HOMILIES OF ST. JOHN CHRYSOSTOM ON THE EPISTLE OF ST. PAUL THE APOSTLE TO THE
PHILIPPIANS, HOMILIES IX TO XII (CHAPTERS 2 & 3)
HOMILY IX.
PHILIPPIANS ii. 19--21.
"But I hope in the Lord Jesus to send Timothy shortly unto you, that I also
may be of good comfort, when I know your state. For I have no man likeminded, who
will care truly for your state. For they all seek their own, not the things of
Jesus Christ."
HE had said, "have fallen out unto the progress of the Gospel; so that my
bonds became manifest in Christ throughout the whole praetorian guard." (Phil.
i. 12, 13.) Again, "Yea, and if I am offered upon the sacrifice and service of
your faith." (Phil. ii. 17.) By these words he strengthened them. Perchance
they might suspect that his former words were spoken just to comfort them. What
then? "I send Timothy unto you," says he; for they desired to hear all things
that concerned him. And wherefore said he not, "that ye may know my state," but,
"that I may know yours"? Because Epaphroditus would have reported his state
before the arrival of Timothy. Wherefore further on he says, "But I counted it
necessary to send to you Epaphroditus, my brother (Phil. ii. 25); but I wish to
learn of your affairs. For it is likely that he had remained long time with Paul
through his bodily weakness. So that he says, I wish to "know your state." See
then how he refers everything to Christ, even the mission of Timothy, saying, "I
hope in the Lord Jesus," that is, I am confident that God will facilitate this
for me, that I too may be of good courage, when I know your state. As I
refreshed you when ye heard the very things of me which ye had prayed for, that the
Gospel had advanced, that its enemies were put to shame, that the means by which
they thought to injure, rather made me rejoice; thus too do I wish to learn of
your affairs, that I too may be of good courage when I know your state. Here
he shows that they ought to rejoice (or his bonds, and to be conformed to them,
for they begat in him great pleasure; for the words, "that I too may be of good
comfort," imply, just as you are.
Oh, what longing had he toward Macedonia He testifies the same to the
Thessalonians, as when he says, "But we, brethren, being bereaved of[1] you for a
short season," &c. (1 Thess. ii. 17.) And here he says, "I hope to send Timothy"
that I may "know your state," which is a proof of excessive care: for when he
could not himself be with them, he sent his disciples, as he could not endure
to remain, even for a little time, in ignorance of their state. For he did not
learn all things by revelation of the Spirit, and for this we can see some
reason; for if the disciples had believed that it were so, they would have lost all
sense of shame,[2] but now from expectation of concealment, they were more
easily corrected. In a high degree did he call their attention by saying, "that I
too may be of good comfort," and rendered them more zealous, so that, when
Timothy came he might not find any other state of things, and report it to him. He
seems to have acted in like sort in his own person, when he delayed his coming
to the Corinthians, that they might repent; wherefore he wrote, "to spare you I
forbare to come to Corinth." (2 Cor. i. 23.) For his love was manifested not
simply in reporting his own state, but in his desire to learn of theirs; for this
is the part of a soul which has a care of others, which takes thought for
them, which is always wrestling for them.
At the same time too, he honors them by sending Timothy. "What sayest
thou? dost thou send Timothy? and wherefore?" Because "I have no one likeminded";
that is, none of those whose care is like mine, none who "will care truly for
you." (Phil. ii. 20.) Had he then no one of those who were with him? No one
likeminded, that is, who has yearnings and takes thought for you as I do. No one
would lightly choose, he means, to make so long a journey for this purpose.
Timothy is the one with me who loves you? For I might have sent others, but there was
none like him. This then is that likemindedness, to love the disciples as the
master loves them. "Who," says he, "will truly care for you," that is, as a
father. "For they all seek their own, not the things of Jesus Christ" (Phil. ii.
21), their own comfort, their own safety. This too he writes to Timothy. But why
doth he lament such things as these? To teach us his hearers not to fall in
like sort, to teach his hearers not to seek for remission from toil; for he who
seeks remission from toil, seeks not the things that are Christ's, but his own.
We ought to be prepared against every toil, against every distress.
Ver. 22. "Ye know the proof of him, that as a child serveth a father, so
he served with me in furtherance of the Gospel."
And that I speak not at random, "ye yourselves," he says, "know, that as a
child serveth a father, so he served with me in furtherance of the Gospel." He
presents then Timothy to them, and with reason, that he might enjoy much honor
from them. This too he does when he writes to the Corinthians, and he says,
"Let no man therefore despise him, for he worketh the work of the Lord as I also
do." (1 Cor. xvi. 10.) This he said not as caring for him, but for those who
receive him, that they might receive a great reward.
Ver. 23. "Him therefore," he says, "I hope to send forthwith, so soon as I
shall see how it will go with me," that is, when I see where I stand, and what
end my affairs will have.
Ver. 24. "But I trust in the Lord that I also myself shall come to you
shortly."
I am not therefore sending him, as though I myself would not come, but
that I may be of good courage when I know your state, that even in the mean time I
may not be ignorant of it. "But I trust in the Lord," says he. See how he
makes all things depend on God, and speaks nothing of his own mind. That is, God
willing.[4]
Ver. 25. "But I counted it necessary to send to you Epaphroditus, my
brother, and fellow-worker, and fellow-soldier."
And him too he sends with the same praises as Timothy, for he commended
him on these two points; first, in that he loved them, when he says, "who will
care truly for you "; and secondly, in that he had approved himself in the
Gospel. And for the same reason, and in the same terms, he praises this man also: and
how? By calling him a brother, and a fellow-worker, and not stopping at this
point, but also "fellow-soldier," he showed how he shared in his dangers, and
testifies of him the same things which he testifies of himself. For
"fellow-soldier" is more than "fellow-worker "; for perchance he gave aid in quiet matters,
yet not so in wars and dangers; but in saying "fellow-soldier," he showed this
too.
Ver. 25. "To send to you your messenger, and minister to my needs"; that
is, I give you your own, since I send to you him that is your own, or, perhaps,
that is your Teacher.[1] Again he adds many things concerning his love, in
saying,
Ver. 26, 27. "Since he longed after you all, and was sore troubled,
because ye had heard that he was sick. For indeed he was sick nigh unto death: but
God had mercy on him; and not on him only, but on me also, that I might not have
sorrow upon sorrow."
Here he aims at a farther point, making it manifest, that Epaphroditus too
was well aware, how he was beloved of them. And this is no light thing toward
loving. You know how he was sick, he says; and he grieved that on his recovery
he did not see you, and free you from the grief ye had by reason of his
sickness. Here too he gives another reason for sending so late to them, not from any
remissness, but he kept Timothy because he had no one else, (for, as he had
written, he had "no one likeminded,") and Epaphroditus because of his sickness. He
then shows that this was a long sickness, and had consumed much time, by
adding, "for he was sick nigh unto death." You see how anxious Paul is to cut off
from his disciples all occasion of slighting or contempt, and every suspicion that
his not coming was because he despised them. For nothing will have such power
to draw a disciple toward one, as the persuasion that his superior cares for
him, and that he is full of heaviness on his account, for this is the part of
exceeding love. Because "ye have heard," he says, "that he was sick; for he was
sick nigh unto death." And that I am not making an excuse, hear what follows.
"But God had mercy on him." What sayest thou, O heretic? Here it is written, that
God's mercy retained and brought back again him who was on the point of
departure. And yet if the world is evil, it is no mercy to leave a man in the evil.
Our answer to the heretic is easy, but what shall we say to the Christian? for he
perchance will question, and say, "if to depart and to be with Christ is far
better," how saith he that he hath obtained mercy? I would ask why the same
Apostle says, that "it is more needful to abide with you"?[2] For as it was needful
for him, so too for this man, who would hereafter depart to God with more
exceeding riches, and greater boldness. Hereafter that would take place, even if it
did not now, but the winning souls is at an end for those who have once
departed thither. In many places too, Paul speaks according to the common habits of
his hearers, and not every where in accordance with his own heavenly wisdom: for
he had to speak to men of the world who still feared death. Then he shows how
he esteemed Epaphroditus, and thence he gets for him respect, by saying, that
his preservation was so useful to himself, that the mercy which had been shown
to Epaphroditus reached him also. Moreover, without this the present life is a
good; were it not so, why does Paul rank with punishment untimely deaths? as
when he says, "For this cause many are weak and sickly among you, and not a few
sleep" (1 Cor. xi. 30); for the future life is not (merely) better than an evil
state, since (then) it were not good, but better than a good state.
"Lest I should have," he says, "sorrow upon sorrow"; sorrow from his death
in addition to that which sprung from his sickness. By this he shows how much
he prized Epaphroditus.
Ver. 28. "I have sent him therefore the more diligently." What means "more
diligently"? It is, without procrastination, without delay, with much speed,
having bidden him lay all aside, and to go to you, that he might be freed from
heaviness; for we rejoice not on hearing of the health of those we love, so much
as when we see them, and chiefly so when this happens contrary to hope, as it
was in the case of Epaphroditus.
"I have sent him therefore the more diligently, that when ye see him
again, ye may rejoice, and that I may be the less sorrowful." How "less sorrowful"?
Because if ye rejoice, I too rejoice, and he too joys at a pleasure of such
sort, and I shall be "less sorrowful." He said not sorrowless, but "less
sorrowful," to show that his soul never was free from sorrow: for he who said, "Who is
weak, and I am not weak? who is made to stumble, and I burn not?" (2 Cor. xi.
29), when could such an one be free from sorrow? That is, this despondency I now
cast off.
Ver. 29. "Receive him therefore in the Lord with all joy."
"In the Lord" either means spiritually and with much zeal, or rather "in
the Lord" means God willing. Receive him in a manner worthy of saints, as saints
should be received with all joy.
All this he does for their sakes, not for that of his messengers, for
greater gain has the doer than the receiver of a good deed. "And such hold in
honor," that is, receive him in a manner worthy of saints.
Ver. 30. "Because for the work of Christ he came nigh unto death,
hazarding his life, to supply that which was lacking in your service towards me."
