GREGORY NAZIANZEN, ORATIONS XXXIII, XXXIV, XXXVII AND XXXVIII
ORATION XXXIII.
AGAINST THEARIANS, AND CONCERNING HIMSELF.
Delivered at Constantinople about the middle of the year 380.
I. WHERE are they who reproach us with our poverty, and boast themselves of
their own riches; who define the Church by numbers,(<greek>a</greek>) and scorn
the little flock; and who measure Godhead,(<greek>b</greek>) and weigh the
people in the balance, who honour the sand, and despise the luminaries of heaven;
who treasure pebbles and overlook pearls; for they know not that sand is not in
a greater degree more abundant than stars, and pebbles than lustrous
stones--that the former are purer and more precious than the latter? Are you again
indignant? Do you again arm yourselves? Do you again insult us?(<greek>a</greek>) Is
this a new faith? Restrain your threats a little while that I may speak. We
will not insult you, but we will convict you; we will not threaten, but we will
reproach you; we will not strike, but we will heal. This too appears an insult!
What pride! Do you here also regard your equal as your slave? If not, permit me
to speak openly; for even a brother chides his brother if he has been
defrauded by him.
II. Would you like me to utter to you the words of God to Israel,
stiff-necked and hardened? "O my people what have I done unto thee, or wherein have I
injured thee, or wherein have I wearied thee?"(<greek>b</greek>) This language
indeed is fitter from me to you who insult me. It is a sad thing that we watch for
opportunities against each other, and having destroyed our fellowship of
spirit by diversities of opinion have become almost more inhuman and savage to one
another than even the barbarians who are now engaged in war against us, banded
together against us by the Trinity whom we have separated; with this difference
that we are not foreigners making forays and raids upon foreigners, nor nations
of different language, which is some little consolation in the calamity, but
are making war upon one another, and almost upon those of the same household; or
if you will, we the members of the same body are consuming and being consumed
by one another. Nor is this, bad though it be, the extent of our calamity, for
we even regard our diminution as a gain. But since we are in such a condition,
and regulate our faith by the times, let us compare the times with one another;
you your Emperor,(<greek>g</greek>) and I my Sovereigns;(<greek>d</greek>) you
Ahab and I Josias. Tell me of your moderation, and I will proclaim my
violence. But indeed yours is proclaimed by many books and tongues, which I think
future ages will accept as an immortal pillory for your actions and I will declare
my own.
III. What tumultuous mob have I led against you? What soldiers have I armed?
What general boiling with rage, and more savage than his employers, and not
even a Christian, but one who offers his impiety against us as his private
worship to his own gods?(<greek>e</greek>) Whom have I besieged while engaged in
prayer and lifting up their hands to God? When have I put a stop to psalmody with
trumpets? or mingled the Sacramental Blood with blood of massacre? What
spiritual sighs have I put an end to by cries of death, or tears of penitence by tears
of tragedy? What House of prayer have I made a burialplace? What liturgical
vessels which the multitude may not touch have I given over to the hands of the
wicked, of a Nebuzaradan,(<greek>a</greek>) chief of the cooks, or of a
Belshazzar, who wickedly used the sacred vessels for his revels,(<greek>b</greek>) and
then paid a worthy penalty for his madness? "Altars beloved" as Holy Scripture
saith, but ''now defiled."(<greek>g</greek>) And what licentious youth has
insulted you for our sake with shameful writhings and contortions? O precious
Throne, seat and rest of precious men, which hast been occupied by a succession of
pious Priests, who from ancient times have taught the divine Mysteries, what
heathen popular speaker and evil tongue hath mounted thee to inveigh against the
Christian's faith? O modesty and majesty of Virgins, that cannot endure the looks
of even virtuous men, which of us hath shamed thee, and outraged thee by the
exposure of what may not be seen, and showed to the eyes of the impious a
pitiable sight, worthy of the fires of Sodom? I say nothing of deaths, which were
more endurable than this shame.
IV. What wild beasts have we let loose upon the bodies of Saints,--like some
who have prostituted human nature,--on one single accusation, that of not
consenting to their impiety; or defiled ourselves by communion with them, which we
avoid like the poison of a snake, not because it injures the body, but because
it blackens the depths of the soul? Against whom have we made it a matter of
criminal accusation that they buried the dead, whom the very beasts reverenced?
And what a charge, worthy of another theatre and of other beasts! What Bishop's
aged flesh have we carded with hooks in the presence of their disciples,
impotent to help them save by tears, hung up with Christ, conquering by suffering,
and sprinkling the people with their precious blood, and at last carried away to
death, to be both crucified and buried and glorified with Christ; with Christ
Who conquered the world by such victims and sacrifices? What priests have those
contrary elements fire and water divided, raising a strange beacon over the
sea, and set on fire together with the ship in which they put to
sea?(<greek>a</greek>) Who (to cover the more numerous part of our woes with a veil of silence)
have been accused of inhumanity by the very magistrates who conferred such
favour on them? For even if they did obey the lusts of those men, yet at any rate
they hated the cruelty of their purpose. The one was opportunism, the other
calculation; the one came of the lawlessness of the Emperor, the other of a
consciousness of the laws by which they had to judge.
V. And to speak of older things, for they too belong to the same fraternity;
whose hands living or dead have I cut off--to bring a lying accusation against
Saints,(<greek>b</greek>) and to triumph over the faith by bluster? Whose
exiles have I numbered as benefits, and failed to reverence even the sacred
colleges of sacred philosophers, whence I sought their suppliants? Nay the very
contrary is the case; I have reckoned as Martyrs those who incurred anger for the
truth. Upon whom have I, whom you accuse of licentiousness of language, brought
harlots when they were almost fleshless and bloodless? Which of the faithful have
I exiled from their country and given over to the hands of lawless men, that
they might be kept like wild beasts in rooms without light, and (for this is the
saddest part of the tragedy) left separated from each other to endure the
hardships of hunger and thirst, with food measured out to them, which they had to
receive through narrow openings, so that they might not be permitted even to see
their companions in misery. And what were they who suffered thus? Men of whom
the world was not worthy.(<greek>g</greek>) Is it thus that you honour faith?
Is this your kind treatment of it? Ye know not the greater part of these things,
and that reasonably, because of the number of these facts and the pleasure of
the action. But he who suffers has a better memory. There have been even some
more cruel than the times themselves, like wild boars hurled against a fence. I
demand your victim of yesterday(<greek>a</greek>) the old man, the Abraham-like
Father, whom on his return from exile you greeted with stones in the middle of
the day and in the middle of the city. But we, if it is not invidious to say
so, begged off even our murderers from their danger. God says somewhere in
Scripture, How shall I pardon thee for this?(<greek>b</greek>) Which of these things
shall I praise; or rather for which shall I bind a wreath upon you?
VI. Now since your antecedents are such, I should be glad if you too will
tell me of my crimes, that I may either amend my life or be put to shame. My
greatest wish is that I may be found free from wrong altogether; but if this may
not be, at least to be converted from my crime; for this is the second best
portion of the prudent. For if like the just man I do not become my own accuser in
the first instance,(<greek>g</greek>) yet at any rate I gladly receive healing
from another. "Your City, you say to me, is a little one, or rather is no city
at all, but only a village, arid, without beauty, and with few inhabitants."
But, my good friend, this is my misfortune, rather than my fault;--if indeed it be
a misfortune; and if it is against my will, I am to be pitied for my bad luck,
if I may put it so; but if it be willingly, I am a philosopher. Which of these
is a crime? Would anyone abuse a dolphin for not being a land animal, or an ox
because it is not aquatic, or a lamprey because it is amphibious? But we, you
go on, have walls and theatres and racecourses and palaces, and beautiful great
Porticoes, and that marvellous work the underground and overhead
river,(<greek>d</greek>) and the splendid and admired column,(<greek>e</greek>) and the
crowded marketplace and a restless people, and a famous senate of highborn men.
VII. Why do you not also mention the convenience of the site, and what I may
call the contest between land and sea as to which owns the City, and which
adorns our Royal City with all their good things? This then is our crime, that
while you are great and splendid, we are small and come from a small place? Many
others do you this wrong, indeed all those whom you excel; and must we die
because we have not reared a city, nor built walls around it, nor can boast of our
racecourse, or our stadia, and pack of hounds, and all the follies that are
connected with these things; nor have to boast of the beauty and splendour of our
baths, and the costliness of their marbles and pictures and golden embroideries
of all sorts of species, almost rivalling nature? Nor have we yet rounded off
the sea for ourselves, or mingled the seasons, as of course you, the new
Creators, have done, that we may live in what is at once the pleasantest and the
safest way. Add if you like other charges, you who say, The silver is mine and the
gold is mine,(<greek>a</greek>) those words of God. We neither think much of
riches, on which, if they increase, our Law forbids us to set our hearts, nor do
we count up yearly and daily revenues; nor do we rival one another in loading
our tables with enchantments for our senseless belly. For neither do we highly
esteem those things which after we have swallowed them are all of the same worth,
or rather I should say worthlessness, and are rejected. But we live so simply
and from hand to mouth, as to differ but little from beasts whose sustenance is
without apparatus and inartificial.
VIII. Do you also find fault with the raggedness of my dress, and the want
of elegance in the disposition of my face? for these are the points upon which I
see that some persons who are very insignificant pride themselves. Will you
leave my head alone, and not jeer at it, as the children did at Elissaeus? What
followed I will not mention. And will you leave out of your allegations my want
of education, and what seems to you the roughness and rusticity of my
elocution? And where will you put the fact that I am not full of small talk, nor a
jester popular with company, nor great hunter of the marketplace, nor given to
chatter and gossip with any chance people upon all sorts of subjects, so as to make
even conversation grievous; nor a frequenter of Zeuxippus, that new
Jerusalem;(<greek>b</greek>) nor one who strolls from house to house flattering and
stuffing himself; but for the most part staying at home, of low spirits and with a
melancholy cast of countenance, quietly associating with myself, the genuine
critic of my actions; and perhaps worthy of imprisonment for my uselessness? How is
it that you pardon me for all this, and do not blame me for it? How sweet and
kind you are.
IX. But I am so old fashioned and such a philosopher as to believe that one
heaven is common to all; and that so is the revolution of the sun and the moon,
and the order and arrangement of the stars; and that all have in Common an
equal share and profit in day and night, and also change of seasons, rains,
fruits, and quickening power of the air; and that the flowing rivers are a common and
abundant wealth to all; and that one and the same is the Earth, the mother and
the tomb, from which we were taken, and to which we shall return, none having
a greater share than another. And further, above this, we have in common
reason, the Law, the Prophets, the very Sufferings of Christ, by which we were all
without exception created anew, who partake of the same Adam, and were led astray
by the serpent and slain by sin, and are saved by the heavenly Adam and
brought back by the tree of shame to the tree of life from whence we had fallen.
