LETTERS XXIX TO LIV
LETTER XXIX.(1)
To the Church of Ancyra. Consolatory.(2)
My amazement at the most distressing news of the calamity which has
befallen you for a long time kept me silent. I felt like a man whose ears are stunned
by a loud clap of thunder. Then I somehow recovered a little from my state of
speechlessness. Now I have mourned, as none could help mourning, over the
event, and, in the midst of my lamentations, have sent you this letter. I write not
so much to console you,--for who could find words to cure a calamity so
great?--as to signify to you, as well as I can by these means, the agony of my own
heart. I need now the lamentations of Jeremiah, or of any other of the Saints who
has feelingly lamented a great woe. A man has fallen who was really a pillar
and stay of the Church or rather he himself has been taken from us and is gone to
the blessed life, and there is no small danger lest many at the removal of
this prop from under them fall too, and lest some men's unsoundness be brought to
light. A mouth is sealed gushing with righteous eloquence and words of grace to
the edification of the brotherhood. Gone are the counsels of a mind which
truly moved in God. Ah! how often, for I must accuse myself, was it my lot to feel
indignation against him, because, wholly desiring to depart and be with Christ,
he did not prefer for our sakes to remain in the flesh!(1) To whom for the
future shall I commit the cares of the Churches? Whom shall I take to share my
troubles? Whom to participate in my gladness? O loneliness terrible and sad How am
I not like to a pelican of the wilderness?(2) Yet of a truth the members of
the Church, united by his leadership as by one soul, and fitted together into
close union of feeling and fellowship, are both preserved and shall ever be
preserved by the bond of peace for spiritual communion. God grants us the boon, that
all the works of that blessed soul, which he did nobly in the churches of God,
abide firm and immovable. But the struggle is no slight one, lest, once more
strifes and divisions arising over the choice of the bishop, all your work be
upset by some quarrel.
LETTER XXX.(3)
To Eusebius of Samosata.
IF I were to write at length all the causes which, up to the present time,
have kept me at home, eager as I have been to set out to see your reverence, I
should tell an interminable story. I say nothing of illnesses coming one upon
another, hard winter weather, and press of work, for all this has been already
made known to you. Now, for my sins, I have lost my Mother,(4) the only comfort
I had in life. Do not smile, if, old as I am, I lament my orphanhood. Forgive
me if I cannot endure separation from a soul, to compare with whom I see
nothing in the future that lies before me. So once more my complaints have come back
to me; once more I am confined to my bed, tossing about in my weakness, and
every hour all but looking for the end of life; and the Churches are in somewhat
the same condition as my body, no good hope shining on them, and their state
always changing for the worse. In the meantime Neocaesarea and Ancyra have decided
to have successors of the dead, and so far they are at peace. Those who are
plotting against me have not yet been permitted to do anything worthy of their
bitterness and wrath. This we make no secret of attributing to your prayers on
behalf of the Churches. Weary not then in praying for the Churches and in
entreating God. Pray give all salutations to those who are privileged to minister to
your Holiness.
LETTER XXXI.(1)
To Eusebius, bishop of Samosata.
THE death is still with us, and I am therefore compelled to remain where I
am, partly by the duty of distribution, and partly out of sympathy for the
distressed. Even now, therefore, I have not been able to accompany our reverend
brother Hypatius,(2) whom I am able to style brother, not in mere conventional
language, but on account of relationship, for we are of one blood. You know how
ill he is. It distresses me to think that all hope of comfort is cut off for
him, as those who have the gifts of healing have not been allowed to apply their
usual remedies in his case. Wherefore again he implores the aid of your prayers.
Receive my entreaty that you will give him the usual protection alike for your
own sake, for you are always kind to the sick, and for mine who am petitioning
on his behalf. If possible, summon to your side the very holy brethren that he
may be treated under your own eyes. If this be impossible, be so good as to
send him on with a letter, and recommend him to friends further on.
LETTER XXXII.(3)
To Sophronius the Master.(4)
OUR God--beloved brother, Gregory the bishop,(1) shares the troubles of
the times, for he too, like everybody else, is distressed. at successive
outrages, and resembles a man buffeted by unexpected blows. For men who have no fear of
God, possibly forced by the greatness of their troubles, are reviling him, on
the ground that they have lent Caesarius(2) money. It is not indeed the
question of any loss which is serious, for he has long learnt to despise riches. The
matter rather is that those who have so freely distributed all the effects of
Caesarius that were worth anything, after really getting very little, because his
property was in the hands of slaves, and of men of no better character than
slaves, did not leave much for the executors.(3) This little they supposed to be
pledged to no one, and straightway spent it on the poor, not only from their
own preference, but because of the injunctions of the dead. For on his death bed
Caesarius is declared to have said "I wish my goods to belong tO the poor." In
obedience then to the wishes of Caesarius they made a proper distribution of
them. Now, with the poverty of a Christian, Gregory is immersed in the bustle of
a chafferer. So I bethought me of reporting the matter to your excellency, in
order that you may state what you think proper about Gregory to the Comes
Thesaurorum, and so may honour a man whom you have known for many years, glorify the
Lord who takes as done to Himself what is done to His servants, and honour me
who am specially bound to you. You will, I hope, of your great sagacity devise a
means of relief from these outrageous people and intolerable annoyances.
2. No one is so ignorant of Gregory as to have any unworthy suspicion of
his giving an inexact account of the circumstances because he is fond of money.
We have not to go far to find a proof of his liberality. What is left of the
property of Caesarius he gladly abandons to the Treasury, so that the property
may be kept there, and the Treasurer may give answer to those who attack it and
demand their proofs; for we are not adapted for such business. Your excellency
may be informed that, so long as it was possible, no one went away without
getting what he wanted, and each one carried off what he demanded without any
difficulty. The consequence indeed was that a good many were sorry that they had not
asked for more at first; and this made still more objectors, for with the
example of the earlier successful applicants before them, one false claimant starts
up after another. I do then entreat your excellency to make a stand against all
this and to come in, like some intervening stream, and solve the continuity of
these troubles. You know how best you will help matters, and need not wait to
be instructed by me. I am inexperienced the affairs of this life, and cannot
see my way out of our difficulties. Of your great wisdom discover I some means of
help. Be our counsellor. Be our champion.
LETTER XXXIII.(1)
To Aburgius.(2)
WHO knows so well as you do how to respect an old friendship, to pay
reverence to virtue, and to sympathise with the sick? Now my God-beloved brother
Gregory the bishop has become involved in matters which would be under any
circumstances disagreeable, and are quite foreign to his bent of mind. I have
therefore thought it best to throw myself on your protection, and to endeavour to
obtain from you some solution of our difficulties. It is really an intolerable state
of things that one who is neither by nature nor inclination adapted for
anything of the kind should be compelled to be thus responsible; that demands for
money should be made on a poor man; and that one who has long determined to pass
his life in retirement should be dragged into publicity. It would depend upon
your wise counsel whether yon think it of any use to address the Comes
Thesaurorum or any other persons.
LETTER XXXIV.(3)
To Eusebius, bishop of Samosata.
How could I be silent at the present juncture? And if I cannot be silent,
how am I to find utterance adequate to the circumstances, so as to make my
voice not like a mere groan but rather a lamentation intelligibly indicating the
greatness of the misfortune? Ah me! Tarsus is undone.(1) This is a trouble
grievous to be borne, but it does not come alone. It is still harder to think that a
city so placed as to be united with Cilicia, Cappadocia, and Assyria, should be
lightly thrown away by the madness of two or three individuals, while you are
all the while hesitating, settling what to do, and looking at one another's
faces. It would have been far better to do like the doctors. (I have been so long
an invalid that I have no lack of illustrations of this kind.) When their
patients' pain becomes excessive they produce insensibility; so should we pray that
our souls may be made insensible to the pain of our troubles, that we be not
put under unendurable agony. In these hard straits I do not fail to use one means
of consolation. I look to your kindness; I try to make my troubles milder by
my thought and recollection of you.(2) When the eyes have looked intently on any
brilliant objects it relieves them to turn again to what is blue and green;
the recollection of your kindness and attention has just the same effect on my
soul; it is a mild treatment that takes away my pain. I feel this the more when I
reflect that you individually have done all that man could do. You have
satisfactorily shewn us, men, if we judge things fairly, that the catastrophe is in
no way due to you personally. The reward which you have won at God's hand for
your zeal for right is no small one. May the Lord grant you to me and to His
churches to the improvement of life and the guidance of souls, and may He once more
allow me the privilege of meeting you.
LETTER XXXV.(3)
Without address.
I HAVE written to you about many people as belonging to myself; now I mean
to write about more. The poor can never fail, and I can never say, no. There
is no one more intimately associated with me, nor better able to do me
kindnesses wherever he has the ability, than the reverend brother Leontius. So treat his
house as if you had found me, not in that poverty in which now by God's help I
am living, but endowed with wealth and landed property. There is no doubt that
you would not have made me poor, but would have taken care of what I had, or
even added to my possessions. This is the way I ask you to behave in the house
of Leontius. You will get your accustomed reward from me; my prayers to the holy
God for the trouble you are taking in shewing yourself a good man and true,
and in anticipating the supplication of the needy.
LETTER XXXVI.(1)
Without address.
IT has, I think, been long known to your excellency that the presbyter of
this place is a foster brother of my own. What more can I say to induce you in
your kindness, to view him with a friendly eye, and give him help in his
affairs? If you love me, as I know you do, I am sure that you will endeavour, to the
best of your power, to relieve any one whom I look upon as a second self. What
then do I ask? That he do not lose his old rating. Really he takes no little
trouble in ministering to my necessities, because I, as you know, have nothing of
my own, but depend upon the means of my friends and relatives. Look, then,
upon my brother's house as you would on mine, or let me rather say, on your own.
In return for your kindness to him God will not cease to help alike yourself,
your house, and your family. Be sure that I am specially anxious lest any injury
should be done to him by the equalization of rates.
LETTER XXXVII.(2)
Without address.
I LOOK with suspicion on the multiplication of letters. Against my will,
and because I cannot resist the importunity of petitioners, I am compelled to
speak. write because I can think of no other means of relieving myself than by
assenting to the supplications of those who are always asking letters from me. I
am really afraid lest, since many are carrying letters off, one of the many be
reckoned to be that brother. I have, I own, many friends and relatives in my
own country, and I am placed in loco parentis by the position a which the Lord
has given me. Among them is this my foster brother, son of my nurse, and I pray
that the house in which I was brought up may remain at its old assessment, so
that the sojourn among us of your excellency, so beneficial to us all, may turn
out no occasion of trouble to him. Now too I am supported from the same house,
because I have nothing of my own, but depend upon those who love me. I do then
entreat you to spare the house in which I was nursed as though you were keeping
up the supply of support for me. May God in return grant you His everlasting
rest. One thing however, and it is most true, I think your excellency ought to
know, and that is that the greater number of the slaves were given him from the
outset by us, as an equivalent for my sustenance, by the gift of my father and
mother. At the same time this was not to be regarded as an absolute gift; he was
only to have the use for life, so that, if anything serious happen to him on
their account, he is at liberty to send them back to me, and I shall thus in
another way be responsible for rates and to collectors.