This man had been publicly sent by the city of the Philippians, who had
come as minister to Paul, and perchance bringing him some contribution, for
toward the end of the Epistle he shows that he also brought him money, when he says,
"Having received of Epaphroditus the things that came from you." (Phil. iv.
18.)
It is probable then, that on his arrival at the city of Rome, he found
Paul in great and urgent peril, so that those who were accustomed to resort to him
were unable safely to do so, but were themselves in peril by their very
attendance; which is wont to happen chiefly in very great dangers, and the exceeding
wrath of kings, (for when any one has offended the king, and is cast into
prison, and is strictly guarded, then even his servants are debarred from access,
which probably then befell Paul,) and that Epaphroditus, being of a noble nature,
despised all danger, that he might go in unto him, and minister unto him, and
do everything which need required. He therefore sets forth two facts, by which
he gains for him their respect; the one, that he was in jeopardy well nigh unto
death, he says, for my sake; the other, that in so suffering he was
representing their city, so that the recompense for that his peril would be accounted to
those who sent him, as if the city had sent him as their ambassador, so that a
kind reception of him and approval of what he had done may rather be called a
participation in the things that he had dared. And he said not, "for my sake,"
but obtains the more credit for his words, by saying, "because for the work of
God," since he acted not for my sake, but for God's sake "he was nigh unto
death." What then? though by the providence of God he died not, yet he himself
regarded not his life, and gave himself up to any suffering that might befall him,
so as not to remit his attendance on me. And if he gave himself up to death to
attend on Paul, much more would he have endured this for the Gospel's sake. Or
rather, this also had been for the Gospel's sake, even to have died for Paul.
For we may bind about our brows the crown of martyrdom, not only by refusing to
sacrifice, but such causes as these also make death martyrdom, and if I may say
something startling, these latter do so far more than the former. For he who
dares to face death for the lesser cause, will much rather for the greater. Let
us therefore, when we see the Saints in danger, regard not our life, for it is
impossible without daring ever to perform any noble act, but need is that he who
takes thought beforehand for his safety here, should fall from that which is
to come.
"To supply," he says, "your lack of service toward me." What is this? the
city was not present, but by sending him, it fulfilled through him all service
toward me. He therefore supplied your lack of service, so that for this reason
too he deserves to enjoy much honor, since, what ye all should have done, this
hath he performed on your behalf. Here he shows that there is also a foregoing
service rendered by those in safety to those in danger, for so he speaks of the
lack,[1] and the lack of service. Seest thou the spirit of the Apostle? These
words spring not from arrogance, but from his great care towards them; for he
calls the matter a "service" and a "lack," that they may not be puffed up, but
be moderate, nor think that they have rendered some great thing, but rather be
humble-minded.
For we owe the saints a debt, and are not doing them a favor. For as
supplies are due by those who are in peace and not engaged in war to such as stand
in the army and fight (for these stand on their behoof), thus too is it here.
For if Paul had not taught, who would have cast him into prison? Wherefore we
ought to minister to the Saints. For is it not absurd to contribute to an earthly
king, when engaged in war, all that he wants, as clothing and food, not
according to his need alone, but abundantly, whilst to the King of Heaven, when
engaged in war, and contending against far more bitter foes (for it is written. "our
wrestling is not against flesh and blood") (Eph. vi. 12), we will not supply
urgent necessity? What folly is this! What ingratitude! What base love of gain!
But, as it seems, the fear of man has greater force with us than hell, and the
future torments. For this cause, in truth, all things are turned upside down;
for political affairs are daily accomplished with much earnestness, and one must
not be left behind, whilst of spiritual things there is no account taken at
all; but the things which are demanded of us of necessity, and with compulsion, as
though we were slaves, and against our wills, are laid down by us with much
readiness, while such as are asked from willing minds, and as if from free men,
are again deficient. I speak not against all, but against those who are
behindhand with these supplies· For might not God have made these contributions
compulsory? Yet He would not, for He has more care of you than of those whom you
support. Wherefore He would not that you should contribute of necessity, since there
is no recompense. And yet many of those who stand here are lower minded[2]
than the Jews. Consider how great things the Jews gave, tithes,[3] first-fruits,
tithes again, and again other tithes, and besides this thirteenths, and the
shekel, and no one said, how much they devour; for the more they receive, the
greater is the reward. They say not, They receive much, they are gluttons; which
words I hear now from some. They for their part, while they are building houses,
and buying estates, still think they have nothing; but if any priest is clothed
in dress more bright than usual, and enjoys more than what is necessary for his
sustenance, or has an attendant, that he may not be forced himself to act
unbecomingly, they set the matter down for riches. And in truth we are rich even at
this rate, and they admit it against their will; for we, though we have but
little, are rich, whilst they, though they get everything about them, are poor.
How far shall our folly extend? does it not suffice to our punishment that
we do no good deed, but must we add to it the punishment of evil speaking? For
if what he has were your gifts, you lose your reward by upbraiding him for
what you gave. In a word, if thou didst give it, why dost thou upbraid him? You
have already borne witness to his poverty, by saying that what he has are your
gifts. Why then dost thou upbraid? Thou shouldest not have given, didst thou
intend so to do. But dost thou speak thus, when another gives? It is then more
grievous, in that when thou thyself hast not given, thou upbraidest for another
man's good deeds. How great reward thinkest thou those who are thus spoken of will
receive? It is for God's sake they thus suffer. How and wherefore? Had they so
willed, they might have taken up a trader's life, even though they received it
not from their ancestors. For I hear many speaking thus at random, when we say
that a certain man is poor. Had he willed, they say, he might have been rich,
and then tauntingly add, His father, his grandfather, and I know not who was
so; but now see what a robe he wears! But what? tell me, ought he to go about
naked? You then start nice questionings on these points, but see lest thou thus
speakest against thyself. Listen to that exhortation of Christ, which says,
"Judge not that ye be not judged." (Matt. vii. 1.) He might, it is true, if he had
willed, have led a trader's or a merchant's life, and would surely not have
lacked. But he would not. What then, says one, is he here profited? Tell me, what
is he profited? Does he wear silken robes? Does he proudly clear his way
through the forum with a troop of followers? Is he borne along on horseback? Does he
build houses, having where to dwell? If he act so, I too accuse him, and spare
him not, but declare that he is unworthy of the priesthood. For how can he
exhort others not to spend their time on these superfluities, who cannot advise
himself? But if he has sufficient for support, is he therefore doing wrong? Would
you have him lead a vagabond life, and beg? Wouldest not thou too, his
disciple, be put to shame? But if thy father in the flesh did this, thou wouldest think
shame of the thing. If thy spiritual father be compelled so to do, wilt thou
not veil thy head, and even think thou art sinking into the earth? It is
written, "A father's dishonor is a reproach to the children." (Ecclus. iii. 11.) But
what? Should he perish with famine? This were not like a pious man; for God
willeth it not. But what do they straightway philosophize? It is written, say
they, "Get you no gold, nor silver, nor brass in your purses, neither two coats,
nor yet staves" (Matt. x. 9, 10), whilst these men have three or four garments,
and beds well spread. I am forced now to heave a bitter sigh, and, but that it
had been indecorous, I had wept too! How so? Because we are such curious
searchers into the motes of others, while we feel not the beams in our own eyes. Tell
me, why sayest thou not this to thyself? The answer is, Because the command is
laid only on our Teachers. When then Paul says, "having food and covering we
shall be therewith content" (1 Tim. vi. 8), says he this only to Teachers? By no
means, but to all men; and this is clear, if we will begin farther back. For
what does he say? "Godliness with contentment is great gain ( 1 Tim. vi. 6); for
we brought nothing into this world, it is certain that neither can we carry
anything out" (1 Tim. vi. 7); he then straightway adds, "And having food and
covering, we shall be therewith content; but they that desire to be rich, fall into
a temptation and a snare, and many foolish and hurtful lusts." (1 Tim. vi. 8,
9.) You see that this is spoken to all; and how is it when he says again, "Make
not provision for the flesh to fulfill the lusts thereof" (Rom. xiii. 14), is
not this said absolutely to all? and what when he says, "Meats for the belly,
and the belly for meats, but God shall bring to nought both it and them" ( 1 Cor.
vi. 13); or what when he says, "But she that giveth herself to pleasure, is
dead while she liveth" (1 Tim. v. 6), speaking of a widow. Is then the widow a
Teacher? Has not he said himself, "But I permit not a woman to teach, nor to have
dominion over a man"? (1 Tim. ii. 12.) But if a widow, in old age, (and age
has need of great attendance,) and a woman's nature too, (for the woman's sex,
being weak, has need of more refreshment,) if then,where there is both the age
and the nature, he suffers her not to live in luxury, but even says that she is
dead, (for he did not simply forbid a life of luxury, but said, "she who giveth
herself to luxury is dead while she liveth,") and thus hath cut her off, (for
she that is dead is cut off,) what indulgence then will any man have, who does
those things, for which a woman and an aged one too is punished?
Yet no one gives a thought to these things, no one searches them out. And
this I have been compelled to say, not from any wish to free the priests from
these charges, but to spare you. They indeed suffer no harm at your hands, even
if it is with cause and justice that they are thus charged of being greedy of
gain; for, whether ye speak, or whether ye forbear, they must there give an
account to the Judge, so that your words hurt them not at all; but if your words
are false besides, they for their part gain by these false accusations, whilst ye
hurt yourselves by these means. But it is not so with you; for be the things
true, which ye bring against them, or be they false, ye speak ill of them to
your hurt. And how so? If they be true, in that ye judge your Teachers, and
subvert order, ye do it to your hurt. For if we must not judge a brother, much less a
Teacher. But if they be false, the punishment and retribution is intolerable;
for of "every idle word ye shall give account." (Matt. xii. 36.) For your sake
then I thus act and labor.
But as I said, no one searches out these things, no one busies himself
about these things, no one communes with himself on any of these things. Would ye
that I should add still more? "Whosoever forsaketh not all that he hath, saith
the Christ, is not worthy of Me." (Luke xiv. 33; Matt. x. 37.) What when he
says, "It is hard for a rich man to enter into the kingdom of heaven"? (Matt. xix.