X. I was deceived too by the Ramah of Samuel, that little fatherland of the
great man; which was no dishonour to the Prophet, for it drew its honour not so
much from itself as from him; nor was he hindered on its account from being
given to God before his birth, or from uttering oracles, and foreseeing the
future; nor only so, but also anointing Kings and Priests, and judging the men of
illustrious cities. I heard also of Saul, how while seeking his father's asses he
found a kingdom. And even David himself was taken from the sheepfolds to be
the shepherd of Israel. What of Amos? Was he not, while a goatherd and scraper of
sycamore fruit entrusted with the gifts of prophecy? How is it that I have
passed over Joseph, who was both a slave and the giver of corn to Egypt, and the
father of many myriads who were promised before to Abraham? Aye and I was
deceived by the Carmel of Elias, who received the car of fire; and by the sheepskin
of Elissaeus that had more power than a silken web or than gold forced into
garments. I was deceived by the desert of John, which held the greatest among them
that are born of women, with that clothing, that food, that girdle, which we
know. And I ventured even beyond these, and found God Himself the Patron of my
rusticity. I will range myself with Bethlehem, and will share the ignominy of the
Manger; for since you refuse on this account honour to God, it is no wonder
that on the same account you despise His herald also. And I will bring up to you
the Fishermen, and the poor to whom the Gospel is preached, as preferred before
many rich. Will you ever leave off priding yourselves upon your cities? Will
you ever revere that wilderness which you abominate and despise? I do not yet
say that gold has its birthplace in sand; nor that translucent stones are the
product and gifts of rocks; for if to these I should oppose all that is
dishonourable in cities perhaps it would be to no good end that I should use my freedom
of speech.
XI. But perhaps some one who is very circumscribed and carnally minded will
say, "But our herald is a stranger and a foreigner." What of the Apostles? Were
not they strangers to the many nations and cities among whom they were
divided, that the Gospel might have free course everywhere, that nothing might miss
the illumination of the Threefold Light, or be unenlightened by the Truth; but
that the night of ignorance might be dissolved for those who sat in darkness and
the shadow of death? You have heard the words of Paul, "that we might go the
Gentiles, and they to the Circumcision."(<greek>a</greek>) Be it that Judaea is
Peter's home; what has Paul in common with the Gentiles, Luke with Achaia,
Andrew with Epirus, John with Ephesus, Thomas with India, Marc with Italy, or the
rest, not to go into particulars, with those to whom they went? So that you must
either blame them or excuse me, or else prove that you, the ambassadors of the
true Gospel, are being insulted by trifling. But since I have argued with you
in a petty way about these matters, I will now proceed to take a larger and more
philosophic view of them.
XII. My friend, every one that is of high mind has one Country, the Heavenly
Jerusalem, in which we store up our Citizenship. All have one family--if you
look at what is here below the dust--or if you look higher, that In-breathing of
which we are partakers, and which we were bidden to keep, and with which I
must stand before my Judge to give an account of my heavenly nobility, and of the
Divine Image. Everyone then is noble who has guarded this through virtue and
consent to his Archetype. On the other hand, everyone is ignoble who has mingled
with evil, and put upon himself another form, that of the serpent. And these
earthly countries and families are the playthings of this our temporary life and
scene. For our country is whatever each may have first occupied, either as
tyrant, or in misfortune; and in this we are all alike strangers and pilgrims,
however much we may play with names. And the family is accounted noble which is
either rich from old days, or is recently raised; and of ignoble birth that which
is of poor parents, either owing to misfortune or to want of ambition. For how
can a nobility be given from above which is at one time beginning and at
another coming to an end; and which is not given to some, but is bestowed on others
by letters patent? Such is my mind on this matter. Therefore I leave it to you
to pride yourself on tombs or in myths, and I endeavour as far as I can, to
purify myself from deceits, that I may keep if possible my nobility, or else may
recover it.
XIII. It is thus then and for these reasons that I, who am small and of a
country without repute, have come upon you, and that not of my own accord, nor
self-sent, like many of those who now seize upon the chief places; but because I
was invited, and compelled, and have followed the scruples of my conscience and
the Call of the Spirit. If it be otherwise, may I continue to fight here to no
purpose, and deliver no one from his error, but may they obtain their desire
who seek the barrenness of my soul, if I lie. But since I am come, and perchance
with no contemptible power (if I may boast myself a little of my folly), which
of those who are insatiable have I copied, what have I emulated of
opportunism, although I have such examples, even apart from which it is hard and rare not
to be bad? Concerning what churches or property have I disputed with you;
though you have more than enough of both, and the others too little? What imperial
edict have we rejected and emulated? What rulers have we fawned upon against
you? Whose boldness have we denounced? And what has been done on the other side
against me? "Lord, lay not this sin to their charge," even then I said, for I
remembered in season the words of Stephen,(<greek>a</greek>) and so I pray now.
Being reviled, we bless: being blasphemed we retreat.(<greek>b</greek>)
XIV. And if I am doing wrong in this, that when tyrannized over I endure it,
forgive me this wrong; I have borne to be tyrannized over by others too; and I
am thankful that my moderation has brought upon me the charge of folly. For I
reckon thus, using considerations altogether higher than any of yours; what a
mere fraction are these trials of the spittings and blows which Christ, for Whom
and by Whose aid we encounter these dangers, endured. I do not count them,
taken altogether, worth the one crown of thorns which robbed our conqueror of his
crown, for whose sake also I learn that I am crowned for the hardness of life.
I do not reckon them worth the one reed by which the rotten empire was
destroyed; of the gall alone, the vinegar alone, by which we were cured of the bitter
taste; of the gentleness alone which He shewed in His Passion. Was He betrayed
with a kiss? He reproves with a kiss, but smites not. Is he suddenly arrested?
He reproaches indeed, but follows; and if through zeal thou cuttest off the ear
of Malchus with the sword, He will be angry, and will restore it. And if one
flee in a linen sheet,(<greek>a</greek>) he will defend him. And if you ask for
the fire of Sodom upon his captors, he will not pour it forth; and if he take a
thief hanging upon the cross for his crime he will bring him into Paradise
through His Goodness. Let all the acts of one that loves men be loving, as were all
the sufferings of Christ, to which we could add nothing greater than, when God
even died for us, to refuse on our part to forgive even the smallest wrongs of
our fellowmen.
XV. Moreover this also I reckoned and still reckon with myself; and do you
see if it is not quite correct. I have often discussed it with you before. These
men have the houses, but we the Dweller in the house; they the Temples, we the
God; and besides it is ours to be living temples of the Living God, lively
sacrifices, reasonable burnt-offerings, perfect sacrifices, yea, gods through the
adoration of the Trinity. They have the people, we the Angels; they rash
boldness, we faith; they threatenings, we prayer; they smiting, we endurance; they
gold and silver, we the pure word. "Thou hast built for thyself a wide house and
large chambers (recognize the words of Scripture), a house celled and pierced
with windows."(<greek>b</greek>) But not yet is this loftier than my faith, and
than the heavens to which I am being borne onwards. Is mine a little flock? But
it is not being carried over a precipice. Is mine a narrow fold? But it is
unapproachable by wolves; it cannot be entered by a robber, nor climbed by thieves
and strangers. I shall yet see it, I know well, wider. And many of those who
are now wolves, I must reckon among my sheep, and perhaps even amongst the
shepherds. This is the glad tidings brought me by the Good Shepherd, for Whose sake
I lay down my life for the sheep. I fear not for the little flock; for it is
seen at a glance. I know my sheep and am known of mine. Such are they that know
God and are known of God. My sheep hear my voice, which I have heard from the
oracles of God, which I have been taught by the Holy Fathers, which I have taught
alike on all occasions, not conforming myself to the fortune, and which I will
never cease to teach; in which I was born, and in which I will depart.
XVI. These I call by name (for they are not nameless like the stars which
are numbered and have names),(<greek>a</greek>) and they follow me, for I rear
them up beside the waters of rest; and they follow every such shepherd, whose
voice they love to hear, as you see; but a stranger they will not follow, but will
flee from him, because they have a habit of distinguishing the voice of their
own from that of strangers. They will flee from Valentinus(<greek>b</greek>)
with his division of one into two, refusing to believe that the Creator is other
than the Good. They will flee from Depth and Silence, and the mythical Aeons,
that are verily worthy of Depth and Silence. They will flee from
Marcion's(<greek>g</greek>) god, compounded of elements and numbers; from
Montanus'(<greek>d</greek>) evil and feminine spirit; from the matter and darkness of
Manes;(<greek>e</greek>) from Novatus'(<greek>z</greek>) boasting and wordy assumption of
purity; from the analysis and confusion of Sabellius,(<greek>h</greek>) and if I
may use the expression, his absorption, contracting the Three into One, instead
of defining the One in Three Personalities; from the difference of natures
taught by Arius(<greek>a</greek>) and his followers, and their new Judaism,
confining the Godhead to the Unbegotten; from Photinus(<greek>b</greek>) earthly
Christ, who took his beginning from Mary. But they worship the Father and the Son
and the Holy Ghost, One Godhead; God the Father, God the Son and (do not be
angry) God the Holy Ghost, One Nature in Three Personalities, intellectual,
perfect, Self-existent, numerically separate, but not separate in Godhead.
XVII. These words let everyone who threatens me to-day concede to me; the
rest let whoever will claim. The Father will not endure to be deprived of the
Son, nor the Son of the Holy Ghost. Yet that must happen if They are confined to
time, and are created Beings ... for that which is created is not God. Neither
will I bear to be deprived of my consecration; One Lord, One Faith, One Baptism.
If this be cancelled, from whom shall I get a second? What say you, you who
destroy Baptism or repeat it? Can a man be spiritual without the Spirit? Has he a
share in the Spirit who does not honour the Spirit? Can he honour Him who is
baptized into a creature and a fellow-servant? It is not so; it is not so; for
all your talk. I will not play Thee false, O Unoriginate Father, or Thee O
Only-begotten Word, or Thee O Holy Ghost. I know Whom I have confessed, and whom I
have renounced, and to Whom I have joined myself. I will not allow myself, after
having been taught the words of the faithful, to learn also those of the
unfaithful; to confess the truth, and then range myself with falsehood; to come down
for consecration and to go back even less hallowed; having been baptised that
I might live, to be killed by the water, like infants who die in the very
birthpangs, and receive death simultaneously with birth. Why make me at once blessed
and wretched, newly enlightened and unenlightened, Divine and godless, that I
may make shipwreck even of the hope of regeneration? A few words will suffice.
Remember your confession. Into what were you baptised? The Father? Good but
Jewish still. The Son? ... good ... but not yet perfect. The Holy Ghost? ... Very
good ... this is perfect. Now was it into these simply, or some common name of
Them? The latter. And what was the common Name? Why, God. In this common Name
believe, and ride on prosperously and reign,(<greek>a</greek>) and pass on from
hence into the Bliss of Heaven. And that is, as I think, the more distinct
apprehension of These; to which may we all come, in the same Christ our God, to
Whom be the glory and the might, with the Unoriginate Father, and the Lifegiving
Spirit, now and for ever and to ages of ages. Amen.
ORATION XXXIV.
ON THE ARRIVAL OF THE EGYPTIANS.
THIS Oration was preached at Constantinople in 380, under the following
circumstances:
Peter, Patriarch of Alexandria, had sent a mission of five of his Suffragans
to consecrate the impostor Maximus to the Throne occupied by Gregory. This had
led to much trouble, but in the end the intruder had been expelled and
banished. Shortly afterwards an Egyptian fleet, probably the regular corn ships, had
arrived at Constantinople, apparently on the day before a Festival. The crews of
the ships, landing next day to go to Church, passed by the numerous Churches
held by the Arians, and betook themselves to the little Anastasia. S. Gregory
felt himself moved to congratulate them specially on such an act, after what had
recently passed, and accordingly pronounced the following discourse.
