HOMILIES OF ST. JOHN CHRYSOSTOM ON THE EPISTLE TO THE HEBREWS, HOMILIES XXVI
TO XXIX (CHAPTERS 11 & 12)
HOMILY XXVI.
HEBREWS xi. 20--22.
"By faith, Isaac blessed Jacob and Esau concerning things to come. By faith,
Jacob when he was a dying blessed both the sons of Joseph, and worshiped[1]
leaning on the top of his staff. By faith, Joseph when he died made mention of the
departing of the children of Israel, and gave commandment concerning his bones."
[1.] "MANY prophets and righteous men" (it is said) "have desired to see
those things which ye see, and have not seen them; and to hear those things
which ye hear and have not heard them." (Matt. xiii. 17.) Did then those righteous
men know all the things to come? Yea, most certainly. For if because of the
weakness of those who were not able to receive Him, the Son was not revealed,--He
was with good reason revealed to those conspicuous in virtue. This Paul also
says, that they knew "the things to come," that is the resurrection of Christ.
Or he does not mean this: but that "By faith, concerning things to come"
[means] not [concerning] the world to come, but "concerning things to come" in
this world. For how [except by faith] could a man sojourning in a strange land,
give such blessings?
But on the other hand he obtained the blessing, and yet did not receive
it.[1] Thou seest that what I said with regard to Abraham, may be said also of
Jacob, that they did not enjoy[2] the blessing, but the blessings went to his
posterity, while he himself obtained the "things to come." For we find that his
brother rather enjoyed the blessing. For [Jacob] spent all his time in servitude
and working as a hireling, and [amid] dangers, and plots, and deceits, and
fears; and when he was asked by Pharaoh, he says, "Few and evil have my days been"
(Gen. xlvii. 9); while the other lived in independence and great security, and
afterwards was an object of terror to [Jacob]. Where then did the blessings
come to their accomplishment, save in the [world] to come?
Seest thou that from the beginning the wicked have enjoyed things here,
but the righteous the contrary? Not however all. For behold, Abraham was a
righteous man, and he enjoyed things here as well, though with affliction and trials.
For indeed wealth was all he had, seeing all else relating to him was full of
affliction. For it is impossible that the righteous man should not be
afflicted, though he be rich: for when he is willing to be overreached, to be wronged,
to suffer all other things, he must be afflicted. So that although he enjoy
wealth, [yet is it] not without grief. Why? you ask. Because he is in affliction
and distress. But if at that time the righteous were in affliction, much more
now.and
"By Faith," he says," Isaac blessed Jacob Esau concerning things to come"
(and yet Esau was the elder; but he puts Jacob first for his excellence). Seest
thou how great was his Faith? Whence did he promise to his sons so great
blessings? Entirely from his having faith in God.
[2.] "By Faith, Jacob when he was a dying, blessed both the sons of
Joseph."' Here we ought to set down the blessings entire, in order that both his
faith and his prophesying may be made manifest. "And worshiped leaning,"[3] he
says, "upon the top of his staff." Here, he means, he not only spoke, but was even
so confident about the future things, as to show it also by his act. For
inasmuch as another King was about to arise from Ephraim, therefore it is said, "And
he bowed himself upon the top of his staff." That is, even though he was now an
old man, "he bowed himself" to Joseph, showing the obeisance of the whole
people which was to be [directed] to him. And this indeed had already taken place,
when his brethren "bowed down" to him: but it was afterwards to come to pass
through the ten tribes. Seest thou how he foretold the things which were to be
afterwards? Seest thou how great faith they had? How they believed "concerning
the things to come"?
For some of the things here, the things present, are examples of patience
only, and of enduring ill-treatment, add of receiving nothing good; for
instance, what is mentioned in the case of Abraham, in the case of Abel. But others
are [examples] of Faith, as in the case of Noah, that there is a God, that there
is a recompense. (For Faith in this place is manifold,[4] both of there being a
recompense, and of awaiting it, not under the same conditions,[5] and of
wrestling before the prizes.) And the things also which concern[6] Joseph are of
Faith only. Joseph heard that [God] had made a promise to Abraham, that He had
engaged His word "to thee and to thy seed will I give this land;" and though in a
strange land, and not yet seeing the engagement fulfilled, but never faltered
even so, but so believed as even to "speak of the Exodus, and to give
commandment concerning his bones." He then not only believed himself, but led on the rest
also to Faith: that having the Exodus always in mind (for he would not have
"given commandment concerning his bones," unless he had been fully assured [of
this]), they might look for their return [to Canaan].
Wherefore, when some men say, 'See ! Even righteous men had care about
their sepulchers,' let us reply to them, that it was for his reason: for he knew
that "the earth is the Lord's and all that therein is."[7] (Ps. xxiv. 1.) He
could not indeed have been ignorant of this, who lived in so great philosophy, who
spent his whole life in Egypt. And yet if he had wished, it was possible for
him to return, and not to mourn or vex himself. But when he had taken up his
father thither, why, did he enjoin them to carry up thence his own bones also?
Evidently for this reason.
But what? Tell me, are not the bones of Moses himself laid in a strange
land? And those of Aaron, of Daniel, of Jeremiah? And as to those of the Apostles
we do not know where those of most of them are laid. For of Peter indeed, and
Paul, and John, and Thomas, the sepulchers are well known; but those of the
rest, being so many, have nowhere become known.[8] Let us not therefore lament at
all about this, nor be so little-minded. For where-ever we may be buried, "the
earth is the Lord's and all that therein is." (Ps. xxiv. 1.) Certainly what
must take place, does take place: to mourn however, and lament, and bewail the
departed, arises from littleness of mind.
[3.] (Ver. 23) "By faith, Moses when he was born, was hid three months of
his parents." Dost thou see that in this case they hoped for things on the
earth after their death?[1] And many things were fulfilled after their death. This
is for some who say, 'After death those things were done for them, which they
did not obtain while alive; nor did they believe [would be] after their death.'
Moreover Joseph did not say, He gave not the land to me in my life-time,
nor to my father, nor to my grandfather, whose excellence too ought to have been
reverenced; and will He vouchsafe to these wretched people what He did not
vouchsafe to them? He said nothing of all this, but by Faith he both conquered and
went beyond all these things.
He has named Abel, Noah, Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, Joseph, all illustrious
and admirable men. Again he makes the encouragement greater, by bringing down the
matter to ordinary persons. For that the admirable should feel thus, is
nothing wonderful, and to appear inferior to them, is not so dreadful: but to show
oneself inferior even to people without names, this is the dreadful thing. And he
begins with the parents of Moses, obscure persons, who had nothing so great as
their son [had]. Therefore also he goes on to increase the strangeness of what
he says by enumerating even women that were harlots, and widows. For "by
Faith" (he says) "the harlot Rahab perished not with them that believed not, when
she had received the spies with peace." And he mentions the rewards not only of
belief but also of unbelief; as in [the case of] Noah.
But at present we must speak of the parents of Moses. Pharaoh gave orders
that all the male children should be destroyed, and none had escaped the
danger. Whence did these expect to save their child? From faith. What sort of Faith?
"They saw" (he says) "that he was a proper child." The very sight drew them on
to Faith: thus from the beginning, yea from the very swaddling-clothes, great
was the Grace that was poured out on that righteous man, this being not the work
of nature. For observe, the child immediately on its birth appears fair and
not disagreeable to the sight. Whose [work] was this? Not that of nature, but of
the Grace of God, which also stirred up and strengthened that barbarian woman,
the Egyptian, and took and drew her on.
And yet in truth Faith had not a sufficient foundation in their case. For
what was it to believe from sight? But you (he would say) believe from facts
and have many pledges of Faith. For "the receiving with joyfulness the spoiling
of their goods" (c. x. 34), and other such [things], were [evidences] of Faith
and of Patience. But inasmuch as these [Hebrews] also had believed, and yet
afterwards had become faint-hearted, he shows that the Faith of those [saints of
old] also was long continued,[2] as, for instance, that of Abraham, although the
circumstances seemed to contend against it.
"And" (he says) "they were not afraid of the king's commandment," although
that was in operation,[3] but this [their hope respecting their child] was
simply a kind of bare expectation. And this indeed was [the act] of his parents;
but Moses himself what did he contribute?
[4.] Next again an example appropriate to them, or rather greater than
that. For, saith he, (ver. 24-26) "by faith Moses when he was come to years,
refused to be called the son of Pharaoh's daughter, choosing rather to suffer
affliction with the people of God than to enjoy the pleasures of sin for a season;
esteeming the reproach of Christ greater riches than the treasures of Egypt;[4]
for he had respect unto the recompense of the reward." As though he had said to
them, ' No one of you has left a palace, yea a splendid palace, nor such
treasures; nor, when he might have been a king's son, has he despised this, as Moses
did.' And that he did not simply leave [these things], he expressed by saying,
"he refused," that is, he hated, he turned away. For when Heaven was set before
him, it was superfluous to admire an Egyptian Palace.
And see how admirably Paul has put it. He did not say, 'Esteeming heaven,
and the things in heaven,' 'greater riches than the treasures of Egypt,' but
what? "The reproach of Christ." For the being reproached for the sake of Christ
he accounted better than being thus at ease; and this itself by itself was
reward.
"Choosing rather" (be says) "to suffer affliction with the people of God."
For ye indeed suffer on your own account, but he "chose" [to suffer] for
others; and voluntarily threw himself into so many dangers, when it was in his power
both to live religiously, and to enjoy good things.
"Than" (he says) "to enjoy the pleasures of sin for a season." He called
unwillingness "to suffer affliction with the" rest "sin ": this, he says,
[Moses] accounted to be "sin." If then he accounted it "sin" not to be ready to
"suffer affliction with" the rest, it follows that the suffering affliction must be
a great good since he threw himself into it from the royal palace.
But this he did, seeing some great things before him. "Esteeming the
reproach of Christ greater riches than the treasures of Egypt." What is, "the
reproach of Christ"? It is being reproached in such ways as ye are, the reproach
which Christ endured; Or that he endured for Christ's sake: for "that rock was
Christ"[1] (1 Cor. x. 4); the being reproached as you are.
But what is "the reproach of Christ"? That [because] we repudiate the
[ways] of our fathers we are reproached; that we are evil-entreated when we have
run to God. It was likely that he also was reproached, when it was said to him,
"Wilt thou kill me as thou killedst the Egyptian yesterday?" (Ex. ii. 14.) This
is "the reproach of Christ," to be ill-treated to the end, and to the last
breath: as He Himself was reproached and heard, "If Thou be the Son of God" (Matt.
xxvii. 40), from those for whom He was crucified, from those who were of the
same race. This is "the reproach of Christ" when a man is reproached by those of
his own family, or by those whom he is benefiting. For [Moses] also suffered
these things from the man who had been benefited [by him].
In these words he encouraged them, by showing that even Christ suffered
these things, and Moses also, two illustrious persons. So that this is rather
"the reproach of Christ" than of Moses inasmuch as He suffered these things from
"His own." (John i. 11.) But neither did the one send forth lightnings, nor the
Other feel any [anger],[2] but He was reviled and endured all things, whilst
they "wagged their heads." (Matt. xxvii. 39.) Since therefore it was probable
that they [the readers] also would hear such things, and would long for the
Recompense, he says that even Christ and Moses had suffered the like. So then ease[3]
is [the portion] of sin; but to be reproached, of Christ. For what then dost
thou wish? "The reproach of Christ," or ease?
