HOMILIES OF ST. JOHN CHRYSOSTOM ON THE EPISTLE OF ST. PAUL THE APOSTLE TO THE
EPHESIANS, HOMILIES XX TO XXIV (CHAPTERS 5 & 6)
HOMILY XX.
EPHESIANS V. VERSES 22--33.
Verses 22--24. "Wives, be in subjection unto your own husbands, as unto the
Lord. For the husband is the head of the wife, as Christ also is the head of the
Church: being Himself the Saviour of the body. But as the Church is subject to
Christ, so let the wives also be to their husbands in everything."
A CERTAIN wise man, setting down a number of things in the rank of
blessings, set down this also in the rank of a blessing, "A wife agreeing with her
husband." (Ecclus. xxv. 1.) And elsewhere again he sets it down among blessings,
that a woman should dwell in harmony with her husband. (Ecclus. xl. 23.) And
indeed from the beginning, God appears to have made special provision for this
union; and discoursing of the twain as one, He said thus, "Male and female created
He them" (Gen. i. 27); and again, "There is neither male nor female." (Gal.
iii. 28.) For there is no relationship between man and man so close as that
between man and wife, if they be joined together as they should be. And therefore a
certain blessed man too, when he would express surpassing love, and was
mourning for one that was dear to him, and of one soul with him, did not mention
father, nor mother, nor child, nor brother, nor friend, but what? "Thy love to me
was wonderful," saith he, "passing the love of women." (2 Sam. i. 26.) For
indeed, in very deed, this love is more despotic than any despotism: for others
indeed may be strong, but this passion is not only strong, but unfading. For there
is a certain love deeply seated in our nature, which imperceptibly to ourselves
knits together these bodies of ours. Thus even from the very beginning woman
sprang from man, and afterwards from man and woman sprang both man and woman.[1]
Perceivest thou the close bond and connection? And how that God suffered not a
different kind of nature to enter in from without? And mark, how many
providential arrangements He made. He permitted the man to marry his own sister; or
rather not his sister, but his daughter; nay, nor yet his daughter, but something
more than his daughter, even his own flesh.[2] And thus the whole He framed from
one beginning, gathering all together, like stones in a building, into one.
For neither on the one hand did He form her from without, and this was that the
man might not feel towards her as towards an alien; nor again did He confine
marriage to her,[3] that she might not, by contracting herself,[4] and making all
center in herself, be cut off from the rest. Thus as in the case of plants,
they are of all others the best, which have but a single stem, and spread out into
a number of branches; (since were all confined to the root alone, all would be
to no purpose, whereas again had it a number of roots, the tree would be no
longer worthy of admiration;) so, I say, is the case here also. From one, namely
Adam, He made the whole race to spring, preventing them by the strongest
necessity from being ever torn asunder, or separated; and afterwards, making it more
restricted, He no longer allowed sisters and daughters to be wives, lest we
should on the other hand contract our love to one point, and thus in another
manner be cut off from one another. Hence Christ said, "He which made them from the
beginning, made them male and female." (Matt. xix. 4.)
For great evils are hence produced, and great benefits, both to families
and to states. For there is nothing which so welds our life together as the love
of man and wife. For this many will lay aside even their arms,[5] for this
they will give up life itself. And Paul would never without a reason and without
an object have spent so much pains on this subject, as when he says here,
"Wives, be in subjection unto your own husbands, as unto the Lord." And why so?
Because when they are in harmony, the children are well brought up, and the
domestics are in good order, and neighbors, and friends, and relations enjoy the
fragrance. But if it be otherwise, all is turned upside down, and thrown into
confusion. And just as when the generals of an army are at peace one with another, all
things are in due subordination, whereas on the other hand, if they are at
variance, everything is turned upside down; so, I say, is it also here. Wherefore,
saith he, "Wives, be in subjection unto your own husbands, as unto the Lord."
Yet how strange! for how then is it, that it is said elsewhere, "If one
bid not farewell both to wife and to husband, he cannot follow me"? (Luke xiv.
26.) For if it is their duty to be in subjection "as unto the Lord," how saith He
that they must depart from them for the Lord's sake? Yet their duty indeed it
is, their bounden duty. But the word "as" is not necessarily and universally
expressive of exact equality. He either means this, " 'as' knowing that ye are
servants to the Lord"; (which, by the way, is what he says elsewhere, that, even
though they do it not for the husband's sake, yet must they primarily for the
Lord's sake;) or else he means, "when thou obeyest thy husband, do so as serving
the Lord."[1] For if he who resisteth these external authorities, those of
governments, I mean, "withstandeth the ordinance of God" (Rom. xiii. 2), much more
does she who submits not herself to her husband. Such was God's will from the
beginning.
Let us take as our fundamental position then that the husband occupies the
place of the "head," and the wife the place of the "body."
Ver. 23, 24. Then, he proceeds with arguments and says that "the husband
is the head of the wife, as Christ also is the head of the Church, being Himself
the Saviour of the body. But[2] as the Church is subject to Christ, so let the
wives be to their husbands in everything."
Then after saying, "The husband is the head of the wife, as Christ also is
of the Church," he further adds, "and He is the Saviour of the body." For
indeed the head is the saving health of the body. He had already laid down
beforehand for man and wife, the ground and provision of their love, assigning to each
their proper place, to the one that of authority and forethought, to the other
that of submission. As then "the Church," that is, both husbands and wives, "is
subject unto Christ, so also ye wives submit yourselves to your husbands, as
unto God."
Ver. 25. "Husbands, love your wives, even as Christ also loved the Church."
Thou hast heard how great the submission; thou hast extolled and marvelled
at Paul, how, like an admirable and spiritual man, he welds together our whole
life. Thou didst well. But now hear what he also requires at thy hands; for
again he employs the same example.
"Husbands," saith he, "love your wives, even as Christ also loved the
Church."
Thou hast seen the measure of obedience, hear also the measure of love.[3]
Wouldest thou have thy wife obedient unto thee, as the Church is to Christ?
Take then thyself the same provident care for her, as Christ takes for the
Church. Yea, even if it shall be needful for thee to give thy life for her, yea, and
to be cut into pieces ten thousand times, yea, and to endure and undergo any
suffering whatever,--refuse it not. Though thou shouldest undergo all this, yet
wilt thou not, no, not even then, have done anything like Christ. For thou
indeed art doing it for one to whom thou art already knit; but He for one who turned
her back on Him and hated Him. In the same way then as He laid at His feet her
who turned her back on Him, who hated, and spurned, and disdained Him, not by
menaces, nor by violence, nor by terror, nor by anything else of the kind, but
by his unwearied affection; so also do thou behave thyself toward thy wife.
Yea, though thou see her looking down upon thee, and disdaining, and scorning
thee, yet by thy great thoughtfulness for her, by affection, by kindness, thou wilt
be able to lay her at thy feet. For there is nothing more powerful to sway
than these bonds, and especially for husband and wife. A servant, indeed, one will
be able, perhaps, to bind down by fear; nay not even him, for he will soon
start away and be gone. But the partner of one's life, the mother of one's
children, the foundation of one's every joy, one ought never to chain down by fear and
menaces, but with love and good temper. For what sort of union is that, where
the wife trembles at her husband? And what sort of pleasure will the husband
himself enjoy, if he dwells with his wife as with a slave, and not as with a
free-woman? Yea, though thou shouldest suffer anything on her account, do not
upbraid her; for neither did Christ do this.
Ver. 26. "And gave Himself up," he says, "for it, that He might sanctify
and cleanse it."
So then she was unclean! So then she had blemishes, so then she was
unsightly, so then she was worthless! Whatsoever kind of wife thou shalt take, yet
shalt thou never take such a bride as the Church, when Christ took her, nor one
so far removed from thee as the Church was from Christ, And yet for all that, He
did not abhor her, nor loathe her for her surpassing deformity. Wouldest thou
hear her deformity described? Hear what Paul saith, "For ye were once
darkness." (Eph. v. 8.) Didst thou see the blackness of her hue? What blacker than
darkness? But look again at her boldness, "living," saith he, "in malice and envy."
(Tit. iii. 3.) Look again at her impurity; "disobedient, foolish." But what am
I saying? She was both foolish, and of an evil tongue; and yet notwithstanding,
though so many were her blemishes, yet did He give Himself up for her in her
deformity, as for one in the bloom of youth, as for one dearly beloved, as for
one of wonderful beauty. And it was in admiration of this that Paul said, "For
scarcely for a righteous man will one die (Rom. v. 7); and again, "in that while
we were yet sinners, Christ died for us." (Rom. v. 8.) And though such as
this, He took her, He arrayed her in beauty, and washed her, and refused not even
this, to give Himself for her.
Ver. 26, 27. "That He might sanctify it having cleansed it," he proceeds,
"by the washing of water with the word; that He might present the Church to
Himself a glorious Church, not having spot, or wrinkle, or any such thing, but
that it should be holy and without blemish."
"By the washing or layer" He washeth her uncleanness. "By the word," saith
he. What word? "In the Name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy
Ghost."[1] (Matt. xxviii. 19.) And not simply hath He adorned her, but hath made
her "glorious, not having spot, or wrinkle, or any such thing." Let us then also
seek after this beauty ourselves, and we shall be able to create it. Seek not
thou at thy wife's hand, things which she is not able to possess. Seest thou
that the Church had all things at her Lord's hands? By Him was made glorious, by
Him was made pure, by Him made without blemish? Turn not thy back on thy wife
because of her deformity. Hear the Scripture that saith, "The bee is little
among such as fly, but her fruit is the chief of sweet things."[2] (Ecclus. xi. 3.)
She is of God's fashioning. Thou reproachest not her, but Him that made her;
what can the woman do? Praise her not for her beauty. Praise and hatred and love
based on personal beauty belong to unchastened souls. Seek thou for beauty of
soul. Imitate the Bridegroom of the Church. Outward beauty is full of conceit
and great license, and throws men into jealousy, and the thing often makes thee
suspect monstrous things. But has it any pleasure? For the first or second
month, perhaps, or at most for the year: but then no longer; the admiration by
familiarity wastes away. Meanwhile the evils which arose from the beauty still
abide, the pride, the folly, the contemptuousness. Whereas in one who is not such,
there is nothing of this kind. But the love having begun on just grounds, still
continues ardent, since its object is beauty of soul, and not of body. What
better, tell me, than heaven? What better than the stars? Tell me of what body
you will, yet is there none so fair. Tell me of what eyes you will, yet are there
none so sparkling. When these were created, the very Angels gazed with wonder,
and we gaze with wonder now; yet not in the same degree as at first. Such is
familiarity; things do not strike us in the same degree. How much more in the
case of a wife! And if moreover disease come too, all is at once fled. Let us
seek in a wife affectionateness, modest-mindedness, gentleness; these are the
characteristics of beauty. But loveliness of person let us not seek, nor upbraid
her upon these points, over which she has no power, nay, rather, let us not
upbraid at all, (it were rudeness,) nor let us be impatient, nor sullen. Do ye not
see how many, after living with beautiful wives, have ended their lives
pitiably, and how many, who have lived with those of no great beauty, have run on to
extreme old age with great enjoyment. Let us wipe off the "spot" that is within,
let us smooth the "wrinkles" that are within, let us do away the "blemishes"
that are on the soul. Such is the beauty God requires. Let us make her fair in
God's sight, not in our own. Let us not look for wealth, nor for that high-birth
which is outward, but for that true nobility which is in the soul. Let no one
endure to get rich by a wife; for such riches are base and disgraceful; no, by
no means let any one seek to get rich from this source. "For they that desire to
be rich, fall into a temptation and a snare, and many foolish and hurtful
lusts, and into destruction and perdition." (1 Tim. vi. 9.) Seek not therefore in
thy wife abundance of wealth, and thou shall find everything else go well. Who,
tell me, would overlook the most important things, to attend to those which are
less so? And yet, alas! this is in every case our feeling. Yes, if we have a
son, we concern ourselves not how he may be made virtuous, but how we may get
him a rich wife; not how he may be well-mannered, but well-monied:[3] if we
follow a business, we enquire not how it may be clear of sin, but how it may bring
us in most profit. And everything has become money; and thus is everything
corrupted and ruined, because that passion possesses us.
Ver. 28. "Even so ought husbands to love their own wives," saith he, "as
their own bodies."
What, again, means this? To how much greater a similitude, and stronger
example has he come; and not only so, but also to one how much nearer and
clearer, and to a fresh obligation. For that other one was of no very constraining
force, for He was Christ, and was God, and gave Himself. He now manages his
argument on a different ground, saying, "so ought men "; because the thing is not a
favor, but a debt. Then, "as their own bodies." And why?
Ver. 29. "For no man ever hated his own flesh, but nourisheth and
cherisheth it."
That is, tends it with exceeding care. And how is she his flesh? Hearken;
"This now is bone of my bones," saith Adam, "and flesh of my flesh." (Gen. ii.
23.) For she is made of matter taken from us. And not only so, but also, "they
shall be," saith God, "one flesh." (Gen. ii. 24.)
"Even as Christ also the Church." Here he returns to the former example.
Ver. 30. "Because we are members of His body, of His flesh and of His
bones."[1]
Ver. 31. "For this cause shall a man leave his father and mother, and
shall cleave to his wife, and the twain shall become one flesh."[2]
Behold again a third ground of obligation; for he shows that a man leaving
them that begat him, and from whom he was born, is knit to his wife; and that
then the one flesh is, father, and mother, and the child, from the substance of
the two commingled. For indeed by the commingling of their seeds is the child
produced, so that the three are one flesh. Thus then are we in relation to
Christ; we become one flesh by participation, and we much more than the child. And
why and how so? Because so it has been from the beginning.
Tell me not that such and such things are so. Seest thou not that we have
in our own flesh itself many defects? For one man, for instance, is lame,
another has his feet distorted, another his hands withered, another some other
member weak; and yet nevertheless he does not grieve at it, nor cut it off, but
oftentimes prefers it even to the other. Naturally enough; for it is part of
himself. As great love as each entertains towards himself, so great he would have us
entertain towards a wife. Not because we partake of the same nature; no, this
ground of duty towards a wife is far greater than that; it is that there are not
two bodies but one; he the head, she the body. And how saith he elsewhere "and
the Head of Christ is God "? (1 Cor. xi. 3.) This I too say, that as we are
one body, so also are Christ and the Father One. And thus then is the Father also
found to be our Head. He sets down two examples, that of the natural body and
that of Christ's body. And hence he further adds,
Ver. 32. "This is great mystery: but I speak in regard of Christ and of
the Church."[3]
Why does he call it a great mystery? That it was something great and
wonderful, the blessed Moses, or rather God, intimated. For the present, however,
saith he, I speak regarding Christ, that having left the Father, He came down,
and came to the Bride, and became one Spirit. "For he that is joined unto the
Lord is one Spirit." (1 Cor. vi. 17.) And well saith he, "it is a great mystery."
And then as though he were saying, "But still nevertheless the allegory does
not destroy affection," he adds,
Ver. 33. "Nevertheless[4] do ye also severally love each one his own wife
even as himself; and let the wife see that she fear her husband."