I. I WILL address myself as is right to those who have come from Egypt; for
they have come here eagerly, having overcome illwill by zeal, from that Egypt
which is enriched by the River, raining out of the earth, and like the sea in
its season,--if I too may follow in my small measure those who have so eloquently
spoken of these matters; and which is also enriched by Christ my Lord, Who
once was a fugitive into Egypt, and now is supplied by Egypt; the first, when He
fled from Herod's massacre of the children;(<greek>b</greek>) and now by the
love of the fathers for their children, by Christ the new Food of those who hunger
after good;(<greek>g</greek>) the greatest alms of corn of which history
speaks and men believe; the Bread which came down from heaven and giveth life to the
world, that life which is indestructible and indissoluble, concerning Whom I
now seem to hear the Father saying, Out of Egypt have I called My
Son.(<greek>d</greek>)
II. For from you hath sounded forth the Word to all men; healthfully
believed and preached; and you are the best bringers of fruit of all men, specially of
those who now hold the right faith, as far as I know, who am not only a lover
of such food, but also its distributor, and not at home only but also abroad.
For you indeed supply bodily food to peoples and cities so far as your
lovingkindness reaches; and you supply spiritual food also, not to a particular people,
nor to this or that city, circumscribed by narrow boundaries, though its people
may think it very illustrious, but to almost the whole world. And you bring
the remedy not for famine of bread or thirst of water,(<greek>a</greek>) which is
no very terrible famine--and to avoid it is easy; but to a famine of hearing
the Word of the Lord, which it is most miserable to suffer, and a most laborious
matter to cure at the present time, because iniquity hath
abounded,(<greek>b</greek>) and scarce anywhere do I find its genuine healers.
III. Such was Joseph your Superintendent of corn measures, whom I may call
ours also; who by his surpassing wisdom was able both to foresee the famine and
to cure it by decrees of government, healing the ill-favoured and starving kine
by means of the fair and fat.(<greek>g</greek>) And indeed you may understand
by Joseph which you will, either the great lover and creator and namesake of
immortality or his successor in throne and word and hoary hair, our new
Peter,(<greek>d</greek>) not inferior in virtue or fame to him by whom the middle course
was destroyed and crushed, though it still wriggles a little weakly, like the
tail of a snake after it is cut off; the one of whom, after having departed
this life in a good old age after many conflicts and wrestlings, looks upon us
from above, I well know, and reaches a hand to those who are labouring for the
right: and this the more, in proportion as he is freed from his bonds; and the
other is hastening to the same end or dissolution of life, and is already drawing
near the dwellers in heaven, but is still so far in the flesh as is needed to
give the last aids to the Word, and to take his journey with richer provision.
IV. Of these great men and doctors and soldiers of the truth and victors,
you are the nurslings and offspring; of these neither times nor tyrants, reason
nor envy, nor fear, nor accuser, nor slanderer, whether waging open war against
them, or plotting secretly; nor any who appeared to be of our side, nor any
stranger, nor gold--that hidden tyrant, through which now almost everything is
turned upside down and made to depend on the hazard of a die; nor flatteries nor
threats, nor long and distant exiles (for they only could not be affected by
confiscation, because of their great riches, which were--to possess nothing) nor
anything else, whether absent or present or expected, could induce to take the
worse part, and to be anywise traitor to the Trinity, or to suffer loss of the
Godhead. On the contrary indeed, they grew strong by dangers, and became more
zealous for true religion. For to suffer thus for Christ adds to one's love, and
is as it were an earnest to high-souled men of further conflicts. These, O
Egypt, are thy present tales and wonders.
V. Once thou didst praise me thy Mendesian Goats, and thy Memphite Apis, a
fatted and fleshy calf, and the rites of Isis, and the mutilations of Osiris,
and thy venerable Serapis, a log that was honoured by myths and ages and the
madness of its worshippers, as some unknown and heavenly matter, however it may
have been aided by falsehood; and things yet more shameful than these, multiform
images of monstrous beasts and creeping things, all of which Christ and the
heralds of Christ have conquered, both the others who have been illustrious in
their own times, and also the Fathers whom I have named just now; by whom, O
admirable country, thou art more famous today than all others put together, whether
in ancient or modern history.
VI. Wherefore I embrace and salute thee, O noblest of peoples and most
Christian, and of warmest piety, and worthy of thy leaders; for I can find nothing
greater to say of thee than this, nor anything by which better to welcome thee.
And I greet thee, to a small extent with my tongue, but very heartily with the
movements of my affections.(<greek>a</greek>) O my people, for I call you mine,
as of one mind and one faith, instructed by the same Fathers, and adoring the
same Trinity. My people, for mine thou art, though it seem not so to those who
envy me. And that they who are in this case may be the deeper wounded, see, I
give the right hand of fellowship before so many witnesses, seen and unseen. And
I put away the old calumny by this new act of kindness. O my people, for mine
thou art, though in saying so I, who am least of all men, am claiming for
myself that which is greatest. For such is the grace of the Spirit that it makes of
equal honour those who are of one mind. O my people, for mine thou art, though
it be afar, because we are divinely joined together,(<greek>b</greek>) and in a
manner wholly different to the unions of carnal people; for bodies are united
in place, but souls are fitted together by the Spirit. O my people, who didst
formerly study how to suffer for Christ, but now if thou wilt hearken unto me,
wilt study not to do aught, but to consider the power of doing to be a
sufficient gain, and to deem that thou art offering a sacrifice to Christ, as in those
days of thy endurance so in these of meekness. O people to whom the Lord hath
prepared Himself to do good, as to do evil to thine enemies.(<greek>a</greek>) O
people, whom the Lord hath chosen to Himself out of all peoples; O people who
art graven upon the hands of the Lord, to whom saith the Lord, Thou art My Will;
and, Thy gates are carved work, and all the rest that is said to them that are
being saved. O people;--nay, marvel not at my insatiability that I repeat your
name so often; for I delight in this continual naming of you, like those who
can never have enough of their enjoyment of certain spectacles or sounds.
VII. But, O people of God and mine, beautiful also was your yesterday's
assembly, which you held upon the sea, and pleasant, if any sight ever was, to the
eyes, when I saw the sea like a forest, and hidden by a cloud made with hands,
and the beauty and speed of your ships, as though ordered for a procession, and
the slight breeze astern, as though purposely escorting you, and wafting to
the City your city of the Sea. Yet the present assembly which we now behold is
more beautiful and more magnificent. For you have not hastened to mingle with the
larger number, nor have you reckoned religion by numbers, nor endured to be a
mere unorganized rabble, rather than a people purified by the Word of God; but
having, as is right, rendered to Caesar the things that are Caesar's, ye have
offered besides to God the things that are God's; to the former Custom, to the
latter Fear; and after feeding the people with your cargoes, you yourselves have
come to be fed by us. For we also distribute corn, and our distribution is
perhaps not worth less than yours. Come eat of my Bread and drink of the Wine
which I have mingled for you.(<greek>b</greek>) I join with Wisdom in bidding you
to my table. For I commend your good feeling, and I hasten to meet your ready
mind, because ye came to us as to your own harbour, running to your like; and ye
valued the kindred Faith, and thought it monstrous that, while they who insult
higher things are in harmony with each other and think alike, and think to make
good each man's individual falsehood by their common conspiracy, like ropes
which get strength from being twisted together; yet you should not meet nor
combine with those who are of the same mind, with whom it is more reasonable that
you should associate, for we gather in the Godhead also. And that you may see
that not in vain have you come to us, and that you have not brought up in a port
among strangers and foreigners, but amongst your own people, and have been well
guided by the Holy Ghost; we will discourse to you briefly concerning God; and
do you recognize your own, like those who distinguish their kindred by the
ensigns of their arms.
VIII. I find two highest differences in things that exist, viz.:--Rule, and
Service; not such as among us either tyranny has cut or poverty has severed,
but which nature has distinguished, if any like to use this word. For That which
is First is also above nature. Of these the former is creative, and
originating, and unchangeable; but the other is created, and subject and changing; or to
speak yet more plainly, the one is above time, and the other subject to time.
The Former is called God, and subsists in Three Greatest, namely, the Cause, the
Creator, and the Perfecter; I mean the Father, the Son, and the Holy Ghost, who
are neither so separated from one another as to be divided in nature, nor so
contracted as to be circumscribed by a single person; the one alternative being
that of the Arian madness, the other that of the Sabellian heresy; but they are
on the one hand more single than what is altogether divided, and on the other
more abundant than what is altogether singular. The other division is with us,
and is called Creation, though one may be exalted above another according to
the proportion of their nearness to God.
IX. This being so, if any be on the Lord's side let him come with
us,(<greek>a</greek>) and let us adore the One Godhead in the Three; not ascribing any
name of humiliation to the unapproachable Glory, but having the exaltations of
the Triune God continually in our mouth.(<greek>b</greek>) For since we cannot
properly describe even the greatness of Its Nature, on account of Its infinity
and undefinableness, how can we assert of It humiliation? But if any one be
estranged from God, and therefore divideth the One Supreme Substance into an
inequality of Natures, it were marvellous if such an one were not Cut in sunder by the
sword, and his portion appointed with the unbelievers,(<greek>g</greek>)
reaping any evil fruit of his evil thought both now and hereafter.
X. What must we say of the Father, Whom by common consent all who have been
preoccupied with natural conceptions share, although He hath endured the
beginnings of dishonour, having been first divided by ancient innovation into the
Good and the Creator. And of the Son and of the Holy Ghost, see how simply and
concisely we shall discourse. If any one could say of Either that He was mutable
or subject to change; or that either in time, or place, or power, or energy He
could be measured; or that He was not naturally good, or not Self-moved, or not
a free agent, or a Minister, or a Hymnsinger; or that He feared, or was a
recipient of freedom, or was not counted with God; let him prove this and we will
acquiesce, and will be glorified by the Majesty of our Fellow Servants, though we
lose our God. But if all that the Father has belongs likewise to the Son,
except Causality; and all that is the Son's belongs also to the Spirit, except His
Sonship, and whatsoever is spoken of Him as to Incarnation for me a man, and
for my salvation, that, taking of mine, He may impart His own by this new
commingling; then cease your babbling, though so late, O ye sophists of vain talk that
falls at once to the ground; for why will ye die O House of
Israel?(<greek>a</greek>)--if I may mourn for you in the words of Scripture.
XI. For my part I revere also the Titles of the Word, which are so many, and
so high and great, which even the demons respect. And I revere also the Equal
Rank of the Holy Ghost; and I fear the threat pronounced against those who
blaspheme Him. And blasphemy is not the reckoning Him God, but the severing Him
from the Godhead. And here you must remark that That which is blasphemed is Lord,
and That which is avenged is the Holy Ghost, evidently as Lord. I cannot bear
to be unenlightened after my Enlightenment, by marking with a different stamp
any of the Three into Whom I was baptized; and thus to be indeed buried in the
water, and initiated not into Regeneration, but into death.
XII. I dare to utter something, O Trinity; and may pardon be granted to my
folly, for the risk is to my soul. I too am an Image of God, of the Heavenly
Glory, though I be placed on earth. I cannot believe that I am saved by one who is
my equal. If the Holy Ghost is not God, let Him first be made God, and then
let Him deify me His equal. But now what deceit this is on the part of grace, or
rather of the givers of grace, to believe in God and to come away godless; by
one set of questions and confessions leading to another set of conclusions. Alas
for this fair fame, if after the Layer I am blackened, if I am to see those
who are not yet cleansed brighter than myself; if I am cheated by the heresy of
my Baptizer; if I seek for the stronger Spirit and find Him not. Give me a
second Font before you think evil of the first. Why do you grudge me a complete
regeneration? Why do you make me, who am the Temple of the Holy Ghost as of God,
the habitation of a creature? Why do you honour part of what belongs to me, and
dishonour part, judging falsely of the Godhead, to cut me off from the Gift, or
rather to cut me in two by the gift? Either honour the Whole, or dishonour the
Whole, O new Theologian, that, if you are wicked, you may at any rate be
consistent with yourself, and not judge unequally of an equal nature.