23; Mark x. 24.) What when he says again, "Woe unto you that are rich, for ye
have received your consolation"? (Luke vi. 24.) No one searches this out, no
one bears it in mind, no one reasons with himself, but all sit as severe
inquisitors on other men's cases. Yet this is to make themselves sharers in the
charges. But listen, that for your own sake I may free the priests from the charges,
which ye say lie against them, for the persuasion that they transgress the law
of God, inclines you not a little towards evil. Come then, let us examine this
matter. Christ said, "Provide neither gold nor silver, neither two coats,
neither shoes, nor girdle, nor yet staves." (Matt. x. 9, 10.) What then? tell me, did
Peter transgress this command? Surely he did so, in having a girdle and a
garment, and shoes, for listen to the words of the Angel, "Gird thyself, and bind
on thy sandals." (Acts xii. 8.) And yet he had no such great need of sandals,
for at that season a man may go even unshod; their great use is in the winter,
and yet he had them. What shall we say of Paul, when he writes thus to Timothy,
"Do thy diligence to come before winter"? (2 Tim. iv. 21.) He gives him orders
too and says, "The cloak that I left at Troas with Carpus bring when thou
comest, and the books, especially the parchments." (2 Tim. iv. 13.) See he speaks of
a cloak, and no one can say that he had not another which he wore; for if he
did not wear one at all, it were superfluous to order this one to be brought, and
if he could not be without one to wear, it is clear he had a second.
What shall we say of his remaining "two whole years in his own hired
dwelling"? (Acts xxviii. 30.) Did then this chosen vessel disobey Christ? this man
who said, "Yet I live; and yet no longer I, but Christ liveth in me" (Gal. ii.
20), concerning whom Christ testified, saying, "He is a chosen vessel unto Me"?
(Acts ix. 15.) I ought to leave this difficulty with you, without supplying
any solution to the question. I ought to exact of you this penalty for your
negligence in the Scriptures, for this is the origin of all such difficulties. For
we know not the Scriptures, we are not trained in the law of God, and so we
become sharp inquirers into the faults of others, whilst we take no account of our
own. I ought then to have exacted from you this penalty. But what shall I do?
Fathers freely give to their sons many things beyond what is fitting: when their
fatherly compassion is kindled, on seeing their child with downcast look, and
wasted with grief, they themselves also feel sharper pangs than he, and rest
not until they have removed the ground of his dejection.
So be it at least here, be ye at least dejected at not receiving, that ye
may receive well. What then is it? They opposed not, far be it; but diligently
followed the commands of Christ, for those commands were but for a season, and
not enduring; and this I say not from conjecture, but from the divine
Scriptures. And how? Luke relates that Christ said to His disciples, "When I sent you
forth without purse, and wallet, and girdle, and shoes, lacked ye anything? And
they said nothing. (Luke xxii. 35.) But for the future provide them." But tell
me, what could he do? could he have but one coat? How then? If need was that
this be washed, should he, because without it, stay at home? should he without it
go abroad in an unbecoming manner, when need called? Consider what a thing it
would have been that Paul, who made the circuit of the world with such great
success, should remain at home for want of raiment, and thus hinder his noble
work. And what if violent cold had set in, or rain had drenched it, or perhaps
frozen in, how could he dry his raiment? must he again remain without it? And what
if cold had deprived his body of strength? must he waste away with disease, and
be unable to speak? For hear what be says to Timothy, to prove that they were
not furnished with adamantine bodies, "Use a little wine for thy stomach's
sake, and thine often infirmities." (1 Tim. v. 23.) And again, when he speaks of
another, "I counted it necessary to send to you your messenger, and minister to
my needs." (Phil. ii. 25.) "For indeed he was sick, nigh unto death; but God had
mercy on him, and not on him only, but on me also." (Phil. ii. 27.) So that
they were subject to every sort of sickness. What then? must they die? By no
means. For what cause then did Christ at that time give them that command? To show
His own power, and to prove that in after times He was able to do it, though He
did it not. But wherefore did He not do it? They were much more admirable than
the Israelites, whose shoes did not wax old, neither their garments, and that
too whilst they were journeying through that desert where the glowing rays of
the sun strike so hot, that they are capable of consuming even stones. (Ref. to
Deut. xxix. 5.) Why then did he do this? For thy sake. For since thou wouldest
not remain in health, but be full of wounds, He gave you that which might serve
for medicine. And this is hence manifest; could He not Himself have fed them?
He that gave to thee, who wast an enemy with Him, would He not much more have
given to Paul? He who gave to the Israelites, those murmurers, those
fornicators, those idolaters, would He not much more have given to Peter, who spent all
for His sake? He who suffered wicked men to possess aught, would He not much more
have freely given to John, who for Him forsook even his father? Yet he would
not: through your hands he feeds them, that you may be sanctified. And see the
excess of His lovingkindness. He chose that His disciples should be in want,
that thou mightest be a little refreshed.
For if He had freed them from all want, they would have been much more
admirable, far more glorious. But then that which is to thee salvation would have
been cut off. God willed not then that they should be admirable, that thou
mightest be saved, but that they should rather be lowered. He hath suffered them to
be less accounted of, that thou mightest be able to be saved. The Teacher who
receiveth is not equally reverenced, but he who receives not is chiefly
honored. But then in the latter case the disciple is not benefited, he is hindered of
his fruit. Seest thou the wisdom of God who thus loveth man? For as He Himself
sought not His own glory, nor had respect to Himself, but when He was in glory,
chose to be dishonored for thy sake, thus too is it in the case of your
Teachers. When they might have been highly reverenced, He preferred that they should
be subject to contempt for thy sake, that thou mightest be able to profit, that
thou mightest be able to be rich. For he is in want of the things of this
life, that you may abound in things spiritual. If then He might have made them
above all want, He showed that for thy sake He suffers them to be in want. Knowing
then these things, let us turn ourselves to well doing, not to accusations. Let
us not be overcurious about the failings of others, but take account of our
own; let us reckon up the excellences of other men, while we bear in mind our
faults ; and thus shall we be well pleasing to God. For he who looks at the faults
of others, and at his own excellences, is injured in two ways; by the latter
he is carried up to arrogance, through the former he falls into listlessness.
For when he perceives that such an one hath sinned, very easily will he sin
himself; when he perceives that he hath in aught excelled, very easily becometh he
arrogant. He who consigns to oblivion his own excellences, and looks at his
failings only, whilst he is a curious enquirer of the excellences, not the sins, of
others, is profited in many ways. And how? When he sees that such an one hath
done excellently, he is raised to emulate the same; when he sees that he
himself hath sinned, he is rendered humble and modest. If we act thus, if we thus
regulate ourselves, we shall be able to obtain the good things which are promised,
through the grace and lovingkindness of our Lord Jesus Christ, with whom, &c.
HOMILY X.
PHILIPPIANS iii. 1-3.
"Finally, my brethren, rejoice in the Lord. To write the same things to you,
to me indeed is not irksome, but for you it is safe. Beware of the dogs, beware
of the evil workers, beware of the concision. For we are the circumcision, who
worship God in the spirit, and glory in Christ Jesus, and have no confidence in
the flesh."
DEJECTION and care, whenever they strain the soul beyond due measure,
bereave it of its native force. And therefore Paul relieves the Philippians, who
were in great despondency, and they were in despondency because they did not know
how matters were with Paul; they were in despondency because they thought that
it was already over with him, because of the preaching, because of
Epaphroditus. It is in giving them assurance on all these points that he introduces the
words, "Finally, my brethren, rejoice." "You no longer have," he says, "cause for
despondency. You have Epaphroditus, for whose sake you were grieved ; you have
Timothy; I am myself coming to you; the Gospel is gaining ground. What is
henceforth wanting to you? Rejoice!"
Now he calls the Galatians indeed "children" (Gal. iv. 19), but these
"brethren." For when he aims either to correct anything or to show his fondness, he
calls them "children"; but when he addresses them with greater honor,
"brethren" is the title. "Finally, my brethren," he says, "rejoice in the Lord." He
said rightly "in the Lord," not "after the world." for this is no rejoicing. These
tribulations, he says, which are according to Christ bring joy. "To write the
same things to you, to me indeed is not irksome, but for you it is safe. Beware
of the dogs." Dost thou mark how he forbears to bring in the exhortation at
the beginning? But after he had given them much commendation, after he had shown
his admiration of them, then he does this, and again repeats his commendation.
For this mode of speech seems to bear somewhat hard upon them. Wherefore he
overshadows it on every side. But whom does he style "dogs"? There were at this
place some of those, whom he hints at in all his Epistles, base and contemptible
Jews, greedy of vile lucre and fond of power, who, desiring to draw aside many
of the faithful, preached both Christianity and Judaism at the same time,
corrupting the Gospel. As then they were not easily discernible, therefore he says,
"beware of the dogs": the Jews are no longer children; once the Gentiles were
called dogs, but now the Jews. Wherefore? because as the Gentiles were strangers
both to God and to Christ, even so are these become this now. And he shows
forth their shamelessness and violence, and their infinite distance from the
relation of children, for that the Gentiles were once called "dogs," hear what the
Canaanitish woman says, "Yea, Lord: for even the dogs eat of the crumbs which
fall from their masters' table." (Matt. xv. 27.) But that they might not have
this advantage, since even dogs are at the table, he adds that, whereby he makes
them aliens also, saying, "Beware of the evil workers"; he admirably expressed
himself, "beware of the evil workers"; they work, he means, but for a bad end,
and a work that is much worse than idleness, plucking up what is laid in goodly
order.
