THREE BOOKS ON THE DUTIES OF THE CLERGY -- BY ST. AMBROSE BISHOP OF MILAN,
BOOK III
BOOK III.
CHAPTER I.
We are taught by David and Solomon how to take counsel with our own heart.
Scipio is not to be accounted prime author of the saying which is ascribed to him.
The writer proves What glorious things the holy prophets accomplished in their
time of quiet, and shows, by examples of their and others' leisure moments,
that a just man is never alone in trouble.
1. The prophet David taught us that we should go about in our heart as
though in a large house; that we should hold converse with it as with some trusty
companion. He spoke to himself, and conversed with himself, as these words
show: "I said, I will take heed to my ways."(2) Solomon his son also said: "Drink
water out of thine own vessels, and out of the springs of thy wells; "(3) that
is: use thine own counsel. For: "Counsel in the heart of a man is as deep
waters."(4) "Let no stranger," it says, "share it with thee. Let the fountain of thy
water be thine own, and rejoice with thy wife who is thine from thy youth. Let
the loving hind and pleasant doe converse with thee."(5)
2. Scipio,(6) therefore, was not the first to know that he was not alone
when he was alone, or that he was least at leisure when he was at leisure. For
Moses knew it before him, who, when silent, was crying out;(4) who, when he
stood at ease, was fighting, nay, not merely fighting but triumphing over enemies
whom he had not come near. So much was he at ease, that others held up his
hands; yet he was no less active than others, for he with his hands at ease was
overcoming the enemy, whom they that were in the battle could not conquer.(5) Thus
Moses in his silence spoke, and in his ease laboured hard. And were his labours
greater than his times of quiet, who, being in the mount for forty days,
received the whole law?(6) And in that solitude there was One not far away to speak
with him. Whence also David says: "I will hear what the Lord God will say
within me."(7) How much greater a thing is it for God to speak with any one, than
for a man to speak with himself!
3. The apostles passed by and their shadows cured the sick.(8) Their
garments were touched and health was granted.
4. Elijah spoke the word, and the rain ceased and fell not on the earth
for three years and six months.(1) Again he spoke, and the barrel of meal failed
not, and the cruse of oil wasted not the whole time of that long famine.(2)
5. But--as many delight in warfare--which is the most glorious, to bring a
battle to an end by the strength of a great army, or, by merits before God
alone? Elisha rested in one place while the king of Syria waged a great war
against the people of our fathers, and was adding to its terrors by various
treacherous plans, and was endeavouring to catch them in an ambush. But the prophet
found out all their preparations, and being by the grace of God present everywhere
in mental vigour, he told the thoughts of their enemies to his countrymen, and
warned them of what places to beware. And when this was known to the king of
Syria, he sent an army and shut in the prophet. Elisha prayed and caused all of
them to be struck with blindness, and made those who had come to besiege him
enter Samaria as captives.(3)
6. Let us compare this leisure of his with that of others.(4) Other men
for the sake of rest are wont to withdraw their minds from business, and to
retire from the company and companionship of men; to seek the retirement of the
country or the solitude of the fields, or in the city to give their minds a rest
and to enjoy peace and quietness. But Elisha was ever active. In solitude he
divided Jordan on passing over it, so that the lower part flowed down, whilst the
upper returned to its source. On Carmel he promises the woman, who so far had
had no child, that a son now unhoped for should be born to her.(5) He raises the
dead to life,(6) he corrects the bitterness of the food, and makes it to be
sweet by mixing meal with it.(7) Having distributed ten loaves to the people for
food, he gathered up the fragments that were left after they had been filled.(8)
He makes the iron head of the axe, which had fallen off and was sunk deep in
the river Jordan, to swim by putting the wooden handle in the water.(9) He
changes leprosy for cleanness,(10) drought for rain,(11) famine for plenty.(12)
7. When can the upright man be alone, since he is always with God? When is
he left forsaken who is never separated from Christ? "Who," it says, "shall
separate us from the love of Christ? I am confident that neither death nor life
nor angel shall do so."(1) And when can he be deprived of his labour who never
can be deprived of his merits, wherein his labour receives its crown? By what
places is he limited to whom the whole world of riches is a possession? By what
judgment is he confined who is never blamed by any one? For he is "as unknown
yet well known, as dying and behold he lives, as sorrowful yet always rejoicing,
as poor yet making many rich, as having nothing and yet possessing all
things."(2) For the upright man regards nothing but what is consistent and virtuous.
And so although he seems poor to another, he is rich to himself, for his worth is
taken not at the value of the things which are temporal, but of the things
which are eternal.
CHAPTER II.
The discussions among philosophers about the comparison between what is
virtuous and what is useful have nothing to do with Christians. For with them nothing
is useful which is not just. What are the duties of perfection, and what are
ordinary duties? The same words often suit different things in different ways.
Lastly, a just man never seeks his own advantage at the cost of another's
disadvantage, but rather is always on the lookout for what is useful to others.
8. As we have already spoken about the two former subjects, wherein we
discussed what is virtuous and what is useful, there follows now the question
whether we ought to compare what is virtuous and useful together, and to ask which
we must follow. For, as we have already discussed the matter as to whether a
thing is virtuous or wicked, and in another place whether it is useful or
useless, so here some think we ought to find out whether a thing is virtuous or
useful.(3)
9. I am induced to do this, lest I should seem to be allowing that these
two are mutually opposed to one another, when I have already shown them to be
one. For I said that nothing can be virtuous but what is useful, and nothing can
be useful but what is virtuous.(4) For we do not follow the wisdom of the
flesh, whereby the usefulness that consists in an abundance of money is held to be
of most value, but we follow that wisdom which is of God, whereby those things
which are greatly valued in this world are counted but as loss.
10. For this <greek>katorqwma</greek>, which is duty carried out entirely
and in perfection, starts from the true source of virtue.(1) On this follows
another, or ordinary duty. This shows by its name that no hard or extraordinary
practice of virtue is involved, for it can be common to very many. The desire to
save money is the usual practice with many. To enjoy a well-prepared banquet
and a pleasant meal is a general habit; but to fast or to use self-restraint is
the practice of but few, and not to be desirous of another's goods is a virtue
rarely found. On the other hand, to wish to deprive another of his
property--and not to be content with one's due--here one will find many to keep company
with one. Those (the philosopher would say) are primary duties--these ordinary.(2)
The primary are found but with few, the ordinary with the many.
11. Again, the same words often have a different meaning. For instance, we
call God good and a man good; but it bears in each case quite a different
meaning.(3) We call God just in one sense, man in another. So, too, there is a
difference in meaning when we call God wise and a man wise. This we are taught in
the Gospel: "Be ye perfect even as your Father Who is in heaven is perfect. "(4)
I read again that Paul was perfect and yet not perfect. For when he said: "Not
as though I had already attained, either were already perfect; but I follow
after, if that. I may apprehend it. "(5) Immediately he added: "We, then, that
are perfect."(6) There is a twofold form of perfection, the one having but
ordinary, the other the highest worth. The one availing here, the other hereafter.
The one in accordance with human powers, the other with the perfection of the
world to come. But God is just through all, wise above all, perfect in all.
12. There is also diversity even among men themselves. Daniel, of whom it
was said: "Who is wiser than Daniel? "(7) was wise in a different sense to what
others are. The same may be said of Solomon, who was filled with wisdom, above
all the wisdom of the ancients, and more than all the wise men of Egypt.(8) To
be wise as men are in general is quite a different thing to being really wise.
He who is ordinarily wise is wise for temporal matters, is wise for himself,
so as to deprive another of something and get it for himself. He who is really
wise does not know how to regard his own advantage, but looks with all his
desire to that which is eternal, and to that which is seemly and virtuous, seeking
not what is useful for himself, but for all.
13. Let this, then, be our rule,(1) so that we may never go wrong between
two things, one virtuous, the other useful. The upright man must never think of
depriving another of anything, nor must he ever wish to increase his own
advantage to the disadvantage of another. This rule the Apostle gives thee, saying:
"All things are lawful, but all things are not expedient; all things are
lawful, but all things edify not. Let no man seek his own, but each one
another's."(2) That is: Let no man seek his own advantage, but another's; let no man seek
his own honour, but another's. Wherefore he says in another place: "Let each
esteem other better than themselves, looking not each one to his own things, but to
the things of others."(3)
14. And let no one seek his own favour or his own praise, but another's.
This we can plainly see declared in the book of Proverbs, where the Holy Spirit
says through Solomon: "My son, if thou be wise, be wise for thyself and thy
neighbours; but if thou turn out evil, thou alone shalt bear it."(4) The wise man
gives counsel to others, as the upright man does, and shares with him in
wearing the form of either virtue.
CHAPTER III.
The rule given about not seeking one's own gain is established, first by the
examples of Christ, next by the meaning of the word, and lastly by the very form
and uses of our limbs. Wherefore the writer shows what a crime it is to
deprive another of what is useful, since the law of nature as well as the divine law
is broken by such wickedness. Further, by its means we also lose that gift
which makes us superior to other living creatures; and lastly, through it civil
laws are abused and treated with the greatest contempt.
15. If, then, any one wishes to please all, he must strive in everything
to do, not what is useful for himself, but what is useful for many, as also Paul
strove to do. For this is "to be conformed to the image of Christ,"(5) namely,
when one does not strive for what is another's, and does not deprive another
of something so as to gain it for oneself. For Christ our Lord,(1) though He was
in the form of God, emptied Himself so as to take on Himself the form of man,
which He wished to enrich with the virtue of His works. Wilt thou, then, spoil
him whom Christ has put on? Wilt thou strip him whom Christ has clothed? For
this is what thou art doing when thou dost attempt to increase thine own
advantage at another's loss.
16. Think, O man, from whence thou hast received thy name--even from the
earth,(2) which takes nothing from any one, but gives freely to all, and
supplies varied produce for the use of all living things. Hence humanity is called a
particular and innate virtue in man, for it assists its partner.
17. The very form of thy body and the uses of thy limbs teach thee this.
Can one limb claim the duties of another? Can the eye claim for itself the
duties of the ear; or the mouth the duties of the eye; or the hand the service of
the feet; or the feet that of the hands? Nay, the hands themselves, both left and
right, have different duties to do, so that if one were to change the use of
either, one would act contrary to nature. We should have to lay aside the whole
man before we could change the service of the various members: as if, for
instance, we were to try to take food with the left hand, or to perform the duties
of the left hand with the right, so as to remove the remains of food--unless, of
course, need demanded it.
