THE BOOK OF ST. AMBROSE BISHOP OF MILAN CONCERNING THE MYSTERIES
ON THE MYSTERIES.
INTRODUCTION.
The writer explains in the commencement of this treatise that his object
was to set forth, for the benefit of those about to be baptized, the rites and
meaning of that Sacrament, as well as of Confirmation and the Holy Eucharist.
For all these matters were treated with the greatest reserve in the Early Church,
for fear of profanation by the heathen, and it was the custom, as in the case
of the well-known Catechetical Lectures of St. Cyril of Jerusalem, to explain
them to the catechumens during the latter part of Lent.
Treatises of this kind possess therefore a special interest, as in them we
find clearly stated the full teaching of the Church at the time when those
addresses which have come down to our times were drawn up.
St Ambrose goes through and explains the greater part, first of the rites
usual at the time of solemn baptism, pointing out the deep truths and mysteries
underlying these outward things. He then treats Confirmation, referring to the
seven gifts of the Holy Spirit; and lastly, speaks of the Holy Eucharist,
especially setting forth the doctrine of the Real Presence.
Some writers in and since the sixteenth century have endeavoured to prove
that this treatise has been falsely attributed to St. Ambrose, but there can be
no real doubt on the matter, as is conclusively shown by the Benedictine
Editors, and now universally admitted. The treatise was composed for use during
Lent, but in what year cannot be fixed, possibly, from reference made to the
treatise De Patriarchis, about A.D. 387.
THE BOOK OF ST. AMBROSE, BISHOP OF MILAN,
CONCERNING THE MYSTERIES.(1)
CHAPTER I.
St. Ambrose states that after the explanations he has already given of holy
living, he will now explain the Mysteries. Then after giving his reasons for not
having done so before, he explains the mystery of the opening of the ears, and
shows how this was of old done by Christ Himself.
1. We have spoken daily upon subjects connected with morals, when the
deeds of the Patriarchs or the precepts of the Proverbs were being read, in order
that being taught and instructed by these you might grow accustomed to enter the
ways of the ancients and to walk in their paths, and obey the divine commands;
in order that being renewed by baptism you might hold to that manner of life
which beseems those who are washed.
2. The season now warns us to speak of the Mysteries, and to set forth the
purport of the sacraments, which if we had thought it well to teach before
baptism to those who were not yet initiated, we should be considered rather to
have betrayed than to have portrayed the Mysteries. And then, too, another reason
is that the light itself of the Mysteries will shed itself with more effect
upon those who are expecting they know not what, than if any discourse had come
beforehand.
3. Open, then, your ears, inhale the good savour of eternal life which has
been breathed upon you by the grace of the sacraments; which was signified to
you by us, when, celebrating the mystery of the opening,(2) we said, "Epphatha,
which is, Be opened,"(1) that whosoever was coming in quest of peace might
know what he was asked, and be bound to remember what he answered.
4. Christ made use of this mystery in the Gospel, as we read, when He
healed him who was deaf and dumb. But He touched the mouth, because he who was
healed was dumb and was a man, as regards one point that he might open his mouth
with the sound of the voice given to him; as regards the other point because that
touch was seemly towards a man, but would have been unseemly towards a woman.
CHAPTER II.
What those who were to be initiated promised on entering the Church, of the
witnesses to these promises, and wherefore they then turned themselves to the
East.
5. AFTER this the Holy of holies(2) was opened to you, you entered the
sanctuary of regeneration; recall what you were asked, and remember what you
answered. You renounced the devil and his works, the world with its luxury and
pleasures. That utterance of yours is preserved not in the tombs of the dead, but in
the book of the living.
6. You saw there the deacon, you saw the priest, you saw the chief priest
[i.e. the bishop]. Consider not the bodily forms, but the grace of the
Mysteries. You spoke in the presence of the angels, as it is written: "For the priest's
lips keep knowledge, and they seek the law at his mouth, for he is the angel
of the Lord Almighty."(3) There is no place for deception nor for denial. He is
an angel who proclaims the kingdom of Christ and eternal life. He is to be
esteemed by you not according to his appearance, but according to his office.
Consider what he delivered, reflect upon the rule of life he gave you, recognize his
position.
7. You entered, then, that you might discern your adversary, whom you were
to renounce as it were to his face, then you turned to the east; for he who
renounces the devil turns to Christ, and beholds Him face to face.