For indeed, in very deed, a mystery it is, yea, a great mystery, that a
man should leave him that gave him being, him that begat him, and that brought
him up, and her that travailed with him and had sorrow, those that have bestowed
upon him so many and great benefits, those with whom he has been in familiar
intercourse, and be joined to one who was never even seen by him and who has
nothing in common with him, and should honor her before all others. A mystery it is
indeed. And yet are parents not distressed when these events take place, but
rather, when they do not take place; and are delighted when their wealth is
spent and lavished upon it.--A great mystery indeed! and one that contains some
hidden wisdom. Such Moses prophetically showed it to be from the very first; such
now also Paul proclaims it, where he saith, "concerning Christ and the Church."
However not for the husband's sake alone it is thus said, but for the
wife's sake also, that "he cherish her as his own flesh, as Christ also the
Church," and, "that the wife fear her husband." He is no longer setting down the
duties of love only, but what? "That she fear her husband." The wife is a second
authority; let not her then demand equality, for. she is under the head; nor let
him despise her as being in subjection, for she is the body; and if the head
despise the body, it will itself also perish. But let him bring in love on his
part as a counterpoise to obedience on her part. For example, let the hands and
the feet, and all the rest of the members be given up for service to the head,
but let the head provide for the body, seeing it contains every sense in itself.
Nothing can be better than this union.
And yet how can there ever be love, one may say, where there is fear? It
will exist there, I say, preeminently. For she that fears and reverences, loves
also; and she that loves, fears and reverences him as being the head, and loves
him as being a member, since the head itself is a member of the body at large.
Hence he places the one in subjection, and the other in authority, that there
may be peace; for where there is equal authority there can never be peace;
neither where a house is a democracy, nor where all are rulers; but the ruling
power must of necessity be one. And this is universally the case with matters
referring to the body, inasmuch as when men are spiritual, there will be peace.
There were "five thousand souls," and not one of them said, "that aught of the
things which he possessed was his own" (Acts iv. 32), but they were subject one to
another; an indication this of wisdom, and of the fear of God. The principle of
love, however, he explains; that of fear he does not. And mark, how on that of
love he enlarges, stating the arguments relating to Christ and those relating
to one's own flesh, the words," For this cause shall a man leave his father and
mother." (Ver. 31.) Whereas upon those drawn from fear he forbears to enlarge.
And why so? Because he would rather that this principle prevail, this, namely,
of love; for where this exists, everything else follows of course, but where
the other exists, not necessarily. For the man who loves his wife, even though
she be not a very obedient one, still will bear with everything. So difficult
and impracticable is unanimity, where persons are not bound together by that love
which is founder in supreme authority; at all events, fear will not
necessarily effect this. Accordingly, he dwells the more upon this, which is the strong
tie. And the wife though seeming to be the loser in that she was charged to
fear, is the gainer, because the principal duty, love, is charged upon the husband.
"But what," one may say, "if a wife reverence me not?" Never mind, thou art to
love, fulfill thine own duty. For though that which is due from others may not
follow, we ought of course to do our duty. This is an example of what I mean.
He says, "submitting yourselves one to another in the fear of Christ." And what
then if another submit not himself? Still obey thou the law of God. Just so, I
say, is it also here. Let the wife at least, though she be not loved, still
reverence notwithstanding, that nothing may lie at her door; and let the husband,
though his wife reverence him not, still show her love notwithstanding, that
he himself be not wanting in any point. For each has received his own.
This then is marriage when it takes place according to Christ, spiritual
marriage, and spiritual birth, not of blood, nor of travail, nor of the will of
the flesh. Such was the birth of Christ, not of blood, nor of travail. Such
also was that of Isaac. Hear how the Scripture saith, "And it ceased to be with
Sarah after the manner of women." (Gen. xviii. 11.) Yea, a marriage it is, not of
passion, nor of the flesh, but wholly spiritual, the soul being united to God
by a union unspeakable, and which He alone knoweth. Therefore he saith, "He
that is joined unto the Lord is one spirit." (1 Cor. vi. 17.) Mark how earnestly
he endeavors to unite both flesh with flesh, and spirit with spirit. And where
are the heretics?[1] Never surely, if marriage were a thing to be condemned,
would he have called Christ and the Church a bride and bridegroom; never would he
have brought forward by way of exhortation the words, "A man shall leave his
father and his mother "; and again have added, that it was "spoken in regard of
Christ and of the Church." For of her it is that the Psalmist also saith,
"Hearken, O daughter, and consider, and incline thine ear; forget also thine own
people, and thy father's house. So shall the king desire thy beauty." (Ps. xlv. 10,
11.) Therefore also Christ saith, "I came out from the Father, and am come."
(John xvi. 28.) But when I say, that He left the Father, imagine not such a
thing as happens among men, a change of place; for just in the same way as the word
"go forth" is used, not because He literally came forth, but because of His
incarnation, so also is the expression, "He left the Father."
Now why did he not say of the wife also, She shall be joined unto her
husband? Why, I say, is this? Because he was discoursing concerning love, and was
discoursing to the husband. For to her indeed be discourses concerning
reverence, and says, "the husband is the head of the wife" (ver. 23), and again, "Christ
is the Head of the Church." Whereas to him he discourses concerning love, and
commits to him this province of love, and declares to him that which pertains
to love, thus binding him and cementing him to her. For the man that leaves his
father for the sake of his wife, and then again, leaves this very wife herself
and abandons her, what forbearance can he deserve?
Seest thou not how great a share of honor God would have her enjoy, in
that he hath taken thee away from thy father, and hath linked thee to her? What
then, a man may say, if our duty is done, and yet she does not follow the
example? "Yet if the unbelieving departeth, let him depart; the brother or the sister
is not under bondage in such cases." (1 Cor. vii. 15.)
However, when thou hearest of "fear," demand that fear which becomes a
free woman, not as though thou wert exacting it of a slave. For she is thine own
body; and if thou do this, thou reproachest thyself in dishonoring thine own
body. And of what nature is this "fear"? It is the not contradicting, the not
rebelling, the not being fond of the preëminence. It is enough that fear be kept
within these bounds. But if thou love, as thou art commanded, thou wilt make it
yet greater. Or rather it will not be any longer by fear that thou wilt be doing
this, but love itself will have its effect. The sex is somehow weaker, and
needs much support, much condescension.
But what will they say, who are knit together in second marriages?[1] I
speak not at all in condemnation of them, God forbid; for the Apostle himself
permits them, though indeed by way of condescension.
Supply her with everything. Do everything and endure trouble for her sake.
Necessity is laid upon thee.
Here he does not think it right to introduce his counsel, as he in many
cases does, with examples from them that are without. That of Christ, so great
and forcible, were alone enough; and more especially as regards the argument of
subjection. "A man shall leave," he saith, "his father and mother." Behold, this
then is from without. But he does not say, and "shall dwell with," but "shall
cleave unto," thus showing the closeness of the union, and the fervent love.
Nay, he is not content with this, but further by what he adds, he explains the
subjection in such a way as that the twain appear no longer twain. He does not
say, "one spirit," he does not say, "one soul" (for that is manifest, and is
possible to any one), but so as to be "one flesh." She is a second authority,
possessing indeed an authority, and a considerable equality of dignity; but at the
same time the husband has somewhat of superiority. In this consists most
chiefly the well-being of the house. For he took that former argument, the example of
Christ, to show that we ought not only to love, but also to govern; "that she
may be," saith he, "holy and without blemish." But the word "flesh" has
reference to love--and the word "shall cleave" has in like manner reference to love.
For if thou shalt make her "holy and without blemish," everything else will
follow. Seek the things which are of God, and those which are of man will follow
readily enough. Govern thy wife, and thus will the whole house be in harmony.
Hear what Paul saith. "And if they would learn any thing, let them ask their own
husbands at home." (1 Cor. xiv. 35.) If we thus regulate our own houses, we
shall be also fit for the management of the Church. For indeed a house is a little
Church. Thus it is possible for us by becoming good husbands and wives, to
surpass all others.
Consider Abraham, and Sarah, and Isaac, and the three hundred and eighteen
born in his house. (Gen. xiv. 14.) How the whole house was harmoniously knit
together, how the whole was full of piety and fulfilled the Apostolic
injunction. She also "reverenced her husband"; for hear her own words, "It hath not yet
happened unto me even until now, and my lord is old also." (Gen. xviii. 12.)[2]
And he again so loved her, that in all things he obeyed her commands. And the
young child was virtuous, and the servants born in the house, they too were so
excellent that they refused not even to hazard their lives with their master;
they delayed not, nor asked the reason. Nay, one of them, the chief, was so
admirable, that he was even entrusted with the marriage of the only-begotten child,
and with a journey into a foreign country. (Gen. xxiv. 1-67.) For just as with
a general, when his soldiery also is well organized, the enemy has no quarter
to attack; so, I say, is it also here: when husband and wife and children and
servants are all interested in the same things, great is the harmony of the
house. Since where this is not the case, the whole is oftentimes overthrown and
broken up by one bad servant; and that single one will often mar and utterly
destroy the whole.
MORAL. Let us then be very thoughtful both for our wives, and children,
and servants; knowing that we shall thus be establishing for ourselves an easy
government, and shall have our accounts with them gentle and lenient, and say,
"Behold I, and the children which God hath given me." (Isa. viii. 18.) If the
husband command respect, and the head be honorable, then will the rest of the body
sustain no violence. Now what is the wife's fitting behavior, and what the
husband's, he states accurately, charging her to reverence him as the head, and
him to love her as a wife; but how, it may be said, can these things be? That
they ought indeed so to be, he has proved. But how they can be so, I will tell
you. They will be so, if we will despise money, if we will look but to one thing
only, excellence of soul, if we will keep the fear of God before our eyes. For
what he says in his discourse to servants, "whatsoever any man doeth, whether it
be good or evil, the same shall he receive of the Lord" (Eph. vi. 8); this is
also the case here. Love her therefore not for her sake so much as for Christ's
sake. This, at least, he as much as intimates, in saying, "as unto the Lord."
So then do everything, as in obedience to the Lord, and as doing everything for
His sake. This were enough to induce and to persuade us, and not to suffer
that there should be any teasing and dissension. Let none be believed when
slandering the husband to his wife; no, nor let the husband believe anything at random
against the wife, nor let the wife be without reason inquisitive about his
goings out and his comings in. No, nor on any account let the husband ever render
himself worthy of any suspicion whatever. For what, tell me, what if thou shall
devote thyself all the day to thy friends, and give the evening to thy wife,
and not even thus be able to content her, and place her out of reach of
suspicion? Though thy wife complain, yet be not annoyed--it is her love, not her
folly--they are the complaints of fervent attachment, and burning affection, and
fear. Yes, she is afraid lest any one have stolen her marriage bed, lest any one
have injured her in that which is the summit of her blessings, lest any one have
taken away from her him who is her head, lest any one have broken through her
marriage chamber.
There is also another ground of petty jealousy. Let neither claim too much
service of the servants, neither the husband from the maid-servant, nor the
wife from the man-servant. For these things also are enough to beget suspicion.
For consider, I say, that righteous household I spoke of. Sarah herself bade the
patriarch take Hagar. She herself directed it, no one compelled her, nor did
the husband[1] attempt it; no, although he had dragged on so long a period
childless, yet he chose never to become a father, rather than to grieve his wife.
And yet even after all this, what said Sarah? "The Lord judge between me and
thee." (Gen. xvi. 5.) Now, I say, had he been any one else would he not have been
moved to anger? Would he not also have stretched forth his hand, saying as it
were, "What meanest thou? I had no desire to have anything to do with the woman;
it was all thine own doing; and dost thou turn again and accuse me?"--But no,
he says nothing of the sort;--but what? "Behold, thy maid is in thy hand; do to
her that which is good in thine eyes." (Gen. xvi. 6.) He delivered up the
partner of his bed, that he might not grieve Sarah. And yet surely is there
nothing greater than this for producing affection. For if partaking of the same table
produces unanimity even in robbers towards their foes, (and the Psalmist[2]
saith, "Who didst eat sweet food at the same table with me"); much more will the
becoming one flesh--for such is the being the partner of the bed--be effectual
to draw us together. Yet did none of these things avail to overcome him; but he
delivered Hagar up to his wife, to show that nothing had been done by his own
fault. Nay, and what is more, he sent her forth when with child. Who would not
have pitied one that had conceived a child by himself? Yet was the just man
unmoved, for he set before everything else the love he owed his wife.
Let us then imitate him ourselves. Let no one reproach his neighbor with
his poverty; let no one be in love with money; and then all difficulties will be
at an end.
Neither let a wife say to her husband, "Unmanly coward that thou art, full
of sluggishness and dullness, and fast asleep! here is such a one, a low man,
and of low parentage, who runs his risks, and makes his voyages, and has made a
good fortune; and his wife wears her jewels, and goes out with her pair of
milk-white mules;[3] she rides about everywhere, she has troops of slaves, and a
swarm of eunuchs, but thou hast cowered down and livest to no purpose." Let not
a wife say these things, nor anything like them. For she is the body, not to
dictate to the head, but to submit herself and obey. "But how," some one will
say, "is she to endure poverty? Where is she to look for consolation?" Let her
select and put beside her those who are poorer still. Let her again consider how
many noble and high-born maidens have not only received nothing of their
husbands, but have even given dowries to them, and have spent their all upon them. Let
her reflect on the perils which arise from such riches, and she will cling to
this quiet life. In short, if she is affectionately disposed towards her
husband, she will utter nothing of the sort. No, she will rather choose to have him
near her, though gaining nothing, than gaining ten thousand talents of gold,
accompanied with that care and anxiety which always arise to wives from those
distant voyages.
Neither, however, let the husband, when he hears these things, on the
score of his having the supreme authority, betake himself to revilings and to
blows; but let him exhort, let him admonish her, as being less perfect, let him
persuade her with arguments. Let him never once lift his hand,--far be this from a
noble spirit,--no, nor give expression to insults, or taunts, or revilings; but
let him regulate and direct her as being wanting in wisdom. Yet how shall this
be done? If she be instructed in the true riches, in the heavenly philosophy,
she will make no complaints like these. Let him teach her then, that poverty is
no evil. Let him teach her, not by what he says only, but also by what he
does. Let him teach her to despise glory; and then his wife will speak of nothing,
and will desire nothing of the kind. Let him, as if he had an image given into
his hands to mould, let him, from that very evening on which he first receives
her into the bridal chamber, teach her temperance, gentleness, and how to live,
casting down the love of money at once from the outset, and from the very
threshold. Let him discipline her in wisdom, and advise her never to have bits of
gold hanging at her ears, and down her cheeks, and laid round about her neck,
nor laid up about the chamber, nor golden and costly garments stored up. But let
her chamber be handsome, still let not what is handsome degenerate into finery.
No, leave these things to the people of the stage. Adorn thine house thyself
with all possible neatness, so as rather to breathe an air of soberness than
much perfume. For hence will arise two or three good results. First then, the
bride will not be grieved, when the apartments are opened, and the tissues, and the
golden ornaments, and silver vessels, are sent back to their several owners.
