THE BOOK OF PASTORAL RULE OF SAINT GREGORY THE GREAT ROMAN PONTIFF TO JOHN
BISHOP OF THE CITY OF RAVENNA, PARTS III & IV
PART III.
THE RULER, WHILE LIVING WELL, OUGHT TO TEACH AND ADMONISH THOSE THAT ARE PUT
UNDER HIM.
PROLOGUE.
Since, then, we have shewn what manner of man the pastor ought to be, let
us now set forth after what manner he should teach. For, as long before us
Gregory Nazianzen of reverend memory has taught, one and the same exhortation does
not suit all, inasmuch as neither are all bound together by similarity of
character. For the things that profit some often hurt others; seeing that also for
the most part herbs which nourish some animals are fatal to others; and the
gentle hissing that quiets horses incites whelps; and the medicine which abates one
disease aggravates another; and the bread which invigorates the life of the
strong kills little children. Therefore according to the quality of the hearers
ought the discourse of teachers to be fashioned, so as to suit all and each for
their several needs, and yet never deviate from the art of common edification.
For what are the intent minds of hearers but, so to speak, a kind of tight
tensions of strings in a harp, which the skilful player, that he may produce a tune
not at variance with itself, strikes variously? And for this reason the
strings render back a consonant modulation, that they are struck indeed with one
quill, but not with one kind of stroke. Whence every teacher also, that he may
edify all in the one virtue of charity, ought to touch the hearts of his hearers
out of one doctrine, but not with one and the same exhortation.
CHAPTER I.
What diversity there ought to be in the art of preaching.
Differently to be admonished are these that follow:--
Men and women.
The poor and the rich.
The joyful and the sad.
Prelates and subordinates.
Servants and masters.
The wise of this world and the dull. The impudent and the bashful.
The forward and the fainthearted. The impatient and the patient.
The kindly disposed and the envious.
The simple and the insincere. The whole and the sick.
Those who fear scourges, and therefore bye innocently; and those who have
grown so hard in iniquity as not to be corrected even by scourges.
The too silent, and those who spend time in much speaking.
The slothful and the hasty.
The meek and the passionate.
The humble and the haughty.
The obstinate and the fickle.
The gluttonous and the abstinent.
Those who mercifully give of their own, and those who would fain seize
what belongs to others.
Those who neither seize the things of others nor are bountiful with their
own; and those who both give away the things they have, and yet cease not to
seize the things of others.
Those that are at variance, and those that are at peace.
Lovers of strifes and peacemakers.
Those that understand not aright the words of sacred law; and those who
understand them indeed aright, but speak them without humility.
Those who, though able to preach worthily,
lore afraid through excessive humility; and those whom imperfection or age
debars from preaching, and yet rashness impels to it.
Those who prosper in what they desire in temporal matters; and those who
covet indeed the things that are of the world, and yet are wearied with the
toils of adversity.
Those who are bound by wedlock, and those who are free from the ties of
wedlock.
Those who have had experience of carnal intercourse, and those who are
ignorant of it.
Those who deplore sins of deed, and those who deplore sins of thought.
Those who bewail misdeeds, yet forsake them not; and those who forsake
them, yet bewail them not.
Those who even praise the unlawful things they do; and those who censure
what is wrong, yet avoid it not.
Those who are overcome by sudden passion, and those who are bound in guilt
of set purpose.
Those who, though their unlawful deeds are trivial, yet do them
frequently; and those who keep themselves from small sins, but are occasionally whelmed
in graver ones.
Those who do not even begin what is good, and those who fail entirely to
complete the good begun.
Those who do evil secretly and good publicly; and those who conceal the
good they do, and yet in some things done publicly allow evil to be thought of
them.
But of what profit is it for us to run through all these things collected
together in a list, unless we also set forth, with all possible brevity, the
modes of admonition for each?
(Admonition 1.) Differently, then, to be admonished are men and women;
because on the former heavier injunctions, on the latter lighter are to be laid,
that those may be exercised by great things, but these winningly converted by
light ones.
(Admonition 2.) Differently to be admonished are young men and old;
because for the most part severity of admonition directs the former to improvement,
while kind remonstrance disposes the latter to better deeds. For it is written,
Rebuke not an elder, but entreat him as a father (1 Tim. v. 1).
CHAPTER II.
How the poor and the rich should be admonished.
(Admonition 3.) Differently to be admonished are the poor and the rich:
for to the former we ought to offer the solace of comfort against tribulation,
but in the latter to induce fear as against elation. For to the poor one it is
said by the Lord through the prophet, Fear not, for thou shall not be confounded
(Isai. liv. 4). And not long after, soothing her, He says, O thou poor little
one, tossed with tempest (Ibid. 11). And again He comforts her, saying, I have
chosen thee in the furnace of poverty (Ibid. xlviii. 10). But, on the other
hand, Paul says to his disciple concerning the rich, Charge the rich of this world,
that they be not high-minded nor trust in the uncertainty of their riches (1
Tim. vi. 17); where it is to be particularly noted that the teacher of humility
in making mention of the rich, says not Entreat, but Charge; because, though
pity is to be bestowed on infirmity, yet to elation no honour is due. To such,
therefore, the right thing that is said is the more rightly commanded, according
as they are puffed up with loftiness of thought in transitory things. Of them
the Lord says in the Gospel, Woe unto you that are rich, which have your
consolation (Luke vi. 24). For, since they know not what eternal joys are, they are
consoled out of the abundance of the present life. Therefore consolation is to be
offered to those who are tried in the furnace of poverty; and fear is to be
induced in those whom the consolation of temporal glory lifts up; that both those
may learn that they possess riches which they see not, and these become aware
that they can by no means keep the riches that they see. Yet for the most part
the character of persons changes the order in which they stand; so that the
rich man may be humble and the poor man proud. Hence the tongue. of the preacher
ought soon to be adapted to the life of the hearer, so as to smite elation in a
poor man all the more sharply as not even the poverty that has come upon him
brings it down, and to cheer all the more gently the humility of the rich as even
the abundance which elevates them does not elate them.
Sometimes, however, even a proud rich man is to be propitiated by
blandishment in exhortation, since hard sores also are usually softened by soothing
fomentations, and the rage of the insane is often restored to health by the bland
words of the physician, and, when they are pleasantly humoured, the disease of
their insanity is mitigated. For neither is this to be lightly regarded, that,
when an adverse spirit entered into Saul, David took his harp and assuaged his
madness (1 Sam. xviii. 10). For what is intimated by Saul but the elation of
men in power, and what by David but the humble life of the holy? When, then, Saul
is seized by the unclean spirit, his madness is appeased by David's singing;
since, when the senses of men in power are turned to frenzy by elation, it is
meet that they should be recalled to a healthy state by the calmess of our
speech, as by the sweetness of a harp. But sometimes, when the powerful of this world
are taken to task, they are first to be searched by certain similitudes, as on
a matter not concerning them; and, when they have pronounced a right sentence
as against another man, then in fitting ways they are to be smitten with regard
to their own guilt; so that the mind puffed up with temporal power may in no
wise lift itself up against the reprover, having by its own judgment trodden on
the neck of pride, and may not try to defend itself, being bound by the
sentence of its own mouth. For hence it was that Nathan the prophet, having come to
take the king to task, asked his judgment as if concerning the cause of a poor
man against a rich one (2 Sam. xii. 4, 5, seq.), that the king might first
pronounce sentence, and afterwards hear of his own guilt, to the end that he might
by no means contradict the righteous doom that he had uttered against himself.
Thus the holy man, considering both the sinner and the king, studied in a
wonderful order first to bind the daring culprit by confession, and afterwards to cut
him to the heart by rebuke. He concealed for a while whom he aimed at, but
smote him suddenly when he had him. For the blow would perchance have fallen with
less force had he purposed to smite the sin openly from the beginning of his
discourse; but by first introducing the similitude he sharpened the rebuke which
he concealed. He had come as a physician to a sick man; he saw that the sore
must be cut; but he doubted of the sick man's patience. Therefore he hid the
medicinal steel under his robe, which he suddenly drew out and plunged into the
sore, that the patient might feel the cutting blade before he saw it, lest, seeing
it first, he should refuse to feel it.
CHAPTER III.
How the joyful and the sad are to be admonished.
Admonition 4. Differently to be admonished are the joyful and the sad.
That is, before the joyful are to be set the sad things that follow upon
punishment; but before the sad the promised glad things of the kingdom. Let the joyful
learn by the asperity of threat-things what to be afraid of: let the sad bear
what joys of reward they may look forward to. For to the former it is said, Woe
unto you that laugh now! For ye shall weep (Luke vi. 25); but the latter hear
from the teaching of the same Master, I will see you again, and your heart shall
rejoice, and your joy no man shall take from you (Job. xvi. 22). But some are
not made joyful or sad by circumstances, but are so by temperament: And to such
it should be intimated that certain defects are connected with certain
temperaments; that the joyful have lechery close at hand, and the sad wrath. Hence it
is necessary for every one to consider not only what he suffers from his
peculiar temperament, but also what worse thing presses on him in connection with it;
lest, while he fights not at all against thai which he has, he succumb also to
that from which he supposes himself free.
CHAPTER IV.
How subjects and prelates are to be admonished.
(Admonition 5.) Differently to be admonished are subjects and prelates:
the former that subjection crush them not, the latter that superior place elate
them not: the former that they fail not to fulfil what is commanded them, the
latter that they command not more to be fulfilled than is just: the former that
they submit humbly, the latter that they preside temperately. For this, which
may be understood also figuratively, is said to the former, Children, obey your
parents in the Lord: but to the latter it is enjoined, And ye, fathers, provoke
not your children to wrath (Coloss. iii. 20, 21). Let the former learn how to
order their inward thoughts before the eyes of the hidden judge; the latter how
also to those that are committed to them to afford outwardly examples of good
living. For prelates ought to know that, if they ever perpetrate what is wrong,
they are worthy of as many deaths as they transmit examples of perdition to
their subjects. Wherefore it is necessary that they guard themselves so much the
more cautiously from sin as by the bad things they do they die not alone, but
are guilty of the souls of others, which by their bad example they have
destroyed. Wherefore the former are to be admonished, lest they should be strictly
published, if merely on their own account they should be unable to stand acquitted;
the latter, lost they should be judged for the errors of their subjects, even
though on their own account they find themselves secure. Those are to be
admonished that they live with all the more anxiety about themselves as they are not
entangled by care for others; but these that they accomplish their charge of
others in such wise as not to desist from charge of themselves, and so to be
ardent in anxiety about themselves as not to grow sluggish in the custody of those
committed to them. To the one, who is at leisure for his own concerns, it is
said, Go to the ant, thou sluggard, and consider her ways, and learn wisdom
(Prov. vi. 6): but the other is terribly admonished, when it is said, My son, if
thou be surety for thy friend, thou hast stricken thy hand with a stranger, and
art snared with the words of thy mouth, and art taken with thine own speeches
(Ibid. 1). For to be surety for a friend is to take charge of the soul of another
on the surety of one's own behaviour Whence also the hand is stricken with a
stranger, because the mind is bound with the care of a responsibility which
before was not. But he is snared with the words of his mouth, and taken with his
own speeches, because, while he is compelled to speak good things to those who
are committed to him, he must needs himself in the first place observe the things
that he speaks. He is therefore snared with the words of his mouth, being
constrained by the requirement of reason not to let his life be relaxed to what
agrees not with his teaching. Hence before the strict judge he is compelled to
accomplish as much in deed as it is plain he has enjoined on others with his
voice. Thus in the passage above cited this exhortation is also presently added, Do
therefore what I say, my son, and deliver thyself, seeing thou hast fallen into
the hands of thy neighbour: run up and down hasten, arouse thy friend ; give
not sleep to thine eyes, nor let thine eyelids slumber (Prov. vi. 3). For
whosoever is put over others for an example of life is admonished not only to keep
watch himself, but also to arouse his friend. For it is not enough for him to
keep watch in living well, if he do not also sever him when he is set over from
the torpor of sin. For it is well said, Give not sleep to thine eyes, nor let
thine eyelids slumber (Ibid. 4). For indeed to give sleep to the eyes is to cease
from earnestness, so as to neglect altogether the care of our subordinates. But
the eyelids slumber when our thoughts, weighed down by sloth, connive at what
they know ought to be reproved in subordinates. For to be fast asleep is
neither to know nor to correct the deeds of those committed to us. But to know what
things are to be blamed, and still through laziness of mind not to amend them by
meet rebukes, is not to sleep, but to slumber. Yet the eye through slumbering
passes into the deepest sleep; since for the most part, when one who is over
others cuts not off the evil that he knows, he comes sooner or later, as his
negligence deserves, not even to know what is done wrong by his subjects.
Wherefore those who are over others are to be admonished, that through
earnestness of circumspection they have eyes watchful within and round about, and
strive to become living creatures of heaven (Ezek. i. 18). For the living
creatures of heaven are described as full of eyes round about and within (Revel. iv.
6). And so it is meet that those who are over others should have eyes within
and round about, so as both in themselves to study to please the inward judge,
and also, affording outwardly examples of life, to detect the things that should
be corrected in others.
Subjects are to be admonished that they judge not rashly the lives of
their superiors, if perchance they see them act blamably in anything, lest whence
they rightly find fault with evil they thence be sunk by the impulse of elation
to lower depths. They are to be admonished that, when they consider the faults
of their superiors, they grow not too bold against them, but, if any of their
deeds are exceedingly bad, so judge of them within themselves that, constrained
by the fear of God, they still refuse not to bear the yoke of reverence under
them. Which thing we shall shew the better if we bring forward what David did (1
Sam. xxiv. 4 seq.). For when Saul the persecutor had entered into a cave to
ease himself, David, who had so long suffered under his persecution, was within
it with his men. And, when his men incited him to smite Saul, he cut them short
with the reply, that he ought not to put forth his hand against the Lord's
anointed. And yet he rose unperceived, and cut off the border of his robe. For what
is signified by Saul but bad rulers, and what by David but good subjects?
Saul's easing himself, then, means rulers extending the wickedness conceived in
their hearts to works of woful stench, and their shewing the noisome thoughts
within them by carrying them out into deeds. Yet him David was afraid to strike,
because the pious minds of subjects, witholding themselves from the whole plague
of backbiting, smite the life of their superiors with no sword of the tongue,
even when they blame them for imperfection. And when through infirmity they can
scarce refrain from speaking, however humbly, of some extreme and obvious evils
in their superiors, they cut as it were silently the border of their robe;
because, to wit, when, even though harmlessly and secretly, they derogate from the
dignity of superiors, they disfigure as it were the garment of the king who is
set over them; yet still they return to themselves, and blame themselves most
vehemently for even the slightest defamation in speech. Hence it is also well
written in that place, Afterward David's heart smote him, because he had cut off
the border of Saul's robe (Ibid. 6). For indeed the deeds of superiors are not
to be smitten with the sword of the mouth, even when they are rightly judged
to be worthy of blame. But if ever, even in the least, the tongue slips into
censure of them, the heart must needs be depressed by the affliction of penitence,
to the end that it may return to itself, and, when it has offended against the
power set over it, may dread the judgment against itself of Him by whom it was
set over it. For, when we offend against those who are set over us, we go
against the ordinance of Him who set them over us. Whence also Moses, when he had
become aware that the people complained against himself and Aaron, said, For
what are we? Not against us are your murmurings, but against the Lord (Exod. xvi.
8).
CHAPTER V.
How servants and masters are to be admonished.
(Admonition 6). Differently to be admonished are servants and masters.
Servants, to wit, that they ever keep in view the humility of their condition; but
masters, that they lose not recollection of their nature, in which they are
constituted on an equality with servants. Servants are to be admonished that they
despise not their masters, lest they offend God, if by behaving themselves
proudly they gainsay His ordinance: masters, too, are to be admonished, that they
are proud against God with respect to His gift, if they acknowledge not those
whom they hold in subjection by reason of their condition to be their equals by
reason of their community of nature. The former are to be admonished to know
themselves to be servants of masters; the latter are to be admonished to
acknowledge themselves to be fellow-servants of servants. For to those it is said,
Servants, obey your masters according to the flesh (Coloss. iii. 22); and again,
Let as many servants as are under the yoke count their masters worthy of all
honour (1 Tim. vi. 1); but to these it is said, And ye, masters, do the same things
unto them, forbearing threatening, knowing that both their and your Master is
in heaven (Ephes. vi. 9).
CHAPTER VI.
How the wise and the dull are to be admonished.
(Admonition 7). Differently to be admonished are the wise of this world
and the dull. For the wise are to be admonished that they leave off knowing what
they know: the dull also are to be admonished that they seek to know what they
know not. In the former this thing first, that they think themselves wise, is
to be thrown down; in the latter whatsoever is already known of heavenly wisdom
is to be built up; since, being in no wise proud, they have, as it were,
prepared their hearts for supporting a building. With those we should labour that
they become more wisely foolish, leave foolish wisdom, and learn the wise
foolishness of God: to these we should preach that from what is accounted foolishness
they should pass, as from a nearer neighbourhood, to true wisdom. For to the
former it is said, If any man among you seemeth to be wise in this world, let him
become fool, that he may be wise (1 Cor. iii. 18): but to the latter it is
said, Not many wise men after the flesh (Ibid. 26); and again, God hath chosen the
foolish things of the world to confound the wise (Ibid. 27). The former are
for the most part converted by arguments of reasoning; the latter sometimes
better by examples. Those it doubtless profits to lie vanquished in their own
allegations; but for these it is sometimes enough to get knowledge of the
praiseworthy deeds of others. Whence also the excellent teacher, who was debtor to the
wise and foolish (Rom. i. 14), when he was admonishing some of the Hebrews that
were wise, but some also that were somewhat slow, speaking to them of the
fulfilment of the Old Testament, overcame the wisdom of the former by argument,
saying, That which decayeth and waxeth old is ready to vanish away Heb. viii. 13).
But, when he perceived that some were to be drawn by examples only, he added in
the same epistle, Saints had trial of mockings and seourgings, yea moreover of
bonds and imprisonment; they were stoned, they were sawn asunder, were tempted,
were slain with the sword (Ibid. xi. 36, 37): and again, Remember those who
were set over you, who spoke to you the Word of God, whose faith follow, looking
to the end of their conversation (Ibid. xiii. 7); that so victorious reason
might subdue the one sort, but the gentle force of example persuade the other to
mount to greater things.
CHAPTER VII.
How the impudent and bashful are to be admonished.
(Admonition 8). Differently to be admonished are the impudent and the
bashful. For those nothing but hard rebuke restrains from the vice of impudence;
while these for the most part a modest exhortation disposes to amendment. Those
do not know that they are in fault, unless they be rebuked even by many; to
these it usually suffices for their conversion that the teacher at least gently
reminds them of their evil deeds. For those one best corrects who reprehends them
by direct invective; but to these greater profit ensues, if what is rebuked in
them be touched, as it were, by a side stroke. Thus the Lord, openly upbraiding
the impudent people of the Jews, saying, There is come unto thee a whore's
forehead; thou wouldest not blush (Jerem. iii. 3). But again He revives them when
ashamed, saying, Thou shalt forget the confusion of thy youth, and shalt not
remember the reproach of thy widowhood ; for thy Maker will reign over thee
(Isai. liv. 4). Paul also openly upbraids the Galatians impudently sinning, when he
says, O foolish Galatians, who hath bewitched you (Galat. iii. 1)? And again,
Are ye so foolish, that, having begun in the Spirit, ye are now made perfect in
the flesh (Ibid. 3)? But the faults of those who are ashamed he reprehends as
though sympathizing with them, saying, rejoiced in the Lord greatly, that now at
the last ye have flourished again to care for me, as indeed ye did care, far
ye lacked opportunity (Philipp. iv. 10); so that hard upbraiding might discover
the faults of the former, and a softer address veil the negligence of the
latter.
CHAPTER VIII.
How the forward and the faint-hearted are to be admonished.
(Admonition 9.) Differently to be admonished are the forward and the
faint-hearted. For the former, presuming on themselves too much, disdain all others
when reproved by them; but the latter, while too conscious of their own
infirmity, for the most part fall into despondency. Those count all they do to be
singularly eminent; these think what they do to be exceedingly despised, and so are
broken down to despondency. Therefore the works of the forward are to be
finely sifted by the reprover, that wherein they please themselves they may be shewn
to displease God.
For we then best correct the forward, when what they believe themselves to
have done well we shew to have been ill done; that whence glory is believed to
have been gained, thence wholesome confusion may ensue. But sometimes, when
they are not at all aware of being guilty of the vice of forwardness, they more
speedily come to correction if they are confounded by the infamy of some other
person's more manifest guilt, sought out from a side quarter; that from that
which they cannot defend, they may be made conscious of wrongly holding to what
they do defend. Whence, when Paul saw the Corinthians to be forwardly puffed up
one against another, so that one said he was of Paul, another of Apollos,
another of Cephas, and another of Christ (1 Cor. i. 12; iii. 4), he brought forward
the crime of incest, which had not only been perpetrated among them, but also
remained uncorrected, saying, It is reported commonly that there is fornication
among you, and such fornication as is not even among the Gentiles, that one
should have his father's wife. And ye are puffed up, and have not rather mourned,
that he that hath done this deed might be taken away from among you ( 1 Cor. v.
1, 2). As if to say plainly, Why say ye in your forwardness that ye are of this
one or of the other, while shewing in the dissoluteness of your negligence,
that ye are of none of them?
But on the other hand we more fitly bring back the faint hearted to the
way of well-doing, if we search collaterally for some good points about them, so
that, while some things in them we attack with our reproof, others we may
embrace with our praise; to the end that the hearing of praise may nourish their
tenderness, which the rebuking of their fault chastises. And for the most part we
make more way with them for their profit, if we also make mention of their
good deeds; and, in case of some wrong things having been done by them, if we find
not fault with them as though they were already perpetrated, but, as it were,
prohibit them as what ought not to be perpetrated; that so both the favour
shewn may increase the things which we approve, and our modest exhortation avail
more with the faint-hearted against the things which we blame. Whence the same
Paul, when he came to know that the Thessalonians, who stood fast in the
preaching which they had received, were troubled with a certain faint-heartedness as
though the end of the world were nigh at hand, first praises that wherein he sees
them to be strong, and afterwards, with cautious admonition, strengthens what
was weak. For he says, We are bound to thank God always for you, brethren, as
it is meet, because that your faith groweth exceedingly, and the charity of
every one of you all toward each other aboundeth; so that we ourselves too glory in
you in the churches of God for your patience and faith (2 Thess. i. 3, 4).
But, having premised these flattering encomiums of their life, a little while
after he subjoined, Now we beseech you, brethren, by the coming of our Lord Jesus
Christ, and our gathering together unto Him, that ye be not soon shaken in mind,
or be troubled, neither by spirit, nor by word, nor by letter as sent by us,
as that the day of the Lord is at hand (Ibid. ii. 1). For the true teacher so
proceeded that they should first hear, in being praised, what they might
thankfully acknowledge, and afterwards, in being exhorted, what they should follow; to
the end that the precedent praise should settle their mind, lest the subjoined
admonition should shake it; and, though he knew that they had been disquieted
by suspicion of the end being near, he did not yet reprove them as having been
so, but, as if ignorant of the past, forbade them to be disquieted in future; so
that, while they believed themselves to be unknown to their preacher with
respect even to the levity of their disquietude, they might be as much afraid of
being open to blame as they were of being known by him to be so.
CHAPTER IX.
How the impatient and the patient are to be admonished.
(Admonition 10.) Differently to be admonished are the impatient and the
patient For the impatient are to be told that, while they neglect to bridle
their spirit, they are hurried through many steep places of iniquity which they
seek not after, inasmuch as fury drives the mind whither desire draws it not, and,
when perturbed, it does, not knowing, what it afterwards grieves for when it
knows The impatient are also to be told that, when carried headlong by the
impulse of emotion; they act in some ways as though beside themselves, and are
hardly aware afterwards of the evil they have done; and, while they offer no
resistance to their perturbation, they bring into confusion even things that may have
been well done when the mind was calm, and overthrow under sudden impulse
whatever they have haply long built up with provident toil. For the very virtue of
charity, which is the mother and guardian of all virtues, is lost through the
vice of impatience. For it is written, Charity is patient (1 Cor. xiii. 4).