LETTER XXXVIII.(1)
To his Brother Gregory, concerning the difference between <greek>ousia</greek>
and <greek>upostasis</greek>
1. MANY persons, in their study of the sacred dogmas, failing to
distinguish between what is common in the essence or substance, and the meaning of the
hypostases, arrive at the same notions, and think that it makes no difference
whether <greek>ousia</greek> or hypostasis be spoken of. The result is that some
of those who accept statements on these subjects without any enquiry, are
pleased to speak of "one hypostasis," just as they do of one "essence" or
"substance;" while on the other hand those who accept three hypostases are under the idea
that they are bound in accordance with this confession, to assert also, by
numerical analogy, three essences or substances. Under these circumstances, lest
you fall into similar error, I have composed a short treatise for you by way of
memorandum. The meaning of the words, to put it shortly, is as follows:
2. Of all nouns the sense of some, which are predicated of subjects plural
and numerically various, is more general; as for instance man. When we so say,
we employ the noun to indicate the common nature, and do not confine our
meaning to any one man in particular who is known by that name. Peter, for instance
is no more than, than Andrew, John, or James. The predicate therefore being
common, and extending to all the individuals ranked under the same name, requires
some note of distinction whereby we may understand not man in general, but
Peter or John in particular.
Of some nouns on the other hand the denotation is more limited; and by the
aid of the limitation we have before our minds not the common nature, but a
limitation of anything, having, so far as the peculiarity extends, nothing in
common with what is of the same kind; as for instance, Paul or Timothy. For, in a
word, of this kind there is no extension to what is common in the nature; there
is a separation of certain circumscribed conceptions from the general idea,
and expression of them by means of their names. Suppose then that two or more are
set together, as, for instance, Paul, Silvanus, and Timothy, and that an
enquiry is made into the essence or substance of humanity; no one will give one
definition of essence or substance in the case of Paul, a second in that of
Silvanus, and a third in that of Timothy; but the same words which have been employed
in setting forth the essence or substance of Paul will apply to the others
also. Those who are described by the same definition of essence or substance are of
the same essence or substance(1) when the enquirer has learned what is common,
and turns his attention to the differentiating properties whereby one is
distinguished from another, the definition by which each is known will no longer
tally in all particulars with the definition of another, even though in some
points it be found to agree.
3. My statement, then, is this. That which is spoken of in a special and
peculiar manner is indicated by the name of the hypostasis. Suppose we say "a
man." The indefinite meaning of the word strikes a certain vague sense upon the
ears. The nature is indicated, but what subsists and is specially and peculiarly
indicated by the name is not made plain. Suppose we say "Paul." We set forth,
by what is indicated by the name, the nature subsisting.(2)
This then is the hypostasis, or "understanding;" not the indefinite
conception of the essence or substance, which, because what is signified is general,
finds no "standing," but the conception which by means of the expressed
peculiarities gives standing and circumscription to the general and uncircumscribed.
It is customary in Scripture to make a distinction of this kind, as well in many
other passages as in the History of Job. When purposing to narrate the events
of his life, Job first mentions the common, and says "a man;" then he
straightway particularizes by adding "a certain."(1) As to the description of the
essence, as having no bearing on the scope of his work, he is silent, but by means of
particular notes of identity, mentioning the place and points of character,
and such external qualifications as would individualize, and separate from the
common and general idea, he specifies the "certain man," in such a way that from
name, place, mental qualities, and outside circumstances, the description of
the man whose life is being narrated is made in all particulars perfectly clear.
If he had been giving an account of the essence, there would not in his
explanation of the nature have been any mention of these matters. The same moreover
would have been the account that there is in the case of Bildad the Shuhite, and
Zophar the Naamathite, and each of the men there mentioned.(2) Transfer, then,
to the divine dogmas the same standard of difference which you recognise in the
case both of essence and of hypostasis in human affairs, and you will not go
wrong. Whatever your thought suggests to you as to the mode of the existence of
the Father, you will think also in the case of the Son, and in like manner too
of the Holy Ghost. For it is idle to bait the mind at any detached conception
from the conviction that it is beyond all contention.(3) For the account of the
uncreate and of the incomprehensible is one and the same in the case of the
Father and of the Son and of the Holy Ghost. For one is not more incomprehensible
and uncreate than another. And since it is necessary, by means of the notes of
differentiation, in the case of the Trinity, to keep the distinction
unconfounded, we shall not take into consideration, in order to estimate that which
differentiates, what is contemplated in common, as the uncreate, or what is beyond
all comprehension, or any quality of this nature; we shall only direct our
attention to the enquiry by what means each particular conception will be lucidly
and distinctly separated from that which is conceived of in common.
4. Now the proper way to direct our investigation seems to me to be as
follows. We say that every good thing, which by God's providence befalls us, is an
operation, of the Grace which worketh in us all things, as the apostle says,
"But all these worketh that one and the self same Spirit dividing to every man
severally as he will."(1) If we ask, if the supply of good things which thus
comes to the saints has its origin in the Holy Ghost alone, we are on the other
hand guided by Scripture to the belief that of the supply of the good things
which are wrought in us through the Holy Ghost, the Originator and Cause is the
Only-begotten God;(2) for we are taught by Holy Scripture that "All things were
made by Him,"(3) and "by Him consist."(4) When we are exalted to this conception,
again, led by God-inspired guidance, we are taught that by that power all
things are brought from non-being into being, but yet not by that power to the
exclusion of origination.(5) On the other hand there is a certain power subsisting
without generation and without origination,(6) which is the cause of the cause
of all things. For the Son, by whom are all things, and with whom the Holy
Ghost is inseparably conceived of, is of the Father.(7) For it is not possible for
any one to conceive of the Son if he be not previously enlightened by the
Spirit. Since, then, the Holy Ghost, from Whom all the supply of good things for
creation has its source, is attached to the Son, and with Him is inseparably
apprehended, and has Its(8) being attached to the Father, as cause, from Whom also
It proceeds; It has this note of Its peculiar hypostatic nature, that It is
known after the Son(9) and together with the Son, and that It has Its subsistence
of the Father. The Son, Who declares the Spirit proceeding from the Father
through Himself and with Himself, shining forth alone and by only-begetting from the
unbegotten light, so far as the peculiar notes are concerned, has nothing in
common either with the Father or with the Holy Ghost. He alone is known by the
stated signs. But God, Who is over all, alone has, as one special mark of His
own hypostasis, His being Father, and His deriving His hypostasis(1) from no
cause; and through this mark He is peculiarly known. Wherefore in the communion of
the substance we maintain that there is no mutual approach or intercommunion of
those notes of indication perceived in the Trinity, whereby is set forth the
proper peculiarity of the Persons delivered in the faith, each of these being
distinctively apprehended by His own notes. Hence, in accordance with the stated
signs of indication, discovery is made of the separation of the hypostases;
while so far as relates to the infinite, the incomprehensible, the uncreate, the
uncircumscribed, and similar attributes, there is no variableness in the
life-giving nature; in that, I mean, of Father, Son, and Holy Ghost, but in Them is
seen a certain communion indissoluble and continuous. And by the same
considerations, whereby a reflective student could perceive the greatness of any one of
the (Persons) believed in in the Holy Trinity, he will proceed without variation.
Beholding the glory in Father, Son, and Holy Ghost, his mind all the while
recognises no void interval wherein it may travel between Father, Son, and Holy
Ghost, for there is nothing inserted between Them; nor beyond the divine nature
is there anything so subsisting as to be able to divide that nature from itself
by the interposition of any foreign matter. Neither is there any vacuum of
interval, void of subsistence, which can make a break in the mutual harmony of the
divine essence, and solve the continuity by the interjection of emptiness. He
who perceives the Father, and perceives Him by Himself, has at the same time
mental perception of the Son; and he who receives the Son does not divide Him from
the Spirit, but, in consecution so far as order is concerned, in conjunction
so far as nature is concerned, expresses the faith commingled in himself in the
three together. He who makes mention of the Spirit alone, embraces also in this
confession Him of whom He is the Spirit. And since the Spirit is Christ's and
of God,(2) as says Paul, then just as he who lays hold on one end of the chain
pulls the other to him, so he who "draws the Spirit,"(3) as says the prophet,
by His means draws to him at the same time both the Son and the Father. And if
any one verily receives the Son, he will hold Him on both sides, the Son drawing
towards him on the one His own Father, and on the other His own Spirit. For He
who eternally exists in the Father can never be cut off from the Father, nor
can He who worketh all things by the Spirit ever be disjoined from His own
Spirit. Likewise moreover he who receives the Father virtually receives at the same
time both the Son and the Spirit; for it is in no wise possible to entertain
the idea of severance or division, in such a way as that the Son should be
thought of apart from the Father, or the Spirit be disjoined from the Son. But the
communion and the distinction apprehended in Them are, in a certain sense,
ineffable and inconceivable, the continuity of nature being never rent asunder by the
distinction of the hypostases, nor the notes of proper distinction confounded
in the community of essence. Marvel not then at my speaking of the name thing
as being both conjoined and parted, and thinking as it were darkly in a riddle,
of a certain(1) new and strange conjoined separation and separated conjunction.
Indeed, even in objects perceptible to the senses, any one who approaches the
subject in a candid and uncontentious spirit, may find similar conditions of
things.
5. Yet receive what I say as at best a token and reflexion of the truth;
not as the actual truth itself. For it is not possible that there should be
complete correspondence between what is seen in the tokens and the objects in
reference to which the use of tokens is adopted. Why then do I say that an analogy
of the separate and the conjoined is found in objects perceptible to the senses?
You have before now, in springtime, beheld the brightness of the bow in the
cloud; the bow, I mean, which, in our common parlance, is called Iris, and is
said by persons skilled in such matters to be formed when a certain moisture is
mingled with the air, and the force of the winds expresses what is dense and
moist in the vapour, after it has become cloudy, into rain. The bow is said to be
formed as follows. When the sunbeam, alter traversing obliquely the dense and
darkened portion of the cloud-formation, has directly cast its own orb on some
cloud, the radiance is then reflected back from what is moist and shining, and
the result is a bending and return, as it were, of the light upon itself. For
flame-like flashings are so constituted that if they fall on any smooth surface
they are refracted on themselves; and the shape of the sun, which by means of the
beam is formed on the moist and smooth part of the air, is round. The
necessary consequence therefore is that the air adjacent to the cloud is marked out by
means of the radiant brilliance in conformity with the shape of the sun's disc.
