SELECTIONS FROM THE LETTERS OF ST. AMBROSE: LETTERS LI, LVII, LXI, LXII & LXIII
LETTER LI.
Addressed to the Emperor Theodosius after the massacre at Thessalonica.(1) St.
Ambrose begins by stating his reasons for not having met the Emperor on his
return to Milan. He then mentions the sentiments of the bishops with regard to
the slaughter at Thessalonica, and points out that repentance for that deed is
necessary to obtain forgiveness and a victory over the devil, the instigator to
that crime. St. Ambrose could not offer the sacrifice in the Emperor's presence,
and, as truly loving the Emperor, grieves and yet hopes.
1. The memory of your old friendship is pleasant to me, and I gratefully
call to mind the kindnesses which, in reply to my frequent intercessions, you
have most graciously conferred on others. Whence it may be inferred that I did
not from any ungrateful feeling avoid meeting you on your arrival, which I had
always before earnestly desired. And I will now briefly set forth the reason for
my acting as I did.
2. I saw that from me alone in your court the natural right of hearing was
withdrawn, so that I was deprived also of the office of speaking; for you were
frequently troubled because certain matters which had been decided in your
consistory had come to my knowledge. I, therefore, am without a part in the common
privilege, since the Lord Jesus says: "That nothing is hidden, which shall not
be made known."(2) I, therefore, as reverently as I could, complied with the
imperial will, and took heed that neither yourself should have any reason for
displeasure, when I effected that nothing should be related to me of the imperial
decrees; and that I, when present, either should not hear, through fear of all
others, and so incur the reputation of connivance, or should hear in such a
fashion that my ears might be open, my utterance prevented, that I might not be
able to utter what I had heard lest I should injure and bring in peril those who
had incurred the suspicion of treachery.
3. What, then, could I do? Should I not hear? But I could not close my
ears with the wax of the old fables. Should I utter what I heard? But I was bound
to be on my guard in my words against that which I feared in your commands,
namely, lest some deed of blood should be committed. Should I keep silence? But
then my conscience would be bound, my utterance taken away, which would be the
most wretched condition of all. And where would be that text? If the priest speak
not to him that erreth, he who errs shall die in his sin, and the priest shall
be liable to the penalty because he warned not the erring.(1)
4. Listen, august Emperor. I cannot deny that you have a zeal for the
faith; I do confess that you have the fear of God. But you have a natural
vehemence, which, if any one endeavours to soothe, you quickly turn to mercy; if any one
stirs it up, you rouse it so much more that you can scarcely restrain it.
Would that if no one soothe it, at least no one may inflame it! To yourself I
willingly entrust it, you restrain yourself, and overcome your natural vehemence by
the love of piety.
5. This vehemence of yours I preferred to commend privately to your own
consideration, rather than possibly raise it by any action of mine in public. And
so I have preferred to be somewhat wanting in duty rather than in humility,
and that other, should rather think me wanting in priestly authority than that
you should find me lacking in most loving reverence, that having restrained your
vehemence your power of deciding on your counsel should not be weakened. I
excuse myself by bodily sickness, which was in truth severe, and scarcely to be
lightened but by great care. Yet I would rather have died than not wait two or
three days for your arrival. But it was not possible for me to do so.
6. There was that done in the city of the Thessalonians of which no
similar record exists, which I was not able to prevent happening; which, indeed, I
had before said would be most atrocious when I so often petitioned against it,
and that which you yourself show by revoking it too late you consider to be
grave,(2) this I could not extenuate when done. When it was first heard of, a synod
had met because of the arrival of the Gallican Bishops. There was not one who
did not lament it, not one who thought lightly of it; your being in fellowship
with Ambrose was no excuse for your deed. Blame for what had been done would
have been heaped more and more on me, had no one said that your reconciliation to
our God was necessary.
7. Are you ashamed, O Emperor, to do that which the royal prophet David,
the forefather of Christ, according to the flesh, did? To him it was told how
the rich man who had many flocks seized and killed the poor man's one lamb,
because of the arrival of his guest, and recognizing that he himself was being
condemned m the tale, for that he himself had done it, he said: "l have sinned
against the Lord.''(1) Bear it, then, without impatience, O Emperor, if it be said
to you: "You have done that which was spoken of to King David by the prophet.
For if you listen obediently to this, and say: "I have sinned against the Lord,"
if you repeat those words of the royal prophet: "O come let us worship and fall
down before Him, and mourn before the Lord our God. Who made us,"(2) it shall
be said to you also: "Since thou repentest, the Lord putteth away thy sin, and
thou shalt not die,"(3)
8. And again, David, after he had commanded the people to be numbered, was
smitten in heart, and said to the Lord: "I have sinned exceedingly, because I
have commanded this, and now, O Lord, take away the iniquity of Thy servant,
for I have transgressed exceedingly."(4) And the prophet Nathan was sent again to
him, to offer him the choice of three things, that he should select the one he
chose--famine in the land for three years, or that he should flee for three
months before his enemies, or mortal pestilence in the land for three days. And
David answered: "These three things are a great strait to me, but let me fall
into the hand of the Lord, for very many are His mercies, and let me not fall
into the hands of man."(5) Now his fault was that he desired to know the number of
the whole of the people which was with him, which knowledge he ought to have
left to God alone.
9. And, we are told, when death came upon the people, on the very first
day at dinner time, when David saw the angel smiting the people, he said: "I have
sinned, and I, the shepherd, have done wickedly, and this flock, what hath it
done? Let Thine hand be upon me, and upon my father's house.''(6) And so it
repented the Lord, and He commanded the angel to spare the people, and David to
offer a sacrifice, for sacrifices were then offered for sins; sacrifices are now
those of penitence. And so by that humbling of himself he became more
acceptable to God, for it is no matter of wonder that a man should sin, but this is
reprehensible, if he does not recognize that he has erred, and humble himself
before God.
10. Holy Job, himself also powerful in this world, says: "I hid not my
sin, but declared it before all the people."(1) His son Jonathan said to the
fierce King Saul himself: "Do not sin against thy servant David;"(2) and: "Why dost
thou sin against innocent blood, to slay David without a cause?"(3) For,
although he was a king, yet he would have sinned if he slew the innocent. And again,
David also, when he was in possession of the kingdom, and had heard that
innocent Abner had been slain by Joab, the leader of his host, said: "I am guiltless
and my kingdom is guiltless henceforth and for ever of the blood of Abner, the
son of Ner,"(4) and he fasted for sorrow.
11. I have written this, not in order to confound you, but that the
examples of these kings may stir you up to put away this sin from your kingdom, for
you will do it away by humbling your soul before God. You are a man, and it has
come upon you, conquer it. Sin is not done away but by tears and penitence.
Neither angel can do it, nor archangel. The Lord Himself, Who alone can say, "I am
with you,"(5) if we have sinned, does not forgive any but those who repent.
12. I urge, I beg, I exhort, I warn, for it is a grief to me, that you who
were an example of unusual piety, who were conspicuous for clemency, who would
not suffer single offenders to be put in peril, should not mourn that so many
have perished. Though you have waged battle most successfully, though in other
matters, too, you are worthy of praise, yet piety was ever the crown of your
actions. The devil envied that which was your most excellent possession. Conquer
him whilst you still possess that wherewith you may conquer. Do not add another
sin to your sin by a course of action which has injured many.
13. I, indeed, though a debtor to your kindness, for which I cannot be
ungrateful, that kindness which has surpassed that of many emperors, and has been
equalled by one only; I, I say, have no cause for a charge of contumacy against
you, but have cause for fear; I dare not offer the sacrifice if you intend to
be present. Is that which is not allowed after shedding the blood of one
innocent person, allowed after shedding the blood of many? I do not think so.
14. Lastly, I am writing with my own hand that which you alone may read.
As I hope that the Lord will deliver me from all troubles, I have been warned,
not by man, nor through man, but plainly by Himself that this is forbidden me.
For when I was anxious, in the very night in which I was preparing to set out,
you appeared to me in a dream to have come into the Church, and I was not
permitted to offer the sacrifice. I pass over other things, which I could have
avoided, but I bore them for love of you, as I believe. May the Lord cause all things
to pass peaceably. Our God gives warnings in many ways, by heavenly signs, by
the precepts of the prophets; by the visions even of sinners He wills that we
should understand, that we should entreat Him to take away all disturbances, to
preserve peace for you emperors, that the faith and peace of the Church, whose
advantage it is that emperors should be Christians and devout, may continue.
15. You certainly desire to be approved by God. "To everything there is a
time,"(1) as it is written: "It is time for Thee, Lord, to work."(2) "It is an
acceptable time, O Lord."(3) You shall then make your offering when you have
received permission to sacrifice, when your offering shall be acceptable to God.
Would it not delight me to enjoy the favour of the Emperor, to act according to
your wish, if the case allowed it? And prayer by itself is a sacrifice, it
obtains pardon, when the oblation would bring offence, for the one is a sign of
humility, the other of contempt. For the Word of God Himself tells us that He
prefers the performance of His commandments to the offering of sacrifice. God
proclaims this, Moses declares it to the people, Paul preaches it to the Gentiles.
Do that which you understand is most profitable for the time. "I prefer mercy,"
it is said, "rather than sacrifice."(4) Are they not, then, rather Christians
in truth who condemn their own sin, than they who think to defend it? "The just
is an accuser of himself in the beginning of his words."(5) He who accuses
himself when tie has sinned is just, not he who praises himself.
16. I wish, O Emperor, that before this I had trusted rather to myself,
than to your habits. When I consider that you quickly pardon, and quickly revoke
your sentence, as you have often done; you have been anticipated, and I have
not shunned that which I needed not to fear. But thanks be to the Lord, Who
willeth to chastise His servants, that He may not lose them. This I have in common
with the prophets, and you shall have it in common with the saints.
17. Shall I not value the father of Gratian more than my very eyes? Your
other holy pledges also claim pardon. I conferred beforehand a dear name on
those to whom I bore a common love. I follow you with my love, my affection, and my
prayers. If you believe me, be guided by me; if, I say, you believe me,
acknowledge what I say; if you believe me not, pardon that which I do, in that I set
God before you. May you, most august Emperor, with your holy offspring, enjoy
perpetual peace with perfect happiness and prosperity.
LETTER LVII.
St. Ambrose informs the Emperor Eugenius why he was absent from Milan. He then
proceeds to reprove him for his conduct with regard to heathen worship. This
was, he says, the reason why he did not write sooner, and he promises that for
the future he will treat him with the same freedom as the other emperors.
AMBROSE, Bishop, to the most gracious Emperor Eugenius.
