing; nor
because the Son wrought, that the Father is deprived of the working. But to the
Father and the Son, all things are common. "For all Mine are Thine," saith He,
"and Thine are Mine." (Jo. xvii: 10.)
The fullness of the times,[2] however, was His coming. After, then, He had
done everything, by the ministry both of Angels, and of Prophets, and of the
Law, and nothing came of it, and it was well nigh come to this, that man had
been made in vain, brought into the world in vain, nay, rather to his ruin; when
all were absolutely perishing, more fearfully than in the deluge, He devised
this dispensation, that is by grace; that it might not be in vain, might not be to
no purpose that man was created. This he calls "the fulness of the times," and
"wisdom." And why so? Because at that time when they were on the very point of
perishing, then they were rescued.
That "He might sum up" he saith.
What is the meaning of this word, "sum up?" It is "to knit together." Let
us, however, endeavor to get near the exact import. With ourselves then, in
common conversation, the word means the summing into a brief compass things spoken
at length, the concise account of matters described in detail. And it has this
meaning. For Christ hath gathered up in Himself the dispensations carried on
through a lengthened period, that is to say, He hath cut them short. For "by
finishing His word and cutting it short in righteousness." (Romans ix: 28.) He
both comprehended former dispensations, and added others beside. This is the
meaning of "summing up."
It has also another signification; and of what nature is this? He hath set
over all one and the same Head, i.e., Christ according to the flesh, alike
over Angels and men. That is to say, He hath given to Angels and men one and the
same government; to the one the Incarnate, to the other God the Word.[3] Just as
one might say of a house which has some part decayed and the other sound, He
hath rebuilt the house, that is to say, He has made it stronger, and laid a
firmer foundation. So also here He hath brought all under one and the same Head.[4]
For thus will an union be effected, thus will a close bond be effected, if one
and all can be brought under one and the same Head, and thus have some
constraining bond of union from above. Honored then as we are with so great a
blessing, so high a privilege, so great loving-kindness, let us not shame our
Benefactor, let us not render in vain so great grace. Let us exemplify the life of
Angels, the virtue of Angels, the conversation of Angels, yea, I entreat and conjure
you, that all these things turn not to our judgment, nor to our condemnation,
but to our enjoyment of those good things, which may God grant we may all
attain, in Christ Jesus, our Lord, with whom to the Father, together with the Holy
Ghost, be glory, strength, &c. &c.
HOMILY II.
CHAPTER I. VERSES 11--14.
"In whom also we were made a heritage, having been foreordained according to
the purpose of Him who worketh all things after the counsel of his will."
Paul earnestly endeavors on all occasions to display the unspeakable
loving-kindness of God towards us, to the utmost of his power. For that it is
impossible to do so adequately, hear his own words. "O! the depth of the riches both
of the wisdom and knowledge of God; how unsearchable are His judgments, and His
ways past tracing out." (Rom. xi: 33.) Still, notwithstanding, so far as it is
possible, he does display it. What then is this which he is saying; "In whom
also we were made a heritage, being predestinated?" Above he used the word, "He
chose us;" here he saith, "we were made a heritage." But inasmuch as a lot is a
matter of chance, not of deliberate choice, nor of virtue, (for it is closely
allied to ignorance and accident, and oftentimes passing over the virtuous,
brings forward the worthless into notice,) observe how he corrects this very
point: "having been foreordained," saith he, "according to the purpose of Him who
worketh all things." That is to say, not merely have we been made a heritage, as,
again, we have not merely been chosen, (for it is God who chooses,) and so
neither have we merely been allotted, (for it is God who allots,)[1] but it is
"according to a purpose." This is what he says also in the Epistle to the Romans,
(Rom. viii: 28-30.) "To them that are called according to His purpose;" and
"whom He called, them He also justified, and whom He justified, them he also
glorified." Having first used the expression, "to them that are called according to
a purpose," and at the same time wishing to declare their privilege compared
with the rest of mankind, he speaks also of inheritance by lot, yet so as not to
divest them of free will. That point then, which more properly belongs to happy
fortune, is the very point he insists upon. For this inheritance by lot
depends not on virtue, but, as one might say, on fortuitous circumstances. It is as
though he had said, lots were cast, and He hath chosen us;[2] but the whole is
of deliberate choice. Men predestinated, that is to say, having chosen them to
Himself, He hath separated. He saw us, as it were, chosen by lot before we were
born. For marvellous is the foreknowledge of God, and acquainted with all
things before their beginning.
But mark now how on all occasions he takes pains to point out, that it is
not the result of any change of purpose, but that these matters had been thus
modeled from the very first, so that we are in no wise inferior to the Jews in
this respect; and how, in consequence, he does every thing with this view. How
then is it that Christ Himself saith, "I was not sent, but unto the lost sheep
of the house of Israel?" (Mat. xv: 24.) And said again to his disciples, "Go not
into any way of the Gentiles, and enter not into any city of the Samaritans."
(Mat. x: 5.) And Paul again himself says, "It was necessary that the word of
God should first be spoken to you. Seeing ye thrust it from you and judge
yourselves unworthy of eternal life, lo, we turn to the Gentiles." (Acts xiii: 46.)
These expressions, I say, are used with this design, that no one may suppose that
this work came to pass incidentally only. "According to the purpose," he says,
"of Him who worketh all things after the counsel of His will." That is to say,
He had no after workings; having modeled all things from the very first, thus
he leads forward all things "according to the counsel of His will." So that it
was not not merely because the Jews did not listen that He called the Gentiles,
nor was it of mere necessity, nor was it on any inducement arising from them.
Ver. 12, 13. "To the end that we should be unto the praise of His glory,
we who had before hoped[1] in Christ. In whom ye also having heard the word of
the truth, the Gospel of your salvation."
That is to say, through whom. Observe how he on all occasions speaks of
Christ, as the Author of all things, and in no case gives Him the title of a
subordinate agent, or a minister. And so again, elsewhere, in his Epistle to the
Hebrews, he says, "that God, having of old time spoken unto the Fathers in the
prophets, hath at the end of these days spoken unto us in His Son," (Heb. I: I.)
that is "through" His
Son.
"The word of truth," he says, no longer that of the type, nor of the image.
"The Gospel of your salvation." And well does be call it the Gospel of
salvation, intimating in the one word a contrast to the law, in the other, a
contrast with punishment to come. For what is the message, but the Gospel of
salvation, which forbears to destroy those that are worthy of destruction.
Ver. 14. "In whom having also believed, ye were sealed with the Holy
Spirit of promise, which is an earnest of our inheritance."
Here again, the word "sealed," is an indication of especial forecast. He
does not speak of our being predestinated only, nor of our being allotted, but
further, of our being sealed. For just as though one were to make those who
should fall to his lot manifest, so also did God separate them for believing, and
sealed them for the allotment of the things to come.
You see how, in process of time, He makes them objects of wonder. So long
as they were in His foreknowledge, they were manifest to no one, but when they
were sealed, they became manifest, though not in the same way as we are; for
they will be manifest except a few. The Israelites also were sealed, but that was
by circumcision, like the brutes and reasonless creatures. We too are sealed,
but it is as sons, "with the Spirit."
But what is meant by, "with the Spirit of promise?" Doubtless it means
that we have received that Spirit according to promise. For there are two
promises, the one by the prophets, the other from the Son.
By the Prophets.--Hearken to the words of Joel; "I will pour out My spirit
upon all flesh, and your sons and your daughters shall prophesy, your old men
shall dream dreams, your young men shall see visions," (Joel ii: 28.) And
hearken again to the words of Christ; "But ye shall receive power, when the Holy
Ghost is come upon you, and ye shall be my witnesses both in Jerusalem, and in all
Judea, and Samaria, and unto the uttermost part of the earth." (Acts. i: 8.)