18. Imagine for a moment, and give to the eye the power to withdraw the
understanding from the head, the sense of hearing from the ears, the power of
thought from the mind, the sense of smell from the nose, the sense of taste from
the mouth, and then to assume them itself, would it not at once destroy the
whole order of nature? Wherefore the Apostle says well: "If the whole body were an
eye, where were the hearing? If the whole were hearing, where were the
smelling?"(3) So, then, we are all one body, though with many members, all necessary to
the body. For no one member can say of another: "I have no need of thee." For
those members which seem to be more feeble are much more necessary and require
greater care and attention. And if one member suffers, all the members suffer
with it.(4)
19. So we see how grave a matter it is to deprive another, with whom we
ought rather to suffer, of anything, or to act unfairly or injuriously towards
one to whom we ought to give a share in our services. This is a true law of
nature, which binds us to show all kindly feeling, so that we should all of us in
turn help one another, as parts of one body, and should never think of depriving
another of anything, seeing it is against the law of nature even to abstain
from giving help. We are born in such a way that limb combines with limb, and one
works with another, and all assist each other in mutual service. But if one
fails in its duty, the rest are hindered. If, for instance, the hand tears out the
eye, has it not hindered the use, of its work? If it were to wound the foot,
how many actions would it not prevent? But how much worse is it for the whole
man to be drawn aside from his duty than for one of the members only! If the
whole body is injured in one member, so also is the whole community of the human
race disturbed in one man. The nature of mankind is injured, as also is the
society of the holy Church, which rises into one united body, bound together in
oneness of faith and love. Christ the Lord, also, Who died for all, will grieve
that the price of His blood was paid in vain.
20. Why, the very law of the Lord teaches us that this rule must be
observed, so that we may never deprive another of anything for the sake of our own
advantage. For it says: "Remove not the bounds which thy fathers have set. "(1)
It bids a neighbour's ox to be brought back if found wandering.(2) It orders a
thief to be put to death.(3) It forbids the labourer to be deprived of his
hire,(4) and orders money to be returned without usury.(5) It is a mark of kindly
feeling to help him who has nothing, but it is a sign of a hard nature to extort
more than one has given. If a man has need of thy assistance because he has not
enough of his own wherewith to repay a debt, is it not a wicked thing to
demand under the guise of kindly feeling a larger sum from him who has not the means
to pay off a less amount? Thou dost but free him from debt to another, to
bring him under thy own hand; and thou callest that human kindliness which is but a
further wickedness.
21. It is in this very matter that we stand before all other living
creatures, for they do not understand how to do good. Wild beasts snatch away, men
share with others. Wherefore the Psalmist says: "The righteous showeth mercy and
giveth. "(1) There are some, however, to whom the wild beasts do good. They
feed their young with what they get, and the birds satisfy their brood with food;
but to men alone has it been given to feed all as though they were their own.
That is so in accordance with the claims of nature. And if it is not lawful to
refuse to give, how is it lawful to deprive another? And do not our very laws
teach us the same? They order those things which have been taken from others with
injury to their persons or property to be restored with additional recompense;
so as to check the thief from stealing by the penalty, and by the fine to
recall him from his ways.
22. Suppose, however, that some one did not fear the penalty, or laughed
at the fine, would that make it a worthy thing to deprive another of his own?
That would be a mean vice and suited only to the lowest of the low. So contrary
to nature is it, that while want might seem to drive one to it, yet nature could
never urge it. And yet we find secret theft among slaves, open robbery among
the rich.
23. But what so contrary to nature as to injure another for our own
benefit? The natural feelings of our own hearts urge us to keep on the watch for all,
to undergo trouble, to do work for all. It is considered also a glorious thing
for each one at risk to himself to seek the quiet of all, and to think it far
more thankworthy to have saved his country from destruction than to have kept
danger from himself. We must think it a far more noble thing to labour for our
country than to pass a quiet life at ease in the full enjoyment of leisure.
CHAPTER IV.
As it has been shown that he who injures another for the sake of his own
advantage will undergo terrible punishment at the hand of his own conscience, it is
referred that nothing is useful to one which is not in the same way useful to
all. Thus there is no place among Christians for the question propounded by the
philosophers about two shipwrecked persons, for they must show love and
humility to all.
24. Hence we infer(2) that a man who guides himself according to the
ruling of nature, so as to be obedient to her, can never injure another. If he
injures another, he violates nature, nor will he think that what he has gained is so
much an advantage as a disadvantage. And what punishment is worse than the
wounds of the conscience within? What judgment harder than that of our hearts,
whereby each one stands convicted and accuses himself of the injury that he has
wrongfully done against his brother? This the Scriptures speak of very plainly,
saying: "Out of the mouth of fools there is a rod for wrong-doing."(1) Folly,
then, is condemned because it causes wrong-doing. Ought we not rather to avoid
this, than death, or loss, or want, or exile, or sickness? Who would not think
some blemish of body or loss of inheritance far less than some blemish of soul or
loss of reputation?
25. It is clear, then,(2) that all must consider and hold that the
advantage of the individual is the same as that of all, and that nothing must be
considered advantageous except what is for the general good. For how can one be
benefited alone? That which is useless to all is harmful. I certainly cannot think
that he who is useless to all can be of use to himself. For if there is one law
of nature for all, there is also one state of usefulness for all. And we are
bound by the law of nature to act for the good of all. It is not, therefore,
right for him who wishes the interests of another to be considered according to
nature, to injure him against the law of nature.
26. For if those who run in a race(3) are, as one hears, instructed and
warned each one to win the race by swiftness of foot and not by any foul play,
and to hasten on to victory by running as hard as they can, but not to dare to
trip up another or push him aside with their hand, how much more in the course of
this life ought the victory to be won by us, without falseness to another and
cheating?
27. Some ask(4) whether a wise man ought in case of a shipwreck to take
away a plank from an ignorant sailor? Although it seems better for the common
good that a wise man rather than a fool should escape from shipwreck, yet I do not
think that a Christian, a just and a wise man, ought to save his own life by
the death of another; just as when he meets with an armed robber he cannot
return his blows, lest in defending his life he should stain his love toward his
neighbour. The verdict on this is plain and clear in the books of the Gospel. "Put
up thy sword, for every one that taketh the sword shall perish with the sword.
"(5) What robber is more hateful than the persecutor who came to kill Christ?
But Christ would not be defended from the wounds of the persecutor, for He
willed to heal all by His wounds.
28. Why dost thou consider thyself greater than another, when a Christian
man ought to put others before himself, to claim nothing for himself, usurp no
honours, claim no reward for his merits? Why, next, art thou not wont to bear
thy own troubles rather than to destroy another's advantage? For what is so
contrary to nature as not to be content with what one has or to seek what is
another's, and to try to get it in shameful ways. For if a virtuous life is in
accordance with nature--for God made all things very good--then shameful living must
be opposed to it A virtuous and a shameful life cannot go together, since they
are absolutely severed by the law of nature.
CHAPTER V.
The upright does nothing that is contrary to duty, even though there is a hope
of keeping it secret. To point this out the tale about the ring of Gyges was
invented by the philosophers. Exposing this, he brings forWard known and true
examples from the life of David and John the Baptist.
29. To lay down here already the result of our discussion, as though we
had already ended it, we declare it a fixed rule, that we must never aim at
anything hut what is virtuous.(1) The wise man does nothing but what can be done
openly and without falseness,(2) nor does he do anything whereby he may involve
himself in any wrong-doing, even where he may escape notice. For he is guilty in
his own eyes, before being so in the eyes of others; and the publicity of his
crime does not bring him more shame than his own consciousness of it. This we
can show, not by the made-up stories which philosophers use, but from the true
examples of good men.
30. I need not, therefore, imagine a great chasm in the earth, which had
been loosened by heavy rains, and had afterwards burst asunder, as Plato
does.(3) For he makes Gyges descend into that chasm, and to meet there that iron horse
of the fable that had doors in its sides. When these doors were opened, he
found a gold ring on the finger of a dead man, whose corpse lay there lifeless. He
desiring the gold took away the ring. But when he returned to the king's
shepherds, to whose number he belonged, by chance having turned the stone inwards
towards the palms of his hands, he saw all, yet was seen by none. Then when he
turned the ring to its proper position, he was again seen by all. On becoming
conscious of this strange power, by the use of the ring he committed adultery with
the queen, killed the king, and took possession of the kingdom after slaying
all the rest, who he thought should be put to death, so that they might be no
hindrance to him.
31. Give, says Plato, this ring to a wise man, that when he commits a
fault he may by its help remain unnoticed; yet he will be none the more free from
the stain of sin than if he could not be hid. The hiding-place of the wise lies
not in the hope of impunity but in his own innocency. Lastly, the law is not
laid down for the just but for the unjust.(1) For the just has within himself the
law of his mind, and a rule of equity and justice. Thus he is not recalled
from sin by fear of punishment, but by the rule of a virtuous life.
32. Therefore, to return to our subject, I will now bring forward, not
false examples for true, but true examples in place of false. For why need I
imagine a chasm in the earth, and an iron horse and a gold ring found on the fingers
of a dead man; and say that such was the power of this ring, that he who wore
it could appear at his own will, but if he did not wish to be seen, he could
remove himself out of the sight of those who stood by, so as to seem to be away.
This story, of course, is meant to answer the question whether a wise man, on
getting the opportunity of using that ring so as to be able to hide his crimes,
and to obtain a kingdom,--whether, I say, a wise man would be unwilling to sin
and would consider the stain of sin far worse than the pains of punishment, or
whether he would use it for doing wickedness in the hope of not being found
out? Why, I say, should I need the pretence of a ring, when I can show from what
has been done that a wise man, on seeing he would not only be undetected in his
sin, but would also gain a kingdom if he gave way to it, and who, on the other
hand, noted danger to his own safety if he did not commit the crime, yet chose
to risk his own safety so as to be free from crime, rather than to commit the
crime and so gain the kingdom.