Next, the bridegroom will have no anxiety about the loss, nor for the security
of the accumulated treasures. Thirdly again, in addition to this, which is the
crown of all these benefits, by these very points he will be showing his own
judgment, that indeed he has no pleasure in any of these things, and that he will
moreover put an end to everything else in keeping with them, and will never so
much as allow the existence either of dances, or of immodest songs. I am aware
that I shall appear perhaps ridiculous to many persons, in giving such
admonitions. Still nevertheless, if ye will but listen to me, as time goes on, and the
benefit of the practice accrues to you, then ye will understand the advantage
of it. And the laughter will pass off, and ye will laugh at the present fashion,
and will see that the present practice is really that of silly children and of
drunken men. Whereas what I recommend is the part of soberness, and wisdom,
and of the sublimest way of life. What then do I say is our duty? Take away from
marriage all those shameful, those Satanic, those immodest songs, those
companies of profligate young people, and this will avail to chasten the spirit of thy
bride.[1] For she will at once thus reason with herself; "Wonderful! What a
philosopher this man is! he regards the present life as nothing, he has brought
me here into his house, to be a mother, to bring up his children, to manage his
household affairs." "Yes, but these things are distasteful to a bride?" Just
for the first or second day;--but not afterwards; nay, she will even reap from
them the greatest delight, and relieve herself of all suspicion. For a man who
can endure neither flute-players, nor dancers, nor broken songs,[2] and that too
at the very time of his wedding, that man will scarcely endure ever to do or
say anything shameful. And then after this, when thou hast stripped the marriage
of all these things, then take her, and form and mould her carefully,
encouraging her bashfulness to a considerable length of time, and not destroying it
suddenly. For even if the damsel be very bold, yet for a time she will keep silence
out of reverence for her husband, and feeling herself a novice in the
circumstances. Thou then break not off this reserve too hastily, as unchaste husbands
do, but encourage it for a long time. For this will be a great advantage to
thee. Meanwhile she will not complain, she will not find fault with any laws thou
mayest frame for her. During that time therefore, during which shame, like a
sort of bridle laid upon the soul, suffers her not to make any murmur, nor to
complain of what is done, lay down all thy laws. For as soon as ever she acquires
boldness, she will overturn and confound everything without any sense of fear.
When is there then another time so advantageous for moulding a wife, as that
during which she reverences her husband, and is still timid, and still shy? Then
lay down all thy laws for her, and willing or unwilling, she will certainly obey
them. But how shalt thou help spoiling her modesty? By showing her that thou
thyself art no less modest than she is, addressing to her but few words, and
those too with great gravity and collectedness. Then entrust her with the
discourses of wisdom, for her soul will receive them. And establish her in that
loveliest habit, I mean modesty. If you wish me, I will also tell you by way of
specimen, what sort of language should be addressed to her. For if Paul shrank not
from saying, "Defraud ye not one the other" (2 Cor. vii. 5), and spoke the
language of a bridesmaid, or rather not of a bridesmaid, but of a spiritual soul,
much more will not we shrink from speaking. What then is the language we ought to
address to her? With great delicacy then we may say to her, "I have taken thee,
my child, to be partner of my life, and have brought thee in to share with me
in the closest and most honorable ties, in my children, and the superintendence
of my house. And what advice then shall I now recommend thee?" But rather,
first talk with her of your love for her; for there is nothing that so contributes
to persuade a hearer to admit sincerely the things that are said, as to be
assured that they are said with hearty affection. How then art thou to show that
affection? By saying, "when it was in my power to take many to wife, both with
better fortunes, and of noble family, I did not so choose, but I was enamoured
of thee, and thy beautiful life, thy modesty, thy gentleness, and soberness of
mind." Then immediately from these beginnings open the way to your discourse on
true wisdom, and with some circumlocution make a protest against riches. For if
you direct your argument at once against riches, you will bear too heavily
upon her; but if you do it by taking an occasion, you will succeed entirely. For
you will appear to be doing it in the way of an apology, not as a morose sort
of person, and ungracious, and over-nice about trifles. But when you take
occasion from what relates to herself, she will be even pleased. You will say then,
(for I must now take up the discourse again,) that "whereas I might have
married a rich woman, and with good fortune, I could not endure it. And why so? Not
capriciously, and without reason; but I was taught well and truly, that money is
no real possession, but a most despicable thing, a thing which moreover
belongs as well to thieves, and to harlots, and to grave-robbers. So I gave up these
things, and went on till I fell in with the excellence of thy soul, which I
value above all gold. For a young damsel who is discreet and ingenuous, and whose
heart is set on piety, is worth the whole world. For these reasons then, I
courted thee, and I love thee, and prefer thee to my own soul. For the present life
is nothing. And I pray, and beseech, and do all I can, that we may be counted
worthy so to live this present life, as that we may be able also there in the
world to come to be united to one another in perfect security. For our time here
is brief and fleeting. But if we shall be counted worthy by having pleased God
to so exchange this life for that one, then shall we ever be both with Christ
and with each other, with more abundant pleasure. I value thy affection above
all things, and nothing is so bitter or so painful to me, as ever to be at
variance with thee. Yes, though it should be my lot to lose my all, and to become
poorer than Irus,[1] and undergo the extremest hazards, and suffer any pain
whatsoever, all will be tolerable and endurable, so long as thy feelings are true
towards me. And then will my children be most dear to me, whilst thou art
affectionately disposed towards me. But thou must do these duties too." Then mingle
also with your discourse the Apostle's words, that "thus God would have our
affections blended together; for listen to the Scripture, which saith, 'For this
cause shall a man leave his father and mother, and cleave to his wife.' Let us
have no pretext for narrow-minded jealousy.[2] Perish riches, and retinue of
slaves, and all your outward pomps. To me this is more valuable than all." What
weight of gold, what amount of treasures, are so dear to a wife as these words?
Never fear that because she is beloved she will ever rave against thee, but
confess that thou lovest her. For courtezans indeed, who now attach themselves to
one and now to another, would naturally enough feel contempt towards their
lovers, should they hear such expressions as these; but a free-born wife or a noble
damsel would never be so affected with such words; no, she will be so much the
more subdued. Show her too, that you set a high value on her company, and that
you are more desirous to be at home for her sake, than in the market-place. And
esteem her before all your friends, and above the children that are born of
her, and let these very children be beloved by thee for her sake. If she does any
good act, praise and admire it; if any foolish one, and such as girls may
chance to do, advise her and remind her. Condemn out and out all riches and
extravagance, and gently point out the ornament that there is in neatness and in
modesty; and be continually teaching her the things that are profitable.
Let your prayers be common.[3] Let each go to Church; and let the husband
ask his wife at home, and she again ask her husband, the account of the things
which were said and read there. If any poverty should overtake you, cite the
case of those holy men, Paul and Peter, who were more honored than any kings or
rich men; and yet how they spent their lives, in hunger and in thirst. Teach her
that there is nothing in life that is to be feared, save only offending
against God. If any marry thus, with these views, he will be but little inferior to
monks; the married but little below the unmarried.
If thou hast a mind to give dinners, and to make entertainments, let there
be nothing immodest, nothing disorderly. If thou shouldest find any poor saint
able to bless your house, able only just by setting his foot in it to bring in
the whole blessing of God, invite him. And shalt I say moreover another thing?
Let no one of you make it his endeavor to marry a rich woman, but much rather
a poor one. When she comes in, she will not bring so great a source of pleasure
from her riches, as she will annoyance from her taunts, from her demanding
more than she brought, from her insolence, her extravagance, her vexatious
language. For she will say perhaps, "I have not yet spent anything of thine, I am
still wearing my own apparel, bought with what my parents settled upon me." What
sayest thou, O woman? Still wearing thine own! And what can be more miserable
than this language? Why, thou hast no longer a body of thine own, and hast thou
money of thine own? After marriage ye are no longer twain, but are become one
flesh, and are then your possessions twain, and not one? Oh! this love of money!
Ye both are become one man, one living creature; and dost thou still say "mine
own"? Cursed and abominable word that it is, it was brought in by the devil.
Things far nearer and dearer to us than these hath God made all common to us, and
are these then not common? We cannot say, "my own light, my own sun, my own
water": all our greater blessings are common, and are riches not common? Perish
the riches ten thousand times over! Or rather not the riches, but those tempers
of mind which know not how to make use of riches, but esteem them above all
things.
Teach her these lessons also with the rest, but with much graciousness.
For since the recommendation of virtue has in itself much that is stern, and
especially to a young and tender damsel, whenever discourses on true wisdom are
to be made, contrive that your manner be full of grace and kindness. And above
all banish this notion from her soul, of "mine and thine." If she say the word
"mine," say unto her, "What things dost thou call thine? For in truth I know
not; I for my part have nothing of mine own. How then speakest thou of 'mine,'
when all things are thine?" Freely grant her the word. Dost thou not perceive that
such is our practice with children? When, whilst we are holding anything, a
child snatches it, and wishes again to get hold of some other thing, we allow it,
and say, "Yes, and this is thine, and that is thine." The same also let us do
with a wife; for her temper is more or less like a child's; and if she says
"mine," say, "why, everything is thine, and I am thine." Nor is the expression one
of flattery, but of exceeding wisdom. Thus wilt thou be able to abate her
wrath, and put an end to her disappointment. For it is flattery when a man does an
unworthy act with an evil object: whereas this is the highest philosophy. Say
then, "Even I am thine, my child; this advice Paul gives me where he says, ' The
husband hath not power over his own body, but the wife.' (1 Cor. vii. 4.) If I
have no power over my body, but thou hast, much more hast thou over my
possessions." By saying these things thou wilt have quieted her, thou wilt have
quenched the fire, thou wilt have shamed the devil, thou wilt have made her more thy
slave than one bought with money, with this language thou wilt have bound her
fast. Thus then, by thine own language, teach her never to speak of "mine and
thine." And again, never call her simply by her name, but with terms of
endearment, with honor, with much love. Honor her, and she will not need honor from
others; she will not want the glory that comes from others, if she enjoys that
which comes from thee. Prefer her before all, on every account, both for her beauty
and her discernment, and praise her. Thou wilt thus persuade her to give heed
to none that are without, but to scorn all the world except thyself. Teach her
the fear of God, and all good things will flow from this as from a fountain,
and the house will be full of ten thousand blessings. If we seek the things that
are incorruptible, these corruptible things will follow. "For," saith He, "seek
first His kingdom, and all these things shall be added unto you." (Matt. vi.
33.) What sort of persons, think you, must the children of such parents be? What
the servants of such masters? What all others who come near them? Will not
they too eventually be loaded with blessings out of number? For generally the
servants also have their characters formed after their master's, and are fashioned
after their humors, love the same objects, which they have been taught to love,
speak the same language, and engage with them in the same pursuits. If thus we
regulate ourselves, and attentively study the Scriptures, in most things we
shall derive instruction from them. And thus shall be able to please God, and to
pass through the whole of the present life virtuously, and to attain those
blessings which are promised to those that love Him, of which God grant that we may
all be counted worthy, through the grace and lovingkindness of our Lord Jesus
Christ, with Whom, together with the Holy Ghost, be unto the Father, glory,
power, and honor, now, and ever, through all ages. Amen.
HOMILY XXI.
EPHESIANS VI. VERSES 1--4.
Verses 1--3. "Children, obey your parents in the Lord, for this is right.
Honor thy father and mother (which is the first commandment with promise), that it
may be well with thee, and thou mayest live long on the earth."
As a man in forming a body, places the head first, after that the neck,
then the feet, so does the blessed Paul proceed in his discourse. He has spoken
of the husband, he has spoken of the wife, who is second in authority, he now
goes on by gradual advances to the third rank--which is that of children. For the
husband has authority over the wife, and the husband and the wife over the
children. Now then mark what he is saying.
"Children,[1] obey your parents in the Lord; for this is the first
commandment with promise."
Here he has not a word of discourse concerning Christ, not a word on high
subjects, for he is as yet addressing his discourse to tender understandings.
And it is for this reason, moreover, that he makes his exhortation short,
inasmuch as children cannot follow up a long argument. For this reason also he does
not discourse at all about a kingdom, (because it does not belong to the tender
age of childhood to understand these subjects,) but what a child's soul most
especially longs to hear, that he says, namely, that it shall "live long." For if
any one shall enquire why it is that he omitted to discourse concerning a
kingdom, but set before them the commandment laid down in the law, he does this
because he speaks to them as infantile, and because he is well aware that if the
husband and the wife are thus disposed according to the law which he has laid
down, there will be but little trouble in securing the submission of the
children. For whenever any matter has a good and sound and orderly principle and
foundation, everything will thenceforward go on with method and regularity, with much
facility: the more difficult thing is to settle the foundation, to lay down a
firm basis. "Children," saith he, "obey your parents in the Lord," that is,
according to the Lord. This, he means to say, is what God[2] commands you. But
what then if they shall command foolish things? Generally a father, however
foolish he may be himself, does not command foolish things. However, even in that
case, the Apostle has guarded the matter, by saying, "in the Lord"; that is,
wherever you will not be offending against God. So that if the father be a gentile
or a heretic, we ought no longer to obey, because the command is not then, "in
the Lord." But how is it that he says, "Which is the first commandment"? For the
first is, "Thou shalt not commit adultery;--Thou shalt not kill." He does not
speak of it then as first in rank,[3] but in respect of the promise. For upon
those others there is no reward annexed, as being enacted with reference to evil
things, and to departure from evil things. Whereas in these others, where
there is the practice of good, there is further a promise held out. And observe how
admirable a foundation he has laid for the path of virtue, that is, honor and
reverence towards parents. When he would lead us away from wicked practices,
and is just about to enter upon virtuous ones, this is the first thing he
enjoins, honor towards parents; inasmuch as they before all others are, after God, the
authors of our being, so that it is reasonable they should be the first to
reap the fruits of our right actions; and then all the rest of mankind. For if a
man have not this honor for parents he will never be gentle toward those
unconnected with him.
However, having given the necessary injunctions to children, he passes to
the fathers, and says,
Ver. 4. "And ye fathers, provoke not your children to wrath; but nurture
them up in the chastening and admonition of the Lord."
He does not say, "love them," because to this nature draws them even
against their own will, and it were superfluous to lay down a law on such subjects.
But what does he say? "Provoke not your children to wrath," as many do by
disinheriting them, and disowning them, and treating them overbearingly, not as
free, but as slaves. This is why he says, "Provoke not your children to wrath."
Then, which is the chief thing of all, he shows how they will be led to obedience,
referring the whole source of it to the head and chief authority. And in the
same way as he has shown the husband to be the cause of the wife's obedience,
(which is the reason also why he addresses the greater part of his arguments to
him, advising him to attach her to himself by the power of love,) so, I say,
here also, he refers the efficiency to him, by saying, "But bring them up in the
chastening and admonition of the Lord." Thou seest that where there are
spiritual ties, the natural ties will follow. Do you wish your son to be obedient? From
the very first "Bring him up in the chastening and admonition of the Lord."