And truly, the Apostle means, He ought, as God, to have been believed; however,
he does not ground his affirmation upon this, but examines it like a case where
man is concerned, speaking ranch as he does in the Epistle to the Hebrews;
(Heb. vi: 18.) where he says, "That by two immutable things in which it was
impossible for God to lie we may have a strong encouragement." Thus here also he
makes the things already bestowed a sure token of the promise of those which are
yet to come. For this reason he further calls it an "earnest," (Cf. also 2. Cot.
i: 22.) for an earnest is a part of the whole. He hath purchased what we are
most concerned in, our salvation; and hath given us an earnest in the mean while.
Why then did He not give the whole at once? Because neither have we, on our
part, done the whole of our work. We have believed. This is a beginning; and He
too on His part hath given an earnest. When we show cur faith by our works, then
He will add the rest. Nay, more, He hath given yet another pledge, His own
blood, and hath promised another still. In the same way as in case of war between
nation and nation they give hostages: just so hath God also given His Son as a
pledge of peace and solemn treaties, and, further, the Holy Spirit also which
is from Him. For they, that are indeed partakers of the Spirit, know that He is
the earnest of our inheritance. Such an one was Paul, who already had here a
foretaste of the blessings there. And this is why he was so eager, and yearned to
be released from things below, and groaned within himself. He transferred his
whole mind thither, and saw every thing with different eyes. Thou hast no part
in the reality, and therefore failest to understand the description. Were we
all partakers of the Spirit, as we ought to be partakers, then should we behold
Heaven, and the order of things that is there.
It is an earnest, however, of what? of
Ver. 14. "The redemption of God's own possession."
For our absolute redemption takes place then.[1] For now we have our life
in the world, we are liable to many human accidents, and are living amongst
ungodly men. But our absolute redemption will be then, when there shall be no
sins, no human sufferings, when we shall not be indiscriminately mixed with all
kinds of people.
At present, however, there is but an earnest, because at present we are
far distant from these blessings. Yet is our citizenship not upon earth; even now
we are out of the pale of the things that are here below. Yes, we are
sojourners even now. Ver. 14. "Unto the praise of His glory." This he adds in immediate
connection. And why? Because it would serve to give those who heard it full
assurance. Were it for our sake only, he means to say, that God did this, there
might be some room for misgiving. But if it be for His own sake, and in order to
display His goodness, he assigns, as a sort of witness, a reason why these
things never possibly could be otherwise. We find the same language everywhere
applied to the case of the Israelites. "Do Thou this for us for Thy Name's sake;"
(Ps. cix: 21.) and again, God Himself said, "I do it for Mine own sake;" (Isa.
xlviii: II.) and so Moses, "Do it, if for nothing else, yet for the glory of
Thy Name." This gives those who hear it full assurance; it relieves them to be
told, that whatever He promises, for His own goodness' sake He will most surely
perform.
Moral. Let not the hearing, however, make us too much at our ease; for
although He doth it for His own sake, yet notwithstanding He requires a duty on
our part. If He says, "Them that honor Me I will honor, and they that despise Me
shall be lightly esteemed," (I Sam.ii: 30.) let us reflect that there is that
which He requires of us also. True, it is the praise of His glory to save those
that are enemies, but those who, after being made friends, continue His
friends. So that if they were to return back to their former state of enmity, all were
vain and to no purpose. There is not another Baptism, nor is there a second
reconciliation again, but "a certain fearful expectation of judgment which shall
devour the adversaries." (Heb. x: 27.) If we intend at the same time to be
always at enmity with Him and yet to claim forgiveness at His hand, we shall never
cease to beat enmity, and to be wanton, to grow in depravity, and to be blind
to the Sun of Righteousness which has risen. Dost thou not see the ray that
shall open thine eyes? render them then good and sound and quicksighted. He hath
showed thee the true light; if thou shunnest it, and runnest back again into the
darkness, what shall be thy excuse? What sort of allowance shall be made for
thee? None from that moment. For this is a mark of unspeakable enmity. When
indeed thou knewest not God, then if thou wert at enmity with Him, thou hadst, be it
how it might, some excuse. But when thou hast tasted I the goodness and the
honey, if thou again abandonest them, and turnest to thine own vomit, what else
art thou doing but bringing forward evidence of excessive hatred and contempt?
'Nay,' thou wilt say, 'but I am constrained to it by nature. I love Christ
indeed, but I am constrained by nature.' If thou art under the power and force of
constraint, thou wilt have allowance made; but if thou yield from indolence, not
for a moment.
Now then, come, let us examine this very question, whether sins are the
effect of force and constraint, or of indolence and great carelessness. The law
says, "Thou shalt not kill." What sort of force, what sort of violence, is there
here? Violence indeed must one use to force himself to kill, for who amongst
us would as a matter of choice plunge his sword into the throat of his neighbor,
and stain his hand with blood? Not one. Thou seest then that, on the contrary,
sin is more properly matter of violence and constraint. For God hath implanted
in our nature a charm, which binds us to love one another. "Every beast (it
saith) loveth his like, and every man loveth his neighbor." (Ecclus. xiii.: 15.)
Seest thou that we have from our nature seeds which tend to virtue; whereas
those of vice are contrary to nature? and if these latter predominate, this is but
an evidence of our exceeding indolence.
Again, what is adultery? What sort of necessity is there to bring us to
this? Doubtless, it will be said, the tyranny of lust. But why, tell me, should
this be? What, is it not in every one's power to have his own wife, and thus to
put a stop to this tyranny? True, he will say, but a sort of passion for my
neighbor's wife seizes hold on me. Here the question is no longer one of
necessity. Passion is no matter of necessity, no one loves of necessity, but of
deliberate choice and free will. Indulgence of nature, indeed, is perhaps matter of
necessity, but to love one woman rather than another is no matter of necessity.
Nor is the point with you natural desire, but vanity, and wantonness, and
unbounded licentiousness. For which is according to reason, that a man should have an
espoused wife, and her the mother of his children, or one not acknowledged?
Know ye not that it is intimacy that breeds attachment. This, therefore, is not
the fault of nature. Blame not natural desire. Natural desire was bestowed with a
view to marriage; it was given with a view to the procreation of children, not
with a view to adultery and corruption. The laws, too, know how to make
allowance for those sins which are of necessity,--or rather nothing is sin when it
arises from necessity but all sin rises from wantonness. God hath not so framed
man's nature as that he should have any necessity to sin, since were this the
case, there would be no such thing as punishment. We ourselves exact no account
of things done of necessity and by constraint, much less would God, so full of
mercy and loving-kindness.
Again, what is stealing? is it matter of necessity? Yes, a man will say,
because poverty causes this. Poverty, however, rather compels us to work, not to
steal. Poverty, therefore, has in fact the contrary effect. Theft is the
effect of idleness; whereas poverty produces usually not idleness, but a love of
labor. So that this sin is the effect of indolence, as you may learn from hence.
Which, I ask, is the more difficult, the more distasteful, to wander about at
night without sleep, to break open houses, and walk about in the dark, and to
have one's life in one's hand, and to be always prepared for murder, and to be
shivering and dead with fear; or to be attending to one's daily task, in full
enjoyment of safety and security? This last is the easier task; and it is because
this is easier, that the majority practise it rather than the other. Thou seest
then that it is virtue which is according to nature, and vice which is against
nature, in the same way as disease and health are.
What, again, are falsehood and perjury? What necessity can they possibly
imply? None whatever, nor any compulsion; it is a matter to which we proceed
voluntarily. We are distrusted, it will be said. True, distrusted we are, because
we choose it. For we might, if we would, be trusted more upon our character,
than upon our oath. Why, tell me, is it that we do not trust some, no, not on
their oath, whilst we deem others trustworthy even independently of oaths.[1]
Seest thou that there is no need of oaths in any case? 'When such an one speaks,'
we say, 'I believe him, even without any oath, but thee, no, not with thy
oaths.' Thus then an oath is unnecessary; and is in fact an evidence rather of
distrust than of confidence. For where a man is over ready to take his oath, he does
not leave us to entertain any great idea of his scrupulousness. So that the man
who is most constant in his use of oaths, has on no occasion any necessity for
using one, and he Who never uses one on any occasion, has in himself the full
benefit of its use. Some one says there is a necessity for an oath, to produce
confidence; but we see that they are the more readily trusted who abstain from
taking oaths.
