THE THIRD PART OF THE CONFERENCES OF JOHN CASSIAN, THE FIRST CONFERENCE OF
ABBOT THEONAS ON THE RELAXATION DURING THE FIFTY DAYS
THE FIRST CONFERENCE OF ABBOT THEONAS.
ON THE RELAXATION DURING THE FIFTY DAYS. (1)
CHAPTER. I.
How Theonas came to Abbot John.
BEFORE we begin to set forth the words of this Conference held with that
excellent man Abbot Theonas, (2) I think it well to describe in a brief
discourse the origin of his conversion because from this the reader will be able to see
more clearly both the excellence and the grace of the man. He then while still
very young was by the desire and command of his parents joined in the tie of
marriage, for as with pious anxiety they were careful about his chastity, and
were afraid of a critical fall at a dangerous age, they thought that the passions
of youth might be anticipated by the remedy of a lawful marriage. When then he
had lived for five years with a wife, he came to Abbot John, who was then for
his marvellous sanctity chosen to preside over the administration of the alms.
(8) For it is not anyone who likes who is of his own wish or ambition promoted
to this office, but only he whom the congregation of all the Elders considers
from the advantage of his age and the witness of his faith and virtues to be
more excellent than, and superior to, all others. To this blessed John then the
aforesaid young man had come in the eagerness of his pious devotion, bringing
gifts of piety among other owners who were eager to offer tithes and first-fruits
of their substance to the old man I mentioned, (4) and when the old man saw
them pouring in upon him with many gifts, and was anxious to make some recompense
in return for their offerings, he began, as the Apostle says, to sow spiritual
things to them whose carnal gifts he was reaping. (5) And finally thus began
his word of exhortation.
CHAPTER. II.
The exhortation of Abbot John to Theonas and the others who had come together
with him.
I AM indeed delighted, my children, with the duteous liberality of your
gifts; and your devout offering, the disposal of which is entrusted to me, I
gratefully accept, because you are offering your firstfruits and tithes for the
good and use of the needy, as a sacrifice to the Lord, of a sweet smelling
savour, in the belief that by the offering of them, the abundance of your fruits and
all your substance, from which you have taken away these for the Lord, will be
richly blessed, and that you yourselves will according to the faith of His
command be endowed even in this world with manifold richness in all good things:
"Honour the Lord from thy righteous labours, and offer to Him of the fruits of
thy righteousness; that thy garners may be full of abundance of wheat, and thy
vats may overflow with wine." (6) And as you are faithfully carrying out this
service, you may know that you have fulfilled the righteousness of the old law,
under which those who then lived if they transgressed it inevitably incurred
guilt, while if they fulfilled it they could not attain to a pitch of perfection.
CHAPTER. III.
Of the offering of tithes and firstfruits.
FOR indeed by the Lord's command tithes were consecrated to the service of
the Levites, but oblations and firstfruits for the priests. (7) But this was
the law of the firstfruits; viz., that the fiftieth part of fruits or animals
should be given for the service of the temple and the priests: and this
proportion some who were faithlessly indifferent diminished, while those who were very
religious increased it, so that the one gave only the sixtieth part, and the
other gave the fortieth part of their fruits; For the righteous, for whom the law
is not enacted, are thus shown to be not under the law, as they try not only to
fulfil but even to exceed the righteousness of the law, and their devotion is
greater than the legal requirement, as it goes beyond the observance of
precepts and adds to what is due of its own free will.
CHAPTER IV.
How Abraham, David, and other saints went beyond the requirement of the law.
FOR so we read that Abraham went beyond the requirement of the law which
was afterwards to be given, when after his victory over the four kings, he would
not touch any of the spoils of Sodom, which were fairly due to him as the
conqueror, and which indeed the king himself, whose spoils he had rescued, offered
him; and with an oath by the Divine name he exclaimed: "I lift up my hand to
the Lord Most High, who made heaven and earth, that I will not take from a thread
to a shoe's latchet of all that is thine." (1) So we know that David went
beyond the requirement of the law, as, though Moses commanded that vengeance should
be taken on enemies, (2) he not only did not do this, but actually embraced
his persecutors with love, and piously entreated the Lord for them, and wept
bitterly and avenged them when they were slain. So we are sure that Elijah and
Jeremiah were not under the law, as though they might without blame have taken
advantage of lawful matrimony, yet they preferred to remain virgins. So we read
that Elisha and others of the same mode of life went beyond the commands of Moses,
as of them the Apostle speaks as follows: "They went about in sheepskins and
in goatskins, they were oppressed, afflicted, in want, of whom the world was not
worthy, they wandered about in deserts and in mountains, and in caves and in
dens of the earth," (3) What shall I say of the sons of Jonadab the son of
Rechab, of whom we are told that, when at the Lord's bidding the prophet Jeremiah
offered them wine, they replied: "We drink no wine: for Jonadab the son of
Rechab, our father, commanded us, saying: Ye shall drink no wine, ye and your sons
forever: and ye shall build no house, nor sow any seed, nor plant vineyards nor
possess them: but ye shall dwell in tents all your days"? Wherefore also they
were permitted to hear from the same prophet these words: "Thus saith the Lord
God of hosts, the God of Israel: there shall not fail a man from the stock of
Jonadab the son of Rechab to stand in My sight all the days;" (4) as all of them
were not satisfied with merely offering tithes of their possessions, but
actually refused property, and offered the rather to God themselves and their souls,
for which no redemption can be made by man, as the Lord testifies in the gospel:
"For what shall a man give in exchange for his own soul?" (5)
CHAPTER V.
How those who live under the grace of the Gospel ought to go beyond the
requirement of the law.
WHEREFORE we ought to know that we from whom the requirements of the law
are no longer exacted, but in whose ears the word of the gospel daily sounds:
"If thou wilt be perfect, go and sell all that thou hast and give to the poor,
and thou shalt have treasure in heaven, and come follow Me," (6) when we offer to
God tithes of our substance, are still in a way ground down beneath the burden
of the law, and not able to rise to those heights of the gospel, those who
conform to which are recompensed not only by blessings in this present life, but
also by future rewards. For the law promises to those who obey it no rewards of
the kingdom of heaven, but only solaces in this life, saying: "The man that
doeth these things shall live in them." (7) But the Lord says to His disciples:
"Blessed are the poor in spirit, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven;" and:
"Everyone that leaveth house or brothers or sisters or father or mother or wife or
children or field for My name's sake, shall receive an hundredfold, and shall
inherit eternal life." (8) And this with good reason. For it is not so
praiseworthy for us to abstain from forbidden as from lawful things, and not to use these
last out of reverence for Him, Who has permitted us to use them because of our
weakness. And so if even those who, faithfully offering tithes of their
fruits, are obedient to the more ancient precepts of the Lord, cannot yet climb the
heights of the gospel, you can see very clearly how far short of it those fall
who do not even do this. For how can those men be partakers of the grace of the
gospel who disregard the fulfilment even of the lighter commands of the law, to
the easy character of which the weighty words of the giver of the law bear
testimony, as a curse is actually invoked on those who do not fulfil them; for it
says: "Cursed is everyone that does not continue in all things that are written
in the book of the law to do them."(1) But here on account of the superiority
and excellence of the commandments it is said: "He that can receive it, let him
receive it."(2) There the forcible compulsion of the lawgiver shows the easy
character of the precepts; for he says: "I call heaven and earth to record
against you this day, that if ye do not keep the commandments of the Lord your God
ye shall perish from off the face of the earth."(3) Here the grandeur of sublime
commands is shown by the very fact that He does not order, but exhorts,
saying: "if thou wilt be perfect go" and do this or that. There Moses lays a burden
that cannot be refused on those who are unwilling: here Paul meets with counsels
those who are willing and eager for perfection. For that was not to be
enjoined as a general charge, nor to be required, if I may so say, as a regular rule
from all, which could not be secured by all, owing to its wonderful and lofty
nature; but by counsels all are rather stimulated to grace, that those who are
great may deservedly be crowned by the perfection of their virtues, while those
who are small, and not able to come up to "the measure of the stature of the
fulness of Christ,"(4) although they seem to be lost to sight and hidden as it
were by the brightness of larger stars, may yet be free from the darkness of the
curses which are in the law, and not adjudged to suffer present evils or
visited with eternal punishment. Christ therefore does not constrain anyone, by the
compulsion of a command, to those lofty heights of goodness, but stimulates them
by the power of free will, and urges them on by wise counsels and the desire
of perfection. For where there is a command, there is duty, and consequently
punishment. But those who keep those things to which they are driven by the
severity of the law established escape the punishment with which they were
threatened, instead of obtaining rewards and a recompense.