Wherefore where patience is not, charity is not. Through this vice of impatience,
too; instruction, the nurse of virtues, is dissipated. For it is written, The
instruction of a man is known by his patience (Prov. xix. 1 1). Every man, then,
is shewn to be by so much less instructed as he is convicted of being less
patient. For neither can he truly impart what is good through instruction, if in his
life he knows not how to bear what is evil in others with equanimity.
Further, through this vice of impatience for the most part the sin of
arrogance pierces the mind; since, when any one is impatient of being looked down
upon in this world, he endeavours to shew off any hidden good, that he may
have, and so through impatience is drawn on to arrogance; and, while he cannot bear
contempt, he glories ostentatiously in self-display. Whence it is written,
Better is the patient than the arrogant (Eccles. vii. 9); because, in truth, one
that is patient chooses to suffer any evils whatever rather than that his
hidden good should come to be known through the vice of ostentation. But the
arrogant, on the contrary, chooses that even pretended good should be vaunted of him,
lest he should possibly suffer even the least evil. Since, then, when patience
is relinquished, all other good things also that have been done are
overthrown, it is rightly enjoined on Ezekiel that in the altar of God a trench be made;
to wit, that in it the whole burnt-offerings laid on the altar might be
preserved (Ezek. xliii. 13). For, if there were not a trench in the altar, the passing
breeze would scatter every sacrifice that it might find there. But what do we
take the altar of God to be but the soul of the righteous man, which lays upon
itself before His eyes as many sacrifices as it has done good deeds? And what
is the trench of the altar but the patience of good men, which, while it humbles
the mind to endure adversities, shews it to be placed low down after the
manner of a ditch? Wherefore let a trench be made in the altar, lest the breeze
should scatter the sacrifice laid upon it: that is, let the mind of the elect keep
patience, lest, stirred with the wind of impatience, it lose even that which it
has wrought well. Well, too, this same trench is directed to be of one cubit,
because, if patience fails not, the measure of unity is preserved. Whence also
Paul says, Bear ye one another's burdens, and so ye shall fulfil the law Christ
(Galat. vi. 2). For the law of Christ is the charity of unity, which they
alone fulfil who are guilty of no excess even when they are burdened. Let the
impatient hear what is written, Better is the patient than the mighty, and he that
ruleth his spirit than he that taketh cities (Prov. xvi. 32). For victory over
cities is a less thing, because that which is subdued is without; but a far
greater thing is that which is conquered by patience, since the mind itself is by
itself overcome, and subjects itself to itself, when patience compels it to
bridle itself within. Let the impatient hear what the Truth says to His elect; In
your patience ye shall possess your souls (Luke xxi. 19). For we are so
wonderfully made that reason possesses the soul, and the soul the body. But the soul is
ousted from its right of possession of the body, if it is not first possessed
by reason. Therefore the Lord pointed out patience as the guardian of our
state, in that He taught us to possess ourselves in it. Thus we learn how great is
the sin of impatience, through which we lose the very possession of what we are.
Let the impatient hear what is said again through Solomon; A fool uttereth all
his mind, but a wise man putteth it off, and reserves it until afterwards
(Prov. xxix. 11). For one is so driven by the impulse of impatience as to utter
forth the whole mind, which the perturbation within throws out the more quickly
for this reason, that no discipline of wisdom fences it round. But the wise man
puts it off, and reserves it till afterwards. For, when injured, he desires not
to avenge himself at the present time, because in his tolerance he even wishes
that men should be spared; but yet he is not ignorant that all things are
righteously avenged at the last judgment.
On the other hand the patient are to be admonished that they grieve not
inwardly for what they bear Outwardly, lest they spoil with the infection of
malice within a sacrifice of so great value which without they offer whole; and
lest the sin of their grieving, not perceived by men, but yet seen as sin under
the divine scrutiny, be made so much the worse as it claims to itself the fair
shew of virtue before men.
The patient therefore should be told to, study to love those whom they
must needs bear with; lest, if love follow not patience, the virtue exhibited be
turned to a worse fault of hatred. Whence Paul, when he said, Charity is
patient, forthwith added, Is kind (I Cor. xiii. 4); shewing certainly that those whom
in patience she bears with in kindness also she ceases not to love. Whence the
same excellent teacher, when he was persuading his disciples to patience,
saying, let all bitterness, and wrath, and indignation, and clamour, and evil
speaking be put away from you (Ephes. iv. 31), having as it were now set all outward
things in good order, turns himself to those that are within, when he subjoins,
With all malice (Ibid.); because, truly, in vain are indignation, clamour, and
evil speaking put away from the things that are without, if in the things that
are within malice, the mother of vices, bears sway; and to no purpose is
wickedness cut off from the branches outside if it is kept at the root within to
spring up in more manifold ways. Whence also the Truth in person says, Love your
enemies, do good to them which hate you, and pray for them which persecute you
and say evil of you falsely (Luke vi. 27). It is virtue therefore before men to
bear with adversaries; but it is virtue before God to love them; because the
only sacrifice which God accepts is that which, before His eyes, on the altar of
good work, the flame of charity kindles. Hence it is that to some who were
patient, and yet did not love, He says, And why seest thou the mote in thy
brother's eye, and seest not the beam in thine own eye? (Matth. vii. 3; Luke vi. 41).
For indeed the perturbation of impatience is a mote; but malice in the heart is
a beam in the eye. For that the breeze of temptation drives to and fro; but
this confirmed iniquity carries almost immoveably. Rightly, however, it is there
subjoined, Thou hypocrite, first cast out the beam out of thine own eye, and
then shah thou see to cast out the mote out of thy brother's eye (Ibid.); as if it
were said to the wicked mind, inwardly grieving while shewing itself by
patience outwardly as holy, First shake off from thee the weight of malice, and then
blame others for the levity of impatience; lest, while thou takest no pains to
conquer pretence, it be worse for thee to bear with the faultiness of others.
For it usually comes to pass with the patient that at the time, indeed,
when they suffer hardships, or hear insults, they are smitten with no vexation,
and so exhibit patience as to fail not to keep also innocence of heart; but,
when after a while they recall to memory these very same things that they have
endured, they inflame themselves with the fire of vexation, they seek reasons for
vengeance, and, in retracting, turn into malice the meekness which they had in
bearing. Such are the sooner succoured by the preacher, if the cause of this
change be disclosed. For the cunning adversary wages war against two; that is, by
inflaming one to be the first to offer insults, and provoking the other to
return insults under a sense of injury. But for the most part, while he is already
conqueror of him who has been persuaded to inflict the injury, he is conquered
by him who bears the infliction with an equal mind. Wherefore, being
victorious over the one whom he has subjugated by incensing him, he lifts himself with
all his might against the other, and is grieved at his firmly resisting and
conquering; and so, because he has been unable to move him in the very flinging of
insults, he rests meanwhile from open contest, and provoking his thought by
secret suggestion, seeks a fit time for deceiving him. For, having lost in public
warfare, he burns to lay hidden snares. In a time of quiet be returns to the
mind of the conqueror, brings back to his memory either temporal harms or darts
of insults, and by exceedingly exaggerating all that has been inflicted on him
represents it as intolerable: and with so great vexation does he perturb the
mind that for the most part the patient one, led captive after victory, blushes
for having borne such things calmly, and is sorry that he did not return insults,
and seeks to pay back something worse, should opportunity be afforded. To
whom, then, are these like but to those who by bravery are victorious in the field,
but by negligence are afterwards taken within the gates of the city? To whom
are they like but to those whom a violent attack of sickness removes not from
life, but who die from a relapse of fever coming gently on? Therefore the patient
are to be admonished, that they guard their heart after victory; that they be
on the lookout for the enemy, overcome in open warfare, laying snares against
the walls of their mind; that they be the more afraid of a sickness creeping on
again; lest the cunning enemy, should he afterwards deceive them, rejoice with
the greater exultation in that he treads on the necks of conquerors which had
long been inflexible against him.
CHAPTER X.
How the kindly-disposed and the envious are to be admonished.
(Admonition 11.) Differently to be admonished are the kindly-disposed and
the envious. For the kindly-disposed are to be admonished so to rejoice in what
is good in others as to desire to have the like as their own; so to praise
with affection the deeds of their neighbours as also to multiply them by
imitation, lest in this stadium of the present life they assist at the contest of others
as eager backers, but inert spectators, and remain without a prize after the
contest, in that they toiled not in the contest, and should then regard with
sorrow the palms of those in the midst of whose toils they stood idle. For indeed
we sin greatly if we love not the good deeds of others: but we win no reward if
we imitate not so far as we can the things which we love. Wherefore the
kindly-disposed should be told that if they make no haste to imitate the good which
they applaud, the holiness of virtue pleases them in like manner as the vanity
of scenic exhibitions of skill pleases foolish spectators: for these extol with
applauses the performances of charioteers and players, and yet do not long to
be such as they see those whom they praise to be. They admire them for having
done pleasing things, and yet they shun pleasing in like manner. The
kindly-disposed are to be told that when they behold the deeds of their neighbours they
should return to their own heart, and presume not on actions which are not their
own, nor praise what is good while they refuse to do it. More heavily, indeed,
must those be smitten by final vengeance who have been pleased by that which
they would not imitate.
The envious are to be admonished how great is their blindness who fail by
other men's advancement, and pine away at other men's rejoicing; how great is
their unhappiness who are made worse by the bettering of their neighbour, and in
beholding the increase of another's prosperity are uneasily vexed within
themselves, and die of the plague of their own heart. What can be more unhappy than
these, who, when touched by the sight of happiness, are made more wicked by the
pain of seeing it? But, moreover, the good things of others which they cannot
have they might, if they loved them, make their own. For indeed all are
constituted together in faith as are many members in one body; which are indeed
diverse as to their office, but in mutually agreeing with each other are made one.
Whence it comes to pass that the foot sees by the eye, and the eyes walk by the
feet; that the hearing of the ears serves the mouth, and the tongue of the mouth
concurs with the ears for their benefit; that the belly supports the hands,
and the hands work for the belly. In the very arrangement of the body, therefore,
we learn what we should observe in our conduct. It is, then, too shameful not
to act up to what we are. Those things, in fact, are ours which we love in
others, even though we cannot follow them; and what things are loved in us become
theirs that love them. Hence, then, let the envious consider of how great power
is charity, which makes ours without labour works of labour not our own. The
envious are therefore to be told that, when they fail to keep themselves from
spite, they are being sunk into the old wickedness of the wily foe. For of him it
is written, But by envy of the devil death entered into the world (Wisd. ii.
24). For, because be had himself lost heaven, he envied it to created man, and,
being himself ruined, by ruining others he heaped up his own damnation. The
envious are to be admonished, that they may learn to how great slips of ruin
growing under them they are liable; since, while they cast not forth spite out of
their heart, they are slipping down to open wickedness of deeds. For, unless Cain
had envied the accepted sacrifice of his brother, he would never have come to
taking away his life. Whence it is written, And the Lord had respect unto Abel
and to his offering, but unto Cain and to his offering He had not respect. And
Cain was very wroth, and his countenance fell (Gen. iv. 4). Thus spite on
account of the sacrifice was the seed-plot of fraticide. For him whose being better
than himself vexed him he cut off from being at all. The envious are to be told
that, while they consume themselves with this inward plague, they destiny
whatever good they seem to have within them. Whence it is written, Soundness of
heart is the life of the flesh, but envy the rottenness of the bones (Prov. xiv.
30). For what is signified by the flesh but certain weak and tender actions, and
what by the bones but brave ones? And for the most part it comes to pass that
some, with innocence of heart, in some of their actions seem weak; but others,
though performing some stout deeds before human eyes, still pine away inwardly
with the pestilence of envy towards what is good in others. Wherefore it is well
said, Soundness of heart is the life of the flesh; because, if innocence of
mind is kept, even such things as are weak outwardly are in time strengthened.
And rightly it is there added, Envy is the rottenness of the bones; because
through the vice of spite what seems strong to human eyes perishes in the eyes of
God. For the rotting of the bones through envy means that certain even strong
things utterly perish.
CHAPTER XI.
How the simple and the crafty are to be admonished.
(Admonition 12.) Differently to be admonished are the simple and the
insincere. The simple are to be praised for studying never to say what is false, but
to be admonished to know how sometimes to be silent about what is true. For,
as falsehood has always harmed him that speaks it, so sometimes the hearing of
truth has done harm to some. Wherefore the Lord before His disciples, tempering
His speech with silence, says, I have many things to say unto you, but ye
cannot bear them new (Job. xvi. 12). The simple are therefore to be admonished
that, as they always avoid deceit advantageously, so they should always utter truth
advantageously. They are to be admonished to add prudence to the goodness of
simplicity, to the end that they may so possess the security of simplicity as
not to lose the circumspection of prudence. For hence it is said by the teacher
of the Gentiles, I would have you wise in that which is good, but simple
concerning evil (Row xvi. 19) Hence the Truth in person admonishes His elect, saying,
Be ye wise as serpents, but simple as doves (Matth. x. 16); because, to wit, in
the hearts of the elect the wisdom of the serpent ought to sharpen the
simplicity of the dove and the simplicity of the dove temper the wisdom of the
serpent, to the end that neither through prudence they be seduced into cunning, nor
from simplicity grow torpid in the exercise of the understanding.
But, on the other hand, the insincere are to be admonished to learn how
heavy is the labour of duplicity, which with guilt they endure. For, while they
are afraid of being found out, they are ever seeking dishonest defences, they
are agitated by fearful suspicions. But there is nothing safer for defence than
sincerity, nothing easier to say than truth. For, when obliged to defend its
deceit, the heart is wearied with hard labour. For hence it is written, The labour
of their own lips shall cover them (Ps. cxxxix. 10). For what now fills them
then covers them, since it then presses down with sharp retribution him whose
soul it now elevates with a mild disquietude, Hence it is said through Jeremiah,
They, have taught their tongue to speak lies, and weary themselves to commit
iniquity (Jerem. ix. 5): as if it were said plainly, They who might have been
friends of truth without labour, labour to sin; and, while they refuse to live in
simplicity, by labours require that they should die. For commonly, when taken
in a fault, while they shrink from being known to be such as they are, they
hide themselves under a veil of deceit, and endeavour to excuse their sin, which
is already plainly perceived; so that often one who has a care to reprove their
faults, led astray by the mists of the falsehood that surrounds them, finds
himself to have almost lost what he just now held as certain concerning them.
Hence it is rightly said through the prophet, under the similitude of Judah, to the
soul that sins and excuses itself, There tire urchin had her nest (Isai.
xxxiv. 15). For by the name of urchin is denoted the duplicity of a mind that is
insincere, and cunningly defends itself; because, to wit, when an urchin is
caught, its head is perceived, and its feet appear, and its whole body is exposed to
view; but no sooner has it been caught than it gathers itself into a ball,
draws in its feet, hides its head, and all is lost together within the hands of
him that holds it which before was all visible together. So as suredly, so
insincere minds are, when they are seized hold of in their transgressions. For the
head of the urchin is perceived, because it appears from what beginning the
sinner has advanced to his crime; the feet of the urchin are seen, because it is
discovered by what steps the iniquity has been perpetrated; and yet by suddenly
adducing excuses the insincere mind gathers in its feet, in that it hides all
traces of its iniquity; it draws in the head, because by strange defences it
makes out that it has not even begun any evil; and it remains as it were a ball in
the hand of one that holds it, because one that takes it to task, suddenly
losing all that he had just now come to the knowledge of, holds the sinner rolled
up within his own consciousness, and, though he had seen the whole of him when
he was caught, yet, illuded by the tergiversation of dishonest defence, he is in
like measure ignorant of the whole of him. Thus the urchin has her nest in the
reprobate, because the duplicity of a crafty mind, gathering itself up within
itself, hides itself in the darkness of its self-defence.
Let the insincere hear what is written, He that walketh in simplicity
walketh surely (Prov. x. 9). For indeed simplicity of conduct is an assurance of
great security. Let them heat what is said by the mouth of the wise man, The holy
spirit of discipline will flee deceit (Wisd. i. 5). Let them hear what is
again affirmed by the witness of ScriptUre, His communing is with the simple (Prov.
iii. 32). For God's communing is His revealing of secrets to human minds by
the illumination of His presence. He is therefore said to commune with the
simple, because He illuminates with the ray of His visitation concerning supernal
mysteries the minds of those whom no shade of duplicity obscures. But it is a
special evil of the double-minded, that, while they deceive others by their crooked
and double conduct, they glory as though they were surpassingly prudent beyond
others; and, since they consider not the strictness of retribution, they
exult, miserable men that they are, in their own losses. But let them hear how the
prophet Zephaniah holds out over them the power of divine rebuke, saying, Behold
the day of the lord cometh, great and horrible, the day of wrath, that day; a
day of darkness and gloominess, a day of cloud and whirlwind, a day of trumpet
and clangour, upon all fenced cities, and upon all lofty corners (Zephan. i.
15, 16). For what is expressed by fenced cities but minds suspected, and
surrounded ever with a fallacious defence; minds which, as often as their fault is
attacked, suffer not the darts of truth to reach them? And what is signified by
lofty corners (a wall being always double in corners) but insincere hearts;
which, while they shun the simplicity of truth, are in a manner doubled back upon
themselves in the crookedness of duplicity, and, what is worse, from their very
fault of insincerity lift themselves in their thoughts with the pride of
prudence? Therefore the day of the Lord comes full of vengeance and rebuke upon
fenced cities and upon lofty corners, because the wrath of the last judgment both
destroys human hearts that have been closed by defences against the truth, and
unfolds such as have been folded up in duplicities. For then the fenced cities
fall, because souls which God has not penetrated will be damned. Then the lofty
corners tumble, because hearts which erect themselves in the prudence of
insincerity are prostrated by the sentence of righteousness.
CHAPTER XII.
How the whole and the sick are to be admonished.
(Admonition 13.) Differently to be admonished are the whole and the sick.
For the whole are to be admonished that they employ the health of the body to
the health of the soul: lest, if they turn the grace of granted soundness to the
use of iniquity, they be made worse by the gift, and afterwards merit the
severer punishments, in that they fear not now to use amiss the more bountiful
gifts of God. The whole are to be admonished that they despise not the opportunity
of winning health for ever. For it is written, Behold now is the acceptable
time, behold now is the day of salvation (2 Cor. vi. 2). They are to be admonished
lest, if they will not please God when they may, they may be not able when,
too late, they would. For hence it is that Wisdom afterward deserts those whom,
too long refusing, she before called, saying, I have called, and ye refused; I
have stretched out my hand, and no man regarded; ye have set at naught all my
counsel, and would none of my reproof: I will also laugh at your destruction, and
will mock when what you feared cometh (Prov. i. 24, seq.). And again, Then
shall they call upon me, and I will not hearken; they shall rise early, and shall
not find me (Ibid. 28). And so, when health of body, received for the purpose
of doing good, is despised, it is felt, after it is lost, how precious was the
gift: and at the last it is fruitlessly sought, having been enjoyed unprofitably
when granted at the fit time. Whence it is well said through Solomon, Give not
thine honour unto aliens and thy years unto the cruel, test haply strangers be
filled with thy wealth, and thy labours be in the house of a stranger, and
thou moan at the last, when thy flesh and thy body are consumed (Ibid. v. 9,
seq.). For who are aliens from us but malignant spirits, who are separated from the
lot of the heavenly country? And what is our honour but that, though made in
bodies of clay, we are yet created after the image and likeness of our Maker? Or
who else is cruel but that apostate angel, who has both smitten himself with
the pain of death through pride, and has not spared, though lost, to bring death
upon the human ace? He therefore gives his honour unto aliens who, being made
after the image and likeness of God, devotes the seasons of his life to the
pleasures of malignant spirits. He also surrenders his years to the cruel one who
spends the space of life accorded him after the will of the ill-domineering
adversary. And in the same place it is well added, Lest haply strangers be filled
with thy wealth, and labours be in the house of a stranger. For whosoever,
through the healthy estate of body received by him, or the wisdom of mind granted to
him, labours not in the practice of virtues but in the perpetration of vices,
he by no means fills his own house, but the habitations of strangers, with his
wealth: that is, he multiplies the deeds of unclean spirits, and indeed so
acts, in his luxuriousness or his pride, as even to increase the number of the lost
by the addition of himself. Further, it is well added, And thou moan at the
best, when thy flesh and thy body are consumed. For, for the most part, the
health of the flesh which has been received is spent through vices: but, when it is
suddenly withdrawn, when the flesh is worn with afflictions, when the soul is
already urged to go forth, then lost health, long enjoyed for ill, is sought
again as though for living well. And then men moan for that they would not serve
God, when altogether unable to repair the losses of their negligence by serving
Him. Whence it is said in another place, When He slew them, then they sought
Him (Ps. lxxvii. 34).
But, on the other hand, the sick are to be admonished that they feel
themselves to be sons of God in that the scourge of discipline chastises them. For,
unless He purposed to give them an inheritance after correction, He would not
have a care to educate them by afflictions. For hence the Lord says to John by
the angel, Whom I love I rebuke and chasten (Rev. iii. 19; Prov. iii. 11). Hence
again it is written, My son despise not thou the discipline of the Lord, nor
faint when thou art rebuked of Him. For whom the Lord loveth He chasteneth, and
scourgeth every son whom He receiveth (Heb. xii. 5, 6). Hence the Psalmist
says, Many are the tribulations of the righteous, and out of all these hath the
Lord delivered them (Ps. xxxiii. 20. Hence also the blessed Job, crying out in
his sorrow, says, If l be righteous, I will not lift up my head, being saturated
with affliction and misery (Job x. 15). The sick are to be told that, if they
believe the heavenly country to be their own, they must needs endure labours in
this as in a strange land. For hence it was that the stones were hammered
outside, that they might be laid without sound of hammer in the building of the
temple of the Lord; because, that is, we are now hammered with scourges without,
that we may be afterwards set in our places within, without stroke of discipline,
in the temple of God; to the end that strokes may now cut away whatever is
superfluous in us, and then the concord of charity alone bind us together in the
building. The sick are to be admonished to consider what severe scourges of
discipline chastise our sons after the flesh for attaining earthly inheritances.
What pain, then, of divine correction is hard upon us, by which both a
never-to-be-lost inheritance is attained, and punishments which shall endure for ever are
avoided? For hence Paul says, We have had fathers of our flesh as our
educators, and we gave them reverence: shall we not much more be in subjection unto the
Father of spirits and live? And they indeed for a few days educated us after
their own will; but He for our profit in the receiving of His sanctification
(Heb. xii. 9, 10).
The sick are to be admonished to consider how great health of the heart is
in bodily affliction, which recalls the mind to knowledge of itself, and
renews the memory of infirmity which health for the most part casts away, so that
the spirit, which is carried out of itself into elation, may be reminded by the
smitten flesh from which it suffers to what condition it is subject. Which thing
is rightly signified to Balaam (had he but been willing to follow obediently
the voice of God) in the very retardation of his journey (Num. xxii. 23, seq.).
