HOMILIES OF ST. JOHN CHRYSOSTOM ON THE EPISTLE OF ST. PAUL THE APOSTLE TO THE
COLOSSIANS, HOMILIES V TO VIII (CHAPTERS 1 TO 3)
HOMILY V.
COLOSSIANS i. 26--28.
"Even the mystery which hath been hid from all ages and generations: but now
hath it been manifested to His saints, to whom God was pleased to make known
what is the riches of the glory of this mystery among the Gentiles, which is
Christ in you, the hope of glory: whom we proclaim, admonishing every man, and
teaching every man in all wisdom, that we may present every man perfect in Christ."
HAVING said what we have come to, and showed the lovingkindness of God and
the honor, by the greatness of the things given, he introduces yet another
consideration that heightens them, namely, that neither before us did any one know
Him.(1) As he doth also in the Epistle to the Ephesians, saying, neither
Angels, nor principalities, nor any other created power, but only the Son of God
knew. (Eph. iii. 5, 9, 10.) And he said, not simply hid, but "quite hid," and that
even if it hath but now come to pass, yet it is of old, and from the beginning
God willed these things, and they were so planned out; but why, he saith not
yet. "From the ages," from the beginning, as one might say. And with reason he
calleth that a mystery, which none knew, save God. And where hid? In Christ; as
he saith in the Epistle to the Ephesians (Eph. iii. 9), or as when the Prophet
saith, "From everlasting even to everlasting Thou art." (Ps. xc. 2.) But now
hath been manifested, he saith, "to His saints." So that it is altogether of the
dispensation of God. "But now hath been manifested," he saith. He saith not,
"is come to pass," but, "hath been manifested to His saints." So that it is even
now still hid, since it hath been manifested to His saints alone.
Let not others therefore deceive you, for they know not. Why to them
alone? "To whom He was pleased," he saith. See how everywhere He stops the mouth of
their questions. "To whom God was pleased to make known," he saith. Yet His
will is not without reason. By way of making them accountable for grace, rather
than allowing them to have high thoughts, as though it were of their own
achieving, he said, "To whom he was pleased to make known." "What is the riches of the
glory of this mystery among the Gentiles." He hath spoken loftily, and
accumulated emphasis, seeking, out of his great earnestness, for amplification upon
amplification. For this also is an amplification, the saying indefinitely, "The
riches of the glory of this mystery among the Gentiles." For it is most of all
apparent among the Gentiles, as he also says elsewhere, "And that the Gentiles
might glorify God for His mercy." (Rom. xv. 9.) For the great glory of this
mystery is apparent among others also, but much more among these. For, on a sudden,
to have brought men more senseless than stones to the dignity of Angels, simply
through bare words, and faith alone, without any laboriousness, is indeed
glory and riches of mystery: just as if one were to take a dog, quite consumed with
hunger and the mange, foul, and loathsome to see, and not so much as able to
move, but lying cast out, and make him all at once into a man, and to display
him upon the royal throne. They were wont to worship stones and the earth; but
they learned that themselves are better both than the heaven and the sun, and
that the whole world serveth them; they were captives and prisoners of the devil:
on a sudden they are placed above his head, and lay commands on him and scourge
him: from being captives and slaves to demons, they are become the body of The
Master of the Angels and the Archangels; from not knowing even what God is,
they are become all at once sharers even in God's throne. Wouldest thou see the
countless steps they overleaped? First, they had to learn that stones are not
gods; secondly, that they not only are not gods, but inferior even to men;
thirdly, to brutes even; fourthly, to plants even; fifthly, they brought together
the extremes:(1) that not only stones but not earth even, nor animals, nor
plants, nor man, nor heaven; or, to begin again, that not stones, not animals, not
plants, not elements, pot things above, not things below, not man, not demons,
not Angels, not Archangels, not any of those Powers above, ought to be worshiped
by the nature of man. Being drawn up,(2) as it were, from some deep, they had
to learn that the Lord of all, He is God, that Him alone is it right to worship;
that the virtuous life(3) is a good thing; that this present death is not
death, nor this life, life; that the body is raised, that it becomes incorruptible,
that it will ascend into heaven, that it obtains even immortality, that it
standeth with Angels, that it is removed thither. But Him who was there below,
having cleared at a bound all these steps, He has placed on high upon the throne,
having made Him that was lower than the stones, higher in dominion than the
Angels, and the Archangels, and the thrones, and the dominions. Truly "What is the
riches of the glory of this mystery?" Just as if one should show a fool to be
all at once made a philosopher; yea rather, whatsoever one should say, it would
be as nothing: for even the words of Paul are undefined. "What is the riches,"
he saith, "of the glory of this mystery among the Gentiles, which is Christ in
you?" Again, they had to learn that He who is above, and who ruleth Angels and
dominions, and all the other Powers, came down below, and was made Man, and
suffered countless things, and rose again, and was received up.
All these things were of the mystery; and he sets them down together with
lofty praise, saying, "Which is Christ in you?" But if He be in you, why seek
ye Angels? "Of this mystery." For there are other mysteries besides. But this is
really a mystery, which no one knew, which is marvelous, which is beside the
common expectation, which was hid. "Which is Christ in you," he saith, "the hope
of glory, whom we proclaim," bringing Him from above. "Whom we," not Angels:
"teaching" and "admonishing": not imperiously nor using constraint, for this too
is of God's lovingkindness to men, not to bring them to Him after the manner
of a tyrant. Seeing it was a great thing he had said, "teaching," he added,
"admonishing," which is rather like a father than an instructor. "Whom," saith he,
"we proclaim, admonishing every man, and teaching every man in all wisdom." So
that all wisdom is needed. That is, saying all things in wisdom. For the
ability to learn such things exists not in every one. "That we may present every man
perfect in Christ Jesus." What sayest thou, "every man"? Yea; this is what we
are earnestly desirous of doing, he saith. For what, if this do not come to
pass? the blessed Paul endeavored. "Perfect." This then is perfection, the other is
imperfect: so that if one have not even the whole of wisdom, he is imperfect.
"Perfect in Christ Jesus," not in the Law, nor in Angels, for that is not
perfection. "In Christ," that is, in the knowledge of Christ. For he that knows what
Christ has done, will have higher thoughts than to be satisfied with Angels.
"In Christ Jesus"; ver. 29. "Whereunto I labor also, striving." And he
said not, "I am desirous" merely, nor in any indifferent way, but "I labor,
striving," with great earnestness, with much watching. If I, for your good, thus
watch, much more ought ye. Then again, showing that it is of God, he saith,
"according to His working which worketh in me mightily." He shows that this is the
work of God. He, now, that makes me strong for this, evidently wills it.
Wherefore also when beginning he saith, "Through the will of God." (Ver. 1.) So that it
is not only out of modesty he so expresses himself, but insisting on the truth
of the Word as well. "And striving." In saying this, he shows that many are
fighting against him. Then great is his tender affection.
Chap. ii. v. 1. "For I would have you know how greatly I strive for you, and for them at
Laodicea."
Then lest this should seem owing to their peculiar weakness, he joined
others also with them, and as yet condemned them not. But why does he say, "And as
many as have not seen my face in the flesh"? He shows here after a divine
manner, that they saw him constantly in the Spirit. And he bears witness to their
great love.
Ver. 2. 3. "That their hearts may be comforted, they being knit together
in love, and unto all riches of the full assurance of understanding, that they
may know the mystery of God the Father,(1) and of Christ: in whom are all the
treasures of wisdom and knowledge hidden."
Now henceforward he is hastening and in pangs to enter upon the doctrine,
neither accusing them, nor clearing them of accusation. "I strive," he saith.
To what end? That they may be knit together. What he means is something like
this; that they may stand firm in the faith. He doth not however so express
himself; but extenuates the matter of accusation. That is, that they may be united
with love, not with necessity nor with force. For as I have said, he always
avoids offending, by leaving it to themselves;(2) and therefore "striving," because
I wish it to be with love, and willingly. For I do not wish it to be with the
lips merely, nor merely that they shall be brought together, but "that their
hearts may be comforted."
"Being knit together in love unto all riches of the full assurance of
understanding." That is, that they may doubt about nothing, that they may be fully
assured in all things. But I meant full assurance which is by faith, for there
is a full assurance which cometh by arguments, but that is worthy of no
consideration. I know, he saith, that ye believe, but I would have you fully assured:
not "unto riches" only, but "unto all riches"; that your full assurance may be
intense, as well as in all things. And observe the wisdom of this blessed one.
He said not, "Ye do ill that ye are not fully assured," nor accused them; but,
ye know not how desirous I am that ye may be fully assured, and not merely so,
but with understanding. For seeing he spoke of faith; suppose not, he saith,
that I meant barely and unprofitably, but with understanding and love. "That they
may know the mystery of God the Father and of Christ." So that this is the
mystery of God, the being brought unto Him by the Son. "And of Christ, in whom are
hid all the treasures of wisdom and knowledge." But if they are in Him, then
wisely also no doubt He came at this time. Wherefore then do some foolish
persons object to Him, "See how He discourseth with the simpler sort." "In whom are
all the treasures." He himself knows all things. "Hid," for think not in truth
that ye already have all; they are hidden also even from Angels, not, from you
only; so that you ought to ask all things from Him. He himself giveth wisdom and
knowledge. Now by saying, "treasures," he shows their largeness, by "All,"
that He is ignorant of nothing, by "hid," that He alone knoweth.
Ver. 4. "This I say, that no one may delude you with persuasiveness of
speech."
Seest thou that he saith, I have therefore said this, that ye may not seek
it from men. "Delude you," he saith, "with persuasiveness of speech." For what
if any doth speak, and speak persuasively?
Ver. 5. "For though I am absent in the flesh, yet am I with you in the
spirit."
The direct thing to have said here was, "even though I be absent in the
flesh, yet, nevertheless, I know the deceivers"; but instead he has ended with
praise, "Joying and beholding your order, and the steadfastness of your faith in
Christ." "Your order," he means, your good order. "And the steadfastness of
your faith in Christ." This is still more in the way of encomium. And he said not
"faith," but steadfastness, as to soldiers standing in good order and firmly.
Now that which is steadfast, neither deceit nor trial can shake asunder. Not
only, he saith, have ye not fallen, but no one hath so much as thrown you into
disorder. He hath set himself over them, that they may fear him as though present;
for thus is order preserved. From solidity follows compactedness, for you will
then produce solidity, when having brought many things together, you shall
cement them compactedly and inseparably; thus a solidity is produced, as in the
case of a wall. But this is the peculiar work of love; for those who were by
themselves, when it hath closely cemented and knit them together, it renders solid.