1. The cause of my departure was the fear of the Lord, to Whom, so far as
I am able, I am accustomed to refer all my acts, and never to turn away my mind
from Him, nor to make more of any man than of the grace of Christ. For I do no
one an injury, if I set God before all, and, trusting in Him, I am not afraid
to tell you emperors my thoughts, such as they are. And so I will not keep
silence before you, O Emperor, as to things respecting which I have not kept
silence before other emperors. And that I may keep the order of the matters, I will
go through, one by one, the things which have to do with this matter.
2. The illustrious Symmachus, when prefect of the city, had
memorialized(1) the Emperor Valentinian the younger of august memory, requesting that he
would command that what had been taken away should be restored to the temples. He
performed his part in accordance with his zeal and his religion. And I also, as
Bishop, was bound to recognize my part. I presented two petitions(1) to the
Emperors, in which I pointed out that a Christian man could not contribute to the
cost of the sacrifices; that I indeed had not been the cause of their being
abolished, but I certainly did urge that they should not be decreed; and lastly,
that he himself would seem to be giving not restoring those sums to the images.
For what he had not himself taken away, he could not, as it were, restore, but
of his own will to grant towards the expenses of superstition. Lastly, that, if
he did it, either he must not come to the Church, or, if he came, he would
either not find a priest there, or he would find one withstanding him in the
Church. Nor could it be alleged in excuse that he was a catechumen, seeing that
catechumens are not allowed to contribute to the idols' expenses.
3. My letters were read in the consistory. Count Bauto, a man of the
highest rank of military authority was present, and Rumoridus, himself also of the
same dignity, addicted to the worship of the gentile nations from the first
years of his boyhood. Valentinian at that time listened to my suggestion, and did
nothing but what the rule of our faith required. And they yielded to his officer.
4. Afterwards I plainly addressed the most clement Emperor Theodosius, and
hesitated not to speak to his face. And he, having received a similar message
from the Senate, though it was not the request of the whole Senate, at length
assented to my recommendation, and so I did not go near him for some days, nor
did he take it ill, for he knew that I was not acting for my own advantage, but
was not ashamed to say in the sight of the king that which was for the profit
of himself and of my own soul.(2)
5. Again a legation sent into Gaul from the Senate to the Emperor
Valentinian of august memory could procure nothing; and then I was certainly absent,
and had not written anything at that time to him.
6. But when your Clemency took up the reins of government it was
afterwards discovered that favours of this kind had been granted to men, excellent
indeed in matters of state but in religion heathens. And it may, perhaps, be said,
august Emperor, that you did not make any restitution to temples, but presented
gifts to men who had deserved well of you. But you know that we must constantly
act in the cause of God, as is often done in the cause of liberty, also not
only by priests, but also by those who are in your armies, or are reckoned in the
number of those who dwell in the provinces. When you became Emperor envoys
requested that you would make restitution to the temples, and you did not do it;
others came a second time and you resisted, and afterwards you thought fit that
this should be granted to those very persons who made the petition.
7. Though the imperial power be great, yet consider, O Emperor, how great
God is. He sees the hearts of all, He questions the inmost conscience, He knows
all things before they happen, He knows the inmost things of your breast. You
do not suffer yourselves to be deceived, and do you desire to conceal anything
from God? Has not this come into your mind? For although they acted with such
perseverance, was it not your duty, O Emperor, to resist with still greater
perseverance because of the reverence due to the most high and true and living God,
and to refuse what was an offence against His holy law?
8. Who grudges your having given what you would to others? We are not
scrutinizers of your liberality, nor envious of the advantages of others, but are
interpreters of the faith. How will you offer your gifts to Christ? Not many but
will put their own estimate on what you have done, all will do so on your
intentions. Whatever they do will be ascribed to you; whatever they do not do, to
themselves. Although you are Emperor, you ought to be all the more subject to
God. How shall the ministers of Christ dispense your gifts?
9. There was a question of this sort in former times, and yet persecution
itself yielded to the faith of our fathers, and heathendom gave way. For when
in the city of Tyre the quinquennial game was being kept, and the intensely
wicked King of Antioch had come to witness it, Jason appointed officers of sacred
rites, who were Antiochians, to carry three hundred didrachms of silver from
Jerusalem, and give them to the sacrifice of Hercules.(1) But the fathers did not
give the money to the heathen, but having sent faithful men declared that that
money should not be spent on sacrifices to the gods, because it was not
fitting, but on other expenses, And it was decreed that because he had said that the
money was sent for the sacrifice of Hercules, it ought to be taken for that for
which it was sent; but, because they, who had brought it, because of their zeal
and religion, pleaded that it should not be used for the sacrifice, but for
other expenses, the money was given for the building of ships. Being compelled
they sent it, but it was not used for sacrifice, but for other expenses of the
state.
10. Now they who had brought the money might, no doubt, have kept silence,
but would have done violence to their faith, because they knew whither the
money was being carried, and therefore they sent men who feared God to contrive
that what was sent should be assigned, not to the temple, but to the cost of
ships. For they entrusted the money to those who should plead the cause of the
sacred Law, and He Who absolves the conscience was made judge of the matter. If
they when in the power of another were so careful, there can be no doubt what you,
O Emperor, ought to have done. You, at any rate, whom no one compelled, whom
no one had in his power, ought to have sought counsel from the priest.
11. And I certainly when I then resisted, although I was alone in
resistance, was not alone in what I wished, and was not alone in what I advised. Since,
then, I am bound by my own words both before God and before all men, I felt
that nothing else was allowable or needful for me but to act for myself, because
I could not well trust you. I kept back and concealed my grief for a long time;
I thought it not right to intimate anything to anybody, now I may no longer
dissemble, nor is it open to me to keep silence. For this reason also at the
commencement of your reign I did not reply when you wrote to me, because I foresaw
that this would happen. Then at last, when you required a letter, because I had
not written a reply, I said: This is the reason that I think this will be
extorted from him.
12. But when a reason for exercising my office arose, I both wrote and
petitioned for those who were in anxiety about themselves, that I might show that
in the canse of God I felt a righteous fear, and that I did not value flattery
above my own soul; but in those matters in which it is fitting that petitions
should be addressed to you. I also pay the deference due to authority, as it is
written: "Honour to whom honour is due, tribute to whom tribute."(2) For since
I deferred from the bottom of my heart to a private person, how could I not
defer to the Emperor? But do you who desire that deference be paid to you suffer
us to pay deference to Him Whom you are desirous to be proved the Author of your
power.
LETTER LXI.
St. Ambrose explains his absence from Milan on the arrival of the Emperor
Theodosius after his victory over Eugenius,(1) and after expressing his
thankfulness for that success he promises obedience to the Emperor's will, and while
commending his piety urges him to be merciful to the conquered.
AMBROSE, to the Emperor Theodosius.
1. You thought, most blessed Emperor, so far as I gathered from your
letter, that I kept away from the city of Milan, because I believed that your cause
was forsaken by God. But I was not so wanting in foresight, nor so unmindful in
my absence of your virtue and merits, as not to anticipate that the aid of
Heaven would be with your piety, with which you would rescue the Roman Empire from
the cruelty of a barbarian robber, and the dominion of an unworthy usurper.
2. I therefore made haste to return thither, as soon as I knew that he,
whom I thought it right to avoid,(2) was now gone, for I had not deserted the
Church of Milan, entrusted to me by the judgment of God, but avoided the presence
of him who had involved himself in sacrilege. I returned, therefore, about the
Calends of August, and have resided here since that day. Here, too, O Augustus,
your letter found me.
3. Thanks be to our Lord God, Who responded to your faith and piety, and
has restored the form of ancient sanctity, suffering us to see in our time that
which we wonder at in reading the Scriptures, namely, such a presence of the
divine assistance s in battle, that no mountain heights delayed the course of
your approach, no hostile arms were any hindrance.
4. For these mercies you think that I ought to render thanks to the Lord
our God, and being conscious of your merits, I will do so willingly, Certainly
that offering will be acceptable to God which is offered in your name, and what
a mark of faith and devotion is this l Other emperors, immediately upon a
victory, order the erection of triumphal arches, or other monuments of their
triumphs; your Clemency prepares an offering for God, and desires that oblation and
thanksgiving should be presented by the priests to the Lord.
5. Though I be unworthy and unequal to such an office and the offering of
such acknowledgments, yet will I describe what I have done. I took the letter
of your Piety with me to the altar. I laid it upon the altar. I held it in my
hand whilst I offered the Sacrifice; so that your faith might speak by my voice,
and the Emperor's letter discharge the function of the priestly oblation.
6. In truth, the Lord is propitious to the Roman Empire, since He has
chosen such a prince and father of princes, whose virtue and power, established on
such a triumphant height of dominion, rests on such humility, that in valour he
has surpassed emperors and priests in humility. What can I wish? What can I
desire? You have everything, and therefore I will endeavour to gain the sum of my
desires. You, O Emperor, are pitiful, and of the greatest clemency.
7. And for yourself, I desire again and again an increase of piety, than
which God has given nothing more excellent, that by your clemency the Church of
God, as it delights in the peace and tranquillity of the innocent, so, too, may
rejoice in the pardon of the guilty. Pardon especially those who have not
offended before. May the Lord preserve your Clemency. Amen.
LETTER LXII.
St. Ambrose excuses himself for having omitted an opportunity of writing to
the Emperor, but is now sending a letter by the hands of a deacon, requesting
forgiveness for some of Eugenius' followers who had sought the protection of the
Church, especially in consideration of the miraculous aid which had been
vouchsafed to the Emperor.
AMBROSE, to the Emperor Theodosius.
1. Although I lately wrote to your Clemency even a second time, it did not
seem to me that I had responded sufficiently to the duty of intercourse by
answering as it were in turn, for I have been so bound by frequent benefits from
your Clemency, that I cannot repay what I owe by any services, most blessed and
august Emperor.
2. And so just as the first opportunity was not to be lost by me, when,
through your chamberlain, I was able to thank your Clemency and to pay the duty
of an address, especially lest my not having written before should seem to have
been owing to sloth rather than necessity, so, too, I had to seek some manner
of rendering to your Piety my dutiful salutations.
3. And rightly do I send my son, the deacon Felix, to bear my letter, and,
at the same time, to present to you my duty, in my place, and also a memorial
on behalf of those who have fled to the Church, the Mother of your Piety,
seeking mercy. I have been unable to endure their tears without anticipating by my
entreaty the coming of your Clemency.
4. It is a great boon that I ask, but I ask it from him to whom the Lord
has granted great and unheard-of things, from him whose clemency I know, and
whose piety I have as a pledge. For your victory is considered to have been
granted to you after the ancient manner, and with the old miracles, a victory such as
was granted to holy Moses, and holy Joshua, son of Nave, and Samuel, and
David, not by human calculations, but by the outpouring of heavenly grace. Now we
expect an equal amount of gentleness with that by virtue of which so great a
victory has been gained.