[5.] (Ver. 27) "By faith he forsook Egypt not fearing the wrath of the
king; for he endured as seeing Him who is Invisible." What dost thou say? That he
did not fear? And yet the Scripture says, that when he heard, he "was afraid
"[4] (Ex. ii. 14), and for this cause provided for safety by flight, and stole
away, and secretly withdrew himself; and afterwards he was exceedingly afraid.
Observe the expressions with care: he said, "not fearing the wrath of the king,"
with reference to his even presenting himself again. For it would have been
[the part] of one who was afraid, not to undertake again his championship, nor to
have any hand in the matter. That he did however again undertake it, was [the
part] of one who committed all to God: for he did not say, 'He is seeking me,
and is busy [in the search], and I cannot bear again to engage in this matter.'
So that even flight was [an act of] faith. Why then did he not remain (you
say)? That he might not cast himself into a foreseen danger. For this finally
would have been tempting [God]: to leap into the midst of dangers, and say,
'Let us see whether God will save me.' And this the devil said to Christ, "Cast
Thyself down." (Matt. iv. 6.) Seest thou that it is a diabolical thing, to throw
ourselves into danger without cause and for no purpose, and to try whether God
will save us? For he [Moses] could no longer be their champion when they who
were receiving benefits were so ungrateful. It would therefore have been a
foolish and senseless thing to remain there. But all these things were done, because,
"he endured as seeing Him who is Invisible."
[6.] If then we too always see God with our mind, if we always think in
remembrance of Him, all things will appear endurable to us, all things tolerable;
we shall bear them all easily, we shall be above them all. For if a person
seeing one whom he loves, or rather, remembering him is roused in spirit, and
elevated in thought, and bears all things easily, while he delights in the
remembrance; one who has in mind Him who has vouchsafed to love us in deed, and
remembers Him, when will he either feel anything painful, or dread anything fearful or
dangerous? When will he be of cowardly spirit? Never.
For all things appear to us difficult, because we do not have the
remembrance of God as we ought; because we do not carry Him about alway in our
thoughts. For surely He might justly say to us, "Thou hast forgotten Me, I also will
forget thee." And so the evil becomes twofold, both that we forget Him and He us.
For these two things are involved in each other, yet are two. For great is the
effect of God's remembrance, and great also of His being remembered by us. The
result of the one is that we choose good things; of the other that we
accomplish them, and bring them to their end.[1] Therefore the prophet says, "I will
remember Thee from the land of Jordan, and from the little hill of Hermon." (Ps.
xlii. 6.) The people which were in Babylon say this: being there, I will
remember Thee.
[7.] Therefore let us also, as being in Babylon, [do the same]. For
although we are not sitting among warlike foes, yet we are among enemies. For some
[of them] indeed were sitting as captives, but others did not even feel their
captivity, as Daniel, as the three children (cf. Ps. cxxxvii. 1); who even while
they were in captivity became in that very country more glorious even than the
king who had carried them captive. And he who had taken them captive does
obeisance to[2] the captives.
Dost thou see how great virtue is? When they were in actual captivity he
waited on them as masters. He therefore was the captive, rather than they. It
would not have been so marvelous if when they were in their native country, he
had come and done them reverence in their own land, or if they had been rulers
there. But the marvelous thing is, that after he had bound them, and taken them
captive, and had them in his own country, he was not ashamed to do them
reverence in the sight of all, and to "offer an oblation."[3] (Dan. ii. 46.)
Do you see that the really splendid things are those which relate to God,
whereas human things are a shadow? He knew not, it seems, that he was leading
away masters for himself, and that he cast into the furnace those whom he was
about to worship.But to them, these things were as a dream.
Let us fear God, beloved, let us fear [Him]: even should we be in
captivity, we are more glorious than all men. Let the fear of God be present with us,
and nothing will be grievous, even though thou speak of poverty, or of disease,
or of captivity, or of slavery, or of any other grievous thing: Nay even these
very things will themselves work together for us the other way. These men were
captives, and the king worshiped them: Paul was a tent-maker, and they
sacrificed to him as a God.
[8.] Here a question arises: Why, you ask, did the Apostles prevent the
sacrifices, and rend their clothes, and divert them from their attempt, and say
with earnest lamentation, "What are ye doing? we also are men of like passions
with you" (Acts xiv. 15); whereas Daniel did nothing of this kind.
For that he also was humble, and referred [the] glory to God no less than
they, is evident from many places. Especially indeed is it evident, from the
very fact of his being beloved by God. For if he had appropriated to himself the
honor belonging to God, He would not have suffered him to live, much less to
be in honor. Secondly, because even with great openness he said, "And as to me,
O King, this secret hath not been revealed to me through any wisdom that is in
me." (Dan. ii. 30.) And again; he was in the den for God's sake, and when the
prophet brought him food, he saith, "For God hath remembered me." (Bel and the
Dragon, yet. 38.) Thus humble and contrite was he.
He was in the den for God's sake, and yet he counted himself unworthy of
His remembrance, and of being heard. Yet we though daring [to commit]
innumerable pollutions, and being of all men most polluted, if we be not heard at our
first prayer, draw back. Truly, great is the distance between them and us, as
great as between heaven and earth, or if there be any greater.
What sayest thou? After so many achievements, after the miracle which had
been wrought in the den, dost thou account thyself so humble? Yea, he says; for
what things soever we have done, "we are unprofitable servants." (Luke xvii.
10.) Thus by anticipation did he fulfill the evangelical precept, and accounted
himself nothing. For "God hath remembered me," he said. His prayer again, of
how great lowliness of mind it is full. And again the three children said thus,
"We have sinned, we have committed iniquity." (Song of the Three Children, ver.
6.) And everywhere they show their humility.
And yet Daniel had occasions innumerable for being puffed up; but he knew
that these also came to him on account of his not being puffed up, and he did
not destroy his treasure. For among all men, and in the whole world he was
celebrated, not only[4] because the king cast himself on his face and offered
sacrifice to him, and accounted him to be a God, who was himself honored as God in
all parts of the world: for he ruled over the whole [earth]; (and this is evident
from Jeremiah. "Who putteth on the earth," saith he, "as a garment." (See Jer.
xliii. 12 and Ps. civ. 2.) And again, "I have given it to Nebuchadnezzar My
servant" (Jer. xxvii. 6), and again from what he [the King] says in his
letter).[5] And because he was held in admiration not only in the place where he was,
but everywhere, and was greater than if the rest of the nations had been present
and seen him; when even by letters [the King] confessed his submission[6] and
the miracle. But yet again for his wisdom he was also held in admiration, for it
is said, "Art thou wiser than Daniel?" (Ezek. xxviii. 3.) And after all these
things he was thus humble, dying ten thousand times for the Lord's sake.
Why then, you ask, being so humble did he not repel either the adoration
which was paid him by the king, or the offerings?
[9.] This I will not say, for it is sufficient for me simply to mention
the question, and the rest I leave to you, that at least in this way I may stir
up your thoughts. (This however I conjure you, to choose all things for the fear
of God, having such examples; and because in truth we shall obtain the things
here also, if we sincerely lay hold on the things which are to come.) For that
he did not do this out of arrogance, is evident from his saying, "Thy gifts be
to thyself." (Dan. v. 17.)
For besides this also again is another question, how while in words he
rejected it, in deed he received the honor, and wore the chain[1] [of gold]. (Dan.
v. 29.)
Moreover while Herod on hearing the cry "It is the voice of a god and not
of a man," inasmuch as "he gave not God the glory, burst in sunder, and all his
bowels gushed out" (Acts xii. 22, 23; see i. 18), this man received to himself
even the honor belonging to God, not words only.
However it is necessary to say what this is. In that case [at Lystra] the
men were falling into greater idolatry, but in this [of Daniel] not so. How?
For his being thus accounted of, was an honor to God. Therefore he said in
anticipation, "And as to me, not through any wisdom that is in me." (Dan. ii. 30.)
And besides he does not even appear to have accepted the offerings. For he [the
king] said (as it is written) that they should offer sacrifice, but it did not
appear that the act followed. But there [at Lystra] they carried it even to
sacrificing the bulls, and "they called" the one "Jupiter and" the other
"Mercurius." (Acts xiv. 12.)
The chain [of gold] then he accepted, that he might make himself known;
the offering however why does it not appear that he rejected it? For in the other
case too they did not do it, but they attempted it, and the Apostles hindered
them; wherefore here also he ought at once to have rejected [the adoration].
And there it was the entire people: here the King. Why he did not divert him
[Daniel] expressed by anticipation, [viz.] that [the king] was not making an
offering [to him] as to a God, to the overthrow of religious worship, but for the
greater wonder. How so? It was on God's account that [Nebuchadnezzar] made the
decree; wherefore [Daniel] did not mutilate[2] the honor [offered]. But those
others [at Lystra] did not act thus, but supposed them to be indeed gods. On this
account they were repelled.
And here, after having done him reverence, he does these things: for he
did not reverence him as a God, but as a wise man.
But it is not clear that he made the offering: and even if he did make it,
yet not that it was with Daniel's acceptance.
And what [of this], that he called him" Belteshazzar, the name of" his own
"god "?[3] Thus [it seems] they accounted their gods to be nothing wonderful,
when he called even the captive thus; he who commands all men to worship the
image,[4] manifold and of various colors, and who adores the dragon.[5]
Moreover the Babylonians were much more foolish than those at Lystra.
Wherefore it was not possible at once to lead them on to this. And many [more]
things one might say: but thus far these suffice.
If therefore we wish to obtain all good things, let us seek the things of
God. For as they who seek the things of this world fail both of them and of the
others, so they who prefer the things of God, obtain both. Let us then not
seek these but those, that we may attain also to the good things promised in
Christ Jesus our Lord, with whom to the Father together with the Holy Ghost, be
glory, power, honor, now and for ever and world without end. Amen.
HOMILY XXVII.
HEBREWS xi. 28-31.
"Through faith, he kept the Passover and the sprinkling of blood, lest he that
destroyed the first-born should touch them. By faith they passed through the
Red Sea, as by dry land; which the Egyptians assaying to do, were drowned.[1] By
faith, the walls of Jericho fell down, after they had been compassed about
seven days. By faith, the harlot Rahab perished not with them that believed not,
when she had received the spies with peace."
[1.] PAUL is wont to establish many things incidently, and is very full[2]
of thoughts. For such is the grace of The Spirit. He does not comprehend a few
ideas in a multitude of words, but includes great and manifold thought in
brevity of expressions. Observe at least how, in the midst[3] of exhortation, and
when discoursing about faith, of what a type and mystery he reminds us, whereof
we have the reality. "Through faith" (he says) "he kept the Passover and the
sprinkling of blood, lest he that destroyed the first-born should touch them."