But again, if one is a man of violence, is this a matter of necessity?
Yes, he will say, because his passion carries him away, and burns within him, and
does not let the soul be at rest. Man, to act with violence is not the effect
of anger, but of littleness of mind. Were it the effect of anger, all men,
whenever they were angry, would never cease committing acts of violence. We have
anger given us, not that we may commit acts of violence on our neighbors, but that
we may correct those that are in sin, that we may bestir ourselves, that we
may not be sluggish. Anger is implanted in us as a sort of sting, to make us
gnash with our teeth against the devil, to make us vehement against him, not to set
us in array against each other. We have arms, not to make us at war amongst
ourselves, but that we may employ our whole armor against the enemy. Art thou
prone to anger? Be so against thine own sins: chastise thy soul, scourge thy
conscience, be a severe judge, and merciless in thy sentence against thine own sins.
This is the way to turn anger to account. It was for this that God implanted
it within us.
But again, is plunder a matter of necessity? No, in no wise. Tell me, what
manner of necessity is there to be grasping: what manner of compulsion?
Poverty, a man will say, causes it, and the fear of being without common necessaries.
Now this is the very reason why you ought not to be grasping. Wealth so gotten
has no security in it. You are doing the very same thing as a man would do,
who, if he were asked why he laid the foundation of his house in the sand, should
say, he did it because of the frost and rain. Whereas this would be the very
reason why he should not lay it in the sand. They are the very foundations which
the rain, and blasts, and wind, most quickly overturn. So that if thou
wouldest be wealthy, never be rapacious; if thou wouldest transmit wealth to thy
children, get righteous wealth, at least, if any there be that is such. Because this
abides, and remains firm, whereas that which is not such, quickly wastes and
perishes. Tell me, hast thou a mind to be rich, and dost thou take the goods of
others? Surely this is not wealth: wealth consists in possessing what is thine
own. He that is in possession of the goods of others, never can be a wealthy
man; since at that rate even your very silk venders, who receive their goods as a
consignment from others, would be the wealthiest and the richest of men.
Though for the time, indeed, it is theirs, still we do not call them wealthy. And
why forsooth? Because they are in possession of what belongs to others. For
though the piece itself happens to be theirs, still the money it is worth is not
theirs. Nay, and even if the money is in their hands, still this is not wealth.
Now, if consignments thus given render not men more wealthy because we so soon
resign them, how can those which arise from rapine render them wealthy? However,
if at any rate thou desirest to be wealthy, (for the matter is not one of
necessity,) what greater good is it that thou wouldest fain enjoy? Is it a longer
life? Yet, surely men of this character quickly become short-lived. Oftentimes
they pay as the penalty of plunder and rapaciousness, an untimely death; and not
only suffer as a penalty the loss of the enjoyment of their gains, but go out
of life having gained but little, and hell to boot. Oftentimes too they die of
diseases, which are the fruits of self-indulgence, and of loft, and of anxiety.
Fain would I understand why it is that wealth is so eagerly pursued by mankind.
Why surely for this reason hath God set a limit and a boundary to our nature,
that we may have no need to go on seeking wealth beyond it. For instance He
hath commanded us, to clothe the body in one, or perhaps in two garments; and
there is no need of any more to cover us. Where is the good of ten thousand changes
of raiment, and those moth-eaten? The stomach has its appointed bound, and any
thing given beyond this, will of necessity destroy the whole man. Where then
is the use of your herds, and flocks, and cutting up of flesh? We require but
one roof to shelter us. Where then is the use of your vast ground-plots, and
costly buildings? Dost thou strip the poor, that vultures and jackdaws may have
where to dwell? And what a hell do not these things deserve? Many are frequently
raising edifices that glisten with pillars and costly marbles, in places which
they never so much as saw. What scheme is there indeed that they have not
adopted? Yet neither themselves reap the benefit, nor any one else. The desolateness
does not allow them to get away thither; and yet not even thus do they desist.
You see that these things are not done for profit's-sake, but in all these
cases folly, and absurdity, and vainglory, is the motive. And this, I beseech you
to avoid, that we may be enabled to avoid also every other evil, and may obtain
those good things which are promised to them that love Him, in our Lord Jesus
Christ, with whom to the Father, together with the Holy Ghost, be glory,
strength, honor forever. Amen.
HOMILY III.
CHAPTER I. VERSES 15--23.
Verses 15-20. "For this cause I also, having heard of the faith in the Lord
Jesus, which is among you, and which ye show toward all the saints, cease not to
give thanks for you, making mention of you in my prayers; that the God of our
Lord Jesus Christ, the Father of glory, may give unto you a spirit of wisdom and
revelation in the knowledge of Him: having the eyes of your heart enlightened;
that ye may know what is the hope of His calling, what the riches of the
glory of His inheritance in the saints, and what the exceeding greatness of His
power to us-ward who believe, according to that working of the strength of His
might, which He wrought in Christ, when He raised Him from the dead."
Never was anything equal to the yearnings of the Apostle, never. anything
like the sympathy and the affectionateness of the blessed Paul, who made his
every prayer in behalf of whole cities and peoples, and writes the same to
all,[1] "I thank my God for you, making mention of you in my prayers." Think how many
he had in his mind, whom it were a labor so much as to remember; how many he
made mention of in his prayers, giving thanks to God for them all as though he
himself had received the greatest blessing.
"Wherefore," he says, i.e., because of what is to come,[2] because of the
good things that are laid up in store for them who rightly believe and live.
And it is meet then to give thanks to God both for all the things which mankind
have received at His hands, both heretofore and hereafter; and meet to give Him
thanks also for the faith of them that believe.
"Having heard," saith he, "of the faith in the Lord Jesus which is among
you, and which ye show[3] toward all the saints."
He on all occasions knits together and combines faith and love, a glorious
pair; nor does he mention the saints of that country only, but all.
"I cease not to give thanks for you, making mention of you in my prayers."
What is thy prayer, and what thy entreaty? It is
"That the God of our Lord Jesus Christ, the Father of glory, may give unto
you a spirit of wisdom and revelation."[1] Two things he requires them to
understand, as it is their duty to understand them; to what blessings they are
called, and how they have been released from their former state. He says, however,
himself that these points are three. How then are they three? In order that we
may understand touching the things to come; for from the good things laid up
for us, we shall know His ineffable and surpassing riches, and from understanding
who we were, and how we believed, we shall know His power and sovereignty, in
turning again to Himself those who had been so long time estranged from Him,
"For the weakness of God is stronger than men." (I Cor. i: 25.) Inasmuch as it is
by the self-same power by which He raised Christ from the dead, that He hath
also drawn us to Himself. Nor is that power limited to the resurrection, but far
exceeds it.
Ver. 21, 22. "And made Him to sit at His right hand, in the Heavenly
places, far above all rule and authority, and power and dominion, and every name
that is named: and He put all things in subjection under His feet, and gave Him to
be Head over all things to the Church, which is His body, the fulness of Him
that filleth all in all."
Vast indeed are the mysteries and secrets of which He hath made us
partakers. And these it is not possible for us to understand otherwise than by being
partakers of the Holy Ghost, and by receiving abundant grace. And it is for this
reason that Paul prays. "The Father of glory," that is, He that hath given us
vast blessings, for he constantly addresses Him according to the subject he is
upon, as, for instance, when he says, "The Father of mercies and God of all
comfort." (2 Cor. i: 3.) And, again, the Prophet says, "The Lord is my strength
and my might." (Ps. xviii: I.) "The Father of glory."
He has no name by which he may represent these things, and on all
occasions calls them "glory," which is in fact, with us, the name and appellation of
every kind of magnificence. Mark, he says, the Father of glory; (cf. Acts vii:
2) but of Christ the God.[2] What then? Is the Son inferior to the glory? No,
there is no one, not even a maniac, would say so.