And faith, again, doeth the same thing; when it allows not reasonings to
intrude themselves. For as reasonings divide, and shake loose, so faith causes
solidity and compactness.
For seeing God hath bestowed upon us benefits surpassing man's reasoning,
suitably enough He hath brought in faith. It is not possible to be steadfast,
when demanding reasons. For behold all our lofty doctrines, how destitute they
are of reasonings, and dependent upon faith alone. God is not anywhere, and is
everywhere. What hath less reason in it than this? Each by itself is full of
difficulty. For, indeed, He is not in place; nor is there any place in which He
is. He was not made, He made not Himself, He never began to be. What reasoning
will receive this, if there be not faith? Does it not seem to be utterly
ridiculous, and more endless than a riddle?
Now that He hath no beginning, and is uncreate, and uncircumscribed, and
infinite, is, as we have said, a manifest difficulty; but let us consider His
incorporealness, whether we can search out this by reasoning. God is incorporeal.
What is incorporeal? A bare word, and no more, for the apprehension has
received nothing, has impressed nothing upon itself; for if it does so impress, it
comes to nature, and what constitutes body. So that the mouth speaks indeed, but
the understanding knows not what it speaks, save one thing only, that it is not
body, this is all it knows. And why do I speak of God? In the case of the
soul, which is created, inclosed, circumscribed, what is incorporealness? say!
show! Thou canst not. Is it air? But air is body, even though it be not compact,
and it is plain from many proofs that it is a yielding body. Fire is body, whilst
the energy of the soul is bodiless. Wherefore? Since it penetrateth
everywhere. If it is not(1) itself body, then that which is incorporeal exists in place,
therefore it is circumscribed; and that which is circumscribed has figure; and
figures are linear, and lines belong to bodies. Again, that which is without
figure, what conception does it admit? It has no figure, no form, no outline.
Seest thou how the understanding becomes dizzy?
Again, That Nature [viz. God's] is not susceptible of evil. But He is also
good of His own will; it is therefore susceptible. But one may not so say, far
be it! Again, was He brought into being, willing it, or not willing it? But
neither may one say this. Again, circumscribes He the world, or no? If He
circumscribes it not, He is Himself circumscribed, but if He circumscribes it, He is
infinite in His nature. Again, circumscribes He Himself? If He circumscribes
Himself, then He is not without beginning to Himself, but to us; therefore He is
not in His nature withOUt beginning. Everywhere one must grant contradictories.
Seest thou how great the darkness is; and how everywhere there is need of
faith. This it is, that is solid. But, if you will, let us come to things which
are less than these. That substance hath an operation. And what in His case is
operation? Is it a certain motion? Then He is not immutable: for that which is
moved, is not immutable: for, from being motionless it becomes in motion. But
nevertheless He is in motion, and never stands still. But what kind of motion,
tell me; for amongst us there are seven kinds; down, up, in, out, right, left,
circular, or, if not this, increase, decrease, generation, destruction,
alteration. But is His motion none of these, but such as the mind is moved with? No,
nor this either. Far be it! for in many things the mind is even absurdly moved.
Is to will, to operate, or not? If to will is to operate, and He wills all men
to be good, and to be saved (1 Tim. ii. 4), how comes it not to pass? But to
will is one thing, to operate, another. To will then is not sufficient for
operation. How then saith the Scripture, "He hath done whatsoever He willed"? (Ps.
cxv. 3.) And again, the leper saith unto Christ, "If Thou wilt, Thou canst make
me clean." (Matt. viii. 2.) For if this follows in company with the will, what
is to be said? Will ye that I mention yet another thing? How were the things
that are, made out of things that are not? How will they be resolved into nothing?
What is above the heaven? And again, what above that? and what above that? and
beyond that? and so on to infinity. What is below the earth? Sea, and beyond
this, what? and beyond that again? Nay; to the right, and to the left, is there
not the same difficulty?
But these indeed are things unseen. Will ye that I lead the discourse to
those which are seen; those which have already happened? Tell me, how did the
beast contain Jonah in its belly, without his perishing? Is it not void of
reason, and its motions without control? How spared it the righteous man? How was it
that the heat did not suffocate him? How was it that it putrefied him not? For
if to be in the deep only, is past contriving, to be both in the creature's
bowels, and in that heat, is very far more unaccountable. If from within we
breathe(1) the air, how did the respiration suffice for two animals? And how did it
also vomit him forth unharmed? And how too did he speak? And how too was he
self-possessed, and prayed? Are not these things incredible? If we test them by
reasonings, they are incredible, if by faith, they are exceeding credible.
Shall I say something more than this? The wheat in the earth's bosom
decays, and rises again. Behold marvels, opposite, and each surpassing the other;
marvelous is the not becoming corrupted, marvelous, after becoming so, is the
rising again. Where are they that make sport of such things, and disbelieve the
Resurrection and say, This bone how shall it be cemented to that? and introduce
such like silly tales. Tell me, how did Elias ascend in a chariot of fire? Fire
is wont to burn, not to carry aloft. How lives he so long a time? In what place
is he? Why was this done? Whither was Enoch translated? Lives he on like food
with us? and what is it hinders him from being here? Nay, but does he not eat?
And wherefore was he translated? Behold how God schooleth us by little and
little. He translated Enoch; no very great thing that. This instructed us for the
taking up of Elias. He shut in Noe into the ark (Gen. vii. 7); nor is this
either any very great thing. This instructed us for the shutting up of the prophet
within the whale. Thus even the things of old stood in need of forerunners and
types. For as in a ladder the first step sends on to the second, and from the
first it is not possible to step to the fourth, and this sends one on to that,
that that may be the way to the next; and as it is not possible either to get to
the second before the first; so also is it here.
And observe the signs of signs, and thou wilt discern this in the ladder
which Jacob saw. "Above," it is said, "the Lord stood fast, and underneath
Angels were ascending and descending." (Gen. xxviii. 13.) It was prophesied that the
Father hath a Son; it was necessary this should be believed. Whence wouldest
thou that I show thee the signs of this? From above, downward? From beneath,
upward? Because He begetteth without passion,(2) for this reason did she that was
barren first bear. Let us rather go higher. It was necessary to be believed,
that He begat of Himself. What then? The thing happens obscurely indeed, as in
type and shadow, but still it doth happen, and as it goes on it becomes somehow
clearer. A woman is formed out of man alone, and he remains whole and entire.
Again, it was necessary there should be some sure sign of the Conception of a
Virgin. So the barren beareth, not once only, but a second time and a third, and
many times. Of His birth then of a Virgin, the barren is a type, and she sends
the mind forward to faith. Again, this was a type of God being able to beget
alone. For if man is the chief agent,(3) and birth takes place without him, in a
more excellent way, much rather, is One begotten of the Chiefest Agent. There is
still another generation, which is a type of the Truth. I mean, ours by the
Spirit. Of this again the barren a type, the fact that it is not of blood (John
i. 13); this pertains to the generation above. The one--as also the types--shows
that the generation is to be without passion; the other, that it could proceed
from one above.
Christ is above, ruling over all things: it was necessary this should be
believed. The same takes place in the earth with respect to man. "Let Us make
man after Our image and likeness" (Gen. i. 26), for dominion of all the brutes.
Thus He instructed us, not by words, but by actions. Paradise showed the
separateness of his nature, and that man was the best thing of all. Christ was to rise
again; see now how many sure signs there were; Enoch, Elias, Jonas, the fiery
furnace, the case of Noah, baptism, the seeds, the plants, our own generation,
that of all animals. For since on this everything was at stake, it, more than
any other, had abundance of types.
That the Universe(4) is not without a Providence we may conjecture from
things amongst ourselves, for nothing will continue to exist, if not provided
for; but even herds, and all other things stand in need of governance. And that
the Universe was not made by chance, Hell is a proof, and so was the deluge in
Noah's day, the fire,(5) the overwhelming of the Egyptians in the sea, the
things which happened in the wilderness.
It was necessary too that many things should prepare the way for Baptism;
yea, thousands of things; those, for instance, in the Old Testament, those in
the Pool,(6) the cleansing of him that was not sound in health, the deluge
itself, and all the things that have been done in water, the baptism of John.
It was necessary to be believed that God giveth up His Son; a man did this
by anticipation, Abraham the Patriarch. Types then of all these things, if we
are so inclined, we shall find by searching in the Scriptures. But let us not
be weary, but attune ourselves by these things. Let us hold the faith
steadfastly, and show forth strictness of life: that having through all things
returned thanks to God, we may be counted worthy of the good things promised to them
that love Him, through the grace and lovingkindness of our Lord Jesus Christ,
with whom, &c.
HOMILY VI.
COLOSSIANS ii. 6, 7.
"As therefore ye received Christ Jesus the Lord, so walk in Him, rooted and
built up in Him, and stablished in your faith, even as ye were taught, abounding
in thanksgiving."
AGAIN, he takes hold on them beforehand with their own testimony, saying,
"As therefore ye received." We introduce no strange addition, he saith, neither
do ye. "Walk ye in Him," for He is the Way that leadeth to the Father: not in
the Angels; this way leadeth not thither. "Rooted," that is, fixed; not one
while going this way, another that, but "rooted": now that which is rooted, never
can remove. Observe how appropriate are the expressions he employs. "And built
up," that is, in thought attaining unto Him. "And stablished" in Him, that is,
holding Him, built as on a foundation. He shows that they had fallen down, for
the word "built"(1) has this force. For the faith is in truth a building; and
needs both a strong foundation, and secure construction. For both if any one
build not upon a secure foundation it will shake; and even though he do, if it be
not firm, it will not stand. "As ye were taught." Again, the word "As."
"Abounding," he saith, "in thanksgiving"; for this is the part of well-disposed
persons, I say not simply to give thanks, but with great abundance, more than ye
learned, if possible, with much ambition.
Ver. 8. "Take heed lest there shall be any one that maketh spoil of you."
Seest thou how he shows him to be a thief, and an alien, and one that
enters in softly? For he has already represented him to be entering in. "Beware."
And he well said "maketh spoil." As one digging away a mound from underneath,
may give no perceptible sign, yet it gradually settles, so do you also beware;
for this is his main point, not even to let himself be perceived. As if some one
were robbing every day, and he (the owner of the house) were told, "Beware lest
there be some one"; and he shows the way--through this way--as if we were to
say, through this chamber;(2) so, "through philosophy," says he.