CHAPTER III.
St. Ambrose points out that we must consider the divine presence and working
in the water and the sacred ministers, and then brings forward many Old
Testament figures of baptism.
8. What did you see? Water, certainly, but not water alone; you saw the
deacons ministering there, and the bishop asking questions and hallowing. First
of all, the Apostle taught you that those things are not to be considered "which
we see, but the things which are not seen, for the things which are seen are
temporal, but the things which are not seen are eternal."(1) For you read
elsewhere: "That the invisible things of God, since the creation of the world, are
understood through those things which have been made; His eternal power also and
Godhead are estimated by His works."(2) Wherefore also the Lord Himself says:
"If ye believe not Me, believe at least the works."(3) Believe, then, that the
presence of the Godhead is there. Do you believe the working, and not believe
the presence? Whence should the working proceed unless the presence went before?
9. Consider, however, how ancient is the mystery prefigured even in the
origin of the world itself. In the very beginning, when God made the heaven and
the earth, "the Spirit," it is said, "moved upon the waters."(4) He Who was
moving upon the waters, was He not working upon the waters? But why should I say,
"working"? As regards His presence He was moving. Was He not working Who was
moving? Recognize that He was working in that making of the world, when the
prophet says: "By the word of the Lord were the heavens made, and all their strength
by the spirit of His mouth."(1) Each statement rests upon the testimony of the
prophet, both that He was moving and that He was working. Moses says that He
was moving, David testifies that he was working.
10. Take another testimony. All flesh was corrupt by its iniquities. "My
Spirit," says God, "shall not remain among men, because they are flesh."(2)
Whereby God shows that the grace of the Spirit is turned away by carnal impurity
and the pollution of grave sin. Upon which, God, willing to restore what was
lacking, sent the flood and bade just Noah go up into the ark. And he, after
having, as the flood was passing off, sent forth first a raven which did not return,
sent forth a dove which is said to have returned with an olive twig.(3) You see
the water, you see the wood [of the ark], you see the dove, and do you
hesitate as to the mystery?
11. The water, then, is that in which the flesh is dipped, that all carnal
sin may be washed away. All wickedness is there buried. The wood is that on
which the Lord Jesus was fastened when He suffered for us. The dove is that in
the form of which the Holy Spirit descended, as you have read in the New
Testament, Who inspires in you peace of soul and tranquillity of mind. The raven is the
figure of sin, which goes forth and does not return, if, in you, too, inwardly
and outwardly righteousness be preserved.
12. There is also a third testimony, as the Apostle teaches us: "For all
our fathers were under the cloud, and all passed through the sea, and were all
baptized to Moses in the cloud and in the sea."(4) And further, Moses himself
says in his song: "Thou sentest Thy Spirit, and the sea covered them."(5) You
observe that even then holy baptism was prefigured in that passage of the Hebrews,
wherein the Egyptian perished, the Hebrew escaped. For what else are we daily
taught in this sacrament but that guilt is swallowed up and error done away,
but that virtue and innocence remain unharmed?
13. You hear that our fathers were under the cloud, and that a kindly
cloud, which cooled the heat of carnal passions. That kindly cloud overshadows
those whom the Holy Spirit visits. At last it came upon the Virgin Mary, and the
Power of the Highest overshadowed her,(6) when she conceived Redemption for the
race of men. And that miracle was wrought in a figure through Moses. If, then,
the Spirit was in the figure, is He not present in the reality, since Scripture
says to us: "For the law was given by Moses, but grace and truth came by Jesus
Christ."(1)
14. Marah was a fountain of most bitter water: Moses cast wood into it and
it became sweet.(2) For water without the preaching of the Cross of the Lord
is of no avail for future salvation, but, after it has been consecrated by the
mystery of the saving cross, it is made suitable for the use of the spiritual
layer and of the cup of salvation. As, then, Moses, that is, the prophet, cast
wood into that fountain, so, too, the priest utters over this font the
proclamation of the Lord's cross, and the water is made sweet for the purpose of grace.
15. You must not trust, then, wholly to your bodily eyes; that which is
not seen is more really seen, for the object of sight is temporal, but that other
eternal, which is not apprehended by the eye, but is discerned by the mind and
spirit.