EPISTLE LXIII.
Limenius, Bishop of Vercellae, having died, the see remained long vacant owing
to domestic factions. St. Ambrose, therefore, as Exarch, writes to the
Christians at Vercellae, and commences by reference to the speedy and unanimous
election of Eusebius, a former Bishop, and reminds them of the presence of Christ as
a reason for concord, He refers next to two apostate monks, Sarmatio and
Barbatianus, and inveighs against sensuality, which degrades men below the beasts.
Thence he passes to the virtues required in a bishop, referring again to
Eusebius, and to Dionysius, Bishop of Milan, comparing the clerical and monastic lives,
and ends with exhortations to Christian virtue. The letter seems to have been
written A.D. 396.
AMBROSE, a servant of Christ, called to be a Bishop, to the Church of
Vercellae, and to those who call on the Name of our Lord Jesus Christ, Grace be
fulfilled unto you in the Holy Spirit from God the Father and His only-begotten
Son.
1. I am spent with grief that the Church of God which is among you is
still without a bishop, and now alone of all the regions of Liguria and AEmilia,
and of the Venetiae all the and other neighbouring parts of Italy needs that care
which other churches were wont to ask for themselves from it; and what is a
greater source of shame to myself, the tension amongst you which causes the
obstacle is laid to my charge. Now since there are dissensions among you, how can we
decree anything, or you elect, or anyone agree to undertake this office
amongst those who are at variance which he could hardly sustain amongst those who are
at unity.
2. Is this the training of a confessor, are these the offspring of those
righteous fathers who, as soon as they saw, approved of holy Eusebius, whom they
had never known before, preferring him to their fellow-citizens, and he was no
sooner amongst them than he was approved, and much more when they had observed
him. Justly did he turn out so great a man, whom the whole Church elected,
justly was it believed that he whom all had demanded was elected by the judgment
of God. It is fitting then that you follow the example of your parents,
especially since you who have been instructed by a holy confessor ought to be so much
better than your fathers, as a better teacher has taught and instructed you, and
to manifest a sign of your moderation and concord by agreeing in your
request[1] for a Bishop.
3. For if according to the Lord's saying, that which two shall have agreed
upon on earth concerning anything which they shall ask, shall be done for
them, as He says, by My Father, Who is in heaven, for: "Where two or three are
gathered together in My Name, there am I in the midst of them,[1] how much less,
where the full congregation is gathered in the Name of the Lord. Where the demand
of all is unanimous, ought we to doubt that the Lord Jesus is there as the
Author of that desire, and the Hearer of the petition, the Presider over the
ordination, and the Giver of the grace?
4. Make yourselves then to appear worthy that Christ should be in your
midst. For where peace is, there is Christ, for Christ is Peace; and where
righteousness is, there is Christ, for Christ is Righteousness. Let Him be in the
midst of you, that you may see Him, lest it be said to you also: "There standeth
One in the midst of you, Whom ye see not."[2] The Jews saw not Him in Whom they
believed not; we look upon Him by devotion, and behold Him by faith.
5. Let Him therefore stand in your midst, that the heavens, which declare
the glory of God,[3] may be opened to you, that you may do His will, and work
His works. He who sees Jesus, to him are the heavens opened as they were opened
to Stephen, when he said: "Behold I see the heavens opened and Jesus standing
at the right hand of God."[4] Jesus was standing as his advocate, He was
standing as though anxious, that He might help His athlete Stephen in his conflict, He
was standing as though ready to crown His martyr.
6. Let Him then be standing for you, that you may not be afraid of Him
sitting; for when sitting He judges, as Daniel says: "The thrones were placed, and
the books were opened, and the Ancient of days did sit."[5] But in the
eighty-first[second] Psalm it is written: "God stood in the congregation of gods, and
decideth among the gods."[6] So then when He sits He judges, when He stands He
decides, and He judges concerning the imperfect, but decides among the gods.
Let Him stand for you as a defender, as a good shepherd, lest the fierce wolves
assault you.
7. And not in vain is my warning turned to this point; for I hear that
Sarmatio and Barbatianus[7] are come to you, foolish talkers, who say that there
is no merit in abstinence no grace in a frugal life, none in virginity, that all
are valued at one price, that they are mad who chasten their flesh with
fastings, that they may bring it into subjection to the spirit. But if he had thought
it madness, Paul the Apostle would never himself have acted thus, nor written
to instruct others. For he glories in it, saying: "But I chasten my body, and
bring it into bondage, lest, after preaching to others, I myself should be found
reprobate."[1] So they who do not chasten their body, and desire to preach to
others, are themselves esteemed reprobates.
8. For is there anything so reprobate as that which excites to luxury, to
corruption, to wantonness, as the incentive to lust, the enticer to pleasure,
the fuel of incontinence, the firebrand of desire? What new school has sent out
these Epicureans? Not a school of philosophers, as they themselves say, but
of unlearned men who preach pleasure, persuade to luxury, esteem chastity to be
of no use. They were with us, but they were not of us,[2] for we are not
ashamed to say what the Evangelist John said. But when settled here they used to fast
at first, they were enclosed within the monastery, there was no place for
luxury, the opportunity of mocking and disputing was cut off.
9. This these dainty men could not endure. They went abroad, then when
they desired to return they were not received; for I had heard many thinks which
necessitated my being cautious; I admonished them, but effected nothing. And so
boiling over they began to disseminate such things as made them the miserable
enticers to all vices. They utterly lost the benefit of having fasted; they lost
the fruits of their temporary continence. And so now they with Satanic
eagerness envy the good works of others, the fruit of which themselves have failed to
keep.
10. What virgin can hear that there is no reward for her chastity and not
groan? Far be it from her to believe this easily, and still more to lay aside
her zeal, or change the intention of her mind. What widow, when she learnt that
there was no profit in her widowhood, would choose to preserve her marriage
faith and live in sorrow, rather than give herself up to a happier condition? Who,
bound by the marriage-bond, if she hear that there is no honour in chastity,
might not be tempted by careless levity of body or mind? And for this reason the
Church in the holy lessons, and in the addresses of her priests, proclaims the
praise of chastity and the glory of virginity.
11. In vain, then, does the Apostle say: "I wrote to you, in an Epistle,
not to mingle with fornicators;"[1] and lest perchance they should say, We are
not speaking of all the fornicators of the world, but we say that he who has
been baptized in Christ ought not now to be esteemed a fornicator, but his life,
whatever it is, is accepted of God,[2] the Apostle has added "Not at
all[meaning] with the fornicators of this world," and farther on, "If any that is named a
brother be a fornicator, or covetous, or an idolator, or a reviler, or a
drunkard, or an extortioner, with such an one not even to eat. For what have I to do
with judging them that are without?"[3] And to the Ephesians: "But fornication,
and all uncleanness, and covetousness let it not even be named among you, as
becometh saints."[4] And immediately he adds: "For this ye know, that no
immodest person, nor unclean, nor covetous, which is an idolator, hath any inheritance
in the kingdom of Christ and of God."[5] It is clear that this is said of the
baptized, for they receive the inheritance, who are baptized into the death of
Christ[6] and are buried together with Him, that they may rise again with Him.
Therefore they are heirs of God, and joint heirs with Christ:[7] heirs of God,
because the grace of Christ is conveyed to them; joint-heirs with Christ,
because they are renewed into His life; heirs also of Christ; because to them is
given by His death as it were the inheritance of the testator.
12. These then ought to take heed to themselves who have that which they
may lose, rather than they who have it not. These ought to act with greater
care, these ought to guard against the allurements of vice, or incentives to error,
which arise chiefly from food and drink. For "the people sat down to eat and
drink, and rose up to play."[8]
13. Epicurus[9] himself also, whom these persons think they should follow
rather than the apostles, the advocate of pleasure, although he denies that
pleasure brings in evil, does not deny that certain things result from it from
which evils are generated; and asserts in fine that the life of the luxurious
which is filled with pleasures does not seem to be reprehensible, unless it be
disturbed by the fear either of pain or of death. But how far he is from the truth
is perceived even from this, that he asserts that pleasure was originally
created in man by God its author, as Philomarus[1] his follower argues in his
Epitomae, asserting that the Stoics are the authors of this opinion.
14. But Holy Scripture refutes this, for it teaches us that pleasure was
suggested to Adam and Eve by the craft and enticements of the serpent. Since,
indeed, the serpent itself is pleasure, and therefore the passions of pleasure
are various and slippery, and as it were infected with the poison of corruptions,
it is certain then that Adam, being deceived by the desire of pleasure, fell
away from the commandment of God and from the enjoyment of grace. How then can
pleasure recall us to paradise, seeing that it alone deprived us of it?
15. Wherefore also the Lord Jesus, wishing to make us more strong against
the temptations of the devil, fasted when about to contend with him, that we
might know that we can in no other way overcome the enticements of evil. Further,
the devil himself hurled the first dart of his temptations from the quiver of
pleasure, saying: "If Thou be the Son of God, command that these stones become
bread.''[2] After which the Lord said: "Man doth not live by bread alone, but
by every word of God;"[3] and would not do it, although He could, in order to
teach us by a salutary precept to attend rather to the pursuit of reading than to
pleasure. And since they say that we ought not to fast, let them prove for
what cause Christ fasted, unless it were that His fast might be an example to us.
Lastly, in His later words He taught us that evil cannot be easily overcome
except by our fasting, saying: "This kind of devils is not cast out but by prayer
and fasting."[4]
16. And what is the intention of the Scripture which teaches us that Peter
fasted, and that the revelation concerning the baptism of Gentiles was made to
him when fasting and praying,[5] except to show that the Saints themselves
advance when they fast. Finally, Moses received the Law when he was fasting;[6]
and so Peter when fasting was taught the grace of the New Testament. Daniel too
by virtue of his fast stopped the mouths of the lions and saw the events of
future times.[7] And what safety can there be for us unless we wash away our sins
by fasting, since ScriptUre says that fasting and alms do away sin? [1]
17. Who then are these new teachers who reject the merit of fasting? Is it
not the voice of heathen who say, "Let us eat and drink?" whom the Apostle
well ridicules, when he says: "If after the manner of men I have fought with
beasts at Ephesus, what advantageth it me if the dead rise not? Let us eat and
drink, for to-morrow we die.''[2] That is to say, What profited me my contention
even unto death, except that I might redeem my body? And it is redeemed in vain if
there is no hope of the resurrection. And, consequently, if all hope of the
resurrection is lost, let us eat and drink, let us not lose the enjoyment of
things present, who have none of things to come. It is then for them to indulge in
meats and drinks who hope for nothing after death.
