CASSIAN'S CONFERENCES, CONFERENCE OF ABBOT DANIEL ON THE LUST OF THE FLESH AND
OF THE SPIRIT
IV. CONFERENCE OF ABBOT DANIEL.
ON THE LUST OF THE FLESH AND OF THE SPIRIT
CHAPTER I.
Of the life of Abbot Daniel.
AMONG the other heroes of Christian philosophy we also knew Abbot Daniel,
who was not only the equal of those who dwelt in the desert of Scete in every
sort of virtue, but was specially marked by the grace of humility. This man on
account of his purity and gentleness, though in age the junior of most, was
preferred to the office of the diaconate by the blessed Paphnutius, presbyter in
the same desert: for the blessed Paphnutius was so delighted with his excellent
qualities, that, as he knew that he was his equal in virtue and grace of life,
he was anxious also to make him his equal in the order of the priesthood. And
since he could not bear that he should remain any longer in an inferior office,
and was also anxious to provide a worthy successor to himself in his lifetime,
he promoted him to the dignity of the priesthood.(2) He however relinquished
nothing of his former customary humility, and when the other was present, never
took upon himself anything from his advance to a higher order, but when Abbot
Paphnutius was offering spiritual sacrifices, ever continued to act as a deacon in
the office of his former ministry. However, the blessed Paphnutius though so
great a saint as to possess the grace of foreknowledge in many matters, yet in
this case was disappointed of his hope of the succession and the choice he had
made, for he himself passed to God no long time after him whom he had prepared
as his successor.
CHAPTER II.
An investigation of the origin of a sudden change of feeling from
inexpressible joy to extreme dejection of mind.
SO then we asked this blessed Daniel why it was that as we sat in the
cells we were sometimes filled with the utmost gladness of heart, together with
inexpressible delight and abundance of the holiest feelings, so that I will not
say speech, but feeling could not follow it, and pure prayers were readily
breathed, and the mind being filled with spiritual fruits, praying to God even in
sleep could feel that its petitions rose lightly and powerfully to God: and again,
why it was that for no reason we were suddenly filled with the utmost grief,
and weighed down with unreasonable depression, so that we not only felt as if we
ourselves were, overcome with such feelings, but also our cell grew dreadful,
reading palled upon us, aye and our very prayers were offered up unsteadily and
vaguely, and almost as if we were intoxicated: so that while we were groaning
and endeavouring to restore ourselves to our former disposition, our mind was
unable to do this, and the more earnestly it sought to fix again its gaze upon
God, so was it the more vehemently carried away to wandering thoughts by
shifting aberrations and so utterly deprived of all spiritual fruits, as not to be
capable of being roused from this deadly slumber even by the desire of the kingdom
of heaven, or by the fear of hell held out to it. To this he replied.
CHAPTER III.
His answer to the question raised.
A THREEFOLD account of this mental dryness of which you speak has been
given by the Elders. For it comes either from carelessness on our part, or from
the assaults of the devil, or from the permission and allowance of the Lord. From
carelessness on our part, when through our own faults, coldness has come upon
us, and we have behaved carelessly and hastily, and owing to slothful idleness
have fed on bad thoughts, and so make the ground of our heart bring forth
thorns and thistles; which spring up in it, and consequently make us sterile, and
powerless as regards all spiritual fruit and meditation. From the assaults of the
devil when, sometimes, while we are actually intent on good desires, our enemy
with crafty subtilty makes his way into our heart, and without our knowledge
and against our will we are drawn away from the best intentions.
CHAPTER IV.
How there is a twofold reason for the permission and allowance of God.
BUT for God's permission and allowance there is a twofold reason. First,
that being for a short time forsaken by the Lord, and observing with all
humility the weakness of our own heart, we may not be puffed up on account of the
previous purity of heart. granted to us by His visitation; and that by proving that
when we are forsaken by Him we cannot possibly recover our former state of
purity and delight by any groanings and efforts of our own, we may also learn that
our previous gladness of heart resulted not from our own earnestness but from
His gift, and that for the present time it must be sought once more from His
grace and enlightenment. But a second reason for this allowance, is to prove our
perseverance, and steadfastness of mind, and real desires, and to show in us,
with what purpose of heart, or earnestness in prayer we seek for the return of
the Holy Spirit, when He leaves us, and also in order that when we discover with
what efforts we must seek for that spiritual gladness--when once it is
lost--and the joy of purity, we may learn to preserve it more carefully, when once it
is secured, and to hold it with firmer grasp. For men are generally more
careless about keeping whatever they think can be easily replaced.
