HOMILIES OF ST. JOHN CHRYSOSTOM ON THE GOSPEL ACCORDING TO ST. JOHN, HOMILIES
I TO V (JOHN 1)
HOMILIES OF ST. JOHN CHRYSOSTOM,
ARCHBISHOP OF CONSTANTINOPLE,
ON THE GOSPEL ACCORDING TO ST. JOHN.
HOMILY I
PREFACE.
[1.] THEY that are spectators of the heathen games, when they have learned
that a distinguished athlete and winner of crowns is come from any quarter,
run all together to view his wrestling, and all his skill and strength; and you
may see the whole theater of many ten thousands, all there straining their eyes
both of body and mind, that nothing of what is done may escape them. So again
these same persons, if any admirable musician come amongst them, leave all that
they had in hand, which often is necessary and pressing business, and mount the
steps, and sit listening very attentively to the words and the accompaniments,
and criticising the agreement of the two. This is what the many do.
Again; those who are skilled in rhetoric do just the same with respect to
the sophists, for they too have their theaters, and their audience, and
clappings of hands, and noise, and closest criticism of what is said.
And if in the case of rhetoricians, musicians, and athletes, people sit in
the one case to look on, in the other to see at once and to listen with such
earnest attention; what zeal, what earnestness ought ye in reason to display,
when it is no musician or debater who now comes forward to a trial of skill, but
when a man is speaking from heaven, and utters a voice plainer than thunder?
for he has pervaded the whole earth with the sound; and occupied and filled it,
not by the loudness of the cry, but by moving his tongue with the grace of God.
And what is wonderful, this sound, great as it is, is neither a harsh nor
an unpleasant one, but sweeter and more delightful than all harmony of music,
and with more skill to soothe; and besides all this, most holy, and most awful,
and full of mysteries so great, and bringing with it goods so great, that if
men were exactly and with ready mind to receive and keep them, they could no
longer be mere men nor remain upon the earth, but would take their stand above all
the things of this life, and having adapted themselves to the condition of
angels, would dwell on earth just as if it were heaven.
[2.] For the son of thunder, the beloved of Christ, the pillar of the
Churches throughout the world, who holds the keys of heaven, who drank the cup of
Christ, and was baptized with His baptism, who lay upon his Master's bosom with
much confidence,(1) this man comes forward to us now; not as an actor of a
play, not hiding his head with a mask, (for he hath another sort of words to
speak,) nor mounting a platform,(2) nor striking the stage with his foot, nor dressed
out with apparel of gold, but he enters wearing a robe of inconceivable
beauty. For he will appear before us having "put on Christ" (Rom. xiii. 14; Gal. iii.
27), having his beautiful "feet shod with the preparation of the Gospel of
peace" (Eph. vi. 15); wearing a girdle not about his waist, but about his loins,
not made of scarlet leather nor daubed outside(3) with gold, but woven and
composed of truth itself. Now will he appear before us, not acting a part, (for with
him there is nothing counterfeit, nor fiction, nor fable,) but with unmasked
head he proclaims to us the truth unmasked; not making the audience believe him
other than he is by carriage, by look, by voice, needing for the delivery of
his message no instruments of music, as harp, lyre, or any other the like, for he
effects all with his tongue, uttering a voice which is sweeter and more
profitable than that of any harper or any music. All heaven is his stage his theater,
the habitable world; his audience, all angels; and of men as many as are
angels already, or desire to become so, for none but these can hear that harmony
aright, and show it forth by their works; all the rest, like little children who
hear, but what they hear understand not, from their anxiety about sweetmeats and
childish playthings; so they too, being in mirth and luxury, and living only
for wealth and power and sensuality, hear sometimes what is said, it is true,
but show forth nothing great or noble in their actions through fastening(1)
themselves for good to the clay of the brickmaking. By this Apostle stand the powers
from above, marveling at the beauty of his soul, and his understanding, and
the bloom of that virtue by which he drew unto him Christ Himself, and obtained
the grace of the Spirit. For he hath made ready his soul, as some well-fashioned
and jeweled lyre with strings of gold, and yielded it for the utterance of
something great and sublime to the Spirit.
[3.] Seeing then it is no longer the fisherman the son of Zebedee, but He
who knoweth "the deep things of God" (1 Cor. ii. 10), the Holy Spirit I mean,
that striketh this lyre, let us hearken accordingly. For he will say nothing to
us as a man, but what he saith, he will say from the depths of the Spirit, from
those secret things which before they came to pass the very Angels knew not;
since they too have learned by the voice of John with us, and by us, the things
which we know. And this hath another Apostle declared, saying, "To the intent
that unto the principalities and powers might be known by the Church the
manifold wisdom of God." (Eph. iii. 10.) If then principalities, and powers, and
Cherubim, and Seraphim, learned these things by the Church, it is very clear that
they were exceedingly earnest in listening to this teaching; and even in this we
have been not a little honored, that the Angels learned things which before
they knew not with us; I do not at present speak of their learning by us also. Let
us then show much silence and orderly behavior; not to-day only, nor during
the day on which we are hearers, but during all our life, since it is at all
times good to hear Him. For if we long to know what is going on in the palace,
what, for instance, the king has said, what he has done, what counsel he is taking
concerning his subjects, though in truth these things are for the most part
nothing to us; much more is it desirable to hear what God hath said, especially
when all concerns us. And all this will this man tell us exactly, as being a
friend of the King Himself, or rather, as having Him speaking within himself, and
from Him hearing all things which He heareth from the Father. "I have called you
friends," He saith, "for all things that I have heard of My Father, I have
made known unto you." (John xv. 15.)
[4.] As then we should all run together if we saw one from above bend down
"on a sudden "(2) from the height of heaven, promising to describe exactly all
things there, even so let us be disposed now. It is from thence that this Man
speaketh to us; He is not of this world, as Christ Himself declareth, "Ye are
not of the world" (John xv. 19), and He hath speaking within him the Comforter,
the Omnipresent, who knoweth the things of God as exactly as the soul of man
knoweth what belongs to herself, the Spirit of holiness, the righteous Spirit,
the guiding Spirit, which leads men by the hand to heaven, which gives them other
eyes, fitting them to see things to come as though present, and giving them
even in the flesh to look into things heavenly. To Him then let us yield
ourselves during all our life(3) in much tranquillity. Let none dull, none sleepy, none
sordid, enter here and tarry; but let us remove ourselves to heaven, for there
He speaketh these things to those who are citizens there. And if we tarry on
earth, we shall gain nothing great from thence. For the words of John are
nothing to those who do not desire to be freed from this swinish life, just as the
things of this world to him are nothing. The thunder amazes our souls, having
sound without significance;(4) but this man's voice troubles none of the faithful,
yea, rather releases them from trouble and confusion; it amazes the devils
only, and those who are their slaves. Therefore that we may know how it amazes
them, let us preserve deep silence, both external and mental, but especially the
latter; for what advantage is it that the mouth be hushed, if the soul is
disturbed and full of tossing? I look for that calm which is of the mind, of the
soul, since it is the hearing of the soul which I require. Let then no desire of
riches trouble us, no lust of glory, no tyranny of anger, nor the crowd of other
passions besides these; for it is not possible for the ear, except it be
cleansed, to perceive as it ought the sublimity of the things spoken; nor rightly to
understand the awful and unutterable nature of these mysteries, and all other
virtue which is in these divine oracles. If a man cannot learn well a melody on
pipe or harp, unless he in every way strain his attention; how shall one, who
sits as a listener to sounds mystical, be able to hear with a careless soul?
[5.] Wherefore Christ Himself exhorted, saying, "Give not that which is
holy unto the dogs, neither cast ye your pearls before swine." (Matt. vii. 6.) He
called these words "pearls," though in truth they be much more precious than
they, because we have no substance more precious than that. For this reason too
He is wont often to compare their sweetness to honey, not that so much only is
the measure of their sweetness, but because amongst us there is nothing
sweeter. Now, to show that they very exceedingly surpass the nature of precious
stones, and the sweetness of any honey, hear the prophet speaking concerning them,
and declaring this superiority; "More to be desired are they," he saith "than
gold and much precious stone; sweeter are they also than honey and the honeycomb."
(Ps. xix. 10.) But to those (only) who are in health; wherefore he has added,
"For thy servant keepeth them." And again in another place calling them sweet
he has added, "to my throat." For he saith, "How sweet are thy words unto my
throat." (Ps. cxix. 103.) And again he insisteth on the superiority, saying,
"Above honey and the honeycomb to my mouth." For he was in very sound health. And
let not us either come nigh to these while we are sick, but when we have healed
our soul, so receive the food that is offered us.
It is for this reason that, after so long a preface, I have not yet
attempted to fathom(1) these expressions (of St. John), in order that every one
having laid aside all manner of infirmity, as · though he were entering into heaven
itself, so may enter here pure, and freed from wrath and · carefulness and
anxiety of this life, of all other passions. For it is not otherwise possible for a
man to gain from hence anything great, except he have first so cleansed anew
his soul. And let no one say that the time to the coming communion(2) is short,
for it is possible, not only in five days, but in one moment, to change the
whole course of life. Tell me what is worse than a robber and a murderer, is not
this the extremest kind of wickedness? Yet such an one arrived straight at the
summit of excellence, and passed into Paradise itself, not needing days, nor
half a day, but one little moment. So that a man may change suddenly, and become
gold instead of clay. For since what belongs to virtue and to vice is not by
nature, the change is easy, as being independent of any necessity. "If ye be
willing and obedient," He saith, "ye shall eat the good of the land." (Isa. i. 19.)
Seest thou that there needs the will only? will--not the common wishing of the
multitude--but earnest will. For I know that all are wishing to fly up to
heaven even now; but it is necessary to show forth the wish by works. The merchant
too wishes to get rich; but he doth not allow his wish to stop with the thought
of it; no, he fits out a ship, and gets together sailors, and engages a pilot,
and furnishes the vessel with all other stores, and borrows money, and crosses
the sea, and goes away into a strange land, and endures many dangers, and all
the rest which they know who sail the sea. So too must we show our will; for we
also sail a voyage, not from land to land, but from earth to heaven. Let us
then so order our reason, that it be serviceable to steer our upward course, and
our sailors that they be obedient to it, and let our vessel be stout, that it be
not swamped amidst the reverses and despondencies of this life, nor be lifted
up by the blasts of vainglory, but be a fast and easy vessel. If So we order
our ship, and so our pilot and our crew, we shall sail with a fair wind, and we
shall draw down to ourselves the Son of God, the true Pilot, who will not leave
our bark to be engulfed, but, though ten thousand winds may blow, will rebuke
the winds and the sea, and instead of raging waves, make a great calm.
[6.] Having therefore ordered yourselves, so come to our next assembly, if
at least it be at all an object of desire to you to hear somewhat to your
advantage, and lay up what is said in your souls. But let not one of you be the
"wayside," none the "stony ground," none the "full of thorns." (Matt. xiii. 4, 5,
7.) Let us make ourselves fallow lands. For so shall we (the preachers) put in
the seed with gladness, when we see the land clean, but if stony or rough,
pardon us if we like not to labor in vain. For if we shall leave off sowing and
begin to cut up thorns, surely to cast seed into ground unwrought were extreme
folly.
It is not meet that he who has the advantage of such hearing be partaker
of the table of devils. "For what fellowship hath righteousness with
unrighteousness?" (2 Cor, vi. 14.) Thou standest listening to John, and learning the
things of the Spirit by him; and dost thou after this depart to listen to harlots
speaking vile things, and acting viler, and to effeminates cuffing one another?
How wilt thou be able to be fairly cleansed, if thou wallowest in such mire? Why
need I reckon in detail all the indecency that is there? All there is
laughter, all is shame, all disgrace, revilings and mockings, all abandonment, all
destruction, See, I forewarn and charge you all. Let none of those who enjoy the
blessings of this table destroy his own soul by those pernicious spectacles. All
that is said and done there is a pageant of Satan. But ye who have been
initiated know what manner of covenants ye made with us, or rather ye made with Christ
when He guided you into His mysteries, what ye spoke to Him, what speech ye
had with Him concerning Satan's pageant;(1) how with Satan and his angels ye
renounced this also, and promised that you would not so much as cast a glance(2)
that way. There is then no slight ground for fear, lest, by becoming careless of
such promises, one should render himself unworthy of these mysteries.