18. Rightly then does the Apostle, arguing against these men, warn us that
we be not shaken by such opinions, saying: "Be not deceived, evil
communications corrupt good manners. Be ye righteously sober and sin not, for some have no
knowledge of God."[3] Sobriety, then, is good, for drunkenness is sin.
19. But as to that Epicurus himself, the defender of pleasure, of whom,
therefore, we have made frequent mention in order to prove that these men are
either disciples of the heathen and followers of the Epicurean sect or himself,
whom the very philosophers exclude from their company as the patron of luxury,
what if we prove him to be more tolerable than these men? He declares, as
Demarchus[4] asserts, that neither drinking, nor banquets, nor offspring, nor embraces
of women, nor abundance of fish, and other such like things which are prepared
for the service of a sumptuous banquet, make life sweet, but sober discussion.
Lastly, he added that those who do not use the banquets of society in excess,
use them with moderation. He who willingly makes use of the juices of plants
alone together with bread and water, despises feasts on delicacies, for many
inconveniences arise from them. In another place they also say: It is not excessive
banquets, nor drinking which give rise to the enjoyment of pleasure, but a
life of temperance.
20. Since, then, philosophy has disowned those men, is the Church not to
exclude them? Seeing, too, that they, because they have a bad cause, frequently
fall foul of themselves by their own assertions. For, although their chief
opinion is that there is no enjoyment of pleasure except such as is derived from
eating and drinking, yet understanding that they cannot, without the greatest
shame, cling to so disgraceful a definition, and that they are forsaken by all,
they have tried to colour it with a sort of stain of specious arguments; so that
one of them has said: Whilst we are aiming at pleasure by means of banquets
and songs, we have lost that which is infused into us by the reception of the
Word, whereby alone we can be saved.
21. Do not they by these various arguments show themselves to us as
differing and disagreeing one with the other? And Scripture too condemns them, not
passing over those whom the Apostle refuted, as Luke, who wrote the book as a
history, tells us in the Acts of the Apostles, "And certain also of the Epicurean
and Stoic philosophers disputed with him. And some said, What does this babbler
mean? And others said, He seemeth to be a setter forth of new gods."[1]
22. Yet from this hand too the Apostle did not go forth without success,
since even Dionysius the Areopagite together with his wife Damaris and many
others believed. And so that company of most learned and eloquent men showed
themselves overcome in a simple discussion by the example of those who believed. What
then do those men mean, who endeavour to prevent those whom the Apostle has
gained, and whom Christ has redeemed with His own blood? asserting that the
baptized ought not to give themselves to the discipline of the virtues, that
revellings injure them not, nor abundance of pleasures; that they are foolish who go
without them, that virgins ought to marry, bear children, and likewise widows to
repeat that converse with man which they have once experienced with ill
results; and that even if they can contain, they are in error who will not again
enter the marriage bond.
23. What then? Would you have us put off the man in order to put on the
beast, and stripping ourselves of Christ, clothe ourselves or be superclothed
with the garments of the devil? But since the very teachers of the heathen did not
think that honour and pleasure could be joined together, because they would
seem thus to class beasts with men, shall we as it were infuse the habits of
beasts into the human breast, and inscribe on the reasonable mind the unreasoning
ways of wild beasts?
24. And yet there are many kinds of animals, which, when they have lost
their fellow, will not mate again, and spend their time as it were in solitary
life; many too live on simple herbs, and will not quench their thirst except at a
pure stream; one can also often see dogs refrain from food forbidden them, so
that they close their famishing mouths if restraint is bidden them. Must men
then be warned against that wherein brutes have learned not to transgress?
26. But what is more admirable than abstinence, which makes even the years
of youth to ripen, so that there is an old age of character? For as by excess
of food and by drunkenness even mature age is excited, so the wildness of youth
is lessened by scanty feasts and by the running stream. An external fire is
extinguished by pouring on water, it is then no wonder if the inward heat of the
body is cooled by draughts from the stream, for the flame is fed or fails
according to the fuel. As hay, straw, wood, oil, and such like things are the
nourishment which feeds fire, if you take them away, or do not supply them, the fire
is extinguished. In like manner then the heat of the body is supported or
lessened by food, it is excited by food and lessened by food. Luxury then is the
mother of lust.
27. And is not temperance agreeable to nature, and to that divine law,
which in the very beginning of all created things gave the springs for drink and
the fruits of the trees for food? After the Flood the just man found wine a
source of temptation to him.[1] Let us then use the natural drink of temperance,
and would that we all were able to do so. But because all are not strong the
Apostle said: "Use a little wine because of thy frequent infirmities."[2] We must
drink it then not for the sake of pleasure, but because of infirmity, and
therefore sparingly as a remedy, not in excess as a gratification.
28. Lastly, Elijah, whom the Lord was training to the perfection of
virtue, found at his head a cake and a cruse of water; and then fasted in the
strength of that food forty days and forty nights.[3] Our fathers, when they passed
across the sea on foot,[4] drank water not wine. Daniel and the Hebrew children,
fed with their peculiar food,[5] and with water to drink, overcame, the former
the fury of the lions;[6] the latter saw the burning fire play around their
limbs with harmless touch.[1]
29. And why should I speak of men? Judith, in no way moved by the
luxurious banquet of Holophernes, carried off the triumph of which men's arms
despaired, solely in right of her temperance; delivered her country from occupation and
slew the leader of the expedition with her own hands.[2] A clear proof both
that his luxury had enervated that warrior, terrible to the nations, and that
temperance made this woman stronger than men. In this case it was not in her sex
that nature was surpassed, but she overcame by her diet. Esther by her fasts
moved a proud king.[3] Anna, who for eighty-four years in her widowhood had served
God with fasts and prayers day and night in the temple,[4] recognized Christ,
Whom John, the master of abstinence, and as it were a new angel on earth,
announced.
30. O foolish Elisha, for feeding the prophets with wild and bitter
gourds![5] O Ezra forgetful of Scripture, though he did restore the Scriptures from
memory![6] foolish Paul, who glories in fastings,[7] if fastings profit nothing.
31. But how should that not be profitable by which our sins are purged?
And if you offer this with humility and with mercy, your bones, as Isaiah said,
shall be fat, and you shall be like a well-watered garden.[8] So, then, your
soul shall grow fat and its virtues also by the spiritual richness of fasting,
and your fruits shall be multiplied by the fertility of your mind, so that there
may be in you the inebriation of soberness, like that cup of which the Prophet
says: "Thy cup which inebriates, how excellent it is!"[9]
32. But not only is that temperance worthy of praise which moderates food,
but also that which moderates lust. Since it is written: "Go not after thy
lusts, and deny thy appetite. If thou givest her desires to thy soul, thou wilt be
a joy to thine enemies;"[10] and farther on; "Wine and women make even wise
men to fall away; "[11] So that Paul teaches temperance even in marriage itself;
for he who is incontinent in marriage is a kind of adulterer, and violates the
law of the Apostle.
33. And why should I tell how great is the grace of virginity, which was
found worthy to be chosen by Christ, that it might be even the bodily temple of
God, in which as we read the fulness of the Godhead dwelt bodily.[1] A Virgin
conceived the Salvation of the world, a Virgin brought forth the life of all.
Virginity then ought not to be left to itself, seeing that it benefited all in
Christ. A Virgin bore Him Whom this world cannot contain or support. And when He
was born from His mother's womb, He yet preserved the fence of her chastity and
the inviolate seal of her virginity. And so Christ found in the Virgin that
which He willed to make His own, that which the Lord of all might take to Himself
Further, our flesh was cast out of Paradise by a man and woman and was joined
to God through a Virgin.
34. What shall I say concerning the other Mary,[2] the sister of Moses,
who as leader of the women passed on foot the straits of the sea?[3] By the same
gift Thecla also was reverenced by the lions, so that the unfed beasts
stretched at the feet of their prey prolonged a holy fast, and harmed the virgin
neither with wanton look nor claw, since virginity is injured even by a look.
35. Again, with what reverence for virginity has the holy Apostle spoken:
"Concerning virgins I have no commandment of the Lord, but I give my counsel,
as having obtained mercy of the Lord."[4] He has received no commandment, but a
counsel, for that which beyond the law is not commanded, but is rather advised
by way of counsel. Authority is not assumed but grace is shown, and this is not
shown by anyone, but by him who obtained mercy from the Lord. Are then the
counsels of these men better than those of the apostles? The Apostle says, "I
give my counsel," but they think it right to dissuade any from cultivating
virginity.
36. And we ought to recognize what commendation of it the prophet, or
rather Christ in the prophet, has uttered in a short verse; "A garden enclosed,"
says He, "is My sister, My spouse, a garden enclosed, a sealed fountain."[5]
Christ says this to the Church, which he desires to be a virgin, without spot,
without a wrinkle. A fertile garden is virginity, which can bear many fruits of
good odour. A garden enclosed, because it is everywhere shut in by the wall of
chastity. A sealed fountain, because virginity is the source and origin of
modesty, having to keep inviolate the seal of purity, in which source the image of God
is reflected, since the purity of simplicity agrees also with chastity of the
body.
37. And no one can doubt that the Church is a virgin, who also in the
Epistle to the Corinthians is espoused and presented as a chaste virgin to
Christ.[1] So in the first Epistle he gives his counsel, and esteems the gift of
virginity as good, since it is not disturbed by any troubles of the present time, nor
polluted by any of its defilements nor shaken by any storms; in the later
Epistle he brings a spouse to Christ, because he is able to certify the virginity
of the Church in the purity of that people.
38. Answer me now, O Paul, in what way thou givest counsel for the present
distress.[2] "Because he that is without a wife is careful," he says, "for the
things of the Lord, how he may please God." And he adds, "The unmarried woman
and the virgin think of the things of the Lord, that they may be holy in body
and spirit."[3] She has then her wall against the tempests of this world, and so
fortified by the defence of divine protection she is disturbed by none of the
blasts of this world. Good then is counsel, because there is advantage in
counsel, but there is a bond in a commandment. Counsel attracts the willing,
commandment binds the unwilling. If then anyone has followed counsel, and not
repented, she has gained an advantage; but if she has repented, she has no ground for
blaming the Apostle, for she ought herself to have judged of her own weakness;
and so she is responsible for her own will, inasmuch as she bound herself by a
bond and knot beyond her power to bear.