XIII. To sum up my discourse:--Glorify Him with the Cherubim, who unite the
Three Holies into One Lord,(<greek>a</greek>) and so far indicate the Primal
Substance as their wings open to the diligent. With David be enlightened, who
said to the Light, In Thy Light shall we see Light,(<greek>b</greek>) that is, in
the Spirit we shall see the Son; and what can be of further reaching ray? With
John thunder, sounding forth nothing that is low or earthly concerning God, but
what is high and heavenly, Who is in the beginning, and is with God, and is
God the Word,(<greek>g</greek>) and true God of the true Father, and not a good
fellow-servant honoured only with the title of Son; and the Other Comforter
(other, that is, from the Speaker, Who was the Word of God). And when you read, I
and the Father are One,(<greek>d</greek>) keep before your eyes the Unity of
Substance; but when you see, "We will come to him, and make Our abode with
him,"(<greek>e</greek>) remember the distinction of Persons; and when you see the
Names, Father, Son, and Holy Ghost, think of the Three Personalities.
XIV. With Luke be inspired as you study the Acts of the Apostles. Why do you
range yourself with Ananias and Sapphira, those vain embezzlers (if indeed the
theft of one's own property be a vain thing) and that by appropriating, not
silver nor any other cheap and worthless thing, like a wedge of
gold,(<greek>z</greek>) or a didrachma, as did of old a rapacious soldier; but stealing the
Godhead Itself, and lying, not to men but to God, as you have heard. What? Will you
not reverence even the authority of the Spirit Who breathes upon whom, and
when, and as He wills? He comes upon Cornelius and his companions before Baptism,
to others after Baptism, by the hands of the Apostles; so that from both sides,
both from the fact that He comes in the guise of a Master and not of a
Servant, and from the fact of His being sought to make perfect, the Godhead of the
Spirit is testified.
XV. Speak of God with Paul, who was caught up to the third
Heaven,(<greek>a</greek>) and who sometimes counts up the Three Persons, and that in varied
order, not keeping the same order, but reckoning one and the same Person now first,
now second, now third; and for what purpose? Why, to shew the equality of the
Nature. And sometimes he mentions Three, sometimes Two or One, became That
which is not mentioned is included. And sometimes he attributes the operation of
God to the Spirit, as in no respect different from Him, and sometimes instead of
the Spirit he brings in Christ; and at times he separates the Persons saying,
"One God, of whom are all things, and we in Him; and one Lord Jesus Christ, by
whom are all things, and we by Him;"(<greek>b</greek>) at other times he brings
together the one Godhead, "For of Him and through Him and in Him are all
things;"(<greek>g</greek>) that is, through the Holy Ghost, as is shown by many
places in Scripture. To Him be glory for ever and ever. Amen.
ORATION XXXVII.
ON THE WORDS OF THE GOSPEL, "WHEN JEsus HAD FINISHED THESE SAYINGS," ETC.--S.
MATT. XIX. I.
I. Jesus Who Chose The Fishermen, Himself also useth a net, and changeth
place for place. Why? Not only that He may gain more of those who love God by His
visitation; but also, as it seems to me, that He may hallow more places. To the
Jews He becomes as a Jew that He may gain the Jews; to them that are under the
Law as under the Law, that He may redeem them that are under the Law; to the
weak as weak, that He may save the weak. He is made all things to all men that
He may gain all. Why do I say, All things to all men? For even that which Paul
could not endure to say of himself I find that the Saviour suffered. For He is
made not only a Jew, and not only doth He take to Himself all monstrous and vile
names, but even that which is most monstrous of all, even very sin and very
curse; not that He it such, but He is called so. For how can He be sin, Who
setteth us free from sin; and how can He be a curse, Who redeemeth us from the curse
of the Law?(<greek>d</greek>) But it is in order that He may carry His display
of humility even to this extent, and form us to that humility which is the
producer of exaltation. As I said then, He is made a Fisherman; He condescendeth
to all; He casteth the net; He endureth all things, that He may draw up the fish
from the depths, that is, Man who is swimming in the unsettled and bitter
waves of life.
II. Therefore now also, when He had finished these sayings He departed from
Galilee and came into the coasts of Judea beyond Jordan; He dwelleth well in
Galilee, in order that the people which sat in darkness may see great
Light.(<greek>a</greek>) He removeth to Judea in order that He may persuade people to rise
up from the Letter and to follow the Spirit. He teacheth, now on a mountain;
now He discourseth on a plain; now He passeth over into a ship; now He rebuketh
the surges. And perhaps He goes to sleep, in order that He may bless sleep
also; perhaps He is tired that He may hallow weariness also; perhaps He weeps that
He may make tears blessed. He removeth from place to place, Who is not
contained in any place; the timeless, the bodiless, the uncircumscript, the same Who
was and is; Who was both above time, and came under time, and was invisible and
is seen. He was in the beginning and was with God, and was
God.(<greek>b</greek>) The word Was occurs the third time to be confirmed by number. What He was He
laid aside; what He was not He assumed; not that He became two, but He deigned
to be One made out of the two. For both are God, that which assumed, and that
which was assumed; two Natures meeting in One, not two Sons (let us not give a
false account of the blending). He who is such and so great--but what has
befallen me? I have fallen into human language. For how can So Great be said of the
Absolute, and how can That which is without quantity be called Such? But pardon
the word, for I am speaking of the greatest things with a limited instrument.
And That great and long-suffering and formless and bodiless Nature will endure
this, namely, my words as if of a body, and weaker than the truth. For if He
condescended to Flesh, He will also endure such language.
III. And great multitudes followed Him, and He healed them there, where the
multitude was greater. If He had abode upon His own eminence, if He had not
condescended to infirmity, if He had remained what He was, keeping Himself
unapproachable and incomprehensible, a few perhaps would have followed Him--perhaps
not even a few, possibly only Moses--and He only so far as to see with difficulty
the Back Parts of God.(<greek>a</greek>) For He penetrated the cloud, either
being placed outside the weight of the body or being withdrawn from his senses;
for how could he have gazed upon the subtlety, or the in-corporeity, or I know
not how one should call it, of God, being incorporate and using material eyes?
But inasmuch as He strips Himself for us, inasmuch as He comes down (and speak
of an exinanition, as it were, a laying aside and a diminution of His glory),
He becomes by this comprehensible.
IV. And pardon me meanwhile that I again suffer a human affection. I am
filled with indignation and grief for my Christ (and would that you might
sympathize with me) when I see my Christ dishonoured on this account on which He most
merited honour. He on this account to be dishonoured, tell me, that for you He
was humble? Is He therefore a Creature, because He careth for the creature? Is He
therefore subject to time, because He watches over those who are subject to
time Nay, He beareth all things, He endureth all things.(<greek>b</greek>) And
what marvel? He put up with blows, He bore spittings, He tasted gall for my
taste. And even now He bears to be stoned, not only by those who deal despite-fully
with Him, but also by ourselves who seem to reverence Him. For to use corporeal
names when discoursing of the incorporeal is perhaps the part of those who
deal despitefully and stone Him; but pardon, I say again to our infirmity, for I
do not willingly stone Him; but having no other words to use, we use what we
have. Thou art called the Word, and Thou art above Word; Thou art above Light, yet
art named Light; Thou art called Fire not as perceptible to sense, but because
Thou purgest light and worthless matter; a Sword, because Thou severest the
worse from the better; a Fan, because Thou purgest the threshing-floor, and
blowest away all that is light and windy, and layest up in the garner above all that
is weighty and full; an Axe, because Thou cuttest down the worthless fig-tree,
after long patience, because Thou cuttest away the roots of wickedness; the
Door, because Thou bringest in; the Way, because we go straight; the Sheep,
because Thou art the Sacrifice; the High Priest, because Thou offerest the Body the
Son, because Thou art of the Father. Again I stir men's tongues; again some men
rave against Christ, or rather against me, who have been deemed worthy to be a
herald of the Word. I am like John, The Voice of one crying in the
wilderness(<greek>a</greek>)--a wilderness that once was dry, but now is only too populous.
V. But, as I was saying, to return to my argument; for this reason great
multitudes followed Him, because He condescended to our infirmities. What next?
The Pharisees also, it says, came unto Him, tempting Him, and saying unto Him, is
it lawful for a man to put away his wife for every cause? Again the Pharisees
tempt Him; again they who read the Law do not know the Law; again they who are
expounders of the Law need others to teach them. It was not enough that
Sadducees should tempt Him concerning the Resurrection, and Lawyers question Him about
perfection, and the Herodians about the poll-tax, and others about authority;
but some one must also ask about Marriage at Him who cannot be tempted, the
Creator of wedlock, Him who from the First Cause made this whole race of mankind.
And He answered and said unto them, Have ye not read that He which made them at
the beginning made them male and female? He knoweth how to solve some of their
questions and to bridle others. When He is asked, By what authority doest thou
these things? He Himself, because of the utter ignorance of those who asked
Him, replies with another question; The baptism of John, was it from Heaven or of
men? He on both sides entangles His questioners, so that we also are able,
following the example of Christ, sometimes to check those who argue with us
over-officiously, and with still more absurd questions to solve the absurdity of
their questions. For we too are wise in vanity at times, if I may boast of the
things of folly. But when He sees a question that calls for reasoning, then He does
not deem His questioners unworthy of prudent answers.
VI. The question which you have put seems to me to do honour to chastity,
and to demand a kind reply. Chastity, in respect of which I see that the majority
of men are ill-disposed, and that their laws are unequal and irregular. For
what was the reason why they restrained the woman, but indulged the man, and that
a woman who practises evil against her husband's bed is an adulteress, and the
penalties of the law for this are very severe; but if the husband commits
fornication against his wife, he has no account to give? I do not accept this
legislation; I do not approve this custom. They who made the Law were men, and
therefore their legislation is hard on women, since they have placed children also
under the authority of their fathers, while leaving the weaker sex uncared for.
God doth not so; but saith Honour thy father and thy mother, which is the first
commandment with promise; that it may be well with thee; and, He that curseth
father or mother, let him die the death. Similarly He gave honour to good and
punishment to evil. And, The blessing of a father strengtheneth the houses of
children, but the curse of a mother uprooteth the foundations.(<greek>a</greek>)
See the equality of the legislation. There is one Maker of man and woman; one
debt is owed by children to both their parents.
VII. How then dost thou demand Chastity, while thou dost not thyself observe
it? How dost thou demand that which thou dost not give? How, though thou art
equally a body, dost thou legislate unequally? If thou enquire into the
worse--The Woman Sinned, and so did Adam.(<greek>b</greek>) The serpent deceived them
both; and one was not found to be the stronger and the other the weaker. But
dost thou consider the better? Christ saves both by His Passion. Was He made flesh
for the Man? So He was also for the woman. Did He die for the Man? The Woman
also is saved by His death. He is called of the seed of David;(<greek>g</greek>)
and so perhaps you think the Man is honoured; but He is born of a Virgin, and
this is on the Woman's side. They two, He says, shall be one Flesh; so let the
one flesh have equal honour." And Paul legislates for chastity by His example.