[7.] Seest thou not how in king's palaces it is not those who have
offended, but those who have been honorably distinguished,(3) that are called to share
especial favor,(4) and are numbered among the king's friends. A messenger has
come to us from heaven, sent by God Himself, to speak with us on certain
necessary matters, and you leave hearing His will, and the message He sends to you,
and sit listening to stage-players. What thunderings, what bolts from heaven,
does not this conduct deserve! For as it is not meet to partake of the table of
devils, so neither is it of the listening to devils; nor to be present with
filthy raiment at that glorious Table, loaded with so many good things, which God
Himself hath provided. Such is its power, that it can raise us at once to
heaven, if only we approach it with a sober mind. For it is not possible that he who
is continually under the influence of(7) the words of God, can remain in this
present low condition, but he needs must presently take wing, and fly away to
the land which is above, and light on the infinite treasures of good things;
which may it be that we all attain to, through the grace and lovingkindness of our
Lord Jesus Christ, through whom and with whom be glory to the Father and the
All-holy Spirit, now and ever, and world without end. Amen.
HOMILY II.
JOHN i. 1.
"In the beginning was the Word."
WERE John about to converse with us, and to say to us words of his own, we
needs must describe his family, his country, and his education. But since it
is not he, but God by him, that speaks to mankind, it seems to me superfluous
and distracting to enquire into these matters. And yet even thus it is not
superfluous, but even very necessary. For when you have learned who he was, and from
whence, who his parents, and what his character, and then hear his voice and
all his heavenly wisdom,(5) then you shall know right well that these
(doctrines) belong not to him, but to the Divine power stirring his soul.
From what country(6) then was he? From no country; but from a poor
village, and from a land little esteemed, and producing no good thing. For the Scribes
speak evil of Galilee, saying, "Search and look, for out of Galilee ariseth no
prophet." (John vii. 52.) And "the Israelite indeed" speaks ill of it, saying,
"Can any good thing come out of Nazareth?" And being of this land, he was not
even of any remarkable place in it, but of one not even distinguished by name.
Of this he was,(8) and his father a poor fisherman, so poor that he took his
sons to the same employment. Now you all know that no workman will choose to
bring up his son to succeed him in his trade, unless poverty press him very hard,
especially where the trade is a mean one. But nothing can be poorer, meaner, no,
nor more ignorant, than fishermen. Yet even among them there are some greater,
some less; and even there our Apostle occupied the lower rank, for he did not
take his prey from the sea, but passed his time on a certain little lake. And
as he was engaged by it with his father and his brother James, and they mending
their broken nets, a thing which of itself marked extreme poverty, so Christ
called him.(9)
As for worldly instruction, we may learn from these facts that he had none
at all of it. Besides, Luke testifies this when he writes not only that he was
ignorant,(10) but that he was absolutely unlettered.(1) (Acts iv. 13.) As was
likely. For one who was so poor, never coming into the public assemblies, nor
falling in with men of respectability, but as it were nailed to his fishing, or
even if he ever did meet any one, conversing with fishmongers and cooks, how, I
say, was he likely to be in a state better than that of the irrational
animals? how could he help imitating the very dumbness of his fishes?
[2.] This fisherman then, whose business was about lakes, and nets, and
fish; this native of Bethsaida of Galilee; this son of a poor fisherman, yes, and
poor to the last degree; this man ignorant, and to the last degree of
ignorance too, who never learned letters either before or after he accompanied Christ;
let us see what he utters, and on what matters he converses with us. Is it of
things in the field? Is it of things in rivers? On the trade in fish? For these
things, perhaps, one expects to hear from a fisherman. But fear ye not; we
shall hear nought of these; but we shall hear of things in heaven, and what no one
ever learned before this man. For, as might be expected of one who speaks from
the very treasures of the Spirit, he is come bringing to us sublime doctrines,
and the best way of life and wisdom, [as though just arrived from the very
heavens; yea, rather such as it was not likely that all even there should know, as
I said before.(2) ] Do these things belong to a fisherman? Tell me. Do they
belong to a rhetorician at all? To a sophist or philosopher? To every one trained
in the wisdom of the Gentiles? By no means. The human soul is simply unable
thus to philosophize on that pure and blessed nature; on the powers that come next
to it; on immortality and endless life; on the nature of mortal bodies which
shall hereafter be immortal; on punishment and the judgment to come; on the
enquiries that shall be as to deeds and words, as to thoughts and imaginations. It
cannot tell what is man, what the world; what is man indeed, and what he who
seems to be man, but is not; what is the nature of virtue, what of vice.
[3.] Some of these things indeed the disciples of Plato and Pythagoras
enquired into. Of the other philosophers we need make no mention at all; they have
all on this point been so excessively ridiculous; and those who have been
among them in greater esteem than the rest, and who have been considered the
leading men in this science, are so more than the others; and they have composed and
written somewhat on the subject of polity and doctrines, and in all have been
more shamefully ridiculous than children. For they have spent their whole life
in making women common to all, in overthrowing the very order of life,(3) in
doing away the honor of marriage, and in making other the like ridiculous laws. As
for doctrines on the soul, there is nothing excessively shameful that they
have left unsaid; asserting that the souls of men become flies, and gnats, and
bushes,(4) and that God Himself is a soul; with some other the like indecencies.
And not this alone in them is worthy of blame, but so is also their
ever-shifting current of words; for since they assert everything on uncertain and
fallacious arguments, they are like men carried hither and thither in Euripus,
and never remain in the same place.
Not so this fisherman; for all he saith is infallible; and standing as it
were upon a rock, he never shifts his ground. For since he has been thought
worthy to be in the most secret places, and has the Lord of all speaking within
him, he is subject to nothing that is human. But they, like persons who are not
held worthy even in a dream(5) to set foot in the king's palace, but who pass
their time in the forum with other men, guessing from their own imagination at
what they cannot see, have erred a great error, and, like blind or drunken men in
their wandering, have dashed against each other; and not only against each
other, but against themselves, by continually changing their opinion, and that
ever on the same matters.
[4.] But this unlettered man, the ignorant, the native of Bethsaida, the
son of Zebedee, (though the Greeks mock ten thousand times at the rusticity of
the names, I shall not the less speak them with the greater boldness.) For the
more barbarous his nation seems to them, and the more he seems removed from
Grecian discipline, so much the brighter does what we have with us appear. For when
a barbarian and an untaught person utters things which no man on earth ever
knew, and does not only utter, (though if this were the only thing it were a
great marvel,) but besides this, affords another and a stronger proof that what he
says is divinely inspired, namely, the convincing all his hearers through all
time; who will not wonder at the power that dwells in him? Since this is, as I
said, the strongest proof that he lays down no laws of his own. This barbarian
then, with his writing of the Gospel, has occupied all the habitable world. With
his body he has taken possession of the center of Asia, where of old
philosophized all of the Grecian party, shining forth in the midst of his foes,
dispersing(6) their darkness, and breaking down the stronghold of devils: but in soul
he has retired to that place which is fit for one who has done such things.
[5.] And as for the writings of the Greeks, they are all put out and
vanished, but this man's shine brighter day by day. For from the time that he (was)
and the other fishermen, since then the (doctrines) of Pythagoras and of Plato,
which seemed before to prevail, have ceased to be spoken of, and most men do
not know them even by name. Yet Plato was, they say, the invited companion of
kings, had many friends, and sailed to Sicily. And Pythagoras occupied Magna
Graecia,(1) and practiced there ten thousand kinds of sorcery. For to converse with
oxen, (which they say he did,) was nothing else but a piece of sorcery. As is
most clear from this. He that so conversed with brutes did not in anything
benefit the race of men, but even did them the greatest wrong. Yet surely, the
nature of men was better adapted for the reasoning of philosophy; still he did, as
they say, converse with eagles and oxen, using sorceries. For he did not make
their irrational nature rational, (this was impossible to man,) but by his magic
tricks he deceived the foolish. And neglecting to teach men anything useful,
he taught that they might as well eat the heads of those who begot them, as
beans. And he persuaded those who associated with him, that the soul of their
teacher had actually been at one time a bush, at another a girl, at another a fish.
Are not these things with good cause extinct, and vanished utterly? With
good cause, and reasonably. But not so the words of him who was ignorant and
unlettered; for Syrians, and Egyptians, and Indians, and Persians, and Ethiopians,
and ten thousand other nations, translating into their own tongues the
doctrines introduced by him, barbarians though they be, have learned to philosophize.
I did not therefore idly say that all the world has become his theater. For he
did not leave those of his own kind, and waste his labor on the irrational
creatures, (an act of excessive vainglory and extreme folly,) but being clear of
this as well as of other passions, he was earnest on one point only, that all the
world might learn somewhat of the things which might profit it, and be able to
translate it from earth to heaven.
For this reason too, he did not hide his teaching in mist and darkness, as
they did who threw obscurity of speech, like a kind of veil, around the
mischiefs laid up within. But this man's doctrines are clearer than the sunbeams,
wherefore they have been unfolded(2) to all men throughout the world. For he did
not teach as Pythagoras did, commanding those who came to him to be silent for
five years, or to sit like senseless stones; neither did he invent fables
defining the universe to consist of numbers; but casting away all this devilish trash
and mischief, he diffused such simplicity through his words, that all he said
was plain, not only to wise men, but also to women and youths. For he was
persuaded that the words were true and profitable to all that should hearken to
them. And all time after him is his witness; since he has drawn to him all the
world, and has freed our life when we have listened to these words from all
monstrous display of wisdom; wherefore we who hear them would prefer rather to give up
our lives, than the doctrines by him delivered to.
[6.] From this then, and from every other circumstance, it is plain, that
nothing of this man's is human, but divine and heavenly are the lessons which
come to us by this divine soul. For we shall observe not sounding sentences, nor
magnificent diction, nor excessive and useless order and arrangement of words
and sentences, (these things are far from all true wisdom,) but strength
invincible and divine, and irresistible force of right doctrines, and a rich supply
of unnumbered good things. For their overcare about expression was so excessive,
so worthy of mere sophists, or rather not even of sophists, but of silly
striplings, that even their own chief philosopher introduces his own master as
greatly ashamed of this art, and as saying to the judges, that what they hear from
him shall be spoken plainly and without premeditation, not tricked out
rhetorically nor ornamented with (fine) sentences and words; since, says he, it cannot
surely be becoming, O men, that one at my age should come before you like a lad
inventing speeches.(3) And observe the extreme absurdity of the thing; what he
has described his master avoiding as disgraceful, unworthy of philosophy and
work for lads, this above all he himself has cultivated. So entirely were they
given up to mere love of distinction.
And as, if you uncover those sepulchers which are whitened without you
will find them full of corruption, and stench, and rotten bones; so too the
doctrines of the philosopher, if you strip them of their flowery diction, you will
see to be full of much abomination, especially when he philosophizes on the soul,
which he both honors and speaks ill of without measure. And this is the snare
of the devil, never to keep due proportion, but by excess on either hand to
lead aside those who are entangled by it into evil speaking. At one time he says,
that the soul is of the substance of God; at another, after having exalted it
thus immoderately and impiously, he exceeds again in a different way, and treats
it with insult, making it pass into swine and asses, and other animals of yet
less esteem than these.
But enough of this; or rather even this is out of measure. For if it were
possible to learn anything profitable from these things, we must have been
longer occupied with them; but if it be only to observe their indecency and
absurdity, more than requisite has been said by us already. We will therefore leave
their fables, and attach ourselves to our own doctrines, which have been brought
to us from above by the tongue of this fisherman, and which have nothing human
in them.
[7.] Let us then bring forward the words, having reminded you now, as I
exhorted you at the first, earnestly to attend to what is said. What then does
this Evangelist say immediately on his outset?
"In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God." (Ver. 1.)
Seest thou the great boldness and power of the words, how he speaks nothing
doubting nor conjecturing, but declaring all things plainly? For this is the teacher's
part, not to waver in anything he says, since if he who is to be a guide to
the rest require another person who shall be able to establish him with
certainty, he would be rightly ranked not among teachers, but among disciples.
But if any one say, "What can be the reason that he has neglected the
first cause, and spoken to us at once concerning the second?" we shall decline to
speak of "first" and "second," for the Divinity is above number, and the
succession of times. Wherefore we decline these expressions; but we confess that the
Father is from none, and that the Son is begotten of the Father. Yes, it may be
said, but why then does he leave the Father, and speak concerning the Son? Why?
because the former was manifest to all, if not as Father, at least as God; but
the Only-Begotten was not known; and therefore with reason did he immediately
from the very beginning hasten to implant the knowledge of Him in those who
knew Him not.
