HOMILIES OF ST. JOHN CHRYSOSTOM ON THE EPISTLE OF ST. PAUL THE APOSTLE TO THE
PHILIPPIANS, HOMILIES V TO VIII (CHAPTER 2)
HOMILY V.
PHILIPPIANS ii. 1-4.
"If there is therefore any comfort in Christ, if any consolation of love, if
any fellowship of the Spirit, if any tender mercies and compassions, fulfil ye
my joy, that ye be of the same mind, having the same love, being of one accord,
of one mind; doing nothing through faction or through vainglory; but in
lowliness of mind, each counting other better than himself; not looking each of you to
his own things, but each of you also to the things of others."
THERE is nothing better, there is nothing more affectionate, than a
spiritual teacher; such an one surpasses the kindness of any natural father. Do but
consider, how this blessed one entreats the Philippians concerning the things
which were to their own advantage. What says he, in exhorting them concerning
concord, that cause of all good things? See how earnestly, how vehemently, with
how much sympathy he speaks, "If there be therefore any comfort in Christ," that
is, if ye have any comfort in Christ, as if he had said, If thou makest any
account of me, if thou hast any care of me, if thou hast ever received good at my
hands, do this. This mode of earnestness we use when we claim a matter which we
prefer to everything else. For if we did not prefer it to everything, we
should not wish to receive in it our recompense for all things, nor say that through
it all is represented. We indeed remind men of our carnal claims; for example,
if a father were to say, If thou hast any reverence for thy father, if any
remembrance of my care in nourishing thee, if any affection towards me, if any
memory of the honor thou hast received of me, if any of my kindness, be not at
enmity with thy brother; that is, for all those things, this is what I ask in
return.
But Paul does not so; he calls to our remembrance no carnal, but all of
them spiritual benefits. That is, if ye wish to give me any comfort in my
temptations, and encouragement in Christ, if any consolation of love, if ye wish to
show any communion in the Spirit, if ye have any tender mercies and
compassions, fulfil ye my joy. "If any tender mercies and compassions." Paul speaks of
the concord of his disciples as compassion towards himself, thus showing that
the danger was extreme, if they were not of one mind. If I can obtain comfort
from you, if I can obtain any consolation from our love if I can communicate with
you in the Spirit, if I can have fellowship with you in the Lord, if I can
find mercy and compassion at your hands, show by your love the return of alI this.
All this have I gained, if ye love one another.
Ver. 2. "Fulfil ye my joy."
That the exhortation might not seem to be made to people who were still
deficient, see how he says not, "do me joy," but "fulfil my joy"; that is, Ye
have begun to plant it in me, ye have already given me some portion of
peacefulness, but I desire to arrive at its fulness? Say, what wouldest thou? that we
deliver thee from dangers? that we supply somewhat to thy need? Not so, but "that
ye be of the same mind, having the same love," in which ye have begun, "being of
one accord, of one mind." Just see, how often he repeats the same thing by
reason of his great affection! "That ye be of the same mind," or rather, "that ye
be of one mind." For this is more than "the same."
"Having the same love." That is, let it not be simply about faith alone,
but also in all other things; for there is such a thing as to be of the same
mind, and yet not to have love. "Having the same love," that is, love and be loved
alike; do not thou enjoy much love, and show less love, so as to be covetous
even in this matter; but do not suffer it in thyself. "Of one accord," he adds,
that is, appropriating with one soul, the bodies of all, not in substance, for
that is impossible, but in purpose and intention. Let all things proceed as
from one soul. What means "of one accord "? He shows when he says "of one mind."
Let your mind be one, as if from one soul.
Ver. 3. "Doing nothing through faction."
He finally demands this of them, and tells[1] them the way how this may
be. "Doing nothing through faction or vainglory." This, as I always say, is the
cause of all evil. Hence come fightings and contentions. Hence come envyings and
strifes. Hence it is that love waxes cold, when we love the praise of men,
when we are slaves to the honor which is paid by the many, for it is not possible
for a man to be the slave of praise, and also a true servant of God. How then
shall we flee vainglory? for thou hast not yet told us the way. Listen then to
what follows.
"But in lowliness ofmind, each counting other better than himself." Oh how
full of true wisdom, how universal a gathering-word[2] of our salvation is the
lesson he has put forth! If thou deemest, he means, that another is greater
than thyself, and persuadest thyself so, yea more, if thou not only sayest it,
but art fully assured of it, then thou assignest him the honor, and if thou
assignest him the honor, thou wilt not be displeased at seeing him honored by
another. Do not then think him simply greater than thyself, but "better," which is a
very great superiority, and thou dost not think it strange nor be pained
thereby, if thou seest him honored. Yea, though he treat thee with scorn, thou dost
bear it nobly, for thou hast esteemed him greater than thyself. Though he revile
thee, thou dost submit; Though he treat thee ill, thou bearest it in silence.
For when once the soul is fully assured that he is greater, it falls not into
anger when it is ill-treated by him, nor yet into envy, for no one would envy
those who are very far above himself, for all things belong to his superiority.
Here then he instructs the one party to be thus minded. But when he too,
who enjoys such honor from thee, is thus affected toward thee, consider what a
double wall there is erected of gentle forbearance [comp. Phil. iv. 5 ]; for
when thou esteemest him thus worthy of honor, and he thee likewise, no painful
thing can possibly arise; for if this conduct when shown by one is sufficient to
destroy all strife, who shall break down the safeguard, when it is shown by
both? Not even the Devil himself. The defense is threefold, and fourfold, yea
manifold, for humanity is the cause of all good; and that you may learn this, listen
to the prophet, saying, "Hadst thou desired sacrifice, I would have given it:
Thou wilt not delight in burnt offerings. The sacrifice for God is a broken
spirit, a broken and a contrite heart God will not despise."[1] (Ps. li. 16, 17.)
Not simply humility, but intense humility. As in the case of bodily substances,
that which is "broken" will not rise against that which is "solid," but, how
many ills soever it may suffer, will perish itself rather than attack the other,
so too the soul, even if constantly suffering ill, will choose rather to die,
than to avenge itself by attack.
How long shall we be puffed up thus ridiculously? For as we laugh, when we
see children drawing themselves up, and looking haughty, or when we see them
picking up stones and throwing them, thus too the haughtiness[2] of men belongs
to a puerile intellect, and an unformed mind. "Why are earth and ashes proud?"
(Ecclus. x. 9.) Art thou highminded, O man? and why? tell me what is the gain?
Whence art thou highminded against those of thine own kind? Dost not thou share
the same nature? the same life? Hast not thou received like honor from God?
But thou art wise? Thou oughtest to be thankful, not to be puffed up. Haughtiness
is the first act of ingratitude, for it denies[3] the gift of grace. He that
is puffed up, is puffed up as if he had excelled by his own strength, and he who
thinks he has thus excelled is ungrateful toward Him who bestowed that honor.
Hast thou any good? Be thankful to Him who gave it. Listen to what Joseph said,
and what Daniel. For when the king of Egypt sent for him, and in the presence
of all his host asked him concerning that matter in which the Egyptians, who
were most learned in these things, had forsaken the field, when he was on the
point of carrying off everything from them, and of appearing wiser than the
astrologers, the enchanters, the magicians, and all the wise men of those times, and
that from captivity and servitude, and he but a youth (and his glory was thus
greater, for it is not the same thing to shine when known, and contrary to
expectation, so that its being unlooked for rendered him the more admirable); what
then, when he came before Pharaoh? Was it "Yea, I know"? But what? When no one
urged it on him, he said from his own excellent spirit, "Do not interpretations
belong to God?"[4] Behold he straightway glorified his Master, therefore he was
glorified. And this also is no small thing. For that God had revealed it to
him was a far greater thing than if he had himself excelled. For he showed that
his words were worthy of credit, and it was a very great proof of his intimacy
with God. There is no one thing so good as to be the intimate friend of God.
"For if," says the Scripture, "he [Abraham] was justified by works, he hath
whereof to glory, but not toward God." (Rom. iv. 2.) For if he who has been
vouchsafed grace maketh his boast in God, that he is loved of Him, because his sins are
forgiven, he too that worketh hath whereof to boast, but not before God, as the
other (for it [5] is a proof of our excessive weakness); he who has received
wisdom of God, how much more admirable is he? He glorifies God and is glorified
of Him, for He says, "Them that honor Me, I will honor." (1 Sam. ii. 30.)
Again, listen to him who descended from Joseph, than whom no one was
wiser. "Art thou wiser,"[6] says he, "than Daniel?" (Ezek. xxviii. 3.) This Daniel
then, when all the wise men that were in Babylon, and the astrologers moreover,
the prophets, the magicians, the enchanters, yea when the whole of their wisdom
was not only coming to be convicted, but to be wholly destroyed (for their
being destroyed was a clear proof that they had deceived before), this Daniel
coming forward, and preparing to solve the king's question, does not take the honor
to himself, but first ascribes the whole to God, and says, "But as for me, O
king, it is not revealed to me for any wisdom that I have beyond all men." (Dan.
ii. 30) And "the king worshiped him, and commanded that they should offer an
oblation." (Dan. ii. 46.) Seest thou his humility? seest thou his excellent
spirit? seest thou this habit of lowliness? Listen also to the Apostles, saying at
one time, "Why fasten ye your eyes on us, as though by our own power or
godliness we had made this man to walk? (Acts iii. 12.) And again, "We are men of like
passions with you." (Acts xiv. 15.) Now if they thus refused the honors paid
them, men who by reason of the humility and power of Christ wrought greater
deeds than Christ (for He says, "He that believeth in Me shall do greater works
than those that I do" (John xiv. 12, abr.)), shall not we wretched and miserable
men do so, who cannot even beat away gnats,[1] much less devils? who have not
power to benefit a single man, much less the whole world, and yet think so much
of ourselves that the Devil himself is not like us?
There is nothing so foreign to a Christian soul as haughtiness.
Haughtiness, I say, not boldness nor courage, for these are congenial. But these are one
thing, and that another; so too humility is one thing, and meanness, flattery,
and adulation another.
I will now, if you wish, give you examples of all these qualities. For
these things which are contraries, seem in some way to be placed near together, as
the tares to the wheat, and the thorns to the rose. But while babes might
easily be deceived, they who are men in truth, and are skilled in spiritual
husbandry, know how to separate what is really good from the bad. Let me then lay
before you examples of these qualities from the Scriptures. What is flattery, and
meanness, and adulation? Ziba flattered [2] David out of season, and falsely
slandered his master. (2 Sam. xvi. 1-3.) Much more did Ahitophel flatter Absalom.
(2 Sam. xvii. 1-4.) But David was not so, but he was humble. For the deceitful
are flatterers, as when they say, "O king, live for ever." (Dan. ii. 4.)
Again, what flatterers the magicians are.
We shall find much to exemplify this in the case of Paul in the Acts. When
he disputed with the Jews he did not flatter them, but was humble-minded (for
he knew how to speak boldly), as when he says, "I, brethren, though I had done
nothing against the people, or the customs of our fathers, yet was delivered
prisoner from Jerusalem." (Acts xxviii. 17.)