33. When David fled from the face of King Saul,(2) because the king was
seeking him in the desert with three thousand chosen men to put him to death, he
entered the king's camp and found him sleeping. There he not only did him no
injury, but actually guarded him from being slain by any who had entered with
him. For when Abishai said to him: "The Lord hath delivered thine: enemy into
thine hand this day, 'now therefore I will slay him," he answered: "Destroy him
not, for who can stretch forth his hand against the Lord's anointed, and be
guiltless?" And he added: "As the Lore liveth, unless the Lord shall smite him, or
his day shall come to die, or he shall die in battle, and it be laid to me, the
Lord forbid that I should stretch out my hand against the Lord's anointed."(1)
34. Therefore he did not suffer him to be slain, but removed only his
spear, which stood by his head, and his cruse of water. Then, whilst all were
sleeping, he left the camp and went across to the top of the hill, and began to
reproach the royal attendants, and especially their general Abner, for not keeping
faithful watch over their lord and king. Next, he showed them where the king's
spear and cruse were which had stood at his head. And when the king called to
him, he restored the spear, and said: "The Lord render to every man his
righteousness and faithfulness, for the Lord delivered thee into my hand, but I would
not avenge myself on the Lord's anointed."(2) Even whilst he said this, he
feared his plots and fled, changing his place in exile. However, he never put
safety before innocency, seeing that when a second opportunity was given him of
killing the king, he would not use the chance that came to him, and which put in
his reach certain safety instead of fear, and a kingdom instead of exile.
35. Where was the use of the ring in John's case,(3) who would not have
been put to death by Herod if he had kept silence? He could have kept silence
before him so as to be both seen and yet not killed. But because he not only could
not endure to sin himself to protect his own safety, but could not bear and
endure even another's sin, he brought about the cause of his own death. Certainly
none can deny that he might have kept silence, who in the case of Gyges deny
that he could have remained invisible by the help of the ring.
36. But although that fable has not the force of truth, yet it has this
much to go upon, that if an upright man could hide himself, yet he would avoid
sin just as though he could not conceal himself; and that he would not hide his
person by putting on a ring, but his life by putting on Christ. As the Apostle
says: "Our life is hid with Christ in God."(1) Let, then, no one here strive to
shine, let none show pride, let none boast. Christ willed not to be known here,
He would not that His Name should be preached in the Gospel whilst He lived on
earth. He came to lie hid from this world. Let us therefore likewise hide our
life after the example of Christ, let us shun boast-fulness, let us not desire
to be made known. It is better to live here in humility, and there in glory.
"When Christ," it says, '' shall appear, then shall we also appear with Him in
glory."(2)
CHAPTER VI.
We ought not to allow the idea of profit to get hold of us. What excuses they
make who get their gains by selling corn, and what answer ought to be made to
them. In connection with this certain parables from the Gospels and some of the
sayings of Solomon are set before our eyes.
37. Let not, therefore, expediency get the better of virtue, but virtue of
expediency. By expediency here I mean what is accounted so by people
generally. Let love of money be destroyed, let lust die. The holy man says that he has
never been engaged in business.(3) For to get an increase in price is a sign not
of simplicity but of cunning. Elsewhere it says: "He that seeketh a high price
for his corn is cursed among the people."(4)
38. Plain and definite is the statement, leaving no room for debate, such
as a disputatious kind of speaking is wont to give, when one maintains that
agriculture is considered praiseworthy by all; that the fruits of the earth are
easily grown; that the more a man has sown, the greater will be his meed of
praise; further, that the richer returns of his active labours are not gained by
fraud, and that carelessness and disregard for an uncultivated soil are wont to be
blamed.
39. I have ploughed, he says, carefully. I have sown freely. I have tilled
actively. I have gathered good increase. I have stored it anxiously, saved it
faithfully, and guarded it with care. Now in a time of famine I sell it, and
come to the help of the hungry. I sell my own corn, not another's. And for no
more than others, nay, even at a less price. What fraud is there here, when many
would come to great danger if they had nothing to buy? Is industry to be made a
crime? Or diligence to be blamed? Or foresight to be abused? Perhaps he may
even say : Joseph collected corn in a time of abundance, and sold it when it was
dear. Is any one forced to buy it at too dear a price? Is force employed against
the buyer? The opportunity to buy is afforded to all, injury is inflicted on
none.
40. When this has been said, and one man's ideas have carried him so far,
another rises and says: Agriculture is good indeed, for it supplies fruits for
all, and by simple industry adds to the richness of the earth without any
cheating or fraud. If there is any error, the loss is the greater, for the better a
man sows, the better he will reap. If he has sown the pure grain of wheat, he
gathers a purer and cleaner harvest. The fruitful earth returns what she has
received in manifold measure. A good field returns its produce with interest.
41. Thou must expect payment for thy labour from the crops of the fruitful
land, and must hope for a just return from the fruitfulness of the rich earth.
Why dost thou use the industry of nature and make a cheat of it? Why dost thou
grudge for the use of men what is grown for all? Why lessen the abundance for
the people? Why make want thy aim? Why make the poor long for a barren season?
For when they do not feel the benefits of a fruitful season, because thou art
putting up the price, and art storing up the corn, they would far rather that
nothing should be produced, than that thou shouldst do business at the expense
of other people's hunger. Thou makest much of the want of corn, the small supply
of food. Thou groanest over the rich crops of the soil; thou mournest the
general plenty, and bewailest the garners full of corn; thou art on the lookout to
see when the crop is poor and the harvest fails. Thou rejoicest that a curse
has smiled upon thy wishes, so that none should have their produce. Then thou
rejoicest that thy harvest has come. Then thou collectest wealth from the misery
of all, and callest this industry and diligence, when it is but cunning
shrewdness and an adroit trick of the trade. Thou callest it a remedy, when it is but a
wicked contrivance. Shall I call this robbery or only gain? These
opportunities are seized as though seasons for plunder, wherein, like some cruel waylayer,
thou mayest fall upon the stomachs of men. The price rises higher as though by
the mere addition of interest, but the danger to life is increased too. For
then the interest of the stored-up crops grows higher. As a usurer thou hidest up
thy corn, as a seller thou puttest it up for auction. Why dost thou wish evil
to all, because the famine will grow worse, as though no corn should be left, as
though a more unfruitful year should follow? Thy gain is the public loss.
42. Holy Joseph opened the garners to all; he did not shut them up. He did
not try to get the full price of the year's produce, but assigned it for a
yearly payment. He took nothing for himself, but, so far as famine could be
checked for the future, he made his arrangements with careful foresight.
43. Thou hast read how the Lord Jesus in the Gospel speaks of that
corn-dealer who was looking out for a high price, whose possessions brought him in
rich fruits, but who, as though still in need, said: "What shall I do? I have no
room where to bestow my goods. I will pull down my barns and build greater,"(1)
though he could not know whether in the following night his soul would not be
demanded of him. He knew not what to do, he seemed to be in doubt, just as
though he were in want of food. His barns could not take in the year's supply, and
yet he thought he was in need.
44. Rightly, therefore, Solomon says: "He that withholdeth corn shall
leave it for the nations,"(2) not for his heirs, for the gains of avarice have
nothing to do with the rights of succession. That which is not rightfully got
together is scattered as though by a wind by outsiders that seize it. And he added:
"He who graspeth at the year's produce is cursed among the people, but blessing
shall be his that imparteth it." Thou seest, then, what is said of him who
distributes the corn, but not of him that seeks for a high price. True expediency
does not therefore exist where virtue loses more than expediency gains.
CHAPTER VII.
Strangers must never be expelled the city in a time of famine. In this matter
the noble advice of a Christian sage is adduced, in contrast to which the
shameful deed committed at Rome is given. By comparing the two it is shown that the
former is combined with what is virtuous and useful, but the latter with
neither.
45. But they, too, who would forbid the city to strangers(1) cannot have
our approval. They would expel them at the very time when they ought to help,
and separate them from the trade of their common parent. They would refuse them a
share in the produce meant for all, and avert the intercourse that has already
begun; and they are unwilling, in a time of necessity, to give those with whom
they have enjoyed their rights in common, a share in what they themselves
have. Beasts do not drive out beasts, yet man shuts out man. Wild beasts and
animals consider food which the earth supplies to be common to all. They all give
assistance to those like themselves; and man, who ought to think nothing human
foreign to himself, fights against his own.
46. How much better did he act who, having already reached an advanced
age, when the city was suffering from famine, and, as is common in such cases, the
people demanded that strangers should be forbidden the city, having the office
of the prefectship(2) of the city, which is higher than the rest, called
together the officials and richer men, and demanded that they should take counsel
for the public welfare. He said that it was as cruel a thing for the strangers to
be expelled as for one man to be cast off by another, and to be refused food
when dying. We do not allow our dogs to come to our table and leave them unfed,
yet we shut out a man. How unprofitable, again, it is for the world that so
many people perish, whom some deadly plague carries off. How unprofitable for
their city that so large a number should perish, who were wont to be helpful either
in paying contributions or in carrying on business. Another's hunger is
profitable to no man, nor to put off the day of help as long as possible and to do
nothing to check the want. Nay more, when so many of the cultivators of the soil
are gone, when so many labourers are dying, the corn supplies will fail for the
future. Shall we then expel those who are wont to supply us with food, are we
unwilling to feed in a time of need those who have fed us all along? How great
is the assistance which they supply even at this time. "Not by bread alone does
man live."(1) They are even our own family; many of them even are our own
kindred. Let us make some return for what we have received.
47. But perhaps we fear that want may increase. First of all, I answer,
mercy never fails, but always finds means of help. Next, let us make up for the
corn supplies which are to be granted to them, by a subscription. Let us put
that right with our gold. And, again, must we not buy other cultivators of the
soil if we lose these? How much cheaper is it to feed than to buy a working-man.
Where, too, can one obtain, where find a man to take the place of the former?
And suppose one finds him, do not forget that, with an ignorant man used to
different ways, one may fill up the place in point of numbers, but not as regards
the work to be done.
48. Why need I say more? When the money was supplied corn was brought in.
So the city's abundance was not diminished, and yet assistance was given to the
strangers. What praise this act won that holy man from God! What glory among
men! He, indeed, had won an honoured name, who, pointing to the people of a
whole province, could truly say to the emperor: All these I have preserved for
thee; these live owing to the kindness of the senate; these thy council(2) has
snatched from death!
49. How much more expedient was this than that which was done lately at
Rome. There from that widely extended city were those expelled who had already
passed most of their life in it. In tears they went forth with their children,
for whom as being citizens they bewailed the exile, which, as they said, ought to
be averted; no less did they grieve over the broken bonds of union, the
severed ties of relationship. And yet a fruitful year had smiled upon us. The city
alone needed corn to be brought into it. It could have got help, if it had sought
corn from the Italians whose children they were driving out. Nothing is more
shameful than to expel a man as a foreigner, and yet to claim his services as
though he belonged to us. How canst thou expel a man who lives on his own
produce? How canst thou expel him who supplies thee with food? Thou retainest thy
servant, and thrustest out thy kindred! Thou takest the corn, but showest no good
feeling! Thou takest food by force, but dost not show gratitude!