But what is "the sprinkling of blood"? [4] A lamb was slain in every
household, and the blood was smeared on the door-posts, and this was a means of
warding off the Egyptian destruction If then the blood of a lamb preserved the Jews
unhurt in the midst of the Egyptians, and under so great a destruction, much
more will the blood of Christ save us, who have had it sprinkled[5] not on the
door-posts, but in our souls. For even now also the Destroyer is going about in
this depth of night: but let us be armed with that Sacrifice. (He calls the
"sprinkling"[6] anointing.) For God has brought us out from Egypt, from darkness,
from idolatry.
Although what was done, was nothing, what was achieved was great. For what
was done was blood; but was achieved, was salvation, and the stopping, and
preventing of destruction The angel feared the blood; for he knew of what it was
a Type; he shuddered, thinking on the Lord's death; therefore he did not touch
the door-posts.
Moses said, Smear, and they smeared, and were confident. And you, having
the Blood of the Lamb Himself, are ye not confident?
[2.] "By faith, they passed through the Red Sea as by dry land." Again he
compares one whole people with another, lest they should say, we cannot be as
the saints.
"By faith" (he says) "they passed through the Red Sea, as by dry land,
which the Egyptians assaying to do, were drowned." Here he leads them also to a
recollection of the sufferings in Egypt.
How, "by faith "? Because they had hoped to pass through the sea, and
therefore they prayed: or rather it was Moses who prayed. Seest thou that
everywhere Faith goes beyond human reasonings, and weakness and lowliness? Seest thou
that at the same time they both believed, and feared punishment, both in the
blood on the doors, and in the Red Sea?
And he made it clear that it was [really] water, through those that fell
into it, and were choked; that it was not a mere appearance: but as in the case
of the lions those who were devoured proved the reality of the facts, and in
the case of the fiery furnace, those who were burnt; so here also thou seest that
the same things become to the one a cause of salvation[7] and glory, and to
the other of destruction.
So great a good is Faith. And when we fall into perplexity, then are we
delivered, even though we come to death itself, even though our condition be
desperate. For what else was left [for them]? They were unarmed, compassed about by
the Egyptians and the sea; and they must either be drowned if they fled, or
fall into the hands of the Egyptians. But nevertheless [He] saved them from
impossibilities. That which was spread under the one as land, overwhelmed the others
as sea. In the former case it forgot its nature: in the latter it even armed
itself against them. (Cf. Wisd. xix. 20.)
[3.] "By faith, the walls of Jericho fell down, after they had been
compassed about for seven days." For assuredly the sound of trumpets is not able to
throw down stones, though one blow for ten thousand years; but Faith can do all
things.
Seest thou that in all cases it is not by natural sequence, nor yet by any
law of nature that it was changed, but all is done contrary to expectation?
Accordingly in this case also all is done contrary to expectation. For inasmuch
as he had said again and again, that we ought to trust to the future hopes, he
introduced all this argument with reason, showing that not now [only], but even
from the beginning all the miracles have been accomplished and achieved by
means of it.
"By faith, the harlot Rahab perished not with them that believed not,
having received the spies with peace." It would then be disgraceful, if you should
appear more faithless even than a harlot. Yet she [merely] heard what the men
related, and forthwith believed. Whereupon the end also followed; for when all
perished, she alone was preserved. She did not say to herself, I shall be with
my many friends.[1] She did not say, Can I possibly be wiser than these
judicious men who do not believe,--and shall I believe? She said no such thing, but
believed what had taken place,[2] which it was likely that they would suffer.
[4.] (Ver. 32) "And what shall I more say? For the time would fail me to
tell." After this he no longer puts down the names: but having ended with an
harlot, and put them to shame by the quality of the person, he no longer enlarges
on the histories, lest he should be thought tedious. However he does not set
them aside, but runs over them, [doing] both very judiciously, avoiding satiety,
and not spoiling the closeness of arrangement; he was neither altogether
silent, nor did he speak so as to annoy; for he effects both points. For when a man
is contending vehemently [in argument], if he persist in contending, he wearies
out the hearer, annoying him when he is already persuaded, and gaining the
reputation of vain ambitiousness. For he ought to accommodate himself to what is
expedient.
"And what do I more say" (he says)? "For the time would fail me to tell of
Gideon, and of Barak, and of Samson, and of Jephthah, of David also and
Samuel, and of the prophets."
Some find fault with Paul, because he puts Barak, and Samson, and Jephthah
in these places. What sayest thou? After having introduced the harlot, shall
he not introduce these? For do not tell me of the rest of their life, but only
whether they did not believe and shine in Faith.
"And the prophets," he says, (ver. 33) "who through faith subdued
kingdoms." Thou seest that he does not here testify to their life as being illustrious;
for this was not the point in question: but the enquiry thus far was about
their faith. For tell me whether they did not accomplish all by faith?
"'By faith," he says, "they subdued kingdoms;" those with Gideon. "Wrought
righteousness;" who? The same. Plainly he means here, kindness.[3]
I think it is of David that he says "they obtained promises." But of what
sort were these? Those in which He said that his "seed should sit upon" his
"throne." (Ps. cxxxii. 12.)
"Stopped the months of lions," (ver. 34) "quenched the violence of fire,
escaped the edge of the sword." See how they were in death itself, Daniel
encompassed by the lions, the three children abiding in the furnace, the
Israelites,[4] Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, in divers temptations; and yet not even so did they
despair. For this is Faith ; when things are turning out adversely, then we
ought to believe that nothing adverse is done, but all things in due order.
"Escaped the edge of the sword.": I think hat he is again speaking of the
three children.
"Out of[5] weakness were made strong." Here be alludes to what took place
at their return from Babylon. For "out of weakness," is out of captivity. When
the condition of the Jews had now become desperate, when they were no better
than dead bones, who could have expected that they would return from Babylon, and
not return only; but also "wax valiant" and "turn to flight armies of aliens
"? ' But to us,' some one says,[6] ' no such thing has happened.'But these are
figures of "the things to come." (Ver. 35) "Women received their dead raised to
life again." He here speaks of what occurred in regard to the prophets, Elisha,
[and] Elijah; for they raised the dead.
[5.] (Ver. 35) "And others were tortured,[7] not accepting deliverance,
that they might obtain a better resurrection." But we have not obtained a
Resurrection. I am able however, he means, to show that they also were cut off, and
did "not accept [deliverance], that they
might obtain a better resurrection." For why, tell me, when it was open to
them to live, did they not choose it? Were they not evidently looking for a better
life? And they who had raised up others, themselves chose to die; in order "to
obtain a better resurrection," not such as the children of those women.[8]
Here I think he alludes both to John and to James. For beheading is called
"torturing."[9]
It was in their power still to behold the sun. It was in their power to
abstain from reproving[10] [sinners], and yet they chose to die; even they who had
raised others chose to die themselves, "that they might obtain a better
resurrection."
(Ver. 36) "And others had trial of cruel mockings and scourgings, yea
moreover of bonds and imprisonment." He ends with these; with things that come
nearer home. For these [examples] especially bring consolation, when the distress
is from the same cause, since even if you mention something more extreme, yet
unless it arise from the same cause, you have effected nothing. Therefore he
concluded his discourse with this, mentioning "bonds, imprisonments, scourges,
stonings," alluding to the case of Stephen, also to that of Zacharias.
Wherefore he added, "They were slain with the sword." What sayest thou?
Some "escaped the edge of the sword," and some "were slain by the sword." (Ver.
34.) What is this? Which dost thou praise? Which dost thou admire? The latter or
the former? Nay, he says: the former indeed, is appropriate to you, and the
latter, because Faith was strong even unto death itself, and it is a type of
things to come. For the wonderful qualities of Faith are two, that it both
accomplishes great things, and suffers great things, and counts itself to suffer
nothing.
And thou canst not say (he says) that these were sinners and worthless.
For even if you put the whole world against them, I find that they weigh down the
beam and are of greater value.[1] What then were they to receive in this life?
Here he raises up their thoughts, teaching them not to be riveted to things
present, but to mind[2] things greater than all that are in this present life,
since the "world is not worthy" of them. What then dost thou wish to receive
here? For it were an insult to thee, shouldst thou receive thy reward here.
[6.] Let us not then mind[3] worldly things, nor seek our recompense here,
nor be so beggarly. For if "the" whole "world is not worthy of" them, why dost
thou seek after a part of it? And with good reason; for they are friends of
God.
Now by "the world" does he mean here the people, or the creation itself?
Both: for the Scripture is wont to use the word of both. If the whole creation,
he would say, with the human beings that belong to it, were put in the balance,
they yet would not be of equal value with these; and with reason. For as ten
thousand measures of chaff and hay would not be of equal value to ten pearls, so
neither they; for "better is one that doeth the will of the Lord, than ten
thousand transgressors" (Ecclus. xvi. 3);[4] meaning by "ten thousand" not
[merely] many, but an infinite multitude.
Consider of how great value is the righteous man. Joshua the son of Nun
said, "Let the sun stand still at Gibeon, the moon at the valley of Elom" (Josh.
x. 12), and it was so. Let then the whole world come, or rather two or three,
or four, or ten, or twenty worlds, and let them say and do this; yet shall they
not be able. But the friend of God commanded the creatures of his Friend, or
rather he besought his Friend, and the servants yielded, and he below gave
command to those above. Seest thou that these things are for service fulfilling their
appointed course?
This was greater than the [miracles] of Moses. Why (I ask)? Because it is
not a like thing to command the sea and the heavenly [bodies]. For that indeed
was also a great thing, yea very great, nevertheless it was not at all equal
[to the other].
Why was this? The name of Joshua [JESUS],[5] was a type. For this reason
then, and because of the very name, the creation reverenced him. What then! Was
no other person called Jesus? [Yes]; but this man was on this account so called
in type; for he used to be called Hoshea. Therefore the name was changed: for
it was a prediction and a prophecy. He brought in the people into the promised
land, as JESUS [does] into heaven; not the Law; since neither did Moses [bring
them in], but remained without. The Law has not power to bring in, but grace.
Seest thou the types which have been before sketched out from the beginning? He
laid his commands on the creation, or rather, on the chief[6] part of the
creation, on the very head itself as he stood below; that so when thou seest JESUS
in the form of Man saying the same, thou mayest not be disturbed, nor think it
strange. He, even while Moses was living, turned back wars. Thus, even while the
Law is living, He directs[7] all things; but not openly.
[7.] But let us consider how great is the virtue of the saints. If here
they work such things, if here they do such things, as the angels do, what then
above? How great is the splendor they have?
Perhaps each of you might wish to be such as to be able to command the sun
and moon. (At this point what would they say who assert that the heaven is a
sphere?[8] For why did he not [merely] say, "Let the sun stand still," but added
"Let the sun stand still at the valley of Elom," that is, he will make the day
longer? This was done also in the time of Hezekiah. The sun went back. This
again is more wonderful than the other, to go the contrary way, not having yet
gone round his course.)