CHAPTER V.
How our efforts and exertions are of no use without God's help.
AND by this it is clearly shown that God's grace and mercy always work in
us what is good, and that when it forsakes us, the efforts of the worker are
useless, and that however earnestly a man may strive, he cannot regain his former
condition without His help, and that this saying is constantly fulfilled in
our case: that it is "not of him that willeth or runneth but of God which hath
mercy."(1) And this grace on the other hand sometimes does not refuse to visit
with that holy inspiration of which you spoke, and with an abundance of spiritual
thoughts, even the careless and indifferent; but inspires the unworthy,
arouses the slumberers, and enlightens those who are blinded by ignorance, and
mercifully reproves us and chastens us, shedding itself abroad in our hearts, that
thus we may be stirred by the compunction which He excites, and impelled to rise
from the sleep of sloth. Lastly we are often filled by His sudden visitation
with sweet odours, beyond the power of human composition--so that the soul is
ravished with these delights, and caught up, as it were, into an ecstasy of
spirit, and becomes oblivious of the fact that it is still in the flesh.
CHAPTER VI.
How it is sometimes to our advantage to be left by God.
BUT the blessed David recognizes that sometimes this departure of which we
have spoken, and (as it were) desertion by God may be to some extent to our
advantage, so that he was unwilling to pray, not that he might not be absolutely
forsaken by God in anything (for he was aware that this would have been
disadvantageous both to himself and to human nature in its course towards perfection)
but he rather entreated that it might be in measure and degree, saying "Forsake
me not utterly"(1) as if to say in other words: I know that thou dost forsake
thy saints to their advantage, in order to prove them, for in no other way
could they be tempted by the devil, unless they were for a little forsaken by Thee.
And therefore I ask not that Thou shouldest never forsake me, for it would not
be well for me not to feel my weakness and say "It is good for me that Thou
hast brought me low"(2) nor to have no opportunity of fighting. And this I
certainly should not have, if the Divine protection shielded me incessantly and
unbrokenly. For the devil will not dare to attack me while supported by Thy defence,
as he brings both against me and Thee this objection and complaint, which he
ever slanderously brings against Thy champions, "Does Job serve God for nought?
Hast not Thou made a fence for him and his house and all his substance round
about?"(3) But I rather entreat that Thou forsake me not utterly--what the Greeks
call <greek>ews</greek> <greek>sfodra</greek>, i.e., too much. For, first, as
it is advantageous to me for Thee to forsake me a little, that the
steadfastness of my love may be tried, so it is dangerous if Thou suffer me to be forsaken
excessively in proportion to my faults and what I deserve, since no power of
man, if in temptation it is forsaken for too long a time by Thine aid, can endure
by its own steadfastness, and not forthwith give in to the power of the
enemy's side, unless Thou Thyself, as Thou knowest the strength of man, and
moderatest his struggles, "Suffer us not to be tempted above that we are able, but
makest with the temptation a way of escape that we may be able to bear it."(4) And
something of this sort we read in the book of Judges was mystically designed in
the matter of the extermination of the spiritual nations which were opposed to
Israel: "These are the nations, which the Lord left that by them He might
instruct Israel, that they might learn to fight with their enemies," and again
shortly after: "And the Lord left them that He might try Israel by them, whether
they would hear the commandments of the Lord, which He had commanded their fathers
by the hand of Moses, or not,"(5) And this conflict God reserved for Israel,
not from envy of their peace, or from a wish to hurt them, but because He knew
that it would be good for them that while they were always oppressed by the
attacks of those nations they might not cease to feel themselves in need of the aid
of the Lord, and for this reason might ever continue to meditate on Him and
invoke His aid, and not grow careless through lazy ease, and lose the habit of
resisting, and the practice of virtue. For again and again, men whom adversity
could not overcome, have been east down by freedom from care and by prosperity.
CHAPTER VII.