That these were the words of humility, listen how he rebukes them in what
follows, "Well spake the Holy Ghost, By hearing ye shall hear, and shall in
nowise understand, and seeing ye shall see, and in nowise perceive." (Acts
xxviii. 25; ib. 26.)
Seest thou his courage? Behold also the courage of John the Baptist, which
he used before Herod; when he said, "It is not lawful for thee to have thy
brother Philip's wife." (Mark vi. 18.) This was boldness, this was courage. Not so
the words of Shimei, when he said, "Begone, thou man of blood" (2 Sam. xvi.
7), and yet he too spake with boldness; but this is not courage, but audacity,
and insolence, and an unbridled tongue. Jezebel too reproached Jehu, when she
said, "The slayer of his master" (2 Kings ix. 31), but this was audacity, not
boldness. Elias too reproached, but this was boldness and courage; "I do not
trouble Israel, but thou and thy father's house." (1 Kings xviii. 18.) Again, Elias
spake with boldness to the whole people, saying, "How long will ye go lame on
both your thighs?" (1 Kings xviii. 21, LXX.) Thus to rebuke was boldness and
courage. This too the prophets did, but that other was audacity.
Would you see words both of humility and not of flattery,[3] listen to
Paul, saying," But with me it is a very small thing that I should be judged of
you, or of man's judgment; yea, I judge not mine own self. For I know nothing
against myself, yet am I not hereby justified." (1 Cor. iv. 3, 4.) This is of a
spirit that becomes a Christian; and again, "Dare any of you, having a matter
against his neighbor, go to law before the unrighteous, and not before the saints"?
(1 Cor. vi. 1.)
Would you see the flattery of the foolish Jews? listen to them, saying,
"We have no king but Caesar." (John xix. 15.) Would you see humility? listen to
Paul again, when he says," For we preach not ourselves, but Christ Jesus as
Lord, and ourselves as your servants for Jesus' sake." (2 Cor. iv. 5.) Would you
see both flattery and audacity? "Audacity" ( 1 Sam. xxv. 10) in the case of
Nabal, and "flattery" (1 Sam. xxiii. 20) in that of the Ziphites? For in their
purpose they betrayed David. Would you see "wisdom" (1 Sam. xxvi. 5-12) and not
flattery, that of David, how he gat Saul into his power, and yet spared him? Would
you see the flattery of those who murdered Mephibosheth,[1] whom also David
slew? In fine, and as it were in outline, to sum up all, audacity is shown when
one is enraged, and insults another for no just cause, either to avenge himself,
or in some unjust way is audacious; but boldness and courage are when we dare
to face perils and deaths, and despise friendships and enmities for the sake of
what is pleasing to God. Again, flattery and meanness are when one courts
another not for any right end, but hunting after some of the things of this life;
but humility, when one does this for the sake of things pleasing to God, and
descends from his own proper station that he may perform something great and
admirable. If we know these things, happy are we if we do them. For to know them is
not enough. For Scripture says, "Not the hearers of a law, but the doers of a
law shall be justified." (Rom. ii. 13.) Yea, knowledge itself condemneth, when
it is without action and deeds of virtue. Wherefore that we may escape the
condemnation, let us follow after the practice, that we may obtain those good things
that are promised to us, by the grace and love of our Lord Jesus Christ.
HOMILY VI.
PHILIPPIANS ii. 5-8.
"Have this mind in you, which was also in Christ Jesus; who, being in the form
of God, counted it not a prize to be on an equality with God, but emptied
Himself, taking the form of a servant, being made in the likeness of men; and being
found in fashion as a man, He humbled Himself, becoming obedient even unto
death, yea, the death of the cross."
OUR Lord Jesus Christ, when exhorting His disciples to great actions,
places before them Himself, and the Father, and the Prophets, as examples; as when
He says, "For thus they did unto the Prophets which were before you" (Matt. v.
12; Luke vi. 23); and again, "If they persecuted Me, they will also persecute
you" (John xv. 20); and, "Learn of me, for I am meek" (Matt. xi. 29); and again,
"Be ye merciful, as your Father which is in heaven is merciful." (Luke vi.
36.) This too the blessed Paul did; in exhorting them to humility, he brought
forward Christ. And he does so not here only, but also when he discourses of love
towards the poor, he speaks in this wise. "For ye know the grace of our Lord
Jesus Christ, that though He was rich, yet for your sakes He became poor." (2 Cor.
viii. 9.) Nothing rouses a great and philosophic soul to the performance of
good works, so much as learning that in this it is likened to God. What
encouragement is equal to this? None. This Paul well knowing, when he would exhort them
to humility, first beseeches and supplicates them, then to awe[2] them he says,
"That ye stand fast in one Spirit"; he says also, that it "is for them an
evident token of perdition, but of your salvation." (Phil. i. 27, 28.) And last of
all he says this, "Have this mind in you, which was also in Christ Jesus, who,
being in the form of God, counted it not a prize to be on an equality with God,
but emptied Himself, taking upon Him the form of a servant." (Phil. ii. 5-7.)
Attend, I entreat you, and rouse yourselves. For as a sharp two-edged sword,
wheresoever it falls, though it be among ten thousand phalanxes, easily cuts
through and destroys, because it is sharp on every side, and nought can bear its
edge; so are the words of the Spirit. (Heb. iv. 12; Rev. i. 16.) For by these
words he has laid low the followers of Arius of Alexandria, of Paul of Samosata,
of Marcellus the Galatian, of Sabellius the Libyan, of Marcion that was of
Pontus, of Valentinus, of Manes, of Apollinarius of Laodicea, of Photinus, of
Sophronius, and, in one word, all the heresies. Rouse yourselves then to behold so
great a spectacle, so many armies falling by one stroke, lest the pleasure of
such a sight should escape you. For if when chariots contend in the horse race
there is nothing so pleasing as when one of them dashes against and overthrows
whole chariots with their drivers, and after throwing down many with the
charioteers that stood thereon, drives by alone towards the goal, and the end of the
course, and amid the applause and clamor which rises on all sides to heaven, with
coursers winged as it were by that joy and that applause, sweeps over the whole
ground; how much greater will the pleasure be here, when by the grace of God
we overthrow at once and in a body the combinations and devilish machinations of
all these heresies together with their charioteers? And if it seem good to
you, we will first arrange the heresies themselves in order. Would you have them
in the order of their impiety, or of their dates? In the order of time, for it
is difficult to judge of the order of their impiety. First then let Sabellius[1]
the Libyan come forward. What does he assert? that the Father, Son, and Holy
Spirit, are mere names given to one Person. Marcion[2] of Pontus says, that God
the Creator of all things is not good, nor the Father of the good Christ, but
another righteous one,[3] and that he did not take flesh for us. Marcellus,[4]
and Photinus,[5] and Sophronius assert, that the Word is an energy, and that it
was this energy that dwelt in Him who was of the seed of David, and not a
personal substance.
Arius confesses indeed the Son, but only in word; he says that He is a
creature, and much inferior to the Father. And others say that He has not a soul.
Seest thou the chariots standing? See then their fall, how he overthrows them
all together, and with a single stroke. How? "Have the same mind in you," he
says, "which was in Christ Jesus, who being in the form of God, counted it not a
prize to be on an equality with God." And Paul[6] of Samosata has fallen, and
Marcellus, and Sabellius. For he says, "Being in the form of God." If "in the
form" how sayest thou, O wicked one, that He took His origin from Mary, and was
not before? and how dost thou say that He was an energy? For it is written, "The
form of God took the form of a servant." "The form of a servant," is it the
energy of a servant, or the nature of a servant? By all means, I fancy, the nature
of a servant. Thus too the form of God, is the nature of God, and therefore
not an energy. Behold also Marcellus of Galatia, Sophronius and Photinus have
fallen.
Behold Sabellius too. It is written, "He counted it not a prize to be on
an equality with God." Now equality is not predicated, where there is but one
person, for that which is equal hath somewhat to which it is equal. Seest thou
not the substance of two Persons, and not empty names without things? Hearest
thou not the eternal pre-existence of the Only-begotten?
Lastly, What shall we say against Arius,[7] who asserts the Son is of a
different substance? Tell me now, what means, "He took the form of a servant"? It
means, He became man. Wherefore "being in the form of God," He was God. For
one "form" and another "form" is named; if the one be true, the other is also.
"The form of a servant" means, Man by nature, wherefore "the form of God" means,
God by nature. And he not only bears record of this, but of His equality too,
as John also doth, that he is no way inferior to the Father, for he saith, "He
thought it not a thing to seize,[8] to be equal with God." Now what is their
wise reasoning? Nay, say they, he proves the very contrary; for he says, that,"
being in the form of God, He seized not equality with God." How if He were God,
how was He able "to seize upon it"? and is not this without meaning? Who would
say that one, being a man, seized not on being a man? for how would any one
seize on that which he is? No, say they, but he means that being a little God, He
seized not upon being equal to the great God, Who was greater than He. Is there
a great and a little God? And do ye bring in the doctrines of the Greeks upon
those of the Church? With them there is a great and a little God. If it be so
with you, I know not. For you will find it nowhere in the Scriptures: there you
will find a great God throughout, a little one nowhere. If He were little, how
would he also be God? If man is not little and great, but one nature, and if
that which is not of this one nature is not man, how can there be a little God and
a great one?
He who is not of that nature is not God. For He is everywhere called great
in Scripture; "Great is the Lord, and highly to be praised." (Ps. xlviii. 1.)
This is said of the Son also, for it always calls Him Lord. "Thou art great,
and doest wondrous things. Thou art God alone." (Ps. lxxxvi. 10.) And again,
"Great is our Lord, and great is His power, and of His greatness there is no end."
(Ps. cxlv. 3.)
But the Son, he says, is little. But it is thou that sayest this, for the
Scripture says the contrary: as of the Father, so it speaks of the Son; for
listen to Paul, saying, "Looking for the blessed hope, and appearing of the glory
of our great God." (Tit. ii. 13.) But can he have said "appearing" of the
Father? Nay, that he may the more convince you, he has added with reference to the
appearing "of the great God." Is it then not said of the Father? By no means.
For the sequel suffers it not which says, "The appearing of our great God and
Saviour Jesus Christ."[9] See, the Son is great also. How then speakest thou of
small and great?
Listen to the Prophet too, calling him "The Messenger[10] of great
counsel." (Isa. ix. 6.) "The Messenger of great counsel," is He not great Himself?
"The mighty God," is He small and not great? What mean then these shameless and
reckless men when they say, that being little He is a God? I repeat ofttimes what
they say, that ye may the more avoid them. He being a lesser God seized not
for Himself to be like the greater God ! Tell me now (but think not that these
words are mine), if he were little, as they say, and far inferior to the Father
in power, how could He possibly have seized to Himself equality with God? For an
inferior nature could not seize for himself admission into that which is
great; for example, a man could not seize on becoming equal to an angel in nature; a
horse could not, though he wished it, seize on being equal to a man in nature.