CHAPTER VI.
How the grace of the gospel supports the weak so that they can obtain pardon,
as it secures to the perfect the kingdom of God.
AND as the word of the gospel raises those that are strong to sublime and
lofty heights, so it suffers not the weak to be dragged down to the depths, for
it secures to the perfect the fulness of blessing, and brings to those who are
overcome through weakness pardon. For the law placed those who fulfilled its
commands in a sort of middle state between what they deserved in either case,
severing them from the condemnation due to transgressors, as it also kept them
away from the glory of the perfect. But how wretched and miserable this is, you
can see from comparing the state of this present life, in which it is considered
a very poor thing for a man to sweat and labour only to avoid being regarded
as guilty among good men, not also to be esteemed rich and honourable and
renowned.
CHAPTER VII.
How it lies in our own power to choose whether to remain under the grace of
the gospel or under the terror of the law.
WHEREFORE it lies today in our own power whether we choose to live under
the grace of the gospel or under the terrors of the law: for each man must
incline to one side or the other in accordance with the character of his actions,
for either the grace of Christ welcomes those who go beyond the law, or else the
law keeps its hold over the weaker ones as those who are its debtors and within
its clutches. For one who is guilty as regards the precepts of the law will
never be able to attain to the perfection of the gospel, even though he idly
boasts that he is a Christian and freed by the Lord's grace: for we must not only
regard as still under the law the man who refuses to fulfil what the law
enjoins, but the man as well who is satisfied with the mere observance of what the law
commands, and who never brings forth fruits worthy of his vocation and the
grace of Christ, where it is not said: "Thou shalt offer to the Lord thy God thy
tithes and firstfruits;" but: "Go and sell all that thou hast and give to the
poor, and come follow Me;"(5) where, owing to the grandeur of perfection, to the
request of the disciple there is not granted even the very short space of an
hour in which to bury his father,(6) as the offices of human charity are
outweighed by the virtue of Divine love.
CHAPTER VIII.
How Theonas exhorted his wife that she too should make her renunciation.
AND when he had heard this the blessed Theonas was fired with an
uncontrollable desire for the perfection of the gospel, and, committed, as it were, the
seed of the word, which he had received in a fruitful heart, to the deep and
broken furrows of his bosom, as he was greatly humiliated and conscience-stricken
because the old man had said not only that he had failed to attain to the
perfection of the gospel, but also that he had scarcely fulfilled the commands of
the law; since though he was accustomed every year to pay the tithes of his
fruits as alms, yet he mourned that he had never even heard of the law of the
firstfruits; and even if he had in the same way fulfilled this, he humbly confessed
that still he would in the old man's view have been very far from the
perfection of the gospel. And so he returned home sad and filled with that sorrow which
worketh repentance unto salvation,(1) and of his own will and determination
turns all his wife's care and anxiety of mind towards salvation; and began to stir
her up to the same eager desire with which he himself had been inflamed, with
the same sort of exhortations, and with tears day and night to urge her that
together they might serve God in sanctity and chastity, telling her that their
conversion to a better life ought not to be deferred because a vain hope in their
youth would be no argument against the inevitableness of a sudden death, which
carries off boys and youths and young persons equally with old men.
CHAPTER IX.
How he fled to a monastery when his wife would not consent.
AND when his wife was hard and would not consent to him as he constantly
persisted with entreaties of this kind, but said that as she was in the flower
of her age she could not altogether do without the solace of her husband, and
further that supposing she was deserted by him and fell into sin, the guilt would
rather be his who had broken the bonds of wedlock: to this he, when he had for
a long while urged the condition of human nature (which being so weak and
uncertain, it would be dangerous for it to be any longer mixed up with carnal
desires and works), added the assertion that it was not right for anyone to cut
himself off from that virtue to which he had learnt that he ought by all means to
cleave, and that it was more dangerous to disregard goodness when discovered,
than to fail to love it before it was discovered; further that he was already
involved in the guilt of a fall if when he had discovered such grand and heavenly
blessings he had preferred earthly and mean ones. Further that the grandeur of
perfection was open to every age and either sex, and that all the members of
the Church were urged to scale the heights of heavenly goodness when the Apostle
said: "So run that ye may obtain;"(2) nor should those who were ready and eager
for it hang back because of the delays of the slow and dawdlers, as it is
better for the sluggards to be urged on by those running before than for those who
are doing their best to be hampered by the slothful. Further that he had
determined and made up his mind to renounce the world and to die to the world that he
might live to God, and that if he could not attain this happiness; viz., to
pass with his wife into union with Christ, he would rather be saved even with the
loss of one member, and enter into the kingdom of heaven as one maimed rather
than be condemned with his body whole. But he also added and spoke as follows:
If Moses suffered wives to be divorced for the hardness of their hearts, why
should not Christ allow this for the desire of chastity, especially when the same
Lord among those other affections; viz., for fathers and mothers and children
(all due regard to which not only the law but He Himself also charged to be
shown, yet for His name's sake and for the desire of perfection He decreed that
they should not simply be disregarded but actually hated)--to these, I say, He
joined also the mention of wives, saying: "And everyone that hath left house, or
brethren or sisters or father or mother or wife or children for My name's sake,
shall receive an hundredfold and shall inherit eternal life."(8) So far then
is He from allowing anything to be set against that perfection which He is
proclaiming, that He actually enjoins that the ties to father and mother should be
broken and disregarded out of love for Him, though according to the Apostle it
is the first commandment with promise; viz., "Honour thy father and thy mother,
which is the first commandment with promise, that it may be well with thee and
that thy days may be long upon earth."(4) And as the word of the gospel
condemns those who break the chains of matrimony where there has been no sin of
adultery, so it clearly promises a reward of an hundredfold to those who have cast
off a carnal yoke out of love for Christ and the desire for chastity. Wherefore
if it can be brought about that you may listen to reason and be turned together
with me to this most desirable choice; viz., that we should together serve the
Lord and escape the pains of hell, I will not refuse the affection of marriage,
nay I will embrace it with a still greater love. For I acknowledge and honour
my helpmeet assigned to me by the word of the Lord, and I do not refuse to be
joined to her in an unbroken tie of love in Christ, nor do I separate from me
what the Lord joined to me by the law of the original condition,(1) if only you
yourself will be what your Maker meant you to be. But if you will not be a
helpmeet, but prefer to make yourself a deceiver and an assistance not to me but to
the adversary, and fancy that the sacrament of matrimony was granted to you for
this reason that you may deprive yourself of this salvation which is offered
to you, and also hold me back from following the Saviour as a disciple, then I
will resolutely lay hold on the words which were uttered by the lips of Abbot
John, or rather of Christ Himself, so that no carnal affection may be able to
tear me away from spiritual blessings, for He says: "He that hateth not father and
mother and children and brothers and sisters and wife and lands, yea and his
own soul also, cannot be My disciple."(2) When then by these and such like words
the woman's purpose was not moved and she persisted in the same obstinate
hardness, If, said the blessed Theonas, I cannot drag you away from death, neither
shall you separate me from Christ: but it is safer for me to be divorced from a
human person than from God. And so by the aid of God's grace he at once set
about the execution of his purpose and suffered not the ardour of his desire to
grow cool through any delay. For at once he stripped himself of all his worldly
goods, and fled to a monastery, where in a very short time he was so famous for
the splendour of his sanctity and humility that when John of blessed memory
departed this life to the Lord, and the holy Elias, a man who was no less great
than his predecessor, had likewise died, Theonas was chosen by the judgment of
all as the third to succeed them in the administration of the almsgiving.