For Balaam is on his way to attain his purpose; but the animal which is under
him thwarts his desire. The ass, stopped by the prohibition, sees an angel which
the human mind sees not; because for the most part the flesh, slow through
afflictions, indicates to the mind from the scourge which it endures the God whom
the mind itself which has the flesh under it did not see, in such sort as to
impede the eagerness of the spirit which desires to advance in this world as
though proceeding on a journey, until it makes known to it the invisible one who
stands in its way. Whence also it is well said through Peter, He had the dumb
beast of burden for a rebuke of his madness, which speaking with a man's voice
forbade the foolishness of the prophet (2 Pet. ii. 16). For indeed a man is
rebuked as mad by a dumb beast of burden, when an elated mind is reminded by the
afflicted flesh of the good of humility which it ought to retain. But Balaam did
not obtain the benefit of this rebuke for this reason, that, going to curse, he
changed his voice, but not his mind. The sick are to be admonished to consider
how great a boon is bodily affliction, which both washes away committed sins and
restrains those which might have been committed, which inflicts on the
troubled mind wounds of penitence derived from outward stripes. Whence it is written,
The blueness of a wound cleanseth away evil, and stripes in the secret parts of
the belly (Prov. xx. 30). For the blueness of a wound cleanseth away evil,
because the pain of scourges cleanses iniquities, whether meditated or
perpetrated. But by the appellation of belly the mind is wont to be understood. For that
the mind is called the belly is taught by that sentence in which it is written,
The spirit of man is the lamp of the Lord, which searcheth all the secret parts
of the belly (Ibid. 27). As if to say, The illumination of Divine inspiration,
when it comes into a man's mind, shews it to itself by illuminating it,
whereas before the coming of the Holy Spirit it both could entertain bad thoughts and
knew not how to estimate them. Then, the blueness of a wound cleanses away
evil, and stripes in the secret parts of the belly, because when we are smitten
outwardly, we are recalled, silent and afflicted, to memory of our sins, and
bring back before our eyes all our past evil deeds, and through what we suffer
outwardly we grieve inwardly the more for what we have done. Whence it comes to
pass that in the midst of open wounds of the body the secret stripe in the belly
cleanses us more fully, because a hidden wound of sorrow heals the iniquities of
evil-doing.
The sick are to be admonished, to the end that they may keep the virtue of
patience, to consider incessantly how great evils our Redeemer endured from
those whom He had created; that He bore so many vile insults of reproach; that,
while daily snatching the souls of captives from the hand of the old enemy, He
took blows on the face from insulting men; that, while washing us with the water
of salvation, He hid not His face from the spittings of the faithless; that,
while delivering us by His advocacy from eternal punishments, He bore scourges
in silence; that, while giving to us everlasting honours among the choirs of
angels, He endured buffets; that, while saving us from the prickings of our sins,
He refused not to submit His head to thorns; that, while inebriating us with
eternal sweetness, He accepted in His thirst the bitterness of gall; that He Who
for us adored the Father though equal to Him in Godhead, when adored in mockery
held His peace: that, while preparing life for the dead, He Who was Himself
the life came even unto death. Why, then, is it thought hard that man should
endure scourges from God for evil-doing, if God underwent so great evils for
well-doing? Or who with sound understanding can be ungrateful for being himself
smitten, when even He Who lived here without sin went not hence without a scourge?
CHAPTER XIII.
How those who fear scourges and those who contemn them are to be admonished.
(Admonition 14.) Differently to be admonished are those who fear scourges,
and on that account live innocently, and those who have grown so hard in
wickedness as not to be corrected even by scourges. For those who fear scourges are
to be told by no means to desire temporal goods as being of great account,
seeing that bad men also have them, and by no means to shun present evils as
intolerable, seeing they are not ignorant how for the most part good men also are
touched by them. They are to be admonished that, if they desire to be truly free
from evils, they should dread eternal punishments; nor yet continue in this fear
of punishments, but grow up by the nursing of charity to the grace of love.
For it is written, Perfect charity casteth out fear (I Joh. iv. 18) And again it
is written, Ye have not received the spirit of bandage again in fear, but the
spirit of adoption of sons, wherein we cry, Abba, Father (Rom. viii. 15). Whence
the same teacher says again, Where the Spirit of the Lord is, there is liberty
(2 Car. iii. 17). If, then, the fear of punishment still restrains from
evil-doing, truly no liberty of spirit possesses the soul of him that so fears. For,
were he not afraid of the punishment, he would doubtless commit the sin. The
mind, therefore, that is bound by the bondage of fear knows not the grace of
liberty. For good should be loved for itself, not pursued because of the compulsion
of penalties. For he that does what is good for this reason, that he is afraid
of the evil of torments, wishes that what he fears were not, that so he might
commit what is unlawful boldly. Whence it appears clearer than the light that
innocence is thus lost before God, in whose eyes evil desire is sin.
But, on the other hand, those whom not even scourges restrain from
iniquities are to be smitten with sharper rebuke in proportion as they have grown hard
with greater insensibility. For generally they are to be disdained without
disdain, and despaired of without despair, so, to wit, that the despair exhibited
may strike them with dread, and admonition following may bring them back to
hope. Sternly, therefore, against them should the Divine judgments be set forth,
that they may be recalled by consideration of eternal retribution to knowledge
of themselves. For let them hear that in them is fulfilled that which is
written, If thou shouldest bray a fool in a mortar, as if with a pestle pounding
barley, his foolishness will not be taken away from him (Pray. xxvii. 22). Against
these the prophet complains to the Lord, saying, Thou hast bruised them, and
they have refused to receive discipline (Jer. v. 3). Hence it is that the Lord
says, I have slain and destroyed this people, and yet they have not returned from
their ways (Isai. ix. 13). Hence He says again, The people hath not returned to
Him that smiteth them (Jer. xv. 6). Hence the prophet complains by the voice
of the scourgers, saying, We have taken care for Babylon, and she is not healed
(Jer. Ii. 9). For Babylon is taken care for, yet still not restored to health,
when the mind, confused in evil-doing, hears the words of rebuke, feels the
scourges of rebuke, and yet scorns to return to the straight paths of salvation.
Hence the Lord reproaches the children of Israel, captive, but yet not converted
from their iniquity, saying, The house of Israel is to Me become dross: all
they are brass, and tin, and iron, and lead, in the midst of the furnace (Ezek.
xxii. 18); as if to say plainly, I would have purified them by the fire of
tribulation, and I sought that they should become silver or gold; but they have been
turned before me in the furnace into brass, tin, iron, and lead, because even
in tribulation they have broken forth, not to virtue but to vices. For indeed
brass, when it is struck, returns a sound more than all other metals. He,
therefore, who, when subjected to strokes, breaks out into a sound of murmuring is
turned into brass in the midst of the furnace. But tin, when it is dressed with
art, has a false show of silver. He, then, who is not free from the vice of
pretence in the midst of tribulation becomes tin in the furnace. Moreover, he who
plots against the life of his neighbour uses iron. Wherefore iron in the furnace
is he who in tribulation loses not the malice that would do hurt. Lead, also,
is the heaviest of metals. He, then, is found as lead in the furnace who, even
when placed in the midst of tribulation, is not raised above earthly desires.
Hence, again, it is written, She hath wearied herself with much labour, and her
exceeding rust went not out from her, not even by fire (Ezek. xxiv. 12). For
He brings upon us the fire of tribulation, that He may purge us from the rust of
vices; but we lose not our rust even by fire, when even amid scourges we lack
not vice. Hence the Prophet says again, The founder hath melted in vain; their
wickednesses are not consumed (Jer. vi. 29).
It is, however, to be known that sometimes when they remain uncorrected
amid the hardness of scourges, they are to be soothed by sweet admonition. For
those who are not corrected by torments are sometimes restrained from unrighteous
deeds by gentle blandishments. For commonly the sick too, whom a strong potion
of medicine has not availed to cure, have been restored to their former health
by tepid water; and some sores which cannot be cured by incision are healed by
fomentations of oil; and hard adamant admits not at all of incision by steel,
but is softened by the mild blood of goats.
CHAPTER XIV.
How the silent and the talkative are to be admonished.
(Admonition 15.) Differently to be admonished are the over-silent, and
those who spend time in much speaking. For it ought to be insinuated to the
over-silent that while they shun some vices unadvisedly, they are, without its being
perceived, implicated in worse. For often from bridling the tongue overmuch
they suffer from more grievous quacity in the heart; so that thoughts seethe the
more in the mind from being straitened by the violent guard of indiscreet
silence. Arid for the most part they overflow all the more widely as they count
themselves the more secure because of not being seen by fault-finders without.
Whence sometimes a man's mind is exalted into pride, and he despises as weak those
whom he hears speaking. And, when he shuts the mouth of his body, he is not
aware to what extent through his pride he lays himself open to vices. For his
tongue he represses, his mind he exalts; and, little considering his own
wickedness, accuses all in his own mind by so much the more freely as he does it also the
more secretly. The over-silent are therefore to be admonished that they study
anxiously to know, not only what manner of men they ought to exhibit themselves
outwardly, but also what manner of men they ought to shew themselves inwardly;
that they fear more a hidden judgment in respect of their thoughts than the
reproof of their neighbours in respect of their speeches. For it is written, My
son, attend unto my wisdom, and bow thine ear to my prudence, that thou mayest
guard thy thoughts (Prov. v. I). For, indeed, nothing is more fugitive than the
heart, which deserts us as often as it slips away through bad thoughts. For
hence the Psalmist says, My heart hath failed me (Ps. xxxix. 13(1) ). Hence, when
he returns to himself, be says, Thy servant hath found his heart to pray to
Thee (2 Sam. vii. 27). When, therefore, thought is kept under guard, the heart
which was wont to fly away is found. Moreover, the over-silent for the most part,
when they suffer some injustices, come to have a keener sense of pain from not
speaking of what they endure. For, were the tongue to tell calmly the
annoyances that have been caused, the pain would flow away from the consciousness. For
closed sores torment the more; since, when the corruption that is hot within is
cast out, the pain is opened out for healing. They, therefore, who are silent
more than is expedient, ought to know this, lest, amid the annoyances which they
endure while they hold their tongue, they aggravate the violence of their
pain. For they are to be admonished that, if they love their neighbours as
themselves, they should by no means keep from them the grounds on which they justly
blame them. For from the medicine of the voice there is a concurrent effect for
the health of both parties, while on the side of him who inflicts the injury his
bad conduct is checked, and on the side of him who sustains it the violent heat
of pain is allayed by opening out the sore. For those who take notice of what
is evil in their neighbours, and yet refrain their tongue in silence, withdraw,
as it were, the aid of medicine from observed sores, and become the causers of
death, in that they would not cure the venom which they could have cured. The
tongue, therefore, should be discreetly curbed, not tied up fast. For it is
written, A wise man will hold his tongue until the time (Eccles. xx. 7); in order,
assuredly, that, when he considers it opportune, he may relinquish the
censorship of silence, and apply himself to the service of utility by speaking such
things as are fit. And again it is written, A time to keep silence, and a time to
speak (Eccles. iii. 7). For, indeed, the times for changes should be
discreetly weighed, lest either, when the tongue ought to be restrained, it run loose to
no profit in words, or, when it might speak with profit, it slothfully
restrain itself. Considering which thing well, the Psalmist says, Set a watch, O Lord,
on my mouth, and a door round about my lips (Ps. cxl. 3(2)). For he seeks not
that a wall should be set on his lips, but a door: that is, what is opened and
shut. Whence we, too, ought to learn warily, to the end that the voice
discreetly and at the fitting time may open the mouth, and at the fitting time silence
close it.
But, on the other hand, those who spend time in much speaking are to be
admonished that they vigilantly note froth what a state of rectitude they fall
away when they flow abroad in a multitude of words. For the human mind, after the
manner of water, when closed in, is collected unto higher levels, in that it
seeks again the height from which it descended; and, when let loose, it falls
away in that it disperses itself unprofitably through the lowest places. For by
as many superfluous words as it is dissipated from the censorship of its
silence, by so many streams, as it were, is it drawn away out of itself. Whence also
it is unable to return inwardly to knowledge of itself, because, being scattered
by much speaking, it excludes itself from the secret place of inmost
consideration. But it uncovers its whole self to the wounds of the enemy who lies in
want, because it surrounds itself with no defence of watchfulness. Hence it is
written, As a city that lieth open and without environment of walls, so is a man
that cannot keep in his spirit in speaking (Prov. xxv. 28). For, because it has
not the wall of silence, the city of the mind lies open to the darts of the
foe; and, when by words it casts itself out of itself, it shews itself exposed to
the adversary. And he overcomes it with so much the less labour as with the
more labour tile mind itself, which is conquered, fights against itself by much
speaking.
Moreover, since the indolent mind for the most part lapses by degrees into
downfall, while we neglect to guard against idle words we go on to hurtful
ones; so that at first it pleases us to talk of other men's affairs; afterwards
the tongue gnaws with detraction the lives of those of whom we talk; but at last
breaks out even into open slanders. Hence are sown pricking thorns, quarrels
arise, the torches of enmities are kindled, the peace of hearts is extinguished.
Whence it is well said through Solomon, He that letteth out water is a
well-spring of strifes (Prov. xvii. 14). For to let out water is to let loose the
tongue to a flux of speech. Wherefore, on the other hand, in a good sense it is
said again, The words of a man's mouth are as deep water (Ibid. xviii. 4). He
therefore who letteth out water is the wellspring of strifes, because he who curbs
not his tongue dissipates concord. Hence on the other hand it is written, He
that imposes silence on a foal allays enmities (Ibid. xxvi. 10). Moreover, that
any one who gives himself to much speaking cannot keep the straight way of
righteousness is testified by the Prophet, who says, A man full of words shall not
be guided aright upon the earth (Ps. cxxxix. 12(3) ). Hence also Solomon says
again, In the multitude of words there shall not want sin (Prov. x. 19). Hence
Isaiah says, The culture of righteousness is silence (Isai. xxxii. 17),
indicating, to wit, that the righteousness of the mind is desolated when there is no
stint of immoderate speaking. Hence James says, If any man thinketh himself to be
religious, and bridleth not his tongue, but deceiveth his own heart, this
man's religion is vain (James i. 26). Hence again he says, get every man be swift
to hear, but slow to speak (Ibid. 19). Hence again, defining the power of the
tongue, he adds, An unruly evil, full of deadly poison (Ibid. iii. 8). Hence the
Truth in person admonishes us, saying, Every idle word that men shall speak,
they shall give account thereof in the day of judgment (Matth. xii. 36). For
indeed every word is idle that lacks either a reason of just necessity or an
intention of pious usefulness. If then an account is required of idle discourse, let
us weigh well what punishment awaits much speaking, in which there is also the
sin of hurtful words.
CHAPTER XV
How the slothful and the hasty are to be admonished.
(Admonition 16.) Differently to be admonished are the slothful and the
hasty. For the former are to be persuaded not to lose, by putting it off, the good
they have to do; but the latter are to be admonished lest, while they
forestall the time of good deeds by inconsiderate haste, they change their meritorious
character. To the slothful therefore it is to be intimated, that often, when we
will not do at the right time what we can, before long, when we will, we
cannot. For the very indolence of the mind, when it is not kindled with befitting
fervour, gets cut off by a torpor that stealthily grows upon it from all desire
of good things. Whence it is plainly said through Solomon, Slothfulness casteth
into a deep sleep (Prov. xix. 15). For the slothful one is as it were awake in
that he feels aright, though he grows torpid by doing nothing: but slothfulness
is said to cast into a deep sleep, because by degrees even the wakefulness of
right feeling is lost, when zeal for well-doing is discontinued. And in the
same place it is rightly added, And a dissolute soul shall suffer hunger (Ibid.)
For, because it braces not itself towards higher things, it lets itself run
loose uncared for in lower desires; and, while not braced with the vigour of
lofty aims, suffers the pangs of the hunger of low concupiscence, and, in that it
neglects to bind itself up by discipline, it scatters itself the more abroad
hungry in its craving after pleasures. Hence it is written again by the same
Solomon, The idle man is wholly in desires (Prov. xxi. 26). Hence in the preaching
of the Truth Himself (Matth. xii. 44, 45) the house is said indeed to be clean
when one spirit has gone out; but, when empty, it is taken possession of by his
returning with many more. For the most part the slothful, while he neglects to
do things that are necessary, sets heron him some that are difficult, but is
inconsiderately afraid of others; and so, as though finding something that he may
reasonably fear, he satisfies himself that he has good reason for remaining
torpid. To him it is rightly said through Solomon, The sluggard would not plough
by reason of the cold; therefore shall he beg in summer, and it shall not be
given unto him (Prov. xx. 4). For indeed the sluggard ploughs not by reason of
the cold, when he finds an excuse for not doing the good things which he ought to
do. The sluggard ploughs not by reason of the cold, when he is afraid of small
evils that are against him, and leaves undone things of the greatest
importance. Further it is well said, He shall beg in summer, and it shall not be given
unto him. For whoso toils not now in good works will beg in summer and receive
nothing, because, when the burning sun of judgment shall appear, he will then
sue in vain for entrance into the kingdom. To him it is well said again through
the same Solomon, He that observeth the wind doth not sow: and he that regardeth
the clouds never reapeth (Eccles. xi. 4). For what is expressed by the wind
but the temptation of malignant spirits? And what are denoted by the clouds which
are moved of the wind but the oppositions of bad men? The clouds, that is to
say, are driven by the winds, because bad men are excited by the blasts of
unclean spirits. He, then, that observeth the wind soweth not, and he that regardeth
the clouds reapeth not, because whosoever fears the temptation of malignant
spirits, whosoever the persecution of bad men, and does not sow the seed of good
work now, neither doth he then reap handfuls of holy recompense.
But on the other hand the hasty, while they forestall the time of good
deeds, l pervert their merit, and often fall into what is evil, while failing
altogether to discern what is good. Such persons look not at all to see what things
they are doing when they do them, but for the most part, when they are done,
become aware that they ought not to have done them. To such, under the guise of
a learner, it is well said in Solomon, My son, do nothing without counsel, and
after it is done thou shalt not repent (Ecclus. xxxii. 24). And again, Let
thine eyelids go before thy steps (Prov. iv. 25). For indeed our eyelids go before
our steps, when right counsels prevent our doings. For he who neglects to look
forward by consideration to what he is about to do advances his steps with his
eyes closed; proceeds on and accomplishes his journey, but goes not in advance
of himself by looking forward; and therefore the sooner falls, because he
gives no heed through the eyelid of counsel to where he should set the foot of
action.
CHAPTER XVI.
How the meek and the passionate are to be admonished.
(Admonition 17.) Differently to be admonished are the meek and the
passionate. For sometimes the meek, when they are in authority, suffer from the torpor
of sloth, which is a kindred disposition, and as it were placed hard by. And
for the most part from the laxity of too great gentleness they soften the force
of strictness beyond need. But on the other hand the passionate, in that they
are swept on into frenzy of mind by the impulse of anger, break up the calm of
quietness, and so throw into confusion the life of those that are put under
them. For, when rage drives them headlong, they know not what they do in their
anger, they know not what in their anger they suffer from themselves. But
sometimes, what is more serious, they think the goad of their anger to be the zeal of
righteousness. And, when vice is believed to be virtue, guilt is piled up without
fear. Often, then, the meek grow torpid in the laziness of inactivity; often
the passionate are deceived by the zeal of uprightness. Thus to the virtue of
the former a vice is unawares adjoined, but to the latter their vice appears as
though it were fervent virtue. Those, therefore, are to be admonished to fly
what is close beside themselves, these to take heed to what is in themselves;
those to discern what they have not, these what they have. Let the meek embrace
solicitude; let the passionate ban perturbation, The meek are to be admonished
that they study to have also the zeal of righteousness: the passionate are to be
admonished that to the zeal which they think they have they add meekness. For on
this account the Holy Spirit has been manifested to us in a dove and in fire;
because, to wit, all whom He fills He causes to shew themselves as meek with
the simplicity of the dove, and burning with the fire of zeal.
He then is in no wise full of the Holy Spirit, who either in the calm of
meekness forsakes the fervour of zeal, or again in the ardour of zeal loses the
virtue of meekness. Which thing we shall perhaps better shew, if we bring
forward the authority of Paul, who to two who were his disciples, and endowed with a
like charity, supplies nevertheless different aids for preaching. For in
admonishing Timothy he says, Reprove, entreat, rebuke, with all long-suffering and
doctrine (2 Tim. iv. 2). Titus also he admonishes, saying, These things speak,
and exhort, and rebuke with all authority (Tit. ii. 15). What is the reason that
he dispenses his teaching with so great art as, in exhibiting it, to recommend
authority to the one, and long-suffering to the other, except that he saw
Titus to be of a meeker spirit, and Timothy of one a little more fervid? The former
he inflames with the earnestness of zeal; the latter he moderates by the
gentleness of long-suffering. To the one he adds what is wanting, from the other he
subtracts what is overabudant. The one he endeavours to push on with a spur,
the other to keep back with a bridle. For the great husbandman who has the Church
in charge waters some shoots that they may grow, but prunes others when he
sees that they grow too much; lest either by not growing they should bear no
fruit, or by growing over much they should lose the fruits they may put forth. But
far different is the anger that creeps in under the guise of zeal from that
which confounds the perturbed heart without pretext of righteousness. For the
former is extended inordinately in that wherein it ought to be, but the latter is
ever kindled in that wherein it ought not to be. It should indeed be known that
in this the passionate differ from the impatient, that the latter bear not with
things brought upon them by others, but the former themselves bring on things
to be borne with. For the passionate often follow after those who shun them,
stir up occasion of strife, rejoice in the toil of contention; and yet such we
better correct, if in the midst of the commotion of their anger we do shun them.
For, while they are perturbed, they do not know what we say to them; but, when
brought back to themselves, they receive words of exhortation the more freely in
proportion as they blush at having been the more calmly borne with. But to a
mind that is drunk with fury every right thing that is said appears wrong.
Whence to Nabal when he was drunk Abigail laudably kept silence about his fault,
but, when he had digested his wine, as laudably told him of it (I Sam. xxv. 37).
For he could for this reason perceive the evil he had done, that he did not hear
of it when drunk.
But when the passionate so attack others that they cannot be altogether
shunned, they should be smitten, not with open rebuke, but sparingly with a
certain respectful cautiousness. And this we shall shew better if we bring forward
what was done by Abner. For, when Asahel attacked him with the violence of
inconsiderate haste, it is written, Abner spake unto Asahel, saying. Turn thee aside
from following me, lest I be driven to smite thee to the ground. Howbeit he
scorned to listen, an refused to turn aside. Whereupon Abner smote him with the
hinder end of the spear in the groin, and thrust him through, and he died (2
Sam. ii. 22, 23). For of whom did Asahel present a type but of those whom fury
violently seizes and carries headlong? And such, in this same attack of fury, are
to be shunned cautiously in proportion as they are madly hurried on. Whence
also Abner, who in our speech is called the lantern of the father, fled; because
when the tongue of teachers, which indicates the supernal light of God, sees the
mind of any one borne along over the steeps of rage, and refrains from casting
back darts of words against the angry person, it is as though it were
unwilling to smite one that is pursuing. But, when the passionate will not pacify
themselves by any consideration, and, like Asahel, cease not to pursue and to be
mad, it is necessary that those who endeavour to repress these furious ones should
by no means lift themselves up in fury, but exhibit all possible calmness; and
yet adroitly bring something to bear whereby they may by a side thrust prick
the heart of the furious one. Whence also Abner, when he made a stand against
his pursuer, pierced him, not with a direct stroke, but with the hinder end of
his spear. For to strike with the point is to oppose with an onset of open
rebuke: but to smite the pursuer with the hinder end of the spear is calmly to touch
the furious one with certain hits, and, as it were, by sparing him overcome
him. Asahel moreover straightway fell, because agitated minds, when they feel
themselves to be spared, and yet are touched inwardly by the answers given in
calmness, fall at once from the elevation to which they had raised themselves.
Those, then, who rebound from the onset of their heat under the stroke of gentleness
die, as it were, without steel.
CHAPTER XVII.
How the humble and the haughty are to be admonished.