But besides all that, I will say this too. What does Paul wish to establish by
this example? Surely, to lead the Philippians to humility. To what purpose
then did he bring forward this example? For no one who would exhort to humility
speaks thus; "Be thou humble, and think less of thyself than of thine equals in
honor, for such an one who is a slave has not risen against his master; do thou
imitate him." This, any one would say, is not humility, but arrogance.[1] Learn
ye what humility is, ye who have a devilish pride! What then is humility? To
be lowly minded. And he is lowly minded who humbles himself, not he who is lowly
by necessity. To explain what I say; and do ye attend; he who is lowly minded,
when he has it in his power to be high minded, is humble, but he who is so
because he is not able to be high minded, is no longer humble. For instance, If a
King subjects himself to his own officer, he is humble, for he descends from
his high estate; but if an officer does so, he will not be lowly minded; for how?
he has not humbled himself from any high estate. It is not possible to show
humble-mindedness except it be in our power to do otherwise. For if it is
necessary for us to be humble even against our will, that excellency comes not from
the spirit or the will, but from necessity. This virtue is called
humble-mindedness, because it is the humbling of the mind.
If he who has it not in his power to snatch at another's goods, continues
in the possession of his own; should we praise him, think you, for his justice?
I trow not, and why? The praise of free choice is taken away by the necessity.
If he, who has it not in his power to usurp and be a king, remains a private
citizen, should we praise him for his quietness? I trow not. The same rule
applies here. For praise, O ye most senseless ones, is not given for abstaining from
these things, but for the performance of good deeds; for the former is free
indeed from blame, but partakes not yet of praise, while eulogy of the other is
meet. Observe accordingly that Christ gives praise on this principle, when He
says, "Come, ye blessed of My Father, inherit the kingdom prepared for you from
the foundation of the world. For I was an hungered, and ye gave Me meat; I was
thirsty, and ye gave Me drink." (Matt. xxv. 34, 35.) He did not say, Because ye
have not been covetous, because ye have not robbed; these are slight things;
but because "ye saw Me an hungered, and fed Me." Who ever praised either his
friends or his enemies in this sort? No one ever praised even Paul. Why say Paul?
no one ever praised even a common man, as thou dost praise Christ, because he
did not take that rule which was not his due. To admire for such things as this,
is to give evidence of much evil. And why? because with evil men this is a
matter of praise, as of one that stealeth, if he steal no more; but it is otherwise
among good men. (Eph. iv. 28.) Because a man has not seized on a rule and an
honor which was not his due, is he praiseworthy? What folly is this?
Attend, I entreat you, for the reasoning is long. Again, who would ever
exhort to humility from such grounds as this? Examples ought to be much greater
than the subject, to which we are exhorting, for no one will be moved by what is
foreign to the subject, For instance, when Christ would lead us to do good to
our enemies, He brought a great example, even that of His Father, "For He
maketh His sun to rise on the evil and the good, and sendeth rain on the just and
the unjust." (Matt. v. 45.) When He would lead to endurance of wrong He brought
an example, "Learn of Me, for I am meek and lowly in heart." (Matt. xi. 29.) And
again, "If I your Lord and Master do these things, how much more should ye"?
(John xiii. 14.) Seest thou how these examples are not distant,[2] for there is
no need they should be so distant, for indeed we also do these things,
especially as in this case the example is not even near. And how? If He be a servant,
He is inferior, and subject to Him that is greater; but this is not lowliness of
mind. It was requisite to show the contrary, namely, that the greater person
subjected himself to the lesser. But since he found not this distinction in the
case of God, between greater and lesser, he made at least an equality. Now if
the Son were inferior, this were not a sufficient example to lead us to
humility. And why? because it is not humility, for the lesser not to rise against the
greater, not to snatch at rule, and to be "obedient unto death."
Again, consider what he says after the example, "In lowliness of mind,
each counting other better than themselves." (Phil. ii. 3.) He says, "counting,"
for as ye are one in substance, and in the honor which cometh of God, it follows
that the matter is one of estimation. Now in the case of those who are greater
and lesser, he would not have said "counting," but honor them that are better
than yourselves, as he says in another place, "Obey them that have the rule
over you, and submit to them." (Heb. xiii. 17.) In that instance subjection is the
result of the nature of the case, in this of our own judgment. "In lowliness
of mind," he says, "each counting other better than themselves," as Christ also
did.
Thus are their explanations overthrown. It remains that I speak of our own
after I have first spoken of theirs summarily. When exhorting to lowliness of
mind, Paul would never have brought forward a lesser one, as obedient to a
greater. If he were exhorting servants to obey their masters, he might have done so
with propriety, but when exhorting the free to obey the free, to what purpose
could he bring forward the subjection of a servant to a master? of a lesser to
a greater? He says not, "Let the lesser be subject to the greater," but ye who
are of equal honor with each other be ye subject, "each counting other better
than themselves." Why then did he not bring forward even the obedience of the
wife, and say, As the wife obeys her husband, so do ye also obey. Now if he did
not bring forward that state in which there is equality and liberty, since in
that the subjection is but slight, how much less would he have brought forward
the subjection of a slave? I said above, that no one so praises a man for
abstaining from evil, nor even mentions him at all; no one who desires to praise a man
for continence would say, he has not committed adultery, but, he has abstained
from his own wife; for we do not consider abstinence from evil as a matter of
praise at all, it would be ridiculous.
I said that the "form of a servant" was a true form, and nothing less.
Therefore "the form of God" also is perfect, and no less. Why says he not, "being
made in the form of God," but "being in the form of God"? This is the same as
the saying, "I am that I am." (Ex. iii. 14.) Form" implies unchangeableness, so
far as it is form. It is not possible that things of one substance should have
the form of another, as no man has the form of an angel, neither has a beast
the form of a man. How then should the Son?
Now in our own case, since we men are of a compound nature, form pertains
to the body, but in the case of a simple and altogether uncompounded nature
it is of the substance. But if thou contendest that he speaks not of the Father,
because the word is used without the article, in many places this is meant,
though the word be used without the article. Why say I, in many places? for in
this very place he says, "He counted it not a prize to be on an equality with
God," using the word without the article, though speaking of God the Father.
I would add our own explanation, but I fear that I shall overwhelm your
minds. Meanwhile remember what has been said for their refutation; meanwhile let
us root out the thorns, and then we will scatter the good seed after that the
thorns have been rooted out, and a little rest has been given to the land; that
when rid of all the evil thence contracted, it may receive the divine seed with
full virtue.
Let us give thanks to God for what has been spoken; let us entreat Him to
grant us the guarding and safe keeping thereof, that both we and ye may
rejoice, and the heretics may be put to shame. Let us beseech Him to open our mouth
for what follows, that we may with the same earnestness lay down our own views.
Let us supplicate Him to vouchsafe us a life worthy of the faith, that we may
live to His glory, and that His name may not be blasphemed through us. For, "woe
unto you," it is written, "through whom the name of God is blasphemed." (Isa.
lii. 5, LXX. nearly.) For if, when we have a son, (and what is there more our
own than a son,) if therefore when we have a son, and are blasphemed through him,
we publicly renounce him, turn away from him, and will not receive him; how
much more will God, when He has ungrateful servants who blaspheme and insult Him,
turn away from them and hate them? And who will take up him whom God hates and
turns away from, but the Devil and the demons? And whomsoever the demons take,
what hope of salvation is left for him? what consolation in life?
As long as we are in the hand of God, "no one is able to pluck us out"
(John x. 28), for that hand is strong; but when we fall away from that hand and
that help, then are we lost, then are we exposed, ready to be snatched away, as a
"bowing wall, and a tottering fence" (Ps. lxii. 3); when the wall is weak, it
will be easy for all to surmount. Think not this which I am about to say refers
to Jerusalem alone, but to all men. And what was spoken of Jerusalem? "Now
will I sing to my well-beloved a song of my beloved touching His vineyard. My
well-beloved hath a vineyard in a very fruitful hill, and I made a fence about it,
and surrounded it with a dike, and planted it with the vine of Sorech, and
built a tower in the midst of it, and also dug a wine press in it, and I looked
that it should bring forth grapes, and it brought forth thorns. And now, O men of
Judah and inhabitants of Jerusalem, judge between Me and My vineyard. What
should have been done to My vineyard, that I have not done to it? Wherefore, when I
looked that it should bring forth grapes, brought it forth thorns? Now
therefore I will tell you what I will do to My vineyard: I will take away the hedge
thereof, and it shall be for a prey, and I will break down the wall thereof, and
it shall be trodden down. And I will leave My vineyard, and it shall not be
pruned or digged, but thorns shall come up upon it, as upon a desert land. I will
also command the clouds, that they rain no rain upon it. For the vineyard of
the Lord of Sabaoth is the house of Israel, and the men of Judah His pleasant
plant. I looked that it should do judgment, but it did iniquity, and a cry instead
of righteousness." (Isa. v. 1-7, LXX.) This is spoken also of every soul. For
when God who loveth man hath done all that is needful and man then bringeth
forth thorns instead of grapes, He will take away the fence, and break down the
wall, and we shall be for a prey. For hear what another prophet speaks in his
lamentations: "Why hast thou broken down her fences, so that all they which pass
by the way do pluck her? The boar out of the wood doth ravage it, and the wild
beasts of the field feed on it." (Ps. lxxx. 12, 13.) In the former place He
speaks of the Mede and the Babylonian, here nought is said of them, but "the boar,"
and "the solitary beast" is the Devil and all his host, because of the
ferocity and impurity of his disposition. For when it would show us his rapacity, it
saith, "As a roaring lion he walketh about, seeking whom he may devour" (1 Pet.
v. 8): when his poisonous, his deadly, his destructive nature, it calleth him a
snake, and a scorpion; "For tread," saith He, "upon serpents and scorpions,
and upon all the power of the enemy" (Luke x. 19): when it would represent his
strength as well as his venom, it calleth him a dragon; as when it says, This
dragon "whom thou hast formed to take his pastime therein." (Ps. civ. 26.)
Scripture everywhere calleth him a dragon, and a crooked serpent, and an adder (Ps.
lxxiv. 13, 14); he is a beast of many folds, and varied in his devices, and his
strength is great, he moves all things, he disturbs all things, he turns all
things up and down. (Isa. xxvii. 1; li. 9; Ezek. xxix. 3; xxxii. 2.) But fear not,
neither be afraid; watch only, and he will be as a sparrow; "for," saith He,
"tread upon serpents and scorpions." If we will, He causes him to be trodden
down under our feet.
See now what scorn is it, yea, what misery, to see him standing over our
heads, who has been given to us to tread down. And whence is this? it is of
ourselves. If we choose, he becomes great; and if we choose, he becomes of small
power. If we take heed to ourselves, and take up our stand with Him who is our
King, he draws himself in, and will be no better than a little child in his
warfare against us. Whensoever we stand apart from Him, he puffeth himself up
greatly, he uttereth terrible sounds, he grindeth his teeth, because he finds us
without our greatest help. For he will not approach to us, except God permit him;
for if he dared not to enter into the herd of swine, except by God's permission,
how much less into men's souls. But God does permit him, either chastening or
punishing us, or making us more approved, as in the case of Job. Seest thou
that he came not to him, neither dared to be near him, but trembled and quaked?