Then because the term "philosophy" has an appearance of dignity, he added,
"and vain deceit." For there is also a good deceit; such as many have been
deceived by, which one ought not even to call a deceit at all. Whereof Jeremiah
speaks; "O Lord, Thou hast deceived me, and I was deceived"(3) (Jer. xx. 7); for
such as this one ought not to call a deceit at all; for Jacob also deceived his
father, but that was not a deceit, but an economy. "Through his philosophy,"
he saith, "and vain deceit, after the tradition of men, after the rudiments(4)
of the world, and not after Christ." Now he sets about to reprove their
observance of particular(5) days, meaning by elements of the world the sun and moon;(6)
as he also said in the Epistle to the Galatians, "How turn ye back again to
the weak and beggarly elements?" (Gal. iv. 9.) And he said not observances of
days, but in general of the present world, to show its worthlessness: for if the
present world be nothing, much more then its elements. Having first shown how
great benefits and kindnesses they had received, he afterwards brings on his
accusation, thereby to show its greater seriousness, and to convict his hearers.
Thus too the Prophets do. They always first point out the benefits, and then
they magnify their accusation; as Esaias saith, "I have begotten children, and
exalted them, but they have rejected me" (Isa. i. 2, Sept.); and again, "O my
people, what have I done unto thee, or wherein have I grieved thee, or wherein have
I wearied thee"? (Mic. vi. 3) and David; as when he says, "I heard thee in the
secret place of the tempest" (Ps. lxxxi. 7, Sept.); and again, "Open thy
mouth, and I will fill it." (Ps. lxxxi. 10.) And everywhere you will find it the
same.
That indeed were most one's duty, not to be persuaded by them, even did
they say aught to the purpose; as it is, however, obligations apart even, it
would be our duty to shun those things. "And not after Christ," he saith. For were
it in such sort a matter done by halves, that ye were able to serve both the
one and the other not even so ought ye to do it; as it is, however, he suffers
you not to be "after Christ." Those things withdraw you from Him. Having first
shaken to pieces the Grecian observances, he next overthrows the Jewish ones
also. For both Greeks and Jews practiced many observances, but the former from
philosophy, the latter from the Law. First then, he makes at those against whom
lay the heavier accusation. How, "not after Christ"?
Ver. 9, 10. "For in Him dwelleth all the fullness of the Godhead bodily:
and in Him ye are made full, who is the head of all principality and power."
Observe how in his accusing of the one he thrusts through the other, by
first giving the solution, and then the objection. For such a solution is not
suspected, and the hearer accepts it the rather, that the speaker is not making it
his aim. For in that case indeed he would make a point of not coming off
worsted, but in this, not so. "For in Him dwelleth," that is, for God dwelleth in
Him. But that thou mayest not think Him enclosed, as in a body, he saith, "All
the fullness of the Godhead bodily: and ye are made full in Him." Others say that
he intends the Church filled by His Godhead, as he elsewhere saith, "of Him
that filleth all in all" (Eph. i. 23), and that the term "bodily" is here, as the
body in the head. How is it then that he did not add, "which is the Church"?
Some again say it is with reference to The Father, that he says that the
fullness of the Godhead dwells in Him, but wrongly.(1) First, because "to dwell,"
cannot strictly be said of God: next, because the "fullness" is not that which
receives, for "the earth is the Lord's, and the fullness thereof" (Ps. xxiv. 1);
and again the Apostle, "until the fullness of the Gentiles be come in." (Rom. xi.
25.) By "fullness" is meant "the whole." Then the word "bodily," what did it
intend? "As in a head." But why does he say the same thing over again? "And ye
are made full in Him." What then does it mean? That ye have nothing less than
He. As it dwelt in Him, so also in you. For Paul is ever straining to bring us
near to Christ; as when he says, "Hath raised us up with Him, and made us to sit
with Him" (Eph. ii. 6): and, "If we endure, we shall also reign with Him" (2
Tim. ii. 12): and, "How shall He not also with Him freely give us all things"
(Rom. viii. 32): and calling us "fellow-heirs." Then as for His dignity. And He
"is the head of all principality and power." (Eph. iii. 6.) He that is above all,
The Cause, is He not Consubstantial? Then he has added the benefit in a
marvelous way; and far more marvelous than in the Epistle to the Romans. For there
indeed he saith, "circumcision of the heart in the spirit, not in the letter"
(Rom. ii. 29), but here, in Christ.
Ver. 11. "In whom ye were also circumcised with a circumcision not made
with hands, in the putting off of the body of the flesh in the circumcision of
Christ."
See how near he is come to the thing. He saith, "In the putting" quite
away,(2) not putting off merely. "The body of sins." He means, "the old life." He
is continually adverting to this in different ways, as he said above, "Who
delivered us out of the power of darkness, and reconciled us who were alienated,"
that we should be "holy and without blemish." (Col. i. 13, 21.) No longer, he
saith, is the circumcision with(3) the knife, but in Christ Himself; for no hand
imparts this circumcision, as is the case there, but the Spirit. It
circumciseth not a part, but the whole man. It is the body both in the one and the other
case, but in the one it is carnally, in the other it is spiritually circumcised;
but not as the Jews, for ye have not put off flesh, but sins. When and where?
In Baptism. And what he calls circumcision, he again calls burial. Observe how
he again passes on to the subject of righteous doings; "of the sins," he saith,
"of the flesh," the things they had done in the flesh. He speaks of a greater
thing than circumcision, for they did not merely cast away that of which they
were circumcised, but they destroyed it, they annihilated it.
Ver. 12. "Buried with him," he saith, "in Baptism, wherein ye were also
raised with Him, through faith in the working of God, who raised Him from the
dead."
But it is not burial only: for behold what he says, "Wherein ye were also
raised with Him, through faith in the working of God, who raised Him from the
dead." He hath well said, "of faith,"(4) for it is all of faith. Ye believed
that God is able to raise, and so ye were raised. Then note also His worthiness of
belief, "Who raised Him," he saith, "from the dead."
He now shows the Resurrection. "And you who sometime were dead through
your trespasses and the uncircumcision of your flesh, you, I say, did He quicken
together with Him." For ye lay under judgment of death. But even though ye died,
it was a profitable death. Observe how again he shows what they deserved in
the words he subjoins:
Ver. 13, 14, 15. "Having forgiven us all our trespasses; having blotted
out the bond written in ordinances that was against us, which was contrary to us:
and he hath taken it out of the way, nailing it to the Cross; having put off
from himself the principalities and the powers, He made a show of them
openly,(1) triumphing over them in it."
"Having forgiven us," he saith, "all our trespasses," those which produced
that deadness. What then? Did He allow them to remain? No, He even wiped them
out; He did not scratch them out merely; so that they could not be seen. "In
doctrines"(2) [ordinances], he saith. What doctrines? The Faith. It is enough to
believe. He hath not set works against works, but works against faith. And what
next? Blotting out is an advance upon remission; again he saith, "And hath
taken it out of the way." Nor yet even so did He preserve it, but rent it even in
sunder, "by nailing it to His Cross." "Having put off from himself the
principalities and the powers, He made a show of them openly, triumphing over them in
it." Nowhere has he spoken in so lofty a strain.
Seest thou how great His earnestness that the bond should be done away? To
wit, we all were under sin and punishment. He Himself, through suffering
punishment, did away with both the sin and the punishment, and He was punished on
the Cross. To the Cross then He affixed it; as having power, He tore it asunder.
What bond? He means either that which they said to Moses, namely, "All that God
hath said will we do, and be obedient" (Ex. xxiv. 3), or, if not that, this,
that we owe to God obedience; or if not this, he means that the devil held
possession of it, the bond which God made for Adam, saying, "In the day thou eatest
of the tree, thou shalt die." (Gen. ii. 17.) This bond then the devil held in
his possession. And Christ did not give it to us, but Himself tore it in two,
the action of one who remits joyfully.
"Having put off from himself the principalities and the powers." He means
the diabolical powers; because human nature had arrayed itself in these, or
because they had,(3) as it were, a hold, when He became Man He put away from
Himself that hold. What is the meaning of "He made a show of them"? And well said
he so; never yet was the devil in so shameful a plight. For whilst expecting to
have Him, he lost even those he had; and when That Body was nailed to the
Cross, the dead arose. There death received his wound, having met his death-stroke
from a dead body. And as an athlete, when he thinks he has hit his adversary,
himself is caught in a fatal grasp; so truly doth Christ also show, that to die
with confidence(4) is the devil's shame.
For he would have done everything to persuade men that He did not die, had
he had the power. For seeing that of His Resurrection indeed all succeeding
time was proof demonstrative; whilst of His death, no other time save that
whereat it happened could ever furnish proof; therefore it was, that He died publicly
in the sight of all men, but He arose not publicly, knowing that the after
time would bear witness to the truth. For, that whilst the world was looking on,
the serpent should be slain on high upon the Cross, herein is the marvel. For
what did not the devil do, that He might die in secret? Hear Pilate saying, "Take
ye Him away, and crucify Him, for I find no fault in Him" (John xix. 6), and
withstanding them in a thousand ways. And again the Jews said unto Him, "If Thou
art the Son of God, come down from the Cross." (Matt. xxvii. 40.) Then
further, when He had received a mortal wound, and He came not down, for this reason He
was also committed to burial; for it was in His power to have risen
immediately: but He did not, that the fact might be believed. And yet in cases of private
death indeed, it is possible to impute them to a swoon, but here, it is not
possible to do this either. For even the soldiers brake not His legs, like those
of the others, that it might be made manifest that He was dead. And those who
buried The Body are known; and therefore too the Jews themselves seal the stone
along with the soldiers. For, what was most of all attended to, was this very
thing, that it should not be in obscurity. And the witnesses to it are from
enemies, from the Jews. Hear them saying to Pilate, "That deceiver said, while he
was vet alive, After three days I rise again. Command therefore that the
sepulchre" (Matt. xxvi. 63, 64) be guarded by the soldiers. This was accordingly done,
themselves also sealing it. Hear them further saying even afterwards to the
Apostles, "Ye intend to bring this Man's blood upon us." (Acts v. 28.) He
suffered not the very fashion of His Cross to be put to shame. For since the Angels
have suffered nothing like it, He therefore doth everything for this, showing
that His death achieved a mighty work. There was, as it were, a single combat.
Death wounded Christ: but Christ, being wounded, did afterwards kill death. He
that seemed to be immortal, was destroyed by a mortal body; and this the whole
world saw. And what is truly wonderful is, that He committed not this thing to
another. But there was made again a second bond of another kind than the former.