Never deem it an unnecessary thing that he should be a diligent hearer of the
divine Scriptures. For there the first thing he hears will be this, "Honor thy
father and thy mother"; so that this makes for thee. Never say, this is the
business of monks. Am I making a monk of him? No. There is no need he should become a
monk.[1] Why be so afraid of a thing so replete with so much advantage? Make
him a Christian. For it is of all things necessary for laymen[2] to be
acquainted with the lessons derived from this source; but especially for children. For
theirs is an age full of folly; and to this folly are super added the bad
examples derived from the heathen tales, where they are made acquainted with those
heroes so admired amongst them, slaves of their passions, and cowards with regard
to death; as, for example, Achilles, when he relents, when he dies for his
concubine, when another gets drunk, and many other things of the sort. He requires
therefore the remedies against these things. How is it not absurd to send
children out to trades, and to school, and to do all you can for these objects, and
yet, not to "bring them up in the chastening and admonition of the Lord "? And
for this reason truly we are the first to reap the fruits, because we bring up
our children to be insolent and profligate, disobedient, and mere vulgar
fellows. Let us not then do this; no, let us listen to this blessed Apostle's
admonition. "Let us bring them up in the chastening and admonition of the Lord." Let
us give them a pattern. Let us make them from the earliest age apply themselves
to the reading of the Scriptures. Alas, that so constantly as I repeat this, I
am looked upon as trifling! Still, I shall not cease to do my duty. Why, tell
me, do ye not imitate them of old? Ye women, especially, emulate those
admirable women. Has a child been born to any one? Imitate Hannah's example (1 Sam. i.
24); look at what she did. She brought him up at once to the temple. Who
amongst you would not rather that his son should become a Samuel than that he should
be king of the whole world ten thousand times over? "And how," you will say,
"is it possible he should become such a one?" Why is it not possible? It is
because thou dost not choose it thyself, nor committest him to the care of those who
are able to make him such a one. "And who," it will be said, "is such a one as
this?" God. Since she put him into the hands of God. For not even Eli himself
was one of those in any great degree qualified to form him; (how could he be,
he who was not able to form even his own children?) No, it was the faith of the
mother and her earnest zeal that wrought the whole. He was her first child, and
her only one, and she knew not whether she should ever have others besides.
Yet she did not say, "I will wait till the child is grown up, that he may have a
taste of the things of this life, I will allow him to have his pastime in them
a little in his childish years." No, all these thoughts the woman repudiated,
she was absorbed in one object, how from the very beginning she might dedicate
the spiritual image[3] to God. Well may we men be put to the blush at the wisdom
of this woman. She offered him up to God, and there she left him. And
therefore was her married state more glorious, in that she had made spiritual objects
her first care, in that she dedicated the first-fruits to God. Therefore was her
womb fruitful, and she obtained other children besides.[4] And therefore she
saw him honorable even in. the world. For if men when they are honored, render
honor in return, will not God much more, He who does this, even without being
honored? How long are we to be mere lumps of flesh? How long are we to be
stooping to the earth? Let everything be secondary with us to the provident care we
should take of our children, and to our "bringing them up in the chastening and
admonition of the Lord." If from the very first he is taught to be a lover of
true wisdom, then wealth greater than all wealth has he acquired and a more
imposing name. You will effect nothing so great by teaching him an art, and giving
him that outward learning by which he will gain riches, as if you teach him the
art of despising riches. If you desire to make him rich, do this. For the rich
man is not he who desires great riches, and is encircled with great riches; but
the man who has need of nothing.[5] Discipline your son in this, teach him
this. This is the greatest riches. Seek not how to give him reputation and high
character in outward learning, but consider deeply how you shall teach him to
despise the glory that belongs to this present life. By this means would he become
more distinguished and more truly glorious. This it is possible for the poor
man and the rich man alike to accomplish. These are lessons which a man does not
learn from a master, nor by art, but by means of the divine oracles. Seek not
how he shall enjoy a long life here, but how he shall enjoy a boundless and
endless life hereafter. Give him the great things, not the little things. Hear
what Paul saith, "Bring them up in the chastening and admonition of the Lord ";
study not to make him an orator, but train him up to be a philosopher. In the
want of the one there will be no harm whatever; in the absence of the other, all
the rhetoric in the world will be of no advantage. Tempers are wanted, not
talking; character, not cleverness; deeds, not words. These gain a man the kingdom.
These confer what are benefits indeed. Whet not his tongue, but cleanse his
soul. I do not say this to prevent your teaching him these things, but to prevent
your attending to them exclusively. Do not imagine that the monk alone stands
in need of these lessons from Scripture. Of all others, the children just about
to enter into the world specially need them. For just in the same way as the
man who is always at anchor in harbor, is not the man who requires his ship to be
fitted out and who needs a pilot and a crew, but he who is always out at sea;
so is it with the man of the world and the monk. The one is entered as it were
into a waveless harbor, and lives an untroubled life, and far removed from
every storm; whilst the other is ever on the ocean, and lives out at sea in the
very midst of the ocean, battling with billows without number.
And though he may not need it himself, still he ought to be so prepared as
to stop the mouths of others.[1] Thus the more distinguished he is in the
present life, so much the more he stands in need of this education. If he passes
his life in courts, there are many Heathens, and philosophers, and persons puffed
up with the glory of this life. It is like a place full of dropsical people.
Such in some sort is the court. All are, as it were, puffed up, and in a state
of inflammation. And they who are not so are studying to become so. Now then
reflect how vast a benefit it is, that your son on entering there, should enter
like an excellent physician, furnished with instruments which may allay every
one's peculiar inflammation, and should go up to every one, and converse with him,
and restore the diseased body to health, applying the remedies derived from
the Scriptures, and pouring forth discourses of the true philosophy. For with
whom is the recluse to converse? with his wall and his ceiling? yea, or again with
the wilderness and the woods? or with the birds and the trees? He therefore
has not so great need of this sort of discipline. Still, however, he makes it his
business to perfect this work, not so much with a view of disciplining others
as himself. There is then every need of much discipline of this sort to those
that are to mix in the present world, because such an one has a stronger
temptation to sin than the other. And if you have a mind to understand it, he will
further be a more useful person even in the world itself. For all will have a
reverence for him from these words, when they see him in the fire without being
burnt, and not desirous of power. But power he will then obtain, when he least
desires it, and will be a still higher object of respect to the king; for it is
not possible that such a character should be hid. Amongst a number of healthy
persons, indeed, a healthy man will not be noticed; but when there is one healthy
man amongst a number of sick, the report will quickly spread and reach the
king's ears, and he will make him ruler over many nations. Knowing then these
things, "bring up your children in the chastening and admonition of the Lord."
"But suppose a man is poor." Still he will be in no wise more
insignificant than the man who lives in kings' courts, because he is not in kings' courts;
no, he will be held in admiration, and will soon gain that authority which is
yielded voluntarily, and not by any compulsion. For if a set of Greeks, men
worthless as they are, and dogs,[2] by taking up that worthless philosophy of
theirs, (for such the Grecian philosophy is,) or rather not itself but only its mere
name, and wearing the threadbare cloak, and letting their hair grow, impress
many; how much more will he who is a true philosopher? If a false appearance, if
a mere shadow of philosophy at first sight so catches us, what if we should
love the true and pure philosophy? Will not all court it, and entrust both
houses, and wives, and children, with full confidence to such men? But there is not,
no, there is not such a philosopher existing now. And therefore, it is not
possible to find an example of the sort. Amongst recluses, indeed, there are such,
but amongst people in the world no longer. And that amongst recluses there are
such, it would be possible to adduce a number of instances. However, I will
mention one out of many. Ye know, doubtless, and have heard of, and some, perhaps,
have also seen, the man. whom I am now about to mention. I mean, the admirable
Julian. This man was a rustic, in humble life, and of humble parentage, and
totally uninstructed in all outward accomplishments, but full of unadorned
wisdom.[3] When he came into the cities, (and this was but rarely,) never did such a
concourse take place, not when orators, or sophists, or any one else rode in.
But what am I saying? Is not his very name more glorious than that of any
king's, and celebrated even to this day? And if these things were in this world, in
the world in which the Lord promised us no one good thing, in which He hath told
us we are strangers, let us consider how great will be the blessings laid up
for us in the heavens. If, where they were sojourners they enjoyed so great
honor, how great glory shall they enjoy where their own city is! If, where He
promised tribulation, they meet with such attentive care, then where He promises
true honors, how great shall be their rest!
And now would ye have me exhibit examples of secular men? At present,
indeed, we have none; still there are perhaps even secular men who are excellent,
though not arrived at the highest philosophy. I shall therefore quote you
examples from the saints of the ancient times. How many, who had wives to keep and
children to bring up, were inferior in no respect, no, in no respect to those who
have been mentioned? Now, however, it is no longer so, "by reason of the
present distress" (1 Cor. vii. 26), as this blessed Apostle saith. Now then whom
would ye have me mention? Noah, or Abraham? The son of the one or of the other? Or
again, Joseph? Or would ye have me go to the Prophets? Moses I mean, or
Isaiah? However, if you will, let us carry our discourse to Abraham, whom all are
continually bringing forward to us above all others. Had he not a wife? Had he not
children? Yes, for I too use the same language to you, as you do to me. He had
a wife, but it was not because he had a wife that he was so remarkable. He had
riches, but it was not because he had riches that he pleased God. He begat
children, but it was not because he begat children that he was pronounced blessed.
He had three hundred and eighteen servants born in his house, but it was not
on this account that he was accounted wonderful. But would you know why it was?
It was for his hospitality, for his contempt of riches, for his chastened
conduct. For what, tell me, is the duty of a philosopher? Is it not to despise both
riches and glory? Is it not to be above both envy and every other passion? Come
now then, let us bring him forward and strip him, and show you what a
philosopher he was. First of all, he esteemed his fatherland as nothing. God said, "Get
thee out of thy country, and from thy kindred" (Gen. xii. 1), and immediately
he went forth. He was not bound to his house, (or surely he would never have
gone forth,) nor to his love of familiar friends, nor to anything else whatever.
But what? glory and money he despised above all others. For when he had put an
end to war by turning the enemy to flight, and was requested to take the spoil,
he rejected it. (Gen. xiv. 21-23.)
Again, the son of this great man was reverenced, not because of his
riches, but for his hospitality: not because of his children, but for his obedience:
not because of his wife, but for the barrenness inflicted on his wife. (Gen.
XXV. 21.)
They looked upon the present life as nothing, they followed not after
gain, they despised all things. Tell me, which sort of plants are the best? Are not
those which have their strength from themselves and are injured neither by
rains, nor by hailstorms, nor by gusts of wind, nor by any other vicissitude of
the sort, but stand naked in defiance of them all, and needing neither wall nor
fence to protect them? Such is the true philosopher, such is that wealth of
which we spoke. He has nothing, and has all things: he has all things, and has
nothing. For a fence is not within, but only without; a wall is not a thing of
nature, but only built round from without. And what again, I ask, what sort of body
is a strong one? Is it not that which is in health, and which is overcome
neither by hunger nor repletion, nor by cold, nor by heat; or is it that which in
view of all these things, needs both caterers, and weavers, and hunters, and
physicians, to give it health? He is the rich man, the true philosopher, who
needeth none of these things. For this cause it was that this blessed Apostle said,
"Bring them up in the chastening and admonition of the Lord." Surround them not
with outward defenses. For such is wealth, such is glory; for when these fall,
and they do fall, the plant stands naked and defenseless, not only having
derived no profit from them during the time past, but even injury. For those very
shelters that prevented its being inured to the attacks of the winds, will now
have prepared it for perishing all at once. And so wealth is injurious rather,
because it renders us undisciplined for the vicissitudes of life. Let us
therefore train up our children to be such, that they shall be able to bear up against
every trial, and not be surprised at what may come upon them; "let us bring
them up in the chastening and admonition of the Lord." And great will be the
reward which will be thus laid up in store for us. For if men for making statues
and painting portraits of kings enjoy so great honor, shall not we who adorn the
image of the King of kings, (for man is the image of God,) receive ten thousand
blessings, if we effect a true likeness? For the likeness is in this, in the
virtue of the soul, when we train our children to be good, to be meek, to be
forgiving, (because all these are attributes of God,) to be beneficent, to be
humane; when we train them to regard the present world as nothing. Let this then be
our task, to mold and to direct both ourselves and them according to what is
right. Otherwise with what sort of boldness shall we stand before the
judgment-seat of Christ? If a man who has unruly children is unworthy to be a Bishop
(Tit. i. 6), much more is he unworthy of the kingdom of Heaven. What sayest thou?
If we have an unruly wife, or unruly children, shall we have to render account?
Yes, we shall, if we do not with exactness bring in that which is due from
ourselves; for our own individual virtue is not enough in order to salvation. If
the man who laid aside the one talent gained nothing, but was punished even in
such a manner, it is plain that one's own individual virtue is not enough in
order to salvation, but there is need of that of another also. Let us therefore
entertain great solicitude for our wives, and take great care of our children, and
of our servants, and of ourselves. And in our government both of ourselves and
of them, let us beseech God that He aid us in the work. If He shall see us
interested in this work, and solicitous about it, He will aid us; but if He shall
see us paying no regard to it, He will not give us His hand. For He does not
vouchsafe us His assistance when we sleep, but when we labor also ourselves. For
a helper, (as the name implies,) is not a helper of one that is inactive, but
of one who works also himself. But the good God is able of Himself to bring the
work to perfection, that we may be all counted worthy to attain to the
blessings promised us, through the grace and compassions of His only begotten Son, with
Whom together with the Holy Ghost be unto the Father, glory, might, and honor,
now and ever, and throughout all ages. Amen.
HOMILY XXII.
EPHESIANS VI. VERSES 5--13.
Verses 5--8. "Servants, be obedient unto them that, according to the flesh,
are your masters, with fear and trembling, in singleness of your heart, as unto
Christ; not in the way of eye-service, as men-pleasers: but as servants of
Christ, doing the will of God from the heart; with good-will doing service, as unto
the Lord, and not unto men: knowing that whatsoever good thing each one doeth,
the same shall he receive again from the Lord, whether he be bond or free."
THUS then it is not husband only, nor wife, nor children, but virtuous
servants also that contribute to the organization and protection of a house.
Therefore the blessed Paul has not overlooked this department even. He comes to it,
however, in the last place, because it is last in dignity and rank. Still he
addresses much discourse also to them, no longer in the same tone as to children,
but in a far more advanced way, inasmuch as he does not hold out to these the
promise in this world, but in that which is to come. "Knowing," saith he, "that
whatsoever good or evil[1] thing each one doeth, the same shall he receive of
the Lord," and thus at once instructs them to love wisdom. For though they be
inferior to the children in dignity, still in mind they are superior to them.
"Servants," saith he, "be obedient to them that, according to the flesh,
are your masters."
Thus at once he raises up, at once soothes the wounded soul. Be not
grieved, he seems to say, that you are inferior to the wife and the children. Slavery
is nothing but a name. The mastership is "according to the flesh," brief and
temporary;[2] for whatever is of the flesh, is transitory. "With fear," he adds,
"and trembling."[3] Thou seest that he does not require the same fear from
slaves as from wives: for in that case he simply said, "and let the wife see that
she fear her husband "; whereas in this case he heightens the expression, "with
fear," he saith, "and trembling, in singleness of your heart, as unto Christ."