16. Lastly, let the lessons lately gone through from the Kings teach you.
Naaman was a Syrian, and suffered from leprosy, nor could he be cleansed by
any. Then a maiden from among the captives said that there was a prophet in
Israel, who could cleanse him from the defilement of the leprosy. And it is said
that, having taken silver and gold, he went to the king of Israel. And he, when he
heard the cause of his coming, rent his clothes, saying, that occasion was
rather being sought against him, since things were asked of him which pertained not
to the power of kings. Elisha, however, sent word to the king, that he should
send the Syrian to him, that he might know there was a God in Israel. And when
he had come, he bade him dip himself seven times in the river Jordan.
17. Then he began to reason with himself that he had better waters in his
own country, in which he had often bathed and never been cleansed of his
leprosy; and so remembering this, he did not obey the command of the prophet, yet on
the advice and persuasion of his servants he yielded and dipped himself. And
being forthwith cleansed, he understood that it is not of the waters but of grace
that a man is cleansed.(3)
18. Understand now who is that young maid among the captives. She is the
congregation gathered out of the Gentiles, that is, the Church of God held down
of old by the captivity of sin, when as yet it possessed not the liberty of
grace, by whose counsel that foolish people of the Gentiles heard the word of
prophecy as to which it had before been in doubt. Afterwards, however, when they
believed that it ought to be obeyed, they were washed from every defilement of
sin. And he indeed doubted before he was healed; you are already healed, and
therefore ought not to doubt,
CHAPTER IV.
That water does not cleanse without the Spirit is shown by the witness of John
and by the very form of the administration of the sacrament. And this is also
declared to be signified by the pool in the Gospel and the man who was there
healed. In the same passage, too, is shown that the Holy Spirit truly descended
on Christ at His baptism, and the meaning of this mystery is explained.
19. The reason why you were told before not to believe only what you saw
was that you might not say perchance, This is that great mystery "which eye hath
not seen, nor ear heard, neither has it entered into the heart of man. "(1) I
see water, which I have been used to see every day. Is that water to cleanse me
now in which I have so often bathed without ever being cleansed? By this you
may recognize that water does not cleanse without the Spirit.
20. Therefore read that the three witnesses in baptism, the water, the
blood, and the Spirit,(2) are one, for if you take away one of these, the
Sacrament of Baptism does not exist. For what is water without the cross of Christ? A
common element, without any sacramental effect. Nor, again, is there the
Sacrament of Regeneration without water: "For except a man be born again of water and
of the Spirit, he cannot enter into the kingdom of God."(3) Now, even the
catechumen believes in the cross of the Lord Jesus, wherewith he too is signed; but
unless he be baptized in the Name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the
Holy Spirit, he cannot receive remission of sins nor gain the gift of spiritual
grace.
21. So that Syrian dipped himself seven times(4) under the law, but you
were baptized in the Name of the Trinity, you confessed the Father. Call to mind
what you did: you confessed the Son, you confessed the Holy Spirit. Mark well
the order of things in this faith: you died to the world, and rose again to God.
And as though buried to the world in that element, being dead to sin, you rose
again to eternal life. Believe, therefore, that these waters are not void of
power.
22. Therefore it is said: "An angel of the Lord went down according to the
season into the pool, and the water was troubled; and he who first after the
troubling of the water went down into the pool was healed of whatsoever disease
he was holden."(1) This pool was at Jerusalem, in which one was healed every
year, but no one was healed before the angel had descended. Because of those who
believed not the water was troubled as a sign that the angel had descended.
They had a sign, you have faith; for them an angel descended, for you the Holy
Spirit; for them the creature was troubled, for you Christ Himself, the Lord of
the creature, works.
23. Then one was healed, now all are made whole; or more exactly, the
Christian people alone, for in some even the water is deceitful.(2) The baptism of
unbelievers heals not but pollutes. The Jew washes pots and cups, as though
things without sense were capable of guilt or grace. But do you wash this living
cup of yours, that in it your good works may shine and the glory of your grace
be bright. For that pool was as a type, that you might believe that the power of
God descends upon this font.