Why speak I of Job? When he leaped upon Judas, he dared not to seize on him
wholly, and to enter into him, until Christ had severed him from the sacred band. He
attacked him indeed from without, but he dared not enter in, but when he saw
him cut off from that holy flock, he leaped upon him with more than wolfish
vehemence, and left him not till he had slain him with a double death.
These things are written for our admonition. What gain have we from
knowing that one of the twelve was a traitor? what profit? what advantage? Much. For,
when we know whence it was that he arrived at this deadly counsel, we are on
our guard that we too suffer not the like. Whence came he to this? From the love
of money. He was a thief. For thirty pieces of silver he betrayed his Lord. So
drunken was he with the passion, he betrayed the Lord of the world for thirty
pieces of silver. What can be worse than this madness? Him to whom nothing is
equivalent, nothing is equal, "before whom the nations are as nothing" (Isa. xl.
15), Him did he betray for thirty pieces of silver. A grievous tyrant indeed
is the love of gold, and terrible in putting the soul beside itself. A man is
not so beside himself through drunkenness[1] as through love of money, not so
much from madness and insanity as from love of money.
For tell me, why didst thou betray Him? He called thee, when a man
unmarked and unknown. He made thee one of the twelve, He gave thee a share in His
teaching, He promised thee ten thousand good things, He caused thee to work
wonders, thou wert sharer of the same table, the same journeys, the same company, the
same intercourse, as the rest. And were not these things sufficient to restrain
thee? For what reason didst thou betray Him? What hadst thou to charge Him
with, O wicked one? Rather, what good didst thou not receive at His hands? He knew
thy mind, and ceased not to do His part. He often said, "One of you shall
betray Me." (Matt. xxvi. 21.) He often marked thee, and yet spared thee, and though
He knew thee to be such an one, yet cast thee not out of the band. He still
bore with thee, He still honored thee, and loved thee, as a true disciple, and as
one of the twelve, and last of all (oh, for thy vileness!), He took a towel,
and with His own unsullied hands He washed thy polluted feet, and even this did
not keep thee back. Thou didst steal the things of the poor, and that thou
mightest not go on to greater sin, He bore this too. Nothing persuaded thee. Hadst
thou been a beast, or a stone, wouldest thou not have been changed by these
kindnesses towards thee, by these wonders, by these teachings? Though thou wast
thus brutalized, yet still He called thee, and by wondrous works He drew thee,
thou wast more senseless than a stone, to Himself. Yet for none of these things
didst thou become better.
Ye wonder perhaps at such folly of the traitor; dread therefore that which
wounded him. He became such from avarice, from the love of money. Cut out this
passion, for to these diseases does it give birth; it makes us impious, and
causes[1] us to be ignorant of God, though we have received ten thousand benefits
at His hands. Cut it out, I entreat you, it is no common disease, it knoweth
how to give birth to a thousand destructive deaths. We have seen his tragedy.
Let us fear lest we too fall into the same snares. For this is it written, that
we too should not suffer the same things. Hence did all the Evangelists relate
it, that they might restrain us. Flee then far from it. Covetousness consisteth
not alone in the love of much money, but in loving money at all. It is grievous
avarice to desire more than we need. Was it talents of gold that persuaded the
traitor? For thirty pieces of silver he betrayed his Lord. Do ye not remember
what I said before, that covetousness is not shown in receiving much, but
rather in receiving little things? See how great a crime he committed for a little
gold, rather not for gold, but for pieces of silver.
It cannot, it cannot be that an avaricious man should ever see the face of
Christ! This is one of the things which are impossible. It is a root of evils,
and if he that possesses one evil thing, falls from that glory, where shall he
stand who bears with him the root? He who is the servant of money cannot be a
true servant of Christ. Christ Himself hath declared that the thing is
impossible. "Ye cannot," He says, "serve God and Mammon," and, "No man can serve two
masters" (Matt. vi. 24), for they lay upon us contrary orders. Christ says,
"Spare the poor"; Mammon says, "Even from the naked[2] strip off the things they
have." Christ says, "Empty thyself of what thou hast"; Mammon says, "Take also
what thou hast not." Seest thou the opposition, seest thou the strife? How is it
that a man cannot easily obey both, but must despise one? Nay, does it need
proof? How so? Do we not see in very deed, that Christ is despised, and Mammon
honored? Perceive ye not how that the very words are painful? How much more then
the thing itself? But it does not appear so painful in reality, because we are
possessed with the disease. Now if the soul be but a little cleansed of the
disease, as long as it remains here, it can judge right; but when it departs
elsewhere, and is seized by the fever, and is engaged in the pleasure of the thing, it
hath not its perception clear, it hath not its tribunal uncorrupt. Christ
says, "Whosoever he be of you that renounceth not all that he hath, he cannot be My
disciple" (Luke xiv. 33); Mammon says, "Take the bread from the hungry."
Christ says, "Cover the naked" (Isa. lviii. 7); the other says, "Strip the naked."
Christ says, "Thou shalt not hide thyself from thine own flesh," (Isa. lviii. 7)
and those of thine own house;[3] Mammon says,[4] "Thou shall not pity those of
thine own seed; though thou seest thy mother or thy father in want, despise
them." Why say I father or mother? "Even thine own soul," he says, "destroy it
also." And he is obeyed! Alas! he who commands us cruel, and mad, and brutal
things, is listened to rather than He who bids us gentle and healthful things! For
this is hell appointed; for this, fire; for this, a river of fire; for this, a
worm that dieth not.
I know that many hear me say these things with pain, and indeed it is not
without pain I say them. But why need I say these things? I could wish the
things concerning the kingdom to be ever my discourse, of the rest, of the waters
of rest, of the green pastures, as the Scripture says, "He maketh me to lie down
in green pastures, He leadeth me beside the still waters" (Ps. xxiii. 2),
there He maketh me to dwell. I could wish to speak of the place, whence "sorrow and
sighing shall flee away." (Isa. li. 11.)
I could wish to discourse of the pleasures of being with Christ, though
they pass all expression and all understanding. Yet would I speak of these things
according to my power. But what shall I do? it is not possible to speak
concerning a kingdom[5] to one that is diseased and in fever; then we must needs
speak of health. It is not possible to speak of honor to one that is brought to
trial, for at that time his desire is that he be freed from judgment, and penalty,
and punishment. If this be not effected, how shall the other be? It is for
this cause that I am continually speaking of these things, that we may the sooner
pass over to those other. For this cause does God threaten hell, that none may
fall into hell, that we all may obtain the kingdom; for this cause we too make
mention continually of hell, that we may thrust you onward towards the kingdom,
that when we have softened your minds by fear, we may bring you to act
worthily of the kingdom. Be not then displeased at the heaviness of our words, for the
heaviness of these words lightens our souls from sin.[1] Iron is heavy, and
the hammer is heavy, but it forms vessels fit for use, both of gold and silver,
and straightens things which are crooked i and if it were not heavy, it would
have no power to straighten the distorted substance. Thus too our heavy speech
has power to bring the soul into its proper tone. Let us not then flee from
heaviness of speech, nor the strokes it gives; the stroke is nor given that it may
break in pieces or tear the soul, but to straighten it. We know how we strike,
how by the grace of God we inflict the stroke, so as not to crush the vessel,
but to polish it, to render it straight, and meet for the Master's use, to offer
it glittering in soundness, skillfully wrought against that Day of the river
of fire, to offer it having no need of that burning pile. For if we expose not
ourselves to fire here, we must needs be burned there, it cannot be otherwise;
"For the day of the Lord is revealed by fire." (1 Cor. iii. 13.) Better is it
that ye be burned for a little space by our words, than for ever in that flame.
That this will indeed be so, is plain, and I have ofttimes given you
reasons[3] which cannot be gain-said. We ought truly to be persuaded from the
Scriptures, but forasmuch as some are contentious, we have also brought forward many
arguments from reason. Nothing binders that I now mention them, and what were they?
God is just. We all acknowledge this, both Greeks and Jews, and Heretics, and
Christians. But many sinners have had their departure without punishment, many
righteous men have had their departure after suffering ten thousand grievous
things. If then God be just, where will He reward their good to the one, and
their punishment to the other, if there be no hell, if there be no resurrection?
This reason then do ye constantly repeat[4] to them and to yourselves, and it
will not suffer you to disbelieve the resurrection, and whoso disbelieves not the
resurrection will take care to live with all heed so as to obtain eternal
happiness, of which may we all be counted worthy, by the grace and lovingkindness of
our Lord Jesus Christ, with whom, &c.
HOMILY VII.
PHILIPPIANS ii. 5-11.
"Have this mind in you which was also in Christ Jesus: who, being in the form
of God, counted it not a prize to be on an equality with God; but emptied
Himself, taking upon Him the form of a servant, being made in the likeness of men:
and being found in fashion as a man, He humbled Himself, becoming obedient unto
death, yea, the death of the cross. Wherefore also God highly exalted Him, and
gave Him the Name which is above every name: that in the Name of Jesus every
knee should bow, of things in heaven, and things on earth, and things under the
earth; and that every tongue should confess that Jesus Christ is Lord, to the
glory of God the Father."
I HAVE stated the views of[2] the heretics. It is befitting that I now
speak of what is our own. They say that the words, "He counted it not a prize,"
are of wrongfully seizing.[5] We have proved, that this is altogether vapid and
impertinent, for no man would exhort another to humility on such grounds, nor in
this sort does he praise God, or even man. What is it then, beloved? Give heed
to what I now say. Since many men think, that, when they are lowly, they are
deprived of their proper right, and debased, Paul, to take away this fear, and
to show that we must not be affected thus, says that God, the only begotten, who
was in the form of God, who was no whit inferior to the Father, who was equal
to Him, "counted it not a prize to be on an equality with God."
Now learn what this meaneth. Whatsoever a man robs, and takes contrary to
his right, he dares not lay aside, from fear lest it perish, and fall from his
possession, but he keeps hold of it continually. He who possesses some dignity
which is natural to him, fears not to descend from that dignity, being assured
that nothing of this sort will happen to him. As for example, Absalom usurped
the government, and dared not afterwards to lay it aside. We will go to another
example, but if example cannot present the whole matter to you, take it not
amiss, for this is the nature of examples, they leave the greater part for the
imagination to reason out. A man rebels against his sovereign, and usurps the
kingdom: he dares not lay aside and hide the matter, for if he once hide it,
straightway it is gone. Let us also take another example; if a man takes anything
violently, he keeps firm hold of it continually, for if he lay it down, he
straightway loses it. And generally speaking, they who have aught by rapine are afraid
to lay it by, or hide it, or not to keep constantly in that state which they
have assumed. Not so they, who have possessions not procured by rapine, as Man,
who possesses the dignity of being a reasonable being. But here examples fail
me, for there is no natural prečminence amongst us, for no good thing is
naturally our own; but they are inherent in the nature of God. What does one say then?