"Beware," he says, "of the concision." The rite of circumcision was
venerable in the Jews' account, forasmuch as the Law itself gave way thereto, and the
Sabbath was less esteemed than circumcision. For that circumcision might be
performed the Sabbath was broken; but that the Sabbath might be kept,
circumcision was never broken; and mark, I pray, the dispensation of God. This is found to
be even more solemn than the Sabbath, as not being omitted at certain
times.[1] When then it is done away, much more is the Sabbath. Wherefore Paul makes a
concision of the name, and says, "Beware of the concision"; and he did not say
"that circumcision is evil, that it is superfluous," lest he should strike the
men with dismay, but he manages it more wisely, withdrawing them from the thing,
but gratifying them with the word, nay, rather with the thing too, in a more
serious way. But not so in the case of the Galatians, for since in that case the
disease was great, he forthwith adopts the remedy of amputation with open
front and with all boldness; but in this case, as they had done nothing of the
sort, he vouchsafes them the gratification of the title, he casts out the others,
and says, "Beware of the concision; for we are the circumcision"--how?--"who
worship God in spirit,[2] and have no confidence in the flesh." He said not that"
we test the one circumcision and the other, which is the better of the two";
but he would not even allow it a share in the name; but what does he say? That
that circumcision is "concision." Why? Because they do nothing but cut the flesh
up. For when what is done is not of the law, it is nothing else than a
concision and cutting up of the flesh; it was then either for this reason that he
called it so, or because they were trying to cut the Church in twain; and we call
the thing "cutting up" in those who do this at random, without aim and without
skill. Now if you must seek circumcision, he says, you will find it among us,
"who worship God in spirit," i.e. who worship spiritually.
For answer me, which is superior, the soul or the body? Evidently the
former. Therefore that circumcision is also superior, or rather, no longer
superior, but this is the only circumcision; for while the type stood, He rightly
brought it forward in conjunction, writing, "For ye shall circumcise the foreskins
of your hearts." (Jerem. iv. 4.) In the same way in the Epistle to the Romans he
does away with it, saying, "for he is not a Jew which is one outwardly,
neither is that circumcision which is outward in the flesh; but he is a Jew which is
one inwardly, and circumcision is that of the heart, in the spirit, not in the
letter." (Rom. ii. 28, 29.) And lastly, he takes from it the very name,
"neither is it circumcision," he maintains; for the type while the reality is yet to
come, is called this, but when the reality has come, it no longer retains the
title. As in delineation, a man has drawn a king in outline; so long as the
colors are not put on we say, Lo, there is the king, but when they are added, the
type is lost in the reality, and ceases to show. And he said not, "for the
circumcision is in us," but "we are the circumcision," and justly; for this is the
Man, the circumcision in virtue, this is really the Man. And he did not say, "For
among them is the concision"; for they themselves are henceforth in a
condition of ruin and of wickedness. But no longer, says he, is circumcision performed
in the body, but in the heart. "And have no confidence," says he, "in the
flesh; though I myself might have confidence even in the flesh." (v. 4.) What does
he call "confidence" here, and "in the flesh"? Boasting, boldness, a high tone.
And he did well to add this; for if he had been of the Gentiles, and had
condemned circumcision, and not only circumcision, but all those that adopted it out
of place, it would have seemed that he was running it down, because he lacked
the high ancestry of Judaism, as being a stranger to its solemn rites, and
having no part therein. But as it is, he, who, though a sharer, yet blames them,
will not therefore blame them as having no share in them, but as disowning them;
not from ignorance, but most especially from acquaintance with them.
Accordingly observe what he says in his Epistle to the Galatians also; having been
brought into a necessity of saying great things about himself, how even in these
circumstances does he manifest nought but humility. "For ye have heard, of my
manner of life in time past," he says, n the Jews religion" (Gal. i. 13); and again
here; "if any other man thinketh to have confidence in the flesh, I more." (v.
4). And he immediately added, "a Hebrew of Hebrews. But "if any other man,"
says he, showing the necessity, showing that it was on their account that he
spoke. "If ye have confidence," he says, I also say so, since I am silent.[1] And
observe the absence of all ungraciousness in the reproofs; by forbearing to do it
by name, he gave even them the opportunity of retracing their steps. "If any
one thinketh to have confidence"; and it was well to say "thinketh," either
inasmuch as they really had no such confidence, or as that confidence was no real
confidence, for all was by necessity, and not of choice. "Circumcised on the
eighth day"; and he sets down the first that wherein they chiefly boasted, viz.
the ordinance of circumcision. "Of the stock of Israel." He pointed out both
these circumstances, that he was neither a proselyte, nor born of proselytes;
or from his being circumcised on the eighth day, it follows that he was not a
proselyte, and from his being of the stock of Israel, that he was not of
proselyte parents. But that you may not imagine that he was of the stock of Israel as
coming of the ten tribes, he says, "of the tribe of Benjamin." So that he was
of the more approved portion, for the place of the priests was in the lot of
this tribe. "An Hebrew of Hebrews." Because he was not a proselyte, but from of
old, of distinguished Jews; for he might have been of Israel, and yet not "an
Hebrew of Hebrews," for many were already corrupting the matter,[2] and were
strangers to the language, being encircled by other nations; it is either this
then, or the great superiority of his birth, that he shows. "According to the law
a Pharisee." He is coming now to the circumstances dependent on his own will ;
for all those things were apart from the will, for his being circumcised was
not of himself, nor that he was of the stock of Israel, nor that he was of the
tribe of Benjamin. So that, even among these he has a larger share, even though
there were really many who partook with him. Where then are we to place the
"rather"? Particularly herein that he was not a proselyte; for to be of the most
distinguished tribe and sect, and this from his ancestors of old, was a thing
which belonged not to many. But he comes to the things which are matters of
choice, wherein we have the "rather." "As touching the law, a Pharisee; as touching
zeal, persecuting the Church." But this is not sufficient; for it is possible to
be a Pharisee even, and yet not very zealous. But this also he adds; behold
the "rather." "According to righteousness." It is possible, however, to be
adventurous, or to act thus[3] from ambition, and not out of zeal for the law, as the
chief priests did. Yet neither was this the case, but, "according to the
righteousness which is in the law, found blameless." If then both for purity of
descent, and earnestness, and habits, and mode of life, I surpassed all, why have I
renounced all those dignities, he asks, but because I found that the things of
Christ are better, and better far? Wherefore he added; "howbeit what things
were gain to me, these have I counted loss for Christ." (v. 7.)
Such a course of life, so strictly regulated, and entered upon from
earliest childhood, such unblemished extraction, such dangers, plots, labors,
forwardness, did Paul renounce, "counting them but loss," which before were "gain,"
that he might "win Christ." But we do not even contemn money, that we may "win
Christ," but prefer to fail of the life to come rather than of the good things of
the present life. And yet this is nothing else than loss; for tell me now, let
us examine in detail the conditions of riches, and see whether it be not loss
accompanied with trouble, and without any gain. For tell me, what is the
advantage of those stores of costly garments, what good do we gain when we are
arrayed in them? None, nay, we are only losers. How so? Because even the poor man, in
his cheap and threadbare clothing, does not bear the scorching in time of heat
any wise worse than yourself; nay, rather he bears it better, for clothes that
are threadbare and worn single allow more ease to the body, but not so with
those which are new made, though they be finer than the spider's web. Besides,
you, from your excessive self-importance, wear even two and often three inner
garments, and a cloak and girdle, and breeches too, but no one blames him if he
wears but a single inner garment; so that he is the man that endures most easily.
It is owing to this that we see rich men sweating, but the poor subject to
nothing of the sort. Since then his cheap clothing, which is sold for a trifle,
answers the same or even a better purpose to him, and those clothes, which oblige
a man to pay down much gold, do only the same thing, is not this great
superabundance so much loss? For it has added nothing in respect of its use and
service, but your purse is emptied of so much the more gold, and the same use and
service. You who have riches have purchased for a hundred pieces of gold, or even
more, but the poor man for a trifling sum of silver. Do you perceive the loss?
No, for your pride will not let you see it. Would you have us make out this
account in the case of the gold ornaments too, which men put alike about their
horses and their wives? For besides the other evils, the possession of money
makes fools of men; they account their wives and horses to be worthy of the same
honor, and the ornamentation of both is the same; and they would make themselves
finer by the same means as the very beasts that carry them, or as the very
skins of the awnings, wherein they are borne. What now is the use of decking out a
mule or a horse with gold? or the lady, that has such a weight of gold and
jewels about her person, what does she gain? "But the golden ornaments are never
worn out," he answers. Assuredly this also is said that in the baths and many
places both precious stones and gold ornaments lose much of their value. But be it
so, and grant that they are not injured, tell me, what is the gain? And how
is it when they drop out, and are lost? is there no loss sustained? And how when
they draw down upon you envy and intrigues? is there no loss then? For when
they do the wearer no good, but rather inflame the eyes of the envious, and act
as an incitement to the robber, do they not become loss? And again, say, when a
man may use them for a serviceable purpose, but is unable on account of the
extravagance of his wife, and is obliged to starve and to stint himself, that he
may see her arrayed in gold, is it not a matter of loss? For it was on this
account that goods have their name from use,[1] not that we should use them thus
like goldsmiths' samples, but that we should do some good therewith; so then when
love of gold does not allow this, is not the whole thing loss? for he that
dares not use them forbears the use as if they were another's property, and there
is no use of them in any way.
Again, how is it when we erect splendid and spacious mansions, decorated
with columns, marbles, porticos, arcades, and in every possible way, setting
images and statues everywhere? Many indeed even call demons out of these, i.e. the
images, but let us omit the examination of those points. What too is the
meaning of the gilded ceiling? Does it not supply the same need as to him, whose
house is on a moderate scale? "But there is great delight in it," he says. Yes,
for the first or second day, and afterwards, none at all, but it stands merely
for nothing. For if the sun does not strike us with wonder, from its being
customary, much more do works of art fail, and we only look at them like things of
clay. For tell me, what does a range of pillars contribute to make your dwelling
superior to others, or the finest statues, or the gilding spread over the wall?
Nothing; rather, these come of luxury and insolence, and overweening pride and
folly; for everything there ought to be necessary and useful, not superfluous
things. Do you see that the thing is loss? Do you see that it is superfluous
and unprofitable? for if it supplies no further use or delight, (and it "does,"
in the course of time, bring satiety,) it is nothing else than loss, and
vainglory is the hindrance, which will not let us see this.