"May give unto you,"
That is, may raise and wing your understanding, for it is not possible
otherwise to understand these things. "For the natural man receiveth not the
things of the Spirit of God; for they are foolishness unto him." (I Cor. ii: 14.)
So then, there is need of spiritual "wisdom," that we may perceive things
spiritual, that we may see things hidden. That Spirit "revealeth" all things. He is
going to set forth the mysteries of God. Now the knowledge of the mysteries of
God, the Spirit alone comprehends, who also searcheth the deep things of Him. It
is not said, "that Angel, or Archangel, or any other created power, may give,"
that is, confer upon you a spiritual gift. And if this be of revelation, then
is the discovery of arguments consequently vain. For he that hath learned God,
and knoweth God, shall no longer dispute concerning any thing. He will not say,
This is impossible, and That is possible, and How did the other thing come to
pass? If we learn God, as we ought to know Him; if we learn God from Him from
whom we ought to learn Him, that is from the Spirit Himself; then shall we no
longer dispute concerning any thing. And hence it is that he says,
"Having the eyes of your heart enlightened in the knowledge of Him."[3]
He that hath learned what God is, will have no misgiving about His
promises, and disbelief about what hath been already brought to pass. He prays, then,
that there may be given them "a spirit of wisdom and revelation." Yet still he
also establishes it, as far as he can himself, by arguments, and from "already"
existing facts. For, whereas he was about to mention some things which had
already come to pass, and others which had not as yet happened; he makes those
which have been brought to pass, a pledge of those which have not: in some such
way, I mean, as this,
"That ye may know," saith he, "what is the hope of His calling."
It is as yet, he means, hidden, but not so to the faithful.
"And," again, "what is the riches of the glory of His inheritance in the
saints."[4] This too is as yet hidden.
But what is clear? that through His power we have believed that He hath
raised Christ. For to persuade souls, is a thing far more miraculous than to
raise a dead body. I will endeavor to make this clear. Hearken then. Christ said to
the dead, "Lazarus, come forth," (John xi: 43.) and straightway he obeyed.
Peter said, "Tabitha, arise," (Acts ix: 40.) and she did not refuse. He Himself
shall speak the word at the last day, and all shall rise, and that so quickly,
that "they which are yet alive, shall in no wise precede them that are fallen
asleep," (1 Thess. iv: 15.) and all shall come to pass, all run together "in a
moment, in the twinkling of an eye." (1 Cor. xv: 52.) But in the matter of
believing, it is not thus, but how is it? Hearken then to Him again, how He saith,
"How often would I have gathered thy children together, and ye would not." (Matt.
xxiii: 37.) You perceive that this last is the more difficult. Accordingly, it
is upon this that he builds up the whole argument; because by human
calculations it is far more difficult to influence the choice, than to work upon nature.
And the reason is this, it is because He would thus have us become good of our
own will. Thus with good reason does he say,[1]
"The exceeding greatness of His power to us-ward who believe."
Yes, when Prophets had availed nothing, nor Angels, nor Archangels, when
the whole creation, both visible and invisible, had failed, (the visible lying
before us, and without any power to guide us, and much also which is invisible,)
then He ordered His own coming, to show us that it was a matter which required
Divine power. "The riches of the glory,"
That is, the unutterable glory; for what language shall be adequate to
express that glory of which the saints shall then be partakers? None. But verily
there is need of grace in order that the understanding may perceive it, and
admit even so much as at least one little ray. Some things indeed they knew even
before; now he was desirous that they should learn more, and know it more
clearly. Seest thou how great things He hath wrought? He hath raised up Christ. Is
this a small thing? But look again. He hath set Him at His right hand. And shall
any language then be able to represent this? Him that is of the earth, more mute
than the fishes, and made the sport of devils, He hath in a moment raised up
on high. Truly this is indeed the "exceeding greatness of His power." And
behold, whither He hath raised Him.
"In the heavenly places;"
He hath made Him far above all created nature, far above all rule and
authority. "Far above all rule," he saith.
Need then indeed is there of the Spirit, of an understanding wise in the
knowledge of Him. Need then is there indeed of revelation. Reflect, how vast is
the distance between the nature of man and of God. Yet from this vile estate
hath He exalted Him to that high dignity. Nor does He mount by degrees, first one
step, then another, then a third. Amazing ! He does not simply say, "above,"
but, "far above;" for God is above those powers which are above. And thither
then hath He raised Him, Him that is one of us, brought Him from the lowest point
to the supremest sovereignty, to that beyond which there is no other honor.
Above "all" principality, he says, not, i.e., over one and not over another, but
over all,
"Rule and authority and power, and dominion, and every name that is named."
Whatever there be in Heaven, He has become above all. And this is said of
Him that was raised from the dead which is worthy of our admiration; for of God
the Word, it cannot possibly be, because what insects are in comparison of
man, this the whole creation is in comparison of God. If all mankind are to be
counted as spittle and were counted as the turn of a balance, consider the
invisible powers as insects. But of Him that was one of us, this is great and
surprising indeed. For He raised Him up from the very lowest parts of the earth. If all
the nations are as a drop, how small a portion then of that drop is a single
man ! Yet Him hath, He made higher than all things, "not only in this world, but
also in that which is to come." Therefore powers there are whose names are to
us unintelligible, and unknown.
"And He put all things in subjection under His feet."
Not simply so set Him above them as to be honored above them, nor by way
of comparison with them, but so that He should sit over them as His slaves.
Amazing! Awful indeed are these things; every created power hath been made the
slave of man by reason of God the Word dwelling in Him.[2] For it is possible for a
man to be above others, without having others in subjection, but only as
preferred before them. But here it is not so. ' No, "He put all things in subjection
under His feet." And not simply put them in subjection, but in the most abject
subjection, that below which there can be none. Therefore he adds, "under His
feet."
"And gave Him to be Head over all things to the Church."
Amazing again, whither hath He raised the Church? as though he were
lifting it up by some engine, he hath raised it up to a vast height, and set it on
yonder throne; for where the Head is, there is the body also. There is no
interval to separate between the Head and the body; for were there a separation, then
were it no longer a body, then were it no longer a head. "Over all things," he
says. What is meant by "over all things?" He hath suffered neither Angel nor
Archangel nor any other being to be above Him. But not only in this way hath He
honored us, in exalting that which is of ourselves, but also in that He hath
prepared the whole race in common to follow Him, to cling to Him, to accompany His
train. "Which is His body."
In order then that when you hear of the Head you may not conceive the
notion of supremacy only, but also of consolidation, and that you may behold Him
not as supreme Ruler only, but as Head of a body.
"The fulness of Him that filleth all in all" he says.
As though this were not sufficient to show the close connection and
relationship, what does he add? "The fullness of Christ is the Church." And rightly,
for the complement of the head is the body, and the complement of the body is
the head. Mark what great arrangement Paul observes, how he spares not a single
word, that he may represent the glory of God. "The, complement," he says,
i.e., the head is, as it were, filled up by the body, because the body is composed
and made up of all its several parts, and he introduces Him as having need of
each single one and not only of all in common and together; for unless we be
many, and one be the hand, and another the foot, and another some other member,
the whole body is not filled up. It is by all then that His body is filled up.
Then is the head filled up, then is the body rendered perfect, when we are all
knit together and united. Perceivest thou then the "riches of the glory of His
inheritance? the exceeding greatness of His power towards them that believe? the
hope of your calling?"