This is what he constantly says. What meanest thou, blessed Paul? He is a
brother, or rather he has become a brother, he enjoys the same privileges, he
belongs to the same body. Yea, more, he is the brother, not of his own master only,
but also of the Son of God, he is partaker of all the same privileges; yet
sayest thou, "obey your masters according to the flesh, with fear and trembling"?
Yes, for this very reason, he would say, I say it. For if I charge free men to
submit themselves one to another in the fear of God,--as he said above,
"submitting yourselves one to another in the fear of Christ";--if I charge moreover the
wife to fear and reverence her husband, although she is his equal; much more
must I so speak to the servant. It is no sign of low birth, rather it is the
truest nobility, to understand how to lower ourselves, to be modest and
unassuming, and to give way to our neighbor. And the free have served the free with much
fear and trembling. "In singleness of heart," he says.
And it is well said, since it is possible to serve with fear and
trembling, and yet not of good will, but in just any way that may be possible. Many
servants in many instances secretly cheat their masters. And this cheating
accordingly he does away, by saying, "in singleness of your heart as unto Christ, not
in the way of eye-service as men-pleasers, but as servants of Christ, doing the
will of God from the heart; with good-will doing service, as unto the Lord, and
not unto men." Seest thou how many words he requires, in order to implant this
good principle, "with goodwill," I mean, and "from the heart"? That other
service, "with fear and trembling" I mean, we see many rendering to their masters,
and the master's threat goes far to secure that. But show, saith he, that thou
servest as "the servant of Christ," not of man. Make the right action your own,
not one of compulsion. Just as in the words which follow, he persuades and
instructs the man who is ill-treated by another to make the right action his own,
and the work of his own free choice. Because inasmuch as the man that smites
the cheek, is not supposed to come to that act in consequence of any intention in
the person struck, but only of his own individual malice, what saith He? "Turn
to him the other also" (Matt. v. 39); to show him that in submitting to the
first thou wert not unwilling. For he that is lavish in suffering wrong, makes
that his own which is not his own act, by suffering himself to be smitten on the
other cheek also, and not merely by enduring the first blow. For this latter
will have perhaps the appearance even of cowardice; but that of a high
philosophy.--Thus thou wilt show that it was for the sake of wisdom that thou didst bear
the first blow also. And so in the present case, show here too, that thou
bearest this slavery also willingly. The man-pleaser then is no servant of Christ.
The servant of Christ is not a man-pleaser. (Gal. i. 10.) For who that is the
servant of God, makes it his object to please men? And who that pleases men, can
be a servant of God?
"From the heart,"[1] saith he, "with good-will doing service." For since
it is possible to do service even with singleness of heart and not wrongfully,
and yet not with all one's might, but only so far as fulfilling one's bounden
duty, therefore he says, do it with alacrity, not of necessity, upon principle,
not upon constraint. If thus thou do service, thou art no slave; if thou do it
upon principle, if with good-will, if from the heart, and if for Christ's sake.
For this is the servitude that even Paul, the free man, serves, and exclaims,
"For we preach not ourselves, but Christ Jesus, as Lord, and ourselves as your
servants for Jesus' sake." (2 Cor. iv. 5.) Look how he divests thy slavery of
its meanness. For just in the same way as the man who has been robbed, if he
gives still more to him who has taken, is not ranked among those robbed, but rather
amongst liberal givers; not amongst those who suffer evil, but amongst those
who do good; and rather clothes the other with disgrace by his liberality, than
is clothed with disgrace by being robbed,--so, I say, in this case, by his
generosity he will appear at once more high-minded, and by showing that he does not
feel the wrong,[2] will put the other to shame.
Let us then do service to our masters for Christ's sake, "knowing," he
continues, "that whatsoever good thing each one doeth, the same shall he receive
of the Lord, whether he be bond or free." For inasmuch as it was probable that
many masters, as being unbelievers, would have no sense of shame, and would make
no return to their slaves for their obedience, observe how he has given them
encouragement, so that they may have no misgiving about the remuneration, but
may have full confidence respecting the recompense. For as they who receive a
benefit, when they make no return, make God a debtor to their benefactors; so, I
say, do masters also, if, when well-treated by thee, they fail to requite thee,
requite thee the more, by rendering God thy debtor.
Ver. 9. "And ye masters," he continues, "do the same things unto them."
The same things. What are these? "With good-will do service." However he
does not actually say, "do service," though by saying, "the same things," he
plainly shows this to be his meaning. For the master himself is a servant. "Not as
men-pleasers," he means, "and with fear and trembling": that is, toward God,
fearing lest He one day accuse you for your negligence toward your slaves.
"And forbear threatening;" be not irritating, he means, nor oppressive.
"Knowing that both their Master and[3] yours is in Heaven."[4] Ah! How
mighty a Master does he hint at here! How startling the suggestion! It is this.
"With what measure thou metest, it shall be measured unto thee again" (Matt. vii.
2); lest thou hear the sentence, "Thou wicked servant. I forgave thee all that
debt." (Matt. xviii. 32.)
"And there is no respect of persons," he saith, "with Him."
Think not, he would say, that what is done towards a servant, He will
therefore forgive, because done to a servant. Heathen laws indeed as being the laws
of men, recognize a difference between these kinds of offenses. But the law of
the common Lord and Master of all, as doing good to all alike, and dispensing
the same rights to all, knows no such difference.
But should any one ask, whence is slavery, and why it has found entrance
into human life, (and many I know are both glad to ask such questions, and
desirous to be informed of them,) I will tell you. Slavery is the fruit of
covetousness, of degradation, of savagery; since Noah, we know, had no servant, nor had
Abel, nor Seth, no, nor they who came after them. The thing was the fruit of
sin, of rebellion against parents. Let children hearken to this, that whenever
they are undutiful to their parents, they deserve to be servants. Such a child
strips himself of his nobility of birth; for he who rebels against his father is
no longer a son; and if he who rebels against his father is not a son, how
shall he be a son who rebels against our true Father? He has departed from his
nobility of birth, he has done outrage to nature. Then come also wars, and battles,
and take their prisoners.[1] Well, but Abraham, you will say, had servants.
Yes, but he used them not as servants.
Observe how everything depends upon the head; the wife, by telling him "to
love her"; the children, by telling him "to bring them up in the chastening
and admonition of the Lord"; the servants, by the words, "knowing that both their
Master and yours is in Heaven." So, saith he, ye also in like manner, as being
yourselves servants, shall be kind and indulgent. "Finally, be strong in the
Lord and in the strength of His might."
But if, before considering this next, ye have a mind to hearken, I shall
make the same remarks concerning servants, as I have also made before concerning
children. Teach them to be religious, and everything else will follow of
necessity. But now, when any one is going to the theater, or going off to the bath,
he drags all his servants after him; but when he goes to church, not for a
moment; nor does he compel them to attend and hear. Now how shall thy servant
listen, when thou his master art attending to other things? Hast thou purchased,
hast thou bought thy slave? Before all things enjoin him what God would have him
do, to be gentle towards his fellow-servants, and to make much account of virtue.
Every one's house is a city; and every man is a prince in his own house.
That the house of the rich is of this character, is plain enough, where there
are both lands, and stewards, and rulers over rulers. But I say that the house of
the poor also is a city. Because here too there are offices of authority; for
instance, the husband has authority over the wife, the wife over the servants,
the servants again over their own wives; again the wives and the husbands over
the children. Does he not seem to you to be, as it were, a sort of king, having
so many authorities under his own authority? and that it were meet that he
should be more skilled both in domestic and general government than all the rest?
For he who knows how to manage these in their several relations, will know how
to select the fittest men for offices, yes, and will choose excellent ones. And
thus the wife will be a second king in the house, lacking only the diadem; and
be who knows how to choose this king, will excellently regulate all the rest.
Ver. 10. "Finally," saith he, "be strong in the Lord."
Whenever the discourse is about to conclude, he always employs this turn.
Said I not well from the first, that every man's house is a camp in itself? For
look, having disposed of the several offices, he proceeds to arm them, and to
lead them out to war.[2] If no one usurps the other's office, but every one
remains at his post, all will be well ordered.
"Be strong," saith he, "in the Lord, and in the strength of His might."
That is, in the hope which we have in Him, by means of His aid. For as he
had enjoined many duties, which were necessary to be done, fear not, he seems
to say, cast your hope upon the Lord, and He will make all easy.
Ver. 11. "Put on the whole armor of God, that ye may be able to stand
against the wiles of the devil."
He saith not, against the fightings, nor against the hostilities, but
against the "-wiles." For this enemy is at war with us, not simply, nor openly, but
by" wiles." What is meant by wiles? To use "wiles," is to deceive and to take
by artifice or contrivance ; a thing which takes place both in the case of the
arts, and by words, and actions, and stratagems, in the case of those who
seduce us. I mean something like this. The Devil never proposes to us sins in their
proper colors; he does not speak of idolatry, but he sets it off in another
dress, using "wiles,"[1] that is, making his discourse plausible, employing
disguises. Now therefore the Apostle is by this means both rousing the soldiers, and
making them vigilant, by persuading and instructing them, that our conflict is
with one skilled in the arts of war, and with one who wars not simply, nor
directly, but with much wiliness. And first then he arouses the disciples from the
consideration of the Devil's skill; but in the second place, from his nature,
and the number of his forces. It is not from any desire to dispirit the soldiers
that stand under him, but to arouse, and to awaken them, that he mentions
these stratagems, and prepares them to be vigilant; for had he merely detailed
their power, and there stopped his discourse, he must have dispirited them. But
now, whereas both before and after this, he shows that it is possible to overcome
such an enemy, he rather raises their courage; for the more clearly the
strength of our adversaries is stated on our part to our own people, so much the more
earnest will it render our soldiers.
Ver. 12. "For our wrestling is not," saith he, "against flesh and
blood,[2] but against the principalities, against the powers, against the world-rulers
of this darkness, against the spiritual hosts of wickedness, in the heavenly
places."
Having stimulated them by the character of the conflict, he next goes on
to arouse them also by the prizes set before them. For what is his argument?
Having said that the enemies are fierce, he adds further, that they despoil us of
vast blessings. What are these? The conflict lies "in the heavenlies";[3] the
struggle is not about riches, not about glory, but about our being enslaved. And
thus is the enmity irreconcilable. The strife and the conflict are fiercer
when for vast interests at stake; for the expression "in the heavenlies"[3] is
equivalent to, "for the heavenly things." It is not that they may gain anything by
the conquest, but that they may despoil us. As if one were to say, "In what
does the contract lie?" In gold. The word "in," means, "in behalf of"; the word
"in," also means, "on account[4] of."[5] Observe how the power of the enemy
startles us; how it makes us all circumspection, to know that the hazard is on
behalf of vast interests, and the victory for the sake of great rewards. For he
is doing his best to cast us out of Heaven.
He speaks of certain "principalities, and powers, and world-rulers of this
darkness." What darkness? Is it that of night? No, but of wickedness. "For ye
were," saith he, "once darkness" (Eph. v. 8); so naming that wickedness which
is in this present life; for beyond it, it will have no place, not in Heaven,
nor in the world to come.
"World-rulers " [6] he calls them, not as having the mastery over the
world, but the Scripture is wont to call wicked practices "the world," as, for
example, where Christ saith, "They are not of this world, even as I am not of the
world." (John xvii. 16.) What then, were they not of the world? Were they not
clothed with flesh? Were they not of those who are in the world? And again; "The
world hateth Me, but you it cannot hate." (John vii. 7.) Where again He calls
wicked practices by this name. Thus the Apostle here by the world means wicked
men, and the evil spirits have more especial power over them. "Against the
spiritual hosts of wickedness," saith he, "in the heavenly places." "Principalities,
and powers," he speaks of; just as in the heavenly places there are "thrones
and dominions, principalities and powers." (Col. i. 16.)
Ver. 13. "Wherefore," saith he, "take up the whole armor of God, that ye
may be able to withstand in the evil day, and, having done all, to stand."
By "evil day" he means the present life, [7] and calls it too "this
present evil world" (Gal. i. 4), from the evils which are done in it. It is as much
as to say, Always be armed. And again, "having done all," saith he; that is,
both passions, and vile lusts, and all things else that trouble us. He speaks not
merely of doing the deed, but of completing it, [8] so as not only to slay, but
to stand also after we have slain. For many who have gained this victory, have
fallen again. "Having done," saith he, "all"; not having done one, but not the
other. For even after the victory, we must stand. An enemy may be struck, but
things that are struck revive again if we do not stand. But if after having
fallen they rise up again, so long as we stand, they are fallen. So long as we
waver not, the adversary rises not again.
"Let us put on the whole armor of God." Seest thou how he banishes all
fear? For if it be possible "to do all, and to stand," his describing in detail
the power of the enemy does not create cowardice and fear, but it shakes off
indolence. "That ye may be able," he saith, "to withstand in the evil day." And he
further gives them encouragement too from the time; the time, he seems to say,
is short;[1] so that ye must needs stand; faint not when the slaughter is
achieved.
MORAL. If then it is a warfare, if such are the forces arrayed against us,
if "the principalities" are incorporeal, if they are "rulers of the world," if
they are "the spiritual hosts of wickedness," how, tell me, canst thou live in
self-indulgence? How canst thou be dissolute? How if we are unarmed, shall we
be able to overcome? These words let every one repeat to himself every day,
whenever he is under the influence of anger, or of lust, whenever he is aiming,
and all to no profit, after this languid life. Let him hearken to the blessed
Paul, saying to him, "Our wrestling is not against flesh and blood, but against
the principalities, against the powers." A harder warfare this than that which is
matter of sense, a fiercer conflict. Think how long time this enemy is
wrestling, for what it is that he is fighting, and be more guarded than ever. "Nay," a
man will say, "but as he is the devil, he ought to have been removed out of
the way, and then all had been saved."[2] These are the pretenses to which some
of your indolent ones m self-defense give utterance. When thou oughtest to be
thankful, O man, that, if thou hast a mind, thou hast the victory over such a
foe, thou art on the contrary even discontented, and givest utterance to the words
of some sluggish and sleepy soldier. Thou knowest the points of attack,[3] if
thou choosest. Reconnoiter on all sides, fortify thyself. Not against the devil
alone is the conflict, but also against his powers. How then, you may say, are
we to wrestle with the darkness? By becoming light. How with the "spiritual
hosts of wickedness"? By becoming good. For wickedness is contrary to good, and
light drives away darkness. But if we ourselves too be darkness, we shall
inevitably be taken captive. How then shall we overcome them? If, what they are by
nature, that we become by choice, free from flesh and blood, thus shall we
vanquish them. For nce it was probable that the disciples would have many
persecutors, "imagine not," he would say, "that it is they who war with you. They that
really war with you, are the spirits that work in them. Against them is our
conflict." Two things he provides for by these considerations; he renders them in
themselves more courageous and he lets loose their wrath against those who war
against them. And wherefore is our conflict against these? Since we have also an
invincible ally, the grace of the Spirit. We have been taught an art, such as
shall enable us to wrestle not against men, but against spirits. Nay, if we have
a mind, neither shall we wrestle at all; for it is because we choose it, that
there is a struggle, since so great is the power of Him that dwelleth in us, as
that He said, "Behold, I have given you authority to tread upon serpents and
scorpions, and over all the power of the enemy." (Luke x. 19.) All power hath He
given us, both of wrestling and of not wrestling. It is because we are
slothful, that we have to wrestle with them ; for that Paul wrestled not, hear what he
saith himself, "Who shall separate us from the love of Christ? shall
tribulation, or anguish, or persecution, or famine, or nakedness, or peril, or sword?"