Of the value of the conflict which the Apostle makes to consist in the strife
between the flesh and the spirit.
THIS conflict too we read in the Apostle has for our good been placed in
our members: "For the flesh lusteth against the spirit: and the spirit against
the flesh. But these two are opposed to each other so that ye should not do what
ye would."(6) You have here too a contest as it were implanted in our bodies,
by the action and arrangement of the Lord. For when a thing exists in everybody
universally and without the slightest exception, what else can you think about
it except that it belongs to the substance of human nature, since the fall of
the first man, as it were naturally: and when a thing is found to be congenital
with everybody, and to grow with their growth, how can we help believing that
it was implanted by the will of the Lord, not to injure them but to help them?
But the reason of this conflict; viz., of flesh and spirit, he tells us is
this: that ye should not do what ye would." And so, if we fulfil what God arranged
that we should not fulfil, i.e., that we should not do what we liked, how can
we help believing that it is bad for us? And this conflict implanted in us by
the arrangement of the Creator is in a way useful to us, and calls and urges us
on to a higher state: and if it ceased, most surely there would ensue on the
other hand a peace that is fraught with danger.
CHAPTER VIII.
A question, how it is that in the Apostle's chapter, after he has spoken of
the lusts of the flesh and spirit opposing one another, he adds a third thing;
viz., man's will.
GERMANUS: Although some glimmer of the sense nosy seems clear to us, yet
as we cannot thoroughly grasp the Apostle!s meaning, we want you to explain this
more clearly to us. For the existence of three things seems to be indicated
here: first, the struggle of the flesh against the spirit, secondly the desire of
the spirit against the flesh, and thirdly our own free will, which seems to be
placed between the two, and of which it is said: "Ye should not do what ye
will." And on this subject though as I said we can gather some hints, from what
you have explained of the meaning, yet--since this conference gives the
opportunity--we are anxious to have it more fully explained to us.
CHAPTER IX.
The answer on the understanding of one who asks rightly.
DANIEL: It belongs to the understanding to discern the distinctions and
the drift of questions; and it is a main part of knowledge to understand how
ignorant you are. Wherefore it is said that "if a fool asks questions, it will be
accounted wisdom,"(1) because, although one who asks questions is ignorant of
the answer to the question raised, yet as he wisely asks, and learns what he does
not know, this very fact will be counted as wisdom in him, because he wisely
discovers what he was ignorant of. According then to this division of yours, it
seems that in this passage the Apostle mentions three things, the lust of the
flesh against the spirit, and of the spirit against the flesh, the mutual
struggle of which against each other appears to have this as its cause and reason;
viz., "that," says he, "we should not do what we would." There remains then a
fourth case, which you have overlooked; viz., that we should do what we would not.
Now then, we must first discover the meaning of those two desires, i.e., of
the flesh and spirit, and so next learn to discuss our free will, which is placed
between the two, and then lastly in the same way we can see what cannot belong
to our free will.
CHAPTER X.
That the word flesh is not used with one single meaning only.
WE find that the word flesh is used in holy Scripture with many different
meanings: for sometimes it stands for the whole man, i.e., for that which
consists of body and soul, as here "And the Word was made flesh,"(2) and "All flesh
shall see the salvation of our God."(3) Sometimes it stands for sinful and
carnal men, as here "My spirit shall not remain in those men, because they are
flesh."(4) Sometimes it is used for sins themselves, as here: "But ye are not in
the flesh but in the spirit,"(5) and again "Flesh and blood shall not inherit the
kingdom of God:" lastly there follows, "Neither shall corruption inherit
incorruption."(6) Sometimes it stands for consanguinity and relationship, as here:
"Behold we are thy bone and thy flesh,"(7) and the Apostle says: "If by any
means I may provoke to emulation them who are my flesh, and save some of them."(8)
We must therefore inquire in which of these four meanings we ought to take the
word flesh in this place, for it is clear that it cannot possibly stand as in
the passage where it is said "The Word was made flesh," and "All flesh shall see
the salvation of God." Neither can it have the same meaning as where it is
said "My Spirit shall not remain in those men because they are flesh," because the
word flesh is not used here as it is there where it stands simply for a sinful
man--when he says" The flesh lusteth against the spirit and the spirit against
the flesh."(9) Nor is he speaking of things material, but of realities which
in one and the same man struggle either at the same time or separately, with the
shifting and changing of time.