Now this brilliance is both continuous and divided. It is of many colours; it
is of many forms; it is insensibly steeped in the variegated bright tints of
its dye; imperceptibly abstracting from our vision the combination of many
coloured things, with the result that no space, mixing or paring within itself the
difference of colour, can be discerned either between blue and flame-coloured, or
between flame-coloured and red, or between red and amber. For all the rays,
seen at the same time, are far shining, and while they give no signs of their
mutual combination, are incapable of being tested, so that it is impossible to
discover the limits of the flame-coloured or of the emerald portion of the light,
and at what point each originates before it appears as it does in glory. As
then in the token we clearly distinguish the difference of the colours, and yet it
is impossible for us to apprehend by our senses any interval between them; so
in like manner conclude, I pray you, that you may reason concerning the divine
dogmas; that the peculiar properties of the hypostases, like colours seen in
the Iris, flash their brightness on each of the Persons Whom we believe to exist
in the Holy Trinity; but that of the proper nature no difference can be
conceived as existing between one and the other, the peculiar characteristics shining,
in community of essence, upon each. Even in our example, the essence emitting
the many-coloured radiance, and refracted by the sunbeam, was one essence; it
is the colour of the phaenomenon which is multiform. My argument thus teaches
us, even by the aid of the visible creation, not to feel distressed at points of
doctrine whenever we meet with questions difficult of solution, and when at the
though of accepting what is proposed to us, our brains begin to reel. In
regard to visible objects experience appears better than theories of causation, and
so in matters transcending all knowledge, the apprehension of argument is
inferior to the faith which teaches us at once the distinction in hypostasis and the
conjunction in essence. Since then our discussion has included both what is
common and what is distinctive in the Holy Trinity, the common is to be
understood as referring to the essence; the hypostasis on the other hand is the several
distinctive sign.(1)
6. It may however be thought that the account here given of the hypostasis
does not tally with the sense of the Apostle's words, where he says concerning
the Lord that He is "the brightness of His glory, and the express image of His
person,"(2) for if we have taught hypostasis to be the conflux of the several
properties; and if it is confessed that, as in the case of the Father something
is contemplated as proper and peculiar, whereby He alone is known, so in the
same way is it believed about the Only-begotten; how then does Scripture in this
place ascribe the name of the hypostasis to the Father alone, and describes
the Son as form of the hypostasis, and designated not by His own proper notes,
but by those of the Father? For if the hypostasis is the sign of several
existence, and the property of the Father is confined to the unbegotten being, and the
Son is fashioned according to His Father's properties, then the term unbegotten
can no longer be predicated exclusively of the Father, the existence of the
Only-begotten being denoted by the distinctive note of the Father.
7. My opinion is, however, that in this passage the Apostle's argument is
directed to a different end; and it is looking to this that he uses the terms
"brightness of glory," and "express image of person." Whoever keeps this
carefully in view will find nothing that clashes with what I have said, but that the
argument is conducted in a special and peculiar sense. For the object of the
apostolic argument is not the distinction of the hypostases from one another by
means of the apparent notes; it is rather the apprehension of the natural,
inseparable, and close relationship of the Son to the Father. He does not say "Who
being the glory of the Father" (although in truth He is); he omits this as
admitted, and then in the endeavour to teach that we must not think of one form of
glory in the case of the Father and of another in that of the Son, He defines the
glory of the Only-begotten as the brightness of the glory of the Father, and,
by the use of the example of the light, causes the Son to be thought of in
indissoluble association with the Father. For just as the brightness is emitted by
the flame, and the brightness is not after the flame, but at one and the same
moment the flame shines and the light beams brightly, so does the Apostle mean
the Son to be thought of as deriving existence from the Father, and yet the
Only-begotten not to be divided from the existence of the Father by any intervening
extension in space, but the caused to be always conceived of together with the
cause. Precisely in the same manner, as though by way of interpretation of the
meaning of the preceding cause, and with the object of guiding us to the
conception of the invisible by means of material examples, he speaks also of
"express image of person." For as the body is wholly in form, and yet tile definition
of the body and the definition of the form are distinct, and no one wishing to
give the definition of the one would be found in agreement with that of the
other; and yet, even if in theory you separate the form from the body, nature does
not admit of the distinction, and both are inseparably apprehended; just so
the Apostle thinks that even if the doctrine of the faith represents the
difference of the hypostases as unconfounded and distinct, he is bound by his language
to set forth also the continuous and as it were concrete relation of the
Only-begotten to the Father. And this he states, not as though the Only-begotten had
not also a hypostatic being, but in that the union does not admit of anything
intervening between the Son and the Father, with the result that he, who with
his soul's eyes fixes his gaze earnestly on the express image of the
Only-begotten, is made perceptive also of the hypostasis of the Father. Yet the proper
quality contemplated in them is not subject to change, nor yet to commixture, in
such wise as that we should attribute either an origin of generation to the
Father or an origin without generation to the Son, but so that if we could compass
the impossibility of detaching one from the other, that one might be apprehended
severally and alone, for, since the mere name implies the Father, it is not
possible that any one should even name the Son without apprehending the Father.(1)
8. Since then, as says the Lord in the Gospels,(2) he that hath seen the
Son sees tim Father also; on this account he says that the Only-begotten is the
express image of His Father's person. That this may be made still plainer I
will quote also other passages of the apostle in which he calls the Son "the image
of the invisible God,"(1) and again "image of His goodness;"(2) not because
the image differs from the Archetype according to the definition of
indivisibility and goodness, but that it may be shewn that it is the same as the prototype,
even though it be different. For the idea of the image would be lost were it
not to preserve throughout the plain and invariable likeness. He therefore that
has perception of the beauty of the image is made perceptive of the Archetype.
So he, who has, as it were mental apprehension of the form of the Son, prints
the express image of the Father's hypostasis, beholding the latter in tile
former, not beholding in the reflection tile unbegotten being of the Father (for thus
there would be complete identity and no distinction), but gazing at tile
unbegotten beauty in the Begotten. Just as he who in a polished mirror beholds the
reflection of the form as plain knowledge of the represented face, so he, who
has knowledge of the Son, through his knowledge of the Son receives in his heart
the express image of the Father's Person. For all things that are the Father's
are beheld in the Son, and all things that are the Son's are the Father's;
because the whole Son is in the Father and has all the Father in Himself.(3) Thus
the hypostasis of the Son becomes as it were form and face of the knowledge of
the Father, and the hypostasis of the Father is known in the form of the Son,
while the proper quality which is contemplated therein remains for the plain
distinction of the hypostases.
LETTER XXXIX.(4)
Julian(5) to Basil.
THE proverb says "You are not proclaiming war,"(1) and, let me adds out of
the comedy, "O messenger of golden words."(2) Come then; prove this in act,
and hasten to me. You will come as friend to friend. Conspicuous and unremitting
devotion to business seems, to those that treat it as of secondary importance,
a heavy burden; yet the diligent are modest, as I persuade myself, sensible,
and ready for any emergency. I allow myself relaxations so that even rest may be
permitted to one who neglects nothing. Our mode of life is not marked by the
court hypocrisy, of which I think you have had some experience, and in accordance
with which compliments mean deadlier hatred than is felt to our worst foes;
but, with becoming freedom, while we blame and rebuke where blame is due, we love
with the love of the dearest friends. I may therefore, let me say, with all
sincerity, both be diligent in relaxation and, when at work, not get worn out,
and sleep secure; since when awake I do not wake more for myself, than, as is
fit, for every one else. I am afraid this is rather silly and trifling, as I feel
rather lazy, (I praise myself like Astydamas(3)) but I am writing to prove to
you that to have the pleasure of seeing you, wise man as you are, will be more
likely to do me good than to cause any difficulty. Therefore, as I have said,
lose no time: travel post haste. After you have paid me as long a visit as you
likes you shall go on your journey, whithersoever you will, with my best wishes.
LETTER XL.(4)
Julian to Basil.
WHILE showing up to the present time the gentleness and benevolence which
have been natural to me from my boyhood, I have reduced all who dwell beneath
the sun to obedience. For lo! every tribe of barbarians to the shores of ocean
has come to lay its gifts before my feet. So too the Sagadares who dwell beyond
the Danube, wondrous with their bright tattooing, and hardly like human beings,
so wild and strange are they, now grovel at my feet, and pledge themselves to
obey all the behests my sovereignty imposes on them. I have a further object. I
must as soon as possible march to Persia and rout and make a tributary of that
Sapor, descendant of Darius. I mean too to devastate the country of the
Indians and the Saracens until they all acknowledge my superiority and become my
tributaries. You, however, profess a wisdom above and beyond these things; you call
yourself clad with piety, but your clothing is really impudence and everywhere
you slander me as one unworthy of the imperial dignity. Do you not know that I
am the grandson of the illustrious Constantius?(1) I know this of you, and yet
I do not change the old feelings which I had to you, and you to me in the days
when we were both young.(2) But of my merciful will I command that a thousand
pounds of gold be sent me from you, when I pass by Caesarea; for I am still on
the march, and with all possible dispatch am hurrying to the Persian campaign..
If you refuse I am prepared to destroy Caesarea, to overthrow the buildings
that have long adorned it; to erect in their place temples and statues; and so to
induce all men to submit to the Emperor of the Romans and not exalt
themselves. Wherefore I charge you to send me without fail by the hands of some trusty
messenger the stipulated gold, after duly counting and weighing it, and sealing
it with your ring. In this way I may show mercy to you for your errors, if you
acknowledge, however late, that no excuses will avail. I have learned to know,
and to condemn, what once I read.(3)
LETTER XLI.(4)
Basil to Julian.
1. THE heroic deeds of your present splendour are small, and your grand
attack against me, or rather against yourself, is paltry. When I think of you
robed in purple, a crown on your dishonoured head, which, so long as true religion
is absents, rather disgraces than graces your empire, I tremble. And you
yourself who have risen to be so high and great, now that vile and honour-hating
demons have brought you to this pass, have begun not only to exalt yourself above
all human nature, but even to uplift yourself against God, and insult His
Church, mother and nurse of all, by sending to me, most insignificant of men, orders
to forward you a thousand pounds of gold. I am not so much astonished at the
weight of the gold, although it is very serious; but it has made me shed bitter
tears over your so rapid ruin. I bethink me how you and I have learned together
the lessons of the best and holiest books. Each of us went through the sacred
and God-inspired Scriptures. Then nothing was hid from you. Nowadays you have
become lost to proper feeling, beleaguered as you are with pride. Your serene
Highness did not find out for the first time yesterday that I do not live in the
midst of superabundant wealth. To-day you have demanded a thousand pounds of
gold of me. I hope your serenity will deign to spare me. My property amounts to
so much, that I really shall not have enough to eat as much as I shall like
to-day. Under my roof the art of cookery is dead. My servants' knife never touches
blood. The most important viands, in which lies our abundance, are leaves of
herbs with very coarse bread and sour wine, so that our senses are not dulled by
gluttony, and do not indulge in excess.