39. And so like a good physician, desiring to preserve the stability of
virtue in the strong, and to give health to the weak, he gives counsel to the
one, and points out the remedy to the others: "He that is weak eateth herbs,"[4]
let him take a wife; he that has more power let him seek the stronger meat of
virtue. And rightly he added: "For he who being steadfast hath settled in his own
heart, having no necessity, but hath power over his own will, and hath
determined this in his own heart, to keep his own virgin, doeth well. So then both he
who giveth his own virgin in marriage, doeth well; and he that giveth her not
in marriage, doeth better. A woman is bound by the law, for so long a time as
her husband liveth. But if her husband have fallen asleep, she is freed, let her
marry whom she will, only in the Lord. But she will be more happy if she abide
as she is, after my counsel, for I think that I also have the Spirit of the
Lord."[1] This is to have the counsel of God, to search diligently into all
things, and to advise things that are best, and to point out those that are safest.
40. A careful guide points out many paths, that each may walk along the
one which he prefers and considers suitable to himself, so long as he comes upon
one by which he can reach the camp. The path of virginity is good, but being
high and steep requires the stronger wayfarers. Good also is that of widowhood,
not so difficult as the former, but being rocky and rough, it requires more
cautious travellers. Good too is that of marriage; being smooth and even it reaches
the camp of the saints by a longer circuit. This way is taken by most. There
are then the rewards of virginity, there are the merits of widowhood, there is
also a place for conjugal modesty. There are steps and advances in each and
every virtue.
41. Stand therefore firm in your hearts, that no one overthrow you, that
no one be able to make you fall. The Apostle has taught us what it is "to
stand," that is what was said to Moses: "The place whereon thou standest is holy
ground;"[2] for no one stands unless he stand by faith, unless he stands fixed in
the determination of his own heart. In another place also we read: "But do thou
stand here with Me."[3] Each sentence was spoken by the Lord to Moses, both
"Where thou standest is holy ground," and "Stand here with Me," that is, thou
standest with Me, if thou stand firm in the Church. For the very place is holy, the
very ground is fruitful with sanctity and fertile with harvests of virtues.
42. Stand then in the Church, stand where I appeared to thee, where I am
with thee. Where the Church is, there is the most solid resting place for thy
mind, there the support of thy soul, where I appeared to thee in the bush. Thou
art the bush, I am the fire; the fire in the bush, I in the flesh. Therefore am
I the fire, that I may give light to thee, that I may consume thy thorns, that
is, thy sins. and show thee My grace.
43. Standing firm then in your hearts, drive away from the Church the
wolves which seek to carry off prey. Let there be no sloth in you, let not your
mouth be evil nor your tongue bitter. Do not sit in the council of vanity; for it
is written, "I have not sat in the council of vanity."[4] Do not listen to
those who speak against their neighhours, lest whilst you listen to others, you be
stirred up yourselves to speak against your neighbours, and it be said to each
of you "Thou satest and spakest against thy brother."[1]
44. Men sit when speaking against others, they stand when they praise the
Lord, to whom it is said: "Behold now, praise the Lord, all ye servants of the
Lord, ye that stand in the house of the Lord."[2] He who sits to speak of the
bodily habit, is as it were loosened by ease, and relaxes the energy of his
mind. But the careful watchman, the active searcher, the watchful guardian, who
keeps the outposts of the camp, stands. The zealous warrior, too, who desires to
anticipate the designs of the enemy, stands in array before he is expected.
45. "Let him that standeth take heed lest he fall."[3] He who stands does
not give way to detraction, for it is the tales of those at ease in which
detraction is spread abroad, and malignity betrayed. So that the prophet says: "I
have hated the congregation of the malignant, and will not sit with the
ungodly."[4] And in the thirty-sixth Psalm, which he has filled with moral precepts, he
has put at the very beginning: "Be not malignant amongst the malignant, neither
be envious of those who do iniquity."[5] Malignancy is more harmful than
malice, because malignancy has neither pure simplicity nor open malice, but a hidden
ill-will. And it is more difficult to guard against what is hidden than
against what is known. For which reason too our Saviour warns us to beware of
malignant spirits, because they would catch us by the appearance of sweet pleasures
and a show of other things, when they hold forth honour to entice us to ambition,
riches to avarice, power to pride.
46. And so both in every action, and especially in the demand for a
bishop, by whom [as a pattern] the life of all is formed malignity ought to be
absent; so that the man who is to be elected out of all, and to heal all, may be
preferred to all by a calm and peaceful decision. For "the meek man is the
physician of the heart."[6] And the Lord in the Gospel called Himself this, when He
said: "They that be whole need not a physician, but they that are sick."[7]
47. He is the good Physician, Who has taken upon Him our infirmities, has
healed our sicknesses, and yet He, as it is written, honoured not Himself to be
made a High Priest, but He Who spake to Him. The Father said: "Thou art My
Son, this day have I begotten Thee."[1] As He said in another place: "Thou art a
Priest for ever after the order of Melchisedech." Who, since He was the type of
all future priests, took our flesh upon Him, that "in the days of His flesh He
might offer prayers and supplications with a loud voice and tears; and by those
things which He suffered, though He was the Son of God, might seem to learn
obedience, which He taught us, that He might be made to us the Author of
Salvation?"[2] And at last when His sufferings were completed, as though completed and
made perfect Himself, He gave health to all, He bore the sin of all.
48. And so He Himself also chose Aaron as priest, that not the will of man
but the grace of God should have the chief part in the election of the
priest;[3] not the voluntary offering of himself, nor the taking it upon himself, but
the vocation from heaven, that he should offer gifts for sins who could be
touched for those who sinned, for He Himself, it is said, bears our weakness.[4] No
one ought to take this honour upon himself but they are called of God, as was
Aaron,[5] and so Christ did not demand but received the priesthood.
49. Lastly, when the succession derived through family descent from Aaron,
contained rather heirs of the family than sharers in his righteousness, there
came, after the likeness of that Melchisedech, of whom we read in the Old
Testament, the true Melchisedech, the true King of peace, the true King of
righteousness, for this is the interpretation of the Name, "without father, without
mother, without genealogy, having neither beginning of days nor end of life,"[6]
which also refers to the Son of God, Who in His Divine Generation had no mother,
was in His Birth of the Virgin Mary without a father; begotten before the ages
of the Father alone, born in this age of the Virgin alone, and certainly could
have no beginning of days seeing He "was in the beginning."[7] And how could He
have any end of life, Who is the Author of life to all? He is "the Beginning
and the Ending."[8] But this also is referred to Him as an example, that a
priest ought to be without father and without mother, since in him it is not
nobility of family, but holiness of character and pro-eminence in virtue which is
elected.
50. Let there be in him faith and ripeness of character, not one without
the other, but let both meet together in one with good works and deeds. For
which reason the Apostle Paul wishes that we should be imitators of them, who, as
he says, "by faith and patience"[1] possess the promises made to Abraham, who by
patience was found worthy to receive and to possess the grace of the blessing
promised to him. avid the prophet warns us that we should be imitators of holy
Aaron, and has set him amongst the Saints of God to be imitated by us, saying:
"Moses and Aaron among his priests, and Samuel among those that call upon His
Name."[2]
51. A man clearly worthy to be proposed that all should follow him was he,
for when a terrible death on account of the rebels was spreading over the
people, he offered himself between the dead and the living, that he might arrest
death, and that no more should perish.[3] A man truly of priestly mind and soul,
who as a good shepherd with pious affection offered himself for the Lord's
flock. And so he broke the sting of death, restrained its violence, refused it
further course. Affection aided his deserts, for he offered himself for those who
were resisting him.
52. Let those then who dissent learn to fear to rouse up the Lord, and to
appease His priests. What! did not the earthquake swallow up Dathan, Abiron,
and Korah because of their dissension?[4] For when Korah, Dathan, and Abiron had
stirred up two hundred and fifty men against Moses and Aaron to separate
themselves from them, they rose up against them and said: "Let it suffice you that
all the congregation are holy, every one, and the Lord is amongst them."[5]
53. Whereupon the Lord was angry and spoke to the whole congregation. The
Lord considered and knew those that were His, and drew His saints to. Himself;
and those whom He chose not, He did not draw to Himself. And the Lord commanded
that Korah and all those who had risen up with him against Moses and Aaron the
priests of the Lord should take to themselves censers, and put on incense,[6]
that he who was chosen of the Lord might be established as holy among the
Levites of the Lord.
54. And Moses said to Korah: "Hear me, ye sons of Levi: Is this a small
thing unto you, that God hath separated you from the congregation of Israel, and
brought you near to Himself, to minister the service of the Tabernacle of the
Lord."[1] And farther on, "Seek ye the priesthood also, so that thou and all thy
congregation are gathered against the Lord. And what is Aaron that ye murmur
about him?"[2]
55. Considering, then, what causes of offence existed, that unworthy
persons desired to discharge the offices of the priesthood, and therefore were
causing dissensions; and were murmuring in censure of the judgment of God in the
choice of His priest, the whole people were seized with a great fear, and dread of
punishment came upon them all. But when all implore that all perish not for
the insolence of few, those guilty of the wickedness are marked out; and two
hundred and fifty men with their leaders are separated from the whole body of the
people; and then the earth with a groan cleaves asunder in the midst of the
people, a deep gulf opens, the offenders are swallowed up, and are so removed from
all the elements of this world, as neither to pollute the air by breathing it,
nor the heavens by beholding them, nor the sea by their touch, nor the earth by
their sepulchres.
56. The punishment ceased, but the wickedness ceased not; for from this
very thing a murmuring rose among them that the people had perished through the
priests. In His wrath at this, the Lord would have destroyed them all, had He
not been moved first by the prayers of Moses and Aaron, and afterwards also at
the intervention of His priest Aaron (the humiliation of their forgiveness being
thereby greater), He willed to give their lives to those whose privilege they
had repudiated.
57. Miriam the prophetess herself, who with her brothers had crossed the
straits of the sea on foot, because, being still ignorant of the mystery of the
Ethiopian woman, she had murmured against her brother Moses, broke out with
leprous spots,[3] so that she would scarcely have been freed from so great a
plague, unless Moses had prayed for her. Although this murmuring refers to the type
of the Synagogue, which is ignorant of the mystery of that Ethiopian woman,
that is the Church gathered out of the nations, and murmurs with daily reproaches,
and envies that people through whose faith itself also shall be delivered from
the leprosy of its unbelief, according to what we read that: "blindness in
part has happened unto Israel, until the fulness of the Gentiles be come in, and
so all Israel shall be saved.[1]
58. And that we may observe that divine grace rather than human works in
priests, of the many rods which Moses had received according to the Tribes, and
had laid up, that of Aaron alone blossomed. And so the people saw that the gift
of the Divine vocation is to be looked for in a priest, and ceased from
claiming equal grace for a human choice though they had before thought that a similar
prerogative belonged to themselves. But what else does that rod show, but that
priestly grace never decays, and in the deepest lowliness has in its office
the flower of the power committed to it, or that this also is refered to in
mystery? Nor do we think that it was without a purpose that this took place near
the end of the life of Aaron the priest. It seems to be shown that the ancient
people, full of decay through the oldness of the long-continued unfaithfulness of
the priests, being fashioned again in the last times to zeal in faith and
devotion by the example of the Church, will again send forth with revived grace its
flowers dead through so many ages.