50. How wretched this is, how useless! For how can that be expedient which
is not seemly. Of what great supplies from her corporations has Rome at times
been deprived, yet she could not dismiss them and yet escape a famine, while
waiting for a favourable breeze, and the provisions in the hoped-for ships.
51. How far more virtuous and expedient was that first-mentioned
management! For what is so seemly or virtuous as when the needy are assisted by the
gifts of the rich, when food is supplied to the hungry, when daily bread fails
none? What so advantageous as when the cultivators are kept for the land, and the
country people do not perish?
52. What is virtuous, then, is also expedient, and what is expedient is
virtuous. On the other hand, what is not expedient is unseemly, and what is
unseemly is also not expedient.
CHAPTER VIII.
That those who put what is virtuous before what is useful are acceptable to
God is shown by the example of Joshua, Caleb, and the other spies.
53. When could our fathers ever have thrown off their servitude, unless
they had believed that it was not only shameful but even useless to serve the
king of Egypt?
54. Joshua, also, and Caleb, when sent to spy out the land, brought back
the news that the land was indeed rich, but that it was inhabited by very fierce
nations.(1) The people, terrified at the thought of war, refused to take
possession of their land. Joshua and Caleb, who had been sent as spies, tried to
persuade them that the land was fruitful. They thought it unseemly to give way
before the heathen; they chose rather to be stoned, which is what the people
threatened, than to recede from their virtuous standpoint. The others kept
dissuading, the people exclaimed against it. saying they would have to fight against
cruel and terrible nations; that they would fall in battle, and their wives and
children would be left for a prey.(1)
55. The anger of the Lord burst forth,(2) so that He would kill all, but
at the prayer of Moses He softened His judgment and put off His vengeance,
knowing that He had already sufficiently punished those who were faithless, even if
He spared them meanwhile and did not slay the unbelievers. However, He said(3)
they should not come to that land which they had refused, as a penalty for
their unbelief; but their children and wives, who had not murmured, and who, owing
to their sex and age, were guiltless, should receive the promised inheritance
of that land. So the bodies of those of twenty years old and upwards fell in the
desert. The punishment of the rest was put aside. But they who had gone up
with Joshua, and had thought fit to dissuade the people, died forthwith of a great
plague.(4) Joshua and Caleb(5) entered the land of promise together with those
who were innocent by reason of age or sex.
56. The better part, therefore, preferred glory to safety; the worse part
safety to virtue. But the divine judgment approved those who thought virtue was
above what is useful, whilst it condemned those who preferred what seemed more
in accordance with safety than with what is virtuous.
CHAPTER IX.
Cheating and dishonest ways of making money are utterly unfit for clerics
whose duty is to serve all. They ought never to be involved in a money affair,
unless it is one affecting a man's life. For them the example of David is given,
that they should injure none, even when provoked; also the death of Naboth, to
keep them from preferring life to virtue.
57. Nothing is more odious than for a man to have no love for a virtuous
life, but instead to be kept excited by an unworthy business in following out a
low line of trade, or to be inflamed by an avaricious heart, and by day and by
night to be eager to damage another's property, not to raise the soul to the
splendour of a virtuous life, and not to regard the beauty of true praise.
58. Hence rise inheritances sought by cunning words and gained under
pretence of being self-restrained and serious. But this is absolutely abhorrent to
the idea of a Christian man. For everything gained by craft and got together by
cheating loses the merit of openness. Even amongst those who have undertaken no
duty in the ranks of the clergy it is considered unfitting to seek for the
inheritance of another. Let those who are reaching the end of their life use their
own judgment, so that they may freely make their wills as they think best,
since they will not be able to amend them later. For it is not honourable to
divert the savings that belong to others or have been got together for them. It is
further the duty of the priest or the cleric to be of use if possible to all and
to be harmful to none.(1)
59. If it is not possible to help one without injuring another, it is
better to help neither than to press hard upon one. Therefore it is not a priest's
duty to interfere in money affairs. For here it must often happen that he who
loses his case receives harm; and then he considers that he has been worsted
through the action of the intervener. It is a priest's duty to hurt no one, to be
ready to help all. To be able to do this is in God's power alone. In a case of
life and death, without doubt it is a grave sin to injure him whom one ought to
help when in danger. But it is foolish to gain others' hate in taking up money
matters, though for the sake of a man's safety great trouble and toil may
often be undertaken. It is glorious in such a case to run risks. Let, then, this be
firmly held to in the priestly duties, namely, to injure none, not even when
provoked and embittered by some injury.(2) Good was the man who said: "If I have
rewarded evil to those who did me good."(3) For what glory is it if we do not
injure him who has not injured us? But it is true virtue to forgive when
injured.
60. What a virtuous action was that, when David wished rather to spare the
king his enemy, though he could have injured him!(4) How useful, too, it was,
for it helped him when he succeeded to the throne. For all learnt to observe
faith to their king and not to seize the kingdom, but to fear and reverence him.
Thus what is virtuous was preferred to what was useful, and then usefulness
followed on what was virtuous.
61. But that he spared him was a small matter; he also grieved for him
when slain in war, and mourned for him with tears, saying: "Ye mountains of
Gilboa, let neither dew nor rain fall upon you; ye mountains of death, for there the
shield of the mighty is cast away, the shield of Saul. It is not anointed with
oil, but with the blood of the wounded and the fat of the warriors. The bow of
Jonathan turned not back and the sword of Saul returned not empty. Saul and
Jonathan were lovely and very dear, inseparable in life, and in death they were
not divided. They were swifter than eagles, they were stronger than lions. Ye
daughters of Israel, weep over Saul, who clothed you in scarlet with your
ornaments, who put on gold upon your apparel. How are the mighty fallen in the midst of
the battle! Jonathan was wounded even to death. I am distressed for thee, my
brother Jonathan; very pleasant hast thou been unto me. Thy love came to me like
the love of women. How have the mighty fallen and the longed-for weapons
perished!(1)
62. What mother could weep thus for her only son as he wept here for his
enemy? Who could follow his benefactor with such praise as that with which he
followed the man who plotted against his life? How affectionately he grieved,
with what deep feeling he bewailed him! The mountains dried up at the prophet's
curse, and a divine power filled the judgment of him who spoke it. Therefore the
elements themselves paid the penalty for witnessing the king's death.
63. And what, in the case of holy Naboth, was the cause of his death,
except his regard for a virtuous life? For when the king demanded the vineyard from
him, promising to give him money, he refused the price for his father's
heritage as unseemly, and preferred to shun such shame by dying. "The Lord forbid it
me, that I should give the inheritance of my fathers unto thee;"(2) that is,
that such reproach may not fall on me, that God may not allow such wickedness to
be attained by force. He is not speaking about the vines--nor has God care for
vines or plots of ground--but he says it of his fathers' rights. He could have
received another or the king's vineyards and been his friend, wherein men think
there is no small usefulness so far as this world is concerned. But because it
was base he thought it could not be useful, and so he preferred to endure
danger with honour intact, rather than gain what was useful to his own disgrace. I
am here again speaking of what is commonly understood as useful, not that in
which there is the grace of virtuous life.
64. The king could himself have taken it by force, but that he thought too
shameless; then when Naboth was dead he grieved.(3) The Lord also declared
that the woman's cruelty should be punished by a fitting penalty, because she was
unmindful of virtue and preferred a shameful gain.(1)
65. Every kind of unfair action is shameful. Even in common things, false
weights and unjust measures are accursed. And if fraud in the market or in
business is punished, can it seem free from reproach if found in the midst of the
performance of the duties of virtue? Solomon says: "A great and a little weight
and divers measures are an abomination before the Lord. "(2) Before that it
also says: "A false balance is abomination to the Lord, but a just weight is
acceptable to Him. "(3)
CHAPTER X.
We are warned not only in civil law, but also in the holy Scriptures, to avoid
fraud in every agreement, as is clear from the example of Joshua and the
Gibeonites.
66. In everything, therefore, good faith is seemly, justice is pleasing,
due measure in equity is delightful. But what shall I say about contracts, and
especially about the sale of land, or agreements, or covenants? Are there not
rules just for the purpose of shutting out all false deceit,(4) and to make him
whose deceit is found out liable to double punishment? Everywhere, then, does
regard for what is virtuous take the lead; it shuts out deceit, it expels fraud.
Wherefore the prophet David has rightly stated his judgment in general, saying:
"He hath done no evil to his neighbour."(5) Fraud, then, ought to be wanting
not only in contracts, in which the defects of those things which are for sale
are ordered to be recorded (which contracts, unless the vendor has mentioned
the defects, are rendered void by an action for fraud, although he has conveyed
them fully to the purchaser), but it ought also to be absent in all else.
Can-dour must be shown, the truth must be made known.
67. The divine Scriptures have plainly stated (not indeed a legal rule of
the lawyers but) the ancient judgment of the patriarchs on deceit, in that book
of the Old Testament which is ascribed to Joshua the son of Nun. When the
report had gone forth among the various peoples that the sea was dried up at the
crossing of the Hebrews; that water had flowed from the rock; that food was
supplied daily from heaven in quantities large enough for so many thousands of the
people; that the walls of Jericho had fallen at the sound of the holy trumpets,
being overthrown by the noise of the shouts of the people; also, that the king
of Ai was conquered and had been hung on a tree until the evening; then the
Gibeonites, fearing his strong hand, came with guile, pretending that they were
from a land very far away, and by travelling so long had rent their shoes and
worn out their clothing, of which they showed proofs that it was growing old. They
said, too, that their reason for undergoing so much labour was their desire to
obtain peace and to form friendship with the Hebrews, and began to ask Joshua
to form an alliance with them. And he, being as yet ignorant of localities, and
not knowing anything of the inhabitants, did not see through their deceit, nor
did he enquire of God, but readily believed them.(1)
68. So sacred was one's plighted word held in those days that no one would
believe that others could try to deceive. Who could find fault with the saints
in this, namely, that they should consider others to have the same feelings as
themselves, and suppose no one would lie because truth was their own
companion? They know not what deceit is, they gladly believe of others what they
themselves are, whilst they cannot suspect others to be what they themselves are not.
Hence Solomon says: "An innocent man believeth every word."(2) We must not
blame his readiness to believe, but should rather praise his goodness. To know
nothing of aught that may injure another, this is to be innocent. And although he
is cheated by another, still he thinks well of all, for he thinks there is good
faith in all.