2. Your excellent tribune Lausus, trusty minister of your orders, has also
reported to me that a certain woman came as a suppliant to your serenity on
the occasion of the death of her son by poison; that it has been judged by you
that poisoners are not allowed to exist;(1) if any there be, that they are to be
destroyed, or, only those are reserved, who are to fight with beasts. And, this
rightly decided by you, seems strange to me, for your efforts to cure the pain
of great wounds by petty remedies are to the last degree ridiculous. After
insulting God, it is useless for you to give heed to widows and orphans. The
former is mad and dangerous; the latter the part of a merciful and kindly man. It is
a serious thing for a private individual like myself to speak to an emperor;
it will be more serious for you to speak to God. No one will appear to mediate
between God and man. What you read yon did not understand. If you had
understood, you would not have condemned.(2)
LETTER XLII.(1)
To Chilo, his disciple.
1. IF, my true brother, you gladly suffer yourself to be advised by me as
to what course of action you should pursue, specially in the points in which
you have referred to me for advice, you will owe me your salvation. Many men have
had the courage to enter upon the solitary life; but to live it out to the end
is a task which perhaps has been achieved by few. The end is not necessarily
involved in the intention; yet in the end is the guerdon of the toil. No
advantage, therefore, accrues to men who fail to press on to the end of what they have
in view and only adopt the solitary's life in its inception. Nay, they make
their profession ridiculous, and are charged by outsiders with unmanliness and
instability of purpose. Of these, moreover, the Lord says, who wishing to build a
house "sitteth not down first and counteth the cost whether he have sufficient
to finish it? lest haply after he hath laid the foundation and is not able to
finish it," the passers-by "begin to mock him saying," this man laid a
foundation "and was not able to finish."(2) Let the start, then, mean that you heartily
advance in virtue. The right noble athlete Paul, wishing us not to rest in
easy security on so much of our life as may have been lived well in the past, but,
every day to attain further progress, says "Forgetting those things which are
behind, and reaching forth unto those things which are before, I press toward
the mark for the prize of the high calling."(3) So truly stands the whole of
human life, not contented with what has gone before and fed not so much on the
past as on the future. For how is a man the better for having his belly filled
yesterday, if his natural hunger fails to find its proper satisfaction in food
to-day? In the same way the soul gains nothing by yesterday's virtue unless it be
followed by the right conduct of to-day. For it is said "I shall judge thee as
I shall find thee."
2. Vain then is the labour of the righteous man, and free from blame is
the way of the sinner, if a change befall, and the former turn from the better to
the worse, and the latter from the worse to the better. So we hear from
Ezekiel teaching as it were in the name of the Lord, when he says, "if the righteous
turneth away and committeth iniquity, I will not remember the righteousness
which he committed before; in his sin he shall die,"(1) and so too about the
sinner; if he turn away from his wickedness, and do that which is right, he shall
live. Where were all the labours of God's servant Moses, when the gainsaying of
one moment shut him out from entering into the promised land? What became of the
companionship of Gehazi with Elissaeus, when he brought leprosy on himself by
his covetousness? What availed all Solomon's vast wisdom, and his previous
regard for God, when afterwards from his mad love of women he fell into idolatry?
Not even the blessed David was blameless, when his thoughts went astray and he
sinned against the wife of Uriah. One example were surely enough for keeping
safe one who is living a godly life, the fall from the better to the worse of
Judas, who, after being so long Christ's disciple, for a mean gain sold his Master
and got a halter for himself. Learn then, brother, that it is not he who begins
well who is perfect. It is he who ends well who is approved in God's sight.
Give then no sleep to your eyes or slumber to your eyelids(2) that you may be
delivered "as a roe from the net and a bird from the snare."(3) For, behold, you
are passing through the midst of snares; you are treading on the top of a high
wall whence a fall is perilous to the fuller; wherefore do not straightway
attempt extreme discipline; above all things beware of confidence in yourself, lest
you fall from a height of discipline through want of training. It is better to
advance a little at a time. Withdraw then by degrees from the pleasures of
life, gradually destroying all your wonted habits, lest you bring on yourself a
crowd of temptations by irritating all your passions at once. When you have
mastered one passion, then begin to wage war against another, and in this manner you
will in good time get the better of all. Indulgence, so far as the name goes,
is one, but its practical workings are diverse. First then, brother, meet every
temptation with patient endurance. And by what various temptations the faithful
man is proved; by worldly loss, by accusations, by lies, by opposition, by
calumny, by persecution! These and the like are the tests of the faithful.
Further, be quiet, not rash in speech, not quarrelsome, not disputatious, not covetous
of vain glory, not more anxious to get than to give knowledge,(1) not a man of
many words, but always more ready to learn than to teach. Do not trouble
yourself about worldly life; from it no good can come to you. It is said, "That my
mouth speak not the works of men."(2) The man who is fond of talking about
sinners' doings, soon rouses the desire for self indulgence; much better busy
yourself about the lives of good men for so you will get some profit for yourself. Do
not be anxious to go travelling about(3) from village to village anti house to
house; rather avoid them as traps for souls. If any one, for true pity's sake,
invite you with many pleas to enter his house, let him be told to follow the
faith of the centurion, who, when Jesus was hastening to him to perform an act
of healing, besought him not to do so in the words, "Lord I am not worthy that
thou shouldest come under my roof, but speak the word only and my servant shall
be healed,"(4) and when Jesus had said to him "Go thy way; as thou hast
believed, so be it done unto thee,"(5) his servant was healed from that hour. Learn
then, brother, that it was the faith of the suppliant, not the presence of
Christ, which delivered the sick man. So too now, if you pray, in whatever place you
be, and the sick man believes that he will be aided by your prayers, all will
fall out as he desires.
3. You will not love your kinsfolk more than the Lord. "He that loveth,"
He says, "father, or mother, or brother, more than me, is not worthy of me."(6)
What is the meaning of the Lord's commandment? "He that taketh not up his cross
and followeth after me, cannot be my disciple?"(7) If, together with Christ,
you died to your kinsfolk according to the flesh, why do you wish to live with
them again? If for your kinsfolk's sake you are building up again what you
destroyed for Christ's sake, you make yourself a transgressor. Do not then for your
kinsfolk's sake abandon your place: if you abandon your place, perhaps you will
abandon your mode of life. Love not the crowd, nor the country, nor the town;
love the desert, ever abiding by yourself with no wandering mind,(8) regarding
prayer anti praise as your life's work. Never neglect reading, especially of
the New Testament, because very frequently mischief comes of reading the Old; not
because what is written is harmful, but because the minds of the injured are
weak. All bread is nutritious, but it may be injurious to the sick. Just so all
Scripture is God inspired and profitable,(1) and there is nothing in it
unclean: only to him who thinks it is unclean, to him it is unclean. "Prove all
things; hold fast that which is good; abstain from every form of evil."(2) "All
things are lawful but all things are not expedient."(3) Among all, with whom you
come in contact, be in all things a giver of no offence,(4) cheerful, "loving as a
brother,"(5) pleasant, humble-minded, never missing the mark of hospitality
through extravagance of meats, but always content with what is at hand. Take no
more from any one than the daily necessaries of the solitary life. Above all
things shun gold as the soul's foe, the father of sin and the agent of the devil.
Do not expose yourself to the charge of covetousness on the pretence of
ministering to the poor; but, if any one brings you money for the poor and you know of
any who are in need, advise the owner himself to convey it to his needy
brothers, lest haply your conscience may be defiled by the acceptance of money.
4. Shun pleasures; seek after continence; train your body to hard work;
accustom your soul to trials. Regarding the dissolution of soul and body as
release from every evil, await that enjoyment of everlasting good things in which
all the saints have part. Ever, as it were, holding the balance against every
suggestion of the devil throw in a holy thought, and, as the scale inclines do
thou go with it. Above all when the evil thought starts up and says, "What is the
good of your passing your life in this place? What do you gain by withdrawing
yourself from the society of men? Do you not know that those, who are ordained
by God to be bishops of God's churches, constantly associate with their fellows,
and indefatigably attend spiritual gatherings at which those who are present
derive very great advantage? There are to be enjoyed explanations of hard
sayings, expositions of the teachings of the apostles, interpretations of the
thoughts of the gospels. lessons in theology and the intercourse of spiritual
brethren, who do great good to all they meet if only by the sight of their faces. You,
however, who have decided to be a stranger to all these good things, are
sitting here in a wild state like the beasts. You see round you a wide desert with
scarcely a fellow creature in it, lack of all instruction, estrangement from your
brothers, and your spirit inactive in carrying out the commandments of God."
Now, when the evil thought rises against you, with all these ingenious pretexts
and wishes to destroy you, oppose to it in pious reflection Your own practical
experience, and say, u tell me that the things in the world are good; the
reason why I came here is because I judged myself unfit for the good things of the
world. With the world's good things are mingled evil things, and the evil things
distinctly have the upper hand. Once when I attended the spiritual assemblies
I did with difficulty find one brother, who, so far as I could see, feared God,
but he was a victim of the devil, and I heard from him amusing stories and
tales made up to deceive those whom he met. After him I fell in with many thieves,
plunderers, tyrants. I saw disgraceful drunkards; I saw the blood of the
oppressed; I saw women's beauty, which tortured my chastity. From actual fornication
I fled, but I defiled my virginity by the thoughts of my heart. I heard many
discourses which were good for the soul, but I could not discover in the case of
any one of the teachers that his life was worthy of his words. After this,
again, I heard a great number of plays, which were made attractive by wanton
songs. Then I heard a lyre sweetly played, the applause of tumblers, the talk of
clowns, all kinds of jests and follies and all the noises of a crowd. I saw the
tears of the robbed, the agony of the victims of tyranny, the shrieks of the
tortured. I looked and lo, there was no spiritual assembly, but only a sea,
wind-tossed and agitated, and trying to drown every one at once under its waves.(1)
Tell me, O evil thought, tell me, daemon of short lived pleasure and vain glory,
what is the good of my seeing and hearing all these things, when I am powerless
to succour any of those who are thus wronged; when I am allowed neither to
defend the helpless nor correct the fallen; when I am perhaps doomed to destroy
myself too. For just as a very little fresh water is blown away by a storm of
wind and dust, in like manner the good deeds, that we think we do in this life,
are overwhelmed by the multitude of evils. Pieces acted for men in this life are
driven through joy and merriment, like stakes into their hearts, so that the
brightness of their worship is be-dimmed. But the wails and lamentations of men
wronged by their fellows are introduced to make a show of the patience of the
poor.