Beware then lest we be condemned by this, after saying, I renounce Satan,
and array myself with Thee, O Christ. Rather however this should not be called
"a bond," but a covenant. For that is "a bond," whereby one is held accountable
for debts: but this is a covenant. It hath no penalty, nor saith it, If this
be done or if this be not done: what Moses said when he sprinkled the blood of
the covenant, by this God also promised everlasting life. All this is a
covenant. There, it was slave with master, here it is friend with friend: there, it is
said, "In the day that thou eatest thereof thou shalt die" (Gen. ii. 17); an
immediate threatening; but here is nothing of the kind. God arrives, and here is
nakedness, and there was nakedness; there, however, one that had sinned was
made naked, because he sinned, but here, one is made naked, that he may be set
free. Then, man put off the glory which he had; now, he puts off the old man; and
before going up (to the contest), puts him off as easily, as it were his
garments.(1) He is anointed,(2) as wrestlers about to enter the lists. For he is born
at once; and as that first man was, not by little and little, but immediately.
(He is anointed,) not as the priests of old time, on the head alone, but
rather in more abundant measure. For he indeed was anointed on the head, the right
ear, the hand (Lev. viii. 23, 24); to excite him to obedience, and to good
works; but this one, all over. For he cometh not to be instructed merely; but to
wrestle, and to be exercised; he is advanced to another creation. For when one
confesses (his belief) in the life everlasting,(3) he has confessed a second
creation. He took dust from the earth, and formed man (Gen. ii. 7): but now, dust no
longer, but the Holy Spirit; with This he is formed, with this harmonized,
even as Himself was in the womb of the Virgin. He said not in Paradise, but "in
Heaven." For deem not that, because the subject is earth, it is done on earth;
he is(4) removed thither, to Heaven, there these things are transacted, in the
midst of Angels: God taketh up thy soul above, above He harmonizeth it anew,
He placeth thee near to the Kingly Throne. He is formed in the water, he
receiveth spirit instead of a soul.(5) And after he is formed, He bringeth to him, not
beasts, but demons, and their prince, and saith, "Tread upon serpents and
scorpions." (Luke x. 19.) He saith not, "Let Us make man in our image, and after
our likeness" (Gen. i. 26), but what? "He giveth them to become the sons of God;
but of God," he saith, "they were born." (John i. 12, 13.) Then that thou give
no ear to the serpent, straightway he teaches thee to say, "I renounce thee,"
that is, "whatsoever thou sayest, I will not hear thee." Then, that he destroy
thee not by means of others, it is said,(6) "and thy pomp, and thy service, and
thy angels." He hath set him no more to keep Paradise, but to have his
citizenship in heaven. For straightway when he cometh up he pronounceth these words,
"Our Father, Which art in Heaven, . . . Thy will be done, as in Heaven, so on
earth." The plain falleth not on thy sight,(7) thou seest not tree, nor fountain,
but straightway thou takest into thee the Lord Himself, thou art mingled with
His Body, thou art intermixed with that Body that lieth above, whither the
devil cannot approach. No woman is there, for him to approach, and deceive as the
weaker; for it is said, "There is neither female, nor male." (Gal. iii. 28.) If
thou go not down to him, he will not have power to come up where thou art; for
thou art in Heaven, and Heaven is unapproachable by the devil. It hath no tree
with knowledge of good and evil, but the Tree of Life only. No more shall woman
be formed from thy side, but we all are one from the side of Christ. For if
they who have been anointed of men take no harm by serpents, neither wilt thou
take any harm at all, so long as thou art anointed; that thou mayst be able to
grasp the Serpent and choke him, "to tread upon serpents and scorpions." (Luke x.
19.) But as the gifts are great, so is the punishment great also. It is not
possible for him that hath fallen from Paradise, to dwell "in front of
Paradise"(1) (Gen. iii. 24), nor to reascend thither from whence we have fallen. But
what after this? Hell, and the worm undying. But far be it that any of us
should become amenable to this punishment! but living virtuously, let us earnestly
strive to do throughout His will. Let us become well-pleasing to God, that we
may be able both to escape the punishment, and to obtain the good things eternal,
of which may we all be counted worthy, through the grace and love toward man,
&c.
HOMILY VII.
COLOSSIANS ii. 16-19.
"Let no man therefore judge you in meat, or in drink, or in respect of a feast
day, or a new moon, or a sabbath day: which are a shadow of the things to
come; but the body is Christ's. Let no man rob you of your prize by a voluntary
humility and worshiping of the Angels, dwelling in the things which he hath not
seen, vainly puffed up by his fleshly mind, and not holding fast the Head, from
whom all the body being supplied and knit together, through the joints and
bands, increaseth with the increase of God."
HAVING first said darkly, "Take heed lest there shall be any one that
maketh spoil of you after the tradition of men" (ver. 8); and again, further back,
"This, I say, that no one may delude you with persuasiveness of speech" (ver.
4); thus preoccupying their soul, and working in it anxious thoughts; next,
having inserted those benefits, and increased this effect, he then brings in his
reproof last, and says, "Let no man therefore judge you in meat, or in drink, or
in respect of a feast day, or a new moon, or a sabbath day." Seest thou how he
depreciates them? If ye have obtained such things, he saith, why make
yourselves accountable for these petty matters? And he makes light of them, saying, "or
in the part(2) of a feast day,"" for in truth they did not retain the whole of
the former rule, "or a new moon, or a sabbath day." He said not, "Do not then
observe them," but, "let no man judge you." He showed that they were
transgressing, and undoing, but he brought his charge against others. Endure not those
that judge you, he saith, nay, not so much as this either, but he argues with
those persons, almost stopping their mouths, and saying, Ye ought not to judge.
But he would not have reflected on these. He said not "in clean and unclean," nor
yet "in feasts of Tabernacles, and unleavened bread, and Pentecost," but "in
part of a feast": for they ventured not to keep the whole; and if they did
observe it, yet not so as to celebrate the feast. "In part," he saith, showing that
the greater part is done away. For even if they did keep sabbath, they did not
do so with precision. "Which are a shadow of the things to come"; he means, of
the New Covenant; "but the body" is "Christ's." Some persons here punctuate
thus "but the body" is "of Christ," i.e. the truth is come in with Christ: others
thus; "The Body of Christ let no man adjudge away from you," that is, thwart
you of it. The term <greek>katabrabeuqhnai</greek>, is employed when the victory
is with one party, and the prize with another, when though a victor thou art
thwarted. Thou standest above the devil and sin; why dost thou again subject
thyself to sin? Therefore he said that "he is a debtor to fulfill the whole law"
(Gal. v. 3); and again, "Is Christ" found to be "the minister of sin" (Gal. ii.
17)? which he said when writing to the Galatians. When he had filled them with
anger through saying, "adjudge away from you," then he begins; "being a
voluntary,"(3) he saith, "in humility and worshiping of Angels, intruding into things
he hath not seen, vainly puffed up by his fleshly mind." How "in humility," or
how "puffed up "? He shows that the whole arose out of vainglory. But what is
on the whole the drift of what is said? There are some who maintain that we must
be brought near by Angels, not by Christ, that were too great a thing for us.
Therefore it is that he turns over and over again what has been done by Christ,
"through the Blood of His Cross" (c. i. 20); on this account he says that "He
suffered for us"; that "He loved us." (1 Pet. ii. 21.) And besides in this very
same thing, moreover, they were elevated afresh. And he said not "introduction
by," but "worshiping of" Angels. "Intruding into things he hath not(4) seen."
(Eph. ii. 4.) For he hath not seen Angels, and yet is affected as though he
had. Therefore he saith, "Puffed up by his fleshly mind vainly," not about any
true fact. About this doctrine, he is puffed up, and puts forward a show of
humility. By his carnal mind, not spiritual; his reasoning is of man. "And not
holding fast the Head," he saith, "from whom all the body." All the body thence hath
its being, and its well-being. Why, letting go the Head, dost thou cling to the
members? If thou art fallen off from it, thou art lost. "From whom all the
body." Every one, be he who he may, thence has not life only, but also even
connection. All the Church, so long as she holds The Head, increaseth; because here
is no more passion of pride and vainglory, nor invention of human fancy.
Mark that "from(1) whom," meaning the Son. "Through the joints and bands,"
he says, "being supplied, and knit together, increases with the increase of
God"; he means, that which is according to God, that of the best life. Ver. 20.
"If ye died with Christ."
He puts that in the middle, and on either side, expressions of greater
vehemence. "If ye died with Christ from the elements of the world," he saith, "why
as though living in the world do ye subject yourselves to ordinances?" This is
not the consequence, for what ought to have been said is, "how as though
living are ye subject to those elements?" But letting this pass, what saith he?
Ver. 21, 22. "Handle not, nor taste, nor touch; all which things are to
perish with the using; after the precepts and doctrines of men."
Ye are not in the world, he saith, how is it ye are subject to its
elements? how to its observances? And mark how he makes sport of them, "touch not,
handle not, taste not," as though they were cowards and keeping themselves clear
of some great matters, "all which things are to perish with the using." He has
taken down the swollenness of the many, and added, "after the precepts and
doctrines of men." What sayest thou? Dost thou speak even of the Law? Henceforth it
is but a doctrine of men, after the time is come.(2) Or, because they
adulterated it, or else, he alludes to the Gentile institutions. The doctrine, he says,
is altogether of man.
Ver. 23. "Which things have indeed a show of wisdom in will worship, and
humility, and severity to the body; but are not of any value against the
indulgence of the flesh."
"Show," he saith; not power, not truth. So that even though they have a
show of wisdom, let us turn away from them. For he may seem to be a religious
person, and modest, and to have a contempt for the body.
"Not of any value against the indulgence of the flesh." For God hath given
it honor, but they use it not with honor. Thus, when it is a doctrine, he
knows how to call it honor. They dishonor the flesh, he says, depriving it, and
stripping it of its liberty, not giving leave to rule it with its will. God hath
honored the flesh.
Chap. iii. ver. 1. "If then ye were raised together with Christ."
He brings them together, having above established that He died. Therefore
he saith, "If then ye were raised together with Christ, seek the things that
are above." No observances are there. "Where Christ is seated on the right hand
of God." Wonderful! Whither hath he led our minds aloft! How hath he filled them
with mighty aspiration! It was not enough to say, "the things that are above,"
nor yet, "where Christ is," but what? "seated on the right hand of God." From
that point he was preparing them henceforward to see the earth.
Ver. 2, 3, 4. "Set your mind on the things that are above, not on the
things that are upon the earth. For ye died, and your life is hid with Christ in
God. When Christ who is your life shall be manifested, then shall ye also with
Him be manifested in glory."
This is not your life, he saith, it is some other one. He is now urgent to
remove them, and insists upon showing that they are seated above, and are
dead; from both considerations establishing the position, that they are not to seek
the things which are here. For whether ye be dead, ye ought not to seek them;
or Whether ye be above, ye ought not to seek them. Doth Christ appear? Neither
doth your life. It is in God, above. What then? When shall we live? When Christ
shall be manifested, who is your life; then seek ye glory, then life, then
enjoyment.