That the Son of God feared not to descend from His right, for He thought not
Deity a prize seized. He was not afraid that any would strip Him of that nature
or that right, Wherefore He laid it[1] aside, being confident that He should
take it up again. He hid it, knowing that He was not made inferior by so doing.
For this cause, Paul says not, "He seized not," but," He counted it not a prize"
; He possessed not that estate by seizure, but it was natural, not
conferred,[2] it was enduring and safe. Wherefore he refused not to take the form of an
inferior.[3] The tyrant fears to lay aside the purple robe in war, while the king
does it with much safety. Why so? because he holds his power not as a matter
of seizure. He did not refuse to lay it aside, as one who had usurped it, but
since He had it as His own by nature, since it could never be parted from Him, He
hid it.
This equality with God He had not by seizure, but as his own by nature.
Wherefore "He emptied Himself." Where be they who affirm, that He underwent
constraint, that He was subjected? Scripture says, "He emptied Himself, He humbled
Himself, and became obedient unto death." How did He empty Himself? By taking
"the form of a servant, being made in the likeness of men, and being found in
fashion as a man." It is written, "He emptied Himself" in reference to the text,
"each counting other better than himself." Since had He been subjected, had He
not chosen it of His own accord, and of His own free will, it would not have
been an act of humility. For if He knew not that so it must be, He would have
been imperfect. If, not knowing it, He had waited for the time of action, then
would He not have known the season. But if He both knew that so it must be, and
when it must be, wherefore should He submit to be subjected? To show, they say,
the superiority of the Father. But this shows not the superiority of the
Father, but His own inferiority. For is not the name of the Father sufficient to show
the priority of the Father? For apart from Him, the son has all the same
things. For this honor is not capable of passing from the Father to the Son.
What then say the heretics? See, say they, He did not become man. The
Marcionites, I mean.[4] But why? He was "made in the likeness of man." But how can
one be "made in the likeness of men"? by putting on a shadow? But this is a
phantom, and no longer the likeness of a man, for the likeness of a man is another
man. And what wilt thou answer to John, when he says, "The Word became flesh"?
(John i. 14.) But this same blessed one himself also says in another place,
"in the likeness of sinful flesh." (Rom. viii. 3.)
"And being found in fashion as a man." See, they say, both" in fashion,"
and "as a man." To be as a man, and to be a man in fashion, is not to be a man
indeed. To be a man in fashion is not to be a man by nature. See with what
ingenuousness I lay down what our enemies say, for that is a brilliant victory, and
amply gained, when we do not conceal what seem to be their strong points. For
this is deceit rather than victory. What then do they say? let me repeat their
argument. To be a man in fashion is not to be a man by nature; and to be as a
man, and in the fashion of a man, this is not to be a man. So then to take the
form of a servant, is not to take the form[5] of a servant. Here then is an
inconsistency; and wherefore do you not first of all solve this difficulty? For as
you think that this contradicts us, so do we say that the other contradicts you.
He says not, "as the form of a servant," nor "in the likeness of the form of a
servant," nor "in the fashion of the form of a servant," but "He took the form
of a servant." What then is this? for there is a contradiction. There is no
contradiction. God forbid! it is a cold and ridiculous argument of theirs. He
took, say they, the form of a servant, when He girded Himself with a towel, and
washed the feet of His disciples. Is this the form of a servant? Nay, this is not
the form, but the work of a servant. It is one thing that there should be the
work of a servant, and another to take the form of a servant. Why did he not
say, He did the work of a servant, which were clearer? But nowhere in Scripture
is "form" put for "work," for the difference is great: the one is the result of
nature, the other of action. In common speaking, too, we never use "form" for
"work." Besides, according to them, He did not even take the work of a servant,
nor even gird Himself. For if all was a mere shadow,[1] there was no reality.
If He had not real hands, how did He wash their feet? If He had not real loins,
how did He gird Himself with a towel? and what kind of garments did he take?
for Scripture says, "He took His garments." (John xiii. 12.) So then not even the
work is found to have really taken place, but it was all a deception, nor did
He even wash the disciples. For if that incorporeal nature did not appear,
it[2] was not in a body. Who then washed the disciples' feet?
Again, what in opposition to Paul of Samosata? for what did he affirm? The
very same. But it is no emptying of Himself, that one who is of human nature,
and a mere man, should wash his fellow-servants. For what we said against the
Arians, we must repeat against these too, for they differ not from one another,
save by a little space of time; both the one and the other affirm the Son of
God to be a creature. What then shall we say to them? If He being a man washed
man, He emptied not, He humbled not Himself. If He being a man seized not on
being equal with God, He is not deserving of praise. That God should become man, is
great, unspeakable, inexpressible humility; but what humility is there in that
one, who was a man should do the works of men? And where is the work of God
ever called "the form of God"? for if he were a mere man, and was called the form
of God by reason of His works, why do we not do the same of Peter, for he
wrought greater deeds than Christ Himself? Why say you not of Paul, that he had the
form of God? Why did not Paul give an example of himself, for he wrought a
thousand servile works, and did not even refuse to say, "For we preach not
ourselves, but Christ Jesus as Lord, and ourselves as your servants for Jesus' sake."
(2 Cor. iv. 5.) These are absurdities and trifles! Scripture says, He "emptied
Himself." How did He empty Himself? tell me. What was His emptying? what His
humiliation? was it because He wrought wonders? This both Paul and Peter did, so
that this was not peculiar to the Son. What then means, "Being made in the
likeness of men"? He had many things belonging to us, and many He had not; for
instance, He was not born of wedlock. He did no sin. These things had He which no
man has. He was not what he seemed only, but He was God also; He seemed to be a
man, but He was not like the mass of men. For He was like them in flesh. He
means then, that He was not a mere man. Wherefore he says, "in the likeness of
men." For we indeed are soul and body, but He was God, and soul and body,
wherefore he says, "in the likeness." For lest when you hear hat He emptied Himself,
you should think that some change, and degeneracy, and loss is here; he says,
whilst He remained what He was, He took that which He was not, and being made
flesh He remained God, in that He was the Word. (John i. 14.)
In this then He was like man, and for this cause Paul says, "and in
fashion." Not that His nature degenerated, nor that any confusion arose, but He
became man in fashion. For when He had said that "He took the form of a servant," he
made bold[3] to say this also, seeing that the first would silence all
objectors; since when he says, "In the likeness of sinful flesh," he says not that He
had not flesh, but that that flesh sinned not, but was like to sinful flesh.
Like in what? in nature, not in sin, therefore was His like a sinful soul. As
then in the former case the term similarity was used, because He was not equal in
everything, so here also there is similarity, because He is not equal in
everything, as His not being born of wedlock, His being without sin, His being not a
mere man. And he well said "as a man," for He was not one of the many, but "as"
one of the many. The Word who was God did not degenerate into man, nor was His
substance changed, but he appeared as a man; not to delude us with a phantom,
but to instruct us in humility. When therefore he says, "as a man," this is
what He means; since he calls Him a man elsewhere also, when he says, "there is
one God, one Mediator also between God and men, Himself man, Christ Jesus." (1
Tim. ii. 5.)
Thus much against these heretics. I must now speak against such as deny
that He took a soul.[4] If "the form of God" is "perfect God," then the "form of
a servant" is "a perfect servant." Again, against the Arians. Here concerning
His divinity, we no longer find "He became," "He took," but "He emptied Himself,
taking the form of a servant, being made in the likeness of men"; here
concerning his humanity we find "He took, He became." He became the latter, He took
the latter; He was the former. Let us not then confound nor divide the natures.
There is one God, there is one Christ, the Son of God; when I say" One," I mean
a union, not a confusion ; the one Nature did not degenerate into the other,
but was united with it.
"He humbled Himself, becoming obedient unto death, yea, the death of the
cross." See, says one, He voluntarily became obedient; he was not equal to Him
whom He obeyed. O ye obstinate ones and unwise! This cloth not at all lower Him.
For we too become obedient to our friends, yet this has no effect. He became
obedient as a Son to His Father; He fell not thus into a servile state, but by
this very act above all others guarded his wondrous Sonship, by thus greatly
honoring the Father. He honored the Father, not that thou shouldest dishonor Him,
but that thou shouldest the rather admire Him, and learn from this act, that He
is a true Son, in honoring His Father more than all besides. No one hath thus
honored God. As was His height, such was the correspondent humiliation which He
underwent. As He is greater than all, and no one is equal to Him, so in
honoring His Father, He surpassed all, not by necessity, nor unwillingly, but this
too is part of His excellence; yea, words fail me. Truly it is a great and
unspeakable thing, that He became a servant; that He underwent death, is far greater;
but there is something still greater, and more strange; why? All deaths are
not alike; His death scented to be the most ignominious of all, to be full of
shame, to be accursed; for it is written, "Cursed is every one that hangeth on a
tree." (Deut. xxi. 23; Gal. iii. 13.) For this cause the Jews also eagerly
desired to slay Him in this manner, to make Him a reproach, that if no one fell away
from Him by reason of His death, yet they might from the manner of His death.
For this cause two robbers were crucified with Him, and He in the midst, that
He might share their ill repute, and that the Scripture might be fulfilled, "And
he was numbered with the transgressors." (Isa. liii. 12.) Yet so much the more
doth truth shine forth, so much the more doth it become bright; for when His
enemies plot such things against His glory, and it yet shines forth, so much the
greater does the matter seem. Not by slaying Him, but by slaying Him in such
sort did they think to make Him abominable, to prove Him more abominable than
all men, but they availed nothing. And both the robbers also were such impious
ones, (for it was afterward that the one repented,) that, even when on the cross,
they reviled Him; neither the consciousness of their own sins, nor their
present punishment, nor their suffering the same things themselves, restrained their
madness. Wherefore the one spake to the other, and silenced him by saying,
"Dost thou not even fear God, seeing thou art in the same condemnation?" (Luke
xxiii. 40.) So great was their wickedness. Wherefore it is written, "God also
highly exalted Him, and gave Him the Name which is above every name." When the
blessed Paul hath made mention of the flesh, he fearlessly speaks of all His
humiliation. For until he had mentioned that He took the form of a servant, and while
he was speaking of His Divinity, behold how loftily he doth it, (loftily, I
say, according to his power; for he speaks not according to His own worthiness,
seeing that he is not able). "Being in the form of God, He counted it not a
prize to be equal with God." But when he had said, that He became Man, henceforth
he fearlessly discourseth of His low estate, being confident that the mention of
His low estate would not harm His Divinity, since His flesh admitted this.