CHAPTER X.
An explanation that we may not appear to recommend separation from wives.
BUT let no one imagine that we have invented this for the sake of
encouraging divorce, as we not only in no way condemn marriage, but also, following the
words of the Apostle, say: "Marriage is honourable in all, and the bed
undefiled,"(3) but it was in order faithfully to show the reader the origin of the
conversion by which this great man was dedicated to God. And I ask the reader
kindly. to allow that, whether he likes this or no, in either case I am free from
blame, and to give the praise or blame for this act to its real author. But as
for me, as I have not put forward an opinion of my own on this matter, but have
given a simple narration of the history. of the facts, it is fair that as I
claim no praise from those who approve of what was done, so I should not be
attacked by the hatred of those who disapprove of it. Let every man therefore, as we
said, have his own opinion on the matter. But I advise him to restrain his
censure in considering it, lest he come to fancy that he is more just and holy than
the Divine judgment, whereby the signs even of Apostolic virtue were conferred
upon him (viz., Theonas), not to mention the opinion of such great fathers by
whom it is clear that his action was not only not blamed, but even so far
praised that in the election to the office of almoner they preferred him to splendid
and most excellent men. And I fancy that the judgment of so many spiritual
men, uttered with God as its author, was not wrong, as it was, as was said above,
confirmed by such wonderful signs.
CHAPTER XI.
An inquiry why in Egypt they do not fast during all the fifty days (of Easter)
nor bend their knees in prayer.
BUT it is now time to follow out the plan of the promised discourse. So
then when Abbot Theonas had come to visit us in our cell during Eastertide(4)
after Evensong was over we sat for a little while on the ground and began
diligently to consider why they were so very careful that no one should during the
whole fifty days either bend his knees in prayer(5) or venture to fast till the
ninth hour, and we made our inquiry the more earnestly because we had never seen
this custom so carefully observed in the monasteries of Syria.
CHAPTER XII.
The answer on the nature of things good, bad, and indifferent.
TO this Abbot Theonas thus began his reply. It is indeed right for us,
even when we cannot see the reason, to yield to the authority of the fathers and
to a custom of our predecessors that has been continued through so many years
down to our own time, and to observe it, as handed down from antiquity, with
constant care and reverence. But since you want to know the reasons and grounds for
this, receive in few words what we have heard as handed down by our Elders on
this subject. But before we bring forward the authority of Holy Scripture, we
will, if you please, say a little about the nature and character of the fast,
that afterwards the authority of Holy Scripture may support our words. The Divine
Wisdom has pointed out in Ecclesiastes that for everything, i.e., for all
things happy or those which are considered unfortunate and unhappy, there is a
right time: saying: "For all things there is a time, and a time for everything
under the heaven. A time to bring forth and a time to die; a time to plant and a
time to pull down what is planted; a time to kill and a time to heal; a time to
destroy and a time to build; a time to weep and a time to laugh; a time to mourn
and a time to dance; a time to cast away stones and a time to gather stones; a
time to embrace and a time to refrain from embracing; a time to get and a time
to lose; a time to keep and a time to send away; a time to scatter and a time
to collect; a time to be silent and a time to speak; a time to love and a time
to hate; a time for war and a time for peace;" and below: "For mere is a
time," it says, "for everything and for every deed."(1) None therefore of these
things does it lay down as always good, but only when any of them are fittingly
done and at the right time, so that these very things which at one time, when done
at the right moment, turn out well, if they are ventured on at a wrong or
unsuitable time, are found to be useless or harmful; only excepting those things
which are in their own nature good or bad, and which cannot ever be made the
opposite, as, e.g., justice, prudence, fortitude, temperance and the rest of the
virtues, or on the other hand, those faults, the description of which cannot
possibly be altered or fall under the other head. But those things which can
sometimes turn out with either result, so that, in accordance with the character of
those who use them, they are found to be either good or bad, these we consider
to be not absolutely in their own natures useful or injurious, but only so in
accordance with the mind of the doer, and the suitableness of the time.
CHAPTER XIII.
What kind of good fasting is.
WHEREFORE we must now inquire what we ought to hold about the state of
fasting, whether we meant that it was good h the same sort of way as justice,
prudence, fortitude and temperance, which cannot possibly be made anything else, or
whether it is something indifferent which sometimes is useful when done, and
may be sometimes omitted without condemnation; and which sometimes it is wrong
to do, and sometimes laudable to omit. For if we hold fasting to be included in
that list of virtues, so that abstinence from food is placed among those things
which are good in themselves, then certainly the partaking of food will be bad
and wrong. For whatever is the opposite of that which is in its own nature
good, must certainly be held to be in its own nature bad. But this the authority
of Holy Scripture does not allow to us to lay down. For if we fast with such
thoughts and intentions, so as to think that we fall into sin by taking food, we
shall not only gain no advantage by our abstinence but shall actually contract
grievous guilt and fall into the sin of impiety, as the Apostle says:
"Abstaining from meats which God has created to be received with thanksgiving by the
faithful and those who know the truth. For every creature of God is good, and
nothing to be refused if it is partaken of with thanksgiving." For "if a man thinks
that a thing is common, to him it is common."(2) And therefore we never read
that anyone is condemned simply for taking food, but only when something was
joined with it or followed afterwards, for which he deserved condemnation.
CHAPTER XIV.
How fasting is not good in its own nature.
AND so that it is a thing indifferent is very clearly shown from this
also; viz., because as it brings justification when observed, so it does not bring
condemnation when it is broken in upon; unless perhaps the transgression of a
command rather than the partaking of food brings punishment. But in the case of
a thing that is good in its own nature, no time should be without it, in such a
way as that a man may do without it, for if it ceases, the man who is careless
about it is sure to fall into mischief. Nor again is any time given for what
is bad in its own nature, because what is hurtful cannot help hurting, if it is
indulged in, nor can it ever be made of a praiseworthy character. And further
it is clear that these things, for which we see conditions and times appointed,
and which sanctify, when observed without corrupting us when they are
neglected, are things indifferent, as, e.g., marriage, agriculture, riches, retirement
into the desert, vigils, reading and meditation on Holy Scripture and fasting
itself, from which our discussion took its rise. All of which things the Divine
precepts and the authority of Holy Scripture decreed should not be so
incessantly aimed at, or so constantly observed, as for it to be wrong for them to be for
a time intermitted. For anything that is absolutely commanded brings death if
it be not fulfilled: but whatever things we are urged to rather than commanded,
when done are useful, when left undone bring no punishment. And therefore in
the case of all or some of these things our predecessors commanded us either to
do them with consideration, or to observe them carefully with regard to the
reason, place, manner, and time, because if any of them are done suitably, it is
fit and convenient, but if incongruously, then it becomes foolish and hurtful.