CHAPTER XI.
What the Apostle means by flesh in this passage, and what the lust of the
flesh is.
WHEREFORE in this passage we ought to take "flesh" as meaning not man,
i.e., his material substance, but the carnal will and evil desires, just as
"spirit" does not mean anything material, but the good and spiritual desires of the
soul: a meaning which the blessed Apostle has clearly given just before, where
he begins: "But I say, walk in the spirit, and ye shall not fulfil the desires
of the flesh; for the flesh lusteth against the spirit and the spirit against
the flesh: but these are contrary the one to the other, that ye may not do what
ye would." And since these two; viz., the desires of the flesh and of the spirit
co-exist in one and the same man, there arises an internal warfare daily
carried on within us, while the lust of the flesh which rushes blindly towards sin,
revels in those delights which are connected with present ease. And on the
other hand the desire of the spirit is opposed to these, and wishes to be entirely
absorbed in spiritual efforts, so that it actually wants to be rid of even the
necessary uses of the flesh, longing to be so constantly taken up with these
things as to desire to have no share of anxiety about the weakness of the flesh.
The flesh delights in wantonness and lust: the spirit does not even tolerate
natural desires. The one wants to have plenty of sleep, and to be satiated with
food: the other is nourished with vigils and fasting, so as to be unwilling even
to admit of sleep and food for the needful purposes of life. The one longs to
be enriched with plenty of everything, the other is satisfied even without the
possession of a daily supply of scanty food. The one seeks to look sleek by
means of baths, and to be surrounded every day by crowds of flatterers, the other
delights in dirt and filth, and the solitude of the inaccessible desert, and
dreads the approach of all mortal men. The one lives on the esteem and applause
of men, the other glories in injuries offered to it, and in persecutions.
CHAPTER XII.
What is our free will, which stands in between the lust of the flesh and the
spirit.
BETWEEN these two desires then the free will of the soul stands in an
intermediate position somewhat worthy of blame, and neither delights in the
excesses of sin, nor acquiesces in the sorrows of virtue. Seeking to restrain itself
from carnal passions in such a way as not nevertheless to be willing to undergo
the requisite suffering, and wanting to secure bodily chastity without
chastising the flesh, and to acquire purity of heart without the exertion of vigils,
and to abound in spiritual virtues together with carnal ease, and to attain the
grace of patience without the irritation of contradiction, and to practise the
humility of Christ without the loss of worldly honour, to aim at the simplicity
of religion in conjunction with worldly ambition, to serve Christ not without
the praise and favour of men, to profess the strictness which truth demands
without giving the slightest offence to anybody: in a word, it is anxious to pursue
future blessings in such a way as not to lose present ones. And this free will
would never lead us to attain true perfection, but would plunge us into a most
miserable condition of lukewarmness, and make us like those who are rebuked by
the Lord's remonstrance in the Apocalypse: "I know thy works, that thou art
neither hot nor cold. I would that thou wert hot or cold. But now thou art
lukewarm, and I will forthwith spue thee out of my mouth;"(1) were it not that these
contentions which rise up on both sides disturb and destroy this condition of
lukewarmness. For when we give in to this free will of ours and want to let
ourselves go in the direction of this slackness, at once the desires of the flesh
start up, and injure us with their sinful passions, and do not suffer us to
continue in that state of purity in which we delight, and allure us to that cold
and thorny path of pleasure which we have to dread. Again, if inflamed with
fervour of spirit, we want to root out the works of the flesh, and without any
regard to human weakness try to raise ourselves altogether to excessive efforts
after virtue, the frailty of the flesh comes in, and recalls us and restrains us
from that over excess of spirit which is bad for us: and so the result is that as
these two desires are contradicting each other in a struggle of this kind, the
soul's free will, which does not like either to give itself up entirely to
carnal desires, nor to throw itself into the exertions which virtue calls for, is
tempered as it were by a fair balance, while this struggle between the two
hinders that more dangerous free will of the soul, and makes a sort of equitable
balance in the scales of our body, which marks out the limits of flesh and spirit
most accurately, and does not allow the mind inflamed with fervour of spirit
to sway to the right hand, nor the flesh to incline through the pricks of sin,
to the left. And while this struggle goes on day after day in us to our profit,