Besides, he has not been silent as to the Father in his writings on these
points. And observe, I beg of you, his spiritual wisdom. He knows that men most
honor the eldest of beings which was before all, and account this to be God.
Wherefore from this point first he makes his beginning, and as he advances,
declares that God is, and does not like Plato assert, sometimes that He is
intellect, sometimes that He is soul; for these things are far removed from that divine
and unmixed Nature which has nothing common with us, but is separated from any
fellowship with created things, I mean as to substance, though not as to
relation.
And for this reason he calls Him "The Word." For since he is about to
teach that this "Word" is the only-begotten Son of God, in order that no one may
imagine that His generation is passible, by giving Him the appellation of "The
Word," he anticipates and removes beforehand the evil suspicion, showing that the
Son is from the Father, and that without His suffering (change).
[8.] Seest thou then that as I said, he has not been silent as to the
Father in his words concerning the Son? And if these instances are not sufficient
fully to explain the whole matter, marvel not, for our argument is God, whom it
is impossible to describe, or to imagine worthily; hence this man nowhere
assigns the name of His essence, (for it is not possible to say what God is, as to
essence,) but everywhere he declares Him to us by His workings. For this "Word"
one may see shortly after called "Light," and the "Light" in turn named "Life."
Although not for this reason only did he so name Him; this was the first
reason, and the second was because He was about to declare to us the things of
the Father. For "all things," He saith, "that I have heard from my Father, I
have made known unto you." (John xv. 15.) He calls Him both "Light" and "Life,"
for He hath freely given to us the light which proceeds from knowledge, and the
life which follows it. In short, one name is not sufficient, nor two, nor three,
nor more, to teach us what belongs to God. But we must be content to be able
even by means of many to apprehend, though but obscurely, His attributes.
And he has not called Him simply "Word," but with the addition of the
article, distinguishing Him from the rest in this way also. Seest thou then that I
said not without cause that this Evangelist speaks to us from heaven? Only see
from the very beginning whither he has drawn up the soul, having given it
wings, and has carried up with him the mind of his hearers. For having set it higher
than all the things of sense, than earth, than sea, than heaven, he leads it
by the hand above the very angels, above cherubim and seraphim, above thrones
and principalities and powers; in a word, persuades it to journey beyond all
created things.
[9.] What then? when he has brought us to such a height as this, is he in
sooth able to stop us there? By no means; but just as one by transporting into
the midst of the sea a person who was standing on the beach, and looking on
cities, and beaches, and havens, removes him indeed from the former objects, yet
does not stay his sight anywhere, but brings him to a view without bound; so
this Evangelist, having brought us above all creation, and escorted us towards the
eternal periods which lie beyond it, leaves the sight suspended,(1) not
allowing it to arrive at any limit upwards, as indeed there is none.
For the intellect, having ascended to "the beginning," enquires what
"beginning"; and then finding the "was" always outstripping its imagination, has no
point at which to stay its thought; but looking intently onwards, and being
unable to cease at any point, it becomes wearied out, and turns back to things
below. For this "was in the beginning," is nothing else than expressive of ever
being and being infinitely.
Seest thou true philosophy and divine doctrines? Not like those of the
Greeks, who assign times, and say that some indeed of the gods are younger, some
eider. There is nothing of this with us. For if God Is, as certainly He Is, then
nothing was before Him. If He is Creator of all things, He must be first; if
Master and Lord of all, then all, both creatures and ages, are after Him.
[10.] I had desired to enter the lists yet on other difficulties, but
perhaps our minds are wearied out; when therefore I have advised you on those
points which are useful(1) to us for the hearing, both of what has been said, and of
what is yet to be said, I again will hold my peace. What then are these
points? I know that many have become confused(2) by reason of the length of what has
been spoken. Now this takes place when the soul is heavy laden with many
burdens of this life. For as the eye when it is clear and transparent is keen-sighted
also, and will not easily be tired in making out even the minutest bodies; but
when from some bad humor from the head having poured into it, or some
smoke-like fumes having ascended to it from beneath, a kind of thick cloud is formed
before the ball, this does not allow it clearly to perceive even any larger
object; so is naturally the case with the soul. For when it is purified, and has no
passion to disturb it, it looks steadfastly to the fit objects of its regard;
but when, darkened by many passions, it loses its proper excellence, then it is
not easily able to be sufficient for any high thing, but soon is wearied, and
falls back; and turning aside to sleep and sloth, lets pass things that concern
it with a view to excellence and the life thence arising, instead of receiving
them with much readiness.
And that you may not suffer this, (I shall not cease continually thus to
warn you,) strengthen your minds, that ye may not hear what the faithful among
the Hebrews heard from Paul. For to them he said that he had "many things to
say, and hard to be uttered" (Heb. v. 11); not as though they were by nature such,
but because, says he, "ye are dull of hearing." For it is the nature of the
weak and infirm man to be confused even by few words as by many, and what is
clear and easy he thinks hard to be comprehended. Let not any here be such an one,
but having chased from him all worldly care, so let him hear these doctrines.
For when the desire of money possesses the hearer, the desire of hearing
cannot possess him as well; since the soul, being one, cannot suffice for many
desires; but one of the two is injured by the other, and, from division, becomes
weaker as its rival prevails, and expends all upon itself.
And this is wont to happen in the case of children. When a man has only
one, he loves that one exceedingly. But when he has become father of many, then
also his dispositions of affection being divided become weaker.
If this happens where there is the absolute rule and power of nature, and
the objects beloved are akin one with another, what can we say as to that
desire and disposition which is according to deliberate choice; especially where
these desires lie directly opposed to each other; for the love of wealth is a
thing opposed to the love of this kind of hearing. We enter heaven when we enter
here; not in place, I mean, but in disposition; for it is possible for one who is
on earth to stand in heaven, and to have vision of the things that are there,
and to hear the words from thence.
[11.] Let none then introduce the things of earth into heaven; let no one
standing here be careful about what is at his house. For he ought to bear with
him, and to preserve both at home and in his business, what he gains from this
place, not to allow it to be loaded with the burdens of house and market. Our
reason for entering in to the chair of instruction is, that thence we may
cleanse ourselves from(3) the filth of the outer world; but if we are likely even in
this little space to be injured by things said or done without, it is better
for us not to enter at all. Let no one then in the assembly be thinking about
domestic matters, but let him at home be stirring with what he heard in the
assembly. Let these things be more precious to us than any. These concern the soul,
but those the body; or rather what is said here concerns both body and soul.
Wherefore let these things be our leading business, and all others but occasional
employments; for these belong both to the future and the present life, but the
rest neither to the one nor the other, unless they be managed according to the
law laid down for these. Since from these it is impossible to learn not only
what we shall hereafter be, and how we shall then live, but how we shall rightly
direct this present life also.
For this house is(1) a spiritual surgery, that whatever wounds we may have
received without, here(2) we may heal, not that we may gather fresh ones to
take with us hence. Yet if we do not give heed to the Spirit speaking to us, we
shall not only fill to clear ourselves of our former hurts, but shall get others
in addition.
Let us then with much earnestness attend to the book as it is being
unfolded to us; since if we learn exactly its first principles and fundamental
doctrines,(3) we shall not afterwards require much close study, but after laboring a
little at the beginning, shall be able, as Paul says, to instruct others also.
(Rom. xv. 14.) For this Apostle is very sublime, abounding in many doctrines,
and on these he dwells more than on other matters.
Let us not then be careless hearers. And this is the reason why we set
them forth to you by little and little, so that all may be easily intelligible to
you, and may not escape your memory. Let us fear then lest we come under the
condemnation of that word which says, "If I had not come and spoken unto them,
they had not had sin." (John XV. 22.) For what shall we be profited more than
those who have not heard, if even after hearing we go our way home bearing nothing
with us, but only wondering at what has been said.
Allow us then to sow in good ground; allow us, that you may draw us the
more to you. If any man hath thorns, let him cast the fire of the Spirit amongst
them. If any hath a hard and stubborn heart, let him by employing the same
fire make it soft and yielding. If any by the wayside is trodden down by all kind
of thoughts, let him enter into more sheltered places, and not lie exposed for
those that will to invade for plunder: that so we may see your cornfields
waving with corn. Besides, if we exercise such care as this over ourselves, and
apply ourselves industriously to this spiritual hearing, if not at once yet by
degrees, we shall surely be freed from all the cares of life.
Let us therefore take heed that it be not said of us, that our(4) ears are
those of a deaf adder. (Ps. lviii. 4.) For tell me, in what does a hearer of
this kind differ from a beast? and how could he be otherwise than more
irrational than any irrational animal, who does not attend when God is speaking? And if
to be well-pleasing(5) to God is really to be a man, what else but a beast can
he be who will not even hear how he may succeed in this? Consider then what a
misfortune it would be for us to fall down(6) of our own accord from (the nature
of) men to (that of) beasts, when Christ is willing of men to make us equal to
angels. For to serve the belly, to be possessed by the desire of riches, to be
given to anger, to bite, to kick, become not men, but beasts. Nay, even the
beasts have each, as one may say, one single passion, and that by nature. But
man, when he has cast away the dominion of reason, and torn himself from the
commonwealth of God's devising, gives himself up to all the passions, is no longer
merely a beast, but a kind of many-formed motley monster; nor has he even the
excuse from nature, for all his wickedness proceeds from deliberate choice and
determination.
May we never have cause to suspect this of the Church of Christ. Indeed,
we are concerning you persuaded of better things, and such as belong to
salvation; but the more we are so persuaded, the more careful we will be not to desist
from words of caution. In order that having mounted to the summit of
excellencies, we may obtain the promised goods. Which may it come to pass that we all
attain to, through the grace and lovingkindness of our Lord Jesus Christ, by whom
and with whom, to the Father and the Holy Ghost, be glory world without end.
Amen.
HOMILY III.
JOHN i. 1.
"In the beginning was the Word."
[1.] ON the subject of attention in hearkening it is superfluous to exhort
you any more, so quickly have you shown by your actions the effects of my
advice. For your manner of running together, your attentive postures, the thrusting
one another in your eagerness to get the inner places, where my voice may more
clearly be heard by you, your unwillingness to retire from the press until
this spiritual assembly be dissolved, the clapping of hands, the murmurs of
applause; in a word, all things of this kind may be considered proofs of the fervor
of your souls, and of your desire to hear. So that on this point it is
superfluous to exhort you. One thing, however, it is necessary for us to bid and
entreat, that you continue to have the same zeal, and manifest it not here only, but
that also when you are at home, you converse man with wife, and father with son,
concerning these matters. And say somewhat of yourselves, and require somewhat
in return from them; and so all contribute to this excellent banquet.(1)
For let no one tell me that our children ought not to be occupied with
these things; they ought not only to be occupied with them, but to be zealous
about them only. And although on account of your infirmity I do not assert this,
nor take them away from their worldly learning,(2) just as I do not draw you
either from your civil business; yet of these seven days I claim that you dedicate
one to the common Lord of us all. For is it not a strange thing that we should
bid our domestics slave for us all their time, and ourselves apportion not even
a little of our leisure to God; and this too when all our service adds nothing
to Him, (for the Godhead is incapable of want,) but turns out to our own
advantage? And yet when you take your children into the theaters, you allege neither
their mathematical lessons, nor anything of the kind; but if it be required to
gain or collect anything spiritual, you call the matter a waste of time. And
how shall' you not anger God, if you find leisure and assign a season for
everything else, and yet think it a troublesome and unseasonable thing for your
children to take in hand what relates to Him?
Do not so, brethren, do not so. It is this very age that most of all needs
the hearing these things; for from its tenderness it readily stores up what is
said; and what children hear is impressed as a seal on the wax of their minds.
Besides, it is then that their life begins to incline to vice or virtue; and
if from the very gates(3) and portals one lead them away from iniquity, and
guide them by the hand to the best road, he will fix them for the time to come in a
sort of habit and nature, and they will not, even if they be willing, easily
change for the worse, since this force of custom draws them to the performance
of good actions. So that we shall see them become more worthy of respect than
those who have grown old, and they will be more useful in civil matters,
displaying in youth the qualities of the aged.