And if at the coming of a brother in whose person he ought to refresh Christ
with courtesy and to embrace him with a most kindly welcome, a man should choose
to observe a strict fast, would he not rather be guilty of incivility than gain
the praise or reward of devoutness? or if when the failure or weakness of the
flesh requires the strength to be restored by the partaking of food, a man will
not consent to relax the rigour of his abstinence, is he not to be regarded as
a cruel murderer of his own body rather than as one who is careful for his
salvation? So too when a festival season permits a suitable indulgence in food and
a necessarily liberal repast, if a man will resolutely cling to the strict
observance of a fast he must be considered as not religious so much as boorish and
unreasonable. But to those men also will these things be found bad, who are on
the lookout for the praises of men by their fasts, and by a foolish show of
paleness gain credit for sanctity, of whom the word of the Gospel tells us that
they have received their reward in this life, and whose fast the Lord execrates
by the prophet. In whose person he first objected to himself and said:
"Wherefore have we fasted and Thou hast not regarded: wherefore have we humbled our
souls, and Thou hast not known it?" and then at once he answered and explained the
reasons why they did not deserve to be heard: "Behold," he says, "in the days
of your fast your own will is found and you exact of all your debtors. Behold
you fast for debates and strife, and strike with the fist wickedly. Do not fast
as ye have done unto this day, to make your cry to be heard on high. Is this
such a fast as I have chosen, for a man to afflict his soul for a day? Is it this,
to wind his head about like a circle, and to spread sackcloth and ashes? Will
ye call this a fast and a day acceptable o the Lord?" Then he proceeds to teach
how the abstinence of one who fasts may become acceptable, and clearly lays
down that faring cannot be good of itself alone, but only when it has the
following reasons which are added: "Is not this," he says, "the fast that I have
chosen? Loose the bands of wickedness, undo the bundles that oppress, let them that
are broken go free, and break asunder every burden. Deal thy bread to the
hungry, and bring the needy and the harbourless into thine house: and when thou
shalt see one naked cover him, and despise not thine own flesh. Then shalt thy
light break forth as the morning and thy health shall speedily arise, and thy
righteousness shall go before thy face and the glory of the Lord shall gather thee
up. Then shalt thou call, and the Lord shall hear: thou shalt cry, and He shall
say, Here am I."(1) You see then that fasting is certainly not considered by
the Lord as a thing that is good in its own nature, because it becomes good and
well-pleasing to God not by itself but by other works, and again from the
surrounding circumstances it may be regarded as not merely vain but actually hateful,
as the Lord says: "When they fast I will not hear their prayers."(2)
CHAPTER XV.
How a thing that is good in its own nature ought not to be done for the sake
of some lesser good.
FOR we ought not to practise pity, patience and love, and the precepts of
the virtues mentioned above, wherein there is what is good in its own nature,
for the sake of fasting, but rather fasting for the sake of them. For our
endeavour must be that those virtues which are really good may be gained by fasting,
not that the practice of those virtues may lead to fasting as its end. For this
then the affliction of the flesh is useful, for this the remedy of abstinence
must be employed; viz., that by it we may succeed in attaining to love, wherein
there is what is good without change, and continually with no exception of
time. For medicines, and the goldsmith's art, and the systems of other arts which
there are in this world are not employed for the sake of the instruments which
belong to the particular work; but rather the implements are prepared for the
practice of the art. And as they are useful for those who understand them, so
they are useless to those who are ignorant of the system of the art in question;
and as they are a great help to those who rely on their aid for doing their
work, so they cannot be of the smallest use to those who do not know for what
purpose they were made, and are contented simply with the possession of them;
because they make all their value consist in the mere having of them, and not in the
performance of work. That then is in its own nature the best thing, for the
sake of which things indifferent are done, but the very chiefest good is done not
for the sake of anything else but because of its own intrinsic goodness.
CHAPTER XVI.
How what is good in its own nature can be distinguished from other things that
are good.
AND this may be distinguished from those other things which we have termed
indifferent, in these ways: if a thing is good in itself and not by reason of
something else: if it is useful for its own sake, and not for the sake of
something else: if it is unchangeably and at all times good, and always keeps its
character and can never become anything different: if its removal or cessation
cannot fail to produce the greatest harm: if that which is its opposite is in the
same way evil in its own nature, and can never be turned into anything good.
And these descriptions by which the nature of things that are good in themselves
can be distinguished, cannot possibly be applied to fasting, for it is not
good of itself, nor useful for its own sake because it is wisely used for the
acquisition of purity of heart and body, that the pricks of the flesh being dulled
the soul may be pacified and reconciled to its Creator, nor is it unchangeably
and at all times good, because often we are not injured by its intermission,
and indeed sometimes if it is unreasonably practised it becomes injurious. Nor is
that which seems its opposite evil in its own nature, i.e., the partaking of
food, which is naturally agreeable, which cannot be regarded as evil, unless
intemperance and luxury or some other faults are the result; "For not that which
entereth into the mouth, defileth a man, but that which cometh out of the mouth,
that defileth a man."(1) And so a man disparages what is good in its own
nature, and does not treat it properly or without sin, if he does it not for its own
sake but for the sake of something else, for everything else should be done
for the sake of it, but it should be sought for its own sake alone.
CHAPTER XVII.
Of the reason for fasting and its value.
SO then let us constantly remember this description of the character of
fasting, and always aim at it with all the powers of the soul, in such a way as
to recognize that then only is it suitable for us if in it we preserve regard
for time, its character and degree, and this not so as to set the end of our hope
upon it, but so that by it we may succeed in attaining to purity of heart and
Apostolical love. Therefore from this it is clear that fasting, for which not
only are there special seasons appointed at which it should be practised or
relaxed, but conditions and rules also laid down, is not good in its own nature,
but something indifferent. But those things which are either enjoined as good by
the authority of a precept, or are forbidden as bad, are never subject to any
exceptions of time in such a way that sometimes we should do what is forbidden
or omit what is commanded. For there is no limit set to justice, patience,
soberness, modesty, love, nor on the other hand is a licence ever granted for
injustice, impatience, wrath, immodesty, envy, and pride.
CHAPTER XVIII.
How fasting is not always suitable.
WHEREFORE as we have premised this on the conditions of fasting, it seems
well to subjoin the authority of Holy Scripture, by which it will be more
clearly proved that fasting neither can nor should be always observed. In the Gospel
when the Pharisees were fasting together with the disciples of John the
Baptist, as the Apostles, as friends and companions of the heavenly Bridegroom, were
not yet keeping the observance of a fast, the disciples of John (who thought
that they acquired perfect righteousness by their fasts, as they were followers
of that grand preacher of repentance who afforded a pattern to all the people by
his own example, as he not only refused the different kinds of food which are
supplied for man's use, but actually altogether did without eating the bread
which is common to all) complained to the Lord and said: "Why do we and the
Pharisees fast oft but thy disciples fast not?" to whom the Lord in His reply
plainly showed that fasting is not suitable or necessary at all times, when any
festival season or opportunity for love intervenes and permits an indulgence in
food, saying: "Can the children of the bridegroom mourn while file bridegroom is
with them? But the days will come when the bridegroom shall be taken away from
them; and then shall they fast;"(1) words which although they were spoken before
the resurrection of His Body, yet specially point to the season of Easter-tide,
in which after His resurrection for forty days He ate with His disciples, and
their joy in His daily Presence did not allow them to fast.