How, and in what way? This Sacrament is great, he says, But I speak concerning
Christ and the Church.(<greek>d</greek>) It is well for the wife to reverence
Christ through her husband: and it is well for the husband not to dishonor the
Church through his wife. Let the wife, he says, see that she reverence her
husband, for so she does Christ; but also he bids the husband cherish his wife, for
so Christ does the Church.(<greek>e</greek>) Let us, then, give further
consideration to this saying.
VIII. Churn milk and it will be butter;(<greek>z</greek>) examine this and
perhaps you may find something more nourishing in it. For I think that the Word
here seems to deprecate second marriage. For, if there were two Christs, there
may be two husbands or two wives; but if Christ is One, one Head of the Church,
let there be also one flesh, and let a second be rejected; and if it hinder
the second what is to be said for a third? The first is law, the second is
indulgence, the third is transgression, and anything beyond this is swinish, such as
has not even many examples of its wickedness. Now the Law grants divorce for
every cause; but Christ not for every cause; but He allows only separation from
the whore; and in all other things He commands patience. He allows to put away
the fornicatress, because she corrupts the offspring; but in all other matters
let us be patient and endure; or rather be ye(<greek>a</greek>) enduring and
patient, as many as have received the yoke of matrimony. If you see lines or marks
upon her, take away her ornaments; if a hasty tongue, restrain it; if a
meretricious laugh, make it modest; if immoderate expenditure or drink, reduce it; if
unseasonable going out, shackle it; if a lofty eye, chastise it. It is
uncertain which is in danger, the separator or the separated. Let thy fountain of
water, it says, be only thine own, and let no stranger share it with
thee;(<greek>b</greek>) and, let the colt of thy favours and the stag of thy love company
with thee; do thou then take care not to be a strange river, nor to please others
better than thine own wife. But if thou be carried elsewhere, then thou makest
a law of lewdness for thy partner also. Thus saith the Saviour.
IX. But what of the Pharisees? To them this word seems harsh. Yes, for they
are also displeased at other noble words--both the older Pharisees, and the
Pharisees of the present day. For it is not only race, but disposition also that
makes a Pharisee. Thus also I reckon as an Assyrian or an Egyptian him who is
ranged among these by his character. What then say the Pharisees? If the case of
the man be so with his wife, it is not good to marry. Is it only now, O
Pharisee, that thou understandest this, It is not good to marry?(<greek>g</greek>)
Didst thou not know it before when thou sawest widowhoods, and orphanhoods, and
untimely deaths, and mourning succeeding to shouting, and funerals coming upon
weddings, and childlessness, and all the comedy or tragedy that is connected with
this? Either is most appropriate language. It is good to marry; I too admit
it, for marriage is honourable in all, and the bed undefiled.(<greek>d</greek>)
It is good for the temperate, not for those who are insatiable, and who desire
to give more than due honour to the flesh. When marriage is only marriage and
conjunction and the desire for a succession of children, marriage is honourable,
for it brings into the world more to please God. But when it kindles matter,
and surrounds us with thorns, and as it were discovers the way of vice, then I
too say, It is not good to marry.
X. Marriage is honourable; but I cannot say that it is more lofty than
virginity; for virginity were no great thing if it were not better than a good
thing. Do not however be angry, ye women that are subject to the yoke. We must obey
God rather than man. But be ye bound together, both virgins and wives, and be
one in the Lord, and each others' adornment. There would be no celibate if there
were no marriage. For whence would the virgin have passed into this life?
Marriage would not have been venerable unless it had borne virgin fruit to God and
to life. Honour thou also thy mother, of whom thou wast born. Honour thou also
her who is of a mother and is a mother.(<greek>a</greek>) A mother she is not,
but a Bride of Christ she is. The visible beauty is not hidden, but that which
is unseen is visible to God. All the glory of the King's Daughter is
within,(<greek>b</greek>) clothed with golden fringes, embroidered whether by actions or
by contemplation. And she who is under the yoke, let her also in some degree be
Christ's; and the virgin altogether Christ's. Let the one be not entirely
chained to the world,(<greek>g</greek>) and let the other not belong to the world
at all. For that which is a part to the yoked, is to the virgin all in all. Hast
thou chosen the life of Angels? Art thou ranked among the unyoked? Sink not
down to the flesh; sink not down to matter; be not wedded to matter, while
otherwise thou remainest unwedded. A lascivious eye guardeth not virginity; a
meretricious tongue mingles with the Evil One; feet that walk disorderly accuse of
disease or danger. Let the mind also be virgin; let it not rove about; let it not
wander; let it not carry in itself forms of evil things (for the form is a part
of harlotry); let it not make idols in its soul of hateful things.
XI. But He said unto them, All men cannot receive this saying, save they to
whom it is given. Do you see the sublimity of the matter? It is found to be
nearly incomprehensible. For surely it is more than carnal that that which is born
of flesh should not beget to the flesh. Surely it is Angelic that she who is
bound to flesh should live not according to flesh, but be loftier than her
nature. The flesh bound her to the world, but reason led her up to God. The flesh
weighed her down, but reason gave her wings; the flesh bound her, but desire
loosed her. With thy whole soul, O Virgin, be intent upon God (I give this same
injunction to men and to women); and do not take the same view in other respects
of what is honourable as the mass of men do; of family, of wealth, of throne, of
dynasty, of that beauty which shews itself in complexion and composition of
members, the plaything of time and disease. If thou hast poured out upon God the
whole of thy love; if thou hast not two objects of desire, both the passing and
the abiding, both the visible and the invisible, then thou hast been so
pierced by the arrow of election, and hast so learned the beauty of the Bridegroom,
that thou too canst say with the bridal drama and song, thou art sweetness and
altogether loveliness.
XII. You see how streams confined in lead pipes, through being much
compressed and carried to one point, often so far depart from the nature of water that
that which is pushed from behind will often flow constantly upwards. So if thou
confine thy desire, and be wholly joined to God, thou wilt not fall downward;
thou wilt not be dissipated; thou wilt remain entirely Christ's, until thou see
Christ thy Bridegroom. Keep thyself unapproachable, both in word and work and
life, and thought and action. From all sides the Evil One interferes with thee;
he spies thee everywhere, where he may strike, where wound thee; let him not
find anything bared and ready to his stroke. The purer he sees thee, the more he
strives to stain thee, for the stains on a shining garment are more
conspicuous. Let not eye draw eye, nor laughter, nor familiarity night, lest night bring
destruction. For that which is gradually drawn away and stolen, works a
mischief which is unperceived at the time, but yet attains to the consummation of
wickedness.
XIII. All men, He saith, cannot receive this saying, but they to whom it is
given. When you hear this, It is given, do not understand it in a heretical
fashion, and bring in differences of nature, the earthly and the spiritual and the
mixed. For there are people so evilly disposed as to think that some men are
of an utterly ruined nature, and some of a nature which is saved, and that
others are of such a disposition as their will may lead them to, either to the
better, or to the worse. For that men may have a certain aptitude, one more, another
less, I too admit; but not that this aptitude alone suffices for perfection,
but that it is reason which calls this out, that nature may proceed to action,
just as fire is produced when a flint is struck with iron. When you hear To whom
it is given, add, And it is given to those who are called and to those who
incline that way. For when you hear, Not of him that willeth, nor of him that
runneth, but of God that sheweth mercy,(<greek>a</greek>) I counsel you to think
the same. For since there are some who are so proud of their successes that they
attribute all to themselves and nothing to Him that made them and gave them
wisdom and supplied them with good; such are taught by this word that even to wish
well needs help from God; or rather that even to choose what is right is
divine and a gift of the mercy of God. For it is necessary both that we should be
our own masters and also that our salvation should be of God. This is why He
saith not of him that willeth; that is, not of him that willeth only, nor of him
that runneth only, but also of God. That sheweth mercy. Next; since to will also
is from God, he has attributed the whole to God with reason. However much you
may run, however much you may wrestle, yet you need one to give the crown.
Except the Lord build the house, they laboured in vain that built it: Except the
Lord keep the city, in vain they watched that keep it.(<greek>b</greek>) I know,
He says, that the race is not to the swift, nor the battle to the
strong,(<greek>g</greek>) nor the victory to the fighters, nor the harbours to the good
sailors; but to God it belongs both to work victory, and to bring the barque safe to
port.
XIV. In another place it is also said and understood, and perhaps it is
necessary that I should add it as follows to what has already been said, in order
that I may impart to you also my wealth. The Mother of the Sons of Zebedee, in
an impulse of parental affection, asked a thing in ignorance of the measure of
what she was asking,(<s>) but pardonably, through the excess of her love and of
the kindness due to her children. For there is nothing more affectionate than a
Mother,--and I speak of this that I may lay down a law for honouring Mothers.
Their mother, then, asked Jesus that they might sit, the one on His right hand,
the other on his left. But what saith the Saviour? He first asks if they can
drink the Cup Which He Himself was about to drink; and when this was professed,
and the Saviour accepted the profession (for He knew that they were being
perfected by the same, or rather that they would be perfected thereby); what saith
He? "They shall drink the cup; but to sit on My right hand and on My left--it is
not Mine, He saith, to give this, but to whom it hath been given." Is then the
ruling mind nothing? Nothing the labour? Nothing the reasoning? Nothing the
philosophy? Nothing the fasting? Nothing the vigils, the sleeping on the ground,
the shedding floods of tears? Is it for nothing of these, but in accordance
with some election by lot, that a Jeremias is sanctified, and others are estranged
from the womb?
XV. I fear lest some monstrous reasoning may come in, as of the soul having
lived elsewhere, and then having been bound to this body, and that it is from
that other life that some receive the gift of prophecy, and others are
condemned, namely, those who lived badly. But since such a conception is too absurd, and
contrary to the traditions of the Church (others if they like may play with
such doctrines, but it is unsafe for us to play with them); we must in this place
too add to the words "To whom it hath been given," this, "who are worthy;" who
have not only received this character from the Father, but have given it to
themselves.
XVI. For there are eunuchs which were made eunuchs from their mother's womb,
etc. I should very much like to be able to say something bold about eunuchs.
Be not proud, ye who are eunuchs by nature. For, in point of self-restraint,
this is perhaps unwilling. For it has not come to the test, nor has your
self-restraint been proved by trial. For the good which is by nature is not a subject of
merit; that which is the result of purpose is laudable. What merit has fire
for burning, for it is its nature to burn? What merit has water for falling, a
property given to it by its Maker? What thanks does the snow get for its
coldness, or the sun for its shining?--It shines even if it does not wish. Claim merit
if you please by willing the better things. You will claim it if, being carnal,
you make yourself spiritual; if, while drawn down by the leaden flesh, you
receive wings from reason; if though lowly born, you are found to be heavenly; if
while chained down to the flesh, you shew yourself superior to the flesh.
XVII. Since then, natural chastity is not meritorious, I demand something
else from the eunuchs. Do not go a whoring in respect of the Godhead. Having been
wedded to Christ, do not dishonour Christ. Being perfected by the spirit, do
not make the Spirit your own equal. If I yet pleased men, says Paul, I should
not be the servant of Christ.(<greek>a</greek>) If I worshipped a creature, I
should not be called a Christian. For why is Christianity precious? Is it not that
Christ is God, unless my mingling with Him in love is a mere human passion?