For, as I before said, it cannot be that they who enjoy the hearing of
such things as these, and who are in the company of such an Apostle, should depart
without receiving some great and remarkable advantage, be it man, woman, or
youth, that partakes of this table. If we train by words the animals which we
have, and so tame them, how much more shall we effect this with men by this
spiritual teaching, when there is a wide difference between the remedy in each case,
and the subject healed as well. For neither is there so much fierceness in us
as in the brutes, since theirs is from nature, ours from choice; nor is the
power of the words the same, for the power of the first is that of the human
intellect, the power of the second is that of the might and grace of the Spirit.(4)
Let then the man who despairs of himself consider the tame animals, and he shall
no longer be thus affected; let him come continually to this house of healing,
let him hear at all times the laws of the Spirit, and on retiring home let him
write down in his mind the things which he has heard; so shall his hopes be
good and his confidence great, as he feels his progress by experience. For when
the devil sees the law of God written in the soul, and the heart become tablets
to write it on, he will not approach any more. Since wherever the king's
writing is, not engraved on a pillar of brass, but stamped by the Holy Ghost on a
mind loving God, and bright with abundant grace, that (evil one) will not be able
even to look at it, but from afar will turn his back upon us. For nothing is so
terrible to him and to the thoughts which are suggested by him as a mind
careful about Divine matters, and a soul which ever hangs over this fountain. Such
an one can nothing present annoy, even though it be displeasing; nothing puff up
or make proud, even though it be favorable; but amidst all this storm and
surge it will even enjoy a great calm.
[2.] For confusion arises within us, not from, the nature of
circumstances, but from the infirmity of our minds; for if we were thus affected by reason
of what befalls us, then, (as we all sail the same sea, and it is impossible to
escape waves and spray,) all men must needs be troubled; but if there are some
who stand beyond the influence of the storm and the raging sea, then it is
clear that it is not circumstances which make the storm, but the condition of our
own mind. If therefore we so order the mind that it may bear all things
contentedly, we shall have no storm nor even a ripple, but always a clear calm.
After professing that I should say nothing on these points, I know not how
I have been carried away into such a length of exhortation. Pardon my
prolixity; for I fear, yes, I greatly fear lest this zeal of ours should ever become
weaker. Did I feel confident respecting it, I would not now have said to you
anything on these matters, since it is sufficient to make all things easy to you.
But it is time in what follows to proceed to the matters proposed for
consideration to-day; that you may not come weary to the contest. For we have contests
against the enemies of the truth, against those who use every artifice to destroy
the honor of the Son of God, or rather their own. This remains for ever as it
now is, nothing lessened by the blaspheming tongue, but they, by seeking
eagerly to pull down Him whom they say they worship, fill their faces with shame and
their souls with punishment.
What then do they say when we assert what we have asserted? "That the
words, "in the beginning was the Word,' do not denote eternity absolutely, for that
this same expression was used also concerning heaven and earth." What enormous
shamelessness and irreverence! I speak to thee concerning God, and dost thou
bring the earth into the argument, and men who are of the earth? At this rate,
since Christ is called Son of God, and God, Man who is called Son of God must be
God also. For, "I have said, Ye are Gods, and all of you are children of the
Most High." (Ps. lxxxii. 6.) Wilt thou contend with the Only-Begotten concerning
Sonship, and assert that in that respect He enjoys nothing more than thou? "By
no means," is the reply. And yet thou doest this even though thou say not so
in words. "How?" Because thou sayest that thou by grace art partaker of the
adoption, and He in like manner. For by saying that He is not Son by nature, thou
only makest him to be so by grace.
However, let us see the proofs which they produce to us. "In the
beginning," it is said, "God made the Heaven and the earth, and the earth was invisible
and unformed." (Gen. i. 2.) And, "There 'was' a man of Ramathaim Zophim." (1
Sam. i. 1.) These are what they think strong arguments, and they are strong; but
it is to prove the correctness of the doctrines asserted by us, while they are
utterly powerless to establish their blasphemy. For tell me, what has the word
"was" in common with the word "made"? What hath God in common with man? Why
dost thou mix what may not be mixed? Why confound things which are distinct, why
bring low what is above? In that place it is not the expression "was" only which
denotes eternity, but that One "was in the beginning." And that other, "The
Word was"; for as the word "being," when used concerning man, only distinguishes
present time, but when concerning God, denotes eternity,(1) so "was," when used
respecting our nature, signifies to us past time, and that too limited, but
when respecting God it declares eternity. It would have been enough then when one
had heard the words "earth" and "man," to imagine nothing more concerning them
than what one may fitly think of a nature that came into being,(2) for that
which came to be, be it what it may, hath come to be either in time, or the age
before time was, but the Son of God is above not only times, but all ages which
were before, for He is the Creator and Maker of them, as the Apostle says, "by
whom also He made the ages." Now the Maker necessarily is, before the thing
made. Yet since some are so senseless, as even after this to have higher notions
concerning creatures than is their due, by the expression "He made," and by that
other, "there was a man," he lays hold beforehand of the mind of his hearer,
and cuts up all shamelessness by the roots. For all that has been made, both
heaven and earth, has been made in time, and has its beginning in time, and none
of them is without beginning, as having been made: so that when you hear that
"he made the earth," and that "there was a man," you are trifling(3) to no
purpose, and weaving a tissue of useless folly.
For I can mention even another thing by way of going further. What is it?
It is, that if it had been said of the earth, "In the beginning was the earth,"
and of man, "In the beginning was the man," we must not even then have
imagined any greater things concerning them than what we have now determined.(1) For
the terms "earth" and "man" as they are presupposed, whatever may be said
concerning them, do not allow the mind to imagine to itself anything greater
concerning them than what we know at present. Just as "the Word," although but little
be said of It, does not allow us to think (respecting It) anything low or poor.
Since in proceeding he says of the earth, "The earth was invisible and
unformed." For having said that "He made" it, and having settled its proper limit, he
afterwards declares fearlessly what follows, as knowing that there is no one so
silly as to suppose that it is without beginning and uncreated, since the word
"earth," and that other "made," are enough to convince even a very simple
person that it is not eternal nor increate, but one of those things created in time.
[3.] Besides, the expression "was," applied to the earth and to man, is
not indicative of absolute existence. But in the case of a man (it denotes) his
being of a certain place, in that of the earth its being in a certain way. For
he has not said absolutely "the earth was," and then held his peace, but has
taught how it was even after its creation, as that it was "invisible and
unformed," as yet covered by the waters and in confusion. So in the case of Elkanah he
does not merely say that "there was a man," but adds also whence he was, "of
Armathaim Zophim." But in the case of "the Word," it is not so. I am ashamed to
try these cases, one against the other, for if we find fault with those who do so
in the case of men, when there is a great difference in the virtue of those
who are so tried, though in truth their substance be one; where the difference
both of nature and of everything else is so infinite, is it not the extremest
madness to raise such questions? But may He who is blasphemed by them be merciful
to us. For it was not we who invented the necessity of such discussions, but
they who war against their own salvation laid it on us.
What then do I say? That this first "was," applied to "the Word," is only
indicative of His eternal Being, (for" In the beginning," he saith, "was the
Word,") and that the second "was," ("and the Word was with God,") denotes His
relative Being. For since to be eternal and without beginning is most peculiar to
God, this he puts first; and then, lest any one hearing that He was "in the
beginning," should assert, that He was "unbegotten" also, he immediately remedies
this by saying, before he declares what He was, that He was "with God." And he
has prevented any one from supposing, that this "Word" is simply such a one as
is either uttered(2) or conceived,(3) by the addition, as I beforesaid, of the
article, as well as by this second expression. For he does not say, was "in
God," but was "with God": declaring to us His eternity as to person? Then, as he
advances, he has more clearly revealed it, by adding, that this "Word" also "was
God."
"But yet created," it may be said. What then hindered him from saying,
that "In the beginning God made the Word"? at least Moses speaking of the earth
says, not that "in the beginning was the earth," but that "He made it," and then
it was. What now hindered John from saying in like manner, that "In the
beginning God made the Word"? For if Moses feared lest any one should assert that the
earth was uncreated,(5) much more ought John to have feared this respecting the
Son, if He was indeed created. The world being visible, by this very
circumstance proclaims its Maker, ("the heavens," says the Psalmist, "declare the glory
of God"--Ps. xix. 1), but the Son is invisible, and is greatly, infinitely,
higher than all creation. If now, in the one instance, where we needed neither
argument nor teaching to know that the world is created,(6) yet the prophet sets
down this fact clearly and before all others; much more should John have
declared the same concerning the Son, if He had really been created.(7)
"Yes," it may be said, "but Peter has asserted this clearly and openly."
Where and when? "When speaking to the Jews he said, that 'God hath made Him both
Lord and Christ.'" (Acts ii. 36.) Why dost thou not add what follows, "That
same Jesus whom ye have crucified"? or dost thou not know that of the words, part
relate to His unmixed Nature, part to His Incarnation?(8) But if this be not
the case, and thou wilt absolutely understand all as referring to the Godhead,
then thou wilt make the Godhead capable of suffering; but if not capable of
suffering, then not created. For if blood had flowed from that divine and ineffable
Nature, and if that Nature, and not the flesh, had been torn and cut by the
nails upon the cross, on this supposition your quibbling would have had reason;
but if not even the devil himself could utter such a blasphemy, why dost thou
feign to be ignorant with ignorance so unpardonable, and such as not the evil
spirits themselves could pretend? Besides the expressions "Lord" and "Christ"
belong not to His Essence, but to His dignity; for the one refers to His Power,(9)
the other to his having been anointed. What then wouldest thou say concerning
the Son of God? for if he were even, as you assert, created, this argument could
not have place. For He was not first created and afterwards God chose Him, nor
does He hold a kingdom which could be thrown aside, but one which belongs by
nature to His Essence; since, when asked if He were a King, He answers, "To this
end was I born." (c. xviii. 37.) But Peter speaks as concerning one chosen,
because his argument wholly refers to the Dispensation.
[4.] And why dost thou wonder if Peter says this? for Paul, reasoning with
the Athenians, calls Him "Man" only, saying, "By that Man whom He hath
ordained, whereof He hath given assurance to all men, in that He hath raised Him from
the dead." (Acts xvii. 31.) He speaks nothing concerning "the form of God"
(Phil. ii. 6), nor that He was "equal to Him," nor that He was the "brightness of
His glory." (Heb. i. 3.) And with reason. The time for words like these was not
yet come; but it would have contented him that they should in the meanwhile
admit that He was Man, and that He rose again from the dead. Christ Himself acted
in the same manner, from whom Paul having learned, used this reserve.(1) For He
did not at once reveal to us His Divinity, but was at first held to be a
Prophet and a good man;(2) but afterwards His real nature was shown by His works and
words. On this account Peter too at first used this method, (for this was the
first sermon that he made to the Jews;) and because they were not yet able
clearly to understand anything respecting His Godhead, he dwelt on the arguments
relating to His Incarnation; that their ears being exercised in these, might open
a way to the rest of his teaching. And if any one will go through all the
sermon from the beginning, he will find what I say very observable, for he (Peter)
calls Him "Man," and dwells on the accounts of His Passion, His Resurrection,
and His generation according to the flesh. Paul too when he says, "Who was born
of the seed of David according to the flesh" (Rom. i. 3), only teaches us that
the word "made"(3) is taken with a view(4) to His Incarnation, as we allow. But
the son of thunder is now speaking to us concerning His Ineffable and
Eternal(5) Existence, and therefore he leaves the word "made" and puts "was"; yet if He
were created, this point he needs must most especially have determined. For if
Paul feared that some foolish persons might suppose that He shall be greater
than the Father, and have Him who begat Him made subject to Him, (for this is
the reason why the Apostle in sending to the Corinthians writes, "But when He
saith, All things are put under Him, it is manifest that He is excepted which did
put all things under Him," yet who could possibly imagine that the Father, even
in common with all things, will be subject to the Son?) if, I say, he
nevertheless feared these foolish imaginations, and says, "He is excepted that did put
all things under Him;" much more if the Son of God were indeed created, ought
John to have feared lest any one should suppose Him uncreated, and to have
taught on this point before any other.
But now, since He was Begotten, with good reason neither John nor any
other, whether apostle or prophet, hath asserted that He was created. Neither had
it been so would the Only-Begotten Himself have let it pass unmentioned. For He
who spoke of Himself so humbly from condescension(6) would certainly not have
been silent on this matter. And I think it not unreasonable to suppose, that He
would be more likely to have the higher Nature, and say nothing of it, than not
having it to pass by this omission, and fail to make known that He had it not.