59. But what does this signify, that after Aaron was dead, the Lord
commanded, not the whole people, but Moses alone, who is amongst the priests, to
clothe Aaron's son Eleazar with the priest's garments, except that we should
understand that priest must consecrate priest, and himself clothe him with the
vestments, that is, with priestly virtues; and then, if he has seen that nothing is
wanting to him of the priestly garments, and that all things are perfect, should
admit him to the sacred altars. For he who is to supplicate for the people
ought to be chosen of God and approved by the priests, lest there be anything
which might give serious offence in him whose office it is to intercede for the
offences of others. For the virtue of a priest must be of no ordinary kind, since
he has to guard not only from nearness to greater faults, but even the very
least. He must also be prompt to have pity, not recall a promise, restore the
fallen, have sympathy with pain, preserve meekness, love piety, repel or keep down
anger, must be as it were a trumpet to excite the people to devotion, or to
soothe them to
tranquillity.
60. It is an old saying: Accustom yourself to be consistent, that your
life may set forth as it were a picture, always preserving the same representation
which it has received. How can he be consistent who at one time is inflamed by
anger, at another blazes up with fierce indignation, whose face now burns, and
now again is changed to paleness, varying and changing colour every moment?
But let it be so, let it be natural for one to be angry, or that there is
generally a cause, it is a man's duty to restrain anger, and not to be carried away
like a lion by fury, so as not to know to be quieted, not to spread tales, nor to
embitter family quarrels; for it is written: "A wrathful man diggeth up
sin"[1] He will not be consistent who is double-minded; he cannot be consistent who
cannot restrain himself when angry, as to which David well says: "Be ye angry
and sin not."[2] He does not govern his anger, but indulges his natural
disposition, which a man cannot indeed prevent but may moderate. Therefore even though
we are angry, let our passion admit only such emotion as is according to nature,
not sin contrary to nature. For who would endure that he should not be able to
govern himself, who has undertaken to govern others?
61. And so the Apostle has given a pattern, saying that a bishop must be
blameless,[3] and in another place: "A bishop must be without offence, as a
steward of God, not proud, not soon angry, not given to wine, not a striker, not
greedy of filthy lucre."[4] For how can the compassion of a dispenser of alms an
the avarice of a covetous man agree together?
62. I have set down these things which I have been told are to be avoided,
but the Apostle is the Master of virtues, and he teaches that gainsayers are
to be convicted with patience,[5] who lays down that one should be the husband
of a single wife,[6] not in order to exclude him form the right of marriage (for
this is beyond the force of the precept), but that by conjugal chastity he may
preserve the grace of his baptismal washing; nor again that he may be induced
by the Apostle's authority to beget children in the priesthood; for the speaks
of having children, not of begetting them, or marrying again.
63. And I have thought it well not to pass by this point, because many
contend that having one wife is said of the time after Baptism; so that the fault
whereby any obstacle would ensue would be washed away in baptism. And indeed
all faults and sins are washed away; so that if anyone have polluted his body
with very many whom he has bound to himself by no law of marriage, all the sins
are forgiven him, but if any one have contracted a second marriage it is not done
away; for sin not law is loosed by the layer, and as to baptism there is no
sin but law. That then which has to do with law is not remitted as though it were
sin, but is retained. And the Apostle has established a law, saying: "If any
man be without reproach the husband of one wife."[1] So then he who is without
blame the husband of one wife comes within the rule for undertaking the priestly
office; he, however, who has married again has no guilt of pollution, but is
disqualified for the priestly prerogative.
64. We have stated what is according to the law, let us state in addition
what is according to reason. But first we must notice that not only has the
Apostle laid down this rule concerning a bishop or priest, but that the Fathers in
the Nicene Council[2] added that no one who has contracted a second marriage
ought to be admitted amongst the clergy at all. For how can he comfort or honour
a widow, or exhort her to preserve her widowhood, and the faith pledged to her
husband, which he himself has not kept in regard to his former marriage? Or
what difference would there be between people and priest, if they were bound by
the same laws? The life of a priest ought to excel that of others as does his
grace, for he who binds others by his precepts ought himself to keep the
precepts of the law.
65. How I resisted my ordination, and lastly, when I was compelled,
endeavoured that it might at least be deferred, but the prescribed rule did not
prevail against the popular eagerness. Yet the Western Bishops approved of my
ordination by their decision, the Eastern by an example of the same kind.[3] And yet
the ordination of a neophyte is forbidden, lest he should be lifted up by
pride.[4] If the ordination was not postponed it was because of constraint, and if
humility suitable to the priestly office be not wanting, where there is no
reason blame will not be imputed to him.
66. But if so much consideration is needed in other churches for the
ordination of a bishop, how much care is required in the Church of Vercellae, where
two things seem to be equally required of the bishop, monastic rule and church
discipline? For Eusebius of holy memory was the first in Western lands to bring
together these differing matters, both while living in the city observing the
rules of the monks, and ruling the Church with fasting and temperance. For the
grace of the priesthood is much increased if the bishop constrain young men to
the practice of abstinence, and to the rule of purity; and forbid them though
living in the city, the manners and mode of life of the city.
67. From such a rule sprang those great men, Elijah, Elisha, John the son
of Elizabeth, who clothed in sheepskins, poor and needy, and afflicted with
pain, wandered in deserts,[1] in hollows and thickets of mountains, amongst
pathless rocks, rough caves, pitfalls and marshes, of whom the world was not worthy.
From the same, Daniel, Ananias, Azarias, and Misael,[2] who were brought up in
the royal palace, were fed meagrely as though in the desert, with coarse food,
and ordinary drink. Rightly did those royal slaves prevail over kingdoms,
despise captivity, shaking off its yoke, subdue powers, conquer the elements, quench
the nature of fire, dull the flames, blunt the edge of the sword, stop the
mouths of lions;[3] they were found most strong when esteemed to be most weak, and
did not shrink from the mockings of men, because they looked for heavenly
rewards; they did not dread the darkness of the prison, on whom was shining the
beauty of eternal light.
68. Following these, holy Eusebius went forth out of his country, and from
his own relatives, and preferred a foreign wandering to ease at home. For the
faith also he preferred and chose the hardships of exile, in conjunction with
Dionysius[4] of holy memory, who esteemed a voluntary exile above an Emperor's
friendship. And so these illustrious men, surrounded with arms, closed in by
soldiers, when torn away from the larger Church, triumphed over the imperial
power, because by earthly shame they purchased fortitude of soul, and kingly power;
they from whom the band of soldiers and the din of arms could not tear away the
faith subdued the raging of the brutal mind, which was unable to hurt the
saints. For, as you read in Proverbs, "the king's wrath is as the wrath of a
lion."[1]
69. He confessed that he was overcome when he asked them to change their
determination, but they thought their pen stronger than swords of iron. Then it
was unbelief which was wounded so that it fell, not the faith of the saints;
they did not desire a tomb in their own country, for whom was reserved a home in
the heavens. They wandered over the whole earth, "having nothing and yet
possessing all things."[2] Wherever they were sent, they esteemed it a place full of
delights, for nothing wanting to them in whom the riches of faith abounded.
Lastly, they enriched others, being themselves poor as to earthly means, rich in
grace. They were tried but not killed, in fasting, in labours, in watchings, in
vigils. Out of weakness they came forth strong. They did not wait for the
enticements of pleasure who were satiated by fasting; the burning summer did not
parch those whom the hope of eternal grace refreshed, nor did the cold of icy
regions break them down, whose devotion was ever budding afresh with glowing
devotion; they feared not the chains of men whom Jesus had set free; they desired not
to be rescued from death, who expected to be raised again by Christ.
70. And at last holy Dionysius requested in his prayers, that he might end
his life in exile, for fear that he might, if he returned home, find the minds
of the people or the clergy disturbed through the teaching or practice of the
unbelievers, and he obtained this favour, so that he bore with him the peace of
the Lord with a quiet mind. Thus as holy Eusebius first raised the standard of
confessorship, so blessed Dionysius in his exile gave up his life with honour
higher even than martyrs.
71. Now this patience in holy Eusebius grew strong by the discipline of
the monastery, and from the custom of hard endurance he derived the power of
enduring hardships. For who doubts that in stricter Christian devotion these two
things are the most excellent, the offices of the clergy and the rule of the
monks? The former is a discipline which accustoms to courteousness and good morals,
the latter to abstinence and patience; the former as it were on an open stage,
the latter in secret; the one is visible, the other hidden. And so he who was
a good athlete said: "We are made a spectacle to this world and to Angels."[1]
Worthy indeed was he to be gazed upon by Angels, when he was striving to attain
the prize of Christ, when he was striving to lead on earth the life of Angels,
and overcome the wickedness of spirits in heaven, for he wrestled with
spiritual wickedness.[2] Rightly did the world gaze upon him, that it might imitate
him.
72. The one life, then, is on the open arena, the other hidden as in a
cave; the one is opposed to the confusion of the world, the other to the desires
of the flesh; the one subdues, the other shuns the pleasures of the body; the
one was more agreeable, the other more safe; the one ruling, the other
restraining itself, in order to be wholly Christ's, for to the perfect it is said: "He
who will come after Me, let him deny himself, and take up his cross and follow
Me."[3] Now he follows Christ who is able to say: "It is no longer I that live,
but Christ liveth ill me."[4]
73. Paul denied himself, when, knowing that chains and tribulations
awaited him in Jesusalem, he willingly offered himself to danger, saying: "Nor do I
count my life dear to myself, if only I can accomplish my course, and the
ministry of the Word, which I have received of the Lord Jesus."[5] And at last,
though many were standing round, weeping and beseeching him, he did not change his
mind, so stern a censor of itself is ready faith.
74. The one then contends, the other retires; the one overcomes
incitements, the other flees from them; by the one the world is triumphed over, the other
rejoices over it; to the one the world is crucified, or itself is crucified to
the world,[6] to the other it is unknown; the one endures more frequent
temptations, and so has the greater victory, the other falls less often, and keeps
guard more easily.
75. Elijah himself too, that the word spoken by his mouth might be
confirmed, was sent by the Lord to hide himself by the brook Cherith.[7] Ahab
threatened, Jezebel threatened, Elijah was afraid and rose up, and then "went in the
strength of that spiritual meat forty days and forty nights unto Horeb the mount
of God; "[1] and entered into a cave and rested there; and afterwards was sent
to anoint kings. He was then inured to patience by dwelling in solitude, and,
as though fed to the fatness of virtue by the homely food, went on more strong.