(Rom. viii. 35.) And again hear his words, "God shall bruise Satan under your
feet shortly." (Rom. xvi. 20.) For he had him under his subjection; whence also he
said, "I charge thee in the name of Jesus Christ to come out of her." (Acts
xvi. 18.) And this is not the language of one wrestling; for he that wrestles has
not yet conquered, and he that has conquered no longer wrestles; he has
subdued, has taken his captive. And so Peter again wrestled not with the devil, but
he did that which was better than wrestling. In the case of the faithful, the
obedient, the catechumens, they prevailed over him to vast advantage and over his
powers. Hence too was it that the blessed Paul said, "For we are not ignorant
of his devices" (2 Cor. ii. 11), which was the way moreover in which he
especially overcame him; and again hear his words, "And no marvel--if his ministers
also fashion themselves as ministers of righteousness." (2 Cor. xi. 14, 15.) So
well knew he every part of the conflict, and nothing escaped him. Again, "For
the mystery of lawlessness," saith he, "doth already work." (2 Thess. ii. 7.)
But against its is the struggle; for hearken again to him, saying, "I am
persuaded, that neither angels, nor principalities, nor things present, nor
things to come, nor powers, nor any other creature, shall be able to separate us
from the love of Christ." (Rom. viii. 38.) He saith not simply, "from Christ,"
but, "from the love of Christ."[4] For many there are who are united forsooth to
Christ, and who yet love Him not. Not only, saith he, shalt thou not persuade
me to deny Him, but, not even to love Him less. And if the powers above had not
strength to do this, who else should move him? Not, however, that he saith
this, as though they were actually attempting it, but upon the supposition;
wherefore also he said, "I am persuaded." So then he did not wrestle, yet
nevertheless he fears his artifices; for hear what he saith, "I fear lest by any means, as
the serpent beguiled Eve in his craftiness, your minds should be corrupted
from the simplicity that is toward Christ." (2 Cor. xi. 3.) True, you will say,
but he uses this word touching himself also where he saith, "For I fear[1] lest,
by any means, after that I have preached to others I myself should be
rejected." How then art thou "persuaded that no one shall separate thee "? Perceivest
thou that the expression is that of lowliness and of humility? For he already
dwelt in Heaven. And hence also it was that he said, "For I know nothing against
myself" (1 Cor. iv. 4); and again, "I have finished the course." (2 Tim. iv. 7.)
So that it was not with regard to these matters that the devil placed
obstacles in his way, but with reference to the interests of the disciples. And why
forsooth? Because in these points he was not himself sole master, but also their
own will. There the devil prevailed in some cases; nay, neither there was it
over him that he prevailed, but over the indolence of persons who took no heed. If
indeed, whether from slothfulness, or anything else of the sort, he had failed
to fulfill his own duty, then had the devil prevailed over him; but if he
himself on his part did all he could, and they obeyed not it was not over him he
prevailed, but over their disobedience; and the disease prevailed not over the
physician, but over the unruliness of the patient; for, when the physician takes
every precaution, and the patient undoes all, the patient is defeated, not the
physician. Thus then in no instance did he prevail over Paul. But in our own
case, it is matter for contentment that we should be so much as able to wrestle.
For the Romans indeed this is not what he asks, but what? "He shall bruise
Satan under your feet shortly." (Rom. xvi. 20.) And for these Ephesians he invokes,
"Him that is able to do exceeding abundantly above all that we ask or think."
(Eph. iii. 20.) He that wrestles is still held fast, but it is enough for him
that he has not fallen. When we depart hence, then, and not till then, will the
glorious victory be achieved. For instance, take the case of some evil lust.
The extraordinary thing would be, not even to entertain it, but to stifle it. If,
however, this be not possible, then though we may have to wrestle with it, and
retain it to the last, yet if we depart still wrestling, we are conquerors.
For the case is not the same here as it is with wrestlers; for there if thou
throw not thy antagonist, thou hast not conquered; but here if thou be not thrown,
thou hast conquered; if thou art not thrown, thou hast thrown him; and with
reason, because there both strive for the victory, and when the one is thrown, the
other is crowned; here, however, it is not thus, but the devil is striving for
our defeat; when then I strip him of that upon which he is bent, I am
conqueror. For it is not to overthrow us, but to make us share his overthrow that he is
eager. Already then am I conqueror, for he is already cast down, and in a
state of ruin; and his victory consists not in being himself crowned, but in
effecting my ruin; so that though I overthrow him not, yet if I be not overthrown, I
have conquered. What then is a glorious victory? It is, over and above, to
trample him underfoot, as Paul did, by regarding the things of this present world
as nothing. Let us too imitate him, and strive to become above them, and nowhere
to give him a hold upon us. Wealth, possessions, vain-glory, give him a hold.
And oftentimes indeed this has roused him, and oftentimes exasperated him. But
what need is there of wrestling? What need of engaging with him? He who is
engaged in the act of wrestling has the issue in uncertainty, whether he may not be
himself defeated and captured. Whereas he that tramples him under foot, has
the victory certain.
Oh then, let us trample under foot the power of the devil; let us trample
under foot our sins, I mean everything that pertains to this life, wrath, lust,
vain-glory, every passion; that when we depart to that world, we may not be
convicted of betraying that power which God hath given us; for thus shall we
attain also the blessings that are to come. But if in this we are unfaithful, who
will entrust us with those things which are greater? If we were not able to
trample down one who had fallen, who had been disgraced, who had been despised, who
was lying beneath our feet, how shall the Father give us a Father's rewards? If
we subdue not one so placed in subjection to us, what confidence shall we have
to enter into our Father's house? For, tell me, suppose thou hadst a son, and,
that he, disregarding the well-disposed part of thy household, should
associate with them that have distressed thee, with them that have been expelled his
father's house, with them that spend their time at the gaming table, and that he
should go on so doing to the very last; will he not be disinherited? It is
plain enough he will. And so too shall we; if, disregarding the Angels who have
well pleased our Father and whom He hath set over us, we have our conversation
with the devil, inevitably we shall be disinherited, which God forbid; but let us
engage in the war we have to wage with him.
If any one hath an enemy, if any one hath been wronged by him, if any one
is exasperated, let him collect together all that wrath, all that fierceness,
and pour it out upon the head of the devil. Here wrath is a good thing, here
anger is profitable, here revenge is praiseworthy, for just as amongst the
heathen, revenge is a vice, so truly here is revenge a virtue. So then if thou hast
any failings, rid thyself of them here. And if thou art not able thyself to put
them away, do it, though with thy members also.[1] Hath any one struck thee?
Bear malice against the devil, and never relinquish thy hatred towards him. Or
again, hath no one struck thee? Yet bear him malice still, because he insulted,
because he offended thy Lord and Master, because he injures and wars against thy
brethren. With him be ever at enmity, ever implacable, ever merciless. Thus
shall he be humbled, thus despicable, thus shall he be an easy prey. If we are
fierce towards him, he shall never be fierce towards us. If we are compliant, then
he will be fierce; it is not with him as it is with our brethren. He is the
foe and enemy, both of life and salvation, both ours and his own. If he loves not
himself, how shall he be able to love us? Let us then put ourselves in array
and wound him, having for our mighty confederate the Lord Jesus Christ, who can
both render us impregnable to his snares, and worthy of the good things to
come; which God grant that we may all attain, through the grace and lovingkindness
of our Lord Jesus Christ, with whom, together with the Holy Ghost, be unto the
Father, glory, might, and honor, now and ever, and throughout all ages. Amen.
HOMILY XXIII.
EPHESlANS VI. VERSE 14.
"Stand therefore, having girded your loins with truth."
HAVING drawn up this army, and roused their zeal,--for both these things
were requisite, both that they should be drawn up in array and subject to each
other, and that their spirit should be aroused,--and having inspired them with
courage, for this was requisite also, he next proceeds also to arm them. For
arms had been of no use, had they not been first posted each in his own place, and
had not the spirit of the soldier's soul been roused; for we must first arm
him within, and then without.
Now if this is the case with soldiers, much more is it with spiritual
soldiers. Or rather in their case, there is no such thing as arming them without,
but everything is within. He hath roused their ardor, and set it on fire, he
hath added confidence. He hath set them in due array. Observe how he also puts on
the armor. "Stand therefore,"[2] saith he. The very first feature in tactics
is, to know how to stand well, and many things will depend upon that. Hence he
discourses much concerning standing, saying also elsewhere, "Watch ye, stand
fast." (1 Cor. xvi. 13.) And again, "So stand fast in the Lord." (Phil. iv. 1.) And
again, "Let him that thinketh he standeth, take heed test he fall." (1 Cor. x.
12.) And again, "That ye may be able, having done all, to stand." (Eph. vi.
13.) Doubtless then he does not mean merely any way of standing, but a correct
way, and as many as have had experience in wars know how great a point it is to
know how to stand. For if in the case of boxers and wrestlers, the trainer
recommends this before anything else, namely, to stand firm, much more will it be
the first thing in warfare, and military matters.
The man who, in a true sense, stands, is upright; he stands not in a lazy
attitude, not leaning upon anything. Exact uprightness discovers itself by the
way of standing, so that they who are perfectly upright, they stand. But they
who do not stand, cannot be upright, but are unstrung and disjointed. The
luxurious man does not stand upright, but is bent; so is the lewd man, and the lover
of money. He who knows how to stand will from his very standing, as from a sort
of foundation, find every part of the conflict easy to him.
"Stand therefore," saith he, "having girded your loins with truth."[3] He
is not speaking of a literal, physical girdle, for all the language in this
passage he employs in a spiritual sense.[1] And observe how methodically he
proceeds. First he girds up his soldier? What then is the meaning of this? The man
that is loose in his life, and is dissolved in his lusts, and that has his
thoughts trailing on the ground, him he braces up by means of this girdle, not
suffering him to be impeded by the garments entangling his legs, but leaving him to
run with his feet well at liberty. "Stand therefore, having girded your loins,"
saith he. By the "loins" here he means this; just what the keel is in ships,
the same are the loins with us the basis or groundwork of the whole body: for
they are, as it were, a foundation, and upon them as the schools of the physicians
tell you, the whole frame is built. So then in "girding up the loins" he
compacts the foundation of our soul; for he is not of course speaking of these loins
of our body, but is discoursing spiritually: and as the loins are the
foundation alike of the parts both above and below, so is it also in the case of these
spiritual loins. Oftentimes, we know, when persons are fatigued, they put their
hands there as if upon a sort of foundation, and in that manner support
themselves; and for this reason it is that the girdle is used in war, that it may
bind and hold together this foundation, as it were, in our frame; for this reason
too it is that when we run we gird ourselves. It is this which guards our
strength. Let this then, saith he, be done also with respect to the soul, and then
in doing anything whatsoever we shall be strong; and it is a thing most
especially becoming to soldiers.
True, you may say, but these our natural loins we gird with a leathern
band ; but we, spiritual soldiers, with what? I answer, with that which is the
head and crown of all our thoughts, I mean, "with .truth." "Having girded your
loins," saith he, "with truth."[3] What then is the meaning of "with truth"? Let
us love nothing like falsehood, all our duties let us pursue "with truth," let
us not lie one to another. Whether it be an opinion, let us seek the truth, or
whether it be a line of life, let us seek the true one. If we fortify ourselves
with this, if we "gird ourselves with truth," then shall no one overcome us. He
who seeks the doctrine of truth, shall never fall down to the earth ; for that
the things which are not true are of the earth, is evident from this, that all
they that are without are enslaved to the passions, following their own
reasonings; and therefore if we are sober, we shall need no instruction in the tales
of the Greeks. Seest thou how weak and frivolous they are? incapable of
entertaining about God one severe thought or anything above human reasoning? Why?
Because they are not "girded about with truth"; because their loins, the receptacle
of the seed of life, and the main strength of their reasonings, are ungirt;
nothing then can be weaker than these. And the Municheans[4] again, seest thou,
how all the things they have the boldness to utter, are from their own
reasonings? "It was impossible," say they, "for God to create the world without matter."
Whence is this so evident? These things they say, grovening, and from the
earth, and from what happens amongst ourselves; because man, they say, cannot
create otherwise. Marcion again, look what he says. "God, if He took upon Him flesh,
could not remain pure." Whence is this evident? "Because," says he, "neither
can men." But men are able to do this. Valentinus again, with his reasonings all
trailing along the ground, speaks the things of the earth; and in like manner
Paul of Samosata. And Arius, what does he say? "It was impossible for God when
He begat, to beget without passion."[5] Whence, Arius, hast thou the boldness
to allege this; merely from the things which take place amongst ourselves? Seest
thou how the reasonings of all these trail along on the ground? All are, as it
were, let loose and unconfined, and savoring of the earth? And so much then
for doctrines. With regard to life and conduct, again, whoremongers, lovers of
money, and of glory, and of everything else, trail on the ground. They have not
their loins themselves standing firm, so that when they are weary they may rest
upon them; but when they are weary, they do not put their hands upon them and
stand upright, but flag. He, however, who "is girt about with the truth," first,
never is weary; and secondly, if he should be weary, he will rest himself upon
the truth itself. What? Will poverty, tell me, render him weary? No, in
nowise; for he will repose on the true riches, and by this poverty will understand
what is true poverty. Or again, will slavery make him weary? No, in nowise, for
he will know what is the true slavery. Or shall disease? No, nor even that. "Let
your loins," saith Christ, "be girded about, and your lamps burning" (Luke
xii. 35), with that light which shall never be put out. This is what the
Israelites also, when they were departing out of Egypt (Ex. xii. 11), were charged to
do. For why did they eat the passover with their loins girded? Art thou desirous
to hear the ground of it? According to the historical fact, or according to its
mystical sense,[1] shall I state it? But I will state them both, and do ye
retain it in mind, for I am not doing it without an object, merely that I may tell
you the solution, but also that my words may become in you reality. They had,
we read, their loins girded, and their staff in their hands, and their shoes on
their feet, and thus they ate the Passover. Awful and terrible mysteries, and
of vast depth; and if so terrible in the type, how much more in the reality?
They come forth out of Egypt, they eat the Passover. Attend. "Our Passover hath
been sacrificed, even Christ," it is said. Wherefore did they have their loins
girded? Their guise is that of wayfarers; for their having shoes, and staves in
their hands, and their eating standing, declares nothing else than this. Will
ye hear the history first, or the mystery?[2] Better the history first. What
then is the design of the history? The Jews were continually forgetting God's
benefits to them. Accordingly then, God tied the sense of these, His benefits, not
only to the time, but also to the very habit of them that were to eat. For this
is why they were to eat girded and sandalled, that when they were asked the
reason, they might say, "we were ready for our journey, we were just about to go
forth out of Egypt to the land of promise and we were ready for our exodus."