CHAPTER XIX.
A question why we break the fast all through Eastertide.
GERMANUS: Why then do we relax the rigour of our abstinence in our meals
all through the fifty days, whereas Christ only remained with His disciples for
forty days after His resurrection?
CHAPTER XX.
The answer.
YOUR pertinent question deserves to be told the perfect true reason. After
the Ascension of our Saviour which took place on the fortieth day after His
Resurrection, the apostles returned from the Mount of Olives, on which He had
suffered them to see Him when He was returning to the Father, as the book of the
Acts of the Apostles also testifies, and entered Jerusalem and are said to have
waited ten days for the coming of the Holy Ghost, and when these were fulfilled
on the fiftieth day they received Him with joy. And thus in this way the
number of this festival was clearly made up, which as we read was figuratively
foreshadowed also in the Old Testament, where when seven weeks were fulfilled the
bread of the firstfruits was ordered to be offered by the priests to the Lord:(2)
and this was indeed shown to be offered to the Lord by the preaching of the
Apostles which they are said on that day to have addressed to the people; the
true bread of the firstfruits, which when produced from the instruction of a new
doctrine, consecrated the firstfruits of the Jews as a Christian people to the
Lord, five thousand men being filled with the gifts of the food. And therefore
these ten days are to be kept with equal solemnity and joy as the previous
forty. And the tradition about this festival, transmitted to us by Apostolic men,
should be kept with the same uniformity. For therefore on those days they do not
bow their knees in prayer, because the bending of the knees is a sign of
penitence and mourning. Wherefore also during these days we observe in all things the
same solemnities as on Sunday, on which day our predecessors taught that men
ought not to fast nor to bow the knee, out of reverence for the Lord's
Resurrection.
CHAPTER XXI.
A question whether the relaxation of the fast is not prejudicial to the
chastity of the body.
GERMANUS: Can the flesh, attracted by the unwonted luxuries of so long a
festival fail to produce something thorny from the incentives to sin although
they have been cut down? or can the soul weighed down by the consumption of
unaccustomed feasts fail to mitigate the rigour of its rule over its servant the
body, especially when in our case our mature age can excite our subject members
to a speedy revolt, if we venture to take our usual food in larger quantities,
or unaccustomed food more freely than usual?
CHAPTER XXII.
The answer on the way to keep control over abstinence.
THEONAS: If we weigh everything that we do, by a reasonable judgment of
the mind, and on the purity of our heart always consult not the opinions of other
people but our own conscience, that interval for refreshment is sure not to
interfere with our proper strictness, if only, as was said, our pure mind
impartially considers the right limits of indulgence and abstinence, and fairly checks
excess in either, and with real discrimination discerns whether the weight of
the delicacies is a burden upon our spirits, or whether too much austerity in
abstaining weighs down the other side, i.e., that of the body, and either
depresses or raises that side which it sees to be raised or weighed down. For our
Lord would have nothing done to His honour and glory without being tempered by
judgment, for "the honour of a king loveth judgment,"(1) and therefore Solomon,
the wisest of men, urges us not to let our judgment incline to either side,
saying: "Honour God with thy righteous labours and offer to Him of the fruits of thy
righteousness."(2) For we have residing in our conscience an uncorrupt and
true judge who sometimes, when all are wrong, is the only person not deceived as
to the state of our purity. And so with all care and pains we should preserve a
constant purpose in our circumspect heart for fear lest if the judgment of our
discretion goes wrong, we may be fired with the desire for an ill-considered
abstinence, or allured by the wish for an excessive relaxation, and so weigh the
substance of our strength in the tongue of an unfair balance; but we should
place in one of the scales our purity of soul, and in the other our bodily
strength, and weigh them both in the true judgment of conscience, so that we may not
perversely incline the scale of fairness to either side, either to undue
strictness or to excessive relaxation, from the preponderating desire for one or the
other, and so have this said to us by reason of excessive strictness or
relaxation: "If thou offerest rightly, but dost not divide rightly, hast thou not
sinned?"(3) For those offerings of fasts, which we thoughtlessly extort by violently
tearing our bowels, and fancy that we rightly offer to the Lord, these He
execrates who "loves mercy and judgment" saying: "I the Lord love judgment, but I
hate robbery in a burnt offering."(4) Those also who take the main part of their
offerings, i.e., their offices and actions, to benefit the flesh for their own
use, but leave the remains of them and a tiny portion for the Lord, these the
Divine Word thus condemns as fraudulent workmen: "Cursed is he that doeth the
work of the Lord fraudulently."(5) It is not then without reason that the Lord
reproves him who thus deceives himself by unfair considerations, saying: "But
vain are the children of men: the children of men are liars upon the balances
that they may deceive."(6) And therefore the blessed Apostle warns us to keep hold
of the reins of discretion and not to be attracted by excess and swerve to
either side, saying: "Your reasonable service."(7) And the giver of the law
similarly forbids the same thing, saying: "Let the balance be just and the weights
equal, the bushel just and the sextarius equal,"(8) and Solomon also gives a like
opinion on this matter: "Great and small weights and double measures are both
unclean before the Lord, and one who uses them shall be hindered in his
contrivances."(9) Further not only in the way in which we have said, but also in this
must we strive not to have unfair weights in our hearts, nor double measures in
the storehouse of our conscience, i.e., not to overwhelm those, to whom we are
to preach the word of the Lord, with precepts that are too strict and heavier
than we ourselves can bear, while we take for granted that for ourselves those
things which have to do with the rule of strictness are to be softened by a
freer allowance of relaxation. For when we do this, what is it but to weigh and
measure the goods and fruits of the Lord's commands in a double weight and
measure? For if we dispense them in one way to ourselves and in another to our
brethren, we are rightly blamed by the Lord because we have unfair balances and
double measures, in accordance with the saying of Solomon which tells us that "A
double weight is an abomination to the Lord, and a deceitful balance is not good
in His sight."(10) In this way also we plainly incur the guilt of using a
deceitful weight and a double measure, if out of the desire for the praise of men, we
make a show before the brethren of greater strictness than what we practice in
private in our own cells, trying to appear more abstinent and holier in the
sight of men than in the sight of God, an evil which we should not only avoid but
actually loathe. But meanwhile as we have wandered some way from the question
before us, let us return to the point from which we started.
CHAPTER XXIII.
Of the time and measure of refreshment.