5. What good then do I get except the loss of my soul? For this reason I
migrate to the hills like a bird. "I am escaped as a bird out of the snare of
the fowlers."(1) I am living, O evil thought, in the desert in which the Lord
lived. Here is the oak of Mature; here is the ladder going up to heaven, and the
stronghold of the angels which Jacob saw; here is the wilderness in which the
people purified received the law, and so came into the land of promise and saw
God. Here is Mount Carmel where Elias sojourned and pleased God. Here is the
plain whither Esdras withdrew, and at God's bidding uttered all the God inspired
books.(2) Here is the wilderness in which the blessed John ate locusts and
preached repentance to men. Here is the Mount of Olives, whither Christ came and
prayed, and taught us to pray. Here is Christ the lover of the wilderness, for He
says "Where two or three are gathered together in my name there am I in the
midst of them."(3) "Here is the strait and narrow way which leadeth unto life."(4)
Here are the teachers and prophets "wandering in deserts and in mountains and
in dens and caves of the earth."(5) Here are apostles and evangelists and
solitaries' life remote from cities. This I have embraced with all my heart, that I
may win what has been promised to Christ's martyrs and all His other saints, and
so I may truly say, "Because of the words of thy lips I have kept hard
ways."(6) I have heard of Abraham, God's friend, who obeyed the divine voice and went
into the wilderness; of Isaac who submitted to authority; of Jacob, the
patriarch, who left his home; of Joseph, the chaste, who was sold; of the three
children. who learnt how to fast, and fought with the fire; of Daniel thrown twice
into the lion's den;(7) of Jeremiah speaking boldly, and thrown into a pit of
mud; of Isaiah, who saw unspeakable things, cut asunder with a saw; of Israel led
away captive; of John the rebuker of adultery, beheaded; of Christ's martyrs
slain. But why say more? Here our Saviour Himself was crucified for our sakes
that by His death He might give us life, and train and attract us all to
endurance. To Him I press on, and to the Father and to the Holy Ghost. I strive to be
found true, judging myself unworthy of this world's goods. And yet not I because
of the world, but the world because of me. Think of all these things in your
heart; follow them with zeal; fight, as you have been commanded, for the truth to
the death. For Christ was made "obedient" even "unto death."(1) The Apostle
says, "Take heed lest there be in any of you an evil heart ... in departing from
the living God. But exhort one another ... (and edify one another(2)) while it
is called to-day."(3) To-day means the whole time of our life, Thus living,
brother, you will save yourself, you will make me glad, and you will glorify God
from everlasting to everlasting. Amen.
LETTER XLIII.(4)
Admonition to the Young.
O Faithful man of solitary life, and practiser of true religion, learn the
lessons of the evangelic conversation, of mastery over the body, of a meek
spirit, of purity of mind, of destruction of pride. Pressed into the service,(5)
add to your gifts, for the Lord's sake; robbed, never go to law; hated, love;
persecuted, endure; slandered, entreat. Be dead to sin; be crucified to God. Cast
all your care upon the Lord, that you may be found where are tens of thousands
of angels, assemblies of the first-born, the thrones of prophets, sceptres of
patriarchs, crowns of martyrs, praises of righteous men. Earnestly desire to be
numbered with those righteous men in Christ Jesus our Lord. To Him be glory
for ever. Amen.
LETTER XLIV.(6)
To a lapsed Monk.(7)
1. I DO not wish you joy, for there is no joy for the wicked. Even now I
cannot believe it; my heart cannot conceive iniquity so great as the crime which
you have committed: if, that is, the truth really is what is generally
understood. I am at a loss to think how wisdom so deep can have been made to
disappear; how such exact discipline can have been undone; whence blindness so profound
can have been shed round you; how with utter inconsiderateness you have wrought
such destruction of souls. If this be true, you have given over your own soul
to the pit, and have slackened the earnestness of all who have heard of your
impiety. You have set at nought the faith; you have missed the glorious fight. I
grieve over you. What cleric(1) does not lament as he hears? What ecclesiastic
does not beat the breast? What layman is not downcast? What ascetic is not sad?
Haply, even the sun has grown dark at your fall, and the powers of heaven have
been shaken at your destruction. Even senseless stones have shed tears at your
madness; even your enemies have wept at the greatness of your iniquity. Oh
hardness of heart! Oh cruelty! You did not fear God; you did not reverence men;
you cared nothing for your friends you made shipwreck of all at once; at once you
were stripped of all. Once more I grieve over you, unhappy man. You were
proclaiming to all the power of the kingdom, and you fell from it. You were making
all stand in fear of your teaching, and there was no fear of God before your
eyes. You were preaching purity, and you are found polluted. You were priding
yourself on your poverty, and you are convicted of covetousness; you were
demonstrating and explaining the chastisement of God, and you yourself brought!
chastisement on your own head. How am I to lament you, flow grieve for you? How is
Lucifer that was rising in the morning fallen and dashed on the ground? Both the
ears of every hearer will tingle. How is the Nazarite, brighter than gold, become
dark above pitch? How has the glorious son of Sion become an unprofitable
vessel! Of him, whose memory of the sacred Scriptures was in all men's mouths, the
memory to-day has perished with the sound. The man of quick intelligence has
quickly perished. The man of manifold wit has wrought manifold iniquity. All who
profiled by your teaching have been injured by your fall. All who came to
listen to your conversation have stopped their ears at your fall. I, sorrowful and
downcast, weakened in every way, eating ashes for breast and with sackcloth on
my wound, am thus recounting your praises; or rather, with none to comfort and
none to cure, am making an inscription for a tomb. For comfort is hid from my
eyes. I have no salve, no oil, no bandage to put on. My wound is sore, how shall
I be healed?
2. If you have any hope of salvation; if you have the least thought of
God, or any desire for good things to come; if you have any fear of the
chastisements reserved for the impenitent, awake without delay, lift up your eyes to
heaven, come to your senses, cease from your wickedness, shake off the stupor that
enwraps you, make a stand against the foe who has struck you down. Make an
effort to rise from the ground. Remember the good Shepherd who will follow and
rescue you. Though it be but two legslobe of an ear,(1) spring back from the beast
that has wounded you. Remember the mercies of God and how He cures with oil and
wine. Do not despair of salvation. Recall your recollection of how it is
written in the Scriptures that he who is filling rises and he who turns away
returns;(2) the wounded is healed, the prey of beasts escapes; he who owns his sin is
not rejected. The Lord willeth not the death of a sinner but rather that he
should turn and live.(3) Do not despise, like the wicked in the pit of evil.(4)
There is a time of endurance, a time of long suffering, a time of healing, a time
of correction. Have you stumbled? Arise. Have you sinned? Cease. Do not stand
in the way of sinners,(5) but spring away. When you are converted and groan you
shall be saved. Out of labour comes health, out of sweat salvation. Beware
lest, from your wish to keep certain obligations, you break the obligations to God
which you professed before many witnesses.(6) Pray do not hesitate to come to
me for any earthly considerations. When I have recovered my dead I shall
lament, I shall tend him, I will weep "because of the spoiling of the daughter of my
people."(7) All are ready to welcome you, all will share your efforts. Do not
sink back. Remember the days of old. There is salvation; there is amendment. Be
of good cheer; do not despair. It is not a law condemning to death without
pity, but mercy remitting punishment and awaiting improvement. The doors are not
yet shut; the bridegroom hears; sin is not the master. Make another effort, do
not hesitate, have pity on yourself and on all of us in Jesus Christ our Lord, to
Whom be glory and might now and for ever and ever. Amen.
LETTER XLV.(6)
To a lapsed Monk.(7)
1. I AM doubly alarmed to the very bottom of my heart, and you are the
cause. I am either the victim of some unkindly prepossession, and so am driven to
make an unbrotherly charge; or, with every wish to feel for you, and to deal
gently with your troubles, I am forced to take a different and an unfriendly
attitude. Wherefore, even as I take my pen to write, I have nerved my unwilling
hand by reflection; but my face, downcast as it is, because of my sorrow over you,
I have had no power to change. I am so covered with shame, for your sake, that
my lips are turned to mourning and my mouth straightway falls. Ah me! What am
I to write? What shall I think in my perplexity?
If I call to mind your former empty mode of life, when you were rolling in
riches and had abundance of petty mundane reputation, I shudder; then you were
followed by a mob of flatterers, and had the short enjoyment of luxury, with
obvious peril and unfair gain on the one hand, fear of the magistrates scattered
your care for your salvation, on the other the agitations of public affairs
disturbed your home, and the continuance of troubles directed your mind to Him
Who is able to help yon. Then, little by little, you took to seeking for the
Saviour, Who brings you fears for your good, Who delivers you and protects you,
though you mocked Him in your security. Then you began to train yourself for a
change to a worthy life, treating all your perilous property as mere dung, and
abandoning the care of your household and the society of your wife. All abroad
like a stranger and a vagabond, wandering through town and country, you betook
yourself to Jerusalem.(1) There I myself lived with you, and, for the toil of your
ascetic discipline, called you blessed, when fasting for weeks you continued
in contemplation before God, shunning the society of your fellows, like a routed
runaway. Then you arranged for yourself a quiet and solitary life, and refused
all the disquiets of society. You pricked your body with rough sackcloth; you
tightened a hard belt round your loins; you bravely put wearing pressure on
your bones; you made your sides hang loose from front to back, and all hollow with
fasting; you would wear no soft bandage, and drawing in your stomach, like a
gourd, made it adhere to the parts about your kidneys. You emptied out all fat
from your flesh; all the channels below your belly you dried up; your belly
itself you folded up for want of food; your ribs, like the caves of a house, you
made to overshadow all the parts about your middle, and, with all your body
contracted, you spent the long hours of the night in pouring out confession to God,
and made your beard wet with channels of tears. Why particularize? Remember how
many mouths of saints you saluted with a kiss, how many bodies you embraced,
how many held hands as undefiled, how many servants God, as though in worship,
ran and clasped you by the knees.
2. And what is the end of all this? My ears are wounded by a charge of
adultery, flying swifter than an arrow, and piercing my heart with a sharper
sting. What crafty wiliness of wizard has driven you into so deadly a trap? What
many-meshed devil's nets have entangled you and disabled all the powers of your
virtue? What has become of the story of your labours? Or must we disbelieve them?