And yet I honour Peter, but I am not called a Petrine; and Paul, but have never
been called a Pauline. I cannot allow myself to be named after a man, who am
born of God. So then, if it is because you believe Him to be God that you are
called a Christian, may you ever be so called, and may you remain in both the name
and the thing; but if you are called from Christ only because you have an
affection for Him, you attribute no more to him than other names which are given
from some practice or fact.
XVIII. Consider those men who are devoted to horse racing. They are named
after the colours and the sides on which they have placed themselves. You know
the names without my mentioning them. If it is thus that you have got the name of
Christian, the mere title is a very small thing even though you pride yourself
upon it. But if it is because you believe Him to be God, shew your faith by
your works. If the Son is a creature, even now also you are worshipping the
creature instead of the Creator. If the Holy Ghost is a creature, you are baptized
in vain, and are only sound on two sides, or rather not even on them; but on one
you are altogether in danger. Imagine the Trinity to be a single pearl, alike
on all sides and equally glistening. If any part of the pearl be injured; the
whole beauty of the stone is gone. So when you dishonour the Son in order to
hon-our the Father, He does not accept your hon-our. The Father doth not glory in
the dishonour of the Son. If a wise Son maketh a glad Father,(<greek>b</greek>)
how much more doth the hon-our of the Son become that of the Father! And if
you also accept this saying, My Son, glory not in the dishonour of thy
Father,(<greek>g</greek>) similarly the Father doth not glory in the Son's dishonour. If
you dishonour the Holy Ghost, the Son receiveth not your honour. For though He
be not of the Father in the same way as the Son, yet He is of the same Father.
Either honour the whole or dishonour the whole, so as to have a consistent
mind. I cannot accept your half piety. I would have you altogether pious, but in
the way that I desire. Pardon my affection: I am grieved even for those who hate
me. You were one of my members, even though you are now cut off: perhaps you
will again become a member; and therefore I speak kindly. Thus much for the sake
of the Eunuchs, that they may be chaste in respect of the Godhead.
XIX. For it is not only bodily sin which is called fornication and adultery,
but any sin you have committed, and especially transgression against that
which is divine. Perhaps you ask how we can prove this:--They went a whoring, it
says, with their own inventions.(<greek>a</greek>) Do you see an impudent act of
fornication? And again, They committed adultery in the wood.(<greek>b</greek>)
See you a kind of adulterous religion? Do not then commit spiritual adultery,
while keeping your bodies chaste. Do not shew that it is unwillingly you are
chaste in body, by not being chaste where you can commit fornication. Why have you
done your impiety? Why are you hurried to vice, so that it is all one to call
a man a Eunuch or a villain? Place yourselves on the side of men, and, even
though so late, have some manly thoughts. Avoid the women's apartments; do not let
the disgrace of proclamation be added to the disgrace of the name. Would you
have us persevere a little longer in this discourse, or are you tired with what
we have said? Nay, by what follows let even the eunuchs be honoured. For the
word is one of praise.
XX. There are, He says, some eunuchs which were so born from their mother's
womb; and there are some eunuchs which were made eunuchs of men; and there be
eunuchs which have made themselves eunuchs for the Kingdom of Heaven's sake. He
that is able to receive it, let him receive it. I think that the discourse
would sever itself from the body, and represent higher things by bodily figures;
for to stop the meaning at bodily eunuchs would be small and very weak, and
unworthy of the Word; and we must understand in addition something worthy of the
Spirit. Some, then, seem by nature to incline to good. And when I speak of nature,
I am not slighting free will, but supposing both--an aptitude for good, and
that which brings the natural aptitude to effect. And there are others whom
reason cleanses, by cutting them off from the passions. These I imagine to be meant
by those whom men have made Eunuchs, when the word of teaching distinguishing
the better from the worse and rejecting the one and commanding the other (like
the verse, Depart from evil and do good),(<greek>g</greek>) works spiritual
chastity. This sort of making eunuchs I approve; and I highly praise both teachers
and taught, that the one have nobly effected, and the other still more nobly
endured, the cutting off.
XXI. And there be eunuchs which have made themselves eunuchs for the Kingdom
of Heaven's sake. Others, too, who have not met with teachers, have been
laudable teachers to themselves. No father nor mother, no Priest or Bishop, nor any
of those commissioned to teach, taught you your duty; but by moving reason in
yourself and by kindling the spark of good by your free will, you made yourself
a eunuch, and acquired such a habit of virtue that impulse to vice became
almost an impossibility to you. Therefore I praise this kind of Eunuch-making also,
and perhaps even above the others. He that is able to receive it let him
receive it. Choose which part you will; either follow the Teacher or be your own
teacher. One thing alone is shameful--that the passions be not extirpated. It
matters not how they are extirpated. The teacher is God's creature; and you also
have the same origin; and whether the teacher grasp this grace, or the good be
your own--it is equally good.
XXII. Only let us cut ourselves off from passion, test any root of
bitterness springing up trouble us;(<greek>a</greek>) only let us follow the image; only
let us reverence our Archetype. Cut off the bodily passions; cut off also the
spiritual. For by how much the soul is more precious than the body, by so much
more precious is it to cleanse the soul than the body. And if cleansing of the
body be a praiseworthy act, see, I pray you, how much greater and higher is
that of the soul. Cut away the Arian impiety; cut away the false opinion of
Sabellius; do not join more than is right, or wrongly sever; do not either confuse
the Three Persons into One, or make Three diversities of Nature. The One is
praiseworthy if rightly understood; and the Three when rightly divided, when the
division is of Persons, not of Godhead.
XXIII. I enact this for Laymen too, and I enjoin it also upon all Priests,
and upon those commissioned to rule. Come to the aid of the Word, all of you to
whom God has given power to aid. It is a great thing to check murder, to punish
adultery, to chastise theft; much more to establish piety by law, and to
bestow sound doctrine. My word will not be able to do as much in fighting for the
Holy Trinity as your Edict, if you will bridle the ill disposed, if you will help
the persecuted, if you will check the slayers, and prevent people from being
slain. I am speaking not merely of bodily but of spiritual slaughter. For all
sin is the death of the soul. Here let my discourse end.
XXIV. But it remains that I speak a prayer for those who are assembled.
Husbands alike and wives, rulers and ruled, old men, and young men, and maidens,
every sort of age, bear ye every loss whether of money or of body, but one thing
alone do not endure--to lose the Godhead. I adore the Father, I adore the Son,
I adore the Holy Ghost; or rather We adore them; I, who am speaking, before all
and after all and with all, in the same Christ our Lord, to whom be the glory
and the might for ever. Amen.
INTRODUCTION TO THE ORATION ON THE THEOPHANY.
THE Title of this Oration has given rise to a doubt whether it was preached
on Dec. 25, 380, or on Jan. 6, 381. The word Theophania is well known as a name
for the Epiphany; which, however, according to Schaff,(<greek>a</greek>) was
originally a celebration both of the Nativity and the Baptism of our Lord. The
two words seem both to have been used in the simplest sense of the Manifestation
of God, and certainly were applied to Christmas Day. Thus Suidas, "The
Epiphany is the Incarnation of the Saviour;" and Epiphanius (Haer., 53), "The Day of
the Epiphany is the day on which Christ was born according to the flesh." But S.
Jerome applies the word to the Baptism of Christ; "The day of the Epiphany is
still venerable; not, as some think, on account of His Birth in the flesh; for
then He was hidden, not manifested; but it agrees with the time at which it was
said, This is My beloved Son (In Ezech. I.). There is also a Sermon,
attributed to S. Chrysostom, "On the Baptism of Christ," in which it is expressly denied
that the name Theophany applies to Christmas. The Oration itself, however,
contains evidence to shew that the Festival of our Lord's Birth was kept at the
earlier date; for in c. 16 the Preacher says, "A little later you shall see Jesus
submitting to be purified in the river Jordan for my purification." And
another piece of evidence occurs in the oration In Sancta Lumina, c. 14, "At His
Birth we duly kept festival, both I the leader of the feast, and you. Now we are
come to another action of Christ and another Mystery."
The Oration is thus analysed by Abbe Benoe it:
"After an exordium which is full of the enthusiasm and joy which such a
subject naturally inspires the Orator recommends his hearers to celebrate the
Festival by a pious gladness, and by hearing the Word of God; and not as the heathen
celebrated their feasts, by profane amusements and all kinds of excess. He
will try to satisfy their desires by speaking to them of God. God is infinite,
ineffable, eternal, the Sovereign Good. He created the Angels in the beginning out
of goodness. The fall of the Angels was followed by the creation of the
material world. Man too fell, and God shewed His mercy even in the punishment. He
used various means to raise him again; and at length He came Himself. Then the
speaker forcibly argues against those who misuse the infinite condescension of the
Word to contest His Godhead; he rapidly traces the principal features of His
Life---at once human and Divine; and ends with a recommendation to his hearers
to imitate in all things the Life of Christ, so that they may have a share in
His Kingdom in Heaven."
It is considered one of the best of Gregory's discourses. "By the grandeur
of the plan," says Benoit, "the elevation of the ideas, and the rich fund of
doctrine, this discourse is incontestably one of S. Gregory's most remarkable
efforts."
ORATION XXXVIII
ON THE THEOPHANY, OR BIRTHDAY OF CHRIST.
I. CHRIST IS BORN, glorify ye Him. Christ from heaven, go ye out to meet
Him. Christ on earth; be ye exalted. Sing unto the Lord all the whole
earth;(<greek>a</greek>) and that I may join both in one word, Let the heavens rejoice, and
let the earth be glad, for Him Who is of heaven and then of earth. Christ in
the flesh, rejoice with trembling and with joy; with trembling because of your
sins, with joy because of your hope. Christ of a Virgin; O ye Matrons live as
Virgins, that ye may be Mothers of Christ. Who doth not worship Him That is from
the beginning?Who doth not glorify Him That is the Last?
II. Again the darkness is past; again Light is made; again Egypt is punished
with darkness; again Israel is enlightened by a pillar.(<greek>a</greek>) The
people that sat in the darkness of ignorance, let it see the Great Light of
full knowledge.(<greek>b</greek>) Old things are passed away, behold all things
are become new.(<greek>g</greek>) The letter gives way, the Spirit comes to the
front. The shadows flee away, the Truth comes in upon them. Melchisedec is
concluded.(<greek>d</greek>) He that was without Mother becomes without Father
(without Mother of His former state, without Father of His second). The laws of
nature are upset; the world above must be filled. Christ commands it, let us not
set ourselves against Him. O clap your hands together all ye
people,(<greek>e</greek>) because unto us a Child is born, and a Son given unto us, Whose
Government is upon His shoulder (for with the Cross it is raised up), and His Name is
called The Angel of the Great Counsel of the Father.(<greek>z</greek>) Let John
cry, Prepare ye the way of the Lord:(<greek>h</greek>) I too will cry the power
of this Day. He Who is not carnal is Incarnate; the Son of God becomes the Son
of Man, Jesus Christ the Same yesterday, and to-day, and for
ever.(<greek>q</greek>) Let the Jews be offended, let the Greeks deride;(<greek>k</greek>) let
heretics talk till their tongues ache. Then shall they believe, when they see Him
ascending up into heaven; and if not then, yet when they see Him coming out of
heaven and sitting as Judge.