For in the first case there was a good excuse for silence, namely, His desire
to teach mankind humility by being silent as to the greatness of His
attributes; but in the second case you can find no just excuse for silence. For why
should He who declined many of His real attributes have been, if He were created,
silent as to His having been made? He who, in order to teach humility, often
uttered expressions of lowliness, such as did not properly belong to Him, much more
if He had been indeed created, would not have failed to speak of this. Do you
not see Him, in order that none may imagine Him not to have been begotten,(7)
doing and saying everything to show that He was so, uttering words unworthy both
of His dignity and His essence, and descending to the humble character of a
Prophet? For the expression, "As I hear, I judge" (v. 30); and that other, "He
hath told Me what I should say, and what I should speak" (xii. 49), and the like,
belong merely to a prophet. If now, from His desire to remove this suspicion,
He did not disdain to utter words thus lowly, much more if He were created
would He have said many like words, that none might suppose Him to be uncreated;
as, "Think not that I am begotten of the Father; I am created, not begotten, nor
do I share His essence." But as it is, He does the very contrary, and utters
words which compel men, even against their will and desire, to admit the opposite
opinion. As, "I am in the Father, and the Father in Me" (xiv. 11); and, "Have
I been so long time with you, and yet hast thou not known Me, Philip? he that
hath seen Me, hath seen the Father." (xiv. 9.) And, "That all men should honor
the Son, even as they honor the Father." (v. 23.) "As the Father raiseth up the
dead and quickeneth them, even so the Son quickeneth whom He will." (v. 21.)
"My Father worketh hitherto, and I work." (v. 17.) "As the Father knoweth Me,
even so know I the Father." (x. 15.) "I and My Father are One." (x. 30.) And
everywhere by putting the "as," and the "so," and the "being with the Father," He
declares His undeviating likeness to Him.(1) His power in Himself He manifests by
these, as well as by many other words; as when He says, "Peace, be still."
(Mark iv. 39.) "I will, be thou clean." (Matt. viii. 3.) "Thou dumb and deaf
spirit, I charge thee, come out of him." (Mark ix. 25.) And again, "Ye have heard
that it was said by them of old time, Thou shalt not kill; but I say unto you,
That whosoever is angry with his brother without a cause, shall be in danger."
(Matt. v. 21, 22.) And all the other laws which He gave, and wonders which He
worked, are sufficient to show His power, or rather, I should say, a very small
part of them is enough to bring over and convince any, except the utterly
insensate.
[5.] But vainglory(2) is a thing powerful to blind even to very evident
truths the minds of those ensnared by it, and to persuade them to dispute against
what is allowed by others; nay, it instigates a some who know and are
persuaded of the truth to pretended ignorance and opposition. As took place in the case
of the Jews, for they did not through ignorance deny the Son of God, but that
they might obtain honor from the multitude; "they believed," says the
Evangelist, but were afraid, "lest they should be put out of the synagogue." (xii. 40.)
And so they gave up(4) their salvation to others.(5) For it cannot be that he
who is so zealous a slave to the glory of this present world can obtain the
glory which is from God. Wherefore He rebuked them, saying, "How can ye believe,
which receive honor of men, and seek not the honor which cometh from God?" (v.
44.) This passion is a sort of deep intoxication, and makes him who is subdued by
it hard to recover. And having detached the souls of its captives from
heavenly things, it nails them to earth, and lets them not look up to the true light,
but persuades them ever. to wallow in the mire, giving them masters so
powerful, that they have the rule over them without needing to use commands. For the
man who is sick of this disease, does of his own accord, and without bidding, all
that he thinks will be agreeable to his masters. On their account he clothes
himself in rich apparel, and beautifies his face, taking these pains not for
himself but for others; and he leads about a train of followers through the
market-place, that others may admire him, and all that he does he goes through,
merely out of obsequiousness to the rest of the world. Can any state of mind be more
wretched than this? That others may admire him, he is ever being
precipitated(6) to ruin.
Would you learn what a tyrannous sway it exercises? Why surely, the words
of Christ are sufficient to show it all. But yet listen to these further
remarks.(7) If you will ask any of those men who mingle in state affairs and incur
great expenses, why they lavish so much gold, and what their so vast expenditure
means; you will hear from them, that it is for nothing else but to gratify the
people. If again you ask what the people may be; they will say, that it is a
thing full of confusion and turbulent, made up for the most part of folly, tossed
blindly to and fro like the waves of the sea, and often composed of varying
and adverse opinions. Must not the man who has such a master be more pitiable
than any one? And yet strange though it be, it is not so strange that worldly men
should be eager about these things; but that those who say that they have
started away from the world should be sick of this same disease, or rather of one
more grievous still, this is the strangest thing of all. For with the first the
loss extends only to money, but in the last case the danger reaches to the soul.
For when men alter a fight faith for reputation's sake, and dishonor God that
they may be in high repute themselves, tell me, what excess of stupidity and
madness must there not be in what they do? Other passions, even if they are very
hurtful, at least bring some pleasure with them, though it be but for a time
and fleeting; those who love money, or wine, or women, have, with their hurt, a
pleasure, though a brief one. But those who are taken captives by this passion,
live a life continually embittered and stripped of enjoyment, for they do not
obtain what they earnestly desire, glory, I mean, from the many. They think they
enjoy it, but do not really, because the thing they aim at is not glory at
all. And therefore their state of mind is not called glory,(8) but a something
void of glory, vaingloriousness,(9) so have all the ancients named it, and with
good reason; inasmuch as it is quite empty, and contains nothing bright or
glorious within it, but as players' masks seem to be bright and lovely, but are
hollow within, (for which cause, though they be more beautiful than natural faces,
yet they never draw. any to love them,) even so, or rather yet more wretchedly,
has the applause of the multitude tricked out for us this passion, dangerous
as an antagonist, and cruel as a master. Its countenance alone is bright, but
within it is no more like the mask's mere emptiness, but crammed with dishonor,
and full of savage tyranny. Whence then, it may be asked, has this passion, so
unreasonable, so devoid of pleasure, its birth? Whence else but from a low, mean
soul? It cannot be that one who is captivated by love of applause should
imagine readily anything great or noble; he needs must be base, mean, dishonorable,
little. He who does nothing for virtue's sake, but to please men worthy of no
consideration, and who ever makes account of their mistaken and erring opinions,
how can he be worth anything? Consider; if any one should ask him, What do you
think of the many? he clearly would say, "that they are thoughtless, and not
to be regarded." Then if any one again should ask him, "Would you choose to be
like them?" I do not suppose he could possibly desire to be like them. Must it
not then be excessively ridiculous to seek the good opinion of those whom you
never would choose to resemble?
[6.] Do you say that they are many and a sort of collective body? this is
the very reason why you ought most to despise them. If when taken singly they
are contemptible, still more will this be the case when they are many; for when
they are assembled together, their individual folly is increased by numbers,
and becomes greater. So that a man might possibly take a single one of them and
set him right, but could not do so with them when together, because then their
folly becomes intense, and they are led like sheep, and follow in every
direction the opinions of one another. Tell me, will you seek to obtain this vulgar
glory? Do not, I beg and entreat you. It turns everything upside down; it is the
mother of avarice, of slander, of false witness, of treacheries; it arms and
exasperates those who have received no injury against those who have inflicted
none. He who has fallen into this disease neither knows friendship nor remembers
old companionship, and knows not how to respect any one at all; he has cast away
from his soul all goodness, and is at war with every one, unstable, without
natural affection.
Again, the passion of anger, tyrannical though it be and hard to bear,
still is not wont always to disturb, but only when it has persons that excite it;
but that of vainglory is ever active, and there is no time, as one may say,
when it can cease, since reason neither hinders nor restrains it, but it is always
with us not only persuading us to sin, but snatching from our hands anything
which we may chance to do aright, or sometimes not allowing us to do right at
all. If Paul calls covetousness idolatry, what ought we to name that which is
mother, and root, and source of it, I mean, vainglory? We cannot possibly find any
term such as its wickedness deserves. Beloved, let us now return to our
senses; let us put off this filthy garment, let us rend and cut it off from us, let
us at some time or other become free with true freedom, and be sensible of the
nobility(1) which has been given to us by God; let us despise vulgar applause.
For nothing is so ridiculous and disgraceful as this passion, nothing so full of
shame and dishonor. One may in many ways see, that to love honor, is dishonor;
and that true honor consists in neglecting honor, in making no account of it,
but in saying and doing everything according to what seems good to God. In this
way we shall be able to receive a reward from Him who sees exactly all our
doings, if we are content to have Him only for a spectator. What need we other
eyes, when He who shall confer the prize is ever beholding our actions? Is it not
a strange thing that, whatever a servant does, he should do to please his
master, should seek nothing more than his master's observation, desire not to
attract other eyes (though they be great men who are looking on) to his conduct, but
aim at one thing only, that his master may observe him; while we who have a
Lord so great, seek other spectators who can nothing profit, but rather hurt us by
their observation, and make all our labor vain? Not so, I beseech you. Let us
call Him to applaud and view our actions from whom we shall receive our
rewards. Let us have nothing to do with human eyes. For if we should even desire to
attain this honor, we shall then attain to it, when we seek that which cometh
from God alone. For, He saith, "Them that honor Me, I will honor." (1 Sam. ii.
30.) And even as we are best supplied with riches when we despise them, and seek
only the wealth which cometh from God ("Seek," he saith, "the kingdom of God,
and all these things shall be added to you"--Matt. vi. 33); so it is in the case
of honor. When the granting either of riches or honor is no longer attended
with danger to us, then God gives them freely; and it is then unattended with
danger, when they have not the rule or power over us, do not command us as slaves,
but belong to us as masters and free men. For the reason that He wishes us not
to love them is, that we may not be ruled by them; and if we succeed in this
respect, He gives us them with great liberality. Tell me, what is brighter than
Paul, when he says, "We seek not honor of men, neither of you, nor yet of
others." (1 Thess. ii. 6.) What then is richer than him who hath nothing, and yet
possesseth all things? for as I said, when we are not mastered by them, then we
shall master them, then we shall receive them. If then we desire to obtain honor,
let us shun honor, so shall we be enabled after accomplishing the laws of God
to obtain both the good things which are here, and those which are promised, by
the grace of Christ, with whom, to the Father and the Holy Ghost, be glory for
ever and ever. Amen.
HOMILY IV.
JOHN i. 1.
"In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God."
[1.] WhEN children are just brought to their learning, their teachers do
not give them many tasks in succession, nor do they set them once for all, but
they often repeat to them the same short ones, so that what is said may be
easily implanted in their minds, and they may not be vexed at the first onset with
the quantity, and with finding it hard to remember, and become less active in
picking up what is given them, a kind of sluggishness arising from the
difficulty. And I, who wish to effect the same with you, and to render your labor easy,
take by little and little the food which lies on this Divine table, and instill
it into your souls. On this account I shall handle again the same words, not so
as to say again the same things, but to set before you only what yet remains.
Come, then, let us again apply our discourse to the introduction.
"In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God." Why, when all
the other Evangelists had begun with the Dispensation(1) ; (for Matthew says,
"The Book of the generation of Jesus Christ, the Son of David"; and Luke too
relates to us in the beginning of his Gospel the events relating to Mary; and in
like manner Mark dwells on the same narratives, from that point detailing to us
the history of the Baptist;) why, when they began with these matters, did John
briefly and in a later place hint at them, saying, "the Word was made flesh"
(ver. 14.); and, passing by everything else, His conception, His birth, His
bringing up, His growth, at once discourse to us concerning His Eternal Generation?
I will now tell you what the reason of this is. Because the other
Evangelists had dwelt most on the accounts of His coming in the flesh, there was fear
lest some, being of grovelling minds, might for this reason rest in these
doctrines alone, as indeed was the case with Paul of Samosata. In order, therefore,
to lead away from this fondness for earth those who were like to fall into it,
and to draw them up towards heaven, with good reason he commences his narrative
from above, and from the eternal subsistence. For while Matthew enters upon his
relation from Herod the king, Luke from Tiberius Caesar, Mark from the Baptism
of John, this Apostle, leaving alone all these things, ascends beyond all time
or age.(2) Thither darting forward the imagination of his hearers to the "WAS
IN THE BEGINNING," not allowing it to stay at any point, nor setting any limit,
as they did in Herod, and Tiberius, and John.