How can we avoid giving credit to what has long been hid when we see what is
plain? What shall we say of your having by tremendous oaths bound souls which
fled for refuge to God, when what is there than yea and nay is carefully
attributed to the devil?(1) You have made yourself security for fatal perjury; and, by
setting the ascetic character at nought, you have cast blame even upon the
Apostles and the very Lord Himself. You have shamed the boast of purity. You have
disgraced the promise of chastity; we have been made a tragedy of captives, and
our story is made a play of be-Jews and Greeks. You have made a in the
solitaries' spirit, driving those of exacter discipline into fear and cowardice, while
they still wonder at the power of the devil, and seducing the careless into
imitation of your incontinence. So far as you have been able, you have destroyed
the boast of Christ, Who said, "Be of good cheer I have overcome the world,"(2)
and its Prince. You have mixed for your country a bowl of ill repute. Verily
you have proved the truth of the proverb, "Like a hart stricken through the
liver."(3)
But what now? The tower of strength has not fallen, my brother. The
remedies of correction are not mocked; the city of refuge is not shut. Do not abide
in the depths of evil. Do not deliver yourself to the slayer of souls. The Lord
knows how to set up them that are dashed down. Do not try to flee afar off, but
hasten to me. Resume once more the labours of your youth, and by a fresh
course of good deeds destroy the indulgence that creeps foully along the ground.
Look to the end, that has come so near to our life. See how now the sons of Jews
and Greeks are being driven to the worship of God, and do not altogether deny
the Saviour of the World. Never let that most awful sentence apply to you,
"Depart from me, I never knew you."(1)
LETTER XLVI.(2)
To a fallen virgin.
1. Now is the time to quote the words of the prophet and to say, "Oh that
my head were waters, and mine eyes a fountain of tears, that I might weep day
and night for the slain of the daughter of my people."(3) Though they are
wrapped in profound silence and lie stunned by their misfortune, robbed of all sense
of feeling by the fatal blow, I at all events must not let such a fall go
unlamented. If, to Jeremiah, it seemed that those whose bodies had been wounded in
war, were worthy of innumerable lamentations, what shall be said of such a
disaster of souls? "My slain men," it is said, "are not slain with the sword, nor
dead in battle."(4) But I am bewailing the sting of the real death, the
grievousness of sin and the fiery darts of the wicked one, which have savagely set on
fire souls as well as bodies. Truly God's laws would groan aloud on seeing so
great a pollution on the earth. They have pronounced their prohibition of old
"Thou shalt not covet thy neighbour's wife";(5) and through the holy gospels they
say that "Whosoever looketh on a woman to lust after her, hath committed
adultery already with her in his heart."(6) Now they see the bride of the Lord
herself, whose head is Christ, boldly committing adultery.(7) So too would groan the
companies(8) of the Saints. Phinehas, the zealous, because he can now no more
take his spear into his hands and avenge the outrage on the bodies; and John the
Baptist, because he cannot quit the realms above, as in his life he left the
wilderness, to hasten to convict iniquity, and if he must suffer for the deed,
rather lose his head than his freedom to speak. But, peradventure, like the
blessed Abel, he too though dead yet speaks to us,(9) and now exclaims, more loudly
than John of old concerning Herodias. "It is not lawful for thee to have
her."(1) For even if the body of John in obedience to the law of nature has received
the sentence of God, and his tongue is silent, yet "the word of God is not
bound."(2) John, when he saw the wedlock of a fellow servant set at nought, was
bold to rebuke even to the death: how would he feel on seeing such an outrage
wreaked on the marriage chamber of the Lord?
2. You have flung away the yoke of that divine union; you have fled from
the undefiled chamber of the true King; you have shamefully fallen into this
disgraceful and impious corruption; and now that you cannot avoid this painful
charge, and have no means or device to conceal your trouble, you rush into
insolence. The wicked man after falling into a pit of iniquity always begins to
despise, and you are denying your actual covenant with the true bridegroom; you say
that you are not a virgin, and made no promise, although you have undertaken and
publicly professed many pledges of virginity. Remember the good profession
which you witnessed(3) before God, angels, and men. Remember the hallowed
intercourse, the sacred company of virgins, the assembly of the Lord, the Church of the
holy. Remember your grandmother, grown old in Christ, still youthful and
vigorous in virtue; and your mother vying with her in the Lord, and striving to
break with ordinary life in strange and unwonted toils; remember your sister, who
copies their doings, nay, endeavours to surpass them, and goes beyond the good
deeds of her fathers in her virgin graces, and earnestly challenges by word and
deed you her sister, as she thinks, to like efforts, while she earnestly prays
that your virginity be preserved.(4) All these call to mind, and your holy
service of God with them, your life spiritual, though in the flesh; your
conversation heavenly, though on earth. Remember days of calm, nights lighted up,
spiritual songs, sweet music of psalms, saintly prayers, a bed pure and undefiled,
procession of virgins, and moderate fare.(5) What has become of your grave
appearance, your gracious demeanour, your plain dress, meet for a virgin, the
beautiful blush of modesty, the comely and bright pallor due to temperance and vigils,
shining fairer than any brilliance of complexion? How often have you not
prayed, perhaps with tears, that you might preserve your virginity without spot! How
often have you not written to the holy men, imploring them to offer up prayers
in your behalf, not that it should be your lot to marry, still less to be
involved in this shameful corruption, but that you should not fall away from the
Lord Jesus? How often have you received gifts from the Bridegroom? Why enumerate
the honours given you for His sake by them that are His? Why tell of your
fellowship with virgins, your progress with them, your being greeted by them with
praises on account of virginity, eulogies of virgins, letters written as to a
virgin? Now, nevertheless, at a little blast from the spirit of the air, "that now
worketh in the children of disobedience,"(1) you have abjured all these; you
have changed the honourable treasure, worth fighting for at all costs, for
short-lived indulgence which does! for the moment gratify the appetite; one day you
will find it more bitter than gall.
3. Who would not grieve over such things and say, "How is the faithful
city become an harlot?"(2) How would not the Lord Himself say to some of those who
are now walking in the spirit of Jeremiah, "Hast thou seen what the virgin of
Israel has done to me?"(3) I betrothed her to me in trust, in purity, in
righteousness, in judgment, in pity, and in mercy;(4) as I promised her through Hosea
the prophet. But she loved strangers, and while I, her husband. was yet alive,
she is called adulteress, and is not afraid to belong to another husband. What
then says the conductor of the bride,(5) the divine and blessed Paul, both
that one of old, and the later one of to-day under whose mediation and instruction
you left your father's house and were united to the Lord? Might not either, in
sorrow for such a trouble, say, "The thing which I greatly feared is come upon
me, and that which I was afraid of is come unto me."(6) "I have espoused you
to one husband that I may present you as a chaste virgin to Christ."(7) I was
indeed ever afraid "lest by any means as the serpent beguiled Eve through his
subtilty, so your mind should be corrupted;"(8) wherefore by countless
counter-charms I strove to control the agitation of your senses, and by countless
safeguards to preserve the bride of the Lord. So I continually set forth the life of
the unmarried maid, and described how "the unmarried" alone "careth for the
things of the Lord, that she may be holy both in body and spirit."(1) I used to
describe the high dignity of virginity, and, addressing you as a temple of God,
used as it were to give wings to your zeal as I strove to lift you to Jesus. Yet
through fear of evil I helped you not to fall by the words "if any man defile
the temple of God, him shall God destroy."(2) So by my prayers I tried to make
you more secure, if by any means "your body, soul, and spirit might be preserved
blameless unto the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ."(3) Yet all my toil on your
behalf has been in vain. Bitter to me has been the end of those sweet labours.
Now I needs must groan again at that over which I ought to have rejoiced. You
have been deceived by the serpent more bitterly than Eve; and not only your
mind but also your body has been defiled. Even that last horror has come to pass
which I shrink from saying, and yet cannot leave unsaid, for it is as a burning
and blazing fire in my bones, and I am undone and cannot endure. You have taken
the members of Christ and made them the members of a harlot.(4) This is an
evil with which no other can be matched. This outrage in life is new. "For pass
over the Isles of Chittim and see; and send unto Chedar and consider diligently,
and see if there be such a thing. Hath a nation changed their gods which are
yet no gods."(5) But the virgin has changed her glory, and her glory is in her
shame. The heavens are astonished at this, and the earth is horribly afraid,
saith the Lord, for the virgin has committed two evils; she has forsaken(6) Me, the
true and holy Bridegroom of holy souls, and has betaken herself to an impious
and lawless destroyer of body and soul alike. She has revolted from God, her
Saviour, and yielded her members servants to uncleanness and to iniquity.(7) She
forgot me and went after her lover(8) from whom she will get no good.
4. It were better for him that a mill-stone had been hanged about his
neck, and that he had been cast into the sea, than that he should have offended the
virgin of the Lord.(9) What slave ever reached such a pitch of mad audacity as
to fling himself upon his master's bed? What robber ever attained such a
height of folly as to lay hands upon the very offerings of God, not dead vessels,
but bodies living and enshrining a soul made after the image of God?(1)
Who was ever known to have the hardihood, in the heart of a city anti at
high noon, to mark figures of filthy swine upon a royal statue? He who has set
at naught a marriage of man, with no mercy shewn him, in the presence of two or
three witnesses, dies.(2) Of how much sorer punishment, suppose you, shall he
be thought worthy who hath trodden under foot the Son of God, and defiled His
pledged bride and done despite unto the spirit of virginity?(3) But the woman, he
urges, consented, and I did no violence to her against her will. So, that
unchaste lady of Egypt raged with love for comely Joseph, but the chaste youth's
virtue was not overcome by the frenzy of the wicked woman, and, even when she
laid her hand upon him, he was not forced into iniquity. But still, he urges, this
was no new thing in her case; she was no longer a maid; if I had been
unwilling, she would have been corrupted by some one else. Yes; and it is written, the
Son of Man was ordained to be betrayed, but woe unto that man by whom He was
betrayed.(4) It must needs be that offences come, but woe to that man by whom
they come.(5)