This is to prepare the way for drawing them off from pleasure and ease.
Such is his wont: when establishing one position, he darts off to another; as,
for instance, when discoursing of those who at supper were beforehand with one
another, he all at once falls upon the observance of the Mysteries.(3) For he
hath a great rebuke when it is administered unsuspected. "It is hid," he saith,
from you. "Then shall ye also with Him be manifested." So that, now, ye do not
appear. See how he hath removed them into the very heaven. For, as I said, he is
always bent upon showing that they have the very same things which Christ hath;
and through all his Epistles, the tenor is this, to show that in all things
they are partakers with Him. Therefore he uses the terms, Head, and Body, and
does everything to convey this to them.
If therefore we shall then be manifested, let us not grieve, when we enjoy
not honor: if this life be not life, but it be hidden, we ought to live this
life as though dead. "Then shall ye also," he saith, "with Him be manifested in
glory." "In glory," he said, not merely "manifested." For the pearl too is
hidden so long as it is within the oyster. If then we be treated with insult, let
us not grieve; or whatever it be we suffer; for this life is not our life, we
are strangers and sojourners. "For ye died," he saith. Who is so witless, as
for a corpse, dead and buried, either to buy servants, or build houses, or
prepare costly raiment? None. Neither then do ye; but as we seek one thing only,
namely, that we be not in a naked state, so here too let us seek one thing and no
more. Our first man is buried: buried not in earth, but in water; not
death-destroyed, but buried by death's destroyer, not by the law of nature, but by the
governing command that is stronger than nature. For what has been done by
nature, may perchance be undone; but what has been done by His command, never.
Nothing is more blessed than this burial, whereat all are rejoicing, both Angels, and
men, and the Lord of Angels. At this burial, no need is there of vestments,
nor of coffin, nor of anything else of that kind. Wouldest thou see the symbol of
this? I will show thee a pool wherein the one was buried the other raised; in
the Red Sea the Egyptians were sunk beneath it, but the Israelites went up from
out of it; in the same act he buries the one, generates the other.
Marvel not that generation and destruction take place in Baptism; for,
tell me, dissolving and cementing, are they not opposite? It is evident to all.
Such is the effect of fire; for fire dissolves and destroys wax, but it cements
together metallic earth, and works it into gold. So in truth here also, the
force of the fire, having obliterated the statue of wax, has displayed a golden one
in its stead; for in truth before the Bath we were of clay, but after it of
gold. Whence is this evident? Hear him saying, "The first man is of the earth,
earthy, the second man is the Lord from heaven." (1 Cor. xv. 47.) I spoke of a
difference as great as that between clay and gold; but greater still do I find
the difference between heavenly and earthy; not so widely do clay and gold
differ, as do things earthy and heavenly. Waxen we were, and clay-formed. For the
flame of lust did much more melt us, than fire doth wax, and any chance temptation
did far rather shatter us than a stone doth things of clay. And, if ye will,
let us give an outline of the former life, and see whether all was not earth and
water, and full of fluctuation and dust, and instability, and flowing away.
And if ye will, let us scrutinize not the former things, but the present,
and see whether we shall not find everything that is, mere dust and water. For
what wilt thou tell me of? authority and power? for nothing in this present
life is thought to be more enviable than these. But sooner may one find the dust
when on the air stationary, than these things; especially now. For to whom are
they not under subjection? To those who are lovers of them; to eunuchs; to those
who will do anything for the sake of money; to the passions of the populace;
to the wrath of the more powerful. He who was yesterday up high on his
tribunal,(1) who had his heralds shouting with thrilling voice, and many to run
before, and haughtily clear the way for i him through the forum, is to-day mean and
low, and of all those things bereft and bare, like dust blast-driven, like a
stream that hath passed by. And like as the dust is raised by our feet, so truly
are magistracies also produced by those who are engaged about money, and in the
whole of life have the rank and condition of feet; and like as the dust when
it is raised occupies a large portion of the air, though itself be but a small
body, so too doth power; and like as the dust blindeth the eyes, so too doth the
pride of power bedim the eyes of the understanding.
But what? Wilt thou that we examine that object of many prayers, wealth?
Come, let us examine it in its several parts. It hath luxury, it hath honors, it
hath power. First then, if thou wilt, let us examine luxury. Is it not dust?
yea, rather, it goeth by swifter than dust, for the pleasure of luxurious living
reacheth only to the tongue, and when the belly is filled, not to the tongue
even. But, saith one, honors are of themselves pleasant things. Yet what can be
less pleasant than that same honor, when it is rendered with a view to money?
When it is not from free choice and with a readiness of mind, it is not thou
that reapest the honor, but thy wealth. So that this very thing makes the man of
wealth, most of all men, dishonored. For, tell me; suppose all men honored thee,
who hadst a friend; the while confessing that thou, to be sure, wert good for
nothing, but that they were compelled to honor thee on his account; could they
possibly in any other way have so dishonored thee? So that our wealth is the
cause of dishonor to us, seeing it is more honored than are its very possessors,
and a proof rather of weakness than of power. How then is it not absurd that
we are not counted of as much value as earth and ashes, (for such is gold,) but
that we are honored for its sake? With reason. But not so he that despiseth
wealth; for it were better not to be honored at all, than so honored. For tell me,
were one to say to thee, I think thee worthy of no honor at all, but for thy
servants' sakes I honor thee, could now anything be worse than this dishonor?
But if to be honored for the sake of servants, who are partakers of the same soul
and nature with ourselves, be a disgrace, much more then is it such, to be
honored for the sake of meaner things, such as the walls and courts of houses, and
vessels of gold, and garments. A scorn indeed were this, and shame; better die
than be so honored. For, tell me, if thou wert in peril in this thy pride, and
some low and disgusting person were to be willing to extricate thee from thy
peril, what could be worse than this? What ye say one to another about the city,
I wish to say to you. Once on a time our(1) city gave offense to the
Emperor,(2) and he gave orders that the whole of it should utterly be destroyed, men,
children, houses, and all. (For such is the wrath of kings, they indulge their
power as much as ever they choose, so great an evil is power.) It was then in the
extremest of perils. The neighboring city, however, this one on the sea-coast,
went and besought the king in our behalf: upon which the inhabitants of our
city said that this was worse than if the city had been razed to the ground. So,
to be thus honored is worse than being dishonored. For see whence honor hath
its root. The hands of cooks procure us to be honored, so that to them we ought
to feel gratitude; and swineherds supplying us with a rich table, and weavers,
and spinners, and workers in metal, and confectioners, and table furnishers.
Were it not then better not to be honored at all, than to be beholden to
these for the honor? And besides this, moreover, I will endeavor to prove
clearly that opulence is a condition full of dishonor; it embases the soul; and what
is more dishonorable than this? For tell me, suppose one had a comely person,
and passing all in beauty, and wealth were to go to him and promise to make it
ugly, and instead of healthy, diseased, instead of cool, inflamed; and having
filled every limb with dropsy, were to make the countenance bloated, and distend
it all over; and were to swell out the feet, and make them heavier than logs,
and to puff up the belly, and make it larger than any turn; and after this, it
should promise not even to grant permission to cure him, to those who should be
desirous of doing so, (for such is the way with power,) but would give him so
much liberty as to punish any one that should approach him to withdraw him from
what was harming him; well then, tell me, when wealth works these effects in
the soul, how can it be honorable?
But this power is a more grievous thing than the disease itself; as for
one in disease not to be obedient to the physician's injunctions is a more
serious evil than the being diseased; and this is the case with wealth, seeing it
creates inflammation in every part of the soul, and forbids the physicians to come
near it. So let us not felicitate these on the score of their power, but pity
them; for neither were I to see a dropsical patient lying, and nobody
forbidding him to take his fill of whatever drinks he pleased and of meats that are
harmful, would I felicitate him because of his power. For not in all cases is
power a good thing, nor are honors either, for these too fill one with much
arrogance. But if thou wouldest not choose that the body should along with wealth
contract such a disease, how comest thou to overlook the soul, and when
contracting not this scourge alone, but another also? For it is on fire all over with
burning fevers and inflammations, and that burning fever none can quench, for
wealth will not allow of this, having persuaded it that those things are gains,
which are really losses, such as not enduring any one and doing everything at
will. For no other soul will one find so replete with lusts so great and so
extravagant, as theirs who are desirous of being rich. For what silly trifles do they
not picture to themselves! One may see these devising more extravagant things
than limners of hippocentaurs, and chimæras, and dragon-footed things, and
Scyllas, and monsters. And if one should choose to give a picture of one lust of
theirs, neither Scylla, nor chimæra, nor hippocentaur will appear anything at
all by the side of such a prodigy; but you will find it to contain every wild
beast at once.
And perchance some one will suppose that I have been myself possessed of
much wealth, seeing I am so true to what really comes of it. It is reported of
one (for I will first confirm what I have said from the legends of the
Greeks)--it is reported amongst them of a certain king, that he became so insolent in
luxury, as to make a plane tree of gold,(3) and a sky above it, and there sate,
and this too when invading a people skilled in warfare. Now was not this lust
hippocentaurean, was it not Scyllæan? Another, again, used(1) to cast men into a
wooden bull. Was not this a very Scylla? And even him,(2) the king I just
mentioned, the warrior,(3) wealth made, from a man a woman, from a woman, what shall
I say? a brute beast, and yet more degraded than this for the beasts, if they
lodge under a tree, take up with nature, and seek for nothing further but the
man in question overshot the nature even of beasts.
What then can be more senseless than are the wealthy? And this arises from
the greediness of their desires. But, are there not many that admire him?