Did Paul then forsake those things which he "counted gain," and shall not
we even quit our loss, for Christ's sake? How long shall we be riveted to the
earth? How long till we shall look up to heaven? Do ye not mark the aged, what
little perception they have of the past? Do ye not mark those that are finishing
their course, both men in age, and men in youth? Do ye not see persons in the
midst of life bereft of them? Why are we so wedded to unstable objects? Why are
we linked to things that are shifting? How long before we lay hold of the
things that last? What would not the old give, were it granted them to divest
themselves of their old age? How irrational then to wish to return to our former
youth, and gladly to give everything for the sake of this, that we might become
younger, and yet when it is ours to receive a youth that knows no old age, a
youth too, which, joined with great riches, hath far more of spirit, to be
unwilling to give up a little trifle, but to hold fast things that contribute not a
whir to the present life. They can never rescue you from death, they have no power
to drive away disease, to stay old age, or any one of those events, which
happen by necessity and according to the law of nature. And do you still hold to
them? Tell me, what do you gain? Drunkenness, gluttony, pleasures contrary to
nature and various in kind, which are far worse torturers than the hardest masters.
These are the advantages which we gain from riches, nor is there one
besides, since we are not so minded, for if we had had the mind, we might have won
heaven itself for our inheritance by our riches. "So then riches are good," he
says. It is not riches, but the will of the possessor that effects this, for
because it is the will that does this, it is in the power even of a poor man to
win heaven. For, as I have often said, God does not regard the amount of the
gifts, but the will of the givers; it is possible even for one in poverty, who has
given but little, to bear off all, for God requires a measure proportioned to
our ability, neither will riches secure heaven to us, nor poverty, hell; but a
good or a bad will, either one or the other. This then let us correct, this let
us repossess, this let us regulate, and all will then be easy to us.
For as the artificer works the wood the same, whether his axe be of iron
or of gold, or rather he does it the better with an implement of iron, so here
too, the straight path of virtue is more easily kept in a state of poverty. For
touching riches we read, "It is easier for a camel to go through a needle's
eye, than for a rich man to enter into the kingdom of Heaven." (Matt. xix. 24.)
But He has made no such declarations about poverty; nay, the very reverse. "Sell
thy goods, and give to the poor, and come follow Me" (v. 21 ); as if the act of
following were to spring from the selling.
Never then let us flee from poverty as an evil, for it is the procurer of
heaven. Again, let us never follow riches as a good; for they are the ruin of
such as walk unwarily, but in everything directing our eyes to God, let us, as
occasion requires, use those gifts which He has vouchsafed us, both strength of
body, and abundance of money, and every other gift; for it is unnatural that
we, who have our being for Him, should make these things serviceable to others,
yet not to Him who has made us He formed thine eye: make it serviceable to
Him, not to the devil. But how serviceable to Him? By contemplating His creatures
and praising and glorifying Him, and by withdrawing it from all gaze at women.
Did He make thy hands? Preserve them for His use, not for the devil, not
putting them out for robbery and rapine, but for His commandments and for good deeds,
for earnest prayers, for holding out help to the fallen. Hath He made thine
ears? Give these to Him, and not to effeminate[1] strains nor to disgraceful
tales; but "let all thy communication be in the law of the Most High." (Ecclus. ix.
15.) For "stand," he says, "in the multitude of the elders, and whoever is
wise, cleave unto him." (Ecclus. vi. 34.) Did he make thy mouth? Let it do nought
that is displeasing to Him, but sing psalms, hymns, and spiritual songs. "Let
no corrupt speech proceed out of your mouth," says the Apostle, "but such as is
good for edifying as the need may be, that it may give grace to them that hear"
(Eph. iv. 29); for edification and not for subversion, for fair words and not
for evil speaking and plotting against other, but the very opposite. He hath
made thy feet, not that thou shouldest run to do evil, but to do good. He made
thy belly, not that thou shouldest cram it to bursting, but to practice lessons
of wisdom. For the production of children, He implanted desire in thy mind, not
for fornication, nor for adultery. He gave thee understanding, not to make of
thee a blasphemer or a reviler, but that thou mightest be without falsehood. He
gave us both money to be used on fitting occasion, and strength likewise to be
used on fitting occasion. He instituted arts, that our present state of
existence might be held together by them, not that we should separate ourselves from
spiritual things, not that we should devote ourselves to the base arts but to
the necessary ones, that we might minister to one another's good, and not that we
should plot one against another. He gave us a roof, that it might afford
shelter from the rain, and no more, not that it should be decked out with gold,
while the poor man perishes with hunger. He gave clothing to cover us, not to make
a display withal, not that things like these should have much gold lavished
upon them, and that Christ should perish naked. He gave you a place of shelter,
not that you should keep it to yourself, but to offer it to others also. He gave
thee land, not that, cutting off the chief portion of it, you should spend the
good gifts of God upon harlots, and dancers, and actors, and flute players, and
harp players, but upon those that hunger and are in want. He gave you the sea
to sail on, that you might not be wearied with journeying, not that you should
pry into its depths, and bring up thence precious stones and all the other
things of the same kind, nor that you should make this your business.
"Why then are there precious stones?" he says. Nay, do you tell me why
these stones are such, and why one class are regarded as of great value, while
the others are more useful? For these may be conducive to building, but those to
no purpose; and these are stronger than those "But they," he says, "produce a
beautiful effect." How so? it is a matter of fancy. Are they whiter? No, they
are not whiter than pure white marble, nor nearly equal to it. But are they
stronger? Not even this can be said for them.[1] Well then, are they more useful?
are they larger? Not even this. Whence then are they so admired, save from fancy?
For if they are neither more beautiful, (for we shall find others more shining
and more white,) nor useful, nor stronger, whence came they to be so admired?
Was it not from mere fancy? Why then did God give them? They were not His gift,
but it is your own imagination that they are anything great. "How is it,
then," he answers, "that even the Scripture shows admiration of them?" So far it
addresses itself to your fancy. As a master too in talking to a child often
admires the same object as it does, when he desires to attract and engage it.
Why do you aim at finery in your clothing? He clothed thee with a garment
and with sandals. But where is there any reason for these things? "The
judgments of God," he says, "are more to be desired than gold; yea than much fine
gold." (Ps. xix. 10.) These, beloved, are of no use. Had they been of use, he would
not have bidden us despise them. And for Holy Scripture, it speaks with
reference to our notion, and this too is an instance of God's lovingkindness. "Why
then," he asks, "did He give purple and the like?" These things are products of
God's gift. For He has willed by other things also to show forth His own riches.
And He gave you corn too by itself; but from this you make many things, cakes
and sweetmeats, of every sort and variety, having much enjoyment. Pleasure and
vainglory give rise to all these inventions. It pleased you to set them before
everything. For if a foreigner or a rustic, who was ignorant of the land,
should put the question, and, seeing your admiration, were to say, "Why do you
admire these?" What have you to say? that they are fair to look at? But not so. Let
us then give up such notions; let us lay hold of the things that are truly
real. These are not, but simply pass away, only flowing past like a river.
Wherefore I charge you, let us take our stand upon the rock, that we both escape being
easily turned about, and that we may obtain the good things to come, by the
grace and lovingkindness of our Lord Jesus Christ, with whom, &c.
HOMILY XI.
PHILIPPIANS iii. 7-10.
"Howbeit what things were gain to me, these have I counted loss for Christ.
Yea verily, and I counted all things to be loss for the excellency of the
knowledge of Christ Jesus my Lord: for whom I suffered the loss of all things, and do
count them but dung, that I may gain Christ and be found in Him, not having a
righteousness of mine own, even that which is of the law, but that which is
through faith in Christ, the righteousness which is of God."
IN our contests with heretics, we must make the attack with minds in
vigor, that they may be able to give exact attention. I will therefore begin nay
present discourse where the last ended. And what was that? Having enumerated every
Jewish boast, both those from his birth, and those that were from choice, he
added, "Howbeit, what things were gain to me, these have I counted to be loss
for the excellency of the knowledge of Christ Jesus my Lord; for whom I suffered
the loss of all things, and do count them but dung, that I may gain Christ."
Here the heretics spring to their attack: for even this comes of the wisdom of
the Spirit, to suggest to them hopes of victory, that they may undertake the
fight.
For if it had been spoken plainly, they would have acted here as they have
done in other places, they would have blotted out the words, they would have
denied the Scripture, when they were unable at all to look it in the face. But
as in the case of fishes, that which can take them is concealed so that they may
swim up, and does not lie open to view; this in truth hath come to pass here
too. The Law, they say, is called "dung" by Paul, it is called "loss." He says,
it was not possible to gain Christ except I "suffered" this "loss." All these
things induced the heretics to accept this passage, thinking it to be favorable
to them: but when they had taken it, then did he enclose them on all sides with
his nets. For what do they themselves say? Lo! the Law is "loss," is "dung";
how then do ye say that it is of God?
But these very words are favorable to the Law, and how they are so, shall
be hence manifest. Let us attend accurately to his very words. He said not, The
Law is loss: but "I counted it loss." But when he spake of gain, he said not,
I counted them, but "they were gain." But when he spake of loss he said," I
counted": and this rightly; for the former was naturally so, but the latter became
so, from my opinion. "What then? Is it not so?" says he. It is loss for Christ.
And how has the law become gain? And it was not counted gain, but was so.
For consider how great a thing it was, to bring men, brutalized in their
nature, to the shape of men. If the law had not been, grace would not have been
given. Wherefore? Because it became a sort of bridge; for when it was impossible to
mount on high from a state of great abasement, a ladder was formed. But he who
has ascended has no longer need of the ladder; yet he does not despise it, but
is even grateful to it. For it has placed him in such a position, as no longer
to require it. And yet for this very reason, that he doth not require it, it is
just that he should acknowledge his obligation, for he could not fly up. And
thus is it with the Law, it hath led us up on high; wherefore it was gain, but
for the future we esteem it loss. How? Not because it is loss, but because grace
is far greater. For as a poor man, that was in hunger, as long as he has
silver, escapes hunger, but when he finds gold, and it is not allowable to keep
both, considers it loss to retain the former, and having thrown it away, takes the
gold coin; so also here; not because the silver is loss, for it is not; but
because it is impossible to take both at once, but it is necessary to leave one.
Not the Law then is loss, but for a man to cleave to the Law, and desert Christ.