Moral. Let us reverence our Head, let us reflect of what a Head we are the
body,--a Head, to whom all things are put in subjection. According to this
representation we ought to be better, yea, than the very angels, and greater than
the Archangels, in that we have been honored above them all. God "took not hold
of Angels," as he says in writing to the Hebrews, "but He took hold of the
seed of Abraham." (Heb. ii: 16.) He took hold of neither principality nor power,
nor dominion, nor any other authority, but He took up our nature, and made it to
sit on His right hand. And why do I say, hath made it sit? He hath made it His
garment,[1] and not only so, but hath put all things in subjection under His
feet. How many sorts of death supposest thou? How many souls? ten thousand? yea,
and ten thousand times told, but nothing equal to it wilt thou mention. Two
things He hath done, the greatest things. He hath both Himself descended to the
lowest depth of humiliation, and hath raised up man to the height of
exaltation. He saved him by His blood. He spoke of the former first, how that He so
greatly humbled Himself. He speaks now of what is stronger than that--a great thing,
the crown of all. Surely, even had we been counted worthy of nothing, it were
enough. Or, had we been counted worthy even of this honor, it were enough,
without the slaying of the Son. But where there are the two, what power of language
must it not transcend and surpass? The very resurrection is not great, when I
reflect on these things. It is of Him that he says, "The God of our Lord Jesus
Christ," not of God the Word.
Let us feel awed at the closeness of our relation, let us dread lest any
one should be cut off from this body, lest any one should fall from it, lest any
one should appear unworthy of it. If any one were to place a diadem about our
head, a crown of gold, should we not do every thing that we might seem worthy
of the lifeless jewels? But now it is not a diadem that is about our head, but,
what is far greater, Christ is made our very Head, and yet we pay no regard to
it. Yet Angels reverence that Head, and Archangels, and all those powers above.
And shall we, which are His body, be awed neither on the one account nor the
other? And what then shall be our hope of salvation? Conceive to yourself the
royal throne, conceive the excess of the honor. This, at least if we chose, might
more avail to startle us, yea, even than hell itself. For, even though hell
were not, that we having been honored with such an honor, should be found base
and unworthy of it, what punishment, what vengeance must not this carry with it?
Think near whom thy Head is seated, (this single consideration is amply
sufficient for any purpose whatever,) on whose right hand He is placed, far above all
principality, and power, and might. Yet is the body of this Head trampled on by
the very devils. Nay, God forbid it should be thus; for were it thus, such a
body could be His body no longer. Thy own head the more respectable of thy
servants reverence, and dost thou subject thy body to be the sport of them that
insult it? How sore punishment then shall thou not deserve? If a man should bind
the feet of the emperor with bonds and fetters, will he not be liable to the
extremity of punishment? Dost thou expose the whole body to fierce monsters, and
not shudder?
However, since our discourse is concerning the Lord's body, come, and let
us turn our thoughts to it, even that which was crucified, which was nailed,
which is sacrificed.[1] If thou art the body of Christ, bear the Cross, for He
bore it: bear spitting, bear buffetings, bear nails. Such was that Body; that
Body "did no sin, neither was guile found in His mouth." (1 Pet. ii: 22.) His
hands did every thing for the benefit of them that needed, His mouth uttered not a
word of those things which are not convenient. He heard them say, "Thou hast a
devil," and He answered nothing.
Further, our discourse is concerning this Body, and as many of us as
partake of that Body and taste of that Blood, are partaking of that which is in no
wise different from that Body, nor separate. Consider that we taste of that Body
that sitteth above, that is adored by Angels, that is next to the Power that
is incorruptible. Alas! how many ways to salvation are open to us! He hath made
us His own body, He hath imparted to us His own body, and yet not one of these
things turns us away from what is evil. Oh the darkness, the depth of the
abyss, the apathy! "Set your mind," saith he, "on the things that are above, where
Christ is, seated on the right hand of God." (Col. iii: 1.) And after all this,
some set their affections upon money, or licentiousness, others are carried
captive by their passions!
Do ye not see, that even in our own body, when any part is superfluous and
useless, it is cut off, is cut away? It is of no use that it has belonged to
the body, when it is mutilated, when it is mortified, when it is decayed, when
it is detrimental to the rest. Let us not then be too confident, because we have
been once made members of this body. If this body of ours, though but a
natural body, nevertheless suffers amputation, what dreadful evil shall it not
undergo, if the moral principle should fail? When the body partakes not of this
natural food, when the pores are stopped up, then it mortifies; when the ducts are
closed, then it is palsied. So is it with us also, when we stop our ears, our
soul becomes palsied; when we partake not of the spiritual food, when, instead of
corrupt bodily humors, evil dispositions impair us, all these things engender
disease, dangerous disease, disease that wastes. And then there will be need of
that fire, there will be need of that cutting asunder. For Christ cannot
endure that we should enter into the bride-chamber with such a body as this. If He
led away, and cast out the man that was clothed in filthy garments, what will He
not do unto the man who attaches filth to the body; how will He not dispose of
him?
I observe many partaking of Christ's Body lightly and just as it happens,
and rather from custom and form, than consideration and understanding. When,
saith a man, the holy season of Lent sets in, whatever a man may be, he partakes
of the mysteries, or, when the day of the Lord's Epiphany[2] comes. And yet it
is not the Epiphany, nor is it Lent, that makes a fit time for approaching, but
it is sincerity and purity of soul. With this, approach at all times; without
it, never. "For as often," (1 Cor. xi: 26.) saith he, "as ye do this, ye
proclaim the Lord's death," i.e., "ye make a remembrance of the salvation that has
been wrought for you, and of the benefits which I have bestowed." Consider those
who partook of the sacrifices under the old Covenant, how great abstinence did
they practise? How did they not conduct themselves? What did they not perform?
They were always purifying themselves. And dost thou, when thou drawest nigh to
a sacrifice, at which the very Angels tremble, dost thou measure the matter by
the revolutions of seasons? and how shall thou present thyself before the
judgment-seat of Christ, thou who presumest upon His body with polluted hands and
lips? Thou wouldest not presume to kiss a king with an unclean mouth, and the
King of heaven dost thou kiss with an unclean soul? It is an outrage. Tell me,
wouldest thou choose to come to the Sacrifice with unwashen hands? No, I suppose,
not. But thou wouldest rather choose not to come at all, than come with soiled
hands. And then, thus scrupulous as thou art in this little matter, dost thou
come with soiled soul, and thus dare to touch it? And yet the hands hold it but
for a time, whereas into the soul it is dissolved entirely, What, do ye not
see the holy vessels so thoroughly cleansed all over, so resplendent? Our souls
ought to be purer than they, more holy, more brilliant. And why so? Because
those vessels are made so for our sakes. They partake not of Him that is in them,
they perceive Him not. But we do;--yes, verily. Now then, thou wouldest not
choose to make use of a soiled vessel, and dost thou approach with a soiled soul?
Observe the vast inconsistency of the thing. At the other times ye come not, no,
not though often ye are clean; but at Easter, however flagrant an act ye may
have committed, ye come. Oh! the force of custom and of prejudice ! In vain is
the daily Sacrifice,[1] in vain do we stand before the Altar; there is no one to
partake. These things I am saying, not to induce you to partake any how, but
that ye should render yourselves worthy to partake. Art thou not worthy of the
Sacrifice, nor of the participation? If so, then neither art thou of the prayer.
Thou hearest the herald[2] standing, and saying, "As many as are in penitence,
all pray."[3] As many as do not partake, are in penitence. If thou art one of
those that are in penitence, thou oughtest not to partake; for he that partakes
not, is one of those that are in penitence. Why then does he say, "Depart, ye
that are not qualified to pray," whilst thou hast the effrontery to stand
still? But no, thou art not of that number, thou art of the number of those who are
qualified to partake, and yet art indifferent about it, and regardest the
matter as nothing.