5. In such a state of things as this, "Shall they fall and not arise?
Shall he turn away and not return?"(6) Why did the virgin turn shamefully away,
though she bad heard Christ her bridegroom saying through the mouth of Jeremiah,
"And I said, after she had done all these things (committed all these
fornications, LXX.), turn thou unto me, but she returned not?"(7) "Is there no balm in
Gilead; is there no physician there? Why then is not the health of the daughter
of my people recovered?"(8) You might indeed find many remedies for evil in
Scripture, many medicines to save from destruction and lead to health; the
mysteries of death and resurrection, the sentences of terrible judgment and everlasting
punishment; the doctrines of repentance and of remission of sins; all the
countless illustrations of conversion, the piece of money, the sheep, the son who
wasted his substance with harlots, who was lost and was found, who was dead and
alive again. Let us not use these remedies for ill; by these means let us heal
our soul. Bethink you of your last day, for you will surely not, unlike all
other women, live for ever. The distress, the gasping for breath, the hour of
death, the imminent sentence of God, the angels hastening on their way, the soul
fearfully dismayed, and lashed to agony by the consciousness of sin, turning
itself piteously to things of this life and to the inevitable necessity of that
long life to be lived elsewhere. Picture to me, as it rises in your imagination,
the conclusion of all human life, when the Son of God shall come in His glory
with His angels, "For he shall come anti shall not keep silence;"(1) when He
shall come to judge the quick and dead, to render to every one according to his
work; when that terrible trumpet with its mighty voice shall wake those that have
slept through the ages, and they that have done good shall come forth unto the
resurrection of life, and they that have done evil unto the resurrection of
damnation.(2) Remember the vision of Daniel, and bow he brings the judgment before
us: "I beheld till the thrones were cast down, and the Ancient of days did
sit, whose garment was white as snow, and the hair of His head like the pure wool;
... and His wheels as burning fire. A fiery stream issued and came forth
before Him; thousand thousands ministered unto Him, and ten thousand times ten
thousand stood before Him: the judgment was set, and the books were opened,"(3)
clearly disclosing in the hearing of all, angels and men, things good and evil,
things done openly and in secret, deeds, words, and thoughts all at once. What
then must those men be who have lived wicked lives? Where then shall that soul
hide which in the sight of all these spectators shall suddenly be revealed in its
fulness of shame? With what kind of body shall it sustain those endless and
unbearable pangs in the place of fire unquenched, and of the worm that perishes
and never dies, and of depth of Hades, dark and horrible; bitter wailings, loud
lamenting, weeping and gnashing of teeth and anguish without end? From all these
woes there is no release after death; no device, no means of coming forth from
the chastisement of pain.
6. We can escape now. While we can, let us lift ourselves from the fall:
let us never despair of ourselves, if only we depart from evil. Jesus Christ
came into the world to save sinners. "O come, let us worship and fall down; let us
weep before Him."(4) The Word Who invited us to repentance calls aloud, "Come
unto me all ye that labour and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest."(1)
There is, then, a way of salvation, if we will. "Death in his might has
swallowed up, but again the Lord hath wiped away tears from off all faces"(2) of them
that repent. The Lord is faithful in all His words.(3) He does not lie when He
says, "Though your sins be scarlet they shall be as white as snow. Though they
be red like crimson they shall be as wool."(4) The great Physician of souls, Who
is the ready liberator, not of you alone, but of all who are enslaved by sin,
is ready to heal your sickness. From Him come the words, it was His sweet and
saving lips that said, "They that be whole need not a physician but they that
are sick. ... I am not come to call the righteous but sinners to repentance."(5)
What excuse have you, what excuse has any one, when He speaks thus? The Lord
wishes to cleanse you from the trouble of your sickness and to show you light
after darkness. The good Shepherd, Who left them that had not wandered away, is
seeking after you. If you give yourself to Him He will not hold back. He, in His
love, will not disdain even to carry you on His own shoulders, rejoicing that
He has found His sheep which was lost. The Father stands and awaits your return
from your wandering. Only come back, and while you are yet afar off, He will
run and fall upon your neck, and, now that you are cleansed by repentance, will
enwrap you in embraces of love. He will clothe with the chief robe the soul that
has put off the old man with all his works; He will put a ring on hands that
have washed off the blood of death, and will put shoes on feet that have turned
from the evil way to the path of the Gospel of peace. He will announce the day
of joy and gladness to them that are His own, both angels and men, and will
celebrate your salvation far and wide. For "verily I say unto you," says He,
"there is joy in heaven before God over one sinner that repenteth."(6) If any of
those who think they stand find fault because of your quick reception, the good
Father will Himself make answer for you in the words, "It was meet that we should
make merry and be glad for this" my daughter "was dead and is alive again, was
lost and is found."(7)
LETTER XLVII.(1)
To Gregory.(2)
"WHO will give me wings like a dove?(3) Or how can my old age be so
renewed that I can travel to your affection, satisfy my deep longing to see you, tell
you all the troubles of my soul, and get from you some comfort in my
affliction? For when the blessed bishop Eusebius(4) fell asleep, we were under no small
alarm lest plotters against the Church of our Metropolis, wishful to fill it
with their heretical tares, should seize the present opportunity, root out by
their wicked teaching the true faith sown by much labour in men's souls, and
destroy its unity. This has been the result of their action in many churches.(5)
When however I received the letters of the clergy exhorting me not to let their
needs be overlooked at such a crisis, as I ranged my eyes in all directions I
bethought me of your loving spirit, your right faith, and your unceasing zeal on
behalf of the churches of God. I have therefore sent the well beloved
Eustathius,(6) the deacon, to invite your reverence, and implore you to add this one more
to all your labours on behalf of the Church. I entreat you also to refresh my
old age by a sight of you; and to maintain for the true Church its famous
orthodoxy, by uniting with me, if I may be deemed worthy of uniting with you, in the
good work, to give it a shepherd in accordance with the will of the Lord, able
to guide His people aright. I have before my eyes a man not unknown even to
yourself. If only we be found worthy to secure him, I am sure that we shall
acquire a confident access to God and confer a very great benefit on the people who
have invoked our aid. Now once again, aye, many times I call on you, all
hesitation put aside, to come to meet me, and to set out before the difficulties of
winter intervene.
LETTER XLVIII.(1)
To Eusebius, Bishop of Samosata.
I HAVE had considerable difficulty in finding a messenger to convey a
letter to your reverence, for our men are so afraid of the winter that they can
hardly bear even to put their heads outside their houses. We have suffered from
such a very heavy fall of snow that we have been buried, houses and all, beneath
it, and now for two months have been living in dens and caves. You know the
Cappadocian character and how hard it is to get us to move.(3) Forgive me then for
not writing sooner and bringing to the knowledge of your excellency the latest
news from Antioch. To tell you all this now, when it is probable that you
learnt it long ago, is stale and uninteresting. But as I do not reckon it any
trouble to tell you even what you know, I have sent you the letters conveyed by the
reader. On this point I shall say no more. Constantinople has now for some time
had Demophilus,(4) as the bearers of this letter will themselves tell you, and
as has doubtless been reported to your holiness. From all who come to us from
that city there is unanimously reported about him a certain counterfeit of
orthodoxy and sound religion, to such an extent that even the divided portions of
the city have been brought to agreement, and some of the neighbouring bishops
have accepted the reconciliation. Our men here have not turned out better than I
expected. They came directly you were gone,(1) said and did many painful
things, and at last went home again, after making their separation from me wider.(2)
Whether anything better will happen in the future, and whether they will give
up their evil ways, is unknown to all but God. So much for our present
condition. The rest of the Church, by God's grace, stands sound, and prays that in the
spring we may have you with us again, and be renewed by your good counsel. My
health is no better than it ever is.
LETTER XLIX.(3)
To Arcadius the Bishop.
I THANKED the Holy God when I read your letter, most pious brother. I pray
that I may not be unworthy of the expectations you have formed of me, and that
you will enjoy a full reward for the honour which you pay me in the name of
our Lord Jesus Christ. I was exceedingly pleased to hear that you have been
occupied in a matter eminently becoming a Christian, have raised a house to the
glory of God, and have in practical earnest loved, as it is written, "the beauty of
the house of the Lord, and have so provided for yourself that heavenly mansion
which is prepared in His rest for them that love the Lord. If I am able to
find any relics of martyrs, I pray that I may take part in your earnest endeavour.
If "the righteous shall be had in everlasting remembrance,"(5) I shall without
doubt have a share in the good fame which the Holy One will give you.
LETTER L.
To Bishop Innocentius.(7)
WHOM, indeed, could it better befit to encourage the timid, and rouse the
slumbering, than you, my godly lord, who have shewn your general excellence in
this, too, that you have consented to come down among us, your lowly inferiors,
like a true disciple of Him Who said, "I am among you," not as a fellow guest,
but "as he that serveth."(1) For you have condescended to minister to us your
spiritual gladness, to refresh our souls by your honoured letter, and, as it
were, to fling the arms of your greatness round the infancy of children. We,
therefore, implore your good soul to pray, that we may be worthy to receive aid
from the great, such as yourself, and to have a mouth and wisdom wherewith to
chime in with the strain of all, who like you are led by the Holy Spirit. Of Him I
hear that you are a friend and true worshipper, and I am deeply thankful for
your strong and unshaken love to God. I pray that my lot may be found with the
true worshippers, among whom we are sure your excellency is to be ranked, as well
as that great and true bishop who has filled all the world with his wonderful
work.
LETTER LI.(2)
To Bishop Bosporius.(3)
How do you think my heart was pained at hearing of the slanders heaped on
me by some of those that feel no fear of the Judge, who "shall destroy them
that speak leasing"?(4) I spent nearly the whole night sleepless, thinking of your
words of love; so did grief lay hold upon my heart of hearts. For verily, in
the words of Solomon, slander humbleth a man.(5) And no man is so void of
feeling as not to be touched heart, and bowed down to the ground, if he falls in with
lips prone to lying. But we must needs put up with all things and endure all
things, after committing our vindication to the Lord. He will not despise us;
for "he that oppresseth the poor reproacheth his Maker."(6) They, however, who
have patched up this new tragedy of blasphemy seem to have lost all belief in the
Lord, Who has declared that we must give account at the day of judgment even
for an idle word.(7) And I, tell me, I anathematized the right blessed Dianius?
For this is what they have said against me. Where? When? In whose presence? On
what pretext? In mere spoken words, or in writing? Following others, or myself
the author and originator of the deed? Alas for the impudence of men who make
no difficulty at saying anything l Alas for their contempt of the judgment of
God! Unless, indeed, they add this further to their fiction, that they make me
out to have been once upon a time so far out of my mind as not to know what I was
saying. For so long as I have been in my senses I know that I never did
anything of the kind, or had the least wish to do so. What I am, indeed, conscious of
is this; that from my earliest childhood I was brought up in love for him,
thought as I gazed at him how venerable he looked, how dignified, how truly
reverend. Then when I grew older I began to know him by the good qualities of his
soul, and took delight in his society, gradually learning to perceive the
simplicity, nobility, and liberality of his character, and all his most distinctive
qualities, his gentleness of soul, his mingled magnanimity and meekness, the
seemliness of his conduct, his control of temper, the beaming cheerfulness and
affability which he combined with majesty of demeanour. From all this I counted him
among men most illustrious for high character.