69. Induced, therefore, by such considerations to believe them, he made an
agreement, he gave them peace, and formed a union with them. But when he came
to their country and the deceit was found out,--for though they lived quite
close they pretended to be strangers,--the people of our fathers began to be angry
at having been deceived. Joshua, however, thought the peace they had made
could not be broken (for it had been confirmed by an oath), for fear that, in
punishing the treachery of others, he should. be breaking his own pledge. He made
them pay the penalty, however, by forcing them to undertake the lowest kind of
work. The judgment was mild indeed, but it was a lasting one, for in their duties
there abides the punishment of their ancient cunning, handed down to this
day(1) in their hereditary service.
CHAPTER XI.
Having adduced examples of certain frauds found in a few passages of the
rhetoricians, he shows that these and all others are more fully and plainly
condemned in Scripture.
70. I SHALL say nothing of the snapping of fingers, or the naked dancing
of the heir, at entering on an inheritance.(2) These are well-known things. Nor
will I speak of the mass of fishes gathered up at a pretended fishing
expedition to excite the buyer's desires. For why did he show himself so eager for
luxuries and delicacies as to allow a fraud of this character?
71. What need is there for me to speak of that well-known story of the
pleasant and quiet retreat at Syracuse and of the cunning of a Sicilian?(3) For he
having found a stranger, and knowing that he was anxious to buy an estate,
asked him to his grounds for a meal. He accepted, and on the following day he
came. There the sight of a great number of fishermen met his eyes, and a banquet
laid out in the most splendid profusion. In the sight of the guests, fishers were
placed in the garden-grounds, where no net had ever been laid before. Each one
in turn presented to the guests what he had taken, the fish were placed upon
the table, and caught the glance of those who sat there. The stranger wondered
at the large quantity of fish and the number of boats there were. The answer
given was, that this was the great water supply, and that great numbers of fish
came there because of the sweetness of the water. To be brief, he drew on the
stranger to be urgent in getting the grounds, he willingly allows himself to be
induced to sell them, and seemingly with a heavy heart he receives the money.
72. On the next day the purchaser comes to the grounds with his friends,
but finds no boat there. On asking whether perhaps the fishermen were observing
a festival on that day, he is told that, with the exception of yesterday, they
were never wont to fish there; but what power had he to proceed against such a
fraud, who had so shamefully grasped at such luxuries? For he who convicts
another of a fault ought himself to be free from it. I will not therefore include
such trifles as these under the power of ecclesiastical censure, for that
altogether condemns every desire for dishonourable gain, and briefly, with few words,
forbids every sharp and cunning action.
73. And what shall I say of him who claims to be the heir or legatee, on
the proof of a will(2) which, though falsified by others, yet was known to be so
by him, and who tries to make again through another's crime, though even the
laws of the state convict him who knowingly makes use of a false will, as guilty
of a wrong action. But the law of justice is plain, namely, that a good man
ought not to go aside from the truth, nor to inflict an unjust loss on any one,
nor to act at all deceitfully or to take part in any fraud.
74. What is clearer, however, on this point than the case of Ananias? He
acted falsely as regards the price he got for his land, for he sold it and laid
at the apostles' feet part of the price, pretending it was the whole amount.(2)
For this he perished as guilty of fraud. He might have offered nothing and
have acted so without committing a fraud. But as deceit entered into his action,
he gained no favour for his liberality, but paid the penalty for his artifice.
75. The Lord also in the Gospel rejected those coming to Him with guile,
saying: "The foxes have holes,"(3) for He bids us live in simplicity and
innocency of heart. David also says: "Thou hast used deceit as a sharp razor,"(4)
pointing out by this the treacherous man, just as an implement of this kind is used
to help adorn a man, yet often wounds him. If any one makes a show of favour
and yet plans deceit after the example of the traitor, so as to give up to death
him whom he ought to guard, let him be looked on in the light of that
instrument which is wont to wound owing to the vice of a drunken mind and a trembling
hand. Thus that man drunk with the wine of wickedness brought death on the high
priest Ahimelech,(5) through a terrible act of treachery, because he had
received the prophet with hospitality when the king, roused by the stings of envy,
was following him.
CHAPTER XII.
We may make no promise that is wrong, and if we have made an unjust oath, we
may not keep it. It is shown that Herod sinned in this respect. The vow taken by
Jephtha is condemned, and so are all others which God does not desire to have
paid to Him. Lastly, the daughter of Jephtha is compared with the two
Pythagoreans and is placed before them.
76. A MAN'S disposition ought to be undefiled and sound, so that he may
utter words without dissimulation and possess his vessel in sanctification;(1)
that he may not delude his brother with false words nor promise aught
dishonourable. If he has made such a promise it is far better for him not to fulfil it,
rather than to fulfil what is shameful.(2)
77. Often people bind themselves by a solemn oath, and, though they come
to know that they ought not to have made the promise, fulfil it in consideration
of their oath. This is what Herod did, as we mentioned before.(3) For he made
a shameful promise of reward to a dancer--and cruelly performed it. It was
shameful, for a kingdom was promised for a dance; and it was cruel, for the death
of a prophet is sacrificed for the sake of an oath. How much better perjury
would have been than the keeping of such an oath, if indeed that could be called
perjury which a drunkard had sworn to in his wine-cups, or an effeminate
profligate had promised whilst the dance was going on. The prophet's head was brought
in on a dish,(4) and this was considered an act of good faith when it really was
an act of madness!
78. Never shall I be led to believe that the leader Jephtha made his vow
otherwise than without thought,(5) when he promised to offer to God whatever
should meet him at the threshold of his house on his return. For he repented of
his vow, as afterwards his daughter came to meet him. He rent his clothes and
said: "Alas, my daughter, thou hast entangled me, thou art become a source of
trouble unto me."(6) And though with pious fear and reverence he took upon himself
the bitter fulfilment of his cruel task, yet he ordered and left to be observed
an annual period of grief and mourning for future times. It was a hard vow,
but far more bitter was its fulfilment, whilst he who carried it out had the
greatest cause to mourn. Thus it became a rule and a law in Israel from year to
year, as it says: "that the daughters of Israel went to lament the daughter of
Jephtha the Gileadite four days in a year."(1) I cannot blame the man for holding
it necessary to fulfil his vow, but yet it was a wretched necessity which could
only be solved by the death of his child.
79. It is better to make no vow than to vow what God does not wish to be
paid to Him to Whom the promise was made. In the case of Isaac we have an
example, for the Lord appointed a ram to be offered up instead of him.(2) Therefore
it is not always every promise that is to be fulfilled. Nay, the Lord Himself
often alters His determination, as the Scriptures point out. For in the book
called Numbers He had declared that He would punish the people with death and
destroy them,(3) but afterwards, when besought by Moses, He was reconciled again to
them. And again, He said to Moses and Aaron: "Separate yourselves from among
this congregation that I may consume them in a moment."(4) And when they
separated from the assembly the earth suddenly clave asunder and opened her mouth and
swallowed up Dathan and Abiram.
80. That example of Jephtha's daughter is far more glorious and ancient
than that of the two Pythagoreans,(5) which is accounted so notable among the
philosophers. One of these, when condemned to death by the tyrant Dionysius, and
when the day of his death was fixed, asked for leave to be granted him to go
home, so as to provide for his family. But for fear that he might break his faith
and not return, he offered a surety for his own death, on condition that if he
himself were absent on the appointed day, his surety would be ready to die in
his stead. The other did not refuse the conditions of suretyship which were
proposed and awaited the day of death with a calm mind. So the one did not withdraw
himself and the other returned on the day appointed. This all seemed so
wonderful that the tyrant sought their friendship whose destruction he had been
anxious for.
81. What, then, in the case of esteemed and learned men is full of marvel,
that in the case of a virgin is found to be far more splendid, far more
glorious, as she says to her sorrowing father: "Do to me according to that which hath
proceeded out of thy mouth."(6) But she asked for a delay of two months in
order that she might go about with her companions upon the mountains to bewail
fitly and dutifully her virginity now given up to death. The weeping of her
companions did not move her, their grief prevailed not upon her, nor did their
lamentations hold her back. She allowed not the day to pass, nor did the hour escape
her notice. She returned to her father as though returning according to her own
desire, and of her own will urged him on when he was hesitating, and acted
thus of her own free choice, so that what was at first an awful chance became a
pious sacrifice.
CHAPTER XIII.
Judith, after enduring many dangers for virtue's sake, gained very many and
great benefits.
82. SEE! Judith presents herself to thee as worthy of admiration. She
approaches Holophernes, a man feared by the people, and surrounded by the
victorious troops of the Assyrians. At first she makes an impression on him by the grace
of her form and the beauty of her countenance. Then she entraps him by the
refinement of her speech. Her first triumph was that she returned from the tent of
the enemy with her purity unspotted.(1) Her second, that she gained a victory
over a man, and put to flight the people by her counsel.
83. The Persians were terrified at her daring.(2) And so what is admired
in the case of those two Pythagoreans deserves also in her case our admiration,
for she trembled not at the danger of death, nor even at the danger her modesty
was in, which is a matter of greater concern to good women. She feared not the
blow of one scoundrel, nor even the weapons of a whole army. She, a woman,
stood between the lines of the combatants--right amidst victorious arms--heedless
of death. As one looks at her overwhelming danger, one would say she went out
to die; as one looks at her faith, one says she went but out to fight.
84. Judith then followed the call of virtue, and as she follows that, she
wins great benefits. It was virtuous to prevent the people of the Lord from
giving themselves up to the heathen; to prevent them from betraying their native
rites and mysteries, or from yielding up their consecrated virgins, their
venerable widows, and modest matrons to barbarian impurity, or from ending the siege
by a surrender. It was virtuous for her to be willing to encounter danger on
behalf of all, so as to deliver all from danger.
85. How great must have been the power of her virtue, that she, a woman,
should claim to give counsel on the chiefest matters and not leave it in the
hands of the leaders of the people! How great, again, the power of her virtue to
reckon for certain upon God to help her! How great her grace to find His help!
CHAPTER XIV.
How virtuous and useful was that which Elisha did. This is compared with that
oft-recounted act of the Greeks. John gave up his life for virtue's sake, and
Susanna for the same reason exposed herself to the danger of death.