(Admonition 18.) Differently to be admonished are the humble and the
haughty. To the former it is to be insinuated how true is that excellence which they
hold in hoping for it; to the latter it is to be intimated how that temporal
glory is as nothing which even when embracing it they hold not. Let the humble
hear how eternal are the things that they long for, how transitory the things
which they despise; let the haughty hear how transitory are the things they
court, how eternal the things they lose. Let the humble hear from the authoritative
voice of the Truth, Every one that humbleth himself shall be exalted (Luke
xviii. 14). Let the haughty hear, Every one that exalteth himself shall be humbled
(Ibid.). Let the humble hear, Humility goeth before glory; let the haughty
hear, The spirit is exalted before a fall (Prov. xv. 33; xvi. 18). Let the humble
hear, Unto whom shall I have respect, but to him that is humble and quiet, and
that trembleth at my words (Isai. lxvi. 2)? Let the haughty hear, Why is earth
and ashes proud (Ecclus. x. 9)? Let the humble hear, God hath respect unto the
things that are humble. Let the haughty hear, And lofty things late knoweth
afar off (Psal. cxxxvii. 6(4) ). Let the humble hear, That the Son of Man came not
to be ministered unto, but to minister (Matth. xx. 28); let the haughty hear,
that The beginning of all sin is price (Ecclus. x. 13). Let the humble hear,
that Our Redeemer humbled himself, being made obedient even unto death (Philip
ii. 8); let the haughty hear what is written concerning their head, He is king
over all the sons of pride (Job xli. 25). The pride, therefore, of the devil
became the occasion of our perdition, and the humility of God has been found the
argument for our redemption. For our enemy, having been created among all things,
desired to appear exalted above all things; but our Redeemer, remaining great
above all things, deigned to become little among all things.
Let the humble, then, be told that, when they abase themselves, they
ascend to the likeness of God; let the haughty be told that, when they exalt
themselves, they fall into imitation of the apostate angel. What, then, is more
debased than haughtiness, which, while it stretches itself above itself, is
lengthened out beyond the stature of true loftiness? And what is more sublime than
humility, which, while it depresses itself to the lowest, conjoins itself to its
Maker who remains above the highest? There is, however, another thing in these
cases that ought to be carefully considered; that some are often deceived by a
false show of humility, while some are beguiled by ignorance of their own
haughtiness. For commonly some who think themselves humble have an admixture of fear,
such as is not due to men; while an assertion of free speech commonly goes with
the haughty. And when any vices require to be rebuked, the former hold their
peace out of fear, and yet esteem themselves as being silent out of humility; the
latter speak in the impatience of haughtiness, and yet believe themselves to
be speaking in the freedom of uprightness. Those the fault of timidity under a
show of humility keeps back from rebuking what is wrong; these the unbridled
impetuosity of pride, under the image of freedom, impels to rebuke things they
ought not, or to rebuke them more than they ought. Whence both the haughty are to
be admonished not to be free more than is becoming, and the humble are to be
admonished not to be more submissive than is right; lest either the former turn
the defence of righteousness into a display of pride, or the latter, while they
study more than needs to submit themselves to men, be driven even to pay
respect to their vices,
It is, however, to be considered that for the most part we more profitably
reprove the haughty, if with our reproofs of them we mingle some balms of
praise. For some other good things that are in them should be introduced into our
reproofs, or at all events some that might have been, though they are not; and
then at last the bad things that displease us should be cut away, when previous
allowance of the good things that please us has made their minds favourably
disposed to listen. For unbroken horses, too, we first touch with a gentle hand,
that we may afterwards subdue them to us even with whips. And the sweetness of
honey is added to the bitter cup of medicine, lest the bitterness which is to be
of profit for health be felt harsh in the act of tasting; but, while the taste
is deceived by sweetness, the deadly humour is expelled by bitterness. In the
case, then, of the haughty the first beginnings of our rebuke should be
tempered with an admixture of praise, that, while they admit the commendations which
they love, they may accept also the reproofs which they hate.
Moreover, we shall in most cases better persuade the haughty to their
profit, if we speak of their improvement as likely to profit us rather than them;
if we request their amendment to be bestowed upon us more than on themselves.
For haughtiness is easily bent to good, if its bending be believed to be of
profit to others also. Whence Moses, who journeyed through the desert under the
direction of God and the leading of the cloudy pillar, when he would draw Hobab his
kinsman from converse with the Gentile world, and subdue him to the dominion
of Almighty God, said, We are journeying unto the place of which the Lord said,
I will give it to you; Come with us, and we will do thee good; for the Lord
hath spoken good concerning lsrael. And when the other had replied to him, I will
not go with thee, but will return to my own land in which I was born; he
straightway added, Leave us not, I pray thee; for thou knowest in what places we
should encamp in the wilderness, and thou shalt be our guide (Num. x. 29, seq.).
And yet Moses was not straitened in his own mind by ignorance of the way, seeing
that acquaintance with Deity had opened out within him the knowledge of
prophecy; and the pillar went before him outwardly, while inwardly familiar speech in
his sedulous converse with God instructed him concerning all things. But, in
truth, as a man of foresight, talking to a haughty hearer, he sought succour
that he might give it; he requested a guide on the way, that he might. be able to
be his guide unto life. Thus he so acted that the proud hearer should become
all the more attentive to the voice that persuaded him to better things from
being supposed to be necessary, and, in that he believed himself to be his
exhorter's guide, he should bow himself to the words of exhortation.
CHAPTER XVIII.
How the obstinate and the tickle are to be admonished.
(Admonition 19.) Differently to be admonished are the obstinate and the
fickle. The former are to be told that they think more of themselves than they
are, and therefore do not acquiesce in the counsels of others: but the latter are
to be given to understand that they undervalue and disregard themselves too
much, and so are turned aside from their own judgment in successive moments of
time. Those are to be told that, unless they esteemed themselves better than the
rest of men, they would by no means set less value on the counsels of all than
on their own deliberation: these are to be told that, if they at all gave heed
to what they are, the breeze of mutability would by no means turn them about
through so many sides of variableness. To the former it is said through Paul, Be
not wise in your own conceits (Rom. xii. 16): but the latter on the other hand
should hear this; Let us not be carried about with every wind of doctrine
(Ephes. iv. 14). Concerning the former it is said through Solomon, They shall eat of
the fruits of their own way, and be filled with their own devices (Pray. i.
31); but concerning the latter it is written by him again, The heart of the
foolish will be unlike (Ibid. xv. 7). For the heart of the wise is always like
itself, because, while it rests in good persuasions, it directs itself constantly in
good performance. But the heart of the foolish is unlike, because, while it
shews itself various through mutability, it never remains what it was. And since
some vices, as out of themselves they generate others, so themselves spring
from others, it ought by all means to be understood that we then better wipe these
away by our reproofs, when we dry them up from the very fountain of their
bitterness. For obstinacy is engendered of pride, and fickleness of levity.
The obstinate are therefore to be admonished, that they acknowledge the
haughtiness of their thoughts, and study to vanquish themselves; lest, while they
scorn to be overcome by the right advice of others outside themselves, they be
held captive within themselves to pride. They are to be admonished to observe
wisely how the Son of Man, Whose will is always one with the Father's, that He
may afford us an example of subduing our own will, says, I seek not mine own
will, but the will of the Father which hath sent me (Joh. v. 30). And, still
more to commend the grace of this virtue, He declared beforehand that He would
retain the same in the last judgment, saying, I can of myself do nothing, but as I
hear I judge (Ibid.). With what conscience, then, can a man disdain to
acquiesce in the will of another, seeing that the Son of God and of Man, when He comes
to shew forth the glory of his power, testifies that of his own self he does
not judge?
But, on the other hand, the fickle are to be admonished to strengthen
their mind with gravity. For they then dry up the germs of mutability in themselves
when they first cut off from their heart the root of levity; since also a
strong fabric is built up when a solid place is first provided whereon to lay the
foundation. Unless, then, levity of mind be previously guarded against,
inconstancy of the thoughts is by no means conquered. From this Paul declared himself
to be free, when he said, Did I use levity? or the things that I purpose do I
purpose according to the flesh, that with me there should be yea and nay ( (2)
Cot. i. 17)? As if to say plainly, For this reason I am moved by no breeze of
mutability, that I yield not to the vice of levity.
CHAPTER XIX.
How those who use food intemperately and those who use it sparingly are to be
admonished.
(Admonition 20.) Differently to be admonished are the gluttonous and the
abstinent. For superfluity of speech, levity of conduct, and lechery accompany
the former; but the latter often the sin of impatience, and often that of
pride. For were it not the case that immoderate loquacity carries away the
gluttonous, that rich man who is said to have fared sumptuously every day would not burn
more sorely than elsewhere in his tongue, saying, Father Abraham, have mercy
on me, and send Lazarus, that he may dip the tip of his finger in water, and
cool my tongue; for I am tormented in this flame (Luke xvi. 24). By these words it
is surely shewn that in his daily feasting he had frequently sinned by his
tongue, seeing that, while burning all over, he demanded to be cooled especially
in his tongue. Again, that levity of conduct follows closely upon gluttony
sacred authority testifies, when it says, The people sat down to eat and drink, and
rose up to play (Exod. xxxii. 6). For the most part also edacity leads us even
to lechery, because, when the belly is distended by repletion, the stings of
lust are excited. Whence also to the cunning foe, who opened the sense of the
first man by lust for the apple, but bound it in a noose of sin, it is said by the
divine voice, On breast and belly shalt thou creep (Gen. iii. 14); as if it
were plainly said to him, In thought and in maw thou shalt have dominion over
human hearts. That lechery follows upon gluttony the prophet testifies, denouncing
hidden things while he speaks of open ones, when he says, The chief of the
cooks broke down the walls of Jerusalem (Jer. xxxix. 9; 2 Kings xxv. 10)(5). For
the chief of the cooks is the belly, to which the cooks pay observance with
great care, that it may itself be delectably filled with viands. But the walls of
Jerusalem are the virtues of the soul, elevated to a longing for supernal peace.
The chief of the cooks, therefore, throws down the walls of Jerusalem,
because, when the belly is distended with gluttony, the virtues of the soul are
destroyed through lechery.
On the other hand, were it not that impatience commonly shakes the
abstinent out of the bosom of tranquillity, Peter would by no means, when saying,
Supply in your faith virtue, and in your virtue knowledge, and in your knowledge
abstinence (2 Pet. i. 5), have straightway vigilantly added, And in your
abstinence patience. For he foresaw that the patience which he admonished them to have
would be wanting to the abstinent. Again, were it not that the sin of pride
sometimes pierces through the cogitations of the abstinent, Paul would by no means
have said, Let not him that eateth not judge him that earth (Rom. xiv. 3). And
again, speaking to others, while glancing at the maxims of such as gloried in
the virtue of abstinence, he added, Which things have indeed a show of wisdom
in superstition and humility, and for not sparing of the body, not in any honour
for the satisfying of the flesh (Coloss. ii. 25). Here it is to be noted that
the excellent preacher, in his argument, joins a show of humility to
superstition, because, when the flesh is worn more than needs by abstinence, humility
is displayed outwardly, but on account of this very humility there is grievous
pride within. And unless the mind were sometimes puffed up by the virtue of
abstinence, the arrogant Pharisee would by no means have studiously numbered this
among his great merits, saying, I fast twice in the week (Luke xviii. 12).
Thus the gluttonous are to be admonished, that in giving themselves to the
enjoyment of dainties they pierce not themselves through with the sword of
lechery; and that they perceive how great loquacity, how great levity of mind, lie
in wait for them through eating; lest, while they softly serve the belly, they
become cruelly bound in the nooses of vice. For by so much the further do we
go back from our second parent as by immoderate indulgence, when the hand is
stretched out for food, we renew the fall of our first parent. But, on the other
hand, the abstinent are to be admonished ever anxiously to look out, lest, while
they fly the vice of gluttony, still worse vices be engendered as it were of
virtue lest, while they macerate the flesh, their spirit break out into
impatience; and so there be no virtue in the vanquishing of the flesh, the spirit being
overcome by anger. Sometimes, moreover, while the mind of the abstinent keeps
anger down, it is corrupted, as it were by a foreign joy coming in, and loses
all the good of abstinence in that it fails to guard itself from spiritual
vices. Hence it is rightly said through the prophet, In the days of your fasts are
found your wills (Isai. lviii. 3, lxx.). And shortly after, Ye fast for debates
and strifes, and ye smile with the fists (Ibid.). For the will pertains to
delight, the fist to anger. In vain, then, is the body worn by abstinence, if the
mind, abandoned to disorderly emotions, is dissipated by vices. And again, they
are to be admonished that, while they keep up their abstinence without
abatement, they suppose not this to be of eminent virtue before the hidden judge; lest,
if it be perchance supposed to be of great merit, the heart be lifted up to
haughtiness. For hence it is said through the prophet, Is it such a fast that I
have chosen! But break thy bread to the hungry, and bring the needy and the
wanderers into thine house (Ibid. 5).
In this matter it is to be considered how small the virtue of abstinence
is accounted, seeing that it is not commended but for other virtues. Hence Joel
says, Sanctify a fast. For indeed to sanctify a fast is to shew abstinence of
the flesh to be worthy of God by other good things being added to it. The
abstinent are to be admonished that they then offer to God an abstinence that pleases
Him, when they bestow on the indigent the nourishment which they withhold from
themselves. For we should wisely attend to what is blamed by the Lord through
the prophet, saying, When ye fasted and mourned in the fifth and seventh month
far these seventy years, did ye at all first a last unto Me? And when ye did
eat and drink, did ye not eat for yourselves, and drink for yourselves (Zach.
vii. 5 seq.)? For a man fasts not to God but to himself, if what he withholds from
his belly. for a time he gives not to the needy, but keeps to be offered
afterwards to his belly.
Wherefore, lest either gluttonous appetite throw the one sort off their
guard, or the afflicted flesh trip up the other by elation, let the former hear
this from the month of the Truth, And take heed to yourselves, lest at any time
your hearts be overcharged in surfeiting and drunkenness and cares of this
world (Luke xxi. 34). And in the same place there is added a profitable fear; And
so that day come upon you unawares. For as a snare shall it come on all them
that dwell an the face of the whole earth (Ibid. 35). Let the latter hear, Not
that which goeth into the mouth defileth a man; but that which cometh out of the
mouth, this defileth a man (Matth. xv. II). Let the former hear, Meat for the
belly, and the belly far meats; but God shall destroy both it and them (I Cor.
vi. 13). And again, Not in rioting and drunkenness (Rom. xiii. 13). And again,
Meat commendeth us not to God (I Cor. viii. 8). Let the latter hear, To the pure
all things are pure: but unto them that am defiled and unbelieving is nothing
pure (Tit. i. 15). Let the former hear, Whose God is their belly, and whose
glory is in their own confusion (Philip. iii. 19). Let the latter hear, Saute shall
depart from the faith; and a little after, Forbidding to marry, and commanding
to abstain frown meats, which God hath treated to be received with
thanksgiving of them which believe and know the truth (1 Tim. iv. 1, 3). Let those hear,
It is good neither to eat flesh nor to drink wine, nor anything whereby thy
brother stumbleth (Rom. xiv. 21). Let these hear, Use a little wine far thy
stomach's sake and thine often infirmities (I Tim. v. 23). Thus both the former may
learn not to desire inordinately the food of the flesh, and the latter not dare
to condemn the creature of God, which they lust not after.
CHAPTER XX.
How to be admonished are those who give away what is their own, and those who
seize what belongs to others.
(Admonition 21.) Differently to be admonished are those who already give
compassionately of their own, and those who still would fain seize even what
belongs to others. For those who already give compassionately of their own are to
be admonished not to lift themselves up in swelling thought above those to whom
they impart earthly things; not to esteem themselves better than others
because they see others to be supported by them. For the lord of an earthly
household, in distributing the ranks and ministries of his servants, appoints some to
rule, but some to be ruled by others. Those he orders to supply to the rest what
is necessary, these to take what they receive from others. And yet it is for
the most part those that rule who offend, while those that are ruled remain in
favour with the good man of the house. Those who are dispensers incur wrath;
those who subsist by the dispensation of others continue without offence. Those,
then, who already give compassionately of the things which they possess are to be
admonished to acknowledge themselves to be placed by the heavenly Lord as
dispensers of temporal supplies, and to, impart the same all the more humbly from
their understanding that the things which they dispense are not their own. And,
when they consider that they are appointed for the service of those to whom
they impart what they have received, by no means let vain glory elate their minds,
but let fear depress them. Whence also it is needful for them to take anxious
thought test they distribute what has been committed to them unworthily; lest
they bestow something on those on whom they ought to have spent nothing, or
nothing on those on whom they ought to have spent something, or much on those on
whom they ought to have spent little, or little on those on whom they ought to
have spent much; lest by precipitancy they scatter unprofitably what they give;
lest by tardiness they mischievously torment petitioners; lest the thought of
receiving a favour in return creep in; lest craving for transitory praise
extinguish the light of giving; lest accompanying moroseness beset an offered gift;
lest in case of a gift that has been well offered the mind be exhilarated more
than is fit; lest, when they have fulfilled all aright, they give something to
themselves, and so at once lose all after they have accomplished all. For, that
they may not attribute to themselves the virtue of their liberality, let them
hear what is written, If any man administer, let him do it as of the ability
which God administereth (I Pet. iv. 11). That they may not rejoice immoderately in
benefits bestowed, let them hear what is written, When ye shall have done all
those things which are commanded you, say, We are unprofitable servants, we have
done that which was our duty to do (Luke xvii. 10). That moroseness may not
spoil liberality, let them hear what is written, God loveth a cheerful giver (2
Cor. ix. 7). That they may not seek transitory praise for a gift bestowed, let
them hear what is written, Let not thy left hand know what thy right hand doeth
(Matth. vi. 3). That is, let not the glory of the present life mix itself with
the largesses of piety, nor let desire of favour know anything of the work of
rectitude. That they may not require a return for benefits bestowed, let them
hear what is written, When thou makest a dinner or a supper, call not thy
friends, nor thy brethren, neither thy kinsmen, nor thy rich neighbours, lest they
also bid thee again, and a recompense be made thee. but, when thou makest a feast,
call the poor, the maimed, the lame, the blind: and thou shalt be blessed; for
they have not whereof to recompense thee (Luke xiv. 12 seq.). That they may
not supply too late what should be supplied at once, let them hear what is
written, Say not unto thy friend, go and come again, and to-morrow I will give, when
thou mightest give immediately (Prov. iii. 28). Lest, under pretence of
liberality, they should scatter what they possess unprofitably, let them hear what is
written, Let thine alms sweat in thine hand. Lest, when much is necessary,
little be given, let them hear what is written, He that soweth sparingly shall reap
also sparingly (2 Cor. ix 6). Lest, when they ought to give little, they give
too much, and afterwards, badly enduring want themselves, break out into
impatience, let them hear what is written, Not that other men be eased, and ye
burdened, but by an quality, that your abundance may supply their want, and that
their abundance may be a supply to your want (Ibid. viii. 13, 14). For, when the
soul of the giver knows not how to endure want, then, in withdrawing much from
himself, he seeks out against himself occasion of impatience. For the mind should
first be prepared for patience, and then either much or all be bestowed in
bounty, lest, the inroad of want being borne with but little equanimity, both the
reward of previous bounty be lost, and subsequent murmuring bring worse ruin on
the soul. Lest they should give nothing at all to those on whom they ought to
bestow something, let them hear what is written, Give to every man that asketh
of thee (Luke vi. 30). Lest they should give something, however little to those
on whom they ought to bestow nothing at all, let them hear what is written.
Give to the good man, and receive not a sinner: do well to him that is lowly, and
give not to the ungodly (Ecclus. xii. 4). And again, Set out thy bread and
wine on the burial of the just, but eat and drink not thereof with sinners (Tobit
iv. 17).
For he gives his bread and wine to sin-nets who gives assistance to the
wicked for that they are wicked. For which cause also some of the rich of this
world nourish players with profuse bounties, while the poor of Christ are
tormented with hunger. He, however, who gives his bread to one that is indigent,
though he be a sinner, not because he is a sinner, but because he is a man, does not
in truth nourish a sinner, but a poor righteous man, because what he loves in
him is not his sin, but his nature. Those who already distribute
compassionately what they possess are to be admonished also that they study to keep careful
guard, lest, when they redeem by alms the sins they have committed, they commit
others which will still require redemption; lest they suppose the righteousness
of God to be saleable, thinking that if they take care to give money for their
sins, they can sin with impunity. For, The soul is more than meat, and the
body than raiment (Matth. vi. 25; Luke xii. 23). He, therefore, who bestows meat
or raiment on the poor, and yet is polluted by iniquity of soul or body, has
offered the lesser thing to righteousness, and the greater thing to sin; for he
has given his possessions to God, and himself to the devil.
But, on the other hand, those who still would fain seize what belongs to
others are to be admonished to give anxious heed to what the Lord says when He
comes to judgment. For He says, I was an hungered, and ye gave Me no meat: I was
thirsty, and ye gave Me no drink: I was a stranger, and ye took Me not in:
naked, and ye clothed Me not; sick, and in prison, and ye visited Me not (Matth.
xxv. 42, 43). And these he previously addresses saying, Depart from Me, ye
cursed, into eternal fire, which is prepared for the devil and his angels (Ibid.
41). Lo, they are in no wise told that they have committed robberies or any other
acts of violence, and yet they are given over to the eternal fires of Gehenna.
Hence, then, it is to be gathered with how great damnation those will be
visited who seize what is not their own, if those who have indiscreetly kept their
own are smitten with so great punishment. Let them consider in what guilt the
seizing of goods must bind them, if not parting with them subjects to such a
penalty. Let them consider what injustice inflicted must deserve, if kindness not
bestowed is worthy of so great a chastisement.
When they are intent on seizing what is not their own, let them hear what
is written, Woe to him that increaseth that which is not his ! How long doth he
heap up against himself thick clay (Hob. it. 6)? For, indeed, for a covetous
man to heap up against him thick clay is to pile up earthly gains into a load of
sin. When they desire to enlarge greatly the spaces of their habitation, let
them hear what is written, Woe unto you that join house to house and lay field
to field, even till there be no place left. What, will ye dwell alone in the
midst of the earth (Isai. v. 8)? As if to say plainly, How far do ye stretch
yourselves, ye that cannot bear to have comrades in a common world? Those that are
joined to you ye keep down, and ever find some against whom ye may have power to
stretch yourselves. When they are intent on increasing money, let them hear
what is written, The covetous man is not filled with money; and he that loveth
riches shall not reap fruit thereof (Eccles. v. 9). For indeed he would reap
fruit of them, were he minded, not loving them, to disperse them well. But whoso in
his affection for them retains them, shall surely leave them behind him here
without fruit. When they burn to be filled at once with all manner of wealth,
let them hear what is written, He that maketh haste to be rich shall not be
innocent (Pray. xxviii. 20): for certainly he who goes about to increase wealth is
negligent in avoiding sin; and, being caught after the manner of birds, while
looking greedily at the bait of earthly things, he is not aware in what a noose
of sin he is being strangled, When they desire any gains of the present world,
and are ignorant of the losses they will suffer in the world to come, let them
hear what is written, An inheritance to which haste is made in the beginning in
the last end shall lack blessing (Pray. xx. 21). For indeed we derive our
beginning from this life, that we may come in the end to the lot of blessing. They,
therefore, that make haste to an inheritance in the beginning cut off from
themselves the lot of blessing in the end; since, while they crave to be increased
in goods here through the iniquity of avarice, they become disinherited there
of their eternal patrimony. When they either solicit very much, or succeed in
obtaining all that they have solicited, let them hear what is written. What is a
man profited, if he should gain the whole world, but lose his own soul (Matth.
xvi. 26)? As if the Truth said plainly, What is a man profited, though he
gather together all that is outside himself, if this very thing only which is
himself he damns? But for the most part the covetousness of spoilers is the sooner
corrected, if it be shewn by the words of such as admonish them how fleeting is
the present life; if mention be made of those who have long endeavoured to grow
rich in this world, and yet have been unable to remain long among their
acquired riches; from whom hasty death has taken away suddenly and all at once
whatever, neither all at once nor suddenly, they have gathered together; who have not
only left here what they had seized, but have carried with them to the judgment
arraignments for seizure. Let them, therefore, be told of examples of such as
these, whom they would, doubtless, even themselves, in words condemn; so that,
when after their words they come back to their own heart, they may blush at any
rate to imitate those whom they judge.
CHAPTER XXI.
How those are to be admonished who desire not the things of others, but keep
their own; and those who give of their own, yet seize on those of others.