III. Of these on a future occasion; for the present the Festival is the
Theophany or Birth-day, for it is called both, two titles being given to the one
thing. For God was manifested to man by birth. On the one hand Being, and
eternally Being, of the Eternal Being, above cause and word, for there was no word
before The Word; and on the other hand for our sakes also Becoming, that He Who
gives us our being might also give us our Well-being, or rather might restore us
by His Incarnation, when we had by wickedness fallen from wellbeing. The name
Theophany is given to it in reference to the Manifestation, and that of Birthday
in respect of His Birth.
IV. This is our present Festival; it is this which we are celebrating
to-day, the Coming of God to Man, that we might go forth,(<greek>l</greek>) or rather
(for this is the more proper expression) that we might go back to God--that
putting off the old man, we might put on the New; and that as we died in Adam, so
we might live in Christ,(<greek>a</greek>) being born with Christ and
crucified with Him and buried with Him and rising with Him.(<greek>b</greek>) For I
must undergo the beautiful conversion, and as the painful succeeded the more
blissful, so must the more blissful come out of the painful. For where sin abounded
Grace did much more abound;(<greek>g</greek>) and if a taste condemned us, how
much more doth the Passion of Christ justify us? Therefore let us keep the
Feast, not after the manner of a heathen festival, but after a godly sort; not
after the way of the world, but in a fashion above the world; not as our own but as
belonging to Him Who is ours, or rather as our Master's; not as of weakness,
but as of healing; not as of creation, but of re-creation.
V. And how shall this be? Let us not adorn our porches, nor arrange dances,
nor decorate the streets; let us not feast the eye, nor enchant the ear with
music, nor enervate the nostrils with perfume, nor prostitute the taste, nor
indulge the touch, those roads that are so prone to evil and entrances for sin; let
us not be effeminate in clothing soft and flowing, whose beauty consists in
its uselessness, nor with the glittering of gems or the sheen of
gold(<greek>d</greek>) or the tricks of colour, belying the beauty of nature, and invented to
do despite unto the image of God; Not in rioting and drunkenness, with which are
mingled, I know well, chambering and wantonness, since the lessons which evil
teachers give are evil; or rather the harvests of worthless seeds are
worthless. Let us not set up high beds of leaves, making tabernacles for the belly of
what belongs to debauchery. Let us not appraise the bouquet of wines, the
kickshaws of cooks, the great expense of unguents. Let not sea and land bring us as a
gift their precious dung, for it is thus that I have learnt to estimate luxury;
and let us not strive to outdo each other in intemperance (for to my mind
every superfluity is intemperance, and all which is beyond absolute need),--and
this while others are hungry and in want, who are made of the same clay and in the
same manner.
VI. Let us leave all these to the Greeks and to the pomps and festivals of
the Greeks, who call by the name of gods beings who rejoice in the reek of
sacrifices, and who consistently worship with their belly; evil inventors and
worshippers of evil demons. But we, the Object of whose adoration is the Word, if we
must in some way have luxury, let us seek it in word, and in the Divine Law,
and in histories; especially such as are the origin of this Feast; that our
luxury may be akin to and not far removed from Him Who hath called us together. Or
do you desire (for to-day I am your entertainer) that I should set before you,
my good Guests, the story of these things as abundantly and as nobly as I can,
that ye may know how a foreigner can feed(<greek>a</greek>) the natives of the
land, and a rustic the people of the town, and one who cares not for luxury
those who delight in it, and one who is poor and homeless those who are eminent for
wealth?
We will begin from this point; and let me ask of you who delight in such
matters to cleanse you mind and your ears and your thoughts, since our discourse
is to be of God and Divine; that when you depart, you may have had the enjoyment
of delights that really fade not away. And this same discourse shall be at
once both very full and very concise, that you may neither be displeased at its
deficiencies, nor find it unpleasant through satiety.
VII. God always was,(<greek>b</greek>) and always is, and always will be. Or
rather, God always Is. For Was and Will be are fragments of our time, and of
changeable nature, but He is Eternal Being. And this is the Name that He gives
to Himself when giving the Oracle to Moses in the Mount. For in Himself He sums
up and contains all Being, having neither beginning in the past nor end in the
future; like some great Sea of Being, limitless and unbounded, transcending all
conception of time and nature, only adumbrated by the mind, and that very
dimly and scantily ... not by His Essentials, but by His Environment; one image
being got from one source and another from another, and combined into some sort of
presentation of the truth, which escapes us before we have caught it, and
takes to flight before we have conceived it, blazing forth upon our Master-part,
even when that is cleansed, as the lightning flash which will not stay its
course, does upon our sight ... in order as I conceive by that part of it which we
can comprehend to draw us to itself (for that which is altogether
incomprehensible is outside the bounds of hope, and not within the compass of endeavour), and
by that part of It which we cannot comprehend to move our wonder, and as an
object of wonder to become more an object of desire, and being desired to purify,
and by purifying to make us like God;(<greek>a</greek>) so that when we have
thus become like Himself, God may, to use a bold expression, hold converse with
us as Gods, being united to us, and that perhaps to the same extent as He
already knows those who are known to Him. The Divine Nature then is boundless and
hard to understand; and all that we can comprehend of Him is His boundlessness;
even though one may conceive that because He is of a simple nature He is
therefore either wholly incomprehensible, or perfectly comprehensible. For let us
further enquire what is implied by "is of a simple nature." For it is quite certain
that this simplicity is not itself its nature, just as composition is not by
itself the essence of compound beings.
VIII. And when Infinity is considered from two points of view, beginning and
end (for that which is beyond these and not limited by them is Infinity), when
the mind looks to the depth above, not having where to stand, and leans upon
phenomena to form an idea of God, it calls the Infinite and Unapproachable which
it finds there by the name of Unoriginate. And when it looks into the depths
below, and at the future, it calls Him Undying and Imperishable. And when it
draws a conclusion from the whole it calls Him Eternal(<greek>aiwnios</greek>).
For Eternity (<greek>aiwn</greek> is neither time nor part of time; for it cannot
be measured. But what time, measured by the course of the sun, is to us, that
Eternity is to the Everlasting, namely, a sort of time-like movement and
interval co-extensive with their existence. This, however, is all I must now say
about God; for the present is not a suitable time, as my present subject is not the
doctrine of God, but that of the Incarnation. But when I say God, I mean
Father, Son, and Holy Ghost. For Godhead is neither diffused beyond these, so as to
bring in a mob of gods; nor yet is it bounded by a smaller compass than these,
so as to condemn us for a poverty-stricken conception of Deity; either
Judaizing to save the Monarchia, or failing into heathenism by the multitude of our
gods. For the evil on either side is the same, though found in contrary
directions. This then is the Holy of Holies,(<greek>b</greek>) which is hidden even from
the Seraphim, and is glorified with a thrice repeated Holy,(<greek>a</greek>)
meeting in one ascription of the Title Lord and God, as one of our predecessors
has most beautifully and loftily pointed out.
IX. But since this movement of self-contemplation alone could not satisfy
Goodness, but Good must be poured out and go forth beyond Itself to multiply the
objects of Its beneficence, for this was essential to the highest Goodness, He
first conceived the Heavenly and Angelic Powers. And this conception was a work
fulfilled by His Word, and perfected by His Spirit. And so the secondary
Splendours came into being, as the Ministers of the Primary Splendour; whether we
are to conceive of them as intelligent Spirits, or as Fire of an immaterial and
incorruptible kind, or as some other nature approaching this as near as may be.
I should like to say that they were incapable of movement in the direction of
evil, and susceptible only of the movement of good, as being about God, and
illumined with the first rays from God--for earthly beings have but the second
illumination; but I am obliged to stop short of saying that, and to conceive and
speak of them only as difficult to move because of him,(<greek>b</greek>) who for
his splendour was called Lucifer, but became and is called Darkness through
his pride; and the apostate hosts who are subject to him, creators of
evil(<greek>g</greek>) by their revolt against good and our inciters.
X. Thus, then, and for these reasons, He gave being to the world of thought,
as far as I can reason upon these matters, and estimate great things in my own
poor language. Then when His first creation was in good order, He conceives a
second world, material and visible; and this a system and compound of earth and
sky, and all that is in the midst of them--an admirable creation indeed, when
we look at the fair form of every part, but yet more worthy of admiration when
we consider the harmony and the unison of the whole, and how each part fits in
with every other, in fair order, and all with the whole, tending to the perfect
completion of the world as a Unit. This was to shew that He could call into
being, not only a Nature akin to Himself, but also one altogether alien to
Himself. For akin to Deity are those natures which are intellectual, and only to be
comprehended by mind; but all of which sense can take cognisance are utterly
alien to It; and of these the furthest removed are all those which are entirely
destitute of soul and of power of motion. But perhaps some one of those who are
too festive and impetuous may say, What has all this to do with us? Spur your
horse to the goal. Talk to us about the Festival, and the reasons for our being
here to-day. Yes, this is what I am about to do, although I have begun at a
somewhat previous point, being compelled to do so by love, and by the needs of my
argument.
XI. Mind, then, and sense, thus distinguished from each other, had remained
within their own boundaries, and bore in themselves the magnificence of the
Creator-Word, silent praisers(<greek>a</greek>) and thrilling heralds of His
mighty work. Not yet was there any mingling of both, nor any mixtures of these
opposites, tokens of a greater Wisdom and Generosity in the creation of natures; nor
as yet were the whole riches of Goodness made known. Now the Creator-Word,
determining to exhibit this, and to produce a single living being out of both--the
visible and the invisible creations, I mean--fashions Man; and taking a body
from already existing matter, and placing in it a Breath taken from
Himself(<greek>b</greek>) which the Word knew to be an intelligent soul and the Image of
God, as a sort of second world. He placed him, great in
littleness(<greek>g</greek>) on the earth; a new Angel, a mingled worshipper, fully initiated into the
visible creation, but only partially into the intellectual; King of all upon
earth, but subject to the King above; earthly and heavenly; temporal and yet
immortal; visible and yet intellectual; half-way between greatness and lowliness; in
one person combining spirit and flesh; spirit, because of the favour bestowed
on him; flesh, because of the height to which he had been raised; the one that
he might continue to live and praise his Benefactor, the other that he might
suffer, and by suffering be put in remembrance, and corrected if he became proud
of his greatness. A living creature trained here, and then moved elsewhere;
and, to complete the mystery, deified by its inclination to God. For to this, I
think, tends that Light of Truth which we here possess but in measure, that we
should both see and experience the Splendour of God, which is worthy of Him Who
made us, and will remake us again after a loftier fashion.