76. John, too, grew up in the desert, and baptized the Lord, and there
first practised constancy, that afterwards he might rebuke kings.
77. And since in speaking of holy Elijah's dwelling in the desert, we have
passed by without notice the names of places which were not given without a
purpose, it seems well to go back to what they signify. Elijah was sent to the
brook Cherith, and there the ravens nourished him, bringing him bread in the
morning, for it "strengthens man's heart."[2] For how should the prophet be
nourished except by mystical food? At evening flesh was supplied. Understand what you
read, for Cherith means "understanding," Horeb signifies "heart" or "as a
heart," Beersheba also is interpreted "the well of the seventh," or "of the oath."
78. Elijah went first to Beersheba, to the mysteries and sacraments of the
divine and holy Law, next he is sent to the brook, to the stream of the river
which makes glad the City of God.[3] You perceive the two Testaments of the One
Author; the old Scripture as a well deep and obscure, whence you can only draw
with labour; it is not full, for He Who was to fill it was not yet come, Who
afterwards said: "I am come not to destroy but to fulfil the Law."[4] And so the
Saint is bidden of the Lord to pass over to the stream, for he who has drunk
of the New Testament, not only is a river, but also "from his belly shall flow
rivers of living water," s rivers of understanding, rivers of meditation,
spiritual rivers, which, however, dried up in the times of unbelief, lest the
sacrilegious and unbelieving should drink.
79. At that place the ravens recognized the Prophet of the Lord, whom the
Jews did not recognize. The ravens fed him, whom that royal and noble race were
persecuting. What is Jezebel, who persecuted him but the Synagogue, vainly
fluent, vainly abounding in the Scriptures, which it neither keeps nor
understands? What ravens fed him but those whose young call upon Him, to whose cattle He
gives food as we read; "to the young ravens that call upon Him."[6] Those ravens
knew whom they were feeding, who were close upon understanding, and brought
food to that stream of sacred knowledge.
80. He feeds the prophet, who understands and keeps the things that are
written. Our faith gives him sustenance, our progress gives him nourishment; he
feeds upon our minds and senses, his discourse is nourished by our
understanding. In the morning we give him bread, who, being placed in the light of the
Gospel, bestow on him the settled strength of our hearts. By these things he is
nourished, by these he is strong, with these he fills the mouths of those who fast,
to whom the unbelief of the Jews supplied no food of faith. To them every
prophetic utterance is but fasting diet, the interior richness of which they do not
see; empty and thin, such as cannot fatten their jaws.
81. Perhaps they brought him flesh in the evening, as it were stronger
food, such as the Corinthians, whose minds were weak, could not take, and were
therefore fed by the Apostle with milk.[1] So, stronger meat was brought in the
evening of the world, in the morning bread. And so, because the Lord commanded
this food to be supplied, that word of prophecy may be suitably addressed to Him
in this place: "Thou wilt give joy in the outgoings of morning and evening;"[2]
and, farther on: "Thou hast prepared their food, for so is its preparation."[3]
82. But I think that enough has been said of the Master, let us now go on
to the lives of the disciples, who have given themselves to His praise and
celebrate it with hymns day and night. For this is the service of the Angels, to be
always occupied in the praises of God, to propitiate and entreat the Lord with
frequent prayers. They attend to reading, or occupy their minds with continual
labours, and separated from the companionship of women, afford safe protection
to each other. What a life is this, in which is nothing to fear, much to
imitate! The pain of fasting is compensated by tranquillity of mind, is lightened by
practice, aided by leisure, or beguiled by occupation; is not burdened with
worldly cares, nor occupied with uncongenial troubles, nor weighed down with the
distractions of the city.
83. You perceive what kind of teacher must be found for the preservation
or teaching of this gift, and we can find him, if you assist by unanimity, if
you forgive one another should any one think himself injured by another. For it
is not the only kind of justice, not to injure him who has not injured us, but
also to forgive him who has most injured us. We are often injured by the fraud
of another, by the guile of a neighbour; do we consider it a mark of virtue, to
avenge guile by guile, or to repay fraud by fraud? For if justice is a virtue
it should be free from offence, and should not repel wickedness by wickedness.
For what virtue is it that the same thing should be done by you which you
yourself punish in another? That is the spreading of wickedness not its punishment,
for it makes no difference whom one injures, whether a just man or an unjust,
seeing one ought not to injure anyone. Nor does it make any difference in what
way one bears ill will, whether from a desire of revenging oneself, or from a
wish to injure, since in neither case is ill will free from blame. For to bear ill
will is the same thing as to be unjust, and so it is said to thee: "Bear not
ill will amongst those that bear ill will, and emulate not those that do
unrighteousness ;"(1) and above; "I have hated the congregation of them that bear ill
will."(2) He clearly comprehends all and makes no exception, he lays hold of
ill will and asks not the cause.
84. But what better pattern can there be than that of Divine justice? For
the Son of God says: "Love your enemies; "(3) and again: "Pray for those that
persecute you and speak against you."(4) So far does He remove the desire of
vengeance from the perfect that He commands charity towards those who injure them.
And since He had said in the Old Testament: "Vengeance is Mine, I will
repay."(5) He says in the Gospel, that we are to pray for those who have injured us,
that He Who has said that He will avenge, may not do so; for it is His will to
pardon at your desire with which according to His promise He agrees. But if you
seek for you know that the unjust is more severely punished by his own
convictions than by judicial severity.
85. And since no one can be without some adversities, let us take care
that they do not happen to us through our own fault. For no one is more severely
condemned by the judgment of others, than a foolish man, who is the cause of his
misfortunes, is condemned by his own. For which reason we should decline
matters which are full of trouble and contention, which have no advantage, but cause
hindrances. Although we ought to take care not to have to repent our decisions
or acts. For it is the part of a prudent man to look forward, so as not often
to have to repent, for never to repent belongs to God alone. But what is the
fruit of righteousness, but tranquillity of mind? Or what is to live righteously
but to live with tranquility? Such as is the pattern of the master, such is the
condition of the whole house. But if these things are requisite in a house,
how much more in the Church, "where we, both rich and poor, bond and free, Greek
anti Scythian, noble and common, are all one in Christ Jesus."(1)
86. Let no man suppose that because he is rich, more deference is to be
paid him. In the Church he is rich who is rich in faith, for the faithful has a
whole world of riches. What wonder is it if the faithful possesses the world,
who possesses the inheritance of Christ, which is of more value than the world?
"Ye were redeemed with the Precious Blood,"(2) was certainly said to all, not to
the rich only. But if you will be rich, obey him who says: "Be ye holy in all
your conversation."(3) He is speaking not to the rich only but to all; for He
judges without respect of persons, as the Apostle His faithful witness says. And
therefore says he: "Spend the time of your sojourning here,"(4) not in luxury,
or fastidiousness, nor haughtiness of heart, but in fear. On this earth you
have time not eternity, do you use the time as those who must pass hence.
87. Do not trust in riches; for all such things are left here, faith alone
will accompany you. And righteousness indeed will go with you if faith has led
the way. Why do riches entice you ? "Ye were not redeemed with gold and
silver," with possessions, or silk garments, "from your vain conversation, but with
the precious Blood of Christ. "(5) He then is rich who is an heir of God, a
joint heir with Christ. Despise not the poor man, he has made you rich. " This poor
man cried, and the Lord heard him."(6) Do not reject a poor man, Christ when
He was rich became poor, and became poor because of you, that by His poverty He
might make you rich.(7) Do not then as though rich exalt yourself, He sent
forth His apostles without money.
88. And the first of them said: "Silver and gold have I none."(8) He
glories in poverty as though shunning contamination. "Silver and gold," he says, "I
have none,"--not gold and silver. He knows not their order in value who knows
not the use of them. "Silver and gold have I none," but I have faith. I am rich
enough in the Name of Jesus, "which is above every name."(1) I have no silver,
neither do I require any; I have no gold, neither do I desire it, but I have
what you rich men have not, I have what even you would consider to be of more
value, and I give it to the poor, namely that I say in the Name of Jesus: "Be
strengthened, ye weak hands, and ye feeble knees. "(2)
89. But if you will be rich, you must be poor. Then shall you in all
things be rich, if you are poor in spirit. It is not property which makes rich, but
the spirit.
90. There are those who humble themselves in abundance of riches, and they
act rightly and prudently, for the law of nature is sufficiently rich for all,
according to which one may soon find what is more than enough; but for lust
any abundance of riches is still penury. Again, no one is born poor but becomes
so. Poverty then is not in nature but in our own feelings, and so to find
oneself rich is easy for nature, but hard for lust. For the more a man has gained the
more he thirsts for gain, and burns as it were with a kind of intoxication
from his lusts.
91. Why do you seek for a heap of riches as though it were necessary?
Nothing is so necessary as to know that this is not necessary. Why do you throw the
blame on the flesh? It is not the belly in the body but avarice in the mind
which makes a man insatiable. Does the flesh take away the hope of the future?
Does the flesh destroy the sweetness of spiritual grace? Does the flesh hinder
faith? Is it the flesh which attributes any weight to vain opinions as it were to
insane masters? The flesh prefers frugal moderation, by which it is freed from
burdens, is clothed with health, because it has laid aside its care and has
obtained tranquillity.
92. But riches themselves are not blameable. For "the ransom of a man's
life are his riches,"(3) since he that gives to the poor redeems his soul.(4) So
that even in these material riches there is place for virtue. You are like
steersmen in the vast sea. If a man steers his course well, he quickly passes over
the sea so as to attain to the port, but one who knows not how to direct his
property is drowned together with his freight. And so it is written: "The wealth
of rich men is a most strong city."(1)
93. And what is that city but Jerusalem which is in heaven, in which is
the kingdom of God? This is a good possession which brings eternal fruit. A good
possession which is not left here, but is possessed there. He who possesses
this says: "The Lord is my portion."(2) He says no(4), My portion stretches and
extends from this boundary to that. Nor does he say, My portion is amongst such
and such neighbours, except perchance amongst the apostles, amongst the
prophets, amongst the saints of the Lord, for this is the righteous man's portion. He
does not say, My portion is in the meadows, or in the woods, or the plains,
except perchance those wooded plains in which the Church is found, of which it is
written: "We found it in the wooded plains."(3) He does not say, My portion
consists of herds of horses, for "a horse is a vain thing for safety."(4) He does
not say, My portion consists of herds of oxen, asses, or sheep; except perchance
he reckons himself amongst those which know their Owner, and wishes to company
with the ass which does not shun the cribs of Christ; and that Sheep is his
portion which was led to the slaughter, and that Lamb which was dumb before the
shearer, and opened not His mouth,(6) in Whose humiliation judgment has been
exalted. Well does he say "before the shearer," for He laid aside what was
additional, not His own essence, on the cross, when He laid aside His Body, but lost
not His Divinity.