Ver. 9-11. "Wherefore also God highly exalted Him, and gave Him the Name
which is above every name: that in the Name of Jesus every knee should bow, of
things in heaven, and things in earth, and things under the earth; and that
every tongue should confess that Jesus Christ is Lord, to the glory of God the
Father." Let us say against the heretics, If this is spoken of one who was not
incarnate, if of God the Word, how did He highly exalt Him? Was it as if He gave
Him something more than He had before? He would then have been imperfect in this
point, and would have been made perfect for our sakes. For if He had not done
good deeds to us, He would not have obtained that honor! "And gave Him the
Name." See, He had not even a name, as you say! But how, if He received it as His
due, is He found here to have received it by grace, and as a gift? And that "the
Name which is above every name": and of what kind, let us see, is the Name?
"That at the Name of Jesus," saith He, "every knee should bow." They (the
heretics) explain name by glory. This glory then is above all glory, and this glory is
in short that all worship Him! But ye hold yourselves far off from the
greatness of God, who think that ye know God, as He knoweth Himself, and from this it
is plain, how far off ye are from right thoughts of God. And this is plain from
hence. Is this, tell me, glory? Therefore before men were created before the
angels or the archangels, He was not in glory. If this be the glory which is
above every glory, for this is the name that is "above every name,") though He
were in glory before, yet was He in glory inferior to this. It was for this then
that He made the things that are, that He might be raised to glory, not from His
own goodness, but because He required glory from us! See ye not their folly?
see ye not their impiety?
Now if they had said this of Him that was incarnate, there had been
reason, for God the Word allows that this be said of His flesh. It touches not His
divine nature, but has to do altogether with the dispensation. What means "of
things in heaven, and things in the earth, and things under the earth "? It means
the whole world, and angels, and men, and demons; or that both the just and the
living and sinners,
"And every tongue," should "confess that Jesus Christ is Lord, to the
glory of God the Father." That is, that all should say so; and this is glory to the
Father. Seest thou how wherever the Son is glorified, the Father is also
glorified? Thus too when the Son is dishonored, the Father is dishonored also. If
this be so with us, where the difference is great between fathers and sons, much
more in respect of God, where there is no difference, doth honor and insult
pass on to Him. If the world be subjected to the Son, this is glory to the Father.
And so when we say that He is perfect, wanting nothing, and not inferior to
the Father, this is glory to the Father, that he begat such a one. This is a
great proof of His power also, and goodness, and wisdom, that He begat one no whit
inferior, neither in wisdom nor in goodness. When I say that He is wise as the
Father, and no whit inferior, this is a proof of the great wisdom of the
Father; when I say that He is powerful as the Father, this is a proof of the Father's
power. When I say that He is good as the Father, this is the greatest evidence
of His goodness, that He begat such (a Son), in no whir less or inferior to
Himself. When I say that He begat Him not inferior in substance but equal, and
not of another substance, in this I again wonder at God, His power, and goodness,
and wisdom, that He hath manifested to us another, of Himself, such as
Himself, except in His not being the Father. Thus whatsoever great things I say of the
Son, pass on to the Father. Now if this small and light matter (for it is but
a light thing to God's glory that the world should worship Him) is to the glory
of God, how much more so are all those other things?
Let us then believe to His glory, let us live to His glory, for one is no
use without the other; when we glorify Him rightly, but live not rightly, then
do we especially insult Him, because we are enrolled under Him as a Master and
Teacher, and yet despise Him, and stand in no dread of that fearful judgment
seat. It is no wonder that the heathen live impurely; this merits not such
condemnation. But that Christians, who partake in such great mysteries, who enjoy so
great glory, that they should live thus impurely, this is worst of all, and
unbearable. For tell me; He was obedient to the uttermost, wherefore He received
the honor which is on high. He became a servant, wherefore He is Lord of all,
both of Angels, and of all other. Let us too not suppose then that we descend
from what is our due, when we humble ourselves. For thus may we be more highly
exalted; and with reason; then do we especially become admirable. For that the
lofty man is really low, and that the lowly man is exalted, the sentence of
Christ sufficiently declares. Let us however examine the matter itself. What is it
to be humbled? Is it not to be blamed, to be accused, and calumniated? What is
it to be exalted? It is to be honored, to be praised, to be glorified. Well.
Let us see how the matter is. Satan was an angel, he exalted himself. What then?
was he not humbled beyond all other? has he not the earth as his place? is he
not condemned and accused by all? Paul was a man, and humbled himself. What
then? is he not admired? is he not praised? is he not lauded? is he not the friend
of Christ? Wrought he not greater things than Christ? did he not ofttimes
command the devil as a captive slave? did he not carry him about as an
executioner?[1] did he not hold him up to scorn? held he not his head bruised under his
feet? did he not with much boldness beg of God that others too might do the same?
Why am I saying? Absalom exalted himself, David humbled himself; which of the
twain was raised up, which became glorious? For what could be a more evident
proof of humility than these words which that blessed Prophet spoke of Shimei, "Let
him curse, for the Lord hath bidden him." (2 Sam. xvi. 11.) And if you please,
we will examine the very cases themselves.[2] The Publican humbled himself,
although the case can hardly be called humility; but how? He answered in a
right-minded manner. The Pharisee exalted himself. What then? let us also examine the
matters. Let there be two men, both rich, and highly honored, and elevated by
wisdom and power, and other worldly advantages; then let one of them seek honor
from all, let him be angry if he receive it not, let him require more than is
due and exalt himself; let the other despise the whole matter, bear himself
unkindly towards no one on this account, and evade honor when offered to him. For
it is not possible to obtain glory any other way than by fleeing from glory,
for as long as we pursue it, it flies from us, but when we flee from it, then it
pursues us. If thou wouldest be glorious, do not desire glory. If thou wouldest
be lofty, do not make thyself lofty. And further, all honor him who does not
grasp at honor, but spurn him who seeks it. For the human race somehow or other
is fond of contention, and leans to contrary feeling. Let us therefore despise
glory, for thus we shall be enabled to become lowly, or rather to become
exalted. Exalt not thyself, that thou mayest be exalted by another; he that is
exalted by himself is not exalted by others, he who is humbled by himself is not
humbled by others. Haughtiness is a great evil, it is better to be a fool than
haughty; for in the one case, the folly is only a perversion of intellect, but in
the other case it is still worse, and is folly joined with madness: the fool is
an evil to himself; but the haughty man is a plague to others too. This misery
comes of senselessness. One cannot be haughty-minded without being a fool; and
he that is brimfull of folly is haughty.
Listen to the Wise Man, who says, "I saw a man wise in his own conceit;
there is more hope of a fool than of him." (Prov. xxvi. 12.) Seest thou how it
was not without reason I said that the evil of which I am speaking is worse than
that of folly, for it is written, "There is more hope of a fool than of him"?
Wherefore, Paul too said, "Be not wise in your own conceits." (Rom. xii. 16.)
Tell me what description of bodies do we say are in good health, those which are
much inflated, and are inwardly full of much air and water, or those which are
kept low, and have their surface such as marks restraint? It is manifest that
we should choose the latter. So, too with the soul, that which is puffed up has
a worse disease than dropsy, whilst that which is under restraint is freed from
all evil. How great then are the good things which lowliness of mind bringeth
to us! What wouldest thou have? Forbearance? freedom from anger? love to our
fellow-men? soberness? attentiveness? All these good things spring from
lowly-mindedness, and their contraries from haughtiness: the haughty man must needs be
also insolent, a brawler, wrathful, bitter, sullen, a beast rather than a man.
Art thou strong, and proud thereat? Thou shouldest rather be humble on this
account. Why art thou proud for a thing of nought? For even a lion is bolder than
thou, a wild boar is stronger, and thou art not even as a fly in comparison with
them. Robbers too, and violaters of tombs, and gladiators, and even thine own
slaves, and those perchance who are more stupid still, are stronger than thou.
Is this then a fit subject for praise? Art thou proud of such a matter? Bury
thyself for shame!
But art thou handsome and beautiful? This is the boast of crows! Thou art
not fairer than the peacock, as regards either its color or its plumage; the
bird beats thee in plumage, it far surpasseth thee in its feathers and in its
color. The swan too is passing fair, and many other birds, with whom if thou art
compared thou wilt see that thou art nought. Often too worthless boys, and
unmarried girls, and harlots, and effeminate men have had this boast; is this then a
cause for haughtiness? But art thou rich? Whence so? what hast thou? Gold,
silver, precious stones! This is the boast of robbers also, of man-slayers, of
those who work in the mines. That which is the labor of criminals becomes to thee
a boast! But dost thou adorn and deck thyself out? Well, we may see horses also
decked out, and among the Persians camels too, and as for men, all those who
are about the stage. Art thou not ashamed to boast thyself of these things, if
unreasoning animals, and slaves, and man-slayers, and effeminate, and robbers,
and violaters of tombs, share with thee? Dost thou build splendid palaces? and
what of this? Many jackdaws dwell in more splendid houses, and have more noble
retreats. Dost thou not see how many, who were mad after money, have built
houses in fields and desert places, that are retreats for jackdaws? But art thou
proud on account of thy voice. Thou canst by no means sing with clearer and
sweeter tones than the swan or the nightingale. Is it for thy varied knowledge of
arts? But what is wiser than the bee in this; what embroiderer, what painter, what
geometrician, can imitate her works? Is it for the fineness of thy apparel?
But here the spiders beat thee. Is it for the swiftness of thy feet? Again the
first prize is with unreasoning animals, the hare, and the gazelle, and all the
beasts[1] which are not wanting in swiftness of foot. Hast thou traveled much?
Not more than the birds; their transit is more easily made, they have no need of
provisions for the way, nor beasts of burden, for their wings are
all-sufficient for them; this is their vessel, this their beast of burden, this their car,
this is even their wind, in short, all that a man can name. But art thou clear
sighted? Not as the gazelle; not as the eagle. Art thou quick of hearing? the
ass is more so. Of scent? the hound suffers thee not to surpass him. Art thou a
good provider? yet thou art inferior to the ant. Dost thou gather gold? Yet not
as the Indian ants. Art thou proud because of thy health? Unreasoning
creatures are far better than we both in habit of body, and in independence; they fear
no poverty. "Behold the birds of the heaven, that they sow not, neither do they
reap, nor gather into barns." (Matt. vi. 26.) "And surely," He means, "God has
not created the irrational animals superior to ourselves." Dost thou mark what
want of consideration is here? Dost thou observe the lack of all
investigation? Dost thou observe the great advantage which we derive from an investigation
of the points? He, whose mind is lifted up above all men, is found to be even
lower than the irrational creatures.
But we will have pity upon him, and not follow his example; nor because
the limits of our mortal nature are too narrow for his conceit of himself, will
we proceed to lower him to the level of the beasts that are without reason, but
will lift him up from thence, not for his own sake, for he deserves no better
fate, but that we may set forth the lovingkindness of God, and the honor which.
He has vouchsafed us. For there are things, yes, there are things wherein the
irrational animals have no participation with us. And of what sort are these?
Piety, and a life based on virtue. Here thou canst never speak of fornicators,
nor of effeminate persons, nor of murderers, for from them we have been severed.
And what then is this which is found here? We know God, His Providence we
acknowledge, and are embued with true philosophy concerning immortality. Here let
the irrational animals give place. They cannot contend with us in these points.