Therefore truly do they share in the laughter he incurs. That displayed not his
wealth but his folly. How much better than that golden plane tree is that which
the earth produceth! For the natural is more grateful than the unnatural. But
what meant that thy golden heaven, O senseless one? Seest thou how wealth that is
abundant maketh men mad? How it inflamed them? I suppose he knows not the sea
even, and perchance will presently have a mind to walk upon it.(4) Now is not
this a chimæra? is it not a hippocentaur? But there are, at this time also, some
who fall not short even of him, but are actually much more senseless. For in
point of senselessness, wherein do they differ, tell me, from that golden plane
tree, who make silver jars, pitchers, and scent bottles? And wherein do those
women differ, (ashamed indeed I am, but it is necessary to speak it,) who make
chamber utensils of silver?(5) It is ye should be ashamed, that are the makers of
these things. When Christ is famishing, dost thou so revel in luxury? yea
rather, so play the fool! What punishment shall these not suffer? And inquirest
thou still, why there are robbers? why murderers? why such evils? when the devil
has thus made you ridiculous. For the mere having of silver dishes indeed, this
even is not in keeping with a soul devoted to wisdom, but is altogether a piece
of luxury; but the making unclean vessels also of silver, is this then luxury?
nay, I will not call it luxury, but senselessness; nay, nor yet this, but
madness; nay rather, worse than even madness. I know that many persons make jokes
at me for this; but I heed them not, only let some good result from it. In
truth, to be wealthy does make people senseless and mad. Did their power reach to
such an excess, they would have the earth too of gold, and walls of gold,
perchance the heaven too, and the air of gold. What a madness is this, what an
iniquity, what a burning fever! Another, made after the image of God, is perishing
of cold; and dost thou furnish thyself with such things as these? O the
senseless pride! What more would a madman have done? Dost thou pay such honor to thine
excrements, as to receive them in silver? I know that ye are shocked at
hearing this; but those women that make such things ought to be shocked, and the
husbands that minister to such distempers. For this is wantonness, and savageness,
and inhumanity, and brutishness, and lasciviousness. What Scylla, what chimæra,
what dragon, yea rather what demon, what devil would have acted on this wise?
What is the benefit of Christ? what of the Faith? when one has to put up with
men being heathens, yea rather, not heathens, but demons? If to adorn the head
with gold and pearls be not right; one that useth silver for a service so
unclean, how shall he obtain pardon? Is not the rest enough, although even it is not
bearable, chairs and footstools all of silver? although even these come of
senselessness. But everywhere is excessive pride; everywhere is vainglory. Nowhere
is it use, but everywhere excess.
I am afraid lest, under the impulse of this madness, the race of woman
should go on to assume some portentous form: for it is likely that they will wish
to have even their hair of gold. Else declare that ye were not(6) at all
affected by what was said, nor were excited greatly, and fell a longing, and had not
shame withheld you, would not have refused. For if they dare to do what is even
more absurd than this, much more, I think, will they long for their hair, and
lips, and eyebrows, and every part to be overlaid with molten gold.
But if ye are incredulous, and think I am speaking in jest, I will relate
what I have heard, or rather what is now existing. The king of the Persians
wears his beard golden; those who are adepts at such work winding leaf of gold
about his hairs as about the woof, and it is laid up as a prodigy.
Glory to Thee, O Christ; with how many good things hast Thou filled us!
How hast Thou provided for our health! From how great monstrousness, from how
great unreasonableness, hast Thou set us free! Mark! I forewarn you, I advise no
longer; but I command and charge; let him that wills, obey, and him that wills
not, be disobedient; that if ye women do continue thus to act, I will not suffer
it, nor receive you, nor permit you to pass across this threshold. For what
need have I of a crowd of distempered people? And what if, in my training of you,
I do not forbid what is not(1) excessive? And yet Paul forbade both gold and
pearls. (1 Tim. ii. 9.) We are laughed at by the Greeks, our religion appears a
fable.
And to the men I give this advice: Art thou come to school to be
instructed in spiritual philosophy? Divest thyself of that pride! This is my advice both
to men and women; and if any act otherwise, henceforward I will not suffer it.
The disciples were but twelve, and hear what Christ saith unto them, "Would ye
also go away?" (John vi. 67.) For if we go on for ever flattering you, when
shall we reclaim you? when shall we do you service? "But," saith one, "there are
other sects, and people go over." This is a cold argument, "Better is one that
doeth the will of the Lord, than ten thousand transgressors." (Ecclus. xvi. 3.)
For, what wouldest thou choose thyself, tell me; to have ten thousand servants
that were runaways and thieves, or a single one that loved thee? Lo! I
admonish and command you to break up both those gay deckings for the face, and such
vessels as I have described, and give to the poor, and not to be so mad.
Let him that likes quit me at once; let him that likes accuse me, I will
not suffer it in any one. When I am about to be judged at the Tribunal of
Christ, ye stand afar off, and your favor, while I am giving in my account. "Those
words have ruined all! he says,(3) 'let him not(4) go and transfer himself to
another sect!' Nay! he is weak! condescend to him!" To what point? Till when?
Once, and twice, and thrice, but not perpetually.
Lo! I charge you again, and protest after the pattern of the blessed Paul,
"that if I come again I will not spare." (2 Cor. xiii. 2.) But when ye have
done as ye ought, then ye will know how great the gain is, how great the
advantage. Yes! I entreat and beseech you, and would not refuse to clasp your knees and
supplicate you(5) in this behalf. What softness is it! What luxury, what
wantonness! This is not luxury, but wantonness. What senselessness is it! What
madness! So many poor stand around the Church; and though the Church has so many
children, and so wealthy, she is unable to give relief to even one poor person;
"but one is hungry, and another is drunken" (1 Cor. xi. 21); one voideth his
excrement even into silver, another has not so much as bread! What madness! what
brutishness so great as this? May we never come to the proof, whether we will
prosecute the disobedient, nor to the indignation which allowing(6) these
practices would cause us; but that willingly and with patience we may avoid all this,
that we may live to God's glory, and be delivered from, the punishment in the
other world, and may obtain the good things promised to those who love Him,
through the grace and love toward man, &c.
HOMILY VIII.
COLOSSIANS iii. 5-7.
"Mortify your members which are upon the earth; fornication, uncleanness,
passion, evil desire, and covetousness, which is idolatry; for which things' sake,
cometh the wrath of God upon the sons of disobedience; in the which ye also
walked aforetime, when ye lived in these things."
I KNOW that many are offended by the foregoing discourse, but what can I
do? ye heard what the Master enjoined. Am I to blame? what shall I do? See ye
not the creditors, when debtors are obstinate, how they wear(2) collars? Heard ye
what Paul proclaimed today? "Mortify" he saith, "your members which are upon
the earth; fornication, uncleanness, passion, evil desire, and covetousness,
which is idolatry." What is worse than such a covetousness? This is worse than
any desire. This is still more grievous than what I was speaking of, the
madness, and the silly weakness about silver. "And covetousness," he saith, "which is
idolatry." See in what the evil ends. Do not, I pray, take what I said amiss,
for not by my own good-will, nor without reason, would I have enemies; but I
was wishful ye should attain to such virtue, as that I might hear of you the
things I ought.(1) So that I said it not for authority's sake, nor of
imperiousness,(2) but out of pain and of sorrow. Forgive me, forgive! I have no wish to
violate decency by discoursing upon such subjects, but I am compelled to it.
Not for the sake of the sorrows of the poor do I say these things, but for
your salvation; for they will perish, will perish, that have not fed Christ.
For what, if thou dost feed some poor man? still so long as thou livest so
voluptuously and luxuriously, all is to no purpose. For what is required is, not the
giving much, but not too little for the property thou hast; for this is but
playing at it.
"Mortify therefore your members," he saith, "which are upon the earth."
What sayest thou? Was it not thou that saidst, "Ye are buried; ye are buried
together with Him; ye are circumcised: we have put off the body of the sins of the
flesh" (c. ii. 11, 12; Rom. vi. 4); how then again sayest thou, "Mortify"?(3)
Art thou sporting? Dost thou thus discourse, as though those things were in us?
There is no contradiction; but like as if one, who has clean Scoured a statue
that was filthy, or rather who has recast it, and displayed it bright afresh,(4)
should say that the rust was eaten off and destroyed, and yet should again
recommend diligence in clearing away the rust, he doth not contradict himself, for
it is not that rust which he scoured off that he recommends should be cleared
away, but that which grew afterwards; so it is not that former putting to death
he speaks of, nor those fornications, but those which do afterwards grow.
He said that this is not our life, but another, that which is in heaven.
Tell me now. When he said, Mortify your members that are upon the earth, is then
the earth also accused? or does he speak of the things upon the earth as
themselves sins?(5) "Fornication, uncleanness," he saith. He has passed over the
actions which it is not becoming even to mention, and by "uncleanness" has
expressed all together.
"Passion," he said, "evil desire."
Lo! he has expressed the whole in the class. For envy, anger, sorrow, all
are "evil desire."
"And covetousness," he saith, "which is idolatry. For which things' sake
cometh the wrath of God upon the sons of disobedience."
By many things he had been withdrawing them; by the benefits which are
already given, by the evils to come from which we had been delivered, being who,
and wherefore; and all those considerations, as, for instance, who we were, and
in what circumstances, and that we were delivered therefrom, how, and in what
manner, and on what terms. These were enough to turn one away, but this one is
of greater force than all; unpleasant indeed to speak of, not however to
disservice, but even serviceable. "For which things' sake cometh," he saith, "the
wrath of God upon the sons of disobedience." He said not, "upon you," but, "upon
the sons of disobedience."
"In the which ye also walked aforetime, when ye lived in them." In order
to shame them, he saith, "when ye lived in them," and implying praise, as now no
more so living: at that time they might.
Ver. 8. "But now put ye also away all these."
He speaks always both universally and particularly; but this is from
earnestness.
Ver. 8, 9. "Anger, wrath, malice, railing, shameful speaking out of your
mouth. Lie not one to another."
"Shameful speaking," he saith, "out of your mouth," clearly intimating
that it pollutes it.
Ver. 9, 10. "Seeing that ye have put off the old man with his doings, and
have put on the new man, which is being renewed unto knowledge after the image
of Him that created him."
It is worth enquiring here, what can be the reason why he calls the
corrupt life, "members," and "man," and "body," and again the virtuous life, the
same. And if "the man" means "sins," how is it that he saith, "with his doings"?
For once he said, "the old man," showing that this is not man, but the other. The
moral choice doth rather determine one than the substance, and is rather "man"
than the other. For his substance casteth him not into hell, nor leadeth him
into the kingdom, but men the themselves: and we neither love nor hate any one
so far as he is man, but so far as he is such or such a man. If then the
substance be the body, and in either sort cannot be accountable, how doth he say that
it is evil?(6) But what is that he saith, "with his doings"? He means the
choice, with the acts. And he calleth him "old," on purpose to show his deformity,
and hideousness, and imbecility; and "new," as if to say, Do not expect that it
will be with this one even as with the other, but the reverse: for ever as he
farther advances, he hasteneth not on to old age, but to a youthfulness greater
than the preceding. For when he hath received a fuller knowledge, he is both
counted worthy of greater things, and is in more perfect maturity, in higher
vigor; and this, not from youthfulness alone, but from that "likeness" also,
"after" which he is. Lo! the best life is styled a creation, after the image of
Christ: for this is the meaning of, "after the image of Him that created him," for
Christ too came not finally to(1) old age, but was so beautiful as it is not
even possible to tell.