We shall attain to greater things than these if we will. For what has
Christ promised us? Not that we shall make the sun stand still, or the moon, nor
that the sun shall retrace his steps, but what? "I and the Father will come unto
him," He says, "and We will make our abode with him." (John xiv. 23.) What need
have I of the sun and the moon, and of these wonders, when the Lord of all
Himself comes down and abides with me? I need these not. For what need I any of
these things? He Himself shall be to me for Sun and for Light. For, tell me, if
thou hadst entered into a palace, which wouldst thou choose, to be able to
rearrange some of the things which have been fixed there, or so to make the king a
familiar friend, as to persuade him to take up his abode with thee? Much rather
the latter than the former.
[8.] But what wonder is it, says some one, that what a man commands,
Christ should also? But Christ (you say) needs not the Father, but acts of His own
authority, you say. Well. Therefore first confess and say, that he needs not the
Father, and acts of His own authority: and then I will ask thee, whether His
prayer is not in the way of condescension and arrangement (for surely Christ was
not inferior to Joshua the son of Nun), and that He might teach us? For as
when thou hearest a teacher lisping,[1] and saying over the alphabet, thou dost
not say that he is ignorant; and when he asks, Where is such a letter? thou
knowest that he does not ask in ignorance, but because he wishes to lead on the
scholar; in like manner Christ also did not make His prayer as needing prayer, but
desiring to lead thee on, that thou mayest continually apply thyself to prayer,
that thou mayest do it without ceasing, soberly, and with great watchfulness.
And by watching, I do not mean, merely the rising at night, but also the
being sober[2] in our prayers during the day. For such an one is called
watchful.[3] Since it is possible both in praying by night to be asleep, and in praying
by day to be awake, when the soul is stretched out towards God, when it
considers with whom it holds converse, to whom its words are addressed, when it has
in mind that angels stand by with fear and trembling, while he approaches gaping
and scratching himself.
[9.] Prayer is a mighty weapon if it be made with suitable mind. And that
thou mayest learn its strength, continued entreaty has overcome shamelessness,
and injustice, and savage cruelty, and overbearing rashness. For He says,"
Hear what the unjust judge saith." (Luke xviii. 6.) Again it has overcome sloth
also, and what friendship did not effect, this continued entreaty did: and
"although he will not give him because he is his friend" (He says), "yet because of
his importunity he will rise and give to him." (Luke xi. 8) And continued
assiduity made her worthy who was unworthy. "It is not meet" (He says) "to take the
children's bread and to cast it to the dogs. Yea! Lord! " she says, "for even
the dogs eat [the crumbs] from their master's table." (Matt. xv. 26, 27.) Let us
apply ourselves to Prayer. It is a mighty weapon if it be offered with
earnestness, if without vainglory, if with a sincere mind. It has turned back wars, it
has benefited an entire nation though undeserving. "I have heard their
groaning" (He says) "and am come down to deliver them." (Acts vii. 34.) It is itself a
saving medicine, and has power to prevent sins, and to heal misdeeds. In this
the desolate widow was assiduous. (1 Tim. v. 5.)
If then we pray with humility, smiting our breast as the publican, if we
utter what he did, if we say, "Be merciful to me a sinner" (Luke xviii. 13), we
shall obtain all. For though we be not publicans, yet have we other sins not
less than his.
For do not tell me, that thou hast gone wrong in some small matter [only],
since the thing has the same nature. For as a man is equally called a homicide
whether he has killed a child or a man, so also is he called overreaching
whether he be overreaching in much or in little. Yea and to remember injuries too,
is no small matter, but even a great sin. For it is said, "the ways of those
who remember injuries [tend] to death." (Prov. xii. 28, LXX.) And "He that is
angry with his brother without a cause, shall be in danger of hell," and he that
"calleth his brother a fool" (Matt. v. 22), and senseless, and numberless such
things.
But we partake even of the tremendous mysteries unworthily, and we envy,
and we revile. And some of us have even oftentimes been drunk. But each one of
these things, even itself by itself, is enough to cast us out of the kingdom,
and when they even come all together, what comfort shall we have? We need much
penitence, beloved, much prayer, much endurance, much perseverance, that we may
be enabled to attain the good things which have been promised to us.
[10.] Let us then say, even we, "Be merciful to me a sinner," nay rather,
let us not say it only, but let us also be thus minded; and should another call
us so, let us not be angry. He heard the words, "I am not as this Publican"
(Luke xviii. 11), and was not provoked thereby, but filled with compunction. He
accepted the reproach, and he put away the reproach. The other spoke of the
wound, and he sought the medicine. Let us say then, "Be merciful to me a sinner"
(Luke xviii. 13); but even if another should so call us, let us not be indignant.
But if we say ten thousand evil things of ourselves, and are vexed when we
hear them from others, then there is no longer humility, nor confession, but
ostentation and vainglory. Is it ostentation (you say) to call one's self a
sinner? Yes; for we obtain the credit of humility, we are admired, we are
commended; whereas if we say the contrary of ourselves, we are despised. So that we do
this too for the sake of credit. But what is humility? It is when another
reviles us, to bear it, to acknowledge our fault, to endure evil speakings. And yet
even this would not be [a mark] of humility but of candor. But now we call
ourselves sinners, unworthy, and ten thousand other such names, but if another
apply one of them to us, we are vexed, we become savage. Seest thou that this is
not confession, nor even candor? Thou saidst of thyself that thou art such an
one: be not indignant if thou hearest it also said by others, and art reproved.
In this way thy sins are made lighter for thee, when others reproach thee:
for they lay a burden on themselves indeed, but thee they lead onwards into
philosophy. Hear what the blessed David says, when Shimei cursed him, "Let him
alone" (he says) "the Lord hath bidden him, that He might look on my humiliation"
(he says):"And the Lord will requite me good for his cursing on this day." (2
Sam. xvi. 11, 12.)
But thou while saying evil things of thyself, even in excess, if thou
hearest not from others the commendations that are due to the most righteous, art
enraged. Seest thou that thou art trifling with things that are no subjects for
trifling? For we even repudiate praises in our desire for other praises, that
we may obtain yet higher panegyrics, that we may be more admired. So that when
we decline to accept commendations, we do it that we may augment them. And all
things are done by us for credit, not for truth. Therefore all things are
hollow, all impracticable. Wherefore I beseech you now at any rate to withdraw from
this mother of evils, vainglory, and to live according to what is roved by God,
that so you may attain to the good things. to come, in Christ Jesus our Lord,
with whom to the Father be glory, together with His Holy and good Spirit, now
and ever and world without end. Amen.
HOMILY XXVIII.
HEBREWS xi. 37, 38.
"They wandered about in sheep-skins, and goat-skins, being destitute,
afflicted, tormented (of whom this[1] world was not worthy); wandering in deserts, and
in mountains, and in dens, and caves of the earth."
[1.] AT all times indeed, but especially then when I reflect upon the
achievements of the saints, it comes over me to feel despondency concerning my own
condition,[2] because we have not even in dreams experienced the things among
which those men spent their whole lives, not paying the penalty of sins, but
always doing rightly and yet always afflicted.
For consider, I beseech you, Elijah, to whom our discourse has come round
to-day, for he speaks of him in this passage, and in him his examples end:
which [example] was appropriate to their case. And having spoken of what befell the
Apostles, that "they were slain with the sword, were stoned," he goes back
again to Elijah, who suffered the same things with them. (See 2 Kings i. 8.) For
since it was probable that they would not as yet hold the Apostles in so great
estimation, he brings his exhortation and consolation from him who had been
taken up [into Heaven] and who was held in special admiration.
For "they wandered about" (he says) "in sheep-skins, and goat-skins, being
destitute, afflicted, tormented,[3] of whom this world was not worthy."
They had not even raiment, he says, through the excess of affliction, no
city, no house, no lodging-place; the same which Christ said, "but the Son of
Man hath not where to lay His head." (Matt. viii. 20.) Why do I say "no
lodging-place"? No standing-place: for not even when they had gained the wilderness,
were they at rest. For he said not, They sat down in the wilderness, but even
when they were there, they fled, and were driven thence, not out of the inhabited
world only, but even out of that which was uninhabitable. And he reminds them
of the places where they were set, and of things which there befell [them].
Then next, he says, they bring accusations against you for Christ's sake.
What accusation had they against Elijah, when they drove him out, and
persecuted him, and compelled him to struggle with famine? Which these [Hebrews] were
then suffering. At least, the brethren, it is said, decided to send [relief] to
those of the disciples who were afflicted. "Every man according to his ability,
determined to send relief unto the brethren that dwelt in Judea" (Acts xi. 29),
which was [the case] of these also.
"Tormented" [or "ill-treated "], he says that is, suffering distress, in
journeyings, in dangers.
But "They wandered about," what is this? "Wandering," he says, "in deserts
and in mountains and in dens and caves of the earth," like exiles and
outcasts, as persons taken in the basest [of crimes], as those not worthy to see the
sun, they found no refuge from the wilderness, but must always be flying, must be
seeking hiding-places, must bury themselves alive in the earth, always be in
terror.
[2.] What then is the reward of so great a change?[1] What is the
recompense?
They have not yet received it, but are still waiting; and after thus dying
in so great tribulation, they have not yet received it. They gained their
victory so many ages ago, and have not yet received [their reward]. And you who are
yet in the conflict, are you vexed?
Do you also consider what a thing it is, and how great, that Abraham
should be sitting, and the Apostle Paul, waiting till thou hast been perfected, that
then they may be able to receive their reward. For the Saviour has told them
before that unless we also are present, He will not give it them. As an
affectionate father might say to sons who were well approved, and had accomplished
their work, that he would not give them to eat, unless their brethren came. And art
thou vexed, that thou hast not yet received the reward? What then shall Abel
do, who was victor before all, and is sitting uncrowned? And what Noah? And
what, they who lived in those [early] times: seeing that they wait for thee and
those after thee?
Dost thou see that we have the advantage of them? For "God" (he says) "has
provided some better thing for us." In order that they might not seem to have
the advantage of us from being crowned before us, He appointed one time of
crowning for all; and he that gained the victory so many years before, receives his
crown with thee. Seest thou His tender carefulness?
And he did not say, "that they without us might not be crowned," but "that
they without us might not be made perfect" ; so that at that time they appear
perfect also. They were before us as regards the conflicts, but are not before
us as regards the crowns. He wronged not them, but He honored us. For they also
wait for the brethren. For if we are "all one body," the pleasure becomes
greater to this body, when it is crowned altogether, and not part by part. For the
righteous are also worthy of admiration in this, that they rejoice in the
welfare of their brethren, as in their own. So that for themselves also, this is
according to their wish, to be crowned along with their own members. To be
glorified all together, is a great delight.
[3.] (Chap. xii. 1) "Wherefore" (he says) "we also being compassed about with so great a cloud
of witnesses." In many places the Scripture derives its consolation in evils
from corresponding things. As when the prophet says, "From burning heat, and from
storm, and rain." (Isa. iv. 6.) This at least he says here also, that the
memory of those holy men, reestablishes and recovers the soul which had been weighed
down by woes, as a cloud does him who is burnt by the too hot rays [of the
sun.]
And he did not say, "lifted on high above us," but, "compassing us about,"
which was more than the other; so that we are in greater security.