This then is the historical type. But the reality is this; we too eat a Passover,
even Christ; "for," saith he, "our Passover hath been sacrificed, even
Christ." (1 Cor. v. 7.) What then? We too ought to eat it, both sandalled and girded.
And why? That we too may be ready for our Exodus, for our departure hence.
MORAL. Let not any one of them that eat this Passover look towards Egypt,
but towards Heaven, towards "Jerusalem that is above." (Gal. iv. 26.) On this
account thou eatest with thy loins girded, on this account thou eatest with
shoes on thy feet, that thou mayest know, that from the moment thou first beginnest
to eat the Passover, thou oughtest to set out, and to be upon thy journey. And
this implies two things, both that we must depart out of Egypt, and that,
whilst we stay, we must stay henceforth as in a strange country; "for our
citizenship," saith he, "is in Heaven" (Phil. iii. 20); and that all our life long we
should ever be prepared, so that when we are called we may not put it off, but
say, "My heart is fixed." (Ps. cviii. 1.) "Yes, but this Paul indeed could say,
who knew nothing against himself; but I, who require a long time for repentance,
I cannot say it." Yet that to be girded is the part of a waking soul, hearken
to what God says to that righteous man, "Gird up now thy loins like a man, for
I will demand of thee, and declare thou unto Me." (Job xxxviii. 3.) This He
says also to all the prophets, and this He says again to Moses, to be girded. And
He Himself also appears to Ezekiel (Ezek. ix. 11, Sept.) girded. Nay more, and
the Angels, too, appear to us girded (Rev. xv. 6), as being soldiers. From our
being girded about, it comes that we also stand bravely as from our standing
our being girded Collies.
For we also are going to depart, and many are the difficulties that
intervene. When we have crossed this plain, straightway the devil is upon us, doing
everything, contriving every artifice, to the end that those who have been saved
out of Egypt, those who have passed the Red Sea, those who are delivered at
once from the evil demons, and from unnumbered plagues, may be taken and
destroyed by him. But, if we be vigilant, we too have a pillar of fire, the grace of
the Spirit. The same both enlightens and overshadows us. We have manna; yea
rather not manna, but far more than manna. Spiritual drink we have, not water, that
springs forth from the Rock. So have we too our encampment (Rev. xx. 9), and we
dwell in the desert even now; for a desert indeed without virtue, is the earth
even now, even more desolate than that wilderness. Why was that desert so
terrible? Was it not because it had scorpions in it, and adders? (Deut. viii. 15.)
"A land," it is said, "which none passed through." (Jer. ii. 6.). Yet is not
that wilderness, no, it is not so barren of fruits, as is this human nature. At
this instant, how many scorpions, how many asps are in this wilderness, how many
serpents, how many "offsprings of vipers" (Matt. iii. 7) are these through
whom we at this instant pass! Yet let us not be afraid; for the leader of this our
Exodus is not Moses, but Jesus.
How then is it that we shall not suffer the same things? Let us not commit
the same acts, and then shall we not suffer the same punishment. They
murmured, they were ungrateful; let us therefore not cherish these passions. How was it
that they fell all of them? "They despised the pleasant land." (Ps. cvi. 24.)
"How 'despised' it? Surely they prized it highly." By becoming indolent and
cowardly, and not choosing to undergo any labors to obtain it. Let not us then
"despise" Heaven! This is what is meant by "despising." Again, among us also has
fruit been brought, fruit from Heaven, not the cluster of grapes borne upon the
staff (Num. xiii. 23), but the "earnest of the Spirit" (2 Cor. i. 22), "the
citizenship which is in Heaven" (Phil. iii. 20), which Paul and the whole company
of the Apostles, those marvelous husbandmen, have taught us. It is not Caleb
the son of Jephunneh, nor Jesus the son of Nun, that hath brought these fruits;
but Jesus the Son of "the Father of mercies" (2 Cor. i. 3), the Son of the Very
God, hath brought every virtue, hath brought down from Heaven all the fruits
that are from thence, the songs of heaven hath He brought. For the words which
the Cherubim above say, these hath He charged us to say also, "Holy, Holy,
Holy."[1] He hath brought to us the virtue of the Angels. "The Angels marry not,
neither are given in marriage" (Matt. xxii. 30) this fair plant hath He planted
here also. They love not money, nor anything like it; and this too hath He sown
amongst us. They never die and this hath He freely given us also, for death is no
longer death, but sleep. For hearken to what He saith, "Our friend Lazarus is
fallen asleep." (John xi. 11.)
Seest thou then the fruits of "Jerusalem that is above"? (Gal. iv. 26.)
And what is indeed more stupendous than all is this, that our war-fire is not
decided, but all these things are given us before the attainment of the promise
For they indeed toiled even after they had entered into the land of
promise;--rather, they toiled not, for had they chosen to obey God, they might have taken
all the cities, without either arms or array. Jericho, we know, they overturned,
more after the fashion of dancers than of warriors. We however have no warfare
after we have entered into the land of promise, that is, into Heaven, but only
so long as we are, in the wilderness, that is, in the present life. "For he
that is entered into his rest hath himself also rested from his works as God did
from His." (Heb. iv. 10.) "Let us not then be weary in well-doing, for in due
season we shall reap, if we faint not." (Gal. vi. 9.) Seest thou how that just as
He led them, so also He leads us? In their case, touching the manna and the
wilderness, it is said, "He that gathered much had nothing over, and he that
gathered little had no lack." (Ex. xvi. 18.) And we have this charge given us, "not
to lay up treasure upon the earth." (Matt. vi. 19.) But if we do lay up
treasure, it is no longer the earthly worm that corrupts it, as was the case with the
manna, but that which dwelleth eternally with fire.[2] Let us then "subdue all
things," that we furnish not food to this worm. For "he," it is said, "who
gathered much had nothing over." For this too happens with ourselves also every
day. We all of us have but the same capacity of hunger to satisfy. And that which
is more than this, is but an addition of cares. For what He intended in
after-times to deliver, saying, "Sufficient unto the day is the evil thereof" (Matt.
vi. 34), this had He thus been teaching even from the very beginning,[3] and
not even thus did they receive it. But as to us, let us not be insatiable, let us
not be discontented, let us not be seeking out for splendid houses; for we are
on our pilgrimage, not at home; so that if there be any that knows that the
present life is a sort of journey, and expedition, and, as one might say, it is
what they call an entrenched camp,[4] he will not be seeking for splendid
buildings. For who, tell me, be he ever so rich, would choose to build a splendid
house in an encampment? No one; he would be a laughing stock, he would be building
for his enemies, and would the more effectually invite them on; and so then,
if we be in our senses, neither shall we. The present life is nothing else than
a march and an encampment.
Wherefore, I beseech you, let us do all we can, so as to lay up no
treasure here; for if the thief should come, we must in a moment arise and depart.
"Watch," saith He, "for ye know not at what hour the thief cometh" (Matt. xxiv.
42, 43), thus naming death. O then, before he cometh, let us send away everything
before us to our native country ; but here let us be "well girded," that we
may be enabled to overcome our enemies, whom God grant that we may overcome,
through the grace and lovingkindness of our Lord Jesus Christ, with Whom together
with the Holy Ghost, be unto the Father glory, strength, honor forever and ever.
Amen.
HOMILY XXIV.
EPHESIANS VI. VERSES 14--24.
Verses 14--17. "Stand therefore, having girded your loins with truth, and
having on the breastplate of righteousness; and having shod your feet with the
preparation of the gospel of peace; withal taking up the shield of faith, wherewith
ye shall be able to quench all the fiery darts of the evil one. And take the
helmet of salvation, and the sword of the Spirit, which is the word of God."
"HAVING girded your loins," saith he, "with truth." What can be the
meaning of this? I have stated in the preceding discourse, that he ought to be
lightly accoutered, in order that there should be no impediment whatever to his
running.
"And having on," he continues, "the breastplate of righteousness." As the
breastplate is impenetrable, so also is righteousness, and by righteousness
here he means a life of universal virtue.[1] Such a life no one shall ever be able
to overthrow; it is true, many wound him, but no one cuts through him, no, not
the devil himself. It is as though one were to say, "having righteous deeds
fixed in the breast "; of these it is that Christ saith, "Blessed are they that
hunger and thirst after righteousness; for they shall be filled." (Matt. v. 6.)
Thus is he firm and strong like a breastplate. Such a man will never be put out
of temper.
"And having shod your feet with the preparation of the gospel of peace."
It is more uncertain in what sense this was said. What then is its meaning? They
are noble greaves, doubtless, with which he invests us. Either then he means
this, that we should be prepared for the gospel, and should make use of our feet
for this, and should prepare and make ready its way before it;[2] or if not
this, at least that we ourselves should be prepared for our departure. "The
preparation," then, "of the gospel of peace," is nothing else than a most virtuous
life; according to what the Prophet saith. "Thou wilt prepare their heart, thou
wilt cause thine ear to hear." (Ps. x. 17.) "Of the gospel," he says, "of
peace," and with reason; for inasmuch as he had made mention of warfare and
fighting, he shows us that this conflict with the evil spirits we must needs have: for
the gospel is "the gospel of peace"; this war which we have against them, puts
an end to another war, that, namely, which is between us and God; if we are at
war with the devil, we are at peace with God. Fear not therefore, beloved; it
is a "gospel," that is, a word of good news; already is the victory won.
"Withal taking up the shield of faith."
By "faith" in this place, he means, not knowledge, (for that he never
would have ranged last,) but that gift by which miracles are wrought.[3] And with
reason does he term this " 'faith' a shield"; for as the shield is put before
the whole body, as if it were a sort of rampart, just so is this faith; for all
things yield to it.
"Wherewith ye shall be able," saith he, "to quench all the fiery darts of
the evil one."
For this shield nothing shall be able to resist; for hearken to what
Christ saith to His disciples, "If ye have faith as a grain of mustard seed, ye
shall say unto this mountain, Remove hence to yonder place, and it shall remove."
(Matt. xvii. 20.) But how are we to have this faith? When we have rightly
performed all those duties.
"By the darts of the evil one," he means, both temptations, and vile
desires; and "fiery," he says, for such is the character of these desires. Yet if
faith can command the evil spirits, much more can it also the passions of the
soul.
"And take the helmet," he continues, "of salvation," that is, of your
salvation. For he is casing them in armor.
"And the sword of the Spirit, which is the word of God." He either means
the Spirit, or else, "the spiritual sword ": for by this[4] all things are
severed, by this all things are cleft asunder, by this we cut off even the serpent's
head.
Ver. 18, 19, 20. "With all prayer and supplication," saith he, "praying at
all seasons in the Spirit, and watching thereunto in all perseverance and
supplication for all the saints; and on my behalf 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, that in it I may speak boldly, as I
ought to speak."
As the word of God has power to do all things, so also has he who has the
spiritual gift. " For the word of God," saith he, "is living, and active and
sharper than any two-edged sword." (Heb. iv. 12.) Now mark the wisdom of this
blessed Apostle. He hath armed them with all security. What then is necessary
after that? To call upon the King, that He may stretch forth His hand. "With all
prayer, and supplication, praying at all seasons in the Spirit"; for it is
possible "to pray" not "in the Spirit," when one "uses vain repetitions" (Matt. vi.
7); "and watching thereunto," he adds, that is, keeping sober; for such ought
the armed warrior, he that stands at the King's side, to be wakeful and
temperate:--"in all perseverance and supplication for all the saints; and on my behalf
that utterance may be given unto me in opening my mouth." What sayest thou,
blessed Paul? Hast thou, then, need of thy disciples? And well does he say, "in
opening my mouth." He did not then study what he used to say, but according to
what Christ said, "When they deliver you up, be not anxious how or what ye shall
speak: for it shall be given you in that hour what ye shall speak" (Matt. x.
19): so truly did he do everything by faith, everything by grace. "With boldness,"
he proceeds, "to make known the mystery of the Gospel"; that is, that I may
answer for myself in its defense, as I ought. And art thou bound in thy chain,
and still needest the aid of others? Yea, saith he, for so was Peter also bound
in his chain, and yet nevertheless "was prayer made earnestly for him." (Acts
xii. 5.) "For which I am an ambassador in chains, that in it I may speak boldly,
as I ought to speak"; that is, that I may answer with confidence, with courage,
with great prudence.
Ver. 21. "But that ye also[1] may know my affairs, how I do, Tychicus, the
beloved brother and faithful minister in the Lord, shall make known to you all
things."
As soon as he had mentioned his chains, he leaves something for Tychicus
also to relate to them of his own accord. For whatever topics there were of
doctrine and of exhortation, all these he explained by his letter: but what were
matters of bare recital, these he entrusted to the bearer of the letter. "That ye
may know my affairs," that is, may be informed of them. This manifests both
the love which he entertained towards them, and their love towards him.
Ver. 22. "Whom I have sent unto you," saith he," for this very purpose,
that ye may know our state, and that he may comfort your hearts."
This language he employs, not without a purpose, but in consequence of
what he had been saying previously; "having girded your loins, having on the
breastplate," &c., which are a token of a constant and unceasing advance; for hear
what the Prophet saith," Let it be unto him as the raiment wherewith he covereth
himself, and for the girdle wherewith he is girded continually" (Ps. cix. 19);
and the Prophet Isaiah again saith, that God hath "put on righteousness as a
breastplate" (Isa. lix. 17); by these expressions instructing us that these are
things which we must have, not for a short time only, but continually, inasmuch
as there is continual need of warfare. "For it is said the righteous are bold
as a lion." (Prov. xxviii. 1.) For he that is armed with such a breastplate, it
cannot be that he should fear the array that is against him, but he will leap
into the midst of the enemy. And again Isaiah saith, "How beautiful are the
feet of him that bringeth good tidings." (Isa. lii. 7.) Who would not run, who
would not serve in such a cause; to publish the good tidings of peace, peace
between God and man, peace, where men have toiled not, but where God hath wrought
all?
But what is the" preparation of the Gospel"?[2] Let us hearken to what
John saith, "Make ye ready the way of the Lord, make His paths straight." (Matt.
iii. 3.) But again there is need also of another "preparation" after baptism, so
that we may do nothing unworthy of "peace." And then, since the feet are
usually a token of the way of life, hence he is constantly exhorting in this
language, "Look, therefore, carefully how ye walk." (Eph. v. 15.) On this account, he
would say, let us exhibit a practice and example worthy of the Gospel; that is,
make our life and conduct pure. The good tidings of peace have been proclaimed
to you, give to these good tidings a ready way; since if ye again become
enemies, there is no more "preparation of peace." Be ready, be not backward to
embrace this peace. As ye were ready and disposed for peace and faith, so also
continue. The shield is that which first receives the assaults of the adversary, and
preserves the armor uninjured. So long then as faith be right and the life be
right, the armor remains uninjured.