So then we should keep the observance of the days mentioned in such a way
that the relaxation allowed may be useful rather than harmful to the good of
body and soul, because the joy of any festival cannot blunt the pricks of the
flesh, nor can that fierce enemy of ours be pacified by regard for days. In order
then that the observance of the customs appointed for festival seasons may be
kept and that the most salutary rule of abstinence be not at all exceeded it is
enough for us to allow the permitted relaxation to go so far, as for us out of
regard for the festival season to take the food, which ought to be taken at the
ninth hour, a little earlier; viz., at the sixth hour, but with this
condition, that the regular allowance and character of the food be not altered, for fear
lest the purity of body and uprightness of soul which has been gained by the
abstinence of Lent be lost by the relaxation of Easter-tide, and it profit us
nothing to have acquired by our fast what a careless satiety causes us presently
to lose, especially as the well-known cunning of our enemy assaults the
stronghold of our purity then chiefly when he sees that our guard over it is somewhat
relaxed at the celebration of some festival. Wherefore we must most vigilantly
look out that the vigour of our soul be never enervated by seductive
flatteries, and we lose not the purity of our chastity, gained, as was said, by the
continuous efforts of Lent, by the repose and carelessness of Eastertide. And
therefore no addition at all should be made to the quality or the quantity of the
food, but even on the highest festivals we should similarly abstain from those
foods, by abstinence from which we preserve our uprightness on common days, that
the joy of the festival may not excite in us a most deadly conflict of carnal
desires, and so be turned to grief, and put an end to that most excellent
festival of the heart, which exults in the joy of purity; and after a brief show of
carnal joy we begin to mourn our lost purity of heart with a lasting sorrow of
repentance. Moreover we should strive that this warning of the prophetic
exhortation may not be uttered against us to no purpose: "Celebrate, O Judah, thy
festivals, and pay thy vows."(1) For if the occurrence of festival days does not
interfere with the continuity of our abstinence, we shall continually enjoy
spiritual festivals and so, when we cease from servile work, "there shall be month
after month and Sabbath after Sabbath."(2)
CHAPTER XXIV.
A question on the different ways of keeping Lent.
GERMANUS: What is the reason why Lent is kept for six weeks, while in some
countries a possibly more earnest care for religion seems to have added a
seventh week as well, though neither number when you subtract Sunday and Saturday,
gives the total of forty days? For only six and thirty days are included in
these weeks.(3)
CHAPTER XXV.
The answer to the effect that the fast of Lent has reference to the title of
the year.
THEONAS: Although the pious simplicity of some folks would put aside a
question on this subject, yet because you are more scrupulous in your examination
of those things which another would consider unworthy to be asked about, and
want to know the whole truth of this observance of ours and the secret of it, you
shall have a very clear reason for this also, that you may still more plainly
be convinced that our predecessors taught nothing unreasonable. By the law of
Moses the command propounded to all the people generally was this: "Thou shalt
offer to the Lord thy God thy tithes and firstfruits."(4) And so, while we are
commanded to offer tithes of our substance and all our fruits, it is much more
needful for us to offer tithes of our life and ordinary employments and
actions, which certainly is clearly arranged for in the calculation of Lent. For the
tithe of the number of all the days included in the revolving circle of the year
is thirty-six days and a half. But in seven weeks, if Sundays and Saturdays
are subtracted, there remain thirty-five days assigned for fasting. But by the
addition of Easter Eve when the Saturday's fast is prolonged to the cock-crowing
at the dawn of Easter Day, not only is the number of thirty-six days made up,
but in regard to the tithe of the five days which seemed to be over, if the bit
of the night which was added be taken into account nothing will be wanting to
the whole sum.
CHAPTER XXVI.
How we ought also to offer our firstfruits to the Lord.
BUT what shall I say of the firstfruits which surely are given daily by
all who serve Christ faithfully? For when men waking from sleep and arising with
renewed activity after their rest, before they take in any impulse or thought
in their heart, or admit any recollection or consideration of business
consecrate their first and earliest thoughts as divine offerings, what are they doing
indeed but rendering the firstfruits of their produce through the High Priest
Jesus Christ for the enjoyment of this life and a figure of the daily
resurrection? And also when roused from sleep in the same way they offer to God a sacrifice
of joy and invoke Him with the first motion of their tongue and celebrate His
name and praise, and throwing open, the first thing, the door of their lips to
sing hymns to Him they offer to God the offices of their mouth; and to Him also
in the same way their bring the earliest offerings of their hands anti steps,
when they rise from bed and stand in prayer and before they use the services of
their limbs for their own purposes, take to themselves nothing of their
services, but for His glory advance their steps, and set them in His praise and so
render the first fruits of all their movements by stretching forth the hands,
bending the knees, and prostrating the whole body. For in no other way can we
fulfil that of which we sing in the Psalm: "I prevented the dawning of the day and
cried;" and: "Mine eves to Thee have prevented the morning that I might
meditate on Thy words;" and: "In the morning shall my prayer prevent Thee;"(1) unless
after our rest in sleep when, as we said above, we are restored as from
darkness and death to this light, we have the courage not to begin by taking any of
all the services both of mind and body for our own uses. For there is no other
morning which the prophet "prevented," or which in the same way we ought to
prevent, except either ourselves, i.e., our occupations and feelings and earthly
cares, without which we cannot exist--or the most subtle suggestions of the
adversary, which he tries to suggest to us, while still resting and overcome with
sleep, by the phantoms of vain dreams, with which, when we presently awake, he
will fill our minds and occupy us, that he may be the first to seize and carry off
the spoils of our firstfruits. Wherefore we must take the utmost care (if we
want to fulfil in act the meaning of the above quoted verse) that an anxious
watchfulness takes regard of our first and earliest morning thoughts, that they
may not be defiled beforehand being hastily taken possession of by our jealous
adversary, and thus he may make our firstfruits to be rejected by the Lord as
worthless and common. And if he is not prevented by us with watchful
circumspection of mind, he will not lay aside his habit of miserably anticipating us nor
cease day after day to prevent us by his wiles. And therefore if we want to offer
firstfruits that are acceptable and well pleasing to God of the fruits of our
mind, we ought to spend no ordinary care to keep all the senses of our body,
especially during the hours of the morning, as a sacred holocaust to the Lord pure
and undefiled in all things. And this kind of devotion many even of those who
live in the world observe with the utmost care, as they rise before it is light
or very early, and do not at all mix in the ordinary and necessary business of
this world before hastening to church and striving to consecrate in the sight
of God the firstfruits of all their actions and doings.
CHAPTER XXVII.
Why Lent is kept by very many with a different number of days.
FURTHER, as for what you say; viz., that in some countries Lent is kept in
different ways, i.e., for six or seven weeks, it is but one system and the
same manner of the fast that is preserved by the different observance of the
weeks. For those who think one ought to fast also on the Saturday, have determined
on the observance of six weeks. They therefore fast for six days out of the
seven, and this being six times repeated makes up the six and thirty days. It is
therefore, as we said, but one system and the same manner of the fast, although
there seems to be a difference in the number of the weeks.
CHAPTER XXVIII.
Why it is called Quadragesima, when the fast is only kept for thirty-six days.
BUT further, as man's carelessness dropped out of sight the reason of
this, this season when, as was said, the tithes of the year are offered by fasts
for thirty-six days and a half, was called Quadragesima,(2) a name which perhaps
they thought ought to be given to it for this reason; viz., that it is said
that Moses and Elijah and our Lord Jesus Christ Himself fasted for forty days. To
the mystery of which number are not unsuitably applied those forty years in
which Israel dwelt in the wilderness, and in like manner the forty stations which
they are said to have passed through with a mystic meaning. Or perhaps the
tithe was properly given the name of Quadragesima from the use of the custom-house.
For so that state tax is commonly called, from which the same proportion of
the increment is assigned for the king's use, as the legal tribute of
Quadragesima, which is required of us by the King of all the ages for the use of our life.