What sort of "cloud"? "A load of witnesses.''[2] With good reason he calls
not those in the New [Testament] only, but those in the Old also, "witnesses"
[or "martyrs"]. For they also were witnesses to the greatness of God, as for
instance, the Three Children, those with Elijah, all the prophets.
"Laying aside all things." "All": what? That is, slumber, indifference,
mean reasonings, all human things.
"And the sin which doth [so] easily beset us";
<greek>euneristaton</greek>, that is either "which easily circumvents us," or "what can easily be
circumvented,"[3] but rather this latter. For it is easy, if we will, to overcome sin.
"Let us run with patience" (he says) "the race that is set before us." He
did not say, Let us contend as boxers, nor, Let us wrestle, nor, Let us do
battle: but, what was lightest of all, the [contest] of the foot-race, this has he
brought forward. Nor yet did he say, Let us add to the length of the course;
but, Let us continue patiently in this, let us not faint. "Let us run" (he says)
"the race that is set before us."
[4.] In the next place as the sum and substance of his exhortation, which
he puts both first and last, even Christ. (Ver. 2) "Looking" (he says) "unto
JESUS the Author and Finisher of our Faith"; The very thing which Christ Himself
also continually said to His disciples, "If they have called the Master of the
house Beelzebub, how much more them of His household?" (Matt. x. 25.) And
again, "The disciple is not above his Master, nor the servant above his Lord."
(Matt. x. 24.)
"Looking" (he says), that is, that we may learn to run. For as in all arts
and games, we impress the art upon our mind by looking to our masters,
receiving certain rules through our sight, so here also, if we wish to run, and to
learn to run well, let us look to Christ, even to Jesus "the author and finisher
of our faith." What is this? He has put the Faith within us. For He said to His
disciples, "Ye have not chosen Me, but I have chosen you" (John xv. 16); and
Paul too says, "But then shall I know, even as also I have been known."[1] (1
Cor. xiii. 12.) He put the Beginning into us, He will also put on the End.
"Who," he days, "for the joy that was set before Him, endured the Cross,
despising the shame." That is, it was in His power not to suffer at all, if He
so willed. For "He did no sin, neither was guile found in His mouth" (1 Pet. ii.
22); as He also says in the Gospels, "The Prince of the world cometh and haft
nothing in Me." (John xiv. 30.) It lay then in His power, if so He willed, not
to come to the Cross. For, "I have power," He says, "to lay down My life; and I
have power to take it again." (John x. 18.) If then He who was under no
necessity of being crucified, was crucified for our sake, how much more is it right
that we should endure all things nobly!
"Who for the joy that was set before Him" (he says) "endured the cross,
despising the shame." But what is, "Despising the shame"? He chose, he means,
that ignominious death. For suppose that He died. Why [should He] also [die]
ignominiously? For no other reason, but to teach us to make no account of glory from
men. Therefore though under no obligation He chose it, teaching us to be bold
against it, and to set it at nought. Why did he say not "pain," but "shame"?
Because it was not with pain[2] that He bore these things.
What then is the end? "He is set down at the right hand of the throne of
God." Seest thou the prize which Paul also says in an epistle, "Wherefore God
also hath highly exalted Him, and given Him a Name which is above every name,
that at the Name of Jesus Christ every knee should bow." (Phil. ii. 9, 10.) He
speaks in respect to the flesh.[3] Well then, even if there were no prize, the
example would suffice to persuade us to accept all [such] things. But now prizes
also are set before us, and these no common ones, but great and unspeakable.
[5.] Wherefore let us also, whenever we suffer anything of this kind,
before the Apostles consider Christ. Why? His whole life was full of insults. For
He continually heard Himself called mad, and a deceiver, and a sorcerer; and at
one time the Jews said," Nay," (it says) "but He deceiveth the people." (John
vii. 12.) And again, "That deceiver said while He was yet alive, after three
days I will rise again." (Matt. xxvii. 63.) As to sorcery too they calumniated
Him, saying, "He casteth out the devils by Beelzebub." (Matt. xii. 24.) And that
"He is mad and hath a devil." (John x. 20.) "Said we not well" (it says) "that
He hath a devil and is mad?" (John viii. 48.)
And these things He heard from them, when doing them good, performing
miracles, showing forth the works of God. For indeed, if He had been so spoken of,
when He did nothing, it would not have been so wonderful: But [it is wonderful]
that when He was teaching what pertained to Truth He was called "a deceiver,"
and when He cast out devils, was said to "have a devil," and when He was
overthrowing all that was opposed [to God], was called a sorcerer. For these things
they were continually alleging against Him.
And if thou wouldst know both the scoffs[4] and the ironical jeerings,[5]
which they made against Him (what particularly wounds our souls), hear first
those from His kindred. "Is not this" (it says) "the carpenter's son, whose
father and mother we know? Are not his brethren sit with us?" (Matt. xiii. 55; Mark
vi. 3; John vi. 42.) Also scoffing at Him from His country, they said He was
"of Nazareth." And again, "search," it says, "and see, for out of Galilee hath no
prophet arisen." (John vii. 52.) And He endured being so greatly calumniated.
And again they said, "Doth not the Scripture say, that Christ cometh from the
town of Bethlehem?" (John vii. 42.)
Wouldst thou see also the ironical jeerings they made? Coming, it says, to
the very cross they worshiped Him; and they struck Him and buffeted Him, and
said, "Tell us who it is that smote Thee" (Matt. xxvi. 68); and they brought
vinegar to Him, and said, "If Thou be the Son of God, come down from the Cross."
(Matt. xxvii. 40.) And again, the servant of the High Priest struck Him with the
palm of his hand; and He says, "If I have spoken evil, bear witness of the
evil; but if well, why smiteth thou Me?" (John xviii. 23.) And in derision they
put a robe about Him; and they spat in His face; and they were continually
applying their tests, tempting Him.
Wouldest thou see also the accusations, some secret, some open, some from
disciples? "Will ye also go away?" (John vi. 67) He says. And that saying,
"Thou hast a devil" (John viii. 48, vii. 20), was uttered by those who already
believed. Was He not continually a fugitive, sometimes in Galilee, and sometimes
in Judea? Was not His trial great, even from the swaddling clothes? When He was
yet a young child, did not His mother take Him and go down into Egypt? For all
these reasons he says, "Looking unto Jesus the Author and Finisher of our Faith
who for the joy that was set before Him endured the cross, despising the
shame, and is set down at the right hand of the throne of God."
To Him then let us look, also to the [sufferings[1]] of His disciples,
reading the [writings[2]] of Paul, and hearing him say," In much patience, in
afflictions, in necessities, in persecutions,[3] in distresses, in stripes, in
imprisonments." (2 Cor. vi. 4, 5.) And again, "Even to this present hour, we both
hunger, and thirst, and are naked, and are buffeted, and have no certain
dwelling-place, and labor, working with our own hands. Being reviled, we bless; being
persecuted, we suffer it; being defamed, we entreat." (1 Cor. iv. 11-13.) Has
any one [of us] suffered the smallest part of these things? For, he says, [we
are] "As deceivers, as dishonored, as having nothing." (2 Cor. vi. 8, 10.) And
again, "Of the Jews five times received I forty stripes save one; thrice was I
beaten with rods, once was I stoned, a night and a day have I been in the deep;
in journeyings often, in tribulations, in distress, in hunger." (2 Cor. xi.
24-26.) And that these things seem good to God, hear him saying, "For this I
besought the Lord thrice, and He said to me, My Grace is sufficient for thee; for My
strength is made perfect in weakness." (2 Cor. xii. 8-10.) "Wherefore," he
says, "l take pleasure in infirmities, in afflictions, in necessities, in
distresses, in stripes, in imprisonments, that the power of Christ may rest upon me."
Moreover, hear Christ Himself saying, "In the world ye shall have tribulation."
(John xvi. 33.)!
[6.] Ver. 3. "For consider," saith he, "Him that endured such
contradiction of sinners against Himself, lest ye be wearied and faint in your minds." For
if the sufferings of those near us arouse us, what earnestness will not those
of our Master give us! What will they not work in us!
And passing by all [else], he expressed the whole by the [word]
"Contradiction"; and by adding "such." For the blows upon the cheek, the laughter, the
insults, the reproaches, the mockeries, all these he indicated by
"contradiction." And not these only, but also the things which befell Him during His whole
life, of teaching.
For a great, a truly great consolation are both the sufferings of Christ,
and those of the Apostles. For He so well knew that this is the better way of
virtue, as even to go that way Himself, not having need thereof: He knew so well
that tribulation is expedient for us, and that it becomes rather a foundation
for repose. For hear Him saying, "If a man take not his cross, and follow after
Me, he is not worthy of Me." (Matt. x. 38.) If thou art a disciple, He means,
imitate the Master; for this is [to be] a disciple. But if while He went by
[the path of] affliction, thou [goest] by that of ease, thou no longer treadest
the same path, which He trod, but another. How then dost thou follow, when thou
followest not? How shall thou be a disciple, not going after the Master? This
Paul also says, "We are weak, but ye are strong; we are despised, but ye are
honored." (1 Cor. iv. 10.) How is it reasonable, he means, that we should be
striving after opposite things, and yet that you should be disciples and we teachers?
[7.] Affliction then is a great thing, beloved, for it accomplishes two
great things; It wipes out sins, and it makes men strong.
What then, you say, if it overthrow and destroy? Affliction does not do
this, but our own slothfulness. How (you say)? If we are sober and watchful, if
we beseech God that He would not "suffer us to be tempted above that we are
able" (1 Cor. x. 13), if we always hold fast to Him, we shall stand nobly, and set
ourselves against our enemy. So long as we have Him for our helper, though
temptations blow more violently than all the winds, they will be to us as chaff and
a leaf borne lightly along. Hear Paul saying, "In all these things" (are his
words) "we are more than conquerors." (Rom. viii. 37.) And again, "For I reckon
that the sufferings of this present time are not worthy to be compared with the
glory which shall be revealed in us." (Rom. viii. 18.) And again, "For the
light affliction which is but for a moment, worketh for us a far more exceeding
and eternal weight of glory." (2 Cor. iv. 17.)
Consider what great dangers, shipwrecks, afflictions one upon another, and
other such things, he calls "light "; and emulate this inflexible one, who
wore this body simply and heedlessly.[4] Thou art in poverty? But not in such as
Paul, who was tried by hunger, and thirst, and nakedness. For he suffered this
not for one day, but endured it continually. Whence does this appear? Hear
himself saying, "Even unto this present hour we both hunger and thirst and are
naked." (1 Cor. iv. 11.) Oh! How great glory did he already have in preaching, when
he was undergoing so great [afflictions]! Having now [reached] the twentieth
year [thereof], at the time when he wrote this. For he says, "I knew a man
fourteen years ago, whether in the body, or out of the body, I know not." (2 Cor.
xii. 2.) And again, "After three years" (he says) "I went up to Jerusalem." (Gal.
i. 18.) And again hear him saying, "It were better for me-to die, than that any
man should make my glorying void." (1 Cor. ix. 15.) And not only this, but
again also in writing he said, "We are become as the filth of the world." (1 Cor.
iv. 13.) What is more difficult to endure than hunger? What than freezing cold?