we are driven most beneficially to come to that fourth stage which we do not
like, so as to gain purity of heart not by ease and carelessness, but by constant
efforts and contrition of spirit; to retain our chastity, of the flesh by
prolonged fastings, hunger, thirst, and watchfulness; to acquire purpose of heart
by reading, vigils, constant prayer and the wretchedness of solitude; to
preserve patience by the endurance of tribulation; to serve our Maker in the midst of
blasphemies and abounding insults; to follow after truth if need be amid the
hatred of the world and its enmity; and while, with such a struggle going on in
our body, we are secured from slothful carelessness, and incited to that effort
which is against the gain, and to the desire for virtue, our proper balance is
admirably secured, and on one side the languid choice of our free will is
tempered by fervour of spirit, and on the other the frigid coldness of the flesh is
moderated by a gentle warmth, and while the desire of the spirit does not allow
the mind to be dragged into unbridled licence, neither does the weakness of
the flesh allow the spirit to be drawn on to unreasonable aspirations after
holiness, lest in the one case incentives to all kinds of sins might arise, or in
the other the earliest of all sins might lift its head and wound us with a yet
more fatal dart of pride: but a due equilibrium will result from this struggle,
and open to us a safe and secure path of virtue between the two, and teach the
soldier of Christ ever to walk on the King's highway. And thus the result will
be that when, in consequence of the lukewarmness arising from this sluggish will
of which we have spoken, the mind has been more easily entangled in carnal
desires, it is checked by the desire of the spirit, which by no means acquiesces
in earthly sins; and again, if through over much feeling our spirit has been
carried in unbounded fervour and towards ill-considered and impossible heights, it
is recalled by the weakness of the flesh to sounder considerations and rising
above the lukewarm condition of our free will with due proportion and even
course proceeds along the way of perfection. Something of this sort we hear that
the Lord ordained in the case of the building of that tower in the book of
Genesis, where a confusion of tongues suddenly sprang up, and put a stop to the
blasphemous and wicked attempts of men. For there would have remained there in
opposition to God, aye and against the interest of those who had begun to assail His
Divine Majesty, an agreement boding no good, unless by God's providence the
difference of languages, raising disturbances among them, had forced them because
of the variations of their words to go on to a better condition, and a happy
and valuable discord had recalled to salvation those whom a ruinous union had
driven to destruction, as when divisions arose they began to experience human
weakness of which when puffed up by their wicked plots they had hitherto known
nothing.
CHAPTER XIII.
Of the advantage of the delay which results from the struggle between flesh
and spirit..
BUT from the differences which this conflict causes, there arises a delay
that is so far advantageous to us, and from this struggle an adjournment that
is for our good, so that while through the resistance of the material body we
are hindered from carrying out those things which we have wickedly conceived with
our minds, We are sometimes recalled to a better mind either by penitence
springing up, or by some better thoughts which usually come to us when delay in
carrying out things, and time for reflection intervene. Lastly, those who, as we
know, are not prevented from carrying out the desires of their free will by any
hindrances of the flesh, I mean devils and spiritual wickednesses, these, since
they have fallen from a higher and angelical state, we see are in a worse
plight than men, much in as much as (owing to the fact that opportunity is always
present to gratify their desires) they are not delayed from irrevocably
performing whatever evil they have imagined because as their mind is quick to conceive
it, so their substance is ready and free to carry it out; and while a short and
easy method is given them of doing what they wish, no salutary second thoughts
come in to amend their wicked intention.
CHAPTER XIV.
Of the incurable depravity of spiritual wickednesses.
FOR a spiritual substance and one that is not tied to any material flesh
has no excuse for an evil thought which arises within, and also shuts out
forgiveness for its sin, because it is not harassed as we are by incentives of the
flesh without, to sin, but is simply inflamed by the fault of a perverse will.
And therefore its sin is without forgiveness and its weakness without remedy. For
as it falls through the allurements of no earthly matter, so it can find no
pardon or place for repentance. And from this we can clearly gather that this
struggle which arises in us of the flesh and spirit against each other is not
merely harmless, but actually extremely useful to us.