24. Lastly, that paralytic was waiting for a man. And what man save the
Lord Jesus, born of the Virgin, at Whose coming no longer the shadow should heal
men one by one, but the truth should heal the whole. He it is, then, Whose
coming down was being waited for, of Whom the Father said to John the Baptist:
"Upon Whom thou shalt see the Spirit descending and abiding upon Him, this is He
Who baptizeth with the Holy Spirit."(3) And John bare witness of Him, and said:
"I saw the Spirit descending from heaven like a dove and abiding upon Him."(4)
And why did the Spirit descend like a dove, but in order that you might see,
that you might acknowledge, that that dove also which just Noah sent forth from
the ark was a likeness of this dove, that you might recognize the type of the
sacrament?
25. Perhaps you may object: Since that was a real dove which was sent
forth, and the Spirit descended like a dove, how is it that we say that the
likeness was there and the reality here, whereas in the Greek it is written that the
Spirit descended in the likeness of a dove? But what is so real as the Godhead
which abides for ever? Now the creature cannot be the reality, but only a
likeness, which is easily destroyed and changed. So, again, because the simplicity of
those who are baptized ought to be not in appearance but in reality, and the
Lord says: "Be ye wise as serpents and simple as doves."(1) Rightly, then, did
He descend like a dove, in order to admonish us that we ought to have the
simplicity of the dove. And further we read of the likeness being put for the
reality, both as regards Christ: "And was found in likeness as a man;"(2) and as
regards God the Father: "Nor have ye seen His likeness."(3)
CHAPTER V.
Christ is Himself present in Baptism, so that we need not consider the person
of His ministers. A brief explanation of the confession of the Trinity as
usually uttered by those about to be baptized.
26. Is there, then, here any room left for doubt, when the Father clearly
calls from heaven in the Gospel narrative, and says: "This is My beloved Son,
in Whom I am well pleased"?(4) When the Son also speaks, upon Whom the Holy
Spirit showed Himself in the likeness of a dove? When the Holy Spirit also speaks,
Who came down in the likeness of a dove? When David, too, speaks: "The voice of
the Lord is above the waters, the God of glory thundered, the Lord above many
waters"?(5) When Scripture testifies that at the prayer of Jerubbaal, fire came
down from heaven,(6) and again, when Elijah prayed, fire was sent forth and
consecrated the sacrifice.(7)
27. Do not consider the merits of individuals, but the office of the
priests. Or, if you look at 'the merits, consider the priest as Elijah. Look upon
the merits of Peter also, or of Paul, who handed down to us this mystery which
they had received of the Lord Jesus. To those [of old] a visible fire was sent
that they might believe; for us who believe, the Lord works invisibly; for them
that happened for a figure, for us for warning. Believe, then, that the Lord
Jesus is present at the invocation of the priest, Who said: "Where two or three
are, there am I also."(3) How much where the Church is, and where His Mysteries
are, does He vouchsafe to impart His presence!
28. You went down,then (into the water), remember what you replied to the
questions, that you believe in the Father, that you believe in the Son, that
you believe in the Holy Spirit. The statement there is not: I believe in a
greater and in a less and in a lowest person, but you are bound by the same guarantee
of your own voice, to believe in the Son in like manner as you believe in the
Father; and to believe in the Holy Spirit in like manner as you believe in the
Son, with this one exception, that you confess that you must believe in the
cross of the Lord Jesus alone.
CHAPTER VI.
Why they who come forth from the layer of baptism are anointed on the
head; why, too, after baptism, their feet are washed, and what sins are
remitted in each case.
29. After this, you went up to the priest, consider what followed. Was it
not that of which David speaks: "Like the ointment upon the head, which went
down to the beard, even Aaron's beard"?(1) This is the ointment of which Solomon,
too, says: "Thy Name is ointment poured out, therefore have the maidens loved
Thee and drawn Thee."(2) How many souls regenerated this day have loved Thee,
Lord Jesus, and have said: "Draw us after Thee, we are running after the odour
of Thy garments,"(3) that they might drink in the odour of Thy resurrection.
30. Consider now why this is done, for "the eyes of a wise man are in his
head ;"(4) therefore the ointment flows down to the beard, that is to say, to
the beauty of youth; and therefore, Aaron's beard, that we, too, may become a
chosen race, priestly and precious, for we are all anointed with spiritual grace
for a share in the kingdom of God and in the priesthood.