Ver. 11. "Where there cannot be Greek and Jew, circumcision and
uncircumcision, Barbarian, Scythian, bondman, freeman: but Christ is all, and in all."
Lo! here is a third encomium of this "man." With him, there is no
difference admitted either of nation, or of rank, or of ancestry, seeing he hath
nothing of externals, nor needeth them for all external things are such as these,
"circumcision, and uncircumcision, bondman, freeman, Greek," that is, proselyte,
"and Jew," from his ancestors. If thou have only this "man," thou wilt obtain
the same things with the others that have him.
"But Christ," he saith, "is all, and in all" Christ will be all things to
you, both rank, and descent, "and" Himself "in you all." Or he says another
thing, to wit, that ye all are become one Christ, being His body.
Ver. 12. "Put on, therefore, as the elect of God, holy and beloved."
He shows the easiness of virtue, so that they might both possess it
continually, and use it as the greatest ornament. The exhortation is accompanied also
with praise, for then its force is greatest. For they had been before(2) holy,
but not elect; but now both "elect, and holy, and beloved."
"A heart of compassion." He said not "mercy," but with greater emphasis
used the two words. And he said not, that it should be as towards brethren, but,
as fathers towards children. For tell me not that he sinned, therefore he said
"a heart." And he said not "compassion," lest he should place them(3) in light
estimation, but "a heart of compassion, kindness, humility, meekness,
longsuffering; forbearing one another, and forgiving each other, if any man have a
complaint against any: even as Christ forgave you, so also do ye."
Again, he speaks after the class,(4) and he always does it; for from
kindness comes humbleness of mind, and from this, longsuffering. "Forbearing," he
saith, "one another," that is, passing things over(5) And see, how he has shown
it to be nothing, by calling it a "complaint," and saying, "even as Christ
forgave you." Great is the example! and thus he always does; he exhorts them after
Christ. "Complaint," he calls it. In these words indeed he showed it to be a
petty matter; but when he has set before us the example, he has persuaded us that
even if we had serious charges to bring, we ought to forgive. For the
expression, "Even as Christ," signifies this, and not this only, but also with all the
heart; and not this alone, but that they ought even to love. For Christ being
brought into the midst, bringeth in all these things, both that even if the
matters be great, and even if we have not been the first to injure, even if we be of
great, they of small account, even if they are sure to insult us afterwards,
we ought to lay down our lives for them, (for the words, "even as," demand
this;) and that not even at death only ought one to stop, but if possible, to go on
even after death.
Ver. 14. "And above all these things put on love, which is the bond of
perfectness."
Dost thou see that he saith this? For since it is possible for one who
forgives, not to love; yea, he saith, thou must love him too, and he points out a
way whereby it becomes possible to forgive. For it is possible for one to be
kind, and meek, and humbleminded, and longsuffering, and yet not affectionate.
And therefore, he said at the first, "A heart of compassion," both love and pity.
"And above all these things, love, which is the bond of perfectness." Now what
he wishes to say is this; that there is no profit in those things, for all
those things fall asunder, except they be done with love; this it is which
clenches them all together; whatsoever good thing it be thou mentionest, if love be
away, it is nothing, it melts away. And it is as in a ship, even though her
rigging be large, yet if there be no girding ropes, it is of no service; and in an
house, if there be no tie beams, it is the same; and in a body, though the
bones be large, if there be no ligaments, they are of no service. For whatsoever
good deeds any may have, all do vanish away, if love be not there. He said not
that it is the summit, but what is greater, "the bond"; this is more necessary
than the other. For "summit" indeed is an intensity of perfectness, but "bond"
is the holding fast together of those things which produce the perfectness; it
is, as it were, the root.
Ver. 15. "And let the peace of God rule in your hearts, to the which also
ye were called in one body; and be ye thankful."
"The peace of God." This is that which is fixed and steadfast. If on man's
account indeed thou hast peace, it quickly comes to dissolution, but if on
God's account, never. Although he had spoken of love universally, yet again he
comes to the particular. For there is a love too which is immoderate; for
instance, when out of much love one makes accusations without reason, and is engaged in
contentions, and contracts aversions. Not this, saith he, not this do I
desire; not overdoing things,(1) but as God made peace with you, so do ye also make
it. How made He peace? Of His own will, not having received anything of you.
What is this? "Let the peace of God rule(2) in your hearts." If two thoughts are
fighting together, set not anger, set not spitefulness to hold the prize, but
peace; for instance, suppose one to have been insulted unjustly; of the insult
are born two thoughts, the one bidding him to revenge, the other to endure; and
these wrestle with one another: if the Peace of God stand forward as umpire, it
bestows the prize on that which bids endure, and puts the other to shame. How?
by persuading him that God is Peace, that He hath made peace with us. Not
without reason he shows the great struggle there is in the matter. Let not anger, he
saith, act as umpire, let not contentiousness, let not human peace, for human
peace cometh of avenging, of suffering no dreadful ill. But not this do I
intend, he saith, but that which He Himself left.
He hath represented an arena within, in the thoughts, and a contest, and a
wrestling, and an umpire. Then again, exhortation, "to the which ye were
called," he saith, that is, for the which ye were called. He has reminded them of
how many good things peace is the cause; on account of this He called thee, for
this He called thee, so as to receive a worthy(3) prize. For wherefore made He
us "one body "? Was it not that she might rule? Was it not that we might have
occasion of being at peace? Wherefore are we all one body? and now are we one
body? Because of peace we are one body, and because we are one body, we are at
peace. But why said he not, "Let the peace of God be victorious," but "be umpire"?
He made her the more honorable. He would not have the evil thought to come to
wrestle with her, but to stand below. And the very name "prize" cheered the
hearer. For if she have given the prize to the good thought, however impudently
the other behave, it is thereafter of no use. And besides, the other being aware
that, perform what feats he might, he should not receive the prize; however he
might puff, and attempt still more vehement onsets, would desist as laboring
without profit. And he well added, "And be ye thankful." For this is to be
thankful, and very effectively,(4) to deal with his fellow-servants as God doth with
himself, to submit himself to the Master, to obey; to express his gratitude for
all things,(5) even though one insult him, or beat him.
For in truth he that confesses thanks due to God for what he suffers, will
not revenge himself on him that has done him wrong, since he at least that
takes revenge, acknowledges no gratitude. But let not us follow him (that
exacted)(6) the hundred pence, lest we hear, "Thou wicked servant," for nothing is
worse than this ingratitude. So that they who revenge are ungrateful.
But why did he begin his list with fornication? For having said, "Mortify
your members which are upon the earth" (c. iii. 5), he immediately says,"
fornication"; and so he does almost everywhere. Because this passion hath the
greatest sway. For even when writing his Epistle to the Thessalonians he did the
same. (1 Thess. iv. 3.) And what wonder? since to Timothy even he saith, "Keep
thyself pure" (1 Tim. v. 22); and again elsewhere, "Follow after peace with all
men, and the sanctification," without which "no man shall see the Lord." (Heb.
xii. 14.) "Put to death," he says, "your members." Ye know of what sort that is
which is dead, namely, hated, loathed, dropping to decay. If thou put anything to
death, it doth not when dead continue dead, but presently is corrupted, like
the body. Extinguish then the heat; and nothing that is dead will continue. He
shows one having the same thing in hand, which Christ wrought in the Layer;
therefore also he calleth them "members," as though introducing some champion, thus
advancing his discourse to greater emphasis. And he well said, "Which are upon
the earth," for here they continue, and here they are corrupted, far rather
than these our members. So that not so truly is the body of the earth, as sin is
earthly, for the former indeed appears even beautiful at times, but those
members never. And those members lust after all things that are upon the earth. If
the eye be such, it seeth not the things in the heavens; if the ear, if the
hand, if thou mention any other member whatsoever. The eye seeth bodies, and
beauties, and riches; these are the things of earth, with these it is delighted: the
ear with soft strains, and harp, and pipe, and filthy talking; these are things
which are concerned with earth.
When therefore he has placed his hearers above, near the throne, he then
says, "Mortify your members which are upon the earth." For it is not possible to
stand above with these members; for there is nothing there for them to work
upon. And this clay is worse than that, for that clay indeed becometh gold, "for
this corruptible," he saith, "must put on incorruption" (1 Cor. xv. 53), but
this clay can never be retempered more. So that these members are rather "upon
the earth" than those. Therefore he said not, "of the earth," but, "which are
upon the earth," for it is possible that these should not be upon the earth. For
it is necessary that these(1) should be "upon the earth," but that those(2)
should, is not necessary. For when the ear hears nothing of what is here uttered,
but only in the heavens, when the eye sees nothing of what is here, but only
what is above, it is not "upon the earth"; when the mouth speaketh nothing of the
things here, it is not "upon the earth"; when the hand doeth no evil
thing--these are not of things "upon the earth," but of those in the heavens.
So Christ also saith, "If thy right eye causeth thee to stumble," that is,
if thou lookest unchastely, "cut it out" (Matt. v. 29), that is, thine evil
thought. And he (Paul) seems to me to speak of "fornication, uncleanness,
passion, desire" as the same, namely fornication: by means of all these expressions
drawing us away from that thing. For in truth this is "a passion"; and like as
the body is subject to any affection, either to fever or to wounds, so also is it
with this. And he said not Restrain, but "Mortify" (put to death), so that
they never rise up more, and "put them away." That which is dead, we put away; for
instance, if there be callosities in the body, their body is dead, and we put
it away. Now, if thou cut into that which is quick, it produces pain, but if
into that which is dead, we are not even sensible of it. So, in truth, is it with
the passions; they make the soul unclean; they make the soul, which is
immortal, passible.
How covetousness is said to be idolatry, we have oftentimes explained. For
the things which do most of all lord it over the human race, are these,
covetousness, and unchasteness, and evil desire. "For which things' sake cometh," he
saith, "the wrath of God upon the sons of disobedience." Sons of disobedience,
he calls them, to deprive them of excuse, and to show that it was because they
would not be obedient, that they were in that condition. "In the which ye
also," he saith, "walked aforetime," and (afterward) became obedient. He points
them out as still in them, and praises them, saying, "But now do ye also put away
all these, anger, wrath, malice, railing, shameful speaking." But against
others he advanceth his discourse. Under the head of "passion and railing" he means
revilings, just as under "wrath" he means wickedness.(3) And in another place,
to shame them, he says, "for we are members one of another." (Eph. iv. 25.) He
makes them out to be as it were manufacturers of men; casting away this one,
and receiving that. He spoke of a man's "members" (v. 5); here he saith, "all."