CHAPTER XV.
Of the value of the lost of the flesh against the spirit in our case
To begin with, because it is an immediate reproof of our sloth and
carelessness, and like some energetic schoolmaster who never allows us to deviate from
the line of strict discipline, and if our carelessness has ever so little
exceeded the limits of due gravity which become it, it immediately excites us by
the stimulus of desire, and chides us and recalls us to due moderation. Secondly,
because, in the matter of chastity and perfect purity, when by God's grace we
see that we have been for some time kept from carnal pollution, in order that
we may not imagine that we can no longer be disturbed by the motions of the
flesh and thereby be elated and puffed up in our secret hearts as if we no longer
bore about the corruption of the flesh, it humbles and checks us, and reminds us
by its pricks that we are but men.(1) For as we ordinarily fall without much
thought into other kinds of sins and those worse and more harmful, and are not
so easily ashamed of committing them, so in this particular one the conscience
is especially humbled, and by means of this illusion it is stung by the
recollection of passions that have been neglected, as it sees clearly that it is
rendered unclean by natural emotions, of which it knew nothing while it was still
more unclean through spiritual sins; and so coming back at once to the cure of its
former sluggishness, it is warned both that it ought not to trust in the
attainments of purity in the past, which it sees to be lost by ever so small a
falling away from the Lord, and also that it cannot attain the gift of this purity
except by God's grace alone, since actual experience somehow or other teaches us
that if we are anxious to reach abiding perfection of heart we must constantly
endeavour to obtain the virtue of humility.
CHAPTER XVI.
Of the excitements of the flesh, without the humiliation of which we should
fall more grievously.
To the fact then that the pride which results from this purity would be
more dangerous than all sins and wickednesses, and that we should on that account
gain no reward for any height of perfect chastity, we may call as witnesses
those powers of which we spoke before, which since it is believed that they
experience no such fleshly lusts, were cast down from their high and heavenly estate
in everlasting destruction simply from pride of heart. And so we should be
altogether hopelessly lukewarm, since we should have no warning of carelessness on
our part implanted either in our body or in our mind, nor should we ever
strive to reach the glow of perfection, or even keep to strict frugality and
abstinence, were it not that this excitement of the flesh springs up and humbles us
and baffles us and makes us keen and anxious about purifying ourselves from
spiritual sins.
CHAPTER XVII.
Of the lukewarmness of eunuchs.
LASTLY, on this account in those who are Eunuchs, we often detect the
existence of this lukewarmness of mind, because, as they are so to speak free from
the needs of the flesh, they fancy that they have no need either of the trouble
of bodily abstinence, or of contrition of heart; and being rendered slack by
this freedom from anxiety, they make no efforts either truly to seek or to
acquire perfection of heart or even purity from spiritual faults. And this condition
which is the result of their state in the flesh, becomes natural, which is
altogether a worse state. For he who passes from the state of coldness to that of
lukewarmness is branded by the Lord's words as still more hateful.
CHAPTER XVIII.
The question what is the difference between the carnal and natural man.
GERMANUS: You have, it seems to us, very clearly shown the value of the
struggle which is raised between the flesh and spirit, so that we can believe
that it can in a sort of way be grasped by us; and therefore we want to have this
also explained to us in the same way; viz., what is the difference between the
carnal and the natural man, or how the natural man can be worse than the carnal.
CHAPTER XIX.
The answer concerning the threefold condition of souls.