Wherefore it is then loss when it leads us away from Christ. But if it sends
us on to Him, it is no longer so. For this cause he saith "loss for Christ"; if
for Christ, it is not so naturally. But why doth not the Law suffer us to come
to Christ? For this very cause, he tells us, was it given. And Christ is the
fulfilling of the Law, and Christ is the end of the Law. It doth suffer us if we
will. "For Christ is the end of the Law." He who obeyeth the Law, leaves the
Law itself. It suffers, if we take heed to it, but if we do not take heed, it
suffers not. "Yea verily, and I have counted all things but loss." Why, he means,
do I say this of the Law? Is not the world good? Is not the present life good?
but if they draw me away from Christ, I count these things loss. Why? "for the
excellency of the knowledge of Jesus Christ my Lord." For when the sun hath
appeared, it is loss to sit by a candle: so that the loss comes by comparison, by
the superiority of the other. You see that Paul makes a comparison from
superiority, not from diversity of kind; for that which is superior, is superior to
somewhat of like nature to itself. So that he shows the connection of that
knowledge by the same means, by which he draws the superiority from the comparison.
"For whom I suffered the loss of all things, and do count them dung, that I may
gain Christ." It is not yet manifest, whether he speaks of the Law, for it is
likely that he applies it to the things of this world. For when he says, "the
things which were gain to me, those I have counted loss for Christ; yea verily,"
he adds, "I count all things loss." Although he said all things, yet it is
things present; and if you wish it to be the Law too, not even so is it insulted.
For dung comes from wheat, and the strength of the wheat is the dung, I mean,
the chaff. But as the dung was useful in its former state, so that we gather it
together with the wheat, and had there been no dung, there would have been no
wheat, thus too is it with the Law.
Seest thou, how everywhere he calls it "loss," not in itself, but for
Christ. "Yea verily, and I count all things but loss." Wherefore again? "For the
excellency of the knowledge (of Him), for whom I suffered the loss of all
things." Again, " wherefore too I count all things to be loss, that I may gain Christ."
See how, from every point, he lays hold of Christ as his foundation, and
suffers not the Law to be anywhere exposed, or receive a blow, but guards it on
every side. "And that I may be found in Him, not having a righteousness of mine
own, even that which is of the Law." If he who had righteousness, ran to this
other righteousness because his own was nothing, how much rather ought they,
who have it not, to run to Him? And he well said, "a righteousness of mine own,"
not that which I gained by labor and toil, but that which I found from grace.
If then he who was so excellent is saved by grace, ranch more are you. For since
it was likely they would say that the righteousness which comes from toil is
the greater, he shows that it is dung in comparison with the other. For
otherwise I, who was so excellent in it, would not have cast it away, and run to the
other. But what is that other? That which is from the faith of God, i.e. it too
is given by God. This is the righteousness of God; this is altogether a gift.
And the gifts of God far exceed those worthless good deeds, which are due to our
own diligence.
But what is "By faith that I may know Him"?(1) So then knowledge is
through faith, and without faith it is impossible to know Him. Why how? Through it we
must "know the power of His resurrection." For what reason can demonstrate to
us the Resurrection? None, but faith only. For if the resurrection of Christ,
who was according to the flesh, is known by faith, how can the generation of the
Word of God be comprehended by reasoning? For the resurrection is less than
the generation. Why? Because of that there have been many examples, but of this
none ever; for many dead arose before Christ, though after their resurrection
they died, but no one was ever born of a virgin. If then we must comprehend by
faith that which is inferior to the generation according to the flesh, how can
that which is far greater, immeasurably and incomparably greater, be comprehended
by reason? These things make the righteousness; this must we believe that He
was able to do, but how He was able we cannot prove. For from faith is the
fellowship of His sufferings. But how? Had we not believed, neither should we have
suffered: had we not believed, that "if we endure with Him, we shall also reign
with Him" (2 Tim. ii. 12), we should not have endured the sufferings. Both the
generation and the resurrection is comprehended by faith. Seest thou, that
faith must not be absolutely, but through good works; for he especially believes
that Christ hath risen, who in like sort gives himself up to dangers, who hath
fellowship with Him in His sufferings. For he hath fellowship with Him who rose
again, with Him who liveth; wherefore he saith, "And may be found in Him, not
having a righteousness of mine own, even that which is of the law, but that which
is through faith in Christ, the righteousness which is of God by faith: that I
may know Him, and the power of His resurrection, and the fellowship of His
sufferings, becoming conformed unto His death; if by any means I may attain unto
the resurrection from the dead." He saith, being made conformable unto His
death, i.e. having fellowship; whereas He suffered from men, thus I too; wherefore
he said, "becoming conformed" and again in another place, "and fill up on my
part that which is lacking of the afflictions of Christ in my flesh." (Col. i.
24.) That is, these persecutions and sufferings work the image of His death, for
He sought not His own, but the good of many.
Therefore persecutions, and afflictions, and straits, ought not to disturb
you, but ought even to make you glad, because through them we are "conformed
to His death." As if he had said, We are molded to His likeness; as he says in
another place, where he writeth, "bearing about in the body the dying of the
Lord Jesus." (2 Cor. iv. 10.) And this too comes from great faith. For we not only
believe that He arose, but that after His resurrection also He hath great
power: wherefore we travel the same road which He travelled, i.e. we become
brethren to Him in this respect also. As if he had said, We become Christs in this
respect. O how great is the dignity of sufferings! We believe that we become
"conformed to His death" through sufferings! For as in baptism, we were "buried with
the likeness of His death," so here, with His death. There did he rightly say,
"The likeness of His death" (Rom. vi. 4, 5), for there we died not entirely,
we died not in the flesh, to the body, but to sin. Since then a death is spoken
of, and a death; but He indeed died in the body, whilst we died to sin, and
there the Man died which He assumed, who was in our flesh, but here the man of
sin; for this cause he saith, "the likeness of His death," but here, no longer the
likeness of His death, but His death itself. For Paul, in his persecutions, no
longer died to sin, but in(1) his very body. Wherefore, he endured the same
death. "If by any means," saith he, "I may attain unto the resurrection from the
dead." What sayest thou? All men will have a share in that. "For we shall not
all sleep, but we shall all be changed" (1 Cor. xv. 51), and shall all share not
only in the Resurrection, but in incorruption. Some indeed to honor, but
others as a means of punishment. If therefore all have a share in the Resurrection,
and not in the Resurrection only, but also in incorruption, how said he," If
by any means I may attain," as if about to share in some especial thing? "For
this cause," saith he, "I endure these things, if by any means I may attain unto
the resurrection from the dead." For if thou hadst not died, thou wouldest not
arise. What is it then? Some great thing seems here to be hinted at. So great
was it, that he dared not openly assert it, but saith, "If by any means." I have
believed in Him and His resurrection, nay, moreover, I suffer for Him, yet I
am unable to be confident concerning the Resurrection. What resurrection doth he
here mention? That which leads to Christ Himself. I said, that I believed in
"Him, and in the power of His resurrection," and that I "have fellowship with
His sufferings," and that I "become conformed to His death." Yet after all these
things I am by no means confident; as he said elsewhere, "Let him that thinketh
he standeth, take heed lest he fall." (1 Cor. x. 12.) And again, "I fear test
by any means, after that I have preached to others, I myself should be
rejected." (1 Cor. ix. 27.)
Ver. 12. "Not that I have already obtained, or am already made perfect:
but I press on, if so be that I may apprehend that for which also I was
apprehended by Christ Jesus."
"Not that I have already obtained." What means "already obtained"? He
speaks of the prize, but if he who had endured such sufferings, he who was
persecuted, he "who had in him the dying of the Lord Jesus," was not yet confident
about that resurrection, what can we say? What meaneth, "if I may apprehend"? What
he before said, "If I may attain to the resurrection of the dead." (2 Cor. iv.
10.) If I may apprehend, he saith, His resurrection; i.e. if I may be able to
endure so great things, if I may be able to imitate Him, if I may be able to
become conformed to Him. For example, Christ suffered many things, He was spit
upon, He was stricken, was scourged, at last He suffered what things he
suffered.(1) This is the entire course. Through all these things it is needful that men
should endure the whole contest, and so come to His resurrection. Or he means
this, if I am thought worthy to attain the glorious resurrection, which is a
matter of confidence, in order to His resurrection. For if I am able to endure all
the contests, I shall be able also to have His resurrection, and to rise with
glory. For not as yet, saith he, am I worthy, but "I press on, if so be that I
may apprehend." My life is still one of contest, I am still far from the end, I
am still distant from the prize, still I run, still I pursue. And He said not,
I run, but "I pursue." For you know with what eagerness a man pursues. He sees
no one, he thrusts aside with great violence all who would interrupt his
pursuit. He collects together his mind, and sight, and strength, and soul, and body,
looking to nothing else than the prize. But if Paul, who so pursued, who had
suffered so many things, yet saith, "if I may attain," what should we say, who
have relaxed our efforts? Then to show that the thing is of debt, he saith, "For
which also I was apprehended by Christ Jesus." I was, he saith, of the number
of the lost, I gasped for breath, I was nigh dead, God apprehended me. For He
pursued us, when we fled from Him, with all speed. So that he points out all
those things; for the words, "I was apprehended," show the earnestness of Him who
wishes to apprehend us, and our great aversion to Him, our wandering, our
flight from Him.
So that we are liable for a vast debt, and no one grieves, no one weeps,
no one groans, all having returned to their former state. For as before the
appearance of Christ we fled from God, so now also. For we can flee from God, not
in place, for He is everywhere; and hear the Prophet, when he says, "Whither
shall I go from Thy Spirit, or whither shall I flee from Thy presence"? (Ps.
cxxxix. 7.) How then can we flee from God? Even as we can become distant from God,
even as we can be removed afar off. "They that are far from Thee," it says,
"shall perish." (Ps. lxxiii. 27.) And again, "Have not your iniquities separated
between Me and you?" (Isa. lix. 2.) How then comes this removal, how comes this
separation? In purpose and soul: for it cannot be in place. For how could one
fly from Him who is everywhere present? The sinner then flies. This is what the
Scripture saith, "The wicked fleeth when no man pursueth him." (Prov. xxviii.
1.) We eagerly fly from God, although He always pursueth us. The Apostle hasted,
that he might be near Him. We haste, that we may be far off.