We live in self-command.[1] Here the irrational animals have nothing in common
with us. For, while coming behind all of them, we exercise dominion over them;
for herein lies the superiority of our dominion, that, while coming behind them,
we yet reign over them: that thou mightest be instructed that the cause of
these things is, not thyself, but God who made thee, and gave thee reason. We set
nets and toils for them, we drive them in, and they are at our mercy.
Self-command, a compliant temper, mildness, contempt of money, are
prerogatives of our race; but since thou who art one o those blinded by presumption
hast none of these, thou doest well in entertaining notions either above the
level of mankind, or beneath the very irrational creatures. For this is the nature
of folly and of audacity; it is either unduly elevated, or on the other hand it
is equally depressed, never observing a proper proportion. We are equal to
angels in this respect, that we have a Kingdom pledged to us, the choir,[2] unto
which Christ is joined. He that is a man may be scourged, yet does he not
succumb. A man laughs at death, is a stranger to fear and trembling, he does not
covet more than he has. So that they all who are not like this are beneath the
irrational animals. For when in the things of the body thou wouldest have the
advantage, but hast no advantage in the things that concern the soul, how art thou
aught else than inferior to the irrational animals? For bring forward one of the
vicious and unthinking, of those that are living in excess and to self. The
horse surpasses him in warlike spirit, the boar in strength, the hare in
swiftness, the peacock in grace, the swan in fineness of voice, the elephant in size,
the eagle in keenness of sight, all birds in wealth. Whence then dost thou
derive thy title to rule the irrational creatures? from reason? But thou hast it
not? For whosoever ceases to make a due use of it, is again inferior to them; for
when though possessing reason he is more irrational than they, it had been
better if he had never from the first become capable of exercising reason. For it
is not the same thing after having received dominion to betray the trust, as to
let pass the season to receive it. That sovereign, who is below the level of
his guards, had better never have had on the purple. And it is the very self-same
thing in this case. Knowing then that without virtue we are inferior to the
very irrational animals, let us exercise ourselves therein, that we may become
men, yea rather angels, and that we may enjoy the promised blessings, through the
grace and lovingkindness of our Lord Jesus Christ, with whom, &c.
HOMILY VIII.
PHILIPPIANS ii. 12-16.
"So then, my beloved, even as ye have always obeyed, not as in my presence
only, but now much more in my absence, work out your own salvation with fear and
trembling; for it is God which worketh in you both to will and to work for His
good pleasure. Do all things without murmurings and disputings: that ye may be
blameless and harmless, children of God without blemish in the midst of a
crooked and perverse generation, among whom ye are seen as lights in the world,
holding forth the word of life; that I may have whereof to glory in the day of
Christ."
THE admonitions which we give ought to be accompanied with commendations;
for thus they become even welcome, when we refer those whom we admonish to that
measure of zeal which they have themselves exhibited; as Paul, for instance,
did here; and observe with what singular discretion; "So then, my beloved," he
says; he did not say simply "be obedient," not until he had first commended them
in these words, "even as ye have always obeyed "; i.e. "it is not other men,
but your own selves, whom I bid you take example by." "Not as in my presence
only, but much more in my absence." And why, "much more in my absence"? "Ye seemed
perhaps at that time to be doing everything out of respect to me, and from a
principle of shame, but that is no longer so; if then ye make it evident that ye
now strive more earnestly, it is also made evident that neither then was it
done out of consideration to me, but for God's sake." Tell me, what wouldest
thou? "not that ye give heed to me, but that ye ' work out your own salvation with
fear and trembling'"; for it is impossible for one, who lives devoid of fear,
to set forth any high or commanding example; and he said not merely "with fear,"
but "and with trembling," which is an excessive degree of fear. Such fear had
Paul: and therefore he said, I fear "lest having preached to others, I myself
should be rejected." (1 Cor. ix. 27.) For if without the aid of fear temporal
things can never be achieved, how much less spiritual matters; for I desire to
know, who ever learnt his letters without fear? who has become a proficient in
any art, without fear? But if, when the devil does not lie in the way, where
indolence is the only obstacle, so much of fear is necessary merely in order that
we may master that indolence which is natural to us; where there is so fierce a
war, so great hindrances, how can we by any possibility be saved without fear?
And how may this fear be produced? If we but consider that God is everywhere
present, heareth all things, seeth all things, not only whatsoever is done and
said, but also all that is in the heart, and in the depth of the soul, for He is
"quick to discern the thoughts and intents of the heart" (Heb. iv. 12), if we
so dispose ourselves, we shall not do or say or imagine aught that is evil. Tell
me, if thou hadst to stand constantly near the person of a ruler, wouldest not
thou stand there with fear? and how standing in God's presence, dost thou
laugh and throw thyself back, and not conceive fear and dread? Let it never be that
thou despisest His patient endurance, for it is to bring thee to repentance
that He is longsuffering. Whenever thou eatest, consider that God is present, for
He is present; whenever thou art preparing to sleep, or giving way to passion,
if thou art robbing another, or indulging in luxury, or whatever thou art
about, thou wilt never fall into laughter, never be inflamed with rage. If this be
thy thought continually, thou wilt continually be in "fear and trembling,"
forasmuch as thou art standing beside the King. The architect, though he be
experienced, though he be perfectly master of his art, yet stands with "fear and
trembling," lest he fall down from the building. Thou too hast believed, thou hast
performed many good deeds, thou hast mounted high: secure thyself, be in fear as
thou standest, and keep a wary eye, lest thou fall thence. For manifold are
the spiritual sorts of wickedness which aim to cast thee down. (Eph. vi. 12.)
"Sense the Lord with fear," he says, "and rejoice unto Him with trembling." (Ps.
ii. 11.) And how is rejoicing compatible with "trembling"? Yet this, be assured,
is the only rejoicing; for when we perform some good work, and such as
beseemeth those who do anything "with trembling," then only do we rejoice. "Work out
your own salvation with fear and trembling": he says not "work," but "work out,"
i.e. with much earnestness, with much diligence; but as he had said, "with
fear and trembling," see how he relieves their anxiety: for what does he say? "It
is God that worketh in you." Fear not because said, "with fear and trembling."
I said it not with this view, that thou shouldest give up in despair, that thou
shouldest suppose virtue to be somewhat difficult to be attained, but that
thou mightest be led to follow after it, and not spend thyself in vain pursuits;
if this be the case, God will work all things. Do thou be bold; "for it is God
that worketh in you." If then He worketh, it is our part to bring a mind ever
resolute, clenched and unrelaxed. "For it is God that worketh in you both to will
and to work." "If He does Himself work in us to will, how dost thou exhort us?
for if He works Himself even the will, the words, which you speak to us, have
no meaning, 'that ye have obeyed'; for we have not 'obeyed'; it is without
meaning that thou sayest, 'with fear and trembling'; for the whole is of God." It
was not for this that I said to you, "for it is He that worketh in you both to
will and to work," but my object was to relieve your anxiety. If thou wilt, in
that case He will "work in thee to will." Be not affrighted, thou art
not-worsted; both the hearty desire and the accomplishment are a gift from Him: for where
we have the will, thenceforward He will increase our will. For instance, I
desire to do some good work: He has wrought the good work itself, and by means of
it He has wrought also the will. Or he says this in the excess of his piety, as
when he declares that our well-doings are gifts of grace.
As then, when he calls these gifts, he does not put us out of the pale of
free will, but accords to us free will, so when he says, "to work in us to
will," he does not deprive us of free will, but he shows that by actually doing
right we greatly increase our heartiness in willing. For as doing comes of doing,
so of not doing comes not doing. Hast thou given an alms? thou art the more
incited to give. Hast thou refused to give? thou art become so much the more
disinclined. Hast thou practiced temperance for one day? Thou hast an incitement for
the next likewise. Hast thou indulged to excess? Thou hast increased the
inclination to self-indulgence. "When a wicked man cometh into the depth of vice,
then he despises." (Prov. xviii. 3.) As, then, when a man cometh into the depth
of iniquity, he turns a despiser; so when he cometh into the depth of goodness,
he quickens his exertions. For as the one runs riot in despair, so the second,
under a sense of the multitude of good things, exerts himself the more,
fearing lest he should lose the whole. "For His good pleasure," he says, that is,
"for love's sake," for the sake of pleasing Him; to the end that what is
acceptable to Him may take place; that things may take place according to His will. Here
he shows, and makes it a ground of confidence, that He is sure to work in us,
for it is His will that we live as He desires we should, and if He desires it,
He Himself both worketh in us to this end,[1] and will certainly accomplish it;
for it is His will that we live aright. Seest thou, how he does not deprive us
of free will?
"Do all things without murmurings and disputings." The devil, when he
finds that he has no power to withdraw us from doing right, wishes to spoil our
reward by other means. For he has taken occasion to insinuate pride or vainglory,
or if none of these things, then murmuring, or, if not this, misgivings. Now
then see how Paul sweeps away all these. He said on the subject of humility all
that he did say, to overthrow pride; he spoke of vainglory, that is, "not as in
my presence only"; he here speaks of "murmuring and disputing." But why, I want
to know, when in the case of the Corinthians he was engaged in uprooting this
evil tendency, did he remind them of the Israelites, but here has said nothing
of the sort, but simply charged them? Because in that case the mischief was
already done, for which reason there was need of a more severe stroke and a
sharper rebuke; but here he is giving admonitions to prevent its being done. Severe
measures then were not called for in order to secure those that had not yet been
guilty; as in leading them to humility he did not subjoin the instance in the
Gospel, wherein the proud were punished, but laid the charge as from God's lips
(Luke xvi. 237 xviii. 14?); and he addresses them as free, as children of pure
birth, not as servants; for in the practice of virtue a rightminded and
generous person is influenced by those who do well, but one of bad principles by
those who do not do well; the one by the consideration of honor, the other of
punishment. Wherefore also writing to the Hebrews, he said, bringing forward the
example of Esau, "Who for one mess of meat sold his own birthright" (Heb. xii.
16); and again, "if he shrink back, my soul hath no pleasure in him." (Heb. x.
38.) And among the Corinthians were many who had been guilty of fornication.
Therefore he said, "Lest when I come again my God should humble me before you, and I
should mourn for many that have sinned heretofore, and repented not of the
uncleanness, and fornication, and lasciviousness which they committed. (2 Cor.
xii. 21.) That ye may be blameless," says he, "and harmless"; i.e. irreproachable,
unsullied; for murmuring occasions no slight stain. And what means "without
disputing"? Is it good, or not good? Do not dispute, he says, though it be
trouble, or labor, or any thing else whatever. He did not say, "that ye be not
punished," for punishment is reserved for the thing; and this he made evident in the
Epistle to the Corinthians; but here he said nothing of the sort; but he says,
"That ye may be blameless and harmless, children of God without blemish, in the
midst of a crooked and perverse generation, among whom ye are seen as lights
in the world, holding forth the word of life, that I may have whereof to glory
in the day of Christ." Observest thou that he is instructing these not to
murmur? So that murmuring is left for unprincipled and graceless slaves. For tell me,
what manner of son is that, who murmurs at the very time that he is employed
in the affairs of his father and is working for his own benefit? Consider he
says, that you are laboring for yourself, that it is for yourself that you are
laying up; it is for those to murmur, when others profit by their labors, others
reap the fruit, while they bear the burden; but he that is gathering for
himself, why should he murmur? Because his wealth does not increase? But it is not so.