At any rate, although this has nothing to do with the question raised, yet I
think that I ought not to omit the fact that very often our elders used to
testify that especially on these days the whole body of monks was attacked according
to the ancient custom of the people opposed to them, and was more vehemently
urged to forsake their homes, for this reason, because in accordance with this
figure, whereby the Egyptians formerly oppressed the children of Israel with
grievous afflictions, so now also the spiritual Egyptians try to bow down the true
Israel, i.e., the monastic folk, with hard and vile tasks, lest by means of
that peace which is dear to God, we should forsake the land of Egypt, and for our
good cross to the desert of virtues, so that Pharaoh rages against us and
says: "They are idle and therefore they cry saying: Let us go and sacrifice to the
Lord our God. Let them be oppressed with labours, and be harassed in their
works, and they shall not be harassed by vain words."(1) For certainly their folly
imagines that the holy sacrifice of the Lord, which is only offered in the
desert of a pure heart, is the height of folly, for "religion is an abomination to
a sinner."(2)
CHAPTER XXIX.
How those who are perfect go beyond the fixed rule of Lent.
By this law of Lent then the man who is upright and perfect is not
restrained nor is he content with merely submitting to that paltry rule which the
heads of the church have established for those who all the year round are involved
in pleasure or business, that they may be bound by this legal requirement and
forced at any rate during these days to find time for the Lord, and dedicate to
Him the tithe of the days of their life, all of which they would have consumed
as their profits. But the righteous, for whom the law is not appointed, and who
devote to spiritual duties not a small part; viz., the tenth, but the whole
time of their life, because they are free from the burden of tithes according to
law, for his reason, if any worthy and pious occasion happening to them
constrains them, are ready to relax their station fast(3) without any hesitation. For
in their case it is no paltry tithe that is diminished, as they offer all that
they have to the Lord equally with themselves. And this certainly a man could
not do without being guilty of a grievous wrong, who, offering nothing of his
own free will to God, is forced to pay his tithes by the stern compulsion of the
law which takes no excuse. Wherefore it is clearly established that the servant
of the law cannot be perfect, who only shuns those things which are forbidden
and does those things which are commanded, but that those are really perfect
who do not take advantage even of those things which the law allows. And in this
way, though it is said of the Mosaic law that "the law brought nothing to
perfection,"(4) we read that some of the saints in the Old Testament were perfect
because they went beyond the commands of the law and lived under the perfection
of the Gospel: "Knowing that the law is not appointed for the righteous but for
the unrighteous and disobedient, for the ungodly and sinners, for the wicked
and defiled, etc."(5)
CHAPTER XXX.
Of the origin and beginning of Lent.
HOWBEIT you should know that as long as the primitive church retained its
perfection unbroken, this observance of Lent did not exist. For they were not
bound by the requirements of this order, or by any legal enactments, nor
confined in the very narrow limits of the fast, as the fast embraced equally the whole
year round. But when the multitude of believers began day by day to decline
from that apostolic fervour, and to look after their own wealth, and not to
portion it out for the good of all the faithful in accordance with the arrangement
of the apostles, but having an eye to their own private expenses, tried not only
to keep it but actually to increase it, not content with following the example
of Ananias and Sapphira, then it seemed good to all the priests that men who
were hampered by worldly cares, and almost ignorant, if I may say so, of
abstinence and contrition, should be recalled to the pious duty by a fast canonically
enjoined, and be constrained by the necessity of paying the legal tithes, as
this certainly would be good for the weak brethren and could not do any harm to
the perfect who were living under the grace of the gospel and by their voluntary
devotion going beyond the law, so as to succeed in attaining to the
blessedness which the Apostle speaks of: "For sin shall not have dominion over you; for
ye are not under the law but under grace."(1) For of a truth sin cannot
exercise dominion over one who lives faithfully under the liberty of grace.
CHAPTER XXXI.
A question, how we ought to understand the Apostle's words: "Sin shall not
have dominion over you."
GERMANUS: Because this saying of the Apostle, which promises freedom from
care not only to monks but to all Christians in general, cannot lead us wrong,
it seems to us somewhat obscure. For whereas he maintains that all those who
believe the gospel are at liberty and free from the yoke and dominion of sin, how
is it that the dominion of sin holds vigorous sway over almost all the
baptized, in accordance with the Lord's words, where He says: "Every one that doeth
sin is the servant of sin"?(2)
CHAPTER XXXII.
The answer on the difference between grace and the commands of the law.
THEONAS: Your inquiry once more raises before us a question of no small
extent. The explanation of which though I know that it cannot be taught to or
understood by the inexperienced, yet as far as I can, I will try to set forth in
words and briefly to explain, if only your minds will follow up and act upon
what we say. For whatever is known not by teaching but by experience, just as it
cannot be taught by one without experience, so neither can it be grasped or
taken in by the mind of one who has not laid the foundation by a similar study and
training. And therefore I think it necessary for us first to inquire somewhat
carefully what is the purpose or meaning of the law, and what is the system and
perfection of grace, that from this we may succeed in understanding the
dominion of sin and how to drive it out. And so the law chiefly commands men to seek
the bonds of wedlock, saying: "Blessed is he that hath seed in Sion and an
household in Jerusalem;"(3) and: "Cursed is the barren that hath not borne."(4) On
the other hand grace invites us to the purity of perpetual chastity, and the
undefiled state of blessed virginity, saying: "Blessed are the barren, and the
breasts which have not given suck;" and: "he that hateth not father and mother and
wife cannot be my disciple;" and this of the Apostle: "It remaineth that they
that have wives be as though they had them not."(5) The law says: "Thou shall
not delay to offer thy tithes and firstfruits;" grace says: "If thou wilt be
perfect, go and sell all that thou hast and give to the poor:"(6) The law forbids
not retaliation for wrongs and vengeance for injuries, saying" "An eye for an
eye and a tooth for a tooth." Grace would have our patience proved by the
injuries and blows offered to us being redoubled, and bids us be ready to endure
twice as much damage; saying: "If a man strike thee on one cheek, offer him the
other also; and to him who will contend with thee at the law and take away thy
coat, give him thy cloak also."(7) The one decrees that we should hate our
enemies, the other that we should love them so that it holds that even for them we
ought always to pray to God.
CHAPTER XXXIII.
Of the fact that the precepts of the gospel are milder than those of the law.