What than plottings made by brethren whom he afterwards calls "false
brethren"? (2 Cor. xi. 26.) Was he not called the pest of the world? An Impostor? A
subverter? Was he not cut with scourging?
[8.] These things let us take into our mind, beloved, let us consider
them, let us hold them in remembrance, and then we shall never faint, though we be
wronged, though we be plundered, though we suffer innumerable evils. Let it be
granted us to be approved in Heaven, and all things [are] endurable. Let it be
granted us to fare well there, and things here are of no account. These things
are a shadow, and a dream; whatever they may be, they are nothing either in
nature or in duration, while those are hoped for and expected.
For what wouldst thou that we should compare with those fearful things?
What with the unquenchable fire? With the never-dying worm? Which of the things
here canst thou name in comparison with the "gnashing of teeth," with the
"chains," and the "outer darkness," with the "wrath," the "tribulation," the
"anguish"? But as to duration? Why, what are ten thousand years to ages boundless and
without end? Not so much as a little drop to the boundless ocean.
But what about the good things? There, the superiority is still greater.
"Eye hath not seen," (it is said,) "ear hath not heard, neither have, entered
into the heart of man" (1 Cor. ii. 9), and these things again shall be during
boundless ages. For the sake of these then were it not well to be cut [by
scourging] times out of number, to be slain, to be burned, to undergo ten thousand
deaths, to endure everything whatsoever that is dreadful both in word and deed? For
even if it were possible for one to live when burning in the fire, ought one
not to endure all for the sake of attaining to those good things promised?
[9.] But Why do I trifle in saying these things to men who do not even
choose to disregard riches, but hold fist to them as though they were immortal?
And if they give a little out of much, think they have done all? This is not
Almsgiving. For Almsgiving is that of the Widow who emptied out "all her living."
(Mark xii. 44.) But if thou dost not go on to contribute so much as the widow,
yet at least contribute the whole of thy superfluity: keep what is sufficient,
not what is superfluous.
But there is no one who contributes even his superabundance. For so long
as thou hast many servants,[1] and garments of silk, these things are all
superfluities. Nothing is indispensable or necessary, without which we are able to
live; these things are superfluous, and are simply superadded.[2] Let us then
see, if you please, what we cannot live without. If we have only two servants, we
can live. For whereas some live without servants, what excuse have we, if we
are not content with two? We can also have a house built of brick of three
rooms;[3] and this were sufficient for us. For are there not some with children and
wife who have but one room?[4] Let there be also, if you will, two serving boys.
[10.] And how is it not a shame (you say) that a gentlewoman[5] should
walk out with [only] two servants? It is no shame, that a gentlewoman should walk
abroad with two servants, but it is a shame that she should go forth with many.
Perhaps you laugh when you hear this. Believe me it is a shame. Do you think
it a great matter to go out with many servants, like dealers in sheep, or
dealers in slaves? This is pride and vainglory, the other is philosophy and
respectability. For a gentlewoman ought not to be known from the multitude of her
attendants. For what virtue is it to have many slaves? This belongs not to the soul,
and whatever is not of the soul does not show gentility. When she is content
with a few things, then is she a gentlewoman indeed; but when she needs many, she
is a servant and inferior to slaves. Tell me, do not the angels go to and fro
about the world alone, and need not any one to follow them? Are they then on
this account inferior to us? They who need no [attendants] to us who need them?
If then not needing an attendant at all, is angelic, who comes nearer to the
angelic life, she who needs many [attendants], or she who [needs] few? Is not this
a shame? For a shame it is to do anything out of place.
Tell me who attracts the attention of those who are in the public
places,[6] she who brings many in her train, or she who [brings but] few? And is not
she who is alone, less conspicuous even than she who is attended by few? Seest
thou that this [first-named conduct] is a shame? Who attracts the attention of
those in the public places, she who wears beautiful garments, or she who is
dressed simply and artlessly? Again who attracts those in the public places, she who
is borne on mules, and with trappings ornamented with gold, or she who walks
out simply, and as it may be, with propriety? Or we do not even look at this
latter, if we even see her; but the multitudes not only force their way to see the
other, but also ask, Who is she, and Where from? And I do not say how great
envy is hereby produced. What then (tell me), is it disgraceful to be looked at
or not to be looked at? When is the shame greater, when all stare at her, or
when no one [does]? When they inform themselves about her, or when they do not
even care? Seest thou that we do everything, not for modesty's sake but for
vainglory?
However, since it is impossible to draw you away from that, I am content
for the present that you should learn that this [conduct] is no disgrace. Sin
alone is a disgrace, which no one thinks to be a disgrace, Sin alone is a
disgrace, which no one thinks tto be a disgrace, but everything rather than this.
[11] Let your dress be such as is needful, not superfluous. However, that
we may not shut you up too narrowly, this I assure you, that we have no need of
ornaments of gold, or of lace[1] And it is not I who say this. For that the
words are not mine, hear the blessed Paul saying, and solemnly charging women "to
adorn themselves, not with plaitings [of the hair], or gold, or pearls, or
costly apparel." (1 Tim. ii. 9.) But with what kind, O Paul, wouldest thou tell
us? For perhaps they will say, that only golden things are costly; and that silks
are not costly. Tell us with what kind thou wouldest? "But having food and
raiment,[2] let us therewith" (he says) "be content." a (1 Tim. vi. 8.) Let our
garment be such as merely to cover us. For God hath given them to us for this
reason, that we may cover our nakedness; and this any sort of garment can do,
though but of trifling cost. Perhaps ye laugh, who wear dresses of silk; for in
truth one may well laugh, considering what Paul enjoined and what we practice!
But my discourse is not addressed to women only, but also to men. For the
rest of the things. which we have are all superfluous; only the poor possess no
superfluities; and perhaps they too from necessity: since, if it had been in
their power, even they would not have abstained [from theme. Nevertheless,
"whether in pretense or in truth" (Phil. i. 18), so far they have no super-fluities.
[12.] Let us then wear such clothes as are sufficient for our need. For
what does much gold mean? To those on the stage these things are fitting, this
apparel belongs to them, to harlots, to those who do everything to be looked at.
Let her beautify herself, who is on the stage or the dancing platform. For she
wishes to attract all to her. But a woman who professes godliness, let her not
beautify herself thus, but in a different way. Thou hast a means of beautifying
thyself far better than that. Thou also hast a theater:[4] for that theater
make thyself beautiful: clothe thyself with those ornaments. What is thy theater?
Heaven, the company of Angels. I speak not of Virgins only, but also of those
in the world. All as many as believe in Christ have that theater. Let us speak
such things that we may please those spectators. Put on such garments that thou
mayest gratify them.
For tell me, if a harlot putting aside her golden ornaments, and her
robes, and her laughter, and her witty and unchaste talk, clothe herself with a
cheap garment, and having dressed herself simply come [on the stage], and utter
religious words, and discourse of chastity, and say nothing indelicate, will not
all rise up? Will not this theater be dispersed? Will they not cast her out, as
one who does not know how to suit herself to the crowd, and speaks things
foreign to that Satanic theater? So thou also, if thou enter into the Theater of
Heaven clad with her garments, the spectators will cast thee out. For there, there
is no need of these garments of gold, but of different ones. Of what kind? Of
such as the prophet names, "clothed in fringed work of gold, and in varied
colors" (Ps. xlv. 13), not so as to make the body white and glistering, but so as
to beautify the soul. For the soul it is, which is contending and wrestling in
that Theater. "All the glory of the King's daughter is from within" (Ps. xlv.
13), it says. With these do thou clothe thyself; for [so] thou both deliverest
thyself from other evils innumerable, and thy husband from anxiety and thyself
from care.
For so thou wilt be respected by thy husband, when thou needest not many
things. For every man is wont to be shy towards those who make requests of him;
but when he sees that they have no need of him, then he lets down his pride,
and converses with them as equals. When thy husband sees that thou hast no need
of him in anything, that thou thinkest lightly of the presents which come from
him, then, even though he be very arrogant,[5] he will respect thee more, than
if thou weft clad in golden ornaments; and thou wilt no longer be his slave. For
those of whom we stand in need, we are compelled to stoop to. But if we
restrain ourselves we shall no longer be regarded as criminals,[6] but he knows that
we pay him obedience from the fear of God, not for what is given by him. For
now, when that he confers great favors on us, whatever honor he receives, he
thinks he has not received all [that is due to him]: but then, though he obtain but
a little, he will account it a favor he does not reproach, nor will he be
himself compelled to overreach on thy account.
[13.] For what is more unreasonable, than to provide golden ornaments, to
be worn in baths, and in market places? However, in baths and in market places
it is perhaps no wonder, but that a woman should come into Church so decked out
is very ridiculous. For, for what possible reason does she come in here
wearing golden ornaments, she who ought to come in that she may hear [the precept]
"that they adorn not themselves with gold, nor pearls, nor costly array"? (1 Tim.
ii. 9.) With what object then, O woman, dost thou come? Is it indeed to fight
with Paul, and show that even if he repeat these things ten thousand times thou
regardest them not? Or is it as wishing to put us your teachers to shame as
discoursing on these subjects in vain? For tell me; if any heathen and
unbeliever, after he has heard the passage read where the blessed Paul says these things,
having a believing wife, sees that she makes much account of beautifying
herself, and puts on ornaments of gold, that she may come into Church and hear Paul
charging [the women] that they adorn themselves, neither with "gold" (1 Tim.
ii. 9), nor with "pearls," nor with "costly array," will he not indeed say to
himself, when he sees her in her little room,[1] putting on these things, and
arranging them beautifully, "Why is my wife staying within in her little room? Why
is she so slow? Why is she putting on her golden ornaments? Where has she to go
to? Into the Church? For what purpose? To hear? 'not with costly array';" will
he not smile, will he not burst out into laughter? will he not think our
religion[2] a mockery and a deceit? Wherefore, I beseech [you], let us leave golden
ornaments to processions, to theaters, to signs on the shops.[3] But let not
the image of God be decked out with these things: let the gentlewoman be adorned
with gentility, and gentility is the absence of pride, and of boastful display.
Nay even if thou wish to obtain glory from men, thou wilt obtain it thus.
For we shall not wonder so much that the wife of a rich man wears gold and silk
(for this is the common practice of them all), as when she is dressed in a
plain and simple garment made merely of wool. This all will admire, this they will
applaud. For in that adorning indeed of ornaments of gold and of costly
apparel, she has many to share with her. And if she surpass one, she is surpassed by
another. Yea, even if she surpass all, she must yield the palm to the Empress
herself. But in the other case, she outdoes all, even the Emperor's wife
herself. For she alone in wealth, has chosen the [dress] of the poor. So that even if
we desire glory, here too the glory is greater.
[14.] I say this not only to widows, and to the rich; for here the
necessity of widowhood seems to cause this: but to those also who have a husband.
But, you say, I do not please my husband Elf I dress plainly]. It is not
thy husband thou wishest to please, but the multitude of poor women; or rather
not to please them, but to make them pine [with envy], and to give them pain,
and make their poverty greater. How many blasphemies are uttered because of thee!