86. WHAT did Elisha follow but virtue, when he brought the army of Syria
who had come to take him as captive into Samaria, after having covered their
eyes with blindness? Then he said: "O Lord, open their eyes that they may see."(1)
And they saw. But when the king of Israel wished to slay those that had
entered and asked the prophet to give him leave to do so, he answered that they whose
captivity was not brought about by strength of hand or weapons of war must not
be slain, but that rather he should help them by supplying food. Then they
were refreshed with plenty of food. And after that those Syrian robbers thought
they must never again return to the land of Israel.
87. How much nobler was this than that which the Greeks once did!(2) For
when two nations strove one with the other to gain glory and supreme power, and
one of them had the opportunity to burn the ships of the other secretly, they
thought it a shameful thing to do so, and preferred to gain a less advantage
honourably than a greater one in shameful wise. They, indeed, could not act thus
without disgrace to themselves, and entrap by this plot those who had banded
together for the sake of ending the Persian war. Though they could deny it in
word, yet they could never but blush at the thought of it. Elisha, however, wished
to save, not destroy, those who were deceived indeed, though not by some foul
act, and had been struck blind by the power of the Lord. For it was seemly to
spare an enemy, and to grant his life to an adversary when indeed he could have
taken it, had he not spared it.
88. It is plain, then, that whatever is seemly is always useful. For holy
Judith by seemly disregard for her own safety put an end to the dangers of the
siege, and by her own virtue won what was useful to all in common. And Elisha
gained more renown by pardoning than he would have done by slaying, and
preserved those enemies whom he had taken for greater usefulness.
89. And what else did John have in mind but what is virtuous, so that he
could not endure a wicked union even in the king's case, saying: "It is not
lawful for thee to have her to wife."(1) He could have been silent, had he not
thought it unseemly for himself not to speak the truth for fear of death, or to
make the prophetic office yield to the king, or to indulge in flattery. He knew
well that he would die as he was against the king, but he preferred virtue to
safety. Yet what is more expedient than the suffering which brought glory to the
saint.
90. Holy Susanna, too, when threatened with the fear of false witness,
seeing herself hard pressed on one side by danger, on the other by disgrace,
preferred to avoid disgrace by a virtuous death rather than to endure and live a
shameful life in the desire to save herself.(2) So while she fixed her mind on
virtue, she also preserved her life. But if she had preferred what seemed to her
to be useful to preserve life, she would never have gained such great renown,
nay, perhaps-and that would have been not only useless but even dangerous--she
might even not have escaped the penalty for her crime. We note, therefore, that
whatsoever is shameful cannot be useful, nor, again, can that which is virtuous
be useless. For usefulness is ever the double of virtue, and virtue of
usefulness.
CHAPTER XV.
After mentioning a noble action of the Romans, the writer shows from the deeds
of Moses that he had the greatest regard for what is virtuous.
91. IT is related as a memorable deed of a Roman general,(3) that when the
physician of a hostile king came to him and promised to give him poison, he
sent him back bound to the enemy. In truth, it is a noble thing for a man to
refuse to gain the victory by foul acts, after he has entered on the struggle for
power. He did not consider virtue to lie in victory, but declared that to be a
shameful victory unless it was gained with honour.(1)
92. Let us return to our hero Moses, and to loftier deeds, to show they
were both superior as well as earlier. The king of Egypt would not let the people
of our fathers go, Then Moses bade the priest Aaron to stretch his rod over
all the waters of Egypt. Aaron stretched it out, and the water of the river was
turned into blood.(2) None could drink the water, and all the Egyptians were
perishing with thirst; but there was pure water flowing in abundance for the
fathers. They sprinkled ashes toward heaven, and sores and burning boils came upon
man and beast.(3) They brought down hail mingled with flaming fire, and all
things were destroyed upon the land.(4) Moses prayed, and all things were restored
to their former beauty. The hail ceased, the sores were healed, the rivers gave
their wonted draught.(5)
93. Then, again, the land was covered with thick darkness for the space of
three days, because Moses had raised his hand and spread out the darkness.(6)
All the first-born of Egypt died, whilst all the offspring of the Hebrews was
left unharmed.(7) Moses was asked to put an end to these horrors, and he prayed
and obtained his request. In the one case it was a fact worthy of praise that
he checked himself from joining in deceit; in the other it was noteworthy how,
by his innate goodness, he turned aside from the foe those divinely ordered
punishments. He was indeed, as it is written, gentle and meek.(8) He knew that the
king would not keep true to his promises, yet he thought it right and good to
pray when asked to do so, to bless when wronged, to forgive when besought.
94. He cast down his rod and it became a serpent which devoured the
serpents of Egypt;(9) this signifying that the Word should become Flesh to destroy
the poison of the dread serpent by the forgiveness and pardon of sins. For the
rod stands for the Word that is true--royal--filled with power --and glorious in
ruling. The rod became a serpent; so He Who was the Son of God begotten of the
Father became the Son of man born of a woman, and lifted, like the serpent, on
the cross, poured His healing medicine on the wounds of man. Wherefore the Lord
Himself says: "As Moses lifted up the serpent in the wilderness, so must the
Son of Man be lifted up."(1)
95. Again, another sign which Moses gave points to our Lord Jesus Christ.
He put his hand into his bosom, and drew it out again, and his hand was become
as snow. A second time he put it in and drew it out, and it was again like the
appearance of human flesh.(2) This signified first the original glory of the
Godhead of the Lord Jesus, and then the assumption of our flesh, in which truth
all nations and peoples must believe. So he put in his hand, for Christ is the
right hand of God; and whosoever does not believe in His Godhead and Incarnation
is punished as a sinner; like that king who, whilst not believing open and
plain signs, yet afterwards, when punished, prayed that he might find mercy. How
great, then, Moses' regard for virtue must have been is shown by these proofs,
and especially by the fact that he offered himself on behalf of the people,
praying that God would either forgive the people or blot him out of the book of the
living.(3)
CHAPTER XVI.
After saying a few words about Tobit he demonstrates that Raguel surpassed the
philosophers in virtue.
96. TOBIT also clearly portrayed in his life true virtue, when he left the
feast and buried the dead,(4) and invited the needy to the meals at his own
poor table. And Raguel is a still brighter example. For he, in his regard for
virtue, when asked to give his daughter in marriage, was not silent regarding his
daughter's faults, for fear of seeming to get the better of the suitor by
silence. So when Tobit the son of Tobias asked that his daughter might be given him,
he answered that, according to the law, she ought to be given him as near of
kin, but that he had already given her to six men, and all of them were dead.(5)
This just man, then, feared more for others than for himself, and wished
rather that his daughter should remain unmarried than that others should run risks
in consequence of their union with her.
97. How simply he settled all the questions of the philosophers! They talk
about the defects of a house, whether they ought to be concealed or made known
by the vendor.(1) Raguel was quite certain that his daughter's faults ought
not to be kept secret. And, indeed, he had not been eager to give her up--he was
asked for her. We can have no doubt how much more nobly he acted than those
philosophers, when we consider how much more important a daughter's future is than
some mere money affair.
CHAPTER XVII.
With what virtuous feelings the fathers of old hid the sacred fires when on
the point of going into captivity.
98. LET us consider, again, that deed done at the time of the captivity,
which has attained the highest degree of virtue and glory. Virtue is checked by
no adversities, for it rises up among them, and prevails here rather than in
prosperity. 'Mid chains or arms, 'mid flames or slavery (which is harder for
freemen to bear than any punishment), 'midst the pains of the dying, the
destruction of their country, the fears of the living, or the blood of the slain,--amidst
all this our forefathers failed not in their care and thought for what is
virtuous. Amidst the ashes and dust of their fallen country it glowed and shone
forth brightly in pious efforts.
99. For when our fathers were carried away into Persia,(2) certain
priests, who then were in the service of Almighty God, secretly buried in the valley
the fire taken from the altar of the Lord. There was there an open pit, with no
water in it, and not accessible for the wants of the people, in a spot unknown
and free from intruders. There they sealed the hidden fire with the sacred mark
and in secret. They were not anxious to bury gold or to hide up silver to
preserve it for their children, but in their own great peril, thinking of all that
was virtuous, they thought the sacred fire ought to be preserved so that impure
men might not defile it, nor the blood of the slain extinguish it, nor the
heaps of miserable ruins cover it.
100. So they went to Persia, free only in their religion; for that alone
could not be torn from them by their captivity. After a length of time,(3)
indeed, according to God's good pleasure, He put it into the Persian king's heart to
order the temple in Judea to be restored, and the regular customs to be again
rebuilt at Jerusalem. To carry out this work of his the Persian king appointed
the priest Nehemiah. He took with him the grandchildren of those priests who on
leaving their native soil had hidden the sacred fire to save it from
perishing. But on arriving, as we are told in the history of the fathers, they found not
fire but water. And when fire was wanting to burn upon the altars, the priest
Nehemiah bade them draw the water, to bring it to him, and to sprinkle it upon
the wood. Then, O wondrous sight! though the sky had been overcast with
clouds, suddenly the sun shone forth, a great fire flamed forth, so that all,
wonder-stricken at such a clear sign of the favour of the Lord, were filled with joy.
Nehemiah prayed; the priests sang a hymn of praise to God, when the sacrifice
was completed. Nehemiah again bade the remainder of the water to be poured upon
the larger stones. And when this was done a flame burst forth whilst the light
shining from off the altar shone more brightly yet.
101. When this sign became known, the king of Persia ordered a temple to
be built on that spot where the fire had been hidden and the water afterwards
found, to which many gifts were made. They who were with holy Nehemiah called it
Naphthar,(1) --which means cleansing--by many it is called Nephi. It is to be
found also in the history of the prophet Jeremiah,(2) that he bade those who
should come after him to take of the fire. That is the fire which fell on Moses'
sacrifice and consumed it, as it is written: "There came a fire out from the
Lord and consumed upon the altar all the whole burnt-offering."(3) The sacrifice
must be hallowed with this fire only. Therefore, also, fire went out from the
Lord upon the sons of Aaron who wished to offer strange fire, and consumed them,
so that their dead bodies were cast forth without the camp.(4)
101. Jeremiah coming to a spot found there a house like a cave, and
brought into it the tabernacle, the ark, and the altar of incense, and closed up the
entrance. And when those who had come with him examined it rather closely to
mark the spot, they could not discover nor find it. When Jeremiah understood what
they wanted he said: "The spot will remain unknown until God shall gather His
people together and be gracious to them. Then God shall reveal these things and
the majesty of the Lord shall appear."(6)
CHAPTER XVIII.