WHOEVER therefore climbs this height of evangelical perfection, is at once
raised by the merits of such virtue above every law, and disregarding as
trivial all that is commanded by Moses, recognizes that he is only subject to the
grace of the Saviour, by whose aid he knows that he attained to that most exalted
condition. Therefore sin has no dominion over him, "because the love of God,
which is shed abroad in our hearts by the Holy Ghost which is given to us,"(8)
shuts out all care for everything else, and can neither desire what is
forbidden, or disregard what is commanded, as its whole aim and all its desire is ever
fixed on divine love, and to such an extent is it not caught by the delights of
worthless things, that it actually does not take advantage of those things
which are permitted. But under the law, where lawful marriages are observed,
although the rovings of wantonness are restrained, and bound down to one woman alone,
yet the pricks of carnal lust cannot help being vigorous; and it is hard for
the fire, for which fuel is expressly supplied, to be thus shut in within
prearranged limits, so as not to spread further and burn up anything it touches. As
even if this objection occurs to it that it is not allowed to be kindled beyond
these limits, yet even while it is kept in check, it is on fire because the
will itself is in fault, and its habit of carnal intercourse hurries it into too
speedy excesses of adultery. But those whom the grace of the Saviour has fired
with the holy love of chastity, so consume all the thorns of carnal desires in
the fire of the Lord's love, that no dying embers of sin interfere with the
coldness of their purity. The servants of the law then from the use of lawful
things fall away to unlawful; the partakers of grace while they disregard lawful
things know nothing of unlawful ones. But as sin is alive in one who loves
marriage, so is it also in one who is satisfied with merely paying his tithes and
firstfruits. For, while he is dawdling or careless, he is sure to sin in regard to
either their quality or quantity, or the daily distribution of them. For as he
is commanded unweariedly to minister to those in want of what is his, although
he may dispense it with the fullest faith and devotion, yet it is hard for him
not to fall often into the snares of sin. But over those who have not set at
naught the counsel of the Lord, but who, disposing of all their property to the
poor, take up their cross and follow the bestower of grace, sin can have no
dominion. For no faithless anxiety for getting food will annoy him who piously
distributes and disperses his wealth already consecrated to Christ and no longer
regarded as his own; nor will any grudging hesitation take away from the
cheerfulness of his almsgiving, because without any thought of his own needs or fear of
his own food running short he is distributing what has once for all been
completely offered to God, and is no longer regarded as his own, as he is sure that
when he has succeeded in stripping himself as he desires, he will be fed by
God much more than the birds of the air. On the other hand he who retains his
goods of this world, or, bound by the rules of the old law, distributes the
tithe of his produce, and his firstfruits, or a portion of his income, although he
may to a considerable degree quench the fire of his sins by this dew of
almsgiving, yet, however generously he gives away his wealth, it is impossible for him
altogether to rid himself of the dominion of sin, unless perhaps by the grace
of the Saviour, together with his substance he gets rid of all love of
possessing. In the same way he cannot fail to be subject to the bloody sway of sin,
whoever chooses to pull out, as the law commands, an eye for an eye, a tooth for a
tooth, or to hate his enemy, for while he desires by retaliation in exchange
to avenge an injury done to himself, and while he cherishes bitter hatred
against an enemy, he is sure always to be inflamed with the passion of anger and
rage. But whoever lives under the light of the grace of the gospel, and overcomes
evil by not resisting it, but by bearing it, and does not hesitate of his own
free will to give to one who smites his right cheek, the other also, and to one
who wants to raise a lawsuit against him for his coat, gives his cloak also, and
who loves his enemies, and prays for those who slander him, this man has
broken the yoke of sin and burst its chains. For he is not living under the law,
which does not destroy the seeds of sin (whence not without reason the Apostle
says of it: "There is a setting aside of the former commandment because of the
weakness and unprofitableness thereof: for the law brought nothing to perfection;"
and the Lord says by the prophet: "And I gave them commands that were not
good, and ordinances, whereby they could not live"(1), but under grace which does
not merely lop off the boughs of wickedness, but actually tears up the very
roots of an evil will.
CHAPTER XXXIV.
How a man can be shown to be under grace.
WHOEVER then strives to reach the perfection of evangelical teaching, this
man living under grace is not oppressed by the dominion of sin, for to be
under grace is to do those things which grace commands. But whoever will not submit
himself to the complete requirements of evangelical perfection, must not
remain ignorant that, although he seems to be baptized and to be a monk, yet he is
not under grace, but is still shackled by the chains of the law, and weighed
down by the burden of sin. For it is the aim of Him, who by the grace of adoption
accepts all those by whom He has been received, not to destroy but to build
upon, not to abolish but to fulfil the Mosaic requirements. But some knowing
nothing about this, and disregarding the splendid counsels and exhortations of
Christ, are so emancipated by the carelessness of a freedom too hastily assumed,
that they not only fail to carry out the commands of Christ as if they were too
hard, but actually scorn as antiquated, the commands given to them as beginners
and children by the law of Moses, saying in this dangerous freedom of theirs
that which the Apostle execrates: "We have sinned, because we are not under the
law but under grace."(1) He then who is neither under grace, because he has never
climbed the heights of the Lord's teaching, nor under the law, because he has
not accepted even those small commands of the law, this man, ground down
beneath a twofold rule of sin, fancies that he has received the grace of Christ,
simply and solely for this, that by this dangerous liberty of his he may make
himself none of His, and falls into that state, which the Apostle Peter warns us to
avoid, saying: "Act as free, and not having your liberty as a cloak of
wickedness." The blessed Apostle Paul also says: "For ye, brethren, were called to
liberty," i.e., that ye might be free from the dominion of sin, "only use not your
liberty for an occasion of the flesh,"(2) i.e., believe that the doing away
with the commands of the law is a licence to sin. But this liberty, the Apostle
Paul teaches us is nowhere but where the Lord is dwelling, for he says: "The Lord
is the Spirit, but where the Spirit of the Lord is there is liberty."(3)
Wherefore I know not whether I could express and explain the meaning of the blessed
Apostle, as those know how, who have experience; one thing I do know, that it
is very clearly revealed even without anyone's explanation to all those who have
perfectly acquired <greek>praktikh</greek>, i.e., practical training. For they
will need no effort to understand in discussion what they have already learnt
by practice.
CHAPTER XXXV.
A question, why sometimes when we are fasting more strictly than usual, we are
troubled by carnal desires more keenly than usual.
GERMANUS: You have very clearly explained a most difficult question, and
one which, as we think, is unknown to many. Wherefore we pray you to add this
also for our good, and carefully to expound why sometimes when we are fasting
more strictly than usual, and are exhausted and worn out, severer bodily struggles
are excited. For often on waking from sleep, when we have discovered that we
have been defiled(4) we are so dejected in heart that we do not even venture
faithfully to rise even for prayer.
CHAPTER XXXVI.
The answer, telling that this question should be reserved for future
Conference.
THEONAS: Your zeal indeed, whereby you desire to reach the way of
perfection, not for a moment only but fully and perfectly, urges us to continue this
discussion unweariedly. For you are anxiously inquiring not about external
chastity or outward circumcision, but about that which is secret, as you know that
complete perfection does not consist in this visible continence of the flesh
which can be attained either by constraint, or by hypocrisy even by unbelievers,
but in that voluntary and invisible purity of heart, which the blessed Apostle
describes as follows: "For he is not a Jew which is so outwardly, nor is that
circumcision which is outward in the flesh, but he is a Jew which is one
inwardly, and the circumcision is that of the heart, in the spirit not in the letter,
whose praise is not of men but of God,"(5) who alone searches the secrets of the
heart. But because it is not possible for your wish to be fully satisfied (as
the short space of the night that is left is not enough for the investigation
of this most difficult question,) I think it well to postpone it for a while.
For these matters, as they should be propounded by us quietly and with an heart
entirely free from all bustling thoughts, so should they be received into your
minds; for just as the inquiry ought to be undertaken for the sake of our common
purity, so they cannot be learnt or acquired by one who is without the gift of
uprightness. For we do not ask what arguments of empty words, but what the
inward faith of the conscience and the greater force of truth can persuade. And
therefore with regard to the knowledge and teaching of this purification nothing
can be brought forward except by one who has had experience of it, nor can
anything be committed except to one who is a most eager and very earnest lover of
the truth itself, who does not hope to attain it by asking questions with mere
vain words, but by striving with all his might and main, with no wish for
useless chattering but with the desire to purify himself internally.
XXII. THE SECOND CONFERENCE OF ABBOT THEONAS.
ON NOCTURNAL ILLUSIONS.
This Conference is omitted.