DANIEL: There are, according to the statements of Scripture, three kinds
of souls; the first is the carnal, the second the natural, and the third the
spiritual: which we find are thus described by the Apostle. For of the carnal he
says: "I gave you milk to drink, not meat: for you were not able as yet. But
neither indeed are you now able; for you are yet carnal." And again: "For whereas
there is among you envying and contention, are you not carnal?" (1) Concerning
the natural he also speaks as follows: "But the natural man perceiveth not the
things that are of the spirit of God; for it is foolishness to him." But
concerning the spiritual: "But the spiritual man judgeth all things: and he himself
is judged by no man." (2) And again "You who are spiritual instruct such ones in
the spirit of meekness." (3) And so, though at our renunciation we ceased to
be carnal, i.e., we began to separate ourselves from intercourse with those in
the world, and to have nothing to do with open pollution of the flesh, we must
still be careful to strive with all our might to attain forthwith a spiritual
condition, lest haply we flatter ourselves because we seem as far as the outer
man is concerned to have renounced this world and got rid of the defilement of
carnal fornication, as if by this we had reached the heights of perfection; and
thence become careless and indifferent about purifying ourselves from other
affections, and so being kept back between these two, become unable to reach the
stage of spiritual advancement; either because we think that it is amply
sufficient for our perfection if we seem to separate ourselves, as regards the outward
man, from intercourse with this world and from its pleasure, or because we are
free from corruption and carnal intercourse, and thus we find ourselves in that
lukewarm condition which is considered the worst of all, and discover that we
are spued out of the mouth of the Lord, in accordance with these words of His:
"I would that thou wert hot or cold. But now thou art lukewarm and I will begin
to spue thee out of My mouth." (4) And not without good reason does the Lord
declare that those whom he has previously received in the bowels of His love,
and who have become shamefully lukewarm, shall be spued out and rejected from His
bosom: in as much as, though they might have yielded Him some health-giving
subsistence, they preferred to be torn away from His heart: thus becoming far
worse than those who had never found their way into the Lord's mouth as food, just
as we turn away with loathing from that which nausea compels us to bring up.
For whatever is cold is warmed when received into the mouth and is received with
satisfaction and good results. But whatever has been once rejected owing to
its miserable luke-warmness, we cannot -- I will not say touch with the lips --
but even look on from a distance without the greatest disgust. Rightly then is
he said to be worse, because the carnal man, i.e., the worldly man and the
heathen, is more readily brought to saving conversion and to the heights of
perfection than one who has been professed as a monk, but has not, as his rule directs,
laid hold on the way of perfection, and so has once for all drawn back from
that fire of spiritual fervour. For the former is at last broken down by the sins
of the flesh, and acknowledges his uncleanness, and in his compunction hastens
from carnal pollution to the fountain of true cleansing, and the heights of
perfection, and in his horror at that cold state of infidelity in which he finds
himself, he is kindled with the fire of the spirit and flies the more readily
to perfection. For one who has, as we said, once started with a lukewarm
beginning, and has begun to abuse the name of monk, and who has not laid hold on the
way of this profession with the humility and fervour that he ought, when once he
is infected by this miserable plague, and is as it were unstrung by it, can no
longer of himself discern what is perfect nor learn from the admonitions of
another. For he says in his heart that which the Lord tells us: "Because I am
rich and wealthy and want nothing;" and so this which follows is at once applied
to him: "But thou art wretched, and miserable, and poor, and blind, and naked:"
(5) and he is so far in a worse condition than a worldly man, because he has no
idea that he is wretched or blind or naked or requires cleansing, or needs to
be directed and taught by any one; and on this account he receives no sound
advice as he does not realise that he is weighted with the name of monk, and is
lowered in the judgment of all, whereas, though everybody believes him to be a
saint and regards him as a servant of God, he must hereafter be subjected to a
stricter judgment and punishment. Lastly, why should we any longer linger over
those things which we have sufficiently discovered and proved by experience? We
have often seen those who were cold and carnal, i.e., worldly men and heathen,
attain spiritual warmth: but lukewarm and "natural" men never. And these too we
read in the prophet are hated of the Lord, so that a charge is given to
spiritual and learned men to desist from warning and teaching them, and not to sow the
seed of the life-giving word in ground that is barren and unfruitful and
choked by noxious thorns; but that they should scorn this, and rather cultivate
fallow ground, i.e., that they should transfer all their care and teaching, and
their zeal in the life-giving word to pagans and worldly men: as we thus read:
"Thus saith the Lord to the men of Judah and inhabitants of Jerusalem: break up
your fallow ground, and sow not among thorns." (1)
CHAPTER XX.
Of those who renounce the world but ill.