31. You went up from the font; remember the Gospel lesson. For our Lord
Jesus Christ in the Gospel washed the feet of His disciples. When He came to
Simon Peter, Peter said: "Thou shalt never wash my feet."(5) He did not perceive
the mystery, and therefore he refused the service, for he thought that the
humility of the servant would be injured, if he patiently allowed the Lord to
minister to him. And the Lord answered him: "If I wash not thy feet, thou wilt have no
part with Me." Peter, hearing this, replies: "Lord, not my feet only, but also
my hands and my head." The Lord answered: "He that is washed needeth not save
to wash his feet but is clean every whit."(1)
32. Peter was clean, but he must wash his feet, for he had sin by
succession from the first man, when the serpent overthrew him and persuaded him to sin.
His feet were therefore washed, that hereditary sins might be done away, for
our own sins are remitted through baptism.
33. Observe at the same time that the mystery consists in the very office
of humility, for Christ says: "If I, your Lord and Master, have washed your
feet; how much more ought you to wash one another's feet." For, since the Author
of Salvation Himself redeemed us through His obedience, how much more ought we
His servants to offer the service of our humility and obedience.
CHAPTER VII.
The washing away of sins is indicated by the white robes of the catechumens,
whence the Church speaks of herself as black and comely. Angels marvel at her
brightness as at that of the flesh of the Lord. Moreover, Christ Himself
commended His beauty to His Spouse under many figures. The mutual affection of the one
for the other is described.
34. After this white robes were given to you as a sign that you were
putting off the covering of sins, and putting on the chaste veil of innocence, of
which the prophet said: "Thou shalt sprinkle me with hyssop and I shall be
cleansed, Thou shalt wash me and I shall be made whiter than snow."(2) For he who is
baptized is seen to be purified both according to the Law and according to the
Gospel: according to the Law, because Moses sprinkled the blood of the lamb
with a bunch of hyssop;(3) according to the Gospel, because Christ's garments were
white as snow, when in the Gospel He showed forth the glory of His
Resurrection. He, then, whose guilt is remitted is made whiter than snow. So that God said
by Isaiah: "Though your sins be as scarlet, I will make them white as snow."(4)
35. The Church, having put on these garments through the layer of
regeneration, says in the Song of Songs: "I am black and comely, O daughters of
Jerusalem." Black through the frailty of her human condition, comely through the
sacrament of faith. And the daughters of Jerusalem beholding these garments say in
amazement "Who is this that cometh up made white?"(2) She was black, how is she
now suddenly made white?
36. The angels, too, were in doubt when Christ arose; the powers of heaven
were in doubt when they saw that flesh was ascending into heaven. Then they
said: "Who is this King of glory?" And whilst some said "Lift up your gates, O
princes, and be ye lift up, ye everlasting doors, and the King of glory shall
come in."(3) In Isaiah, too, we find that the powers of heaven doubted and said:
"Who is this that cometh up from Edom, the redness of His garments is from
Bosor, He who is glorious in white apparel?"(4)
37. But Christ, beholding His Church, for whom He Himself, as you find in
the book of the prophet Zechariah, had put on filthy garments, now clothed in
white raiment, seeing, that is, a soul pure and washed in the layer of
regeneration, says: "Behold, thou art fair, My love, behold thou art fair, thy eyes are
like a dove's,"(5) in the likeness of which the Holy Spirit descended from
heaven. The eyes are beautiful like those of a dove, because in the likeness of a
dove the Holy Spirit descended from heaven.
38. And farther on: "Thy teeth are like a flock of sheep that are shorn,
which are come up from the pool, which all bear twins, and none is barren among
them, thy lips are as a cord of scarlet."(6) This is no slight praise. First by
the pleasing comparison to those that are shorn; for we know that goats both
feed in high places without risk, and securely find their food in rugged places,
and then when shorn are freed from what is superfluous, The Church is likened
to a flock of these, having in itself the many virtues of those souls which
through the layer lay aside the superfluity of sins, and offer to Christ the
mystic faith and the grace of good living, which speak of the cross of the Lord
Jesus.
39. The Church is beautiful in them. So that God the Word says to her:
"Thou art all fair, My love, and there is no blemish in thee," for guilt has been
washed away. "Come hither from Lebanon, My spouse, come hither from Lebanon,
from the beginning of faith wilt thou pass through and pass on,"(1) because,
renouncing the world, she passed through things temporal and passed on to Christ.
And again, God the Word says to her: "How beautiful and sweet art thou made, O
love, in thy delights! Thy stature is become like that of a palm-tree, and thy
breasts like bunches of grapes."