Why does he murmur who acts of free-will, and not by constraint? It is better
to do nothing than to do it with murmuring, for even the very thing itself is
spoilt. And do you not remark that in our own families we are continually saying
this; "it were better for these things never to be done, than to have them
done with murmuring"? and we had often rather be deprived of the services some one
owes us, than submit to the inconvenience of his murmuring. For murmuring is
intolerable, most intolerable; it borders upon blasphemy. Otherwise why had
those men to pay a penalty so severe? It is a proof of ingratitude; the murmurer is
ungrateful to God, but whoso is ungrateful to God does thereby become a
blasphemer. Now there were at that time, if ever, uninterrupted troubles, and dangers
without cessation: there was no pause, no remission: innumerable were the
horrors, which pressed upon them from all quarters; but now we have profound peace,
a perfect calm.
Wherefore then murmur? Because thou art poor? Yet think of Job. Or because
sickness is thy lot? What then if, with the consciousness of as many
excellencies and as high attainments as that holy man, thou hadst been so afflicted?
Again reflect on him, how that for a long time he never ceased to breed worms,
sitting upon a dunghill and scraping his sores; for the account says that "(after
a long time had passed,) then said his wife unto him, How long wilt thou
persist, saying, Yet a little while I bide in expectation? Speak some word against
the Lord, and die."[1] (Job ii. 9, LXX.) But your child is dead? What then if
thou hadst lost all thy children, and that by an evil fate, as he did? For ye
know, ye know well, that it is no slight alleviation to take our place beside the
sick man, to close the mouth, to shut the eyes, to stroke the beard, to hear the
last accents; but that just man Was vouchsafed none of these consolations,
they all being overwhelmed at once. And what do I say? Hadst thou, thine own self,
been bidden to slay and offer up thine own son, and to see the body consumed,
like that blessed Patriarch, what then wouldst thou have felt whilst erecting
the altar, laying on the wood, binding the child? But there are some who revile
thee? What then would be thy feelings did thy friends, come to administer
consolation to thee, speak like Job's? For, as it is, innumerable are our sins, and
we deserve to be reproached; but in that case he who was true, just, godly, who
kept himself from every evil deed, heard the contrary of those laid to his
charge by his friends. What then, tell me, if thou hadst heard thy wife exclaiming
in accents of reproach; "I am a vagabond and a servant, wandering from place
to place, and from house to house, waiting until the sun goes down, that I may
rest from the woes that encompass me." (Job ii. 9, LXX.) Why dost thou speak so,
O foolish woman? for is thine husband to blame for these things? Nay, but the
devil. "Speak a word against God," she says, "and die";--and if thereupon the
stricken man had cursed and died, how wouldest thou be the better?--No disease
you can name is worse than that of his, though you name ten thousand. It was so
grievous, that he could no longer be in the house and under cover; such, that
all men gave him up. For if he had not been irrecoverably gone, he would never
have taken his seat without the city, a more pitiable object than those
afflicted with leprosy; for these are both admitted into houses, and they do herd
together; but he passing the night in the open air, was naked upon a dunghill, and
could not even bear a garment upon his body. How so? Perhaps there would only
have been an addition to his pangs. For "I melt the clods of the earth," he says,
"while I scrape off my sore."[2] (Job vii. 5, LXX.) His flesh bred sores and
worms in him, and that continually. Seest thou how each one of us sickens at the
hearing of these things? but if they are intolerable to hear, is the sight of
them more tolerable? and if the sight of them is intolerable, how much more
intolerable to undergo them? And yet that righteous man did undergo them, not for
two or three days, but for a long while, and he did not sin, not even with his
lips. What disease can you describe to me like this, so exquisitely painful?
for was not this worse than blindness? "I look on my food," he says, "as a fetid
mass." (Job vi. 7.) And not only this, but that which affords cessation to
others, night and sleep, brought no alleviation to him, nay, were worse than any
torture. Hear his words: "Why dost thou scare me with dreams, and terrify me
through visions? If it be morning, I say, When will it be evening?" (Job vii. 14,
4), and he murmured not. And there was not only this; but reputation in the eyes
of the world was added; for they forthwith concluded him to be guilty of
endless crimes, judging from all that he suffered. And accordingly this is the
consideration, which his friends urged upon him; "Know therefore that God exacteth
less of thee than thine iniquities deserve." (Job xi. 6.) Wherefore he himself
said, "But now they that are younger than I have me in derision, whose fathers I
disdained to set with the dogs of my flock." (Job xxx. 1.) And was not this
worse than many deaths? Yet though assaulted on all sides by a flood like this,
when there raged around him a fearful storm, clouds, rain, lightnings, whirling
winds, and waterspouts, he remained himself unmoved, seated as it were in the
midst of this surge, thus awful and overwhelming, as in a perfect calm, and no
murmur escaped him; and this before the gift of grace, before that aught was
declared concerning a resurrection, before aught concerning hell and punishment
and vengeance. Yet we, who hear both Prophets and Apostles and Evangelists
speaking to us, and have innumerable examples set before us, and have been taught the
tidings of a Resurrection, yet harbor discontent, though no man can say that
such a fate as this has been his own. For if one has lost money, yet not all
that great number of sons and daughters, or if he has, perchance it was that he
had sinned; but for him, he lost them suddenly, in the midst of his sacrifices,
in the midst of the service which he was rendering to God. And if any man has at
one blow lost property to the same amount, which can never be, yet he has not
had the further affliction of a sore all over his body, he has not scraped the
humors that covered him; or if this likewise has been his fate, yet he has not
had men to upbraid and reproach him, which is above all things calculated to
wound the feelings, more than the calamities we suffer. For if when we have
persons to cheer and console us in our misfortunes, and to hold out to us fair
prospects, we yet despond, consider what it was to have men upbraiding him. If the
words, "I looked for some to have pity, but there was no man, and for
comforters, but I found none" (Ps. lxix. 20), describe intolerable misery, how great an
aggravation to find revilers instead of comforters! "Miserable comforters are
ye all" (Job xvi. 2), he says. If we did but revolve these subjects
continually in our minds, if we well weighed them, no ills of this present time could
ever have force to disturb our peace, when we turned our eyes to that athlete,
that soul of adamant, that spirit impenetrable as brass. For as though he had
borne about him a body of brass or stone, he met all events with a noble and
constant spirit.
Taking these things to heart, let us do everything "without murmuring and
disputing." Is it some good work that thou hast before thee, and dost thou
murmur? wherefore? art thou then forced? for that there are many about you who
force you to murmur, I know well, says he. This he intimated by saying, "in the
midst of a crooked and perverse generation"; but it is this that deserves
admiration, that we admit no such feeling when under galling provocation. For the stars
too give light in the night, they shine in the dark, and receive no blemish to
their own beauty, yea they even shine the brighter; but when light returns,
they no longer shine so. Thus thou too dost appear with the greater lustre,
whilst thou holdest straight in the midst of the crooked. This it is which deserves
our admiration, the being "blameless "; for that they might not urge this
plea,[1] he himself set it down by anticipation. What means "holding fast the word
of life"? i.e. "being destined to live, being of those that are gaining
salvation."[2] Observe how immediately he subjoins the rewards, which are in reserve.
Lights[i.e. luminaries], he says, retain the principle of light; so do ye the
principle[3] of life. What means "the word of life"? Having the seed of life,
i.e. having pledges of life, holding life itself, i.e. "having in yourselves the
seed of life," this is what he calls "the word of life." Consequently the rest
are all dead, for by these words he signified as much; for otherwise those
others likewise would have held "the word of life." "That I may have whereof to
glory," he says; what is this? I too participate in your good deeds, he says. So
great is your virtue, as not only to save yourselves, but to render me
illustrious. Strange kind of "boasting," thou blessed Paul! Thou art scourged, driven
about, reviled for our sakes: therefore he adds," in the day of Christ, that I did
not run," he says, "in vain, nor labored in vain," but I always have a right
to glory, he means, that I did not run in vain.
"Yea, and if I am offered." He said not, "and if I die even," nor did he
when writing to Timothy, for there, too, he has made use of the same expression,
"For I am already being offered." (2 Tim. iv. 6.) He is both consoling them
about his own death, and instructing them to bear gladly the death that is for
Christ's sake. I am become, he says, as it were a libation and a sacrifice. O
blessed soul! His bringing them to God he calls a sacrifice. It is much better to
present a soul than to present oxen. "If, then, over and above this offering,"
he says, "I add myself, my death as a libation, I rejoice." For this he
implies, when he says, "Yea, and if I am offered upon the sacrifice and service, I joy
and rejoice with you all; and in the same manner do ye also joy and rejoice
with me." Why dost thou rejoice with them? Seest thou that he shows that it is
their duty to rejoice? On the one hand then, I rejoice in being made a libation;
on the other, I rejoice with you, in having presented a sacrifice; "and in the
same manner do ye also joy and rejoice with me," that I am offered up; "rejoice
with me, "who rejoice in myself." So that the death of the just is no subject
for tears, but for joy. If they rejoice, we should rejoice with them. For it is
misplaced for us to weep, while they rejoice. "But," it is urged, "we long for
our wonted intercourse." This is a mere pretext and excuse; and that it is so,
mark what he enjoins: "Rejoice with me, and joy." Dost thou miss thy wonted
intercourse? If thou wert thyself destined to remain here, there would be reason
in what thou sayest; but if after a brief space thou wilt overtake him who has
departed, what is that intercourse which thou dost seek? for it is only when he
is forever severed from him that a man misses the society of another, but if
he will go the same way that thou wilt go, what is the intercourse which thou
longest for? Why do we not bewail all that are upon foreign travel? Do we not
just a little, and cease after the first or the second day? If thou longest for
thy wonted intercourse with him, weep so far only. "It is no evil that I suffer,"
says he, "but I even rejoice in going to Christ, and do ye not rejoice."
"Rejoice with me." Let us too rejoice when we see a righteous man dying, and yet
more even when any of the desperately wicked; for the first is going to receive
the reward of his labors, but the other has abated somewhat from the score of his
sins.[1] But it is said, perhaps he might have altered, had he lived. Yet God
would never have taken him away, if there had been really a prospect of an
alteration. For why should not He who orders all events for our salvation, allow
him the opportunity, who gave promise of pleasing Him? If He leaves those, who
never alter, much more those that do. Let then the sharpness of our sorrow be
everywhere cut away, let the voice of lamentation cease. Let us thank God under
all events: let us do all things without murmuring; let us be cheerful, and let
us become pleasing to Him in all things, that we may also attain the good things
to come, by the grace and loving-kindness of our Lord Jesus Christ, with whom,
&c.