In the last place I am ashamed to say how we find that a large number have
made their renunciation in such a way that we find that they have altered
nothing of their former sins and habits, but only their state of life and worldly
garb. For they are eager in amassing wealth which they never had before, or else
do not give up that which they had, or which is still sadder, they actually
strive to augment it under this excuse; viz., that they assert that it is right
that they should always support with it their relations or the brethren, or they
hoard it under pretence of starting congregations which they imagine that they
can preside over as Abbots. But if only they would sincerely seek after the
way of perfection, they would rather endeavour with all their might and main to
attain to this: viz., that they might strip themselves not only of their wealth
but of all their former likings and occupations, and place themselves
unreservedly and entirely under the guidance of the Elders so as to have no anxiety not
merely about others, but even about themselves. But on the contrary we find
that while they are eager to be set over their brethren, they are never subject to
their EIders themselves, and, with pride for their starting point, while they
are quite ready to teach others they take no trouble to learn themselves or to
practise what they are to teach: and so it is sure to end in their becoming, as
the Saviour said," blind leaders of the blind "so that "both fall into the
ditch." (2) And this pride though there is only one kind of it, yet takes a
twofold form. One form continually puts on the appearance of seriousness and gravity,
the other breaks out with unbridled freedom into silly giggling and laughing.
The former delights in not talking: the latter thinks it hard to be kept to the
restraint of silence, and has no scruples about talking freely on matters that
are unsuitable and foolish, while it is ashamed to be thought inferior to or
less well informed than others. The one on account of pride seeks clerical
office, the other looks down upon it, since it fancies that it is unsuitable or
beneath its former dignity and life and the deserts of its birth. And which of
these two should be accounted the worse each man must consider and decide for
himself. At any rate the kind of disobedience is one and the same, if a man breaks
the Elder's commands whether it be owing to zeal in work, or to love of ease:
and it is as hurtful to upset the rules of the monastery for the sake of sleep,
as it is for the sake of vigilance, and it is just the same to transgress the
Abbot's orders in order to read, as it is to slight them in order to sleep: nor
is there any difference in the incentive to pride if you neglect a brother,
whether it is because of your fast or because of your breakfast: except that those
faults which seem to show themselves under the guise of virtues and in the form
of spirituality are worse and less likely to be cured than those which arise
openly and from carnal pleasures. For these latter, like sicknesses which are
perfectly plain and visible, are grappled with and cured, while the former, since
they are covered under the cloak of virtue, remain uncured, and cause their
victims to fall into a more dangerous and deadly state of ill health.
CHAPTER XXI.
Of those who having made light of great things busy themselves about trifles.
For how can we show how absurd it is that we see that some men after their
first enthusiasm of renunciation in which they forsook their estates and vast
wealth and the service of the world, and betook themselves to the monasteries,
are still earnestly devoted to those things which cannot altogether be cut off,
and which we cannot do without in this state of life, even though they are
small and trifling things; so that in their case the anxiety about these trifles
is greater than their love of all their property. And it certainly will not
profit them much that they have disregarded greater riches and property, if they
have only transferred their affections (on account of which they were to make
light of them) to small and trifling things. For the sin of covetousness and
avarice of which they cannot be guilty in the matter of really valuable things, they
retain with regard to commoner matters, and so show that they have not got rid
of their former greed but only changed its object. For if they are too careful
about their mats, baskets, blankets, books, and other trifles such as these,
the same passion holds them captive as before. And they actually guard and
defend their rights over them so jealously as to get angry with their brethren
about them, and, what is worse, they are not ashamed to quarrel over them. And
being still troubled by the bad effects of their former covetousness, they are not
content to possess those things which the needs and requirements of the body
compel a monk to have, according to the common number and measure, but here too
they show the greediness of their heart, as they try to have those things which
they are obliged to use, better got up than the others; or, exceeding all due
bounds, keep as their special and peculiar property and guard from the touch of
others that which ought to belong to all the brethren alike. As if the
difference of metals, and not the passion of covetousness was what mattered; and as if
it was wrong to be angry about big things, while one might innocently be about
trifling matters: and as if we had not given up all our precious things just in
order that we might learn more readily to think nothing about trifles! For
what difference does it make whether one gives way to covetousness in the matter
of large and splendid things, or in the matter of the merest trifles, except
that we ought to think a man so far worse if he has made light of great things and
then is a slave to little things? And so that sort of renunciation of the
world does not attain perfection of heart, because though it ranks as poverty it
still keeps the mind of wealth.