He spoke of his heart, wrath, mouth, blasphemy, eyes, fornication,
covetousness, hands and feet, lying, the understanding itself, and the old mind. One royal
form it hath, that, namely, of Christ. They whom he has in view, appear to me
rather to be of the Gentiles. For like as earth, being but sand, even though one
part be greater, another less, losing its own previous form, doth afterwards
become gold; and like as wool, of whatever kind it be, receiveth another aspect,
and hides its former one: so truly is it also with the faithful. "Forbearing,"
he saith, "one another"; he showeth what is just. Thou for-bearest him, and he
thee; and so he says in the Epistle to the Galatians, "Bear ye one another's
burdens." (Gal. vi. 2.) "And be ye thankful," he saith. For this is what he
everywhere especially seeks; the chiefest of good things.
Give we thanks then in all things; whatever may have happened; for this is
thankfulness. For to do so in prosperity indeed, is no great thing, for the
nature of the circumstances of itself impels one thereto; but when being in
extremities we give thanks, then it is admirable. For when, in circumstances under
which others blaspheme, and exclaim discontentedly, we give thanks, see how
great philosophy is here. First, thou hast rejoiced God; next, thou hast shamed the
devil; thirdly, thou hast even made that which hath happened to be nothing;
for all at once, thou both givest thanks, and God cuts short the pain, and the
devil departs. For if thou have exclaimed discontentedly, he, as having succeeded
to his wish, standeth close by thee, and God, as being blasphemed, leaveth
thee, and thy calamity is heightened; but if thou have given thanks, he, as
gaining nought, departs; and God, as being honored, requites thee with greater honor.
And it is not possible, that a man, who giveth thanks for his evils should be
sensible of them. For his soul rejoiceth, as doing what is right; forthwith his
conscience is bright, it exults in its own commendation; and that soul which
is bright, cannot possibly be sad of countenance. But in the other case, along
with the misfortune, conscience also assails him with her lash; whilst in this
she crowns, and proclaims him.
Nothing is holier than that tongue, which in evils giveth thanks to God;
truly in no respect doth it fall short of that of martyrs; both are alike
crowned, both this, and they. For over this one also Stands the executioner to force
it to deny God, by blasphemy; the devil stands over it, torturing it with
executioner thoughts, darkening it with despondencies. If then one bear his griefs,
and give thanks, he hath gained a crown of martyrdom. For instance, is her
little child sick, and doth she give God thanks? this is a crown to her. What
torture so bad that despondency is not worse? still it doth not force her to vent
forth a bitter word. It dies: again she hath given thanks. She hath become the
daughter of Abraham. For if she sacrificed not with her own hand, yet was she
pleased with the sacrifice, which is the same; she felt no indignation when the
gift was taken away.
Again, is her child sick? She hath made no amulets.(1) It is counted to
her as martyrdom, for she sacrificed her son in her resolve. For what, even
though those things are unavailing, and a mere cheat and mockery, still there were
nevertheless those who persuaded her that they do avail: and she chose rather to
see her child dead, than to put up with idolatry. As then she is a martyr,
whether it be in her own case, or in her son's, that she hath thus acted; or in
her husband's, or in any other's of her dearest; so is that other one an
idolatress. For it is evident that she would have done sacrifice, had it been allowed
her to do sacrifice; yea, rather, she hath even now performed the act of
sacrifice. For these amulets, though they who make money by them are forever
rationalizing about them, and saying, "we call upon God, and do nothing extraordinary,"
and the like; and "the old woman is a Christian," says he, "and one of the
faithful"; the thing is idolatry. Art thou one of the faithful? sign the Cross;
say, this I have for my only weapon; this for my remedy; and other I know none.
Tell me, if a physician should come to one, and, neglecting the remedies
belonging to his art, should use incantation, should we call that man a physician? By
no means: for we see not the medicines of the healing art; so neither, in this
case, do we see those of Christianity.
Other women again tie about them(2) the names of rivers, and venture
numberless things of like nature. Lo, I say, and forewarn you all, that if any be
detected, I will not spare them again, whether they have made amulet, or
incantation, or any other thing of such an art as this. What then, saith one, is the
child to die? If he have lived through this means, he did then die, but if he
have died without this, he then lived. But now, if thou seest him attaching
himself to harlots, thou wishest him buried, and sayest, "why, what good is it for
him to live?" but when thou seest him in peril of his salvation, dost thou wish
to see him live? Heardest thou not Christ saying, "He that loseth his life,
shall find it; and he that findeth it, shall lose it"? (Matt. xvi. 25.) Believest
thou these sayings, or do they seem to thee fables? Tell me now, should one say,
"Take him away to an idol temple, and he will live"; wouldest thou endure it?
No! she replies. Why? "Because," she saith, "he urges me to commit idolatry;
but here, there is no idolatry, but simple incantation:" this is the device of
Satan, this is that wiliness of the devil to cloak over the deceit, and to give
the deleterious drug in honey. After he found that he could not prevail with
thee in the other way,(3) he hath gone this way about, to stitched charms, and old
wives' fables; and the Cross indeed is dishonored, and these charms preferred
before it. Christ is cast out, and a drunken and silly old woman is brought in.
That mystery of ours is trodden under foot, and the imposture of the devil
dances.
Wherefore then, saith one, doth not God reprove the aid from such sources?
He hath many times reproved, and yet hath not persuaded thee; He now leaveth
thee to thine error, for It saith, "God gave them up unto a reprobate mind."
(Rom. i. 28.) These things, moreover, not even a Greek who hath understanding
could endure. A certain demagogue in Athens is reported once to have hung these
things about him: when a philosopher who was his instructor, on beholding them,
rebuked him, expostulated, satirized, made sport of him. For in so wretched a
plight are we, as even to believe in these things!
Why, saith one, are there not now those who raise the dead, and perform
cures? Yes, then, why, I say: why are there not now those who have a contempt for
this present life? Do we serve God for hire? When man's nature was weaker,
when the Faith had to be planted, there were even many such; but now he would not
have us to hang upon these signs, but to be ready for death. Why then clingest
thou to the present life? why lookest thou not on the future? and for the sake
of this indeed canst bear even to commit idolatry, but for the other not so
much as to restrain sadness? For this cause it is that there are none such now;
because that (future) life hath seemed to us honorless, seeing that for its sake
we do nothing, whilst for this there is nothing we refuse to undergo. And why
too that other farce, ashes, and soot, and salt? and the old woman again
brought in? A farce truly, and a shame! And then, "an eye," say they, "hath caught
the child."
Where will these satanical doings end? How will not the Greeks laugh? how
will they not gibe when we say unto them, "Great is the virtue of the Cross";
how will they be won, when they see us having recourse to those things, which
themselves laugh to scorn? Was it for this that God gave physicians and
medicines? What then? Suppose they do not cure him, but the child depart? Whither will
he depart? tell me, miserable and wretched one! Will he depart to the demons?
Will he depart to some tyrant? Will he not depart to heaven? Will he not depart
to his own Lord? Why then grievest thou? why weepest thou? why mournest thou?
why lovest thou thine infant more than thy Lord? Is it not through Him that thou
hast this also? Why art thou ungrateful? Dost thou love the gift more than the
Giver? "But I am weak," she replies, "and cannot bear the fear of God." Well,
if in bodily evils the greater covers the less, much rather in the soul, fear
destroyed fear, and sorrow, sorrow. Was the child beautiful? But be it what it
may, not more beauteous is he than Isaac: and he too was an only one. Was it born
in thine old age? So too was he. But is it fair? Well: however fair it may be,
it is not lovelier than Moses (Acts vii. 20), who drew even barbarian eyes
unto a tender love of him, and this too at a time of life when beauty is not yet
disclosed; and yet this beloved thing did the parents cast into the river. Thou
indeed both seest it laid out, and deliverest it to the burying, and goest to
its monument; but they did not so much as know whether it would be food for
fishes, or for dogs, or for other beasts that prey in the sea; and this they did,
knowing as yet nothing of the Kingdom, nor of the Resurrection.
But suppose it is not an only child; but that after thou hast lost many,
this also hath departed. But not so sudden is thy calamity as was Job's, and
(his was) of sadder aspect?(1) It is not when a roof has fallen in, it is not as
they are feasting the while, it is not following on the tidings of other
calamities.
But was it beloved by thee? But not more so than Joseph, the devoured of
wild beasts; but still the father bore the calamity, and that which followed it,
and the next to that. He wept; but acted not with impiety; he mourned, but he
uttered not discontent, but stayed at those words, saying, "Joseph is not,
Simeon is not, and will ye take Benjamin away? all these things are against
me."(2) (Gen. xlii. 36.) Seest thou how the constraint of famine prevailed with him
to be regardless of his children? and doth not the fear of God prevail with thee
as much as famine?
Weep: I do not forbid thee: but aught blasphemous neither say nor do. Be
thy child what he may, he is not like Abel; and yet nought of this kind did Adam
say; although that calamity was a sore one, that his brother should have
killed him. But I am reminded of others also that have killed their brothers; when,
for instance, Absalom killed Amnon the eldest born (2 Sam. 13), and King David
loved his child,(3) and sat indeed in sackcloth and ashes, but he neither
brought soothsayers, nor enchanters, (although there were such then, as Saul shows,)
but he made supplication to God. So do thou likewise: as that just man did, so
do thou also; the same words say thou, when thy child is dead, "I shall go to
him, but he will not come to me." (2 Sam. xii. 23.) This is true wisdom, this
is affection. However much thou mayst love thy child, thou wilt not love so much
as he did then. For even though his child were born of adultery, yet that
blessed man's love of the mother was at its height,(4) and ye know that the
offspring shares the love of the parents. And so great was his love toward it, that he
even wished it to live, though it would be his own accuser, but still he gave
thanks to God. What, thinkest thou, did Rebecca suffer, when his brother
threatened Jacob, and she grieved not her husband, but bade him send her son away?
(Gen. xxvii. 46; xxviii. 1.) When thou hast suffered any calamity, think on what
is worse than it; and thou wilt have a sufficient consolation; and consider
with thyself, what if he had died in battle? what if in fire? And whatsoever our
sufferings may be, let us think upon things yet more fearful, and we shall have
comfort sufficient, and let us ever look around us on those who have undergone
more terrible things, and if we ourselves have ever suffered heavier
calamities. So doth Paul also exhort us; as when he saith, "Ye have not yet resisted unto
blood, striving against sin" (Heb. xii. 4): and again, "There hath no
temptation taken you but such as man can bear." (1 Cor. x. 13.) Be then our sufferings
what they may, let us look round on what is worse; (for we shall find such,)
and thus shall we be thankful. And above all, let us give thanks for all things
continually; for so, both these things will be eased, and we shall live to the
glory of God, and obtain the promised good things, whereunto may all we
attain, through the grace and love toward man, &c.