However, towards the close of his life (I will not conceal the truth) I,
together with many of them that in our country(1) feared the Lord, sorrowed over
him with sorrow unendurable, because he signed the creed brought from
Constantinople by George.(2) Afterwards, full of kindness and gentleness as he was, and
willing out of the fulness of his fatherly heart to give satisfaction to
everyone, when he had already fallen sick of the disease of which he died, he sent
for me, and, calling the Lord to witness, said that in the simplicity of his
heart he had agreed to the document sent from Constantinople, but had had no idea
of rejecting the creed put forth by the holy Fathers at Nicaea, nor had had any
other disposition of heart than from the beginning he had always had. He
prayed, moreover, that he might not be cut off from the lot of those blessed three
hundred and eighteen bishops who had announced the pious decree(1) to the world.
In consequence of this satisfactory statement I dismissed all anxiety and
doubt, and, as you are aware, communicated with him, and gave over grieving. Such
have been my relations with Dianius. If anyone avers that he is privy to any
vile slander on my part against Dianius, do not let him buzz it slave-wise in a
corner; let him come boldly out and convict me in the light of day.
LETTER LII.(2)
To the Canonicoe.
1. I HAVE been very much distressed by a painful report which reached my
ears; but I have been equally delighted by my brother, beloved of God, bishop
Bosporius,(4) who has brought a more satisfactory account of you. He avers by
God's grace that all those stories spread abroad about you are inventions of men
who are not exactly informed as to the truth about you. He added, moreover, that
he found among you impious calumnies about me, of a kind likely to be uttered
by those who do not expect to have to give the Judge in the day of His
righteous retribution an account of even an idle word. I thank God, then, both because
I am cured of my damaging opinion of you, an opinion which I have derived from
the calumnies of men, and because I have heard of your abandonment of those
baseless notions about me, on hearing the assurances of my brother. He, in all
that he has said as coming from himself, has also completely expressed my own
feeling. For in us both there is one mind about the faith, as being heirs of the
same Fathers who once at Nicaea promulgated their great decree(5) concerning the
faith. Of this, some portions are universally accepted without cavil, but the
homoousion, ill received in certain quarters, is still rejected; by some. These
objectors we may very properly blame, and yet on the contrary deem them
deserving of pardon. To refuse to follow the Fathers, not holding their declaration of
more authority than one's own opinion, is conduct worthy of blame, as being
brimful of self-sufficiency. On the other hand the fact that they view with
suspicion a phrase which is misrepresented by an opposite party does seem to a small
extent to relieve them from blame. Moreover, as a matter of fact, the members
of the synods which met to discuss the case of Paul of Samosata(1) did find
fault with the term as an unfortunate one.
For they maintained that the homoousion set forth the idea both of essence
and of what is derived from it, so that the essence, when divided, confers the
title of co-essential on the parts into which it is divided. This explanation
has some reason in the case of bronze and coins made therefrom, but in the case
of God the Father and God the Son there is no question of substance anterior
or even underlying both; the mere thought anti utterance of such a thing is the
last extravagance of impiety. What can be conceived of as anterior to the
Unbegotten? By this blasphemy faith in the Father and the Son is destroyed, for
things, constituted out of one, have to one another the relation of brothers.
2. Because even at that time there were men who asserted the Son to have
been brought into being out of the non-existent, the term homoousion was
adopted, to extirpate this impiety. For the conjunction of the Son with the Father is
without time and without interval. The preceding words shew this to have been
the intended meaning. For after saying that the Son was light of light, and
begotten of tile substance of tile Father, but was not made, they went on to add
the homoousion, thereby showing that whatever proportion of light any one would
attribute in the case of the Father will obtain also in that of the Son. For
very light in relation to very light, according to the actual sense of light, will
have no variation. Since then the Father is light without beginning, and the
Son begotten light, but each of Them light and light; they rightly said "of one
substance," in order to set forth the equal dignity of the nature. Things, that
have a relation of brotherhood, are not, as some persons have supposed, of one
substance; but when both the cause and that which derives its natural
existence from the cause are of the same nature, then they are called "of one
substance."
3. This term also corrects the error of Sabellius, for it removes the idea
of the identity of the hypostases, and introduces in perfection the idea of
the Persons. For nothing can be of one substance with itself, but one thing is of
one substance with another. The word has therefore an excellent and orthodox
use, defining as it does both the proper character of the hypostases, and
setting forth the invariability of the nature. And when we are taught that the Son is
of the substance of the Father, begotten and not made, let us not fall into
the material sense of the relations. For the substance was not separated from the
Father and bestowed on the Son; neither did the substance engender by fluxion,
nor yet by shooting forth(1) as plants their fruits. The mode of the divine
begetting is ineffable and inconceivable by human thought. It is indeed
characteristic of poor and carnal intelligence to compare the things that are eternal
with the perishing things of time, and to imagine, that as corporeal things
beget, so does God in like manner; it is rather our duty to rise to the truth by
arguments of the contrary, and to say, that since thus is the mortal, not thus is
He who is immortal. We must neither then deny tile divine generation, nor
contaminate our intelligence with corporeal senses.
4. The Holy Spirit, too, is numbered with the Father and the Son, because
He is above creation, and is ranked as we are taught by the words of the Lord
in the Gospel, "Go and baptize in the name of the Father and of the Son and of
the Holy Ghost."(2) He who, on the contrary, places the Spirit before the Son,
or alleges Him to be older than the Father, resists the ordinance of God, and is
a stranger to the sound faith, since he fails to preserve the form of doxology
which he has received, but adopts some new fangled device in order to be
pleasing to men. It is written "The Spirit is of God,"(3) and if He is of God, how
can He be older than that of which He is? And what folly is it not, when there
is one Unbegotten, to speak of something else as superior to the Unbegotten? He
is not even anterior, for nothing intervenes between Son and Father. If,
however, He is not of God but is through Christ, He does not even exist at all. It
follows, that this new invention about the order really involves the destruction
of the actual existence, and is a denial of the whole faith. It is equally
impious to reduce Him to the level of a creature, and to subordinate Him either to
Son or to Father, either in time or in rank. These are the points on which I
have heard that you are making enquiry. If the Lord grant that we meet I may
possibly have more to say on these subjects, and may myself, concerning points
which I am investigating, receive satisfactory information from you.
LETTER LIII.(1)
To the Chorepiscopi.(2)
1. MY soul is deeply pained at the enormity of the matter on which I
write, if for this only, that it has caused general suspicion and talk. But so far
it has seemed to me incredible. I hope then that what I am writing about it may
be taken by the guilty as medicine, by the innocent as a warning, by the
indifferent, in which class I trust none of you may be found, as a testimony. And
what is it of which I speak? There is a report that some of you take money from
candidates for ordination,(3) and excuse it on grounds of religion. This is
indeed worse. If any one does evil under the guise of good he deserves double
punishment; because he not only does what is in itself not good, but, so to say,
makes good an accomplice in the commission of sin. If the allegation be true, let
it be so no more. Let a better state of things begin. To the recipient of the
bribe it must be said, as was said by the Apostles to him who was willing to give
money to buy the fellowship of the Holy Ghost, "Thy money perish with thee.[1]
It is a lighter sin to wish in ignorance to buy, than it is to sell, the gift
of God. A sale it was; and if you sell what you received as a free gift you
will be deprived of the boon, as though you were yourself sold to Satan. You are
obtruding the traffic of the huckster into spiritual things and into the Church
where we are entrusted with the body and blood of Christ. These things mast not
be. And I will mention wherein lies an ingenious contrivance. They think that
there is no sin because they take the money not before but after the
ordination; but to take is to take at whatever time.
2. I exhort you, then, abandon this gain, or, I would rather says this
approach to Hell. Do not, by defiling your hands with such bribes, render
yourselves unfit to celebrate holy mysteries. But forgive me. I began by discrediting;
and now I am threatening as though I were convinced. If, after this letter of
mine, any one do anything of the kind, he will depart from the altars here and
will seek a place where he is able to buy and to sell God's gift. We and the
Churches of God have no such custom.[2] One word more, and I have done. These
things come of covetousness. Now covetousness is the root of all evil and is called
idolatry.[3] Do not then price idols above Christ for the sake of a little
money. Do not imitate Judas and once more betray for a bribe Him who was crucified
for us. For alike the lands and the hands of all that make such gain shall be
called Aceldama.[4]
LETTER LIV.[5]
To the Chorepiscopi.
I AM much distressed that the canons of the Fathers have fallen through,
and that the exact discipline of the Church has been banished from among you. I
am apprehensive lest, as this indifference grows, the affairs of the Church
should, little by little, fall into confusion According to the ancient custom
observed in the Churches of God, ministers in the Church were received after
careful examination; the whole of their life was investigated; an enquiry was made as
to their being neither railers nor drunkards, not quick to quarrel, keeping
their youth in subjection, so as to be able to maintain "the holiness without
which no man shall see the Lord."[6] This examination was made by presbyters and
deacons living with them. Then they brought them to the Chorepiscopi; and the
Chorepiscopi, after receiving the suffrages of the witnesses as to the truth and
giving information to the Bishop, so admitted the minister to the sacerdotal
order.[1] Now, however, you have quite passed me over; you have not even had the
grace to refer to me, and have transferred the whole authority to yourselves.
Furthermore, with complete indifference, you have allowed presbyters and deacons
to introduce unworthy persons into the Church, just any one they choose,
without any previous examination of life and character, by mere favoritism, on the
score of relationship or some other tie. The consequence is, that in every
village, there are reckoned many ministers, but not one single man worthy of the
service of the altars. Of this you yourselves supply proof from your difficulty in
finding suitable candidates for election. As, then, I perceive that the evil
is gradually reaching a point at which it would be incurable, and especially at
this moment when a large number of persons are presenting themselves for the
ministry through fear of the conscription, I am constrained to have recourse to
the restitution of the canons of the Fathers. I thus order you in writing to
send me the roll of the ministers in every village, stating by whom each has been
introduced, and what is his mode of life. You have the roll in your own
keeping, so that your version can be compared with the documents which are in mine,
and no one can insert his own name when he likes. So if any have been introduced
by presbyters after the first appointment,[2] let them be rejected, and take
their place among the laity. Their examination must then be begun by you over
again, and, if they prove worthy, let them be received by your decision. Drive out
unworthy men from the Church, and so purge it. For the future, test by
examination those who are worthy, and then receive them; but do not reckon them of the
number before you have reported to me. Otherwise, distinctly understand that
he who is admitted to the ministry without my authority will remain a layman.