94. It is not then everyone who can say, "The Lord is my portion." The
covetous man cannot, for covetousness draws near and says: Thou art my portion, I
have thee in subjection, thou hast served me, thou hast sold thyself to me with
that gold, by that possession thou hast adjudged thyself to me. The luxurious
man says not: Christ is my portion, for luxury comes and says: Thou art my
portion, I made thee mine in that banquet, I caught thee in the net of that feast,
I hold thee by the bond of thy gluttony. Dost thou not know that thy table was
more valued by thee than thy life? I refute thee by thine own judgment, deny if
thou canst, but thou canst not. And in fine thou hast reserved nothing for thy
life, thou hast spent it all for thy table. The adulterer cannot say: "The
Lord is my portion;" for lust comes and says: I am thy portion, thou didst bind
thyself to me in the love of that maiden, by a night with that harlot thou hast
come under my laws and into my power. The traitor cannot say: "Christ is my
portion," for at once the wickedness of his sin rushes on him and says: He is
deceiving Thee, Lord Jesus, he is mine.
95. We have an example of this, for when Judas had received the bread from
Christ the devil entered into his heart, as though claiming his own property,
as though retaining his right to his own portion, as though saying: He is not
Thine but mine; clearly he is my servant, Thy betrayer, plainly he is mine. He
sits at table with Thee, and serves me; with Thee he feasts, but is fed by me;
from Thee he receives bread, from me money; with Thee he drinks, and has sold
Thy Blood to me. And he proved how truly he spoke. Then Christ departed from him,
Judas also himself left Jesus and followed the devil.
96. How many masters has he who has forsaken the One! But let us not
forsake Him. Who would forsake Him Whom they follow bound with chains indeed, but
chains of love, which set free and do not bind, those chains in which they who
are bound boast, saying: "Paul the bondservant of Jesus Christ, and Timothy."(1)
It is more glorious for us to be bound by Him, than to be set free and loosed
from others. Who then would flee from peace? Who would flee from salvation? Who
would flee from mercy? Who would flee from redemption?
97. You see, my sons, what has been the end of those who followed these
things, how being dead they yet work. Let us study to gain the diligence of those
the glory of whose virtues we admire, and what we praise in others, let us
silently recognize in ourselves. Nothing effeminate, nothing feeble attains to
praise. "The kingdom of heaven suffereth violence, and the violent take it by
force."(2) The fathers ate the lamb in haste. Faith hastens, devotion is quick,
hope is active, it loves not objections of the mind, but to pass from fruitless
ease to the fruits of toil. Why do you put off till tomorrow? You can gain
to-day; and must guard against not attaining the one and losing the other. The loss
even of one hour is no slight one, one hour is a portion of our whole life.
98. There are young persons who desire quickly to attain to old age, so as
no longer to be subject to the will of their elders; and there are also old
men who would wish if they could to return again to youth. And I approve of
neither desire, for the young, disdainful of things present, as it were ungratefully
desire a change in their way of living, the old wish for its lengthening,
whereas youth can grow old in character, and old age grow green with action. For it
is discipline as much as age which brings amendment of character. How much the
more then ought we to raise our hopes to the kingdom of God, where will be
newness of life, and where will be a change of grace not of age!
99. Reward is not obtained by ease or by sleep. The sleeper does no work,
ease brings no profit, but rather loss. Esau by taking his ease lost the
blessing of the first-born, for he preferred to have food given to him rather than to
seek it. Industrious Jacob found favour with each parent.
100. And yet although Jacob was superior in virtue and favour, he yielded
to his brother's anger, who grieved that his younger brother was preferred to
him. And so it is written: "Give place to wrath,"(1) lest the wrath of another
draw you also into sin, when you wish to resist, and to avenge yourself. You can
put away sin both from him and from yourself, if you think well to yield.
Imitate the patriarch who by his mother's counsel went far away. And who was the
mother? Rebecca, that is, Patience. For who but Patience could have given this
counsel? The mother loved her son, but preferred that he should be cut off from
herself rather than from God. And so because the mother was good, she benefited
both her sons, but to the youngest she gave a blessing which he could keep; yet
she preferred not one son to the other as sons; but the active to the
easy-going, the faithful to the unbelieving.
101. And so since he was separated from his parents through piety not on
account of impiety, he talked with God, he increased in riches, in children, and
in favour. Nor was he elated by these things when he met his brother; but
humbly bowed down to him, not indeed considering him the pitiless, the furious, the
degenerate, but Him Whom he reverenced in him. And so he bowed down seven
times, which is the number of remission, for he was not bowing down to man, but to
Him Whom he foresaw in the Spirit, as hereafter to come in human flesh to take
away the sins of the world.(2) And this mystery is unfolded to you in the
answer given to Peter, when he said: "If my brother trespass against me how often
shall I forgive him? Until seven times? ": You see that remission of sins is a
type of that great Sabbath, of that rest of everlasting grace, and therefore is
given by contemplation.
102. But what is the meaning of his having arranged his wives and children
and all his servants, and ordered that they should bow down to the earth ? It
was certainly not to the element of earth, which is often filled with blood, in
which is the workshop of all crimes, which often is rough with huge rocks, or
broken cliffs, or barren and hungry soil, but as to that Flesh which is to be
for our salvation. And perchance this is that mystery which the Lord taught,
when He said: "Not only seven times, but even seventy times seven."(2)
103. Do you then forgive injuries done to you that you may be children of
Jacob. Be not provoked as was Esau. Imitate holy David, who as a good master
left us what we should follow, saying: "Instead of loving me they spake against
me, but I prayed,"(3) and when he was reviled, he prayed. Prayer is a good
shield, wherewith contumely is kept away, cursing is repelled and often is turned
back on those who utter it, so that they are wounded by their own weapons. "Let
them curse," he says, "but bless Thou. "(4) The curse of man is to be sought
for, which procures the blessing of the Lord.
104. And for the rest, most dear brethren, consider that Jesus suffered
without the gate, and do you go forth out of this earthly city, for your city is
Jerusalem which is above. Let your conversation be there, that you may say:
"But our conversation is in heaven."(5) Therefore did Jesus go forth out of the
city, that you going out of this world may be above the world. Moses alone, who
saw God, had his tabernacle without the camp when he talked with God;(6) and the
blood indeed of the victims which were offered for sin, was brought to the
altar, but the bodies were burnt without the camp ;(7) for no one placed amidst
the evil of this world can lay aside sin, nor is his blood accepted of God,
except he go forth from the defilement of this body.
105. Love hospitality, whereby holy Abraham found favour, and received
Christ as his guest, and Sarah already worn with age gained a son; Lot also
escaped the fire of the destruction of Sodom. You too can receive Angels if you offer
hospitality to strangers. What shall I say of Rahab who by this means found
safety ?
106. Compassionate those who are bound with chains, as though bound with
them. Comfort those in sorrow; for, "It is better to go into the house of
mourning than into the house of rejoicing. "(1) From the one is gained the merit of a
good work, from the other a lapse into sin. Lastly, in the one case you still
hope for the reward, in the other you have already received it. Feel with those
who are afflicted as if also afflicted with them.
107. Let a wife show deference, not be a slave to her husband; let her
show herself ready to be ruled not coerced. She is not worthy of wedlock who
deserves chiding. Let a husband also guide his wife like a steersman, honour her as
the partner of his life, share with her as a joint heir of grace.
108. Mothers, wean your children, love them, but pray for them that they
may long live above this earth, not on the earth but above it, for there is
nothing long-lived on this earth, and that which lasts long is but short and very
frail. Warn them rather to take up the Cross of the Lord than to love this life.
109. Mary, the mother of the Lord stood by her Son's Cross; no one has
taught me this but the holy Evangelist St. John.(2) Others have related how the
earth was shaken at the Lord's passion, the sky was covered with darkness, the
sun withdrew itself;(3) that the thief was after a faithful confession received
into paradise.(4) John tells us what the others have not told, how the Lord
fixed on the Cross called to His mother, esteeming it of more worth that,
victorious over His sufferings, He rendered her the offices of piety, than that lie gave
her a heavenly kingdom. For if it be according to religion to grant pardon to
the thief, it is a mark of much greater piety that a mother is honoured with
such affection by her Son. "Behold," He says, "thy Son". ... "Behold thy
mother."(5) Christ testified from the Cross, and divided the offices of piety between
the mother and the disciple. The Lord made not only a public but also a private
testament, and John signed this testament of His, a witness worthy of so great
a Testator. A good testament not of money but of eternal life, which was
written not with ink but with the Spirit of the living God, Who says: "My tongue is
the pen of a quickly writing scribe."(1)
110. Nor was Mary below what was becoming the mother of Christ. When the
apostles fled, she stood at the Cross, and with pious eyes beheld her Son's
wounds, for she did not look for the death of her Offspring, but the salvation of
the world. Or perchance, because that "royal hall "(2) knew that the redemption
of the world would be through the death of her Son, she thought that by her
death also she might add something to the public weal. But Jesus did not need a
helper for the redemption of all, Who saved all without a helper. Wherefore also
He says: "I am become like a man without help, free among the dead."(3) He
received indeed the affection of His mother, but sought not another's help.
111. Imitate her, holy mothers, who in her only dearly beloved Son set
forth so great an example of maternal virtue; for neither have you sweeter
children, nor did the Virgin seek the consolation of being able to bear another son.
112. Masters, command your servants not as being below you in rank, but as
remembering that they are sharers of the same nature as yourselves.(1)
Servants, serve your masters with good will, for each ought patiently to support that
to which he is born, and be obedient not only to good but also to froward
masters. For what thanks has your service if you zealously serve good masters? But
if you thus serve the froward also you gain merit; for the free also have no
reward, if when they transgress they are punished by the judges, but this is their
merit to suffer without transgressing. And so you, if contemplating the Lord
Jesus you serve even difficult masters with patience, will have your reward.
Since the Lord Himself suffered, the just at the hand of the unjust, and by His
wonderful patience nailed our sins to His Cross, that he who shall imitate Him
may wash away his sins in His Blood.
113. In fine, turn all to the Lord Jesus. Let your enjoyment of this life
be with a good conscience, your endurance of death with the hope of
immortality, your assurance of the resurrection through the grace of Christ; let truth be
with simplicity, faith with confidence, abstinence with holiness, industry with
soberness, conversation with modesty, learning without vanity; let there be
soberness of doctrine, faith without the intoxication of heresy. The grace of our
Lord Jesus Christ be with you all. Amen.