And what we may mention besides as especially deserving our admiration is,
that John, though he gave himself up to the higher doctrine,(3) yet did not
neglect the Dispensation; nor were the others, though intent upon the relation of
this, silent as to the subsistence before the ages. With good cause; for One
Spirit It was that moved the souls of all; and therefore they have shown great
unanimity in their narrative. But thou, beloved, when thou hast heard of "The
Word," do not endure those who say, that He is a work; nor those even who think,
that He is simply a word. For many are the words of God which angels execute,
but of those words none is God; they all are prophecies or commands, (for in
Scripture it is usual to call the laws of God His commands, and prophecies, words;
wherefore in speaking of the angels, he says, "Mighty in strength, fulfilling
His word") (Ps. ciii. 20), but this WORD is a Being with subsistence,(4)
proceeding(5) without affection(6) from the Father Himself. For this, as I before
said, he has shown by the term "Word." As therefore the expression, "In the
beginning was the Word," shows His Eternity, so "was in the beginning with God," has
declared to us His Co-eternity. For that you may not, when you hear "In the
beginning was the Word," suppose Him to be Eternal, and yet imagine the life of
the Father to differ from His by some interval and longer duration, and so
assign a beginning to the Only-Begotten, he adds, "was in the beginning with God";
so eternally even as the Father Himself, for the Father was never without the
Word, but He was always God with God, yet Each in His proper Person.(1)
How then, one says, does John assert, that He was in the world, if He was
with God? Because He was both(2) with God and in the world also. For neither
Father nor Son are limited in any way. Since, if "there is no end of His
greatness" (Ps. cxlv. 3), and if "of His wisdom there is no number" (Ps. cxlvii. 5), it
is clear that there cannot be any beginning in time(3) to His Essence. Thou
hast heard, that "In the beginning God made the heaven and the earth" (Gen. i.
1); what dost thou understand from this "beginning"? clearly, that they were
created before all visible things. So, respecting the Only-Begotten, when you hear
that He was "in the beginning," conceive of him as before all intelligible
things,(4) and before the ages.
But if any one say, "How can it be that He is a Son, and yet not younger
than the Father? since that which proceeds from something else needs must be
later than that from which it proceeds"; we will say that, properly speaking,
these are human reasonings; that he who questions on this matter will question on
others yet more improper;(5) and that to such we ought not even to give ear. For
our speech is now concerning God, not concerning the nature of men, which is
subject to the sequence and necessary conclusions of these reasonings. Still,
for the assurance of the weaker sort, we will speak even to these points.
[2.] Tell me, then, does the radiance of the sun proceed from the
substance(6) itself of the sun, or from some other source? Any one not deprived of his
very senses needs must confess, that it proceeds from the substance itself.
Yet, although the radiance proceeds from the sun itself, we cannot say that it is
later in point of time than the substance of that body, since the sun has
never appeared without its rays. Now if in the case of these visible and sensible
bodies there has been shown to be something which proceeds from something else,
and yet is not after that from whence it proceeds; why are you incredulous in
the case of the invisible and ineffable Nature? This same thing there takes
place, but in a manner suitable to That Substance? For it is for this reason that
Paul too calls Him "Brightness" (Heb. i. 3); setting forth thereby His being
from Him and His Co-eternity. Again, tell me, were not all the ages, and every
interval s created by Him? Any man not deprived of his senses must necessarily
confess this. There is no interval(9) therefore between the Son and the Father;
and if there be none, then He is not after, but Co-eternal with Him. For "before"
and "after" are notions implying time, since, without age or time, no man
could possibly imagine these words; but God is above times and ages.
But if in any case you say that you have found a beginning to the Son, see
whether by the same reason and argument you are not compelled to reduce the
Father also to a beginning, earlier indeed, but still a beginning. For when you
have assigned to the Son a limit and beginning of existence, do you not proceed
upwards from that point, and say, that the Father was before it? Clearly you
do. Tell me then, what is the extent of the Father's prior subsistence? For
whether you say that the interval is little, or whether you say it is great, you
equally have brought the Father to a beginning. For it is clear, that it is by
measuring the space that you say whether it is little or great; yet it would not
be possible to measure it, unless there were a beginning on either side; so that
as far as you are concerned you have given the Father a beginning, and
henceforth, according to your argument, not even the Father will be without beginning.
See you that the word spoken by the Saviour is true, and the saying everywhere
discovers its force? And what is that word? It is "He that honoreth not the
Son, honoreth not the Father." (John v. 23.)
And I know indeed that what now has been said cannot by many be
comprehended, and therefore it is that in many places we avoid(10) agitating questions of
human reasonings, because the rest of the people cannot follow such arguments,
and if they could, still they have nothing firm or sure in them. "For the
thoughts of mortal men are miserable, and our devices are but uncertain." (Wisd.
ix. 14.) Still I should like to ask our objectors, what means that which is said
by the Prophet, "Before Me there was no God formed, nor is there any after Me?
(Isa. xliii. 10.) For if the Son is younger than the Father, how, says He, "Nor
is there(11) any after me"? Will you take away the being of the Only-Begotten
Himself? You either must dare this, or admit one Godhead with distinct Persons
of the Father and Son.
Finally, how could the expression, "All things were made by Him," be true?
For if there is an age older than He, how can that(12) which was before Him
have been made by Him? See ye to what daring the argument has carried them, when
once the truth has been unsettled? Why did not the Evangelist say, that He was
made from things that were not, as Paul declares of all things, when he says,
"Who calleth those things which be not as though they were"; but says, "Was in
the beginning"? (Rom. iv. 17.) This is contrary to that; and with good reason.
For God neither is made,(1) nor has anything older; these are words of the
Greeks.(2) Tell me this too: Would you not say, that the Creator beyond all
comparison excels His works? Yet since that which is from things that were not is
similar to them, where is the superiority not admitting of comparison? And what mean
the expressions, "I am the first and I am the last" (Isa. xliv. 6); and,
"before Me was no other God formed"? (Isa. xliii. 10.) For if the Son be not of the
same Essence, there is another God; and if He be not Co-eternal, He is after
Him; and if He did not proceed from His Essence, clear it is that He was made.
But if they assert, that these things were said to distinguish Him from idols,
why do they not allow that it is to distinguish Him from idols that he says,
"the Only True God"? (John xvii. 3.) Besides, if this was said to distinguish Him
from idols, how would you interpret the whole sentence? "After Me," He says,
"is no other God." In saying this, He does not exclude the Son, but that "After
Me there is no idol God," not that "there is no Son." Allowed, says he; what
then? and the expression, "Before Me was no other God formed," will you so
understand, as that no idol God indeed was formed before Him, but yet a Son was
formed before Him? What evil spirit would assert this? I do not suppose that even
Satan himself would do so.
Moreover, if He be not Co-eternal with the Father, how can you say that
His Life is infinite? For if it have a beginning from before,(3) although it be
endless, yet it is not infinite; for the infinite must be infinite in both
directions. As Paul also declared, when he said, "Having neither beginning of days,
nor end of life" (Heb. vii. 3); by this expression showing that He is both
without beginning and without end. For as the one has no limit, so neither has the
other. In one direction there is no end, in the other no beginning.
[3.] And how again, since He is "Life," was there ever when He was not?
For all must allow, that Life both is always, and is without beginning and
without end, if It be indeed Life, as indeed It is. For if there be when It is
not, how can It be the life of others, when It even Itself is not?
"How then," says one, "does John lay down a beginning by saying, 'In the
beginning was'?" Tell me, have you attended to the "In the beginning," and to
the "was," and do you not understand the expression, "the Word was"? What! when
the Prophet says, "From everlasting(4) and to everlasting Thou art" (Ps. xc. 2),
does he say this to assign Him limits? No, but to declare His Eternity.
Consider now that the case is the same in this place. He did not use the expression
as assigning limits, since he did not say, "had a beginning," but "was in the
beginning"; by the word "was" carrying thee forward to the idea that the Son is
without beginning. "Yet observe," says he, "the Father is named with the
addition of the article, but the Son without it." What then, when the Apostle says,
"The Great God, and our Saviour Jesus Christ" (Tit. ii. 13); and again, "Who is
above all, God"? (Rom. ix. 5.) It is true that here he has mentioned the Son,
without the article; but he does the same with the Father also, at least in his
Epistle to the Philippians (c. ii. 6), he says, "Who being in the form of God,
thought it not robbery to be equal with God"; and again to the Romans, "Grace to
you, and peace, from God our Father, and the Lord Jesus Christ." (Rom. i. 7.)
Besides, it was superfluous for it to be attached in that place, when close(5)
above it was continually attached to "the Word." For as in speaking concerning
the Father, he says, "God is a Spirit" (John iv. 24), and we do not, because
the article is not joined to "Spirit," yet deny the Spiritual Nature of God; so
here, although the article is not annexed to the Son, the Son is not on that
account a less God. Why so? Because in saying "God," and again "God," he does not
reveal to us any difference in this Godhead, but the contrary; for having
before said, "and the Word was God"; that no one might suppose the Godhead of the
Son to be inferior, he immediately adds the characteristics of genuine Godhead,
including Eternity, (for "He was," says he, "in the beginning with God,") and
attributing to Him the office of Creator. For "by Him were all things made, and
without Him was not anything made that was made"; which His Father also
everywhere by the Prophets declares to be especially characteristic of His own Essence.
And the Prophets are continually busy on this kind of demonstration, not only
of itself, but when they contend against the honor shown to idols; "Let the
gods perish," says one who have not made heaven and earth" (Jer. x. 11): and
again, "I have stretched out the heaven with My hand" (Isa. xliv. 24); and it is as
declaring it to be indicative of Divinity, that He everywhere puts it. And the
Evangelist himself was not satisfied with these words, but calls Him "Life"
too and "Light." If now He was ever with the Father, if He Himself created all
things, if He brought all things into existence, and keeps together(1) all
things, (for, this he meant by "Life,") if He enlightens all things, who so
senseless as to say, that the Evangelist desired to teach an inferiority of Divinity by
those very expressions, by which, rather than by any others, it is possible to
express its equality and not differing? Let us not then confound the creation
with the Creator, lest we too hear it said of us, that." they served the
creature rather than the Creator" (Rom. i. 25); for although it be asserted that this
is said of the heavens, still in speaking of the heavens he positively says,
that we must not serve(2) the creature, for it is a heathenish(3) thing.
[4.] Let us therefore not lay ourselves under this curse. For this the Son
of God came, that He might rid us from this service; for this He took the form
of a slave, that He might free us from this slavery; for this He was spit
upon, for this He was buffeted, for this He endured the shameful death. Let us not,
I entreat you, make all these things of none effect, let us not go back to our
former unrighteousness, or rather to unrighteousness much more grievous; for
to serve the creature is not the same thing as to bring down the Creator, as far
at least as in us lies, to the meanness of the creature. For He continues
being such as He is; as says the Psalmist, "Thou art the same, and Thy years shall
not fail." (Ps. cii. 27.) Let us then glorify Him as we have received from our
fathers, let us glorify Him both by our faith and by our works; for sound
doctrines avail us nothing to salvation, if our life is corrupt. Let us then order
it according to what is well-pleasing to God, setting ourselves far from all
filthiness, unrighteousness, and covetousness, as strangers and foreigners and
aliens to the things here on earth. If any have much wealth and possessions, let
him so use them as one who is a sojourner, and who, whether he will or not,
shall shortly pass from them. If one be injured by another, let him not be angry
forever, nay rather not even for a time. For the Apostle has not allowed us more
than a single day for the venting of anger.
"Let not," says he, "the sun go down upon your wrath" (Eph. iv. 26); and
with reason; for it is matter for contentment that even in so short a time
nothing unpleasant take place; but if night also overtake us, what has happened
becomes more grievous, because the fire of our wrath is increased ten thousand
times by memory, and we at our leisure enquire into it more bitterly. Before
therefore we obtain this pernicious leisure and kindle a hotter fire, he bids us
arrest beforehand and quench the mischief. For the passion of wrath is fierce,
fiercer than any flame; and so we need much haste to prevent the flame, and not
allow it to blaze up high, for so this disease becomes a cause of many evils. It
has overturned whole Houses, it has dissolved old companionships, and has worked
tragedies not to be remedied in a short moment of time. "For," saith one, "the
sway of his fury shall be his destruction." (Ecclus. i. 22.) Let us not then
leave such a wild beast unbridled, but put upon him a muzzle in all ways strong,
the fear of the judgment to come. Whenever a friend grieves thee, or one of
thine own family exasperates thee, think of the sins thou hast committed against
God, and that by kindness towards him thou makest that judgment more lenient to
thyself, ("Forgive," saith He, "and ye shall be forgiven") (Luke vi. 37), and
thy passion shall quickly skulk away.(4)
And besides, consider this, whether there has been a time when thou wert
being carried away into ferocity, and didst control thyself, and another time
when thou hast been dragged along by the passion. Compare the two seasons, and
thou shalt gain thence great improvement. For tell me, when didst thou praise
thyself? Was it when thou wast worsted, or when thou hadst the mastery? Do we not
in the first case vehemently blame ourselves, and feel ashamed. even when none
reproves us, and do not many feelings of repentance come over us, both for what
we have said and done; but when we gain the mastery, then are we not proud,
and exult as conquerors? For victory in the case of anger is, not the requiting
evil with the like, (that is utter defeat,) but the bearing meekly to be ill
treated and ill spoken of. To get the better is not to inflict but to suffer evil.