Are not these things then worthy of lamentation? Are they not worthy of
tears? Whither fliest thou, wretched and miserable man? Whither fliest thou from
thy Life and thy Salvation? If thou fly from God, with whom wilt thou take
refuge? If thou fly from the Light, whither wilt thou cast thine eyes? If thou fly
from thy Life, whence wilt thou henceforth live? Let us fly from the enemy of
our Salvation! Whensoever we sin we fly from God, we are as runaways, we depart
to a foreign land, as he who consumed his paternal goods and departed into a
foreign land, who wasted all his father's substance, and lived in want. We too
have substance from our Father; and what is this? He hath freed us from our sins;
He hath freely given to us power, strength for works of virtue; He hath freely
given to us readiness, patience; He hath freely given to us the Holy Ghost in
our baptism; if we waste these things we shall henceforth be in want. For as
the sick, as long as they are troubled with fevers, and badness of their juices,
are unable to arise or work, or do anything, but if any one sets them free, and
brings them to health, if they then work not, this comes from their own sloth;
thus too is it with us. For the disease was heavy and the fever excessive. And
we lay not upon a bed, but upon wickedness itself, cast away in crime, as on a
dunghill, full of sores, and evil odors, squalid, wasting away, more like
ghosts than men. Evil spirits encompassed us about, the Prince of this world
deriding and assaulting us; the Only-Begotten Son of God came, sent forth the rays of
His Presence, and straightway dispelled the darkness. The King, who is on His
Father's throne, came to us, having left His Father's throne. And when I say
having left, think not of any removal, for He filleth the heavens and the earth,
but I speak of the economy; He came to an enemy, who hated Him, who turned
himself away, who could not endure to behold Him, who blasphemed Him every day. He
saw him lying on a dunghill, eaten with worms, afflicted with fever and hunger,
having every sort of disease; for both fever vexed him, which is evil desire;
and inflammation lay heavy on him, this is pride; and gnawing hunger had hold
of him, which is covetousness; and putrefying sores on every side, for this is
fornication; and blindness of eyes, which is idolatry; and dumbness, and
madness, which is to worship stocks and stones, and address them; and great deformity,
for wickedness is this, foul to behold, and a most heavy disease. And he saw
us speaking more foolishly than the mad, and calling stocks our God, and stones
likewise; He saw us in such great guilt, he did not reject us; was not wroth,
turned not away, hated us not, for He was a Master, and could not hate His own
creation. But what does he do? As a most excellent physician, He prepareth
medicines of great price, and Himself tastes them first. For He Himself first
followed after virtue, and thus gave it to us. And He first gave us the washing,(1)
like some antidote, and thus we vomited up all our guilt, and all things took
their flight at once, and our inflammation ceased, and our fever was quenched,
and our sores were dried up. For all the evils which are from covetousness, and
anger, and all the rest, were dissipated by the Spirit. Our eyes were opened,
our ears were opened, our tongue spake holy words: our soul received strength,
our body received such beauty and bloom, as it is like that he who is born a son
of God should have from the grace of the Spirit; such glory as it is like that
the new-born son of a king should have, nurtured in purple. Alas! How great
nobility did He confer on us!
We were born, we were nurtured, why do we again fly from our Benefactor?
He then, who hath done all these things, giveth us strength too, for it was not
possible, for a soul bowed down by the disease to endure it, did not He Himself
give us the strength. He gave us remission of our sins. We devoured all
things. He gave us strength, we wasted it. He gave us grace, we quenched it; and how?
we consumed it upon nought that was fitting, we used it for no useful end.
These things have destroyed us, and what is more dreadful than all, when we are in
a foreign country, and feeding on husks, we say not, Let us return to our
Father, and say, "We have sinned against Heaven, and against Thee." (Luke xv. 18.)
And that too, when we have so loving a Father, who eagerly desires our return.
If we will only return to Him, He does not even bear to call in question our
former deeds, only let us quit them. It is sufficient apology with Him, that we
have returned. Not only He Himself calls not in question, but if another does
so, He stops his mouth, though the accuser be one of good repute. Let us return!
How long do we stand afar off? Let us perceive our dishonor, let us be sensible
of our vileness. Sin makes us swine, sin brings famine to the soul; let us
regain ourselves, and be sober again, and return to our former high birth, that we
may obtain the good things which are to come, in Christ Jesus our Lord, with
whom to the Father together with the Holy Spirit be glory, might, honor, now and
ever and world without end.
HOMILY XII.
PHILIPPIANS iii. 13, 14.
"Brethren, I count not myself yet to have apprehended: but one thing I do
forgetting the things which are behind, and stretching forward to the things
which are before, I press on toward the goal unto the prize of the high calling
of God in Christ Jesus."
NOTHING so renders our real excellences vain and puffs them away, as to be
remembering the good deeds we have done; for this produces two evils, it both
renders us remiss, and raises us to haughtiness. Wherefore see how Paul, since
he knew our nature to be easily inclined to remissness, though he had given
great praise to the Philippians, now subdues their mind by many other things
above, but chiefly by his resent words And what are they? "Brethren, I count not
myself(2) to have apprehended." But if Paul had not as yet apprehended, and is not
confident about the Resurrection and things to come, hardly should they be so,
who have not attained the smallest proportion of his excellence. That is, I
consider that I have not as yet apprehended all virtue, as if one were speaking
of a runner. Not as yet, saith he, have I completed all. And if in another
place he saith, "I have fought the good fight" (2 Tim. iv. 7), but here, "I count
myself not as yet to have apprehended "; any one who reads carefully will well
know the reason both of those, and of the present words; (for it is not
necessary to dwell continually on the same point;) and that he spoke these words at a
much earlier date, but the others near his death. But I am solely engaged on
"one thing," says he, "in stretching forward to the things which are before." But
"one thing," says he, "forgetting the things which are behind, and stretching
forward to the things which are before, I press on toward the goal unto the
prize of the high calling of God in Christ Jesus." For what made him reach forward
unto the things which are before, was his forgetting the things that are
behind. He then, who thinks that all is accomplished, and that nothing is wanting to
him for the perfecting of virtue, may cease running, as having apprehended all.
But he who thinks that he is still distant from the goal, will never cease
running. This then we should always consider, even though we have wrought ten
thousand good deeds; for if Paul, after ten thousand deaths, after so many dangers,
considered this, how much more should we? For I fainted not, saith he,
although I availed not, after running so much; nor did I despair, but I still run, I
still strive. This thing only I consider, that I may in truth advance. Thus too
we should act, we should forget our successes, and throw them behind us. For
the runner reckons not up how many circuits he hath finished, but how many are
left. We too should reckon up, not how far we are advanced in virtue, but how
much remains for us. For what doth that which is finished profit us, when that
which is deficient is not added? Moreover he did not say, I do not reckon up, but
I do not even remember. For we thus become eager, when we apply all diligence
to what is left, when we give to oblivion everything else. "Stretching forward,"
saith he; before we arrive, we strive to obtain. For he that stretches forward
is one who, though his feet are running, endeavors to outstrip them with the
rest of his body, stretching himself towards the front, and reaching out his
hands, that he may accomplish somewhat more of the course. And this comes from
great eagerness, from much warmth; thus the runner should run with great
earnestness, with so great eagerness, without relaxation. As far as one who so runs
differs from him who lies supine, so far doth Paul differ from us. He died daily,
he was approved daily, there was no season, there was no time in which his
course advanced not. He wished not to take, but to snatch the prize; for in this way
we may take it. He who giveth the prize standeth on high, the prize is laid up
on high.
See how great a distance this is that must be run over! See how great an
ascent! Thither we must fly up with the wings of the Spirit, otherwise it is
impossible to surmount this height. Thither must we go with the body, for it is
allowed. "For our citizenship is in heaven" (Phil. iii. 20), there is the prize;
seest thou the runners, how they live by rule, how they touch nothing that
relaxes their strength, how they exercise themselves every day in the palaestra,
under a master, and by rule? Imitate them, or rather exhibit even greater
eagerness, for the prizes are not equal: many are those who would hinder you; live by
rule: many are the things which relax your strength; make its feet(1) agile:
for it is possible so to do, it comes not naturally, but by our will. Let us
bring it to lightness, lest our swiftness of foot be hindered by the weight of
other things. Teach thy feet to be sure. for there are many slippery places, and
if thou fallest, straightway thou losest much. But yet if thou fall, rise up
again. Even thus mayst thou obtain the victory. Never attempt slippery things, and
thou wilt not fall; walk upon firm ground, up with thy head, up with thine
eyes; these commands the trainers give to those who run. Thus thy strength is
supported; but if thou stoopest downward, thou fallest, thou art relaxed. Look
upward, where the prize is; the sight of the prize increaseth the determination of
our will. The hope of taking it suffereth not to perceive the toils, it maketh
the distance appear short. And what is this prize? No palm branch; but what?
The kingdom of heaven, everlasting rest, glory together with Christ, the
inheritance, brotherhood, ten thousand good things, which it is impossible to name. It
is impossible to describe the beauty of that prize; he who hath it alone
knoweth it, and he who is about to receive it. It is not of gold, it is not set with
jewels, it is far more precious. Gold is mire, in comparison with that prize,
precious stones are mere bricks in comparison with its beauty. If thou hast
this, and takest thy departure to heaven, thou wilt be able to walk there with
great honor; the angels will reverence thee, when thou bearest this prize, with
much confidence wilt thou approach them all. "In Christ Jesus." See the humility
of his mind; this I do, saith he, "in Christ Jesus," for it is impossible
without an impulse from Him to pass over so vast an interval: we have need of much
aid, of a mighty alliance; He hath willed that thou shouldest struggle below, on
high He crowns thee. Not as in this world; the crown is not here, where the
contest is; but the crown is in that bright place. See ye not, even here, that the
most honored of the wrestlers and charioteers are not crowned in the course
below, but the king calls them up, and crowns them there? Thus too is it here, in
heaven thou receivest the prize.
Ver. 15. "Let us, therefore, as many as be perfect, be thus minded," saith
he. "And if in anything ye are otherwise minded, even this shall God reveal
unto you." What sort of thing? That we should "forget the things which are
behind." Wherefore it belongs to him who is perfect not to consider himself perfect.