He discourses, however, much concerning faith, but most especially in
writing to the Hebrews, as he does also concerning hope. Believe, saith he, in the
good things to come, and none of this armor shall be injured. In dangers, in
toils, by holding out thy hope and thy faith to protect thee, thou wilt preserve
thy armor uninjured. "He that cometh to God must believe that He is, and that
He is a rewarder of them that seek after Him." (Heb. xi. 6.) Faith is a shield;
but wherever there are quibbles, and reasonings, and scrutinizings, then is it
no longer a shield, but it impedes us. Let this our faith be such as shall
cover and screen the whole frame. Let it not then be scanty, so as to leave the
feet or any other part exposed, but let the shield be commensurate with the whole
body.
"Fiery(1) darts." For many doubtful reasonings there are, which set the
soul, as it were, on fire, many difficulties, many perplexities, but all of them
faith sets entirely at rest; many things does the devil dart in, to inflame our
soul and bring us into uncertainty; as, for example, when some persons say,
"Is there then a resurrection?" "Is there a judgment?" "Is there a retribution?"
"But is there faith?" the apostle would say, "thou shalt with it quench the
darts of the devil. Has any base lust assaulted thee? Hold before thee thy faith
in the good things quenched, and others not. Hearken to what Paul saith, "For I
reckon that the sufferings of this present time are not worthy to be compared
with the glory that shall be revealed to us-ward." (Rom. viii. 18.) Seest thou
how many darts the righteous quenched in those days? Seemeth it not to thee to
be "fiery darts," when the patriarch burned with inward fire, as he was offering
up his son? Yea, and other righteous men also have quenched "all his darts."
Whether then they be reasonings that assault us, let us hold out this; or
whether they be base desires, let us use this; or whether again labors and
distresses, upon this let us repose. Of all the other armor, this is the safeguard; if we
have not this, they will be quickly pierced through. Withal," saith he,
"taking up the shield of faith." What is the meaning of "withal"? It means both "in
truth," and "in righteousness," and "in the preparation of the gospel "; that is
to say, all these have need of the aid of faith.
And therefore he adds further, "and take the helmet of salvation"; that is
to say, finally by this shall ye be able to be in security. To receive the
helmet of salvation is to escape the peril. For as the helmet covers the head
perfectly in every part, and suffers it not to sustain any injury, but preserves
it, so also does faith supply alike the place of a shied, and of a helmet(2) to
preserve us. For if we quench his darts, quickly shall we receive also those
saving thoughts that suffer not our governing principle(3) to sustain any harm;
for if thee, the thoughts that are adverse to our salvation, are quenched, those
which are not so, but which contribute to our salvation, and inspire us with
good hopes, will be generated within us, and will rest upon our governing
principle as a helmet does upon the head.
And not only this, but we shall take also "the sword of the Spirit," and
thus not only ward off his missiles, but smite the devil himself. For a soul
that does not despair of herself, and is proof against those fiery darts, will
stand with all intrepidity to face the enemy, and will cleave open his breastplate
with this very sword with which Paul also burst through it, and "brought into
captivity his devices" (2 COR. x. 5); he will cut off and behead the serpent.
"Which is the word of God."
By the "word of God" in this place, he means on the one hand the ordinance
of God, or the word of command; or on the other that it is in the Name of
Christ. For if we keep his commandments, by these we shall kill and slay above all
things they stand in need of God; for what does he say?
"With all prayer and supplication," he says, these things shall be done,
and ye shall accomplish all by praying. But when thou drawest near, never ask
for thyself only: thus shalt thou have God favorable to thee.
"With all prayer and supplication, praying at all seasons in the Spirit,
and washing thereunto in all perseverance for all the saints." Limit it not, I
say to certain times of the day, for, hear what he is saying; approach at all
times; "pray," saith he, "without ceasing." (1 Thess. v. 17.) Hast thou never
heard of that widow, how by her importunity she prevailed? (Luke xviii. 1-7.) Hast
thou never heard of that friend, who at midnight shamed his friend into
yielding by his 25-30), how by the constancy of her entreaty she called forth the
Lord's compassion? These all of them gained their object by their importunity
"Praying at all seasons," saith he, "in the Spirit."
That is to say, let us seek for the things which are according to God,
nothing of this world, nothing pertaining to this life.
Therefore, is there need not only that we "pray without ceasing," but
also, that we should do so "watching;--and watching," saith he, "thereunto."
Whether he is here speaking of vigils;(1) or of the wakefulness of the soul, I admit
both meanings. Seest thou how that Canaanitish woman watched unto prayer? and
though the Lord gave her no answer, nay, even crumbs which fall from their
masters' table" (Matt. xv. 27), and desisted not until she obtained her request How,
too, did that widow cry, and persist so long, until she was able to shame into
yielding that ruler, that neither feared God, nor regarded man (Luke xviii.
1-7)? And how, again, did the friend persist, remaining before the door in the
dead of night, till he shamed the other into yielding by his importunity, and
made him arise. (Luke xi. 5-8.) This is to be watchful.
Wouldest thou understand what watchfulness in prayer is? Go to Hannah,
hearken to her very words, "Adonai Eloi Sabaoth." (1 Sam. i. II.) Nay, rather,
hear what preceded those words; "they all rose up," says the history, "from the
table" (I Sam. i. 9), and she, forthwith, did not betake herself to sleep, nor
to repose. Whence she appears to me even when she was sitting at the table to
have partaken lightly, and not to have been made heavy with viands. Otherwise
never could she have shed so many tears; for if we, when we are fasting and
foodless, hardly pray thus, or rather never pray thus, much more would not she ever
have prayed thus after a meal, unless even at the meal she had been as they that
eat not. Let us be ashamed, us that are men, at the example of this woman; let
us be ashamed, that are suing and gasping for a kingdom, at her, praying and
weeping for a little child. "And she stood," it says, "before the Lord" (I Sam.
i. 10); and what are her words? "Adonai, Lord, Eloi Sabaoth!" and this is,
being interpreted, "O Lord, the God of Hosts." Her tears went before her tongue; by
these she hoped to prevail with God to bend to her request. Where tears are
there is always affliction also: where affliction is, there is great wisdom and
heedfulness. "If thou wilt indeed," she continues, "look on the affliction of
thine handmaid, and wilt give unto thine handmaid a man child, then will I give
him unto the Lord all the days of his life." (I Sam. i. II.) She said not, "for
one year," or, "for two," as we do;--nor said she, "if thou wilt give me a
child, I will give thee money"; but, "I give back to Thee the very gift itself
entire, my first-born, the son of my prayer." Truly here was a daughter of Abraham.
He gave when it was demanded of him. She offers even before it is demanded.
But observe even after this her deep reverence." Only her lips moved, but
her voice," it saith, "was not heard." (I Sam. i. 13.) And thus does he who
would gain his request draw nigh unto God; not consulting his ease, nor gaping,
nor lounging, nor scratching his head, nor with utter listlessness. What, was not
God able to grant, even without any prayer at all? What, did He not know the
woman's desire even before she asked? And yet had He granted it before she
asked, then the woman's earnestness would not have been shown, her virtue would not
have been made manifest, she would not have gained so great a reward. So that
the delay is not the result of envy or of witchcraft, but of providential
kindness. When therefore ye hear the Scripture saying, that "the Lord had shut up her
womb" (ver. 5, 6), and that, "her rival provoked her sore"; consider that it
is His intention to prove the woman's seriousness.(2) For, mark, she had a
husband devoted to her, for he said (ver. 8), "Am I not better to thee than ten
sons?" "And her rival," it saith, "provoked her sore," that is, reproached her,
insulted over her. And yet did she never once retaliate, nor utter imprecation
against her, nor say, "Avenge me, for my rival reviles me." The other had
children, but this woman had her husband's love to make amends. With this at least he
even consoled her, saying, "Am not I better to thee than ten sons?"
But let us look, again, at the deep wisdom of this woman. "And Eli," it
says, "thought she handmaid for a daughter of Belial, for out of the abundance of
my complaint and my provocation have I spoken hitherto." (Ver. 16.) Here is
truly the proof of a contrite heart, when we are not angry with those that revile
us, when we are not indignant against them, when we reply but in self-defense.
Nothing renders the heart so wise as affliction; nothing is there so sweet as
"godly mourning." (2 COR. vii. 10.) "Out of the abundance" saith she, "of my
complaint and my provocation have I spoken hitherto." Her let us imitate, one and
all. Hearken, ye that are barren, hearken, ye that desire children, hearken,
both husbands and wives; yes, for husbands, too used oftentimes to contribute
their part; for hear what the Scripture saith, "And Isaac intreated the Lord for
Rebekah his wife, because she was barren." (Gen. xxv. 21.) For prayer is able
to accomplish great things.
"With all prayer and supplication," saith he "for all the saints, and for
me," placing himself last. What doest thou, O blessed Paul, in thus placing
thyself last? Yea, saith he, "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." And where art thou an ambassador? "To mankind," saith
he. Oh amazing lovingkindness of God! He sent from Heaven in His own Name
ambassadors for peace, and lo, men took them, and bound them, and reverenced not so
much as the law of nations, that an ambassador never suffers any hurt. "But,
however, I am an ambassador in bonds. The chain lies like a bridle upon me,
restraining my boldness, but your prayer shall open my mouth" in order that I may
speak all things I was sent to speak.
"But that ye also may know my affairs, how I do, Tychicus, the beloved
brother, and faithful minister in the Lord, shall make known to you all things."
If" faithful," he will tell no falsehood, he will in everything speak the truth
:--"whom I have sent unto you for this very purpose, that ye might know our
state, and that he may comfort your hearts." Amazing, transcendent affection I
"that it may not be in the power" he means, "of them that would, to affright you."
intimates as much; that is, "may not suffer you to sink under it."
with faith from God the Father, and the Lord Jesus Christ."
He invokes upon them, "peace and love with faith." He saith well: for he
would not that they should have regard to bye by itself, and mince themselves
with those of a different faith. Either he means this, or that above described,
namely, that they should have faith also, so as to have a cheerful confidence of
the good things to come. The "peace" which is towards God, and the "love." And
if there be peace, there will also be bye; if bye, there will be peace also.
"With faith," because without faith, love amounts to nothing; or rather love
could not exist at all without it.
Ver. 24. "Grace be with all them that love our Lord Jesus Christ in
uncorruptness."
Why does he separate the two here, placing "peace" by itself, and "grace"
by itself?
"In uncorruptness," he concludes.
What is this "in uncorruptness"? It either means, "in purity"; or else,
"for the sake of those things which are incorruptible," as, for example, not in
riches, nor in glory, but in those treasures which are incorruptible. The "in"
means, "through." "Through uncorruptness," that is, "through virtue."(1) Because
all sin is corruption. And in the same way as we say a virgin is corrupted, so
also do we speak of the soul. Hence Paul says, "Lest by any means your minds
should be corrupted." ((2) COR. xi. 3.) And again elsewhere, he says, "In
doctrine, showing uncorruptness."(3) For what, tell me, is corruption of the body? Is
it not the dissolution of the whole frame, and of its union? This then is what
takes place also in the soul when sin enters. The beauty of the soul is
temperance, and righteousness; the heath of the soul is courage, and prudence; for
the base man is hideous in our eyes, so is the covetous, so is the man who gives
himself up to evil practices, and so the coward and unmanly man is sick, and
the foolish man is out of health. Now that sins work corruption, is evident from
this, that they render men base, and weak, and cause them to be sick and
diseased. Nay, and when we say that a virgin is corrupted, we say so, strictly
speaking, on this account also, not only because the body is defiled, but became of
the transgression. For the mere act is natural; and if in that consisted the
"corruption," then were marriage corruption. Hence is it not the act that is
corruption, but the sin, for it dishonors and puts her to shame. And again, what
would be corruption in the case of a house? Its dissolution. And so, one. For hear
what the Scripture saith, "All flesh had corrupted his way" (Gen. vi. 12); and
again, "In intolerable corruption" (3) (Ex. xviii. 18); and again, "Men
corrupted in mind." ((2) Tim. iii. 8.) Our body is corruptible, but our soul is
incorruptible: Oh then, let us not make that corruptible also. This, the corruption
of the body, was the work of former sin;(4) but sin which is after the Laver,
has the power also to render the soul corruptible, and to make it an easy prey
to "the worm that dieth not." For never had that worm touched it, had it not
found the soul corruptible. The worm touches not adamant, and even if he touches
it, he can do it no harm. Oh then, corrupt not the soul; for that which is
corrupted is full of foul stench; for hearken to the Prophet who saith, "My wounds
stink and are corrupt because of my foolishness." (Ps. xxxviii. 5.)
However, "this corruption" of the body "shall put on incorruption" (I COR.
XV. 53), but the other of the soul, never; for where incorruption is, there is
no(1) corruption. Thus is it a corruption which is incorruptible, which hath
no end, a deathless death; which would have been, had the body remained
deathless. Now if we shall depart into the next world having not burnt up, ever wasted
by the worm, is corruption 'incorruptible; like as was the case with the
blessed Job. He was corrupted, and died not, and that through a lengthened period,
and "wasted continually, scraping the clods of dust from his sore."(2) Some such
torment as this shall it undergo, when the worms surround and devour you, let
us dread the words, that we meet not with the realties. Covetousness is
corruption, corruption more dangerous than any other, and leading on to idolatry. Let
us shun the corruption, let us choose the incorruption. Hast thou in
covetousness overreached and defrauded some one? The fruits of thy covetousness perish,
but the covetousness remains; a corruption which is the foundation of
incorruptible corruption. The enjoyment indeed passes away, but the sin remains
imperishable. A fearful evil is it for us not to strip ourselves of everything in this
present world; a great calamity to depart into the next with loads of sins about
us. "For in Sheol," it is said "who shall give Thee thanks?" (Ps. vi. 5.) There
is the place of judgment; then is there no longer season for repentance. How
many things did the rich man bewail then? (Luke xvi. 23.) And yet it availed him
nothing. How many things did they say who had neglected to feed Christ? (Matt.
xxv. 41.) Yet were they led away notwithstanding into the everlasting fire.
How many things had they then to say: "that had wrought iniquity"; "Lord, did we
not prophesy by Thy Name, and by Thy Name cast out devils?" And yet
notwithstanding, they were not owned. All these things therefore will take place then; but
it will be of no avail, if they be not done now. Let us fear then, lest ever
we should have to say then, "Lord, when saw we Thee an hungered, and fed Thee
not?" (Matt. xxv. 44.) Let us feed Him now, not one day, nor two, nor three days.
"For let not mercy and truth," saith the Wise Man, "forsake thee." (Prov. iii.
3.) He saith not "do it once, nor twice" The Virgins, we know, had oil, but
not enough to last out. (Matt. xxv. 3, 8.) And thus we need much oil, and thus
should we be "like a green olive tree in the house of God." (Ps. lii. 8.) Let us
reflect then how many burdens of sins each of us has about him, and let us make
our acts of mercy counterbalance them; nay rather, far exceed them, that not
only the sins may be quenched, but that the acts of righteousness may be also
accounted unto us for righteousness. For if the good deeds be not so many in
number as to put aside the crimes laid against us, and out of the reminder to be
counted unto us for righteousness,(3) then shall no one rescue us from that
punishment, from which God grant that we may be all delivered, through the grace and
lovingkindness of our Lord Jesus Christ, with whom to the Father, &c.