Therefore when angry do not say, "certainly I will retaliate," "certainly I
will be revenged"; do not persist in saying to those who exhort you to gain a
victory, "I will not endure that the man mock me, and escape clear." He will never
mock thee, except when thou avengest thyself; or if he even should mock thee
he will do so as a fool. Seek not when thou conquerest honor from fools, but
consider that sufficient which comes from men of understanding. Nay, why do I set
before thee a small and mean body of spectators, when I make it up of men? Look
up straight to God: He will praise thee, and the man who is approved by Him
must not seek honor from mortals, Mortal honor often arises from flattery or
hatred of others, and brings no profit; but the decision of God is free from this
inequality, and brings great advantage to the man whom He approves. This praise
then let us follow after.
Will you learn what an evil is anger? Stand by while others are quarreling
in the forum. In yourself you cannot easily see the disgrace of the thing,
because your reason is darkened and drunken; but when you are clear from the
passion, and while your judgment is sound, view your own case in others. Observe, I
pray you, the crowds collecting round, and the angry men like maniacs acting
shamefully in the midst. For when the passion boils up within the breast, and
becomes excited and savage, the mouth breathes fire, the eyes emit fire, all the
face becomes swollen, the hands are extended disorderly, the feet dance
ridiculously, and they spring at those who restrain them, and differ nothing from
madmen in their insensibility to all these things; nay, differ not from wild asses,
kicking and biting. Truly a passionate man is not a graceful one.
And then, when after this exceedingly ridiculous conduct, they return
home and come to themselves, they have the greater pain, and much fear, thinking
who were present when they were angry. For like raving men, they did not then
know the standers by, but when they have returned to their right mind, then they
consider, were they friends? were they foes and enemies that looked on? And
they fear alike about both; the first because they will condemn them and give them
more shame; the others because they will rejoice at it. And if they have even
exchanged blows, then their fear is the more pressing; for instance, lest
anything very grievous happen to the sufferer; a fever follow and bring on death, or
a troublesome swelling rise and place him in danger of the worst. And, "what
need" (say they) "had I of fighting, and violence, and quarreling? Perish such
things." And then they curse the ill-fated business which caused them to begin,
and the more foolish lay on "wicked spirits," and "an evil hour," the blame of
what has been done; but these things are not from an evil hour, (for there is
no such thing as an evil hour,) nor from a wicked spirit, but from the
wickedness of those captured by the passion; they draw the spirits to them, and bring
upon themselves all things terrible. "But the heart swells," says one, "and is
stung by insults." I know it; and that is the reason why I admire those who
master this dreadful wild beast; yet it is possible if we will, to beat off the
passion. For why when our rulers insult us do we not feel it? It is because fear
counterbalances the passion, and frightens us from it, and does not allow it to
spring up at all. And why too do our servants, though insulted by us in ten
thousand ways, bear all in silence? Because they too have the same restraint laid
upon them. And think thou not merely of the fear of God, but that it is even God
Himself who then insults thee, who bids thee be silent, and then thou wilt
bear all things meekly, and say to the aggressor, How can I be angry with thee?
there is another that restrains both my hand and my tongue; and the saying will
be a suggestion of sound wisdom, both to thyself and to him. Even now we bear
unbearable things on account of men, and often say to those who have insulted us,
"Such an one insulted me, not you." Shall we not use the same caution in the
case of God? How else can we hope for pardon? Let us say to our soul, "It is God
who holds our hands, who now insults us; let us not be restive, let not God be
less honored by us than men." Did ye shudder at the word? I wish you would
shudder not at the word only, but at the deed. For God hath commanded us when
buffeted not only to endure it, but even to offer ourselves to suffer something
worse; and we withstand Him with such vehemence, that we not only refuse to offer
ourselves to suffer evil, but even avenge ourselves, nay often are the first to
act on the offensive,(1) and think we are disgraced if we do not the same in
return. Yes, and the mischief is, that when utterly worsted we think ourselves
conquerors, and when lying undermost and receiving ten thousand blows from the
devil, then we imagine that we are mastering him. Let us then, I exhort you,
understand what is the nature(2) of this victory, and this kind of nature(3) let
us follow after. To suffer evil is to get the crown. If then we wish to be
proclaimed victors by God, let us not in these contests observe the laws of heathen
games, but those of God, and learn to bear all things with longsuffering; for
so we may get the better of our antagonists, and obtain both present and
promised goods, through the grace and lovingkindness of our Lord Jesus Christ, through
whom and with whom to the Father and the Holy Spirit be glory, power, and
honor, now and ever, and world without end. Amen.
HOMILY V
JOHN i. 3.
" All things were made by Him; and without Him was not anything made that was
made."
[1.] MOSES in the beginning of the history and writings of the Old
Testament speaks to us of the objects of sense, and enumerates them to us at length.
For, "In the beginning," he says, "God made the heaven and the earth," and then
he adds, that light was created, and a second heaven and the stars, the various
kinds of living creatures, and, that we may not delay by going through
particulars, everything else. But this Evangelist, cutting all short, includes both
these things and the things which are above these in a single sentence; with
reason, because they were known to his hearers, and because he is hastening to a
greater subject, and has instituted all his treatise, that he might speak not of
the works but of the Creator, and Him who produced them all. And therefore
Moses, though he has selected the smaller portion of the creation, (for he has
spoken nothing to us concerning the invisible powers,) dwells on these things;(1)
while John, as hastening to ascend to the Creator Himself, runs by both these
things, and those on which Moses was silent, having comprised them in one little
saying, "All things were made by Him." And that you may not think that he
merely speaks of all the things mentioned by Moses, he adds, that "without Him was
not anything made that was made." That is to say, that of created things, not
one, whether it be visible(2) or intelligible(3) was brought into being without
the power of the Son.
For we will not put the full stop after "not anything," as the heretics
do. They, because they wish to make the Spirit created, say, "What was made, in
Him was Life"; yet so what is said becomes unintelligible. First, it was not the
time here to make mention of the Spirit, and if he desired to do so, why did
he state it so indistinctly? For how is it clear that this saying relates to the
Spirit? Besides, we shall find by this argument, not that the Spirit, but that
the Son Himself, is created by Himself. But rouse yourselves, that what is
said may not escape you; and come, let us read for a while after their fashion,
for so its absurdity will be clearer to us. "What was made, in Him was Life."
They say that the Spirit is called" Life." But this "Life" is found to be also
"Light," for he adds, "And the Life was the Light of men." (Ver. 4.) Therefore,
according to them the "Light of men" here means the Spirit. Well, but when he
goes on to say, that "There was a man sent from God, to bear witness of that
Light" (vers. 6, 7), they needs must assert, that this too is spoken of the Spirit;
for whom he above called "Word," Him as he proceeds he calls "God," and "Life,"
and "Light." This "Word" he says was "Life," and this "Life" was "Light." If
now this Word was Life, and if this Word and this Life became flesh, then the
Life, that is to say, the Word, "was made flesh, and we beheld" Its "glory, the
glory as of the Only-Begotten of the Father." If then they say that the Spirit
is here called "Life," consider what strange consequences will follow. It will
be the Spirit, not the Son, that was made flesh; the Spirit will be the
Only-Begotten Son.
And those who read the passage so will fall, if not into this, yet in
avoiding this into another most strange conclusion. If they allow that the words
are spoken of the Son, and yet do not stop or read as we do, then they will
assert that the Son is created by Himself. Since, if "the Word was Life," and "what
was made in Him was Life"; according to this reading He is created in Himself
and through Himself. Then after some words between, he has added, "And we beheld
His glory, the glory as of the Only-Begotten of the Father." (Ver. 14.) See,
the Holy Spirit is found, according to the reading of those who assert these
things, to be also an only-begotten Son, for it is concerning Him that all this
declaration is uttered by him. See when the word has swerved(4) from the truth,
whither it is perverted, and what strange consequences it produces!
What then, says one, is not the Spirit "Light"? It is Light: but in this
place there is no mention of the Spirit. Since even God (the Father) is called
"Spirit," that is to say, incorporeal, yet God (the Father) is not absolutely
meant wherever "Spirit" is mentioned. And why do you wonder if we say this of the
Father? We could not even say of the Comforter, that wherever "Spirit" (is
mentioned), the Comforter is absolutely meant, and yet this is His most
distinctive name; still not always where Spirit (is mentioned is) the Comforter (meant).
Thus Christ is called "the power of God" (1 Cor. i. 24), and "the wisdom of
God"; yet not always where "the power" and "the wisdom of God" are mentioned is
Christ meant; so in this passage, although the Spirit does give "Light," yet the
Evangelist is not now speaking of the Spirit.
When we have shut them out from these strange opinions, they who take all
manner of pains to withstand the truth, say, (still clinging to the same
reading,) "Whatever came into existence(1) by him was life, because," says one,
"whatever came into existence was life." What then do you say of the punishment of
the men of Sodom, and the flood, and hell fire, and ten thousand like things?
"But," says one, "we are speaking of the material creation."(2) Well, these too
belong entirely to the material creation. But that we may out of our
abundance(3) refute their argument, we will ask them, "Is wood, life," tell me? "Is stone,
life?" these things that are lifeless and motionless? Nay, is man absolutely
life? Who would say so? he is not pure life,(4) but is capable of receiving life.
[2.] See here again, an absurdity; by the same succession of consequences
we will bring the argument to such a point, that even hence you may learn their
folly. In this way they assert things by no means befitting of the Spirit.
Being driven from their other ground, they apply those things to men, which they
before thought to be spoken worthily of the Spirit. However, let us examine
the reading itself this way also. The creature is now called "life," therefore,
the same is "light," and John came to witness concerning it. Why then is not he
also "light"? He says that "he was not that light" (ver. 8), and yet he
belonged to created things? How then is he not "light"? How was he" in the world, and
the world was made by him"? (Ver. 10.) Was the creature in the creature, and
was the creature made by the creature? But how did "the world know him not"? How
did the creature not know the creature? "But as many as received him, to them
gave he power to become the sons of God." (Ver. 12.) But enough of laughter. For
the rest I leave it to you to attack these monstrous reasonings, that we may
not seem to have chosen(5) to raise a laugh for its own sake, and waste the time
without cause. For if these things are neither said of the Spirit, (and it has
been shown that they are not,) nor of anything created, and yet they still
hold to the same reading, that stranger conclusion than any which we before
mentioned, will follow, that the Son was made by Himself. For if the Son is the true
Light, and this Light was Life, and this Life was made in Him, this must needs
be the result according to their own reading. Let us then relinquish this
reading, and come to the recognized reading and explanation.(8)
And what is that? It is to make the sentence end at "was made," and to
begin the next sentence with, "In Him was Life." What (the Evangelist) says is
this, "Without Him was not anything made that was made"; whatever created thing
was made, says he, was not made without Him. See you how by this short addition
he has rectified all the besetting(7) difficulties; for the saying, that
"without Him was not anything made," and then the adding, "which was made," includes
things cognizable by the intellect,(8) but excludes the Spirit. For after he
had said that "all things were made by Him," and "without Him was not anything
made," he needed this addition, lest some one should say, "If all things were
made by Him, then the Spirit also was made." "I," he replies, "asserted that
whatever was made was made by Him, even though it be invisible, or incorporeal, or
in the heavens. For this reason, I did not say absolutely, 'all things,' but
'whatever was made,' that is, 'created things,' but the Spirit is uncreated."