Look, I entreat: a royal table is set before you, Angels minister at that
table, the King Himself is there, and dost thou stand gaping?"[4] Are thy
garments defiled, and yet dost thou make no account of it?--or are they clean? Then
fall down and partake. Every day He cometh in to see the guests, and converseth
with them all. Yes, at this moment is he speaking to your conscience;
"Friends, how stand ye here, not having on a wedding garment?" He said not, Why didst
thou sit down? no, before he sat down, He declared him to be unworthy, so much
as to come in. He saith not, "Why didst thou sit down to meat," but, "Why camest
thou in?" And these are the words that He is at this very moment addressing to
one and all of us that stand here with such shameless effrontery. For every
one, that partaketh not of the mysteries, is standing here in shameless
effrontery. It is for this reason, that they which are in sins are first of all put
forth; for just as when a master is present at his table, it is not right that
those servants who have offended him should be present, but they are sent out of
the way: just so also here when the sacrifice is brought forth, and Christ, the
Lord's sheep, is sacrificed; when thou hearest the words, "Let us pray
together," when thou beholdest the curtains drawn up,[5] then imagine that the Heavens
are let down from above, and that the Angels are descending!
As then it is not meet that any one of the uninitiated be present, so
neither is it that one of them that are initiated, and yet at the same time
defiled. Tell me, suppose any one were invited to a feast, and were to wash his hands,
and sit down, and be all ready at the table, and after all refuse to partake ;
is he not insulting the man who invited him? were it not better for such an
one never to have come at all? Now it is just in the same way that thou hast come
here. Thou hast sung the Hymn[6] with the rest: thou hast declared thyself to
be of the number of them that are Worthy, by not departing with them that are
unworthy. Why stay, and yet not partake of the table? I am unworthy, thou wilt
say. Then art thou also unworthy of that communion thou hast had in prayers. For
it is not by means of the offerings only, but also by means of those canticles
that the Spirit descendeth all around. Do we not see our own servants, first
scouring the table with a sponge, and cleaning the house, and then setting out
the entertainment? This is what is done by the prayers, by the cry of the
herald. We scour the Church, as it were, with a sponge, that all things may be set
out in a pure church, that there may be "neither spot nor wrinkle." (Eph. v:
27.) Unworthy, indeed, both our eyes of these sights, and unworthy are our ears !
"And if even a beast," it is said, "touch the mountain, it shall be stoned."
(Ex. xix: 13.) Thus then they were not worthy so much as to set foot on it, and
yet afterwards they both came near, and beheld where God had stood. And thou
mayest, afterwards, come near, and behold: when, however, He is present, depart.
Thou art no more allowed to be here than the Catechumen is. For it is not at all
the same thing never to have reached the mysteries, and when thou hast reached
them, to stumble at them and despise them, and to make thyself unworthy of
this thing. One might enter upon more points, and those more awful still; not
however to burden your understanding, these will suffice. They who are not brought
to their right senses with these, certainly will not be with more. That I may
not then be the means of increasing your condemnation, I entreat you, not to
forbear coming, but to render yourselves worthy both of being present, and of
approaching. Tell me, were any king to give command and to say, "If any man does
this, let him partake of my table;" say, would ye not do all ye could to be
admitted? He hath invited us to heaven, to the table of the great and wonderful
King, and do we shrink and hesitate, instead of hastening and running to it? And
what then is our hope of salvation? We cannot lay the blame on our weakness; we
cannot on our nature. It is indolence and nothing else that renders us unworthy.
So far have I spoken of myself. But may He that pricketh the heart, He
that giveth the Spirit of compunction, pierce your hearts, and plant the seeds in
the depth of them, that so through His fear ye may conceive, and bring forth
the spirit of salvation, and come near with boldness. For, "thy children," it is
said, "are like olive plants round about thy table." (Ps. cxxviii: 3.) O, then,
let there be nothing old, nothing wild, nothing harsh. For of such sort are
the young plants that are fit for fruit, for the beautiful fruit, fruit I mean of
the olive-tree. And thriving they are, so as all to be round about the table,
and come together here, not in vain or by chance, but with fear and reverence.
For thus shall ye behold with boldness even Christ Himself in heaven, and shall
be counted worthy of that heavenly kingdom, which may God grant we may all
attain, in Jesus Christ, our Lord with whom to the Father, together with the Holy
Spirit, be glory, might, honor, now and ever, and for ages of ages. Amen.
HOMILY IV.
CHAPTER. II. VERSES 1--10.
Verses 1--3. "And you did He quicken, when ye were dead through your
trespasses and sins, wherein aforetime ye walked, according to the course of this world,
according to the prince of the power of the air, of the spirit that now
worketh in the sons of disobedience; among whom we also all once lived, in the lusts
of our flesh, doing the desires of the flesh, and of the mind; and were by
nature children of wrath even as the rest."
There is, we know, a corporal, and there is also a spiritual, dying.[1] Of
the first it is no crime to partake, nor is there any peril in it, inasmuch as
there is no blame attached to it, for it is a matter of nature, not of
deliberate choice It had its origin in the transgression of the first-created man, and
thenceforward in its issue it passed into a nature, and, at all events, will
quickly be brought to a termination; whereas this spiritual dying, being a
matter of deliberate choice, has criminality, and has no termination. Observe then
how Paul, having already shown how exceedingly great a thing it is, in so much
that to heal a deadened soul is a far greater thing than to raise the dead, so
now again lays it down in all its real greatness.
"And you," saith he "when ye were dead through your trespasses and sins,
wherein aforetime ye walked according to the course of this world, according to
the prince of the power of the air, of the spirit that now worketh in the sons
of disobedience."' You observe the gentleness of Paul, and how on all occasions
he encourages the hearer, not bearing too hard upon him. For whereas he had
said, Ye have arrived at the very last degree of wickedness, (for such is the
meaning of becoming dead,) that he may not excessively distress them,[2] (because
men are put to shame when their former misdeeds are brought forward, cancelled
though they be, and no longer attended with danger,) he gives them, as it were,
an accomplice, that it may not be supposed that the work is all their own, and
that accomplice a powerful one. And who then is this? The Devil. He does much
the same also in the Epistle to the Corinthians, where, after saying, "Be not
deceived, neither fornicators, nor idolaters," (1 Cor. vi: 9.) and after
enumerating all the other vices, and adding in conclusion, "shall inherit the kingdom
of God;" he then adds, "and such were some of you;" he does not say absolutely,
"ye were," but "some of you were," that is, thus in some sort were ye. Here
the heretics attack us. They tell us that these expressions ("prince of all the
power of the air," etc.) are used with reference to God, and letting loose their
unbridled tongue, they fit these things to God, which belong to the Devil
alone, How then are we to put them to silence? By the very words they themselves
use; for, if He is righteous, as they themselves allow, and yet hath done these
things, this is no longer the act of a righteous being, but rather of a being
most unrighteous and corrupted; and corrupted God cannot possibly be.
Further, why does he call the Devil "the prince" of the world? Because
nearly the whole human race has surrendered itself to him and all are willingly
and of deliberate choice his slaves. And to Christ, though He promises unnumbered
blessings, not any one so much as gives any heed; whilst to the Devil, though
promising nothing of the sort, but sending them on to hell, all yield
themselves. His kingdom then is in this world, and he has, with few exceptions, more
subjects and more obedient subjects than God, in consequence of our indolence.
"According to the power," saith he, "of the sir, of the spirit."[1]
Here again he means, that Satan occupies the space under Heaven, and that
the incorporeal powers are spirits of the air, under his operation. For that
his kingdom is of this age, i. e., will cease with the present age, hear what he
says at the end of the Epistle; "Our wrestling is not against flesh and blood,
but against the principalities, against powers, against the world rulers of
this darkness;" (Eph. vi: 12.) where, lest when you hear of world-rulers you
should therefore say that the Devil is uncreated, he elsewhere (Gal. i: 4.) calls a
perverse time, "an evil world," not of the creatures. For he seems to me,
having had dominion beneath the sky, not to have fallen from his dominion, even
after his transgression.
"That now worketh," he says, "in the sons of disobedience."
You observe that it is not by force, nor by compulsion, but by persuasion,
he wins us over; "disobedience" or "untractableness" is his word, as though
one were to say, by guile and persuasion he draws all his votaries to himself.
And not only does he give them a word of encouragement by telling them they have
an associate, but also by ranking himself with them, for he says,
"Among whom we also all once lived."
"All," because he cannot say that any one is excepted.