(Admonition 22.) Differently to be admonished are those who neither desire
what belongs to others nor bestow what is their own, and those who give of
what they have, and yet desist not from seizing on what belongs to others. Those
who neither desire what belongs to others nor bestow what is their own are to be
admonished to consider carefully that the earth out of which they are taken is
common to all men, and therefore brings forth nourishment for all in common.
Vainly, then, do those suppose themselves innocent, who claim to their own
private use the common gift of God; those who, in not imparting what they have
received, walk in the midst of the slaughter of their neighbours; since they almost
daily slay so many persons as there are dying poor whose subsidies they keep
close in their own possession. For, when we administer necessaries of any kind to
the indigent, we do not bestow our own, but render them what is theirs; we
rather pay a debt of justice than accomplish works of mercy. Whence also the Truth
himself, when speaking of the caution required in shelving mercy, says, Take
heed that ye do not your justice before men (Matth. vi. 1). The Psalmist also,
in agreement with this sentence, says, He hath dispersed, he hath given ta the
poor, his justice endureth for ever (Ps. cxii. 9).
For, having first mentioned bounty bestowed upon the poor, he would not
call this mercy, but rather justice: for it is surely just that whosoever receive
what is given by a common lord should use it in common. l Hence also Solomon
says, Whoso is just will give and will not spare (Pray. xxi. 26). They are to
be admonished also anxiously to take note how of the fig-tree that had no fruit
the rigorous husbandman complains that it even cumbers the ground.
For a fig-tree without fruit cumbers the ground, when the soul of the
niggardly keeps unprofitably what might have benefited many. A fig-tree without
fruit cumbers the ground, when the fool keeps barren under the shade of sloth a
place which another might have cultivated under the sun of good works.
But these are wont sometimes to say, We use what has been granted us; we
do not seek what belongs to others; and, if we do nothing worthy of the reward
of mercy, we still commit no wrong. So they think, because in truth they close
the ear of their heart to the words which are from heaven. For the rich man in
the Gospel who was clothed in purple and fine linen, and feasted sumptuously
every day, is not said to have seized what belonged to others, but to have used
what was his own unfruitfully; and avenging hell received him after this life,
not because he did anything unlawful but because by immoderate indulgence he gave
up his whole self to what was lawful.
The niggardly are to be admonished to take notice that they do God, in the
first place, this wrong; that to Him Who gives them all they render in return
no sacrifice of mercy. For hence the Psalmist says. He will not give his
propitiation to God, nor the price of the redemption of his soul (Psal. xlviii.
9(6)). For to give the price of redemption is to return good deeds for preventing
grace. Hence John cries aloud saying, Now the axe is laid unto the raft of the
tree. Every tree which bringeth not forth good fruit shall be hewn dawn and cast
into the fire (Luke iii. 9). Let those, therefore, who esteem themselves
guiltless because they do not seize on what belongs to others look forward to the
stroke of the axe that is nigh at hand, and lay aside the torpor of improvident
security, lest, while they neglect to bear the fruit of good deeds, they be cut
off from the present life utterly, as it were from the greenness of the root.
But, on the other hand, those who both give what they have and desist not
from seizing on what belongs to others are to be admonished not to desire to
appear exceeding munificent, and so be made worse from the outward show of good.
For these, giving what is their own without discretion, not only, as we have
said above, fall into the murmuring of impatience, but, when want urges them, are
swept along even to avarice. What, then, is more wretched than the mind of
those in whom avarice is born of bountifulness, and a crop of sins is sown as it
were from virtue? First, then, they are to be admonished to learn how to keep
what is theirs reasonably, and then in the end not to go about getting what is
another's. For, if the root of the fault is not burnt out in the profusion
itself, the thorn of avarice, exuberant through the branches, is never dried up. So
then, cause for seizing is withdrawn, if the right of possession be first
adjusted well. But then, further, let those who are admonished be told how to give
mercifully what they have, when they have learnt not to confound the good of
mercy by throwing into it the wickedness of robbery. For they violently exact what
they mercifully bestow. For it is one thing to shew mercy on account of our
sins; another thing to sin on account of shewing mercy; which can no longer indeed
be called mercy, since it cannot grow into sweet fruit, being embittered by
the poison of its pestiferous root. For hence it is that the Lord through the
prophet rejects even sacrifices themselves, saying, I the lord love judgment, and
I hate robbery in a whole burnt offering (Isai. lxi. 8). Hence again He has
said, The sacrifices of the ungodly are abominable, which are offered of
wickedness (Pray. xxi. 28). Such persons also often withdraw from the indigent what they
give to God.
But the Lord shews with what strong censure he disowns them, saying
through a certain wise man, Whoso offereth a sacrifice of the substance of the poor
doeth as one that killeth the son before the father's eyes (Ecclus. xxxiv. 20).
For what can be more intolerable than the death of a son before his father's
eyes? Wherefore it is shewn with what great wrath this kind of sacrifice is
beheld, in that it is compared to the grief of a bereaved father. And yet for the
most part people weigh well how much they give; but how much they seize they
neglect to consider. They count, as it were, their wage, but refuse to consider
their defaults. Let them hear therefore what is written, He that hath gathered
wages hath put them into a bag with holes (Hagg. i. 6). For indeed money put into
a bag with holes is seen when it is put in, but when it is lost it is not seen.
Those, then, who have an eye to how much they bestow, but consider not how
much they seize, put their wages into a bag with holes, because in truth they look
to them when they gather them together in hope of being secure, but lose them
without looking.
CHAPTER XXII.
How those that are at variance and those that are at peace are to be
admonished.
(Admonition 23.) Differently to be admonished are those that are at
variance and those that are at peace. For those that are at variance are to be
admonished to know most certainly that, in whatever virtues they may abound, they can
by no means become spiritual if they neglect becoming united to their
neighbours by concord. For it is written, But the fruit of the Spirit is love, joy,
peace (Gal. v. 22). He then that has no care to keep peace refuses to bear the
fruit of the Spirit. Hence Paul says, Whereas there is among you envying and
strife, are ye not carnal Hence again he says also, Follow peace with all men and
holiness, without which no man shall see the Lord (Heb. xii. 14). Hence again he
admonishes, saying, Endeavouring to keep the unity of the Spirit in the bond of
peace: there is one body and one Spirit, even as ye are called in one hope of
your calling (Eph. iv. 3, 4). The one hope of our calling, therefore, is never
reached, if we run not to it with a mind at one with our neighbours. But it is
often the case that some, by being proud of some gifts that they especially
partake of, lose the greater gift of concord; as it may be if one who subdues the
flesh more than others by bridling of his appetite should scorn to be in
concord with those whom he surpasses in abstinence. But whoso separates abstinence
from concord, let him consider the admonition of the Psalmist, Praise him with
timbrel and chorus (Ps. cl. 4). For in the timbrel a dry and beaten skin
resounds, but in the chorus voices are associated in concord. Whosoever then afflicts
his body, but forsakes concord, praises God indeed with timbrel, but praises
Him not with chorus. Often, however, when superior knowledge lifts up some, it
disjoins them from the society of other men; and it is as though the more wise
they are, the less wise are they as to the virtue of concord. Let these therefore
hear what the Truth in person says, Have salt in yourselves, and have peace
one with another (Mark ix. 50). For indeed salt without peace is not a gift of
virtue, but an argument for condemnation. For the better any man is in wisdom,
the worse is his delinquency, and he will deserve punishment inexcusably for this
very reason, that, if he had been so minded, he might in his prudence have
avoided sin. To such it is rightly said through James, But if ye have bitter
envying and strife in your hearts, glory not, and lie not against the truth. This
wisdom descendeth not from above, but is earthly, sensual, devilish. But the
wisdom that is from above is first pure, then peaceable (James iii. 14, 15, 17).
Pure, that is to say, because its ideas are chaste; and also peaceable, because
it in no wise through elation disjoins itself from the society of neighbours.
Those who are at variance are to be admonished to take note that they offer to
God no sacrifice of good work so long as they are not in charity with their
neighbours. For it is written, If thou bring thy gift to the altar, and there
rememberest that thy brother hath ought against thee, leave there thy gift before the
altar, and go thy way first to be reconciled to thy brother, and then thou
shall come and offer they gift (Matth. v. 23, 24). Now by this precept we are led
to consider how intolerable the guilt of men is shewn to be when their
sacrifice is rejected. For, whereas all evils are washed away when followed by what is
good, let us consider now great must be the evils of discord, seeing that,
unless they are utterly extinguished, they allow no good to follow. Those who are
at variance are to be admonished that, if they incline not their ears to
heavenly commands, they should open the eyes of the mind to consider the ways of
creatures of the lowest order; how that often birds of one and the same kind desert
not one another in their social flight, and that brute beasts feed in herds
together. Thus, if we observe wisely, irrational nature shews by agreeing together
how great evil rational nature commits by disagreement; when the latter has
lost by the exercise of reason what the former by natural instinct keeps. But, on
the other hand, those that are at peace are to be admonished to take heed
lest, while they love more than they need do the peace which they enjoy, they have
no longing to reach that which is perpetual. For commonly tranquil
circumstances more sorely try the bent of minds, so that, in proportion as the things which
occupy them are not troublesome, the things which invite them come to appear
less lovely, and the more present things delight, eternal things are the less
sought after. Whence also the Truth speaking in person, when He would distinguish
earthly from supernal peace, and provoke His disciples from that which now is
to that which is to come, said, Peace I leave with you, My peace I give unto
you (Job. xiv. 27). That is, I leave a transitory, I give a lasting peace. If
then the heart is fixed on that which is left, that which is to be given is never
reached. Present peace, therefore, is to be held as something to be both loved
and thought little of, lest, if it is loved immoderately, the mind of him that
loves be taken in a fault. Whence also those who are at peace should be
admonished lest, while too desirous of human peace, they fail entirely to reprove
men's evil ways, and, in consenting to the froward, disjoin themselves from the
peace of their Maker; lest, while they dread human quarrels without, they be
smitten by breach of their inward covenant. For what is transitory peace but a
certain footprint of peace eternal? What, then, can be more mad than to love
footprints impressed on dust, but not to love him by whom they have been impressed?
Hence David, when he would bind himself entirely to the covenants of inward
peace, testifies that he held no agreement with the wicked, saying, Did not I hate
them, O God, that hate thee, and waste away an account of thine enemies? I
hated them with perfect hatred, they became enemies to me (Ps. cxxxviii. 21,
22(7)). For to hate God's enemies with perfect hatred is both to love what they were
made, and to chide what they do, to be severe on the manners of the wicked, and
to profit their life. It is therefore to be well weighed, when there is rest
from chiding, how culpably peace is kept with the worst of men, if so great a
prophet offered this as a sacrifice to God, that he excited the enmities of the
wicked against himself for the Lord. Hence it is that the tribe of Levi, when
they took their swords and passed through the midst of the camp because they
would not spare the sinners who were to be smitten, are said to have consecrated
their hands to God (Exod. xxxii. 27, seq.). Hence Phinehas, spurning the favour
of his fellow-countrymen when they sinned, smote those who came together with
the Midianites, and in his wrath appeased the wrath of God (Num. xxv. 9). Hence
in person the Truth says, Think not that I am came to send peace an earth: I
came not to send peace, but a sword (Matth. x. 34). For, when we are unwarily
joined in friendship with the wicked, we are bound in their sins. Whence
Jehoshaphat, who is extolled by so many praises of his previous life, is rebuked for his
friendship with King Ahab as though nigh unto destruction, when it is said to
him through the prophet, Than givest help to the ungodly, and art joined in
friendship with them that hate the Lord; and therefore thou didst deserve indeed
the wrath of the Lord: nevertheless there are good works found in thee, in that
thou hast taken away the graves out of the land of Judah (2 Chron. xix. 2, 3).
For our life is already at variance with Him who is supremely righteous by the
very fact of agreement in the friendships of the froward. Those who are at
peace are to be admonished not to be afraid of disturbing their temporal peace, if
they break forth into words of rebuke. And again they are to be admonished to
keep inwardly with undiminished love the same peace which in their external
relations they disturb by their reproving voice. Both which things David declares
that he had prudently observed, saying, With them that hate peace I was
peaceable; when I spake unto them, they fought against me without a cause (Ps. cxix.
7(8) ). Lo, when he spoke, he was fought against; and yet, when fought against,
he was peaceable, because he neither ceased to reprove those that were mad
against him, nor forgot to love those who were reproved. Hence also Paul says, If
it be possible, as much as lieth in you, have peace with all men (Rom. xii. 18).
For, being about to exhort his disciples to have peace with all, he said
first, If it be possible, and added, As much as heth in you. For indeed it was
difficult for them, if they rebuked evil deeds, to be able to have peace with all.
But, when temporal peace is disturbed in the hearts of bad men through our
rebuke, it is necessary that it should be kept inviolate in our own heart. Rightly,
therefore, says he, As much as lieth in you. It is indeed as though he said,
Since peace stands in the consent of two parties, if it is driven out by those
who are reproved, let it nevertheless be retained undiminished in the mind of you
who reprove. Whence the same apostle again admonishes his disciples, saying,
If any man obey not our word, note that man by this epistle; and have no company
with him, that he may be confounded (2 Thess. iii. 14). And straightway he
added, Yet count him not as an enemy, but reprove him as a brother (Ibid. 15). As
if to say, Break ye outward peace with him, but guard in your heart's core
internal peace concerning him; that your discord with him may so smite the mind of
the sinner that peace depart not from your hearts even though denied to him.
CHAPTER XXIII.
How sowers of strifes and peacemakers are to be admonished.
(Admonition 24.) Differently to be admonished are sowers of strifes and
peacemakers. For sowers of strifes are to be admonished to perceive whose
followers they are. For of the apostate angel it is written, when tares had been sown
among the good crop, An enemy hath done this (Matth. xiii. 28). Of a member of
him also it is said through Solomon, An apostate person, an unprofitable man,
walketh with a perverse mouth, he winketh with his eyes, he beateth with his
foot, he speaketh with his finger, with froward heart he deviseth mischief
continually, he soweth strifes (Prov. vi. 12--14). Lo, him whom he would speak of as a
sower of strifes he first named an apostate; since, unless after the manner of
the proud angel he first fell away inwardly by the alienation of his mind from
the face of his Maker, he would not afterwards come to sow strifes outwardly.
He is rightly described too as winking with his eyes, speaking with his finger,
beating with his foot. For it is inward watch that keeps the members outwardly
in orderly control. He, then, who has lost stability of mind falls off
outwardly into inconstancy of movement, and by his exterior mobility shews that he is
stayed on no root within. Let sowers of strifes hear what is written, Blessed
are the peacemakers, far they shall be called the children of God (Matth. v. 9).
And on the other hand let them gather that, if they who make peace are called
the children of God, without doubt those who confound it are the children of
Satan. Moreover, all who are separated by discord from the greenness of
loving-kindness are dried up: and, though they bring forth in their actions fruits of
well-doing, yet there are in truth no fruits, because they spring not from the
unity of charity. Hence, therefore, let sowers of strifes consider how manifoldly
they sin; in that, while they perpetrate one iniquity, they eradicate at the
same time all virtues from human hearts. For in one evil they work innumerable
evils, since, in sowing discord, they extinguish charity, which is in truth the
mother of all virtues. But, since nothing is more precious with God than the
virtue of loving-kindness, nothing is more acceptable to the devil than the
extinction of charity. Whosoever, then, by sowing of strifes destroy the
loving-kindness of neighbours, serve God's enemy as his familiar friend; because by taking
away from them this, by the loss of which he fell, they have cut off from them
the road whereby to rise.
But, on the other hand, the peacemakers are to be admonished that they
detract not from the efficacy of so great an undertaking through not knowing
between whom they ought to establish peace. For, as there is much harm if unity be
wanting to the good, so there is exceeding harm if it be not wanting to the bad.
If, then, the iniquity of the perverse is united in peace, assuredly there is
an accession of strength to their evil doings, since the more they agree among
themselves in wickedness, by so much the more stoutly do they dash themselves
against the good to afflict them. For hence it is that against the preachers of
that vessel of damnation, to wit, Antichrist, is it said by the divine voice to
the blessed Job, The members of his flesh stick close to each other (Job xli.
14(9)). Hence, under the figure of scales, it is said of his satellites, One is
joined to another, and not even a breathing-hole cometh between them (xli.
7(9)). For, indeed, his followers, from being divided by no opposition of discord
among themselves. are by so much the more strongly banded together in the
slaughter of the good. He then who associates the iniquitous together in peace
supplies strength to iniquity, since they worse press down the good, whom they
persecute unanimously. Whence the excellent preacher, being overtaken by violent
persecution from Pharisees and Sadducees, endeavoured to divide among themselves
those whom he saw to be violently united against himself, when he cried out,
saying, Men, brethren, I am a Pharisee, the son of Pharisees; of the hope and
resurrection of the dead I am called in question (Acts xxiii. 6). And, whereas the
Sadducees denied the hope and resurrection of the dead, which the Pharisees ill
accordance with the precepts of Holy Writ believed, a dissension was caused in
the unanimity of the persecutors; and Paul escaped unhurt from the divided
crowd, which before, when united, had savagely assailed him. Those, therefore, who
are occupied with the desire of making peace, are to be admonished that they
ought first to infuse a love of internal peace into the minds of the froward, to
the end that external peace may afterwards avail to do them good; so that,
while their heart is hanging on cognition of the former, they be by no means
hurried into wickedness from perception of the latter; and, while they see before
them that which is supernal, they in no way turn that which is earthly to serve
to their own detriment. But, if any perverse persons are such that they could
not harm the good, even though they lusted to do so, between them, indeed,
earthly peace ought to be established, even before they have risen to the knowledge
of supernal peace; even so that they, whom the wickedness of their impiety
exasperates against the loving-kindness of God, may at any rate be softened out of
love of their neighbour, and, as it were from a neighbouring position, may pass
to a better one, and so rise to what is as yet far from them, the peace of
their Maker.
CHAPTER XXIV.
How the rude in sacred learning, and those who are learned but not humble, are
to be admonished.
(Admonition 25.) DifferentIy to be admonished are those who do not
understand aright the words of the sacred Law, and those who understand them indeed
aright, but speak them not humbly. For those who understand not aright the words
of sacred Law are to be admonished to consider that they turn for themselves a
most wholesome drought of wine into a cup of poison, and with a medicinal knife
inflict on themselves a mortal wound, when they destroy in themselves what was
sound by that whereby they ought, to their health, to have cut away what was
diseased. They are to be admonished to consider that Holy Scripture is set as a
kind of lantern for us in the night of the present life, the words whereof when
they understand not aright, from light they get darkness. But in truth a
perverse bent of mind would not hurry them to understand it wrong, did not pride
first puff them up. For, while they think themselves wise beyond all others, they
scorn to follow others to things better understood: and, in order to extort
for themselves from the unskilful multitude a name for knowledge, they strive
mightily both to upset the right views of others and to confirm their own perverse
views. Hence it is well said by the prophet, They have ripped up the women
with child of Gilead, that they might enlarge their border (Amos i. 13). For
Gilead is by interpretation a heap of witness (Gen. xxxi. 47, 48). And, since the
whole congregation of the Church together serves by its confession for a witness
to the truth, not unfitly by Gilead is expressed the Church, which witnesses by
the mouth of all the faithful whatever is true concerning God. Moreover, souls
are called with child, when of divine love they conceive an understanding of
the Word, so that, if they come to their full time, they may bring forth their
conceived intelligence in the shewing forth of work. Further, to enlarge their
border is to extend abroad the fame of their reputation. They have therefore
ripped up the women with child of Gilead that they might enlarge their border,
because heretics assuredly slay by their perverse preaching the souls of the
faithful who had already conceived something of the understanding of the truth, and
extend for themselves a name for knowledge. The hearts of little ones, already
big with conception of the word, they cleave with the sword of error, and, as
it were, make for themselves a reputation as teachers. When, therefore, we
endeavour to instruct these not to think perversely, it is necessary that we first
admonish them to shun vain glory. For, if the root of elation is cut off, the
branches of wrong assertion are consequently dried up. They are also to be
admonished to take heed, lest, by gendering errors and discords, they turn into a
sacrifice to Satan the very same law of God which has been given for hindering
sacrifices to Satan. Whence the Lord complains through the prophet, saying, I gave
them corn, wine, and oil, and I multiplied to them silver and gold, which
they sacrificed to Baal (Hos. ii. 8). For indeed we receive corn from the Lord,
when, in the more obscure sayings, the husk of the letter being drawn off, we
perceive in the marrow of the Spirit the inward meaning of the Law. The Lord
proffers us His wine, when He inebriates us with the lofty preaching of His
Scripture. His oil also He gives us, when, by plainer precepts, He orders our life
gently and smoothly. He multiplies silver, when He supplies to us eloquent
utterances, full of the light of truth. With gold also He enriches us, when He
irradiates our heart with an understanding of the supreme splendour. All which things
heretics offer to Baal, because they pervert them in the hearts of their hearers
by a corrupt understanding of them all. And of the corn of God, of His wine
and oil, and likewise of His silver and gold, they offer a sacrifice to Satan,
because they turn aside the words of peace to promote the error of discord.
Wherefore they are to be admonished to consider that, when of their perverse mind
they make discord out of the precepts of peace, they themselves, in the just
judgment of God, die from the words of life.
But, on the other hand, those who understand indeed aright the words of
the Law, but speak them not humbly, are to be admonished that, in divine
discourses, before they put them forth to others, they should examine themselves; lest,
in following up the deeds of others, they leave themselves behind; and lest,
while thinking rightly of all the rest of Holy Scripture, this only thing they
attend not to, what is said in it against the proud. For he is indeed a poor and
unskilful physician, who would fain heal another's disease while ignorant of
that from which he himself is suffering. Those, then, who speak not the words of
God humbly should certainly be admonished, that, when they apply medicines to
the sick, they see to the poison of their own infection, lest in healing others
they die themselves. They ought to be admonished to take heed, lest their
manner of saying things be at variance with the excellence of what is said, and
lest they preach one thing in their speaking and another in their outward bearing.
Let them hear, therefore, what is written, If any man speak let him speak as
the oracles of God (I Pet. iv. 11). If then the words they utter are not of the
things that are their own, why are they puffed up on account of them as though
they were their own? Let them hear what is written, As of God, in the sight of
God, speak we in Christ (2 Cor. ii. 17) For he speaks of God in the sight of
God, who both understands that he has received the word of preaching from God,
and also seeks through it to please God, not men. Let them hear what is written,
Every one that is proud in heart is an abomination to the Lord (Prov. xvi. 5).
For, surely, when in the Word of God he seeks his own glory, he invades the
right of the giver; and he fears not at all to postpone to his own praise Him
from whom he has received the very thing that is praised. Let them hear what is
said to the preacher through Solomon, Drink water out of thine own cistern, and
running waters of thine own well. Let thy fountains be dispersed abroad, and
divide thy waters in the streets. Have them to thyself alone, and let not
strangers be partakers with thee (Prov. v. 15--17). For indeed the preacher drinks out
of his own cistern, when, returning to his own heart, he first listens himself
to what he has to say. He drinks the running waters of his own well, if he is
watered by his own word. And in the same place it is well added, Let thy
fountains be dispersed abroad, and divide thy watery in the streets. For indeed it is
right that he should himself drink first, and then flow upon others in
preaching. For to disperse fountains abroad is to pour outwardly on others the power of
preaching. Moreover, to divide waters in the streets is to dispense divine
utterances among a great multitude of hearers according to the quality of each.
And, because for the most part the desire of vain glory creeps in when the Word
of God has free course unto the knowledge of many, after it has been said,
Divide thy waters in the streets, it is rightly added, Have them to thyself alone,
and let not strangers be partakers with thee. He here calls malignant spirits
strangers, concerning whom it is said through the prophet in the words of one
that is tempted, Strangers are risen up against me, and strong ones have sought
after my soul (Ps. liii. 5(1)). He says therefore, Both divide thy waters in the
streets, and yet have them to thyself alone; as if he had said more plainly, It
is necessary for thee so to serve outwardly in preaching as not to join
thyself through elation to unclean spirits, lest in the ministry of the divine word
thou admit thine enemies to be partakers with thee. Thus we divide our waters in
the streets, and yet alone possess them, when we both pour out preaching
outwardly far and wide, and yet in no wise court human praises through it.