Do you see the precision of his teaching? He has alluded to the creation
of material things, (for concerning these Moses had taught before him,) and
after bringing us to advance from thence to higher things, I mean the immaterial
and the invisible, he excepts the Holy Spirit from all creation. And so Paul,
inspired by the same grace, said, "For by Him were all things created." (Col. i.
16.) Observe too here again the same exactness. For the same Spirit moved this
soul also. That no one should except any created things from the works of God
because of their being invisible, nor yet should confound the Comforter with
them, after running through the objects of sense which are known to all, he
enumerates also things in the heavens, saying, "Whether they be thrones, or dominions,
or principalities, or powers"; for the expression "whether" subjoined to each,
shows to us nothing else but this, that "by Him all things were made, and
without Him was not anything made that was made."
But if you think that the expression "by"(9) is a mark of inferiority, (as
making Christ an instrument,) hear him say, "Thou, Lord, in the beginning,
hast laid the foundation of the earth, and the heavens are the work of Thy hands."
(Ps. cii. 25.) He says of the Son what is said of the Father in His character
of Creator; which he would not have said, unless he had deemed of Him as of a
Creator, and yet not subservient to any. And if the expression "by Him" is here
used, it is put for no other reason but to prevent any one from supposing the
Son to be Unbegotten. For that in respect of the title of Creator He is nothing
inferior to the Father; hear from Himself, where He saith, "As the Father
raiseth up the dead and quickeneth them, even so the Son quickeneth whom He will."
(c. v. 21.) If now in the Old Testament it is said of the Son, "Thou, Lord, in
the beginning hast laid the foundation of the earth," His title of Creator is
plain. But if you say that the Prophet spoke this of the Father, and that Paul
attributed to the Son what was said of the Father, even so the conclusion is the
same. For Paul would not have decided that the same expression suited the Son,
unless he had been very confident that between Father and Son there was an
equality of honor; since it would have been an act of extremest rashness to refer
what suited an incomparable Nature to a nature inferior to, and falling short of
it. But the Son is not inferior to, nor falls short of, the Essence of the
Father; and therefore Paul has not only dared to use these expressions concerning
Him, but also others like them. For the expression "from Whom," which you
decide to belong properly to the Father alone, he uses also concerning the Son, when
he says, "from which all the body by joints and bands having nourishment
ministered, and knit together, increaseth with the increase of God." (Col. ii. 19.)
[3.] And he is not content with this only, he stops your mouths in another
way also, by applying to the Father the expression "by whom," which you say is
a mark of inferiority. For he says, "God is faithful, by whom ye were called
unto the fellowship of His Son" (1 Cor. i. 9): and again, "By His will" (1 Cor.
i. 1, &c.); and in another place, "For of Him, and through Him, and to Him, are
all things." (Rom. xi. 26.) Neither is the expression "from(1) whom," assigned
to the Son only, but also to the Spirit; for the angel said to Joseph, "Fear
not to take unto thee Mary thy wife, for that which is conceived in her is of
the Holy Ghost." (Matt. i. 20.) As also the Prophet does not deem it improper to
apply to the Father the expression "in whom,"(2) which belongs to the Spirit,
when he says, "In(3) God we shall do valiantly." (Ps. lx.. 12.) And Paul,
"Making request, if by any means now at length I might have a prosperous journey, in
the will of God, to come unto you." (Rom. i. 10.) And again he uses it of
Christ, saying, "In Christ Jesus." (Rom. vi. 11, 23, &c.) In short, we may often and
continually find these expressions interchanged;(4) now this would not have
taken place, had not the same Essence been in every instance their subject. And
that you may not imagine that the words, "All things were made by Him," are in
this case used concerning His miracles, (for the other Evangelists have
discoursed concerning these;) he farther goes on to say, "He was in the world, and the
world was made by Him"; (but not the Spirit, for This is not of the number of
created things, but of those above all creation.)
Let us now attend to what follows. John having spoken of the work of
creation, that "All things were made by Him, and without Him was not anything made
that was made," goes on to speak concerning His Providence, where he saith,
"In Him was Life." That no one may doubt how so many and so great things were
"made by Him," he adds, that "In Him was Life." For as with the fountain which is
the mother of the great deeps, however much you take away you nothing lessen
the fountain; so with the energy of the Only-Begotten, however much you believe
has been produced and made by it, it has become no whir the less. Or, to use a
more familiar example, I will instance that of light, which the Apostle himself
added immediately, saying, "And the Life was the Light." As then light, however
many myriads it may enlighten, suffers no diminution of its own brightness; so
also God, before commencing His work and after completing it, remains alike
indefectible, nothing diminished, nor wearied by the greatness of the creation.
Nay, if need were that ten thousand, or even an infinite number of such worlds
be created, He remains the same, sufficient for them all not merely to produce,
but also to control them after their creation. For the word "Life" here refers
not merely to the act of creation, but also to the providence (engaged) about
the permanence of the things created; it also lays down beforehand the doctrine
of the resurrection, and is the beginning(5) of these marvelous good
tidings.(6) Since when "life" has come to be with us, the power of death is dissolved;
and when "light" has shone upon us, there is no longer darkness, but life ever
abides within us, and death cannot overcome it. So that what is asserted of the
Father might be asserted absolutely of Him (Christ) also, that "In Him we live
and move and have our being." (Col. i. 16, 17.) As Paul has shown when he says,
"By Him were all things created," and "by Him all things consist"; for which
reason He has been called also "Root"(7) and "Foundation."(8)
But when you hear that "In Him was Life," do not imagine Him a compound
Being, since farther on he says of the Father also, "As the Father hath Life in
Himself, so hath He given to the Son also to have Life" (John v. 26); now as you
would not on account of this expression say that the Father is compounded, so
neither can you say so of the Son. Thus in another place he says, that "God is
Light" (1 John i. 5), and elsewhere (it is said), that He "dwelleth in light
unapproachable" (1 Tim. vi. 16); yet these expressions are used not that we may
suppose a compounded nature,(1) but that by little and little we may be led up
to the highest doctrines. For since one of the multitude could not easily have
understood how His life was Life Impersonate,(2) he first used that humbler
expression, and afterwards leads them (thus) trained to the higher doctrine. For He
who had said that "He hath given Him (the Son) to have life" (c. v. 26); the
Same saith in another place, "I am the Life" (c. xiv. 6); and in another, "I am
the Light." (c. viii. 12.) And what, tell me, is the nature of this "light"?
This kind (of light) is the object not of the senses, but of the intellect,
enlightening the soul herself. And since Christ should hereafter say, that "None can
come unto Me except the Father draw him" (c. vi. 44); the Apostle has in this
place anticipated an objection, and declared that it is He (the Son) who
"giveth light" (ver. 9); that although you hear a saying like this concerning the
Father, you may not say that it belongs to the Father only, but also to the Son.
For, "All things," He saith, "which the Father hath are Mine." (c. xvi. 15.)
First then, the Evangelist hath instructed us respecting the creation,
after that he tells us of the goods relating to the soul which He supplied to us
by His coming; and these he has darkly described in one sentence, when he says,
"And the Life was the Light of men." (Ver. 4.) He does not say, "was the light
of the Jews," but universally "of men": nor did the Jews only, but the Greeks
also, come to this knowledge, and this light was a common proffer made(3) to
all. "Why did he not add 'Angels,' but said, 'of men'?" Because at present his
discourse is of the nature of men, and to them he came bearing glad tidings of
good things.
"And the light shineth in darkness." (Ver. 5.) He calls death and error,
"darkness." For the light which is the object of our senses does not shine in
darkness, but apart from it; but the preaching of Christ hath shone forth in the
midst of prevailing error, and made it to disappear. And He by enduring
death(4) hath so overcome death, that He hath recovered those already held by it.
Since then neither death overcame it, nor error, since it is bright everywhere, and
shines by its proper strength, therefore he says,
"And the darkness comprehended it not." For it cannot be overcome, and
will not dwell in souls which wish not to be enlightened.
[4.] But let it not trouble thee that It took not all, for not by
necessity and force, but by will and consent(5) does God bring us to Himself. Therefore
do not thou shut thy doors against this light, and thou shalt enjoy great
happiness.(6) But this light cometh by faith, and when it is come, it lighteth
abundantly him that hath received it; and if thou displayest a pure life (meet) for
it, remains indwelling within continually. "For," He saith, "He that loveth
Me, will keep My commandments; and I and My Father will come unto him, and make
Our abode with him." (John xiv. 23; slightly varied.) As then one cannot rightly
enjoy the sunlight, unless he opens his eyes; so neither can one largely share
this splendor, unless he have expanded the eye of the soul, and rendered it in
every way keen of sight.
But how is this effected? Then when we have cleansed the soul from all the
passions. For sin is darkness, and a deep darkness; as is clear, because men
do it unconsciously and secretly. For, "every one that doeth evil hateth the
light, neither cometh to the light." (c. iii. 20.) And, "It is a shame even to
speak of those things which are done of them in secret." (Eph. v. 12.) For, as in
darkness a man knows neither friend nor foe, but cannot perceive any of the
properties of objects; so too is it in sin. For he who desires to get more gain,
makes no difference between friend and enemy; and the envious regards with
hostile eyes the man with whom he is very intimate; and the plotter is at mortal
quarrel with all alike. In short, as to distinguishing the nature of objects, he
who commits sin is no better than men who are drunk or mad. And as in the night,
wood, lead, iron, silver, gold, precious stones, seem to us all alike on
account of the absence of the light which shows their distinctions; so he who leads
an impure life knows neither the excellence of temperance nor the beauty of
philosophy. For in darkness, as I said before, even precious stones if they be
displayed do not show their luster, not by reason of their own nature, but because
of the want of discernment in the beholders. Nor is this the only evil which
happens to us who are in sin, but this also, that we live in constant fear: and
as men walking in a moonless night tremble, though none be by to frighten them;
so those who work iniquity cannot have confidence, though there be none to
accuse them; but they are afraid of everything, and are suspicious, being pricked
by their conscience: all to them is full of fear and distress,(1) they look
about them at everything, are terrified at everything. Let us then flee a life so
painful, especially since after this painfulness shall follow death; a
deathless death, for of the punishment in that place there will be no end; and in this
life they (who sin) are no better than madmen, in that they are dreaming of
things that have no existence. They think they are rich when they are not rich,
that they enjoy when they are not enjoying, nor do they properly perceive the
cheat until they are freed from the madness and have shaken off the sleep.
Wherefore Paul exhorts all to be sober, and to watch; and Christ also commands the
same. For he who is sober and awake, although he be captured by sin, quickly
beats it off; while he who sleeps and is beside himself, perceives not how he is
held prisoner of it.
Let us then not sleep. This is not the season of night, but of day. Let us
therefore "walk honestly(2) as in the day" (Rom. xiii. 13); and nothing is
more indecent than sin. In point of indecency it is not so bad to go about naked
as in sin and wrong doing. That is not so great matter of blame, since it might
even be caused by poverty; but nothing has more shame and less honor than the
sinner. Let us think of those who come to the justice-hall on some account of
extortion, or overreaching;(3) how base and ridiculous they appear to all by
their utter shamelessness, their lies, and audacity.(4) But we are such pitiable
and wretched beings, that we cannot bear ourselves to put on a garment awkwardly
or awry; nay, if we see another person in this state, we set him right; and yet
though we and all our neighbors are walking on our heads, we do not even
perceive it. For what, say, can be more shameful than a man who goes in to a harlot?
what more contemptible than an insolent, a foul-tongued or an envious man?
Whence then is it that these things do not seem so disgraceful as to walk naked?
Merely from habit. To go naked no one has ever willingly endured; but all men
are continually venturing on the others without any fear. Yet if one came into an
assembly of angels, among whom nothing of the sort has ever taken place, there
he would clearly see the great ridicule (of such conduct). And why do I say an
assembly of angels? Even in the very palaces among us, should one introduce a
harlot and enjoy her, or be oppressed by excess of wine, or commit any other
like indecency, he would suffer extreme punishment. But if it be intolerable hat
men should dare such things in palaces, much more when the King is everywhere
present, and observes what is done, shall we if we dare them undergo severest
chastisement. Wherefore let us, I exhort you, show forth in our life much
gentleness, much purity, for we have a King who beholds all our actions continually.
In order then that this light may ever richly enlighten us, let us gladly
accept(6) these bright beams,(7) for so shall we enjoy both the good things present
and those to come, through the grace and lovingkindness of our Lord Jesus
Christ, by whom, and with whom, to the Father, and the Holy Spirit, be glory for ever
and ever. Amen.