40. And the Church answers Him, "Who will give Thee to me, my Brother,
that didst suck the breasts of my mother? If I find Thee without, I will kiss
Thee, and indeed they will not despise me. I will take Thee, and bring Thee into
the house of my mother; and into the secret chamber of her that conceived me.
Thou shalt teach me."(3) You see how, delighted with the gifts of grace, she longs
to attain to the innermost mysteries, and to consecrate all her affections to
Christ. She still seeks, she still stirs up His love, and asks of the daughters
of Jerusalem to stir it up for her, and desires that by their beauty, which is
that of faithful souls, her spouse may be incited to ever richer love for her.
41. So that the Lord Jesus Himself, invited by such eager love and by the
beauty of comeliness and grace, since now no offences pollute the baptized,
says to the Church: "Place Me as a seal upon thy heart, as a signet upon thine
arm;"(4) that is, thou art comely, My beloved, thou art all fair, nothing is
wanting to thee. Place Me as a seal upon thine heart, that thy faith may shine forth
in the fulness of the sacrament. Let thy works also shine and set forth the
image of God in the Whose image thou wast made. Let no persecution lessen thy
love, which many waters cannot quench, nor many rivers drown.
42. And then remember that you received the seal of the Spirit; the spirit
of wisdom and understanding, the spirit of counsel and strength, the spirit of
knowledge and godliness, and the spirit of holy fear,(5) and preserved what
you received. God the Father sealed you, Christ the Lord strengthened you, and
gave the earnest of the Spirit in your heart,(6) as you have learned in the
lesson from the Apostle.(7)
CHAPTER VIII.
Of the mystical feast of the altar of the Lord. Lest any should think lightly
of it, St. Ambrose shows that it is of higher antiquity than the sacred rites
of the Jews, since it was foreshadowed in the sacrifice of Melchisedech, and far
better than the manna, as being the Body of Christ.
43. The cleansed people, rich with these adornments, hastens to the altar
of Christ, saying: "I will go to the altar of God, to God Who maketh glad my
youth;"(1) for having laid aside the slough of ancient error, renewed with an
eagle's youth, it hastens to approach that heavenly feast. It comes, and seeing
the holy altar arranged, cries out: "Thou hast prepared a table in my sight."
David introduces the people as speaking, where he says: "The Lord feedeth me, and
nothing shall be wanting to me, in a place of good pasture hath He placed me.
He hath led me forth by the water of refreshment." And later: "For though I walk
in the midst of the shadow of death, I will fear no evils, for Thou art with
me. Thy rod and Thy staff have comforted me. Thou hast prepared in my sight a
table against them that trouble me. Thou hast anointed my head with oil, and Thy
inebriating cup, how excellent it is!"(2)
44. We must now pay attention, lest perchance an y one seeing that what is
visible (for things which are invisible cannot be seen nor comprehended by
human eyes), should say, "God rained down manna and rained down quails upon the
Jews,"(5) but for the Church beloved of Him the things which He has prepared are
those of which it is said: "That eye hath not seen, nor ear heard, neither hath
it entered into the heart of man, what things God hath prepared for them that
love Him."(4) So, lest any one should say this, we will take great pains to
prove that the sacraments of the Church are both more ancient than those of the
synagogue, and more excellent than the manna.
45. The lesson of Genesis just read shows that they are more ancient, for
the synagogue took its origin from the law of Moses. But Abraham was far
earlier, who, after conquering the enemy, and recovering his own nephew, as he was
enjoying his victory, was met by Melchisedech, who brought forth those things
which Abraham reverently received. It was not Abraham who brought them forth, but
Melchisedech, who is introduced without father, without mother, having neither
beginning of days, nor ending, but like the Son of God, of Whom Paul says to
the Hebrews: "that He remaineth a priest for ever," Who in the Latin version is
called King of righteousness and King of peace.
46. Do you recognize Who that is? Can a man be king of righteousness, when
himself he can hardly be righteous? Can he be king of peace, when he can
hardly be peaceable? He it is Who is without mother according to His Godhead, for He
was begotten of God the Father, of one substance with the Father; without a
father according to His Incarnation, for He was born of a Virgin; having neither
beginning nor end, for He is the beginning and end of all things, the first and
the last. The sacrament, then, which you received is the gift not of man but
of God; brought forth by Him Who blessed Abraham the father of faith, whose
grace and deeds we admire.