XII. This being He placed in Paradise, whatever the Paradise may have been,
having honoured him with the gift of Free Will (in order that God might belong
to him as the resuit of his choice, no less than to Him who had implanted the
seeds of it), to till the immortal plants, by which is meant perhaps the Divine
Conceptions, both the simpler and the more perfect; naked in his simplicity and
in-artificial life, and without any covering or screen; for it was fitting
that he who was from the beginning should be such. Also He gave him a Law, as a
material for his Free Will to act upon. This Law was a Commandment as to what
plants he might partake of, and which one he might not touch. This latter was the
Tree of Knowledge; not, however, because it was evil from the beginning when
planted; nor was it forbidden because God grudged it to us ... Let not the
enemies of God wag their tongues in that direction, or imitate the Serpent ... But it
would have been good if partaken of at the proper time, for the tree was,
according to my theory, Contemplation, upon which it is only safe for those who
have reached maturity of habit to enter; but which is not good for those who are
still somewhat simple and greedy in their habit; just as solid food is not good
for those who are yet tender, and have need of milk.(<greek>a</greek>) But when
through the Devil's malice and the woman's caprice, to which she succumbed as
the more tender, and which she brought to bear upon the man, as she was the
more apt to persuade, alas for my weakness! (for that of my first father was
mine), he forgot the Commandment which had been given to him;(<greek>b</greek>) he
yielded to the baleful fruit; and for his sin he was banished, at once from the
Tree of Life, and from Paradise, and from God; and put on the coats of skins
... that is, perhaps, the coarser flesh, both mortal and contradictory. This was
the first thing that he learnt--his own shame;(<greek>g</greek>) and he hid
himself from God. Yet here too he makes a gain, namely death, and the cutting off
of sin, in order that evil may not be immortal. Thus his punishment is changed
into a mercy; for it is in mercy, I am persuaded, that God inflicts punishment.
XIII. And having been first chastened by many means (because his sins were
many, whose root of evil sprang up through divers causes and at sundry tithes),
by word, by law, by prophets, by benefits, by threats, by plagues, by waters,
by fires, by wars, by victories, by defeats, by signs in heaven and signs in the
air and in the earth and in the sea, by unexpected changes of men, of cities,
of nations (the object of which was the destruction of wickedness), at last he
needed a stronger remedy, for his diseases were growing worse; mutual
slaughters, adulteries, perjuries, unnatural crimes, and that first and last of all
evils, idolatry and the transfer of worship from the Creator to the Creatures. As
these required a greater aid, so also they obtained a greater. And that was that
the Word of God Himself--Who is before all worlds, the Invisible, the
Incomprehensible, the Bodiless, Beginning of Beginning,(<greek>a</greek>) the Light of
Light, the Source of Life and Immortality, the Image of the Archetypal Beauty,
the immovable Seal, the unchangeable Image, the Father's
Definition(<greek>b</greek>) and Word, came to His own Image, and took on Him flesh for the sake of
our flesh, and mingled Himself with an intelligent soul for my soul's sake,
purifying like by like; and in all points except sin was made man. Conceived by the
Virgin,(<greek>g</greek>) who first in body and soul was purified by the Holy
Ghost(<greek>d</greek>) (for it was needful both that Childbearing should be
honoured, and that Virginity should receive a higher honour), He came forth then
as God with that which He had assumed, One Person in two Natures, Flesh and
Spirit, of which the latter deified the former.(<greek>e</greek>) O new
commingling; O strange conjunction; the Self-Existent comes into being, the Uncreate is
created, That which cannot be contained is contained, by the intervention of an
intellectual soul, mediating between the Deity and the corporeity of the flesh.
And He Who gives riches becomes poor, for He assumes the poverty of my flesh,
that I may assume the richness of His Godhead. He that is full empties Himself,
for He empties Himself of His glory for a short while, that I may have a share
in His Fulness. What is the riches of His Goodness? What is this mystery that
is around me? I had a share in the image; I did not keep it; He partakes of my
flesh that He may both save the image and make the flesh immortal. He
communicates a second Communion far more marvellous than the first, inasmuch as then He
imparted the better Nature, whereas now Himself partakes of the worse. This is
more godlike than the former action, this is loftier in the eyes of all men of
understanding.
XIV. To this what have those cavillers to say, those bitter reasoners about
Godhead, those detractors of all that is praiseworthy, those darkeners of
light, uncultured in respect of wisdom, for whom Christ died in vain, those
unthankful creatures, the work of the Evil One? Do you turn this benefit into a
reproach to God? Wilt thou deem Him little on this account, that He humbled Himself
for thee; because the Good Shepherd,(<greek>a</greek>) He who lays down His life
for His sheep, came to seek for that which had strayed upon the mountains and
the hills, on which thou wast then sacrificing, and found the wanderer; and
having found it,(<greek>b</greek>) took it upon His shoulders--on which He also
took the Wood of the Cross; and having taken it, brought it back to the higher
life; and having carried it back, numbered it amongst those who had never strayed.
Because He lighted a candle--His own Flesh--and swept the house, cleansing the
world from sin; and sought the piece of money, the Royal Image that was
covered up by passions. And He calls together His Angel friends on the finding of the
coin, and makes them sharers in His joy,(<greek>g</greek>) whom He had made to
share also the secret of the Incarnation? Because on the candle of the
Forerunner there follows the light that exceeds in brightness; and to the Voice the
Word succeeds; and to the Bridegroom's friend the Bridegroom; to him that
prepared for the Lord a peculiar people, cleansing them by water in preparation for
the Spirit? Dost thou reproach God with all this? Dost thou on this account deem
Him lessened, because He girds Himself with a towel and washes His disciples'
feet, and shows that humiliation is the best road to exaltation? Because for the
soul that was bent to the ground He humbles Himself, that He may raise up with
Himself the soul that was tottering to a fall under a weight of sin? Why dost
thou not also charge upon Him as a crime the fact that He eats with Publicans
and at Publicans' tables,(<greek>a</greek>) and that He makes disciples of
Publicans, that He too may gain somewhat ... and what? ... the salvation of sinners.
If so, we must blame the physician for stooping over sufferings, and enduring
evil odours that he may give health to the sick; or one who as the Law commands
bent down into a ditch to save a beast that had fallen into
it.(<greek>b</greek>)
XV. He was sent, but as man, for He was of a twofold Nature; for He was
wearied, and hungered, and was thirsty, and was in an agony, and shed tears,
according to the nature of a corporeal being. And if the expression be also used of
Him as God, the meaning is that the Father's good pleasure is to be considered a
Mission, for to this He refers all that concerns Himself; both that He may
honour the Eternal Principle, and because He will not be taken to be an
antagonistic God. And whereas it is written both that He was betrayed, and also that He
gave Himself up(<greek>g</greek>) and that He was raised up by the Father, and
taken up into heaven; and on the other hand, that He raised Himself and went up;
the former statement of each pair refers to the good pleasure of the Father,
the latter to His own Power. Are you then to be allowed to dwell upon all that
humiliates Him, while passing over all that exalts Him, and to count on your
side the fact that He suffered, but to leave out of the account the fact that it
was of His own will? See what even now the Word has to suffer. By one set He is
honoured as God, but is confused with the Father,(<greek>d</greek>) by another
He is dishonoured as mere flesh(<greek>a</greek>) and severed from the Godhead.
With which of them will He be most angry, or rather, which shall He forgive,
those who injuriously confound Him or those who divide Him? For the former ought
to have distinguished, and the latter to have united Him; the one in number,
the other in Godhead. Stumblest Thou at His flesh? So did the Jews. Or dost thou
call Him a Samaritan, and ... I will not say the rest. Dost thou disbelieve in
His Godhead? This did not even the demons, O thou who art less believing than
demons and more stupid than Jews. Those did perceive that the name of Son
implies equality of rank; these did know that He who drove them out was God, for
they were convinced of it by their own experience. But you will admit neither the
equality nor the Godhead. It would have been better for you to have been either
a Jew or a demoniac (if I may utter an absurdity), than in uncircumcision and
m sound health to be so wicked and ungodly in your attitude of mind.
XVI. A little later on you will see Jesus submitting to be purified in the
River Jordan for my Purification, or rather, sanctifying the waters by His
Purification (for indeed He had no need of purification Who taketh away the sin of
the world) and the heavens cleft asunder, and witness borne to him by the Spirit
That is of one nature with Him;(<greek>a</greek>) you shall see Him tempted
and conquering and served by Angels,(<greek>b</greek>) and healing every
sickness(<greek>g</greek>) and every disease,(<greek>d</greek>) and giving life to the
dead (O that He would give life to you who are dead because of your heresy),
and driving out demons,(<greek>e</greek>) sometimes Himself, sometimes by his
disciples; and feeding vast multitudes with a few loaves;(<greek>z</greek>) and
walking dryshod upon seas;(<greek>h</greek>) and being betrayed and crucified,
and crucifying with Himself my sin; offered as a Lamb, and offering as a Priest;
as a Man buried in the grave, and as God rising again; and then ascending, and
to come again in His own glory. Why what a multitude of high festivals there
are in each of the mysteries of the Christ; all of which have one completion,
namely, my perfection and return to the first condition of Adam.
XVII. Now then I pray you accept His Conception, and leap before Him; if not
like John from the womb,(<greek>q</greek>) yet like David, because of the
resting of the Ark.(<greek>i</greek>) Revere the enrolment on account of which thou
wast written in heaven, and adore the Birth by which thou wast loosed from the
chains of thy birth,(<greek>k</greek>) and honour little Bethlehem, which hath
led thee back to Paradise; and worship the manger through which thou, being
without sense, wast fed by the Word. Know as Isaiah bids thee, thine Owner, like
the ox, and like the ass thy Master's crib;(<greek>l</greek>) if thou be one of
those who are pure and lawful food, and who chew the cud of the word and are
fit for sacrifice. Or if thou art one of those who are as yet unclean and
uneatable and unfit for sacrifice, and of the gentile portion, run with the Star, and
bear thy Gifts with the Magi, gold and frankincense and
myrrh,(<greek>m</greek>) as to a King, and to God, and to One Who is dead for thee. With Shepherds
glorify Him;(<greek>n</greek>) with Angels join in chorus; with Archangels sing
hymns. Let this Festival be common to the powers in heaven and to the powers
upon earth.(<greek>x</greek>) For I am persuaded that the Heavenly Hosts join in
our exultation and keep high Festival with us to-day(<greek>o</greek>) ...
because they love men, and they love God just like those whom David introduces after
the Passion ascending with Christ(<greek>p</greek>) and coming to meet Him,
and bidding one another to lift up the gates.
XVIII. One thing connected with the Birth of Christ I would have you hate
... the murder of the infants by Herod.(<greek>a</greek>) Or rather you must
venerate this too, the Sacrifice of the same age as Christ, slain before the
Offering of the New Victim. If He flees into Egypt,(<greek>b</greek>) joyfully become
a companion of His exile. It is a grand thing to share the exile of the
persecuted Christ. If He tarry long in Egypt, call Him out of Egypt by a reverent
worship of Him there. Travel without fault through every stage and faculty of the
Life of Christ. Be purified; be circumcised; strip off the veil which has
covered thee from thy birth. After this teach in the Temple, and drive out the
sacrilegious traders.(<greek>g</greek>) Submit to be stoned if need be, for well I
wot thou shalt be hidden from those who cast the stones; thou shalt escape even
through the midst of them, like God.(<greek>d</greek>) If thou be brought
before Herod, answer not for the most part.(<greek>e</greek>) He will respect thy
silence more than most people's long speeches. If thou be
scourged,(<greek>z</greek>) ask for what they leave out. Taste gall for the taste's
sake;(<greek>h</greek>) drink vinegar;(<greek>q</greek>) seek for spittings; accept blows, be
crowned with thorns,(<greek>i</greek>) that is, with the hardness of the godly
life; put on the purple robe, take the reed in hand, and receive mock worship from
those who mock at the truth; lastly, be crucified with Him, and share His
Death and Burial gladly, that thou mayest rise with Him, and be glorified with Him
and reign with Him. Look at and be looked at by the Great God, Who in Trinity
is worshipped and glorified, and Whom we declare to be now set forth as clearly
before you as the chains of our flesh allow, in Jesus Christ our Lord, to Whom
be the glory for ever. Amen.