In the narration of that event already mentioned, and especially of the
sacrifice offered by Nehemiah, is typified the Holy Spirit and Christian baptism. The
sacrifice of Moses and Elijah and the history of Noah are also referred to the
same.
102. WE form the congregation of the Lord. We recognize the propitiation
of our Lord God, which our Propitiator wrought in His passion. I think, too, we
cannot leave out of sight that fire when we read that the Lord Jesus baptizes
with the Holy Spirit and with fire,(1) as John said in his Gospel. Rightly was
the sacrifice consumed, for it was for sin. But that fire was a type of the Holy
Spirit Who was to come down after the Lord's ascension, and forgive the sins
of all, and Who like fire inflames the mind and faithful heart. Wherefore
Jeremiah, after receiving the Spirit, says: "It became in my heart as a burning fire
flaming in my bones, and I am vile and cannot bear it."(2) In the Acts of the
Apostles, also, when the Holy Spirit descended upon the apostles and those
others who were waiting for the Promise of the Father, we read that tongues as of
fire were distributed among them.(3) The soul of each one was so uplifted by His
influence that they were supposed to be full of new wine,(4) who instead had
received the gift of a diversity of tongues.
103. What else can this mean--namely, that fire became water and water
called forth fire--but that spiritual grace burns out our sins through fire, and
through water cleanses them? For sin is washed away and it is burnt away.
Wherefore the Apostle says: "The fire shall try every man's work of what sort it
is."(5) And further on: "If any man's work shall be burned, he shall suffer loss:
but he himself shall be saved; yet so as by fire."(6)
104. This, then, we have stated, so as to prove that sins are burnt out by
means of fire. We know now that this is in truth the sacred fire which then,
as a type of the future remission of sins, came down upon the sacrifice.
105. This fire is hidden in the time of captivity, during which sin
reigns, but in the time of liberty it is brought forth. And though it is changed into
the appearance of water, yet it preserves its nature as fire so as to consume
the sacrifice. Do not wonder when thou readest that God the Father said: "I am
a consuming fire."(1) And again: "They have forsaken Me, the fountain of living
water."(2) The Lord Jesus, too, like a fire inflamed the hearts of those who
heard Him, and like a fount of waters cooled them. For He Himself said in His
Gospel that He came to send fire on the earth(3) and to supply a draught of
living waters to those who thirst.(4)
106. In the time of Elijah, also, fire came down when he challenged the
prophets of the heathen to light up the altar without fire. When they could not
do so, he poured water thrice over his victim, so that the water ran round about
the altar; then he cried out and the fire fell from the Lord from heaven and
consumed the burnt-offering.(5)
107. Thou art that victim. Contemplate in silence each single point. The
breath of the Holy Spirit descends on thee, He seems to burn thee when He
consumes thy sins. The sacrifice which was consumed in the time of Moses was a
sacrifice for sin, wherefore Moses said, as is written in the book of the Maccabees:
"Because the sacrifice for sin was not to be eaten, it was consumed."(6) Does
it not seem to be consumed for thee when in the sacrament of baptism the whole
outer man perishes? "Our old man is crucified,"(7) the Apostle exclaims. Herein,
as the example of the fathers teaches us, the Egyptian is swallowed up--the
Hebrew arises renewed by the Holy Spirit, as he also crossed the Red Sea
dryshod--where our fathers were baptized in the cloud and in the sea.(8)
108. In the flood, too, in Noah's time all flesh died, though just Noah
was preserved together with his family.(9) Is not a man consumed when all that is
mortal is cut off from life? The outer man is destroyed, but the inner is
renewed. Not in baptism alone but also in repentance does this destruction of the
flesh tend to the growth of the spirit, as we are taught on the Apostle's
authority, when holy Paul says: "I have judged as though I were present him that hath
so done this deed, to deliver him unto Satan for the destruction of the flesh,
that the spirit may be saved in the day of our Lord Jesus Christ."(10)
109. We seem to have made a somewhat lengthy digression for the sake of
regarding this wonderful mystery, in desiring to unfold more fully this sacrament
which has been revealed to us, and which, indeed, is as full of virtue as it
is full of religious awe.
CHAPTER XIX.
The crime committed by the inhabitants of Gibeah against the wife of a certain
Levite is related, and from the vengeance taken it is inferred how the idea of
virtue must have filled the heart of those people of old.
110. WHAT regard for virtue our forefathers had to avenge by a war the
wrongs of one woman which had been brought on her by her violation at the hands of
profligate men! Nay, when the people were conquered, they vowed that they
would not give their daughters in marriage to the tribe of Benjamin! That tribe had
remained without hope of posterity, had they not received leave of necessity
to use deceit. And this permission does not seem to fail in giving fitting
punishment for violation, since they were only allowed to enter on a union by a
rape, and not through the sacrament of marriage. And indeed it was right that they
who had broken another's intercourse should themselves lose their marriage
rites.
111. How full of pitiful traits is this story! A man, it says,(1) a
Levite, had taken to himself a wife, who I suppose was called a concubine from the
word "concubitus." She some time afterwards, as is wont to happen, offended at
certain things, betook herself to her father, and was with him four months. Then
her husband arose and went to the house of his father-in-law, to reconcile
himself with his wife, to win her back and take her home again. The woman ran to
meet him and brought her husband into her father's house.
112. The maiden's(2) father rejoiced and went to meet him, and the man
stayed with him three days, and they ate and rested. On the next day the Levite
arose at daybreak, but was detained by his father-in-law, that he might not so
quickly lose the pleasure of his company. Again on the next and the third day the
maiden's father did not suffer his son-in-law to start, until their joy and
mutual regard was complete. But on the seventh day, when it was already drawing
to a close, after a pleasant meal, having urged the approach of the coming
night, so as to make him think he ought to sleep amongst friends rather than
strangers, he was unable to keep him, and so let him go together with his daughter.
113. When some little progress(1) was made, though night was threatening
to come on, and they were close by the town of the Jebusites, on the slave's
request that his lord should turn aside there, he refused, because it was not a
city of the children of Israel. He meant to get as far as Gibeah, which was
inhabited by the people of the tribe of Benjamin. But when they arrived there was no
one to receive them with hospitality, except a stranger of advanced age--When
he had looked upon them he asked the Levite: Whither goest thou and whence dost
thou come? On his answering that he was travelling and was making for Mount
Ephraim and that there was no one to take him in, the old man offered him
hospitality and prepared a meal.
114. And when they were satisfied(2) and the tables were removed, vile men
rushed up and surrounded the house. Then the old man offered these wicked men
his daughter, a virgin, and the concubine with whom she shared her bed, only
that violence might not be inflicted on his guest. But when reason did no good
and violence prevailed, the Levite parted from his wife, and they knew her and
abused her all that night. Overcome by this cruelty or by grief at her wrong, she
fell at the door of their host where her husband had entered, and gave up the
ghost, with the last effort of her life guarding the feelings of a good wife so
as to preserve for her husband at least her mortal remains.
115. When this became known(3) (to be brief) almost all the people of
Israel broke out into war. The war remained doubtful with an uncertain issue, but
in the third engagement the people of Benjamin were delivered to the people of
Israel,(4) and being condemned by the divine judgment paid the penalty for their
profligacy. The sentence, further,(5) was that none of the people of the
fathers should give his daughter in marriage to them. This was confirmed by a solemn
oath. But relenting at having laid so hard a sentence on their brethren, they
moderated their severity so as to give them in marriage those maidens that had
lost their parents, whose fathers had been slain for their sins, or to give
them the means of finding a wife by a raid. Because of the villainy of so foul a
deed, they who have violated another's marriage rights were shown to be unworthy
to ask for marriage. But for fear that one tribe might perish from the people,
they connived at the deceit.
116. What great regard our forefathers had for virtue is shown by the fact
that forty thousand men drew the sword against their brethren of the tribe of
Benjamin in their desire to avenge the wrong done to modesty, for they would
not endure the violation of chastity. And so in that war on both sides there fell
sixty-five thousand warriors, whilst their cities were burnt. And when at
first the people of Israel were defeated, yet unmoved by fear at the reverses of
the war, they disregarded the sorrow the avenging of chastity cost them. They
rushed into the battle ready to wash out with their own blood the stains of the
crime that had been committed.
CHAPTER XX.
After the terrible siege of Samaria was ended in accordance with Elisha's
prophecy, he relates what regard the four lepers showed for what was virtuous.
117. WHY need we wonder that the people of the Lord had regard for what
was seemly and virtuous when even the lepers--as we read in the books of the
Kings--showed concern for what is virtuous?
118. There was a great famine in Samaria,(1) for the army of the Syrians
was besieging it. The king in his anxiety was making the round of the guards on
the wails when a woman addressed him, saying: This woman persuaded me to give
up my son--and I gave him up, and we boiled him and did eat him. And she
promised that she would afterwards bring her son and that we should eat his flesh
together, but now she hath hidden her son and will not bring him. The king was
troubled because these women seemed to have fed not merely on human bodies, but on
the bodies of their own children; and being moved by an example of such awful
misery, threatened the prophet Elisha with death. For he believed it was in his
power to break up the siege and to avert the famine; or else he was angry
because the prophet had not allowed the king to smite the Syrians whom he had struck
with blindness.(2)
119. Elisha sat(3) with the elders at Bethel, and before the king's
messenger came to him he said to the elders: "See ye how the son of that murderess
hath sent to take away mine head?" Then the messenger entered and brought the
king's command threatening instant danger to his life. Him the prophet
answered:(1) "To-morrow about this time shall a measure of fine flour be sold for a
shekel, and two measures of barley for a shekel in the gate of Samaria." Then when
the messenger sent by the king would not believe it, saying: "If the Lord would
rain abundance of corn from heaven, not even so would that come about," Elisha
said to him: "Because thou hast not believed, thou shall see it with thine eyes,
but shall not eat of it."
120. And suddenly(2) in the camp of Syria was there heard, as it were, a
sound of chariots and a loud noise of horses and the noise of a great host, and
the tumult of some vast battle. And the Syrians thought that the king of Israel
had called to his help in the battle the king of Egypt and the king of the
Amorites, and they fled at dawn leaving their tents, for they feared that they
might be crushed by the sudden arrival of fresh foes, and would not be able to
withstand the united forces of the kings. This was unknown in Samaria, for they
dared not go out of the town, being overcome with fear and also being weak
through hunger.