47. We have proved the sacraments of the Church to be the more ancient,
now recognize that they are superior. In very truth it is a marvellous thing that
God rained manna on the fathers, and fed them with daily food from heaven; so
that it is said, "So man did eat angels' food."(1) But yet all those who ate
that food died in the wilderness, but that food which you receive, that living
Bread which came down from heaven, furnishes the substance of eternal life; and
whosoever shall eat of this Bread shall never die, and it is the Body of Christ.
48. Now consider whether the bread of angels be more excellent or the
Flesh of Christ, which is indeed the body of life. That manna came from heaven,
this is above the heavens; that was of heaven, this is of the Lord of the heavens;
that was liable to corruption, if kept a second day, this is far from all
corruption, for whosoever shall taste it holly shall not be able to feel
corruption. For them water flowed from the rock, for you Blood flowed from Christ; water
satisfied them for a time, the Blood satiates you for eternity. The Jew drinks
and thirsts again, you after drinking will be beyond the power of thirsting;
that was in a shadow, this is in truth.
49. If that which you so wonder at is but shadow, how great must that be
whose very shadow you wonder at. See now what happened in the case of the
fathers was shadow: "They drank, it is said, of that Rock that followed them, and
that Rock was Christ. But with many of them God was not well pleased, for they
were overthrown in the wilderness. Now these things were done in a figure
concerning us."(1) You recognize now which are the more excellent, for light is better
than shadow, truth than a figure, the Body of its Giver than the manna from
heaven.
CHAPTER IX.
In order that no one through observing the outward part should waver in faith,
many instances are brought forward wherein the outward nature has been
changed, and so it is proved that bread is made the true body of Christ. The treatise
then is brought to a termination with certain remarks as to the effects of the
sacrament, the disposition of the recipients, and such like.
50. Perhaps you will say, "I see something else, how is it that you assert
that I receive the Body of Christ?" And this is the point which remains for us
to prove. And what evidence shall we make use of? Let us prove that this is
not what nature made, but what the blessing consecrated, and the power of
blessing is greater than that of nature, because by blessing nature itself is changed.
51. Moses was holding a rod, he cast it down and it became a serpent.(2)
Again, he took hold of the tail of the serpent and it returned to the nature of
a rod. You see that by virtue of the prophetic office there were two changes,
of the nature both of the serpent and of the rod. The streams of Egypt were
running with. a pure flow of water; of a sudden from the veins of the sources blood
began to burst forth, and none could drink of the river. Again, at the
prophet's prayer the blood ceased, and the nature of water returned.(3) The people of
the Hebrews were shut in on every side, hemmed in on the one hand by the
Egyptians, on the other by the sea; Moses lifted up his rod, the water divided and
hardened like walls, and a way for the feet appeared between the waves.(4) Jordan
being turned back, returned, contrary to nature, to the source of its
stream.(5) Is it not clear that the nature of the waves of the sea and of the river
stream was changed? The people of the fathers thirsted, Moses touched the rock,
and water flowed out of the rock.(6) Did not grace work a result contrary to
nature, so that the rock poured forth water, which by nature it did not contain?
Marsh was a most bitter stream, so that the thirsting people could not drink.
Moses cast wood into the water, and the water lost its bitterness, which grace of
a sudden tempered.(1) In the time of Elisha the prophet one of the sons of the
prophets lost the head from his axe, which sank. He who had lost the iron asked
Elisha, who cast in a piece of wood and the iron swam. This, too, we clearly
recognize as having happened contrary to nature, for iron is of heavier nature
than water.
52. We observe, then, that grace has more power than nature, and yet so
far we have only spoken of the grace of a prophet's blessing. But if the blessing
of man had such power as to change nature, what are we to say of that divine
consecration where the very words of the Lord and Saviour operate? For that
sacrament which you receive is made what it is by the word of Christ. But if the
word of Elijah had such power as to bring down fire from heaven, shall not the
word of Christ have power to change the nature of the elements? You read
concerning the making of the whole world: "He spake and they were made, He commanded
and they were created."(2) Shall not the word of Christ, which was able to make
out of nothing that which was not, be able to change things which already are
into what they were not? For it is not less to give a new nature to things than
to change them.