How therefore sayest thou, "as many as are perfect"? For tell me, are we minded
as thou art? For if thou hast not attained nor art perfected, how dost thou
command those that are perfect to be so minded as thou art, who art not yet
perfect? Yea, for this, saith he, is perfection. And "if ye are in anything
otherwise minded, even this shall God reveal unto you." That is, if any one considers
that he has attained all excellence. He puts them on their guard, not by
speaking directly, but what saith he? "If in anything ye are otherwise minded, even
this shall God reveal unto you." See how humbly he saith this! God shall teach
you, i.e. God shall persuade you,(1) not teach you; for Paul was teaching, but
God shall lead them on. And he said not, shall lead you on, but "shall reveal,"
that this may rather seem to spring from ignorance. These words were spoken not
concerning doctrines, but concerning perfection of life, and our not
considering ourselves to be perfect, for he who considers that he hath apprehended all,
hath nothing.
Ver. 16. "Only, whereunto we have already attained, by that same rule let
us walk, let us mind the same thing."
"Only, whereunto we have attained." What means this? Let us hold fast, he
saith, that in which we have succeeded; love, concord, and peace: for in this
we have succeeded.(2) "Whereto we have attained: to walk by the same rule, to
mind the same thing." "Whereunto we have attained," i.e. in this we have already
succeeded. Seest thou, that he wills that his precepts should be a rule to us?
And a rule admits neither addition, nor subtraction, since that destroys its
being a rule. "By the same rule," i.e. by the same faith, within the same limits.
Ver. 17. "Brethren, be ye imitators of me, and mark them which so walk
even as ye have us for an ensample."
He had said above, "beware of dogs," from such he had led them away; he
brings them near to these whom they ought to imitate. If any one, saith he,
wishes to imitate me, if any one wishes to walk the same road, let him take heed to
them; though I am not present, ye know the manner of my walk, that is, my
conduct in life. For not by words only did he teach, but by deeds too; as in the
chorus, and the army, the rest must imitate the leader of the chorus or the army,
and thus advance in good order. For it is possible that the order may be
dissolved by sedition.
The Apostles therefore were a type, and kept throughout a certain
archetypal model. Consider how entirely accurate their life was, so that they are
proposed as an archetype and example, and as living laws. For what was said in their
writings, they manifested to all in their actions. This is the best teaching;
thus he will be able to carry on his disciple. But if he indeed speaks as a
philosopher, yet in his actions doth the contrary, he is no longer a teacher. For
mere verbal philosophy is easy even for the disciple: but there is need of that
teaching and leading which comes of deeds. For this both makes the teacher to
be reverenced, and prepares the disciple to yield obedience. How so? When one
sees him delivering philosophy in words, he will say he commands
impossibilities; that they are impossibilities, he himself is the first to show, who does not
practice them. But if he sees his virtue fully carried out in action, he will
no longer be able to speak thus. Yet although the life of our teacher be
careless, let us take heed to ourselves, and let us listen to the words of the
prophet; "They shall be all taught of God." (Isa. liv. 13.) "And they shall teach no
more every man his brother, saying, Know the Lord, for they shall all know me
from the least of them to the greatest of them." (Jer. xxxi. 34.) Hast thou a
teacher who is not virtuous? Still thou hast Him who is truly a Teacher, whom
alone thou shouldest call a Teacher. Learn from Him: He hath said, "Learn of Me,
for I am meek." (Matt. xi. 29.) Take not heed, then, to thy teacher, but to Him
and to His lessons. Take thence thy examples, thou hast a most excellent model,
to it conform thyself. There are innumerable models laid before thee in the
Scriptures of virtuous lives; whichsoever thou wilt, come, and after the Master
find it in the disciples. One hath shown forth through poverty, another through
riches; for example, Elijah through poverty, Abraham through riches. Go to that
example, which thou esteemest most easy, most befitting thyself to practice.
Again, one by marriage, the other by virginity; Abraham by marriage, the other
by virginity. Follow whichever thou wilt: for both lead to heaven. One shone
forth by fasting, as John, another without fasting, as Job. Again, this latter had
a care for his wife, his children, his daughters, his family, and possessed
great wealth; the other possessed nothing but the garment of hair. And why do I
make mention of family, or wealth, or money, when it is possible that even one
in a kingdom should lay hold on virtue, for the house of a king would be found
more full of trouble than any private family. David then shone forth in his
kingdom; the purple and the diadem rendered him not at all remiss. To another it
was entrusted to preside over a whole people, I mean Moses, which was a more
difficult task, for there the power was greater, whence the difficulty too became
greater. Thou hast seen men approved in wealth, thou hast seen them in poverty
also, thou hast seen them in marriage, thou hast seen them in virginity too; on
the contrary, behold some lost in marriage and in virginity, in wealth and in
poverty. For example, many men have perished in marriage, as Samson,[1] yet not
from marriage, but from their own deliberate choice. Likewise in virginity, as
the five virgins. In wealth, as the rich man, who disregarded Lazarus: in
poverty, innumerable poor men even now are lost. In a kingdom, I can point to many
who have perished, and in ruling the people. Wouldest thou see men saved in the
rank of a soldier? there is Cornelius; and in the government of a household?
there is the eunuch of the Ethiopian Queen. Thus is it universally. If we use our
wealth as is fit, nothing will destroy us; but if not, all things will destroy
us, whether a kingdom, or poverty, or wealth. But nothing will have power to
hurt the man, who keeps well awake.
For tell me, was captivity any harm? None at all. For consider, I pray
thee, Joseph, who became a slave, and preserved his virtue. Consider Daniel, and
the Three Children, who became captives, and how much the more they shone forth,
for virtue shineth everywhere, is invincible, and nothing can put hindrances
in its way. But why make I mention of poverty, and captivity, and slavery; and
hunger, and sores, and grievous disease? For disease is, more hard to endure
than slavery. Such was Lazarus, such was Job, such was also Timothy, straitened
by" often infirmities." (1 Tim. v. 23.) Thou seest that nothing can obtain the
mastery over virtue; neither wealth, nor poverty, nor dominion, nor subjection,
nor the preëminence in affairs, nor disease, nor contempt, nor abandonment. But
having left all these things below, and upon the earth, it hastens towards
Heaven. Only let the soul be noble, and nought can hinder it from being virtuous.
For when he who works is in vigor, nothing external can hinder him; for as in
the arts, when the artificer is experienced and persevering, and thoroughly
acquainted with his art, if disease overtakes him, he still hath it; if he became
poor, he still hath it; whether he hath his tools in his hand or hath them not,
whether he works or worketh not, he loseth not at all his art: for the science
of it is contained within him. Thus too the virtuous man, who is devoted to God,
manifests his art, if you cast him into wealth, or if into poverty, if into
disease, if into health, if into dishonor, if into great honor. Did not the
Apostles work in every state, "By glory and dishonor, by good report and evil
report"? (2 Cor. vi. 8.) This is an athlete, to be prepared for everything; for such
is also the nature of virtue.
If thou sayest, I am not able to preside over many, I ought to lead a
solitary life; thou offerest an insult to virtue, for it can make use of every
state, and shine through all: only let it be in the soul. Is there a famine? or is
there abundance? It shows forth its own strength, as Paul saith, "I know how to
abound, and how to be in want." (Phil. iv. 12; Acts xxviii. 30.) Was he
required to work? He was not ashamed, but wrought two years. Was hunger to be
undergone? He sank not under it, nor wavered. Was death to be borne? He became not
dejected, through all he exhibited his noble mind and art. Him therefore let us
imitate, and we shall have no cause of grief: for tell me, what will have power
to grieve such an one? Nothing. As long as no one deprives us of this art, this
will be the most blessed of all men, even in this life as well as in that to
come. For suppose the good man hath a wife and children, and riches, and great
honor, with all these things he remaineth alike virtuous. Take them away, and
again in like sort he will be virtuous, neither overwhelmed by his misfortunes,
nor puffed up by prosperity, but as a rock standeth equally unmoved in the raging
sea and in calm, neither broken by the waves nor influenced at all by the
calm, thus too the solid mind stands firm both in calm and in storm. And as little
children, when sailing in a ship, are tossed about, whilst the pilot sits by,
laughing and undisturbed, and delighted to see their confusion; thus too the
soul which is truly wise, when all others are in confusion, or else are
inopportunely smiling at any change of circumstance, sits unmoved, as it were, at the
tiller and helm of piety. For tell me, what can disturb the pious soul? Can death?
This is the beginning of a better life. Can poverty? This helps her on toward
virtue. Can disease? She regards not its presence. She regards neither ease,
nor affliction; for being beforehand with it, she hath afflicted herself. Can
dishonor? The world hath been crucified to her. Can the loss of children? She
fears it not, when she is fully persuaded of the Resurrection. What then can
surprise her? None of all these things. Doth wealth elevate her? By no means, she
knoweth that money is nothing. Doth glory? She hath been taught that "all the
glory of man is as the flower of grass." (Isa. xl. 6.) Doth luxury? She hath heard
Paul say, "She that giveth herself to pleasure is dead while she liveth." (1
Tim. v. 6.) Since then she is neither inflamed nor cramped, what can equal such
health as this?
Other souls, meanwhile, are not such, but change more frequently than the
sea, or the cameleon, so that thou hast great cause to smile, when thou seest
the same man at one time laughing, at another weeping, at one time full of care,
at another beyond measure relaxed and languid. For this cause Paul saith, "Be
not fashioned according to this world." (Rom. xii. 2.) For we are citizens of
heaven, where there is no turning. Prizes which change not are held out to us.
Let us make manifest this our citizenship, let us thence already receive our
good things. But why do we cast ourselves into the Euripus, into tempest, into
storm, into foam? Let us be in calm. It all depends not on wealth, nor on poverty,
nor honor, nor dishonor, nor on sickness, nor on health, nor on weakness, but
on our own soul. If it is solid, and well-instructed in the science of virtue,
all things will be easy to it. Even hence it will already behold its rest, and
that quiet harbor, and, on its departure, will there attain innumerable good
things, the which may we all attain, by the grace and love of our Lord Jesus
Christ, with whom, to the Father, together with the Holy Spirit, be glory,
dominion, honor, now and ever, and world without end. Amen.