CHAPTER XXV.
How those are to be admonished who decline the office of preaching out of too
great humility, and those who seize on it with precipitate haste.
(Admonition 26.) Differently to be admonished are those who, though able
to preach worthily, are afraid by reason of excessive humility, and those whom
imperfection or age forbids to preach, and yet precipitancy impells. For those
who, though able to preach with profit, still shrink back through excessive
humility are to be admonished to gather from consideration of a lesser matter bow
faulty they are in a greater one. For, if they were to hide from their indigent
neighbours money which they possessed themselves they would undoubtedly shew
themselves to be promoters of their calamity. Let them perceive, then, in what
guilt those are implicated who, in with-holding the word of preaching from their
sinning brethren, hide away the remedies of life from dying souls. Whence also
a certain wise man says well, Wisdom that is hid, and treasure that is unseen,
what profit is in them both (Ecclus. xx. 32)? Were a famine wasting the people,
and they themselves kept hidden corn, undoubtedly they would be the authors of
death. Let them consider therefore with what punishment they must be visited
who, when souls are perishing from famine of the word, supply not the bread of
grace which they have themselves received. Whence also it is well said through
Solomon, He that hideth corn shall be cursed among the people (Prov. xi. 26).
For to hide corn is to retain with one's self the words of sacred preaching. And
every one that does so is cursed among the people, because through his fault of
silence only he is condemned in the punishment of the many whom he might have
corrected. If persons by no means ignorant of the medicinal art were to see a
sore that required lancing, and yet refused to lance it, certainly by their mere
inactivity they would be guilty of a brother's death. Let them see, then, in
how great guilt they are involved who, knowing the sores of souls, neglect to
cure them by the lancing of words. Whence also it is well said through the
prophet, Cursed is he who keepeth back his sword from blood (Jer. xlviii. re). For to
keep back the sword from blood is to hold back the word of preaching from the
slaying of the carnal life. Of which sword it is said again, And my sword shall
devour flesh (Deut. xxxii. 42).
Let these, therefore, when they keep to themselves the word of preaching,
hear with terror the divine sentences against them, to the end that fear may
expel fear from their hearts. Let them hear how he that would not lay out his
talent lost it, with a sentence of condemnation added (Matth. xxv. 24, &c.). Let
them hear how Paul believed himself to be pure from the blood of his neighbours
in this, that he spared not their vices which required to be smitten, saying, I
take you to record this day, that I am pure from the blood of all men: for l
have not shunned to declare unto you all the counsel of God (Acts xx. 26, 27).
Let them hear how John is admonished by the angelic voice, when it is said, Let
him that heareth say, Come (Rev. xxii. 17); in order doubtless that he into
whose heart the internal voice has found its way may by crying aloud draw others
whither he himself is carried; lest, even though called, he should find the
doors shut, if he approaches Him that calls him empty. Let them hear how Esaias,
because he had held his peace in the ministry of the word when illuminated by
supernal light, blamed himself with a loud cry of penitence, saying Woe unto me
that I have held my peace (Isai. vi. 5). Let them hear how through Solomon the
knowledge of preaching is promised to be multiplied to him who is not held back
by the vice of torpor in that whereto he has already attained. For he says, The
soul which blesseth shall be made fat; and he that inebriates shall be
inebriated also himself (Prey. xi. 25). For he that blesses outwardly by preaching
receives the fatness of inward enlargement; and, while he ceases not to inebriate
the minds of his hearers with the wine of eloquence, he becomes increasingly
inebriated with the drought of a multiplied gift. Let them hear how David offered
this in the way of gift to God, that he did not hide the grace of preaching
which he had received, saying, Lo I will not refrain my lips, O lord, thou
knowest: I have not hid thy righteousness within my heart: I have declared thy truth
and thy salvation (Ps. xxxix. 10, 11 (2) ). Let them hear what is said by the
bridegroom in his colloquy with the bride; Thou that dwellest in the gardens, thy
friends hearken: make me to hear thy voice (Cant. viii. 13). For the Church
dwelleth in the gardens, in that she keeps in a state of inward greenness the
cultivated nurseries of virtues. And that her friends hearken to her voice is,
that all the elect desire the word of her preaching; which voice also the
bridegroom desires to hear, because he pants for her preaching through the souls of his
elect. Let them hear how Moses, when he saw that God was angry with His
people, and commanded swords to be taken for executing vengeance, declared those to
be on God's side who should smite the crimes of the offenders without delay,
saying, If any man is the Lord's, let him join himself to me; put every man his
sword upon his thigh; go in and out from gate to gate through the midst of the
camp, and slay every man his brother and friend and neighbour (Exod. xxxii. 27).
For to put sword upon thigh is to set earnestness in preaching before the
pleasures of the flesh; so that, when any one is earnest to speak holy words, he
must needs have a care to subdue illicit suggestions. But to go from gate to gate
is to run to and fro with rebuke from vice to vice, even to every one by which
death enters in unto the soul. And to pass through the midst of the camp is to
live with such impartiality within the Church that one who reproves the sins
of offenders turns aside to shew favour to none. Whence also it is rightly
added, slay every man his brother and friend and neighbour. He in truth slays
brother and friend and neighbour who, when he finds what is worthy of punishment,
spares not even those whom he loves on the score of relationship from the sword of
his rebuke. If, then, he is said to be God's who is stirred up by the zeal of
divine love to smite vices, he surely denies himself to be God's who refuses to
rebuke the life of the carnal to the utmost of his power.
But, on the other hand, those whom imperfection or age debars from the
office of preaching, and yet precipitancy impells to it, are to be admonished
lest, while rashly arrogating to themselves the burden of so great an office, they
cut off from themselves the way of subsequent improvement; and, while seizing
out of season what they are not equal to, they lose even what they might at some
time in due season have fulfilled; and be shewn to have justly forfeited their
knowledge because of their attempt to display it improperly. They are to be
admonished to consider that young birds, if they try to fly before their wings
are fully formed, are plunged low down from the place whence they fain would have
risen on high. They are to be admonished to consider that, if on new buildings
not yet compacted a weight of timbers be laid, there is built not a
habitation, but a ruin. They are to be admonished to consider that, if women bring forth
their conceived offspring before it is fully formed, they by no means fill
houses, but tombs. For hence it is that the Truth Himself, Who could all at once
have strenghted whom He would, in order to give an example to His followers that
they should not presume to preach while imperfect, after He had fully
instructed His disciples concerning the power of preaching, forthwith added, But tarry
ye in the city until ye be endued with power from on high (Luke xxiv. 49). For
indeed we tarry together in the city, if we restrain ourselves within the
enclosures of our souls from wandering abroad in speech; so that, when we are
perfectly endued with divine power, we may then go out as it were from ourselves
abroad, instructing others also. Hence through a certain wise man it is said, Young
man, speak scarcely in thy cause; and if thou hast been twice asked, let thy
answer have a beginning (Ecclus. xxxii. 10). Hence it is that the same our
Redeemer, though in heaven the Creator, and even a teacher of angels in the
manifestation of His power, would not become a master of men upon earth before His
thirtieth year, in order, to wit, that He might infuse into the precipitate the
force of a most wholesome fear, in that even He Himself, Who could not slip, did
not preach the grace of a perfect life until He was of perfect age. For it is
written, When he was twelve years old, the child Jesus tarried behind in
Jerusalem (Luke ii. 42, 43). And a little afterwards it is further said of Him, when He
was sought by His parents, They found him in the temple, sitting in the midst
of the doctors, hearing them, and asking them questions (Ibid. v. 46). It is
therefore to be weighed with vigilant consideration that, when Jesus at twelve
years of age is spoken of as sitting in the midst of the doctors, He is found,
not teaching, but asking questions. By which example it is plainly shewn that
none who is weak should venture to teach, if that child was willing to be taught
by asking questions, who by the power of His divinity supplied the word of
knowledge to His teachers themselves. But, when it is said by Paul to his disciple,
These things command and teach: let no man despise thy adolescence (1 Tim. iv.
11, 12), we must understand that in the language of Holy Writ youth is
sometimes called adolescence (3). Which thing is the sooner evident, if we adduce the
words of Solomon, who says, Rejoice O young man in thy adolescence (Eccles. xi.
9). For unless he meant the same by both words, he would not call him a young
man whom he was admonishing in his adolescence.
CHAPTER XXVI.
How those are to be admonished with whom everything succeeds according to
their wish, and those with whom nothing does.
(Admonition 27.) Differently to be admonished are those who prosper in
what they desire in temporal matters, and those who covet indeed the things that
are of this world, but yet are wearied with the labour of adversity. For those
who prosper in what they desire in temporal matters are to be admonished, when
all things answer to their wishes, lest, through fixing their heart on what is
given, they neglect to seek the giver; lest they love their pilgrimage instead
of their country; lest they turn the supplies for their journey into hindrances
to their arrival at its end; lest, delighted with the light of the moon by
night, they shrink from beholding the clearness of the sun. They are, therefore, to
be admonished to regard whatever things they attain in this world as
consolations in calamity, but not as the rewards of retribution; but, on the other hand,
to lift their mind against the favours of the world, lest they succumb in the
midst of them with entire delight of the heart. For whosoever in the judgment
of his heart keeps not down the prosperity he enjoys by love of a better life,
turns the favours of this transitory life into an occasion of everlasting death.
For hence it is that under the figure of the Idumaeans, who allowed themselves
to be vanquished by their own prosperity, those who rejoice in the successes
of this world are rebuked, when it is said, They have given my land to
themselves for an inheritance with joy, and with their whole heart and mind (Ezek.
xxxvi. 5). In which words it is to be observed, that they are smitten with severe
rebuke, not merely because they rejoice, but because they rejoice with their
whole heart and mind. Hence Solomon says, The turning away of the simple shall slay
them, and the prosperity of fools shall destroy them (Prov. i. 32). Hence Paul
admonishes, saying, They that buy, as though they possessed not; and they
that use this world, as though they used it not (1 Cor. vii. 30). So may the
things that are supplied to us be of service to us outwardly to such extent only as
not to turn our minds away from desire of supernal delight; and thus the things
that afford us succour in our state of exile may not abate the mourning of our
soul's pilgrimage; and we, who see ourselves to be wretched in our severance
from the things that are eternal, may not rejoice as though we were happy in the
things that are transitory. For hence it is that the Church says by the voice
of the elect, His left hand is under my head, and his right hand shall embrace
me (Cant. ii. 6). The left hand of God, to wit prosperity in the present life,
she has put under her head, in that she presses it down in the intentness of
her highest love. But the right hand of God embraces her, because in her entire
devotion she is encompassed with His eternal blessedness. Hence again, it is
said through Solomon, Length of days is in her right hand, but in her left hand
riches and glory (Pray. iii. 16). In speaking, then, of riches and glory being
placed in her left hand, he shewed after what manner they are to be esteemed.
Hence the Psalmist says, Save me with thy right hand (Ps. cvii. 7(4)). For he says
not, with thy hand, but with thy right hand;' in order, that is, to indicate,
in saying right hand, that it was eternal salvation that he sought. Hence again
it is written, Thy right hand, O Lord, hath dashed in pieces the enemies
(Exod. xv. 6). For the enemies of God, though they prosper in His left hand, are
dashed to pieces with His right; since for the most part the present life elevates
the bad, but the coming of eternal blessedness condemns them.
Those who prosper in this world are to be admonished to consider wisely
how that prosperity in the present life is sometimes given to provoke people to a
better life, but sometimes to condemn them more fully for ever. For hence it
is that to the people of Israel the land of Canaan is promised, that they may be
provoked at some time or other to hope for eternal things. For that rude
nation would not have believed the promises of God afar off, had they not received
also something nigh at hand from Him that promised. In order, therefore, that
they may be the more surely strengthened unto faith in eternal things, they are
drawn on, not only by hope to realities, but also by realities to hope. Which
thing the Psalmist clearly testifies, saying, He gave them the lands of the
heathen, and they took the labours of the peoples in possession, that they might
keep his statutes and seek after his law (Ps. civ. 44(5)). But, when the human
mind follows not God in His bountiful gifts with an answer of good deeds, it is
the more justly condemned from being accounted to have been kindly nurtured. For
hence it is said again by the Psalmist, Thou castedst them down when they were
lifted up (Ps. lxxii. 18(6)). For in truth when the reprobate render not
righteous deeds in return for divine gifts, when they here abandon themselves
entirely and sink themselves in their abundant prosperity, then in that whereby they
profit outwardly they fall from what is inmost. Hence it is that to the rich man
tormented in hell it is said, Thou in thy lifetime receivedst thy good things
(Luke xvi. 25), For on this account, though an evil man, he here received good
things, that there he might receive evil things more fully, because here even
by good things he had not been converted.
But, on the other hand, those who covet indeed the things that are of the
world, but yet are wearied by the labour of adversity, are to be admonished to
consider anxiously with how great favour the Creator and Disposer of all things
watches over those whom He gives not up to their own desires. For a sick man
whom the physician despairs of he allows to take whatever he longs for: but one
of whom it is thought that he can be cured is prohibited from many things that
he desires; and we withdraw money from boys, for whom at the same time, as our
heirs, we reserve our whole patrimony. Let, then, those whom temporal adversity
humiliates take joy from hope of an eternal inheritance, since Divine
Providence would not curb them in order to educate them under the rule of discipline,
unless it designed them to be saved for ever. Those, therefore, who in respect
of the temporal things which they covet, are wearied with the labour of
adversity are to be admonished to consider carefully how for the most part even the
righteous, when temporal power exalts them, are caught by sin as in a snare. For,
as in the former part of this volume we have already said, David, beloved of
God, was more upright when in servitude than when he came to the kingdom (1 Sam.
xxiv. 18). For, when he was a servant, in his love of righteousness he feared
to smite his adversary when taken; but, when he was a king, through the
persuasion of lasciviousness, he put to death by a deceitful plan even a devoted
soldier (2 Sam. xi. 17). Who then can without harm seek wealth, or power, or glory,
if they proved harmful even to him who had them unsought? Who in the midst of
these things shall be saved without the labour of a great contest, if he who had
been prepared for them by the choice of God was disturbed among them by the
intervention of sin? They are to be admonished to consider that Solomon, who
after so great wisdom is described as having fallen even into idolatry, is not said
to have had any adversity in this world before his fall; but the wisdom that
had been granted him entirely left his heart, because not even the least
discipline of tribulation had guarded it.
CHAPTER XXVII.
How the married and the single are to be admonished.
(Admonition 28.) Differently to be admonished are those who are bound in
wedlock and those who are free from the ties of wedlock. For those who are bound
in wedlock are to be admonished that, while they take thought for each other's
good, they study, both of them, so to please their consorts as not to
displease their Maker; that they so conduct the things that are of this world as still
not to omit desiring the things that are of God; that they so rejoice in
present good as still, with earnest solicitude, to tear eternal evil; that they so
sorrow for temporal evils as still to fix their hope with entire comfort on
everlasting good; to the end that, while they know what they are engaged in to be
transitory, but what they desire to be permanent, neither the evils of the world
may break their heart while it is strengthened by the hope of heavenly good,
nor the good things of the present life deceive them, while they are saddened by
the apprehended evils of the judgment to come. Wherefore the mind of married
Christians is both weak and stedfast, in that it cannot fully despise all
temporal things, and yet can join itself in desire to eternal things. Although it lies
low meanwhile in the delights of the flesh, let it grow strong in the
refreshment of supernal hope: and, if it has the things that are of the world for the
service of its journey, let it hope for the things that are of God for the fruit
of its journey s end: nor let it devote itself entirely to what it is engaged
in now, lest it fall utterly from what it ought stedfastly to hope for. Which
thing Paul well expresses briefly, saying, They that have wives as though they
had none, and they that weep as though they wept not, and they that rejoice as
though they rejoiced not (1 Cor. vii. 29, 30). For he has a wife as though he
had none who so enjoys carnal consolation through her as still never to be turned
by love of her to evil deeds from the rectitude of a better aim. He has a wife
as though he had none who, seeing all things to be transitory, endures of
necessity the care of the flesh, but looks forward with longing to the eternal joys
of the spirit. Moreover, to weep as though we wept not is so to lament outward
adversities as still to know how to rejoice in the consolation of eternal
hope. And again, to rejoice as though we rejoiced not is so to take heart from
things below as still never to cease from fear concerning the things above. In the
same place also a little afterwards he aptly adds, For the fashion of this
world passeth away (v. 31); as if he had said plainly, Love not the world
abidingly, since the world which ye love not itself abide. In vain ye fix your
affections on it as though it were continuing, while that which ye love itself is
fleeting. Husbands and wives are to be admonished, that those things wherein they
sometimes displease one another they bear with mutual patience, and by mutual
exhortations remedy. For it is written, Bear ye one another's burdens, and so ye
shall fulfil the law of Christ (Galat. vi. 2). For the law of Christ is Charity;
since it has from Him bountifully bestowed on us its good things, and has
patiently borne our evil things. We, therefore, then fulfil by imitation the law of
Christ, when we both kindly bestow our good things, and piously endure the evil
things of our friends. They are also to be admonished to give heed, each of
them, not so much to what they have to bear from the other as to what the other
has to bear from them. For, if one considers what is barite from one's self, one
bears more lightly what one endures from another.
Husbands and wives are to be admonished to remember that they are joined
together for the sake of producing offspring; and, when, giving themselves to
immoderate intercourse, they transfer the occasion of procreation to the service
of pleasure, to consider that, though they go not outside wedlock yet in
wedlock itself they exceed the just dues of wedlock. Whence it is needful that by
frequent supplications they do away their having fouled with the admixture of
pleasure the fair form of conjugal union. For hence it is that the Apostle, skilled
in heavenly medicine, did not so much lay down a course of life for the whole
as point out remedies to the weak when he said, It is good for a man not to
touch a woman: but on account of fornication let every man have his own wife, and
let every woman have her own husband (1 Cor. vii. 1, 2). For in that he
premised the fear of fornication, he surely did not give a precept to such as were
standing, but pointed out the bed to such as were falling, lest haply they should
tumble to the ground. Whence to such as were still weak he added, Let the
husband render unto the wife her due; and likewise also the wife unto the husband
(v. 3). And, while in the most honourable estate of matrimony allowing to them
something of pleasure, he added, But this I say by way of indulgence, not by way
of command (v. 6). Now where indulgence is spoken of, a fault is implied; but
one that is the more readily remitted in that it consists, not in doing what is
unlawful, but in not keeping what is lawful under control. Which thing Lot
expresses well in his own person, when he flies from burning Sodom, and yet,
finding Zoar, does not still ascend the maintain heights. For to fly from burning
Sodom is to avoid the unlawful fires of the flesh. But the height of the
mountains is the purity of the continent. Or, at any rate, they are as it were upon the
mountain, who, though cleaving to carnal intercourse, still, beyond the due
association for the production of offspring, are not loosely lost in pleasure of
the flesh. For to stand on the mountain is to seek nothing in the flesh except
the fruit of procreation. To stand on the mountain is not to cleave to the
flesh in a fleshly way. But, since there are many who relinquish indeed the sins of
the flesh, and yet, when placed in the state of wedlock, do not observe solely
the claims of due intercourse, Lot went indeed out of Sodom, but yet did not
at once reach the mountain heights; because a damnable life is already
relinquished, but still the loftiness of conjugal continence is not thoroughly attained.
But there is midway the city of Zoar, to save the weak fugitive; because, to
wit, when the married have intercourse with each other even incontinently, they
still avoid lapse into sin, and are still saved through mercy. For they find as
it were a little city, wherein to be protected from the fire; since this
married life is not indeed marvellous for virtue, but yet is secure from punishment.
Whence the same Lot says to the angel, This city is near toffee unto, and it
is small, and I shall be saved therein. Is it not a little one, and my soul
shall live in it (Gen. xix. 20)? So then it is said to be near, and yet is spoken
of as a refuge of safety, since married life is neither far separated from the
world, nor yet alien from the joy of safety. But the married, in this course of
conduct, then preserve their lives as it were in a small city, when they
intercede for each other by continual supplications. Whence it is also rightly said
by the Angel to the same Lot, See I have accepted thy prayers concerning this
thing also, that I will not overthrow the city for the which thou hast spoken (v.
21). For in truth, when supplication is poured out to God, such married life
is by no means condemned. Concerning which supplication Paul also admonishes,
saying, Defraud ye not one the other except it be with consent for a time, that
ye may give yourselves to prayer (1 Cor. vii. 5).
But, on the other hand, those who are not bound by wedlock are to be
admonished that they observe heavenly precepts all the more closely in that no yoke
of carnal union bows them down to worldly cares; that, as they are free from
the lawful burden of wedlock, the unlawful weight of earthly anxiety by no means
press them down; that the last day find them all the more prepared, as it finds
them less encumbered; lest from being free and able, and yet neglecting, to do
better things, they therefore be found deserving of worse punishment. Let them
hear how the Apostle, when he would train certain persons for the grace of
celibacy, did not contemn wedlock, but guarded against the worldly cares that are
burn of wedlock, saying, This I say for your profit, not that I may cast a
snare upon you, but for that which is comely, and that ye may attend upon the Lord
without hindrance (1 Cor. vii. 3, 5). For from wedlock proceed earthly
anxieties; and therefore the teacher of the Gentiles persuaded his bearers to better
things, lest they should be bound by earthly anxiety. The man, then, whom, being
single, the hindrance of secular cares impedes, though he has not subjected
himself to wedlock, has still not escaped the burdens of wedlock. The single are
to be admonished not to think that they can have intercourse with disengaged
women without incurring the judgment of condemnation. For, when Paul inserted the
vice of fornication among so many execrable crimes, he indicated the guilt of
it, saying, Neither fornicators, nor idolaters, nor adulterers, nor effeminate,
nor abusers of themselves with mankind, nor thieves, nor covetous, nor
drunkards, nor revilers, nor extortioners, shall possess the kingdom of God (1 Cor.
vi. 9, 10). And again, But fornicators and adulterers God will judge (Heb. xiii.
4). They are therefore to be admonished that, if they suffer from the storms of
temptation with risk to their safety, they should seek the port of wedlock.
For it is written, It is better to marry than to burn (1 Cor. vii. 9). They come,
in fact, to marriage without blame, if only they have not vowed better things.
For whosoever has proposed to himself the attainment of a greater good has
made unlawful the less good which before was lawful. For it is written, No man,
having put his hand to the plough, and looking back, is fit for the kingdom of
God (Luke ix. 62). He therefore who has been intent on a more resolute purpose is
convicted of looking back, if, leaving the larger good, he reverts to the
least.
CHAPTER XXVIII.
How those are to be admonished who have had experience of the sins of the
flesh, and those who have not.
(Admonition 29.) Differently to be admonished are those who are conscious
of sins of the flesh, and those who know them not. For those who have had
experience of the sins of the flesh are to be admonished that, at any rare after
shipwreck, they should fear the sea, and feel horror at their risk of perdition
at least when it has become known to them; lest, having been mercifully
preserved after evil deeds committed, by wickedly repeating the same they die. Whence
to the soul that sins and never ceases from sin it is said, There is come unto
thee a whore's forehead; thou refuseth to be ashamed (Jer. iii. 3). They are
therefore to be admonished to take heed, to the end that, if they have refused to
keep whole the good things of nature which they have received, they at least
mend them after they have been rent asunder. And they are surely bound to
consider, how many in so great a number of the faithful both keep themselves
undefiled and also convert others from the error of their way. What, then, will they be
able to say, if, while others are standing in integrity, they themselves, even
after loss, come not to a better mind? What will they be able to say, if, when
many bring others also with themselves to the kingdom, they bring not back
even themselves to the Lord who is waiting for them? They are to be admonished to
consider past transgressions, and to shun such as are impending. Whence, under
the figure of Judaea, the Lord through the prophet recalls past sins to the
memory of souls corrupted in this world, to the end that they may be ashamed to be
polluted in sins to come, saying, They committed whoredoms in Egypt; they
committed whoredoms in their youth: then were their breasts pressed, and the teats
of their virginity were bruised (Ezek. xxiii, 3). For indeed breasts are
pressed in Egypt, when the will of the human soul is prostituted to the base desire
of this world. Teats of virginity are bruised in Egypt, when the natural senses,
still whole in themselves, are vitiated by the corruption of assailing
concupiscence.