53. But why make use of arguments? Let us use the examples He gives, and
by the example of the Incarnation prove the truth of the mystery. Did the course
of nature proceed as usual when the Lord Jesus was born of Mary? If we look to
the usual course, a woman ordinarily conceives after connection with a man.
And this body which we make is that which was born of the Virgin. Why do you seek
the order of nature in the Body of Christ, seeing that the Lord Jesus Himself
was born of a Virgin, not according to nature? It is the true Flesh of Christ
which crucified and buried, this is then truly the Sacrament of His Body.
54. The Lord Jesus Himself proclaims: "This is My Body."(3) Before the
blessing of the heavenly words another nature is spoken of, after the consecration
the Body is signified. He Himself speaks of His Blood. Before the consecration
it has another name, after it is called Blood. And you say, Amen, that is, It
is true. Let the heart within confess what the mouth utters, let the soul feel
what the voice speaks.
55. Christ, then, feeds His Church with these sacraments, by means of
which the substance of the soul is strengthened, and seeing the continual progress
of her grace, He rightly says to her: "How comely are thy breasts, my sister,
my spouse, how comely they are made by wine, and the smell of thy garments is
above all spices. A dropping honeycomb are thy lips, my spouse, honey and milk
are under thy tongue, and the smell of thy garments is as the smell of Lebanon. A
garden enclosed is my sister, my spouse, a garden enclosed, a fountain
sealed."(1) By which He signifies that the mystery ought to remain sealed up with you,
that it be not violated by the deeds of an evil life, and pollution of
chastity, that it be not made known to thou, for whom it is not fitting, nor by
garrulous talkativeness it be spread abroad amongst unbelievers. Your guardianship of
the faith ought therefore to be good, that integrity of life and silence may
endure unblemished.
56. For which reason, too, the Church, guarding the depth of the heavenly
mysteries, repels the furious storms of wind, and calls to her the sweetness of
the grace of spring, and knowing that her garden cannot displease Christ,
invites the Bridegroom, saying: "Arise, O north wind, and come, thou south; blow
upon my garden, and let my ointments flow down. Let my Brother come down to His
garden, and eat the fruit of His trees."(2) For it has good trees and fruitful,
which have dipped their roots in the water of the sacred spring, and with fresh
growth have shot forth into good fruits, so as now not to be cut with the axe
of the prophet, but to abound with the fruitfulness of the Gospel.
57. Lastly, the Lord also, delighted with their fertility, answers: "I
have entered into My garden, My sister, My spouse; I have gathered My myrrh with
My spices, I have eaten My meat with My honey, I have drunk My drink with My
milk."(3) Understand, you faithful, why He spoke of meat and drink. And there is
no doubt that He Himself eats and drinks in us, as you have read that He says
that in our persons He is in prison.(1)
58. Wherefore, too, the Church, beholding so great grace, exhorts her sons
and her friends to come together to the sacraments, saying: "Eat, my friends,
and drink and be inebriated, my brother."(3) What we eat and what we drink the
Holy Spirit has elsewhere made plain by the prophet, saying, "Taste and see
that the Lord is good, blessed is the man that hopeth in Him."(3) In that
sacrament is Christ, because it is the Body of Christ, it is therefore not bodily food
but spiritual. Whence the Apostle says of its type: "Our fathers ate spiritual
food and drank spiritual drink,"(4) for the Body of God is a spiritual body;
the Body of Christ is the Body of the Divine Spirit, for the Spirit is Christ, as
we read: "The Spirit before our face is Christ the Lord."(5) And in the
Epistle of Peter we read: "Christ died for us."(6) Lastly, that food strengthens our
heart, and that drink "maketh glad the heart of man,"(7) as the prophet has
recorded.
59. So, then, having obtained everything, let us know that we are born
again, but let us not say, How are we born again? Have we entered a second time
into our mother's womb and been born again? I do not recognize here the course of
nature. But here there is no order of nature, where is the excellence of
grace. And again, it is not always the course of nature which brings about
conception, for we confess that Christ the Lord was conceived of a Virgin, and reject
the order of nature. For Mary conceived not of man, but was with child of the
Holy Spirit, as Matthew says: "She was found with child of the Holy Spirit."(8)
If, then, the Holy Spirit coming down upon the Virgin wrought the conception, and
effected the work of generation, surely we must not doubt but that, coming
down upon the Font, or upon those who receive Baptism, He effects the reality of
the new birth.