"In the lusts of our flesh, doing the desires of the flesh, and of the
mind, and were by nature children of wrath, even as the rest."
That is, having no spiritual affections. Yet, lest he should
slander the flesh, or lest it should be supposed that the transgression was not
great, observe how he guards the matter,
"Doing," he says, "the desires of the flesh and of the mind."
That is, the pleasurable passions. We provoked God to anger, he saith, we
provoked Him to wrath, we were wrath, and nothing else. For as he who is a
child of man is by nature man, so also were we children of wrath[2] even as others;
i. e., no one was free, but we all did things worthy of wrath. Ver. 4. "But
God, being rich in mercy." Not merely merciful, but rich in mercy; as it is said
also in another place; "In the multitude of thy mercies." (Ps. lxix: 17.) And
again, "Have mercy upon me, according to the multitude of thy tender mercies."
(Ps. li: 1.)
Ver. 4. "For His great love,[3] wherewith He loved us."
Why did He love us? For these things are not deserving of love, but of
the sorest wrath, and punishment. And thus it was of great mercy.
Ver. 5. "Even when we were dead through our trespasses He quickened us
together with Christ."
Again is Christ introduced, and it is a matter well worthy of our belief,
because if the Firstfruits live, so do we also. He hath quickened both Him, and
us. Seest thou that all this is said of Christ incarnate? Beholdest thou "the
exceeding greatness of His power to us-ward who believe?" (Eph. i: 19.) Them
that were dead, them that were children of wrath, them hath he quickened.
Beholdest thou "the hope of his calling?"
Ver. 6. "He raised us up with Him and made us sit with Him."
Beholdest thou the glory of His inheritance? That "He hath raised us up
together," is plain. But that He "hath made us sit with Him in the heavenly
places in Christ Jesus," how does this hold? It holds as truly, as that He hath
raised us together. For as yet no one is actually raised,[1] excepting that
inasmuch as as the Head hath risen, we also are raised, just as in the history, when
Jacob did obeisance, his wife also did obeisance to Joseph. (Gen. xxxvii: 9,
10.) And so in the same way "hath He also made us to sit with Him." For since the
Head sitteth, the body sitteth also with it, and therefore he adds "in Christ
Jesus." Or again, if it means, not this, it means that by the layer of Baptism
He hath "raised us up with Him." How then in that case hath He made "us to sit
with Him?" Because, saith he, "if we suffer we shall also reign with Him," (2
Tim. ii: 12.) if we be dead with Him we shall also live with Him. Truly there is
need of the Spirit and of revelation, in order to understand the depth of these
mysteries. And then that ye may have no distrust about the matter, observe
what he adds further.
Ver. 7. "That in the ages to come, He might show the exceeding riches of
His grace, in kindness towards us, in Christ Jesus."
Whereas he had been speaking of the things which concerned Christ, and
these might be nothing to us, (for what, it might be said, is it to us, that He
rose) therefore he shows that they do moreover extend to us, inasmuch as He is
made one with us. Only that our concern in the matter he states separately. "Us,"
saith he, "who were dead through our trespasses He raised up with Him, and
made us sit with Him." Wherefore, as I was saying, be not unbelieving, take the
demonstration he adduces both from former things, and from His Headship, and also
from His desire to show forth His goodness. For how will He show it, unless
this come to pass? And He will show it in the ages to come. What? that the
blessings are both great, and more certain than any other. For now the things which
are said may to the unbelievers seem to be foolishness; but then all shall know
them. Wouldest thou understand too, how He hath made us sit together with Him?
Hear what Christ Himself saith to the disciples, "Ye also shall sit upon twelve
thrones, judging the twelve tribes of Israel." (Matt. xix: 28.) And again,
"But to sit on My right hand and on My left hand is not Mine to give, but it is
for them for whom it hath been prepared of My Father." (Matt. xx: 23.) So that it
hath been prepared. And well saith he, "in kindness towards us in Christ
Jesus," for to sit on His right hand is honor above all honor, it is that beyond
which there is none other. This then he saith, that even we shall sit there. Truly
this is surpassing riches, truly surpassing is the greatness of His power, to
make us sit down with Christ, Yea, hadst thou ten thousand souls, wouldest thou
not lose them for His sake? Yea, hadst thou to enter the flames, oughtest thou
not readily to endure it? And He Himself too saith again, "Where I am, there
shall also My servant be." (John. xii: 26.) Why surely had ye to be cut to
pieces every day, ought ye not, for the sake of these promises cheerfully to embrace
it? Think, where He sitteth? above all principality and power. And with whom
it is that thou sittest? With Him. And who thou art? One dead, by nature a child
of wrath. And what good hast thou done? None. Truly now it is high time to
exclaim, "Oh the depth of the riches both of the wisdom and the knowledge of God!"
(Rom. xi:33.)
Ver. 8. "For by grace," saith he "have ye been saved."[2]
In order then that the greatness of the benefits bestowed may not raise
thee too high, observe how he brings thee down: "by grace ye have been saved,"
saith he, "Through faith;"
Then, that, on the other hand, our free-will be not impaired, he adds also
our part in the work, and yet again cancels it, and adds, "And that not of
ourselves."
Neither is faith,[3] he means, "of ourselves." Because had He not come,
had He not called us, how had we been able to believe? for "how," saith he,
"shall they believe, unless they hear?" (Rom. x: 14.) So that the work of faith
itself is not our own.
"It is the gift," said he, "of God," it is "not of works."
Was faith then, you will say, enough to save us? No; but God, saith he,
hath required this, lest He should save us, barren and without work at all. His
expression is, that faith saveth, but it is because God so willeth, that faith
saveth. Since, how, tell me, doth faith save, without works? This itself is the
gift of God.
Ver. 9. "That no man should glory."
That he may excite in us proper feeling touching this gift of grace. "What
then?" saith a man, "Hath He Himself hindered our being justified by works?" By
no means. But no one, he saith, is justified by works, in order that the grace
and loving-kindness of God may be shown. He did not reject us as having works,
but as abandoned of works He hath saved us by grace; so that no man henceforth
may have whereof to boast. And then, lest when thou hearest that the whole
work is accomplished not of works but by faith, thou shouldest become idle,[1]
observe how he continues,
Ver. 10. "For we are His workmanship, created in Christ Jesus for good
works, which God afore prepared that we should walk in them."
Observe the words he uses. He here alludes to the regeneration, which is m
reality a second creation. We have been brought from non-existence into being.
As to what we were before, that is, the old man, we are dead. What we are now
become, before, we were not. Truly then is this work a creation, yea, and more
noble than the first; for from that one, we have our being; but from this last,
we have, over and above, our well being.
"For good works, which God afore prepared that we should walk in them."[2]
Not merely that we should begin, but that we should walk in them, for we
need a virtue which shall last throughout, and be extended on to our dying day.
If we had to travel a road leading to a royal city, and then when we had passed
over the greater part of it, were to flag and sit down near the very close, it
were of no use to us. This is the hope of our calling; for "for good works" he
says. Otherwise it would profit us nothing.