Those who have had experience of the sins of the flesh are to be
admonished to observe vigilantly with how great benevolence God opens the bosom of His
pity to us, if after transgressions we return to Him, when He says through the
prophet, If a man put away his wife, and she go firm him and become another
man's, shall he return to her again? Shall not that woman be polluted and
contaminated? But thou hast played the harlot with many lovers; yet return again to me,
saith the Lord (Jer. iii. 1). So, concerning the wife who has played the harlot
and is deserted, the argument of justice is put forward: and yet to us
returning after fall not justice, but pity is displayed. Whence we are surely meant to
gather how great is our wickedness, if we return not, even after
transgression, seeing that, when transgressing, we are spared with so great pity: or what
pardon for the wicked there will be from Him who, after our sin, ceases not to
call us. And indeed this mercifulness, in calling after transgression, is well
expressed through the Prophet, when to man turned away from God it is said, Thine
eyes shall see thy teacher, and thine ears shall hear the word of one behind
thy back admonishing thee (Isai. xxx. 20, 21). For indeed the Lord admonished
the human race to their face, when to man, created in Paradise, and standing
in free will, He declared what He ought to do or not to do. But man turned his
back on the face of God, when in his pride he despised His commands. Yet still
God deserted him not in his pride, in that He gave the Law for the purpose of
recalling man, and sent exhorting angels, and Himself appeared in the flesh of
our mortality. Therefore, standing behind our back, He admonished us, in that,
even though despised, He called us to the recovery of grace. What, therefore
could be said generally of all alike must needs be felt specially with regard to
each. For every man hears the words of God's admonition set as it were before
him, when, before he commits sin, he knows the precepts of His will. For still
to stand before His face is not yet to despise Him by sinning. But, when a man
forsakes the good of innocence, and of choice desires iniquity, he then turns
his back on the face of God. But lo, even behind his back God follows and
admonishes him, in that even after sin He persuades him to return to Himself. He
recalls him that is turned away, He regards not past transgressions, He opens the
bosom of pity to the returning one. We hearken, then, to the voice of one behind
our back admonishing us, if at least after sins we return to the Lord inviting
us. We ought therefore to feel ashamed for the pity of Him Who calls us, if we
will not fear His justice: since there is the more grievous wickedness in
despising Him in that, though despised, He disdains not to call us still.
But, on the other hand, those that are unacquainted with the sins of the
flesh are to be admonished to fear headlong ruin the more anxiously, as they
stand upon a higher eminence. They are to be admonished to be aware that the more
prominent be the place they stand on, so much the more frequent are the arrows
of the lier-in-wait by which they are assailed. For he is wont to rouse himself
the more ardently, the more stoutly he sees himself to be vanquished: and · so
much the more he scorns and feels it intolerable to be vanquished, as he
perceives the unbroken camp of weak flesh to be set in array against him. They are
to be admonished to look up incessantly to the rewards, and then undoubtedly
they will gladly tread under foot the labours of temptation which they endure.
For, if attention be fixed on the attained felicity apart from the passage to it,
the toil of the passage becomes light. Let them hear what is said through the
Prophet; Thus saith the Lord unto the eunuchs, Whoso shall have kept my
sabbaths, and chosen the things that l would, and kept my covenant, I will give unto
them in mine house and within my walls a place and a name better than of sons and
of daughters (Isai. lvi. 4, 5). For they indeed are eunuchs, who, suppressing
the motions of the flesh, cut off within themselves affection for wrong-doing.
Moreover, in what place they are held with the Father is shewn, forasmuch as
in the Father's house, that is in His eternal mansion, they are preferred even
before sons. Let them hear what is said through John; These are they which have
not been defiled with women; for they are virgins, and follow the Lamb
whithersoever He goeth ( Rev. xiv. 4); and how they sing a song which no one can utter
but those hundred and forty four thousand. For indeed to sing a song to the
Lamb singularly is to rejoice with Him for ever beyond all the faithful, even for
incorruption of the flesh. Yet the rest of the elect can hear this song,
although they cannot utter it, because, through charity, they are joyful in the
exaltation of those others, though they rise not to their rewards. Let those who are
unacquainted with the sins of the flesh hear what the Truth in person says
concerning this purity; Not all receive this ward (Matth. xix. 11). Which thing He
denoted as the highest, in that He spoke of it as not belonging to all: and,
in foretelling that it would be difficult to receive it, He signifies to his
hearers with what caution it should be kept when received.
Those who are unacquainted with the sins of the flesh are therefore to be
admonished both to know that virginity surpasses wedlock, and yet not to exalt
themselves above the wedded: to the end that, while they put virginity first,
and themselves last, they may both keep to that which they esteem as best, and
also keep guard over themselves in not vainly exalting themselves.
They are to be admonished to consider that commonly the life of the
continent is put to shame by the action of secular persons, when the latter take on
themselves works beyond their condition, and the former do not stir up their
hearts to the mark of their own order. Whence it is well said through the Prophet,
Be thou ashamed, O Sidon, saith the sea (Isai. xxiii. 4). For Sidon is as it
were brought to shame by the voice of the sea, when the life of him who is
fortified, and as it were stedfast, is reproved by comparison with the life at those
who are secular and fluctuating in this world. For often there are some who,
returning to the Lord after sins of the flesh, shew themselves the more ardent
in good works as they see themselves the more liable to condemnation for bad
ones: and often certain of those who persevere in purity of the flesh seeing that
they have less in the past to deplore, think that the innocency of their life
is fully sufficient for them, and inflame themselves with no incitements of
ardour to fervour of spirit. And for the most part a life burning with love after
sin becomes more pleasing to God than innocence growing torpid in security.
Whence also it is said by the voice of the Judge, Her sins which are many are
forgiven, for she loved much (Luke vii. 47); and, Joy shall be in heaven over one
sinner that repenteth more than over ninety and nine just persons which need no
repentance (xv. 7). Which thing we the sooner gather from experience itself, if
we weigh the judgments of our own mind. For we love the land which produces
abundant fruit after thorns have been ploughed out of it more than that which has
had no thorns, but which, when cultivated, yields a barren harvest. Those who
know not the sins of the flesh are to be admonished not to prefer themselves to
others for the loftiness of their superior order, while they know not how great
things are done by their inferiors better than by themselves. For in the
inquisition of the righteous judge the quality of actions changes the merits of
orders. For who, considering the very outward appearance of things, can be ignorant
that in the nature of gems the carbuncle is preferred to the jacinth? But
still a jacinth of cerulean colour is preferred to a pale carbuncle; because to the
former its show of beauty supplies what the order of nature denied it, and the
latter, which natural order had preferred, is debased by the quality of its
colour. Thus, then, in l the human race both some in the better order are the
worse, and some in the worse order are the better; since these by good living
transcend the lot oft their lower state, and those lessen the merit of their higher
place by not coming up to it in their behaviour.
CHAPTER XXIX.
How they are to be admonished who lament sins of deed, and those who lament
only sins of thought.
(Admonition 30.) Differently to be admonished are those who deplore sins
of deed, and those who deplore sins of thought. For those who deplore sins of
deed are to be admonished that perfected lamentations should wash out consummated
evils, lest they be bound by a greater debt of perpetrated deed than they pay
in tears of satisfaction for it. For it is written, He hath given us drink in
tears by measure (Ps. lxxix. 6): which means that each person's soul should in
its penitence drink the tears of compunction to such extent as it remembers
itself to have been dried up from God through sins. They are to be admonished to
bring back their past offences incessantly before their eyes, and so to live that
these may not have to be viewed by the strict judge.
Hence David, when he prayed, saying, Turn away thine eyes from my sins
(Ps. 1. 11(7)), had said also a little before, My fault is ever before me (v. 5);
as if to say, I beseech thee not to regard my sin, since I myself cease not to
regard it. Whence also the Lord says through the prophet, And I will not be
mindful of thy sins, but be than mindful of them (Isai. xliii. 25, 26). They are
to be admonished to consider singly all their past offences, and, in bewailing
the defilements of their former wandering one by one, to cleanse at the same
time even their whole selves with tears. Whence it is well said through
Jeremiah, when the several transgressions of Judaea were being considered, Mine eye
hath shed divisions of waters (Lam. iii. 48). For indeed we shed divided waters
from our eyes, when to our several sins we give separate tears. For the mind
does not sorrow at one and the same time alike for all things; but, while it is
more sharply touched by memory now of this fault and now of that, being moved
concerning all in each, it is purged at once from all.
They are to be admonished to build upon the mercy which they crave, lest
they perish through the force of immoderate affliction. For the Lord would not
set sins to be deplored before the eyes of offenders, were it His will to smite
them with strict severity Himself. For it is evident that it has been His will
to hide from His own judgment those whom in anticipation He has made judges of
themselves. For hence it is written, Let us come beforehand before the face of
the Lord in confession (Ps. xciv. 2(8)). Hence through Paul it is said, If we
would judge ourselves, we should not be judged (1 Cor. xi. 31). And again, they
are to be admonished so to be confident in hope as not to grow torpid in
careless security. For commonly the crafty foe, when he sees the soul which he trips
up by sin to be afflicted for its fall, seduces it by the blandishments of
baneful security. Which thing is figuratively expressed in the history of Dinah.
For it is written, Dinah went out to see the women of that land; and when Sichem,
the son of Hemor the Hivite, prince of the country, saw her, he loved her, and
seized her, and lay with her, and defiled her by force; and his soul clave
unto her, and he soothed her with kind blandishments when she was sad (Gen. xxxiv.
1-3). For indeed Dinah goes out to see the women of a foreign land, when any
soul, neglecting its own concerns, and giving heed to the actions of others,
wanders forth out of its own proper condition and order. And Sichem, prince of the
country, overpowers it inasmuch as the devil corrupts it, when found occupied
in external cares. And his soul clave unto her, because he regards it as united
to himself through iniquity. And because, when the soul comes to a sense of
its sin, it stands condemned, and would fain deplore its transgression, but the
corrupter recalls before its eyes empty hopes and grounds of security to the end
that he may withdraw from it the benefit of sorrow, therefore it is rightly
added in the text, And soothed her with blandishments when she was sad. For he
tells now of the heavier offences of others, now of what has been perpetrated
being nothing, now of God being merciful; or again he promises time hereafter for
repentance; so that the soul, seduced by these deceptions, may be suspended
from its purpose of penitence, to the end that it may receive no good hereafter,
being saddened by no evil now, and that it may then be more fully overwhelmed
with punishment, in that now it even rejoices in its transgressions.
But, on the other hand, those who bewail sins of thought are to be
admonished to consider anxiously within the recesses of their soul whether they have
sinned in delight only, or also in consent. For commonly the heart is tempted,
and in the sinfulness of the flesh experiences delight, and yet in its judgment
resists this same sinfulness; so that in the secrets of thought it is both
saddened by what pleases it and pleased by what saddens it. But sometimes the soul
is so whelmed in a gulph of temptation as not to resist at all, but follows of
set purpose that whereby it is assailed through delight; and, if outward
opportunity be at hand, it soon consummates in effect its inward wishes. And
certainly, if this is regarded according to the just animadversion of a strict judge,
the sin is one, not of thought, but of deed; since, though the tardiness of
circumstances has deferred the sin outwardly, the will has accomplished it inwardly
by the act of consent.
Moreover, we have learnt in the case of our first parent that we
perpetrate the iniquity of every sin in three ways; that is to say, in suggestion,
delight, and consent. Thus the first is perpetrated through the enemy, the second
through the flesh, the third through the spirit. For the lier-in-wait suggests
wrong things; the flesh submits itself to delight; and at last the spirit,
vanquished by delight, consents. Whence also that serpent suggested wrong things;
then Eve, as though she had been the flesh, submitted herself to delight; but
Adam, as the spirit, overcome by the suggestion and the delight, assented. Thus by
suggestion we have knowledge of sin, by delight we are vanquished, by consent
we are also bound. Those, therefore, who bewail iniquities of thought are to be
admonished to consider anxiously in what measure they have fallen into sin, to
the end that they may be lifted up by a measure of lamentation corresponding to
the degree of the downfall of which they are inwardly conscious; lest, if
meditated evils torment them too little, they lead them on even to the perpetration
of deeds. But in all this they should be alarmed in such wise that they still
be by no means broken down. For often merciful God absolves sins of the heart
the more speedily in that He allows them not to issue in deeds; and meditated
iniquity is the more Speedily loosed from not being too tightly bound by effected
deed. Whence it is rightly said by the Psalmist, I said I will declare against
myself my iniquities to the Lord, and thou forgavest the impiety of my heart
(Ps. xxxi. 5). For in that he added impiety of heart, he indicated that it was
iniquities of thought that he would declare: and in saying, I said I will
declare, and straightway subjoining, And thou forgavest, he shewed how easy in such a
case pardon was. For, while but promising that he would ask, he obtained what
he promised to ask for; so that, since his sin had not advanced to deed,
neither should his penitence go so far as to be torment; and that meditated
affliction should cleanse the soul which in truth no more than meditated iniquity had
defiled.
CHAPTER XXX.
How those are to be admonished who abstain not from the sins which they
bewail, and those who, abstaining from them, bewail them not.
(Admonition 31.) Differently to be admonished are those who lament their
transgressions, and yet forsake them not, and those who forsake them, and yet
lament them not. For those who lament their transgressions and yet forsake them
not are to be admonished to learn to consider anxiously that they cleanse
themselves in vain by their weeping, if they wickedly defile themselves in their
living, seeing that the end for which they wash themselves in tears is that, when
clean, they may return to filth. For hence it is written, The dog is returned to
his own vomit again, and the saw that was washed to her wallowing in the mire
(2 Pet. ii. 22). For the dog, when he vomits, certainly casts forth the food
which weighed upon his stomach; but, when he returns to his vomit, he is again
loaded with what he had been relieved from. And they who mourn their
transgressions certainly cast forth by confession the wickedness with which they have been
evilly satiated, and which oppressed the inmost parts of their soul; and yet,
in recurring to it after confession, they take it in again. But the sow, by
wallowing in the mire when washed, is made more filthy. I And one who mourns past
transgressions, yet forsakes them not, subjects himself to the penalty of more
grievous sin, since he both despises the very pardon which he might have won by
his weeping, and as it were rolls himself in miry water; because in withholding
purity of life from his weeping he makes even his very tears filthy before the
eyes of God. Hence again it is written, Repeat not a word in thy prayer
(Ecclus. vii. 14). For to repeat a word in prayer is, after bewailing, to commit what
again requires bewailing. Hence it is said through Isaiah, Wash you, be ye
clean (Isai. i. 16). For he neglects being clean after washing, whosoever after
tears keeps not innocency of life. And they therefore are washed, but are in no
wise clean, who cease not to bewail the things they have committed, but commit
again things to be bewailed. Hence through a certain wise man it is said, He
that is baptized from the touch of a dead body and toucheth it again, what
availeth his washing (Ecclus. xxxiv. 30(9))? For indeed he is baptized from the touch
of a dead body who is cleansed from sin by weeping: but he touches a dead body
after his baptism, who after tears repeats his sin.
Those who bewail transgressions, yet forsake them not, are to be
admonished to acknowledge themselves to be before the eyes of the strict judge like
those who, when they come before the face of certain men, fawn upon them with great
submission, but, when they depart, atrociously bring upon them all the enmity
and hurt they can. For what is weeping for sin but exhibiting the humility of
one's devotion to God? And what is doing wickedly after weeping but putting in
practice arrogant enmity against Him to whom entreaty has been made? This James
attests, who says, Whosoever will be a friend of this world becomes the enemy
of God (James iv. 4). Those who lament their transgressions, yet forsake them
not, are to be admonished to consider anxiously that, for the most part, bad men
are unprofitably drawn by compunction to righteousness, even as, for the most
part, good men are without harm tempted to sin. Here indeed is found a wonderful
measure of inward disposition in accordance with the requirements of desert,
in that the bad, while doing something good, but still without perfecting it,
are proudly confident in the midst of the very evil which even to the full they
perpetrate; while the good, when tempted of evil to which they in no wise
consent, plant the steps of their heart towards righteousness through humility all
the more surely from their tottering through infirmity. Thus Balaam, looking on
the tents of the righteous, said, May my soul die the death of the righteous,
and may my last end be like theirs (Num. xxiii. 10). But, when the time of
compunction had passed, he gave counsel against the life of those whom he had
requested for himself to be like even in dying: and, when he found an occasion for the
gratification of his avarice, he straightway forgot all that he had wished for
himself of innocence. Hence it is that Paul, the teacher and preacher of the
Gentiles, says, I see another law in my members, warring against the law of my
mind, and bringing me into captivity to the law of sin, which is in my members
(Rom. vii. 23). He is of a truth tempted for this very purpose, that he may be
the more stedfastly confirmed in good from the knowledge of his own infirmity.
Why is it, then, that the one is touched with compunction, and yet draws not
near unto righteousness, while the other is tempted, and yet sin defiles him not,
but for this evident reason, that neither do good things not perfected help the
bad, nor bad things not consummated condemn the good?
But, on the other hand, those who forsake their transgressions, and yet
mourn them not, are to be admonished not to suppose the sins to be already
remitted which, though they multiply them not by action, they still cleanse away by
no bewailings. For neither has a writer, when he has ceased from writing,
obliterated what he had written by reason of his having added no more: neither has
one who offers insults made satisfaction by merely holding his peace, it being
certainly necessary for him to impugn his former words of pride by words of
subsequent humility: nor is a debtor absolved by not increasing his debt, unless he
also pays what he has incurred. Thus also, when we offend against God, we by no
means make satisfaction by ceasing from iniquity, unless we also follow up the
pleasures which we have loved by lamentations set against them. For, if no sin
of deed had polluted us in this life, our very innocence would by no means
suffice for our security as long as we live here, since many unlawful things would
still assail our heart. With what conscience, then, can he feel safe, who,
having perpetrated iniquities, is himself witness to himself that he is not
innocent?
For it is not as if God were fed by our torments: but He heals the
diseases of our transgressions by medicines opposed to them that we, who have departed
from Him delighted by pleasures, may return to Him embittered by tears; and
that, having fallen by running loose in unlawful things, we may rise by
restraining ourselves even in lawful ones; and that the heart which mad joy had flooded
may be burnt clean by wholesome sadness: and that what the elation of pride had
wounded may be cured by the dejection of a humble life. For hence it is
written, I said unto the wicked, Deal not wickedly; and to the transgressors, lift
not up the horn (Ps. lxxiv. 5(1)). For transgressors lift up the horn, if they in
no wise humble themselves to penitence after knowledge of their iniquity.
Hence again it is said, A bruised and humbled heart God doth not despise (Ps. l.
19(2)). For whosoever mourns his sins yet forsakes them not bruises indeed his
heart, but scorns to humble it. But he who forsakes his sins yet mourns them not
does indeed already humble his heart, but refuses to bruise it. Hence Paul
says, And such indeed were ye; but ye are washed, but ye are sanctified (1 Cor. vi.
11); because, in truth, amended life sanctifies those whom the ablution of the
affliction of tears cleanses through penitence. Hence Peter, when he saw some
affrighted by consideration of their evil deeds, admonished them, saying,
Repent, and be baptized every one of you (Acts ii. 38). For, being about to speak of
baptism, he spoke first of the lamentations of penitence; that they should
first bathe themselves in the water of their own affliction, and afterwards wash
themselves in the sacrament of baptism. With what conscience, then, can those
who neglect to weep for their past misdeeds live secure of pardon, when the chief
pastor of the Church himself believed that penitence must be added even to
this Sacrament which chiefly extinguishes sins?
CHAPTER XXXI.
How those are to be admonished who praise the unlawful things of which they
are conscious, and those who, while condemning them, in no wise guard against
them.
(Admonition 32.) Differently to be admonished are they who even praise the
unlawful things which they do, and those who censure what is wrong, and yet
avoid it not. For they who even praise the unlawful things which they do are to
be admonished to consider how for the most part they offend more by the mouth
than by deeds. For by deeds they perpetrate wrong things in their own persons
only; but with the mouth they bring out wickedness in the persons of as many as
there are souls of hearers, to whom they teach wicked things by praising them.
They are therefore to be admonished that, if they evade the eradication of evil,
they at least be afraid to sow it. They are to be admonished to let their own
individual perdition suffice them. And again they are to be admonished that, if
they fear not to be bad, they at least blush to be seen to be what they are.
For usually a sin, when it is concealed, is shunned; because, when a soul blushes
to be seen to be what nevertheless it does not fear to be, it comes in time to
blush to be what it shuns being seen to be. But, when any bad man shamelessly
courts notice, then the more freely he perpetrates every wickedness, the more
does he come even to think it lawful; and in what he imagines to be lawful he is
without doubt sunk ever more and more. Hence it is written, They have declared
their sin as Sodom, neither have they hidden it (Isai. iii. 9). For, had Sodom
hidden her sin, she would still have sinned, but, in fear. But she had utterly
lost the curb of fear, in that she did not even seek darkness for her sin.
Whence also again it is written, The cry of Sodom and Gomorrah is multiplied (Gen.
xviii. 20). For sin with a voice is guilt in act; but sin with even a cry is
guilt at liberty.
But, on the other band, those who censure wrong things and yet avoid them
not are to be admonished to weigh circumspectly what they can say in their own
excuse before the strict judgment of God, seeing they are not excused from the
guilt of their crimes, even themselves being judges. What, then, are these men
but their own summoners? They give their voices against misdeeds, and deliver
themselves up as guilty in their doings. They are to be admonished to perceive
how it even now comes of the hidden retribution of judgment that their mind is
enlightened to see the evil which it perpetrates, but strives not to overcome
it; so that the better it sees the worse it may perish; because it both perceives
the light of understanding, and also relinquishes not the darkness of
wrong-doing. For, when they neglect the knowledge that has been given to help them,
they turn it into a testimony against themselves; and from the light of
understanding, which they had in truth received that they might be able to do away their
sins, they augment their punishments. And, indeed, this their wickedness, doing
the evil which it condemns, has already a taste here of the judgment to come;
so that, while kept liable to eternal punishment, it shall not meanwhile be
absolved here in its own test of itself; and that it may experience there the more
grievous torments, in that here it forsakes not the evil which even itself
condenms. For hence the Truth says, That servant which knew his lord's will, and
prepared not himself, neither did according to his will, shall be beaten with
many stripes (Luke xii. 47). Hence the Psalmist says, Let them go down quick into
hell (Ps. liv. 16(3)). For the quick know and feel what is being done about
them; but the dead can feel nothing. For they would go down dead into hell if
they committed what is evil without knowledge. But when they know what is evil,
and yet do it, they go down quick, miserable, and feeling, into the hell of
iniquity.
CHAPTER XXXII.
How those are to be admonished who sin from sudden impulse and those who sin
deliberately.