'Let there be no poverty' (say they). 'God hates the poor.' 'God loves not
those in poverty.' For that it is not thy husband whom thou wishest to please, and
for this reason thou deckest thyself out, thou makest plain to all by what
thou thyself doest. For as soon as thou hast passed over the threshold of thy
chamber,[4] thou immediately puttest off all, both the robes, and the golden
ornaments, and the pearls; and at home of all places thou dost not wear them.
But if thou really wishest to please thy husband, there are ways of
pleasing him, by gentleness, by meekness, by propriety. For believe me, O woman, even
if thy husband be infinitely debased,[5] these are the things which will more
effectually win him, gentleness, propriety, freedom from pride and
expensiveness and extravagance. For even if thou devise ten thousand such things, thou wilt
not restrain the profligate. And this they know who have had such husbands.
For however thou mayest beautify thyself, he being a profligate will go off to a
courtesan; while [the husband] that is chaste and regular thou wilt gain not by
these means, but by the opposite: yea by these thou even causest him pain,
clothing thyself with the reputation of a lover of the world. For what if thy
husband out of respect, and that as a sober-minded man, does not speak, yet
inwardly he will condemn thee, and will not conceal[6] ill-will[7] and jealousy. Wilt
thou not drive away all pleasure for the future, by exciting ill-will against
thyself?
[15.] Possibly you are annoyed at hearing what is said, and are indignant,
saying, 'He irritates husbands still more against their wives.' I say this,
not to irritate your husbands, but I wish that these things should be done by you
willingly, for your own sakes, not for theirs; not to free them from envy but
to free you from the parade of this life.
Dost thou wish to appear beautiful? I also wish it, but with beauty which
God seeks, which "the King desires."[1] (Ps. xlv. 11.) Whom wouldst thou have
as a Lover? God or men? Shouldest thou be beautiful with that beauty, God will
"desire thy beauty"; but if with the other apart from this, He will abominate
thee, and thy lovers will be profligates. For no man who loves a married woman is
good. Consider this even in regard to the adorning that is external. For the
other adorning, I mean that of the soul, attracts God; but this again,
profligates. Seest thou that I care for you, that I am anxious for you, that ye may be
beautiful, really beautiful, splendid, really splendid, that instead of
profligate men, ye may have for your Lover God the Lord of all? And she who has Him for
her Lover, to whom will she be like? She has her place among the choirs of
Angels. For if one who is beloved of a king is accounted happy above all, what
will her dignity be who is beloved of God with much love? Though thou put the
whole world [in the balance against it], there is nothing equivalent to that beauty.
This beauty then let us cultivate; with these embellishments let us adorn
ourselves, that we may pass into the Heavens, into the spiritual chambers, into
the nuptial chamber that is undefiled. For this beauty is liable to be
destroyed by anything; and when it lasts well, and neither disease nor anxiety impair
it (which is impossible), it does not last twenty years. But the other is ever
blooming, ever in its prime. There, there is no change to fear; no old age
coming brings a wrinkle, no undermining disease withers it; no desponding anxiety
disfigures it; but it is far above all these things. But this [earthly beauty]
takes flight before it appears, and if it appears it has not many admirers. For
those of well-ordered minds do not admire it; and those who do admire it,
admire with wantonness.
[16.] Let us not therefore cultivate this [beauty], but the other: let us
have that, so that with bright torches we may pass into the bridal chamber. For
not to virgins only has this been promised, but to virgin souls. For had it
belonged merely to virgins, those five would not have been shut out. This then
belongs to all who are virgins in soul, who are freed from worldly imaginations:
for these imaginations corrupt our souls. If therefore we remain unpolluted, we
shall depart thither, and shall be accepted. "For I have espoused you," he
says, "to one husband, to present you a chaste virgin unto Christ." (2 Cor. xi.
2.) These things he said, not with reference to Virgins, but to the whole body of
the entire Church. For the uncorrupt soul is a virgin, though she have a
husband: she is a virgin as to that which is Virginity indeed, that which is worthy
of admiration. For this of the body is but the accompaniment and shadow of the
other: while that is the True Virginity. This let us cultivate, and so shall we
be able with cheerful countenance to behold the Bridegroom, to enter in with
bright torches, if the oil do not fail us, if by melting down our golden
ornaments we procure such oil as makes our lamps bright. And this oil is
lovingkindness.
If we impart what we have to others, if we make oil therefrom, then it
will protect us, and we shall not say at that time, "Give us oil, for our lamps
are going out" (Matt. xxv. 8), nor shall we beg of others, nor shall we be shut
out when we are gone to them that sell, nor shall we hear that fearful and
terrible voice, while we are knocking at the doors, "I know you not." (Matt. xxv.
12.) But He will acknowledge us, and we shall go in with the Bridegroom, and
having entered into the spiritual Bride-chamber we shall enjoy good things
innumerable.
For if here the bride-chamber is so bright, the rooms so splendid, that
none is weary of observing them, much more there. Heaven is the chamber,[2] and
the bride-chamber[3] better than Heaven; then we shall enter. But if the
Bride-chamber is so beautiful, what will the Bridegroom be?
And why do I say, 'Let us put away our golden ornaments, and give to the
needy'? For if ye ought even to sell yourselves, if ye ought to become slaves
instead of free women, that so ye might be able to be with that Bridegroom, to
enjoy that Beauty, [nay] merely to look on that Countenance, ought you not with
ready mind to welcome all things? We look at and admire a king upon the earth,
but when [we see] a king and a bridegroom both, much more ought we to welcome
him with readiness. Truly these things are a shadow, while those are a reality.
And a King and a Bridegroom in Heaven! To be counted worthy also to go before
Him with torches, and to be near Him, and to be ever with Him, what ought we not
to do? What should we not perform? What should we not endure? I entreat you,
let us conceive some desire for those blessings, let us long for that Bridegroom,
let us be virgins as to the true Virginity. For the Lord seeks after the
virginity of the soul. With this let us enter into Heaven, "not having spot, or
wrinkle, or any such thing" (Eph. v. 27); that we may attain also to the good
things promised, of which may we all be partakers through the grace and mercy of
Jesus Christ our Lord, with whom to the Father together with the Holy Ghost, be
glory, power, honor, now and ever, and world without end. Amen.
HOMILY XXIX.
HEBREWS xii. 4-6.
"Ye have not yet resisted unto blood, striving against sin. And ye have
forgotten the exhortation which speaketh unto you as unto children, My son, despise
not thou the chastening of the Lord, nor faint when thou art rebuked of Him. For
whom the Lord loveth, He chasteneth: and scourgeth every son whom He
receiveth."[1]
[1.] There are two kinds of consolation, apparently opposed to one
another, but yet contributing great strength each to the other; both of which he has
here put forward. The one is when we say that persons have suffered much: for
the soul is refreshed, when it has many witnesses of its own sufferings, and this
he introduced above, saying, "Call to mind the former days, in which after ye
had been illuminated ye endured a great fight of afflictions." (c. x. 32.) The
other is when we say, "Thou hast suffered no great thing." The former, when
[the soul] has been exhausted refreshes it, and makes it recover breath: the
latter, when it has become indolent and supine, turns it again[2] and pulls down
pride. Thus that no pride may spring up in them from that testimony [to their
sufferings], see what he does. "Ye have not yet" (he says) "resisted unto blood,
[striving] against sin." And he did not at once go on with what follows, but
after having shown them all those who had stood "unto blood," and then brought in
the glory of Christ, His sufferings,[3] he afterwards easily pursued his
discourse. This he says also in writing to the Corinthians, "There hath no temptation
taken you, but such as is common to man" (1 Cor. x. 13), that is, small. For
this is enough to arouse and set right the soul, when it considers that it has
not risen to the whole [trial], and encourages itself from what has already
befallen it.
What he means is this: Ye have not yet submitted to death; your loss has
extended to money, to reputation, to being driven from place to place. Christ
however shed His blood for you, while you have not [done it] for yourselves. He
contended for the Truth even unto death fighting for you; while ye have not yet
entered upon dangers that threaten death.
"And ye have forgotten the exhortation." That is, And ye have slackened
your hands, ye have become faint. "Ye have not yet," he said, "resisted unto
blood, striving against sin." Here he indicates that sin is both very vigorous,[4]
and is itself armed. For the [expression] "Ye have resisted [stood firm
against]," is used with reference to those who stand firm.[5]
[2.] "Which" (he says) "speaketh unto you as unto sons, My son, despise
not thou the chastening of the Lord, nor hint when thou art rebuked of Him." He
has drawn his encouragement from the facts themselves; over and above he adds
also that which is drawn from arguments, from this testimony.
"Faint not" (he says) "when thou art rebuked of Him." It follows that
these things are of God. For this too is no small matter of consolation, when we
learn that it is God's work that such things have power,[6] He allowing [them];
even as also Paul says; "He said unto me, My grace is sufficient for thee: for
My strength is made perfect in weakness." (2 Cor. xii. 9.) He it is who allows
[them'].
"For whom the Lord loveth He chasteneth, and scourgeth every son whom He
receiveth." Thou canst not say that any righteous man is without affliction:
even if he appear to be so, yet we know not his other afflictions. So that of
necessity every righteous man must pass through affliction. For it is a declaration
of Christ, that the wide and broad way leads to destruction, but the strait
and narrow one to life. (Matt. vii. 13, 14.) If then it is possible to enter into
life by that means, and is not by any other, then all have entered in by the
narrow [way], as many as have departed unto life.
Ver. 7. "Ye endure chastisement"[7] (he says); not for punishment, nor for
vengeance, nor for suffering. See, from that from which they supposed they had
been deserted [of God], from these he says they may be confident, that they
have not been deserted. It is as if he had said, Because ye have suffered so many
evils, do you suppose that God has left you and hates you? If ye did not
suffer, then it were right to suppose this. For if "He scourgeth every son whom He
receiveth," he who is not scourged, perhaps is not a son. What then, you say, do
not bad men suffer distress? They suffer indeed; how then? He did not say,
Every one who is scourged is a son, but every son is scourged. For in all cases He
scourges His son: what is wanted then is to show, whether any son is not
scourged. But thou wouldest not be able to say: there are many wicked men also who
are scourged, such as murderers, robbers, sorcerers, plunderers of tombs. These
however are paying the penalty of their own wickedness, and are not scourged as
sons, but punished as wicked: but ye as sons.
[3.] Then again [he argues] from the general custom. Seest thou how he
brings up arguments from all quarters, from facts in the Scripture, from its
words, from our own notions, from examples in ordinary life? (Ver. 8.) "But if ye be
without chastisement" [&c.]. Seest thou that he said what I just mentioned,
that it is not possible to be a son without being chastened? For as in families,
fathers care not for bastards, though they learn nothing, though they be not
distinguished, but fear for their legitimate sons lest they should be indolent,
[so here.]. If then not to be chastised is [a mark] of bastards, we ought to
rejoice at chastisement, if this be [a sign] of legitimacy. "God dealeth with you
as with sons"; for this very cause.
Ver. 9. "Furthermore, we have had fathers of our flesh which corrected us,
and we gave them reverence." Again, [he reasons] from their own experiences,
from what they themselves suffered. For as he says above, "Call to mind the
former days" (c. x. 32), so here also "God" (he saith) "dealeth with you as with
sons," and ye could not say, We cannot bear it: yea, "as with sons" tenderly
beloved. For if they reverence their "fathers of the flesh," how shall not you
reverence your heavenly Father?