Moral. Thus here he rejoices not that we should work one work, but all;
for, as we have five senses, and ought to make use of all in their proper season,
so ought we also the several virtues. Now were a man to be temperate and yet
unmerciful, or were he to be merciful and yet grasping, or were he to abstain
indeed from other people's goods, and yet not bestow his own, it would be all in
vain. For a single virtue alone is not enough to present us with boldness
before the judgment-seat of Christ; no, we require it to be great, and various, and
universal, and entire. Hear what Christ saith to the disciples, "Go, ye and
make disciples of all the nations,--teaching them to observe all things whatsoever
I commanded you." (Matt. xxviii: 19.) And again, "Whosoever shall break one of
these least commandments, shall be called least in the kingdom of Heaven,"
(Matt. v: 19.) that is, in the resurrection; nay, he shall not enter into the
kingdom; for He is wont to call the time also of the resurrection, the kingdom. "If
he break one," saith He, "he shall be called least," so that we have need of
all. And observe how it is not possible to enter without works of mercy; but if
even this alone be wanting, we shall depart into the fire. For, saith He,
"Depart, ye cursed, into the eternal fire, which is prepared for the Devil and his
angels." Why and wherefore? "For I was an hungered, and ye gave me no meat; I
was thirsty, and ye gave me no drink." (Matt. xxv: 42.) Beholdest thou, how
without any other charge laid against them, for this one alone they perished. And
for this reason alone too were the virgins also excluded from the bride-chamber,
though sobriety surely they did possess. As the Apostle saith "and the
sanctification, without which no man shall see the Lord." (Heb. xii: 14.) Consider
then, that without sobriety, it is impossible to see the Lord; yet it does not
necessarily follow that with sobriety it is possible to see Him, because
often-times something else stands in the way. Again, if we do all things ever so rightly,
and yet do our neighbor no service, neither in that case shall we enter into
the kingdom. Whence is this evident? From the parable of the servants entrusted
with the talents. For, in that instance, the man's virtue was in every point
unimpaired, and there had been nothing lacking, but forasmuch as he was slothful
in his business, he was rightly cast out. Nay, it is possible, even by railing
only, to fall into Hell. "For whosoever" saith Christ, "shall say to his
brother, Thou fool, shall be in danger of the hell of fire." (Matt. v: 22.) And if a
man be ever so right in all things, and yet be injurious, he shall not enter.
And let no one impute cruelty to God, in that he excludes those who fail
in this matter, from the kingdom of Heaven. For even with men, if any one do any
thing whatsoever contrary to the law, he is banished from the king's presence.
And if he transgresses so much as one of the established laws, if he lays a
false accusation against another, he forfeits his office. And if he commits
adultery, and is detected, he is disgraced, and even though he have done ten
thousand right acts, he is undone; and if he commits murder, and is convicted, this
again is enough to destroy him. Now if the laws of men are so carefully guarded,
how much more should those of God be. "But He is good," a man says. How long
are we to be uttering this foolish talk? foolish, I say, not because He is not
good, but in that we keep thinking that His goodness will be available to us for
these purposes, though I have again and again used ten thousand arguments on
this subject. Listen to the Scripture, which saith, "Say not, His mercy is great,
He will be pacified for the multitude of my sins." (Ecclus. v: 6.) He does not
forbid us to say, "His mercy is great." This is not what He enjoins; rather he
would have us constantly say it, and with this object Paul raises all sorts of
arguments, but his object is what follows. Do not, he means, admire the
loving-kindness of God with this view, with a view to sinning, and saying, "His mercy
will be pacified for the multitude of my sins." For it is with this object
that I too discourse so much concerning His goodness, not that we may presume upon
it, and do any thing we choose, because in that way this goodness will be to
the prejudice of our salvation; but that we may not despair in our sins, but may
repent. For "the goodness of God leadeth thee to repentance," (Rom. ii: 4.)
not to greater wickedness. And if thou become depraved, because of His goodness,
thou art rather belying Him before men. I see many persons thus impugning the
long-suffering of God; so that if thou use it not aright, thou shalt pay the
penalty. Is God a God of loving-kindness? Yes, but He is also a righteous Judge.
Is He one who maketh allowance for sins? True, yet rendereth He to every man
according to his works. Doth He pass by iniquity and blot out transgressions?
True, yet maketh He inquisition also. How then is it, that these things are not
contradictions? Contradictions they are not, if we distinguish them by their
times. He doeth away iniquity here, both by the laver of Baptism, and by penitence.
There He maketh inquisition of what we have done by fire and torment. "If
then," some man may say, "I am cast out, and forfeit the kingdom, whether I have
wrought ten thousand evil deeds or only one, wherefore may I not do all sorts of
evil deeds?" This is the argument of an ungrateful servant; still nevertheless,
we will proceed to solve even this. Never do that which is evil in order to do
thyself good; for we shall, all alike fall short of the kingdom, yet in Hell we
shall not all undergo the same punishment, but one a severer, another a milder
one. For now, if thou and another have "despised God's goodness," (Rom. ii:
4.) the one in many instances, and the other in a few, ye will alike forfeit the
kingdom. But if ye have not alike despised Him, but the one in a greater, the
other in a less degree, in Hell ye shall feel the difference.
Now then, why, it may be said, doth He threaten them who have not done
works of mercy, that they shall depart into the fire, and not simply into the
fire, but into that which is "prepared for the devil and his angels?" (Matt. xxv:
41.) Why and wherefore is this? Because nothing so provokes God to wrath. He
puts this before all terrible things; for if it is our duty to love our enemies,
of what punishment shall not he be worthy, who turns away even from them that
love him, and is in this respect worse than the heathen? So that in this case the
greatness of the sin will make such an one go away with the devil. Woe to him,
it is said, who doeth not alms; and if this was the case under the Old
Covenant, much more is it under the New. if, where the getting of wealth was allowed,
and the enjoyment of it, and the care of it, there was such provision made for
the succoring the poor, how much more in that Dispensation, where we are
commanded to surrender all we have? For what did not they of old do? They gave
tithes, and tithes again upon tithes for orphans, widows, and strangers; whereas some
one was saying to me in astonishment at another, "Why, such an one gives
tithes." What a load of disgrace does this expression imply, since what was not a
matter of wonder with the Jews has come to be so in the case of the Christians?
If there was danger then in omitting tithes, think how great it must be now.
Again, drunkenness shall not inherit the kingdom. Yet what is the language
of most people? "Well, if both I and he are in the same case, that is no
little comfort." What then? First of all, that thou and he shall not reap the same
punishment; but were it otherwise, neither is that any comfort. Fellowship in
sufferings has comfort in it, when the miseries have any proportion in them; but
when they exceed all proportion, and carry us beyond ourselves, no longer do
they allow of our receiving any comfort at all. For tell the man that is being
tortured, and has entered into the flames, that such an one is undergoing the
same, still he will not feel the comfort. Did not all the Israelites perish
together? What manner of comfort did that afford them? Rather, did not this very
thing distress them? And this was why they kept saying, We are lost, we are
perished, we are wasted away. What manner of comfort then is there here? In vain do we
comfort ourselves with such hopes as these. There is but one only comfort, to
avoid falling into that unquenchable fire; but it is not possible for one who
has fallen into it to find comfort, where there is the gnashing of teeth, where
there is the weeping, where is the worm that dieth not, and the fire that is
not quenched. For shalt thou conceive any comfort at all, tell me, when thou art
in so great tribulation and distress? Wilt thou then be any longer thyself? Let
us not, I pray and entreat you, let us not vainly deceive ourselves and
comfort ourselves with arguments like these; no, let us practise those virtues, which
shall avail to save us. The object before us is to sit together with Christ,
and art thou trifling about such matters as these? Why, were there no other sin
at all, how great punishment ought we not to suffer for these very speeches
themselves, because we are so insensate, so wretched, and so indolent, as, even
with so vast a privilege before us, to talk thus? Oh! how much shalt thou have to
lament, when thou shalt then consider them that have done good! When thou
shalt behold slaves and base-born who have labored but a little here, there made
partakers of the royal throne, will not these things be worse to thee than
torment? For if even now, when thou seest any in high reputation, though thou art
suffering no evil, thou regardest this as worse than any punishment, and by this
alone art consumed, and bemoanest thyself, and weepest, and judgest it to be as
bad as ten thousand deaths; what shalt thou suffer then? Why, even were there
no hell at all, the very thought of the kingdom, were it not enough to destroy
and consume thee? And that such will be the case, we have enough in our own
experience of things to teach us. Let us not then vainly flatter our own souls with
speeches like these; no, let us take heed, let us have a regard for our own
salvation, let us make virtue our care, let us rouse ourselves to the practice of
good works, that we may be counted worthy to attain to this exceeding glory,
in Jesus Christ our Lord with whom to the Father, together with the Holy Spirit
be glory, might, honor, now and ever, and for ages of ages. Amen.