121. But there were four lepers(3) at the gate of the city to whom life
was a misery, and to die would be gain. And they said one to another: "Behold we
sit here and die. If we enter into the city, we shall die with hunger; if we
remain here, there are no means of living at hand for us. Let us go to the Syrian
camp, either they will quickly kill us or grant us the means of safety." So
they went and entered into the camp, and behold, all was forsaken by the enemy.
Entering(4) the tents, first of all on finding food they satisfied their hunger,
then they laid hold of as much gold and silver as they could. But whilst they
were intent on the booty alone, they arranged to announce to the king that the
Syrians had fled, for they thought this more virtuous than to withhold the
information and keep for themselves the plunder gained by deceit.
122. At this information the peoples went forth and plundered the Syrian
camp. The supplies of the enemy produced an abundance, and brought about
cheapness of corn according to the prophet's word: "A measure of fine flour for a
shekel, and two measures of barley for a shekel." In this rejoicing of the people,
that officer on whose hand the king leaned died, being crushed and trodden
under foot by the people as the crowds kept hurrying to go out or returned with
great rejoicing.
CHAPTER XXI.
Esther in danger of her life followed the grace of virtue; nay, even a heathen
king did so, when death was threatened to a man most friendly to him, For
friendship must ever be combined with virtue, as the examples of Jonathan and
Ahimelech show.
123. WHY did Queen Esther(1) expose herself to death and not fear the
wrath of a fierce king? Was it not to save her people from death, an act both
seemly and virtuous? The king of Persia himself also, though fierce and proud, yet
thought it seemly to show honour to the man who had given information about a
plot which had been laid against himself,(2) to save a free people from slavery,
to snatch them from death, and not to spare him who had pressed on such
unseemly plans. So finally he handed over to the gallows(3) the man that stood second
to himself, and whom he counted chief among all his friends, because he
considered that he had dishonoured him by his false counsels.
124. For that commendable friendship which maintains virtue is to be
preferred most certainly to wealth, or honours, or power. It is not wont to be
preferred to virtue indeed, but to follow after it.(4) So it was with Jonathan, s
who for his affection's sake avoided not his father's displeasure nor the danger
to his own safety. So, too, it was with Ahimelech, who, to preserve the duties
of hospitality, thought he must endure death rather than betray his friend when
fleeing.(6)
CHAPTER XXlI.
Virtue must never be given up for the sake of a friend. If, however, one has
to bear witness against a friend, it must be done with caution. Between friends
what candour is needed in opening the heart, what magnanimity in suffering,
what freedom in finding fault! Friendship is the guardian of virtues, which are
not to be found but in men of like character. It must be mild in rebuking and
averse to seeking its own advantage; whence it happens that true friends are
scarce among the rich. What is the dignity of friendship? The treachery of a friend,
as it is worse, so it is also more hateful than another's, as is recognized
from the example of Judas and of Job's friends.
125. NOTHING, then, must be set before virtue; and that it may never be
set aside by the desire for friendship, Scripture also gives us a warning on the
subject of friendship. There are, indeed various questions raised among
philosophers;(1) for instance whether a man ought for the sake of a friend to plot
against his country or not, so as to serve his friend? Whether it is right to
break one's faith, and so aid and maintain a friend's advantage?
126. And Scripture also says: "A maul, and a sword, and a sharp arrow, so
is a man that beareth false witness against his friend."(2) But note what it
adds. It blames not witness given against a friend, but false witness. For what
if the cause of God or of one's country compels one to give witness? Ought
friendship to take a higher place than our religion, or our love for our
fellow-citizens? In these matters, however, true witness is required so that a friend may
not be assailed by the treachery of a friend, by whose good faith he ought to
be acquitted. A man, then, ought never to please a friend who desires evil, or
to plot against one who is innocent.
127. Certainly, if it is necessary to give witness, then, when one knows
of any fault in a friend, one ought to rebuke him secretly--if he does not
listen, one must do it openly. For rebukes are good,(3) and often better than a
silent friendship. Even if a friend thinks himself hurt, still rebuke him; and if
the bitterness of the correction wounds his mind, still rebuke him and fear not.
"The wounds of a friend are better than the kisses of flatterers:"(4) Rebuke,
then, thy erring friend; forsake not an innocent one. For friendship ought to
be steadfast s and to rest firm in true affection. We ought not to change our
friends in childish fashion at some idle fancy.
128. Open thy breast to a friend that he may be faithful to thee, and that
thou mayest receive from him the delight of thy life. "For a faithful friend
is the medicine of life and the grace of immortality."(6) Give way to a friend
as to an equal, and be not ashamed to be beforehand with thy friend in doing
kindly duties. For friendship knows nothing of pride. So the wise man says: "Do
not blush to greet a friend."(7) Do not desert a friend in time of need, nor
forsake him nor fail him, for friendship is the support of life. Let us then bear
our burdens as the Apostle has taught:(8) for he spoke to those whom the charity
of the same one body had embraced together. If friends in prosperity help
friends, why do they not also in times of adversity offer their support? Let us aid
by giving counsel, let us offer our best endeavours, let us sympathize with
them with all our heart.
129. If necessary, let us endure for a friend even hardship. Often enmity
has to be borne for the sake of a friend's innocence; oftentimes revilings, if
one defends and answers for a friend who is found fault with and accused. Do
not be afraid of such displeasure, for the voice of the just says: "Though evil
come upon me, I will endure it for a friend's sake."(1) In adversity, too, a
friend is proved, for in prosperity all seem to be friends. But as in adversity
patience and endurance are needed, so in prosperity strong influence is wanted to
check and confute the arrogance of a friend who becomes overbearing.
130. How nobly Job when he was in adversity said: "Pity me, my friends,
pity me."(2) That is not a cry as it were of misery, but rather one of blame. For
when he was unjustly reproached by his friends, he answered: "Pity me, my
friends," that is, ye ought to show pity, but instead ye assail and overwhelm a man
with whose sufferings ye ought to show sympathy for friendship's sake.
131. Preserve, then, my sons, that friendship ye have begun with your
brethren, for nothing in the world is more beautiful than that. It is indeed a
comfort in this life to have one to whom thou canst open thy heart,(3) with whom
thou canst share confidences, and to whom thou canst entrust the secrets of thy
heart. It is a comfort to have a trusty man by thy side, who will rejoice with
thee in prosperity, sympathize in troubles, encourage in persecution. What good
friends those Hebrew children were whom the flames of the fiery furnace did not
separate from their love of each other!(4) Of them we have already spoken.
Holy David says well: "Saul and Jonathan were lovely and pleasant, inseparable in
their life, in death they were not divided."(5)
132. This is the fruit of friendship; and so faith(6) may not be put aside
for the sake of friendship. He cannot be a friend to a man who has been
unfaithful to God. Friendship is the guardian of pity and the teacher of equality, so
as to make the superior equal to the inferior, and the inferior to the
superior.(1) For there can be no friendship between diverse characters,(2) and so the
good-will of either ought to be mutually suited to the other. Let not authority
be wanting to the inferior if the matter demands it, nor humility to the
superior. Let him listen to the other as though he were of like position--an equal,
and let the other warn and reprove like a friend, not from a desire to show
off, but with a deep feeling of love.
133. Let not thy warning be harsh, nor thy rebuke bitter,(3) for as
friendship ought to avoid flattery, so, too, ought it to be free from arrogance. For
what is a friend but a partner in love,(4) to whom thou unitest and attachest
thy soul, and with whom thou blendest so as to desire from being two to become
one; to whom thou entrustest thyself as to a second self, from whom thou fearest
nothing, and from whom thou demandest nothing dishonourable for the sake of
thine own advantage. Friendship is not meant as a source of revenue,(5) but is
full of seemliness, full of grace. Friendship is a virtue, not a way of making
money. It is produced, not by money, but by esteem; not by the offer of rewards,
but by a mutual rivalry in doing kindnesses.
134. Lastly, the friendships of the poor are generally better than those
of the rich,(6) and often the rich are without friends, whilst the poor have
many. For true friendship cannot exist where there is lying flattery. Many try
fawningly to please the rich, but no one cares to make pretence to a poor man.
Whatsoever is stated to a poor man is true, his friendship is free from envy.
135. What is more precious than friendship which is shared alike by angels
and by men? Wherefore the Lord Jesus says: "Make to yourselves friends of the
mammon of unrighteousness, that they may receive you into eternal
habitations."(7) God Himself makes us friends instead of servants, as He Himself says: "Ye
are My friends if ye do whatsoever I command you."(8) He gave us a pattern of
friendship to follow. We are to fulfil the wish of a friend, to unfold to him our
secrets which we hold in our own hearts, and are not to disregard his
confidences. Let us show him our heart and he will open his to us. Therefore He says:
"I have called you friends, for I have made known unto you all things whatsoever
I have heard of My Father."(1) A friend, then, if he is a true one, hides
nothing; he pours forth his soul as the Lord Jesus poured forth the mysteries of
His Father.
136. So he who does the will of God is His friend and is honoured with
this name. He who is of one mind with Him, he too is His friend. For there is
unity of mind in friends, and no one is more hateful than the man that injures
friendship. Hence in the traitor the Lord found this the worst point on which to
condemn his treachery, namely, that he gave no sign of gratitude and had mingled
the poison of malice at the table of friendship. So He says: "It was thou, a
man of like mind, My guide and Mine acquaintance, who ever didst take pleasant
meals with Me."(2) That is: it could not be endured, for thou didst fall upon Him
Who granted grace to thee. "For if My enemy had reproached Me I could have
borne it,(3) and I would have hid Myself from him who hated Me." An enemy can be
avoided; a friend cannot, if he desires to lay a plot. Let us guard against him
to whom we do not entrust our plans; we cannot guard against him to whom we
have already entrusted them. And so to show up all the hatefulness of the sin He
did not say: Thou, My servant, My apostle; but thou, a man of like mind with Me;
that is: thou art not My but thy own betrayer, for thou didst betray a man of
like mind with thyself.
137. The Lord Himself, when He was displeased with the three princes who
had not deferred to holy Job, wished to pardon them through their friend, so
that the prayer of friendship might win remission of sins. Therefore Job asked and
God pardoned. Friendship helped them whom arrogance had harmed.(4)
138. These things I have left with you, my children, that you may guard
them in your minds--you yourselves will prove whether they will be of any
advantage. Meanwhile they offer you a large number of examples, for almost all the
examples drawn from our forefathers, and also many a word of theirs, are included
within these three books; so that, although the language may not be graceful,
yet a succession of old-time examples set down in such small compass may offer
much instruction.