However the difference arises not from this alone, nor from the persons,
but also from the cause itself, and from the fact. For it is not on the same
grounds that He and they inflict chastisement: but they [did it] with a view to
"what seemed good to them," that is, fulfilling [their own] pleasure oftentimes,
and not always looking to what was expedient. But here, that cannot be said.
For He does this not for any interest of His own but for you, and for your
benefit alone. They [did it] that ye might be useful to themselves also, oftentimes
without reason; but here there is nothing of this kind. Seest thou that this
also brings consolation? For we are most closely attached to those [earthly
parents], when we see that not for any interests of their own they either command or
advise us: but their earnestness is, wholly and solely, on our account. For
this is genuine love, and love in reality, when we are beloved though we be of no
use to him who loves us,--not that he may receive, but that he may impart. He
chastens, He does everything, He uses all diligence, that we may become capable
of receiving His benefits. (Ver. 10.) "For they verily" (he says) "for a few
days chastened us after their own pleasure, but He for our profit, that we might
be partakers of His holiness."
What is "of his holiness"? It is, of His purity, so as to become worthy of
Him, according to our power. He earnestly desires that ye may receive, and He
does all that He may give you: do ye not earnestly endeavor that ye may
receive? "I said unto the Lord" (one says) "Thou art my Lord, for of my good things
Thou hast no need." (Ps. xvi. 2.)
"Furthermore," he saith," we have had fathers of our flesh which corrected
us and we gave them reverence: shall we not much rather be in subjection to
the Father of spirits, and live?" ("To the Father of spirits," whether of
spiritual gifts, or of prayers, or of the incorporeal powers.) If we die thus, then
"we shall live. For they indeed for a few days chastened us after their own
pleasure," for what seems [so] is not always profitable, but "He for our profit."
[4.] Therefore chastisement is "profitable"; therefore chastisement is a
"participation of holiness." Yea and this greatly: for when it casts out sloth,
and evil desire, and love of the things of this life, when it helps the soul,
when it causes a light esteem of all things here (for affliction [does] this),
is it not holy? Does it not draw down the grace of the Spirit?
Let us consider the righteous, from what cause they all shone brightly
forth. Was it not from affliction? And, if you will, let us enumerate them from
the first and from the very beginning: Abel, Noah himself; for it is not possible
that he, being the only one in that so great multitude of the wicked, should
not have been afflicted; for it is said, "Noah being" alone "perfect in his
generation, pleased God." (Gen. vi. 9.) For · consider, I beseech you, if now, when
we have innumerable persons whose virtue we may emulate, fathers, and
children, and teachers, we are thus distressed, what must we suppose he suffered, alone
among so many? But should I speak of the circumstances of that strange and
wonderful rain? Or should I speak of Abraham, his wanderings one upon another, the
carrying away of his wife, the dangers, the wars, the famines? Should I speak
of Isaac,[1] what fearful things he underwent, driven from every place, and
laboring in vain, and toiling for others? Or of Jacob? for indeed to enumerate all
his [afflictions] is not necessary, but it is reasonable to bring forward the
testimony, which he himself (gave] when speaking with Pharaoh; "Few and evil
are my days, and they have not attained to the days of my fathers." (Gen. xlvii.
9.) Or should I speak of Joseph himself? Or of Moses? Or of Joshua? Or of
David? Or of Elijah? Or of Samuel? Or wouldest thou [that I speak] of all the
prophets? Wilt thou not find that all these were made illustrious from their
afflictions? Tell me then, dost thou desire to become illustrious from ease and
luxury? But thou canst not.
Or should I speak of the Apostles? Nay but they went beyond all. And
Christ said this, "In the world ye shall have tribulation." (John xvi. 33.) And
again, "Ye shall weep and lament, but the world shall rejoice." (John xvi. 20.)
And, that "Strait and narrow is the way[1] that teadeth unto life." (Matt. vii.
14.) The Lord of the way said, that it is "narrow and strait"; and dost thou seek
the "broad" [way]? How is this not unreasonable? In consequence thou wilt not
arrive at life, going another [way], but at destruction, for thou hast chosen
the [path] which leads thither.
Wouldst thou that I bring before you those [that live] in luxury? Let us
ascend from the last to the first. The rich man who is burning in the furnace;
the Jews who live for the belly, "whose god is their belly" (Phil. iii. 19), who
were ever seeking ease in the wilderness, were destroyed; as also those in
Sodore, on account of their gluttony; and those in the time of Noah, was it not
because they chose this soft and dissolute life? For "they luxuriated," it says,
"in fullness of bread." (Ezek. xvi. 49.) It speaks of those in Sodom. But if
"fullnes of bread" wrought so great evil, what should we say of other delicacies?
Esau, was not he in ease? And what of those who being of "the sons of God"
(Gen. vi. 2), looked on women, and were borne down the precipice? And what of
those who were maddened by inordinate lust? and all the kings of the nations, of
the Babylonians, of the Egyptians, did they not perish miserably? Are they not in
torment?
[5.] And as to things now, tell me, are they not the same? Hear Christ
saying, "They that wear soft clothing are in kings' houses" (Matt. xi. 8), but
they who do not [wear] such things, are in Heaven. For the soft garment relaxes
even the austere soul, breaks it and enervates it: yea, even if it meet with a
body rough and hard, it speedily by such delicate treatment makes it soft and
weak.
For, tell me, for what other reason do you suppose women are so weak? Is
it from their sex only? By no means: but from their way of living, and their
bringing up. For their avoiding exposure,[2] their inactivity, their baths, their
unguents, their multitude of perfumes, the delicate softness of their couches,
makes them in the end such as they are.
And that thou mayest understand, attend to what I say. Tell me; take from
a garden a tree from those standing in the uncultivated[3] part and beaten by
the winds, and plant it in a moist and shady place, and thou wilt find it very
unworthy of that from which thou didst originally take it. And that this is
true, [appears from the fact that] women brought up in the country are stronger
than citizens of towns: and they would overcome many such in wrestling. For when
the body becomes more effeminate, of necessity the soul also shares the
mischief, since, for the most part, its energies are affected in accordance with the
[body]. For in illness we are different persons owing to weakness, and when we
become well, we are different again. For as in the case of a string when the
tones[4] are weak and relaxed, and not well arranged, the excellence of the art is
also destroyed, being obliged to serve the ill condition of the strings: so in
the case of the body also, the soul receives from it many hurts, many
necessities.[5] For when it needs much nursing, the other endures a bitter servitude.
[6.] Wherefore, I beseech you, let us make it strong by work, and not
nurse it as an invalid.[6] My discourse is not to men only but to women also. For
why dost thou, O woman, continually enfeeble[7] [thy body] with luxury and
exhaust it?[7] Why dost thou ruin thy strength with fat? This fat is flabbiness, not
strength. Whereas, if thou break off from these things, and manage thyself
differently, then will thy personal beauty also improve according to thy wish,
when strength and a good habit of body are there. If however thou beset it with
ten thousand diseases, there will neither be bloom of complexion, nor good
health; for thou wilt always be in low spirits. And you know that as when the air is
smiling it makes a beautiful house look splendid, so also cheerfulness of mind
when added to a fair countenance, makes it better: but if [a woman] is in low
spirits and in pain she becomes more ill-looking. But diseases and pains produce
low spirits; and diseases are produced from the body too delicate through
great luxury. So that even for this you will flee luxury, if you take my advice.
'But, you will say, luxury gives pleasure.' Yes, but not so great as the
annoyances. And besides, the pleasure goes no further than the palate and the
tongue. For when the table has been removed, and the food swallowed, thou wilt be
like one that has not partaken, or rather much worse, in that thou bearest
thence oppression, and distension, and headache, and a sleep like death, and often
too, sleeplessness from repletion, and obstruction of the breathing, and
eructation. And thou wouldest curse bitterly thy belly, when thou oughtest to curse
thy immoderate eating.
[7.] Let us not then fatten the body, but listen to Paul saying, "Make not
provision for the flesh, to fulfill the lusts thereof," (Rom. xiii. 14.) As if
one should take food and throw it into a drain, so is he who throws it into
the belly: or rather it is not so, but much worse. For in the one case he uses[1]
the drain without harm to himself: but in the other he generates innumerable
diseases. For what nourishes is a sufficiency which also can be digested: but
what is over and above our need, not only does not nourish, but even spoils the
other. But no man sees these things, owing to some prejudice and unseasonable
pleasure.
Dost thou wish to nourish the body? Take away What is superfluous; give
what is sufficient, and as much as can be digested, Do not load it, lest thou
overwhelm it. A sufficiency is both nourishment and pleasure. For nothing is so
productive of pleasure, as food well digested: nothing so [productive of] health:
nothing [so productive of] acuteness of the faculties, nothing tends so much
to keep away disease. For a sufficiency is both nourishment, and pleasure, and
health; but excess is injury, and unpleasantness and disease. For what famine
does, that also satiety does; or rather more grievous evils. For the former
indeed within a few days carries a man off and sets him free; but the other eating
into and putrefying the body, gives it over to long disease, and then to a most
painful death. But we, while we account famine a thing greatly to be dreaded,
yet run after satiety, which is more distressing than that.
Whence is this disease? Whence this madness? I do not say that we should
waste ourselves away, but that we should eat as much food as also gives us
pleasure, that is really pleasure, and can nourish the body, and furnish it to us
well ordered and adapted for the energies of the soul, well joined and fitted
together. But when it comes to be water-logged[2] by luxury, it cannot in the
flood-wave, keep fast the bolts[3] themselves, as one may say, and joints which
hold the frame together. For the flood-wave coming in, the whole breaks up and
scatters.
"Make not provision for the flesh" (he says) "to fulfill the lusts
thereof." (Rom. xiii. 14.) He said well. For luxury is fuel for unreasonable lusts;
though the luxurious should be the most philosophical of all men, of necessity he
must be somewhat affected by wine, by eating, he must needs be relaxed, he
must needs endure the greater flame. Hence [come] fornications, hence adulteries.
For a hungry belly cannot generate lust, or rather not one which has used just
enough. But that which generates unseemly lusts, is that which is relaxed[4] by
luxury. And as land which is very moist and a dung-hill which is wet through
and retains much dampness, generates worms, while that which has been freed from
such moistness bears abundant fruits, when it has nothing immoderate: even if
it be not cultivated, it yields grass, and if it be cultivated, fruits: [so
also do we].
Let us not then make our flesh useless, or unprofitable, or hurtful, but
let us plant in it useful fruits, and fruit-bearing trees; let us not enfeeble
them by luxury, for they too put forth worms instead of fruit when they are
become rotten. So also implanted desire, if thou moisten it above measure,
generates unreasonable pleasures, yea the most exceedingly unreasonable. Let us then
remove this pernicious evil, that we may be able to attain the good things
promised us, in Christ Jesus our Lord, with whom to the Father, together with the
Holy Spirit, be glory now and ever and world without end. Amen.