(Admonition 33.). Differently to be admonished are those who are overcome
by sudden passion and those, who are bound in guilt of set purpose. For those
whom sudden passion overcomes are to be admonished to regard themselves as daily
set in the warfare of the present life, and to protect the heart, which cannot
foresee wounds, with the shield oil anxious fear; to dread the hidden darts of
the ambushed foe, and, in so dark a contest, to guard with continual attention
the inward camp of the soul. For, if the heart is left destitute of the
solicitude of circumspection, it is laid open to wounds; since the crafty enemy
strikes the breast the more freely as he catches it bare of the breastplate of
forethought. Those who are overcome by sudden passion are to be admonished to cease
caring too much for earthly things; since, while they entangle their attention
immoderately in transitory things, they are not aware of the darts of sins
which pierce them. Whence, also, the utterance of one that is stricken and yet
sleeps is expressed by Solomon, who says, They, have beaten the, and I was not
pained; they have dragged me, and I felt it not. When shall I awake and again find
wine (Prov. xxiii. 35)? For the soul that sleeps from the care of its
solicitude is beaten and feels not pain, because, as it foresees not impending evils, so
neither is it aware of those which it has perpetrated. It is dragged, and in
no wise feels it, because it is led by the allurements of vices, and yet is not
roused to keep guard over itself. But again it wishes to awake, that it may
again find wine, because, although weighed down by the sleep of its torpor from
keeping guard over itself, it still strives to be awake to the cares of the
world, that it may be ever drunk with pleasures; and, while sleeping to that wherein
it ought to have been wisely awake, it desires to be awake to something else,
to which it might have laudably slept. Hence it is written previously, And thou
shall be as one that sleepeth in the midst of the sea, and as a steersman that
is lulled to rest, having let go the rudder (Prov. xxiii. 35). For he sleeps
in the midst of the sea who, placed among the temptations of this world,
neglects to look out for the motions of vices that rush in upon him like impending
heaps of waves. And the steersman, as it were, lets go the rudder when the mind
loses the earnestness of solicitude for guiding the ship of the body. For,
indeed, to let go the rudder in the sea is to leave off intentness of forethought
among the storms of this life. For, if the steersman holds fast the rudder with
anxious care, he now directs the ship among the billows right against them, now
cleaves the assaults of the winds aslant. So, when the mind vigilantly guides
the soul, it now surmounts some things and treads them down, now warily turns
aside from others, so that it may both by hard exertion overcome present dangers,
and by foresight gather strength against future struggle. Hence, again, of the
strong warriors of the heavenly country it is said, Every man hath his sword
upon his thigh because of fears in the night (Cant. iii. 8). For the sword is
put upon the thigh when the evil suggestion of the flesh is subdued by the sharp
edge of holy preaching. But by the night is expressed the blindness of our
infirmity; since any opposition that is impending in the night is not seen. Every
man's sword, therefore, is put upon his thigh because of fears in the night;
that is, because holy men, while they fear things which they do not see, stand
always prepared for the strain of a struggle. Hence, again. it is said to the
bride, Thy nose is as the tower that is in Lebanon (Cant. vii. 4). For the thing
which we perceive not with our eyes we usually anticipate by the smell. By the
nose, also, we discern between odours and stenches. What, then, is signified by
the nose of the Church but the foreseeing discernment of Saints? It is also
said to be like to the tower that is in Lebanon, because their discerning
foresight is so set on a height as to see the struggles of temptations even before
they come, and to stand fortified against them when they do come. For things that
are foreseen when future are of less force when they are present; because, when
every one has become more prepared against the blow, the enemy, who supposed
himself to be unexpected, is weakened by the very fact of having been
anticipated.
But, on the other hand, those who of set purpose are bound in guilt, are
to be admonished to perpend with wary consideration how that, when they do what
is evil of their own judgment, they kindle stricter judgment against
themselves; and that by so much the harder sentence will smite them as the chains of
deliberation have bound them more tightly in guilt. Perhaps they might sooner wash
away their transgressions by penitence, had they fallen into them through
precipitancy alone. For the sin is less speedily loosened which of set purpose is
firmly bound. For unless the soul altogether despised eternal things, it would
not perish in guilt advisedly. In this, then, those who perish of set purpose
differ from those who fall through precipitancy; that the former, when they fall
by sin from the state of righteousness, for the most part fall also into the
snare of desperation. Hence it is that the Lord through the Prophet reproves not
so much the wrong doings of precipitance as purposes of sin, saying, Lest
perchance my indignation come out as fire, and be inflamed, and there be none to
quench it because of the wickedness of your purposes (Jer. iv. 4). Hence, again, in
wrath He says, I will visit upon you according to the fruit of your purposes
(Ibid. xxiii. 2). Since, then, sins which are perpetrated of set purpose differ
from other sins, the Lord censures purposes of wickedness rather than wicked
deeds. For in deeds the sin is often of infirmity or of negligence, but in
purposes it is always of malicious intent. Contrariwise, it is well said through the
Prophet in describing a blessed man, And he sitteth not in the chair of
pestilence (Ps. i. 1). For a chair is wont to be the seat of a judge or a president.
And to sit in the chair of pestilence is to commit what is wrong judicially; to
sit in the chair of pestilence is to discern with the reason what is evil, and
yet deliberately to perpetrate it. He sits, as it were, in the chair of
perverse counsel who is lifted up with so great elation of iniquity as to endeavour
even by counsel to accomplish evil. And, as those who are supported by the
dignity of the chair are set over the crowds that stand by, so sins that are
purposely sought out transcend the transgressions of those who fall through
precipitancy. Those, then, who even by counsel bind themselves in guilt are to be
admonished hence to gather with what vengeance they must at some time be smitten, being
now made, not companions, hut princes, of evil-doers.
CHAPTER XXXIII.
How those are to be admonished who commit very small but frequent faults, and
those who, while avoiding such as are very small, are sometimes plunged in such
as are grievous.
(Admonition 34.) Differently to be admonished are those who, though the
unlawful things they do are very small, yet do them frequently, and those who
keep themselves from small sins, but are sometimes plunged in such as are
grievous. Those who frequently transgress, though in very small things, are to be
admonished by no means to consider the quality of the sins they commit, but the
quantity. For, if they scorn being afraid when they weigh their deeds, they ought
to be alarmed when they number them; seeing that deep gulphs of rivers are
filled by small but innumerable drops of rain; and bilge-water, increasing secretly,
has the same effect as a storm raging openly; and the sores that break out on
the members in scab are minute; but, when a multitude of them gets possession
in countless numbers, it destroys the life of the body as much as one grievous
wound inflicted on the breast. Hence for certain it is written, He that
contemneth small things falleth by little and little (Ecclus. xix. 1). For he that
neglects to bewail and avoid the smallest sins fails from the state of
righteousness, not indeed suddenly, but bit by bit entirely. Those who transgress
frequently in very little things are to be admonished to consider anxiously how that
sometimes there is worse sin in a small fault than in a greater one. For a greater
fault, in that it is the sooner acknowledged to be one, is by so much the more
speedily amended; but a smaller one, being reckoned as though it were none at
all, is retained in use with worse effect as it is so with less concern. Whence
for the most part it comes to pass that the mind, accustomed to light evils,
has no horror even of heavy ones, and, being fed up by sins, comes at last to a
sort of sanction of iniquity, and by so much the more scorns to be afraid in
greater matters as it has learnt to sin in little ones without fear.
But, on the other hand, those who keep themselves from small sins, but are
sometimes plunged in grievous ones, are to be admonished anxiously to
apprehend the state they are in; how that, while their heart is lifted up for very
small things guarded against, they are so swallowed up in the very gulph of their
own elation as to perpetrate others that are more grievous, and, while they
outwardly master little ills, but are puffed up inwardly with vain glory, they
prostrate their soul, overcome within itself by the sickness of pride, amid greater
ills even outwardly. Those, then, who keep themselves from little faults, but
are sometimes plunged in such as are grievous, are to be admonished to take
care lest they fall inwardly where they suppose themselves to be standing
outwardly, and lest, according to the retribution of the strict judge, elation on
account of lesser righteousness become a way to the pitfall of more grievous sin.
For such as, vainly elated, attribute their keeping of the least good to their
own strength, being justly left to themselves are overwhelmed in greater sins;
and by falling they learn that their standing was not of themselves, so that
immeasurable ills may humble the heart that is exalted by the smallest good. They
are to be admonished to consider that, while in their more grievous faults they
bind themselves in deep guilt, they nevertheless for the most part sin worse in
the little faults which they guard against; because, while in the former they
do what is wicked, in the latter they hide from men that they are wicked.
Whence it comes to pass that, when they perpetrate greater evils before God, it is a
case of open iniquity; and when they are careful to observe small good things
before men, it is a case of pretended holiness. For hence it is that it is said
of the Pharisees, Straining out a gnat, but swallowing a camel (Matth. xxiii.
24). As if it were said plainly. The least evils ye discern; the greater ye
devour. Hence it is that they are again reproved by the mouth of the Truth, when
they are told, Ye tithe mint and anise and cummin, and omit the weightier
matters of the Law, judgment and mercy and truth (Ibid. 23). For neither is it to be
carelessly heard that, when He said that the least things were tithed, He chose
indeed to mention the lowest of herbs, but yet such as are sweet-smelling; in
order, surely, to shew that, when pretenders observe small things, they seek to
extend for themselves the odour of a holy reputation; and, though they omit to
fulfil the greatest things, they still observe such of the smallest as smell
sweetly far and wide in human judgment.
CHAPTER XXXIV.
How those are to be admonished who do not even begin good things, and those
who do not finish them when begun.
(Admonition 35.) Differently to be admonished are they who do not even
begin good things, and those who in no wise complete such as they have begun. For
as to those who do not even begin good things, for them the first need is, not
to build up what they may wholesomely love, but to demolish that wherein they
are wrongly occupied. For they will not follow the untried things they hear of,
unless they first come to feel how pernicious are the things that they have
tried; since neither does one desire to be lifted up who knows not the very fact
that he has fallen; nor does one who feels not the pain of a wound seek any
healing remedy. First, then, it is to be shewn to them how vain are the things that
they love, and then at length to be carefully made known to them how
profitable are the things that they let slip. Let them first see that what they love is
to be shunned, and afterwards perceive without difficulty that what they shun
is to be loved. For they sooner accept the things which they have not tried, if
they recognize as true whatever discourse they may hear concerning the things
that they have tried. So then they learn to seek true good with fulness of
desire, when they have learnt with certainty of judgment how vainly they have held
to what was false. Let them be told, therefore, both that present good things
will soon pass away from enjoyment, and also that the account to be given of them
will nevertheless endure, without passing away, for vengeance; since both what
pleases them is withdrawn from them now against their will, and what pains
them is reserved them, also against their will, for punishment. Thus may they be
wholesomely filled with alarm by the same things in which they harmfully take
delight; so that when the stricken soul, in sight of the deep ruin of its fall,
perceives that it has reached a precipice, it may retrace its steps backward,
and, fearing what it had loved, may learn to esteem highly what it once despised.
For hence it is that it is said to Jeremiah when sent to preach, See, I
have this day set thee over the nations and over the kingdoms, to pluck out, and
to pull down, and to destroy, and to scatter, and to build, and to plant (Jer.
i. 10). Because, unless he first destroyed wrong things, he could not
profitably build right things; unless he plucked out of the hearts of his hearers the
thorns of vain love, he would certainly plant to no purpose the words of holy
preaching. Hence it is that Peter first overthrows, that he may afterwards build
up, when he in no wise admonished the Jews as to what they were now to do, but
reproved them for what they had done, saying, Jesus of Nazareth, a man approved
of God among you by powers and wonders and signs, which God did by Him in the
midst of you, as ye yourselves know; Him, being delivered by the determinate
counsel and foreknowledge of God, ye have by the hands of wicked men crucified and
slain; whom God hath raised up, having loosed the pains hell (Acts it.
22--24); in order, to wit, that having been thrown down by a recognition of their
cruelty, they might hear the building up of holy preaching by so much the more
profitably as they anxiously sought it. Whence also they forthwith replied, What
then shah we do, men and brethren? And it is presently said to them, Repent and
be baptized, every one of you (Ibid. 37, 38). Which words of building up they
would surely have despised, had they not first wholesomely become aware of the
ruin of their throwing down. Hence it is that Saul, when the light from heaven
shone upon him, did not hear immediately what he was to do aright, but what he
had done wrong. For, when, fallen to the earth, he enquired. saying, Who art
Thou, Lord? it was straightway replied, I am Jesus of Nazareth, whom thou
persecutest. And when he forthwith replied, Lord, what wilt Thou have me to do? it is
added at once, Arise, and go into the city, and it shall be told thee there what
thou must do (Acts ix. 4, &c.; xxii. 8, &c.). Lo, the Lord, speaking from
heaven, reproved the deeds of His persecutor, and yet did not at once shew him what
he had to do. Lo, the whole fabric of his elation had already been thrown down
and then, humble after his downfall, he sought to be built up: and when pride
was thrown down, the words of building up were still kept back; to wit, that the
cruel persecutor might long lie overthrown, and rise afterwards the more
firmly built in good as he had fallen utterly upset from his former error. Those,
then, who have not as yet begun to do any good are first to be overthrown by the
hand of correction from the stiffness of their iniquity, that they may
afterwards be lifted up to the state of well-doing. For this cause also we cut down the
lofty timber of the forest, that we may raise it up in the roof of a building:
but yet it is not placed in the fabric suddenly; in order, that is, that its
vicious greenness may first be dried out: for the more the moisture thereof is
exuded in the lowest, by so much the more solidly is it elevated to the topmost
places.
But, on the other hand, those who in no wise complete the good things they
have begun are to be admonished to consider with cautious circumspection how
that, when they accomplish not their purposes, they tear up with them even the
things that had been begun. For, if that which is seen to be a thing to be done
advances not through assiduous application, even that which had been well done
fails back. For the human soul in this world is, as it were, in the condition
of a ship ascending against the stream of a river: it is never suffered to stay
in one place, since it will float back to the nethermost parts unless it strive
for the uppermost. If then the strong hand of the worker carry not on to
perfection the good things begun, the very slackness in working fights against what
has been wrought. For hence it is that it is said through Solomon, He that is
feeble and slack in work is brother to him that wasteth his works (Prov. xviii.
9). For in truth he who does not strenuously execute the good things he has
begun imitates in the slackness of his negligence the hand of the destroyer. Hence
it is said by the Angel to the Church of Sardis, Be watchful, and strengthen
the things which remain, that are ready to die; for I find not thy works
complete before my God (Rev. iii. 2). Thus, because the works had not been found
complete before his God, he foretold that those which remained, even such as had
been done, were about to die. For, if that which is dead in us be not kindled into
life, that which is retained as though still alive is extinguished too. They
are to be admonished that it might have been more tolerable for them not to have
laid hold of the right way than, having laid hold of it, to turn their backs
upon it. For unless they looked back, they would not grow weak with any torpor
with regard to their undertaken purpose. Let them hear, then, what is written,
It had been better for them not to have known the way of righteousness than,
after they hare known it, to be turned backward (2 Pet. it. 21). Let them hear
what is written; I would thou wert cold or hot: but, because than art lukewarm,
and neither cold nor hot, I will begin to spue thee out of my mouth (Rev. iii.
15, 16). For he is hot who both takes up and completes good purposes; but he is
cold who does not even begin any to be completed. And as transition is made
through lukewarmness from cold to heat, so through lukewarmness there is a return
from heat to cold. Whosoever, then, has lost the cold of unbelief so as to live,
but in no wise passes beyond lukewarmness so as to go on to burn, he
doubtless, despairing of heat, while he lingers in pernicious lukewarmness, is in the
way to become cold. But, as before lukewarmness there is hope in cold, so after
cold there is despair in lukewarmness. For he who is yet in his sins loses not
his trust in conversion: but he who after conversion has become lukewarm has
withdrawn the hope that there might have been of the sinner. It is required, then,
that every one be either hot or cold, lest, being lukewarm, he be spued out:
that is, that either, being not yet converted, he still afford hope of his
conversion, or, being already converted, he be fervent in virtues; lest he be spued
out as lukewarm, in that he goes back in torpor from purposed heat to
pernicious cold.
CHAPTER XXXV.
How those are to be admonished who do bad things secretly and good things
openly, and those who do contrariwise.
(Admonition 36.) Differently to be admonished are those who do bad things
in secret and good things publicly, and those who hide the good things they do,
and yet in some things done publicly allow ill to be thought of them. For
those who do bad things in secret and good things publicly are to be admonished to
consider with what swiftness human judgments flee away, but with what
immobility divine judgments endure. They are to be admonished to fix the eyes of their
mind on the end of things; since, while the attestation of human praise passes
away, the heavenly sentence, which penetrates even hidden things, grows strong
unto lasting retribution. When, therefore, they set their hidden wrong things
before the divine judgment, and their right things before human eyes, both
without a witness is the good which they do publicly, and not without an eternal
witness is their latent transgression. So by concealing their faults from men, and
displaying their virtues, they both discover while they hide what they deserve
to be punished for, and hide while they discover what they might have been
rewarded for. Such persons the Truth calls whited sepulchres, beautiful outward,
but full of dead men's bones (Matth. xxiii. 17); because they cover up the evil
of vices within, but by the exhibition of certain works flatter human eyes with
the mere outward colour of righteousness. They are therefore to be admonished
not to despise the right things they do, but to believe them to be of better
desert. For those greatly misjudge their own good things who think human favour
sufficient for their reward. For when transitory praise is sought in return for
right doing, a thing worthy of eternal reward is sold for a mean price. As to
which price being received, indeed, the Truth says, Verily I say unto you, they
have received their reward (Matth. vi. 2, 5, 6). They are to be admonished to
consider that, when they prove themselves bad in hidden things, but yet offer
themselves as examples publicly in good works, they shew that what they shun is to
be followed; they cry aloud that what they hate is to be loved: in fine, they
live to others, and die to themselves.
But, on the other hand, those who do good things in secret, and yet in
some things done publicly allow evil to be thought of them, are to be admonished
that, while what is good in them quickens themselves in the virtue of
well-doing, they themselves slay not others through the example of a bad repute; that
they love not their neighbours less than themselves, nor, while themselves
imbibing a wholesome drought of wine, pour out a pestiferous cup of poison to minds
intent on observing them. These assuredly in one way little help the life of
their neighbour, and in the other greatly burden it, while they both study to do
what is right unseen, and also, in some things in which they set an example, sow
from themselves the seeds of evil. For whosoever is already competent to tread
under foot the lust of praise commits a fraud on edification, if he conceals
the good things he does; and he steals away, as it were, the roots of germination
after having cast the seed, who shews not forth the work that is to be
imitated. For hence in the Gospel the Truth says, That they may see your good works,
and glorify your Father which is in heaven (Matth. v. 16). But then there comes
also this sentence, which has the appearance of enjoining something very
different, namely, Take heed that ye do not your righteousness before men, to be seen
of them (Matth. vi. 1).
What means then its being enjoined both that our work is so to be done as
not to be seen, and yet that it should be seen, but that the things we do are
to be hidden, lest we ourselves should be praised, and yet to be shewn, that we
may increase the praise of our heavenly Father? For, when the Lord forbade us
to do our righteousness before men, He straightway added, To be seen of them.
And again, when He enjoined that our good works were to be seen of men, He
forthwith subjoined, That they may glorify your Father which is in heaven (Matth. v.
16). In what manner, then, they are to be seen, and in what manner they are not
to be seen, He shewed in the end of His injunctions, to the effect that the
mind of the worker should not seek for his work to be seen on his own account,
and yet that on account of the glory of the heavenly Father he should not conceal
it. Whence it commonly comes to pass that a good work is both in secret when
it is done publicly, and again in public when it is done secretly. For he that
in a public good work seeks not his own, but the heavenly Father's glory, hides
what he has done, in that he has had Him only for a witness whom he has desired
to please And he who in his secret good work covets being observed and praised
has done this before men, even though no one has seen what he has done;
because he has adduced so many witnesses to his good work as he has sought human
praises in his heart. But when bad repute, so far as it prevails without sin
committed, is not obliterated from the minds of lookers on, the cup of guilt is
offered, in the way of example, to all who think evil. Whence also it generally
comes to pass, that those who carelessly allow evil to be thought of them do not
indeed commit wickedness in their own persons, but still, through those who may
have taken example from them, offend in a more manifold way. Hence it is that
Paul says to those who ate certain unclean things without pollution, but in this
their eating put: a stumbling-block of temptation in the way of the imperfect,
Take heed, lest by any means this liberty of yours become a stumblingblock to
them that are weak (1 Cor. viii. 9); and again, And by thy conscience shall the
weak brother perish, for whom Christ died. But when ye so sin against the
brethren, and wound their weak consciene, ye sin against Christ (Ibid. it. 12).
Hence it is that Moses, when he said, Than shad not curse the deaf, at once added,
Nor out a stumblingblock before the blind (Lev. xix. 14). For to curse the deaf
is to disparage one who is absent and does not hear; but to put a
stumbling-block before the blind is to act indeed with discernment, but yet to give cause
of offence to him who has not the light of discernment.
CHAPTER XXXVI.
Concerning the exhortation to be addressed many at once, that it may so aid
the virtues of each among them that vices contrary to such virtues may not grow
up through.
These are the things that a Bishop of souls should observe in the
diversity of his preaching, that he may solicitously oppose suitable medicines to the
diseases of his several hearers. But, whereas it is a matter of great anxiety,
in exhorting individuals, to be of service to them according to their individual
needs, since it is a very difficult thing to struct each person in what
concerns himself, dealing out due consideration to each case, it is yet far more
difficult to admonish innumerable hearers labouring under various passions at one
and the same time with one common exhortation. For in this case the speech is to
be tempered with such art that, the vices of the hearers being diverse, it may
be found suitable to them severally, and yet be not diverse from itself; that
it pass indeed with one stroke through the midst of passions, but, after the
manner of a two-edged sword, cut the swellings of carnal thoughts on either
side; so that humility be so preached to the proud that yet fear be not increased
in the timid; that confidence be so infused into the timid that yet the
unbridled licence of the proud grow not; that solicitude in well doing be so preached
to the listless and torpid that yet licence of immoderate action be not
increased in the unquiet; that bounds be so set on the unquiet that yet careless torpor
be not produced in the listless; that wrath be so extinguished in the
impatient that yet negligence grow not in the easy and soft-hearted; that the
soft-hearted be so inflamed to zeal that yet fire be not added to the wrathful; that
liberality in giving be so infused into the niggardly that yet the reins of
profusion be in no wise loosened to the prodigal; that frugality be so preached to
the prodigal that yet care to keep perishable things be not increased in the
niggardly; that marriage be so praised to the incontinent that yet those who are
already continent be not called back to voluptuousness; that virginity of body be
so praised to the continent that yet fecundity of the flesh come not to be
despised by the married. Good things are so to be preached that ill things be not
assisted sideways. The highest good is so to be praised that the lowest be not
despaired of. The lowest is so to be cherished that there be no cessation of
striving for the highest from the lowest being thought sufficient.
CHAPTER XXXVII.
Of the exhortation to be applied to one person, who labours under contrary
passions.
It is indeed a serious labour for the preacher to keep an eye in his
public preaching to the hidden affections and motives of individuals, and, after the
manner of the palaestra, to turn himself with skill to either side: yet he is
worn with much severer labour, when he is compelled to preach to one person who
is subject to contrary vices. For it is commonly the case that some one is of
too joyous a constitution, and yet sadness suddenly arising immoderately
depresses him. The preacher, therefore, must give heed that the temporary sadness be
so removed that the constitutional joyousness be not increased; and that the
constitutional joyousness be so curbed that the temporary sadness be not
aggravated. This man is burdened by a habit of immoderate precipitancy, and yet
sometimes the power of a suddenly-born fear impedes his doing what ought to be done in
haste. That man is burdened by a habit of immoderate fear, and yet sometimes
is impelled in what he desires by the rashness of immoderate precipitancy. In
the one, therefore, let the fear that suddenly arises be so repressed that his
long-nourished precipitancy do not further grow. In the other let the
precipitancy that suddenly arises he so repressed that yet the fear stamped on him by
constitution do not gather strength. And, indeed, what is there strange in the
physicians of souls being on their guard in these things, when those who heal not
hearts but bodies govern themselves with so great skill of discernment? For it
is often the case that extreme faintness weighs down a weak body, which
faintness ought to be met by strong remedies; but yet the weak body cannot bear a
strong remedy. He, therefore, who treats the ease gives heed so to draw off the
supervening malady that the pre-existing weakness of the body be in no wise
increased, test perchance the faintness should pass away with the life. He compounds,
then, his remedy with such discernment as at one and the same time to meet both
the faintness and the weakness. If, then, medicine for the body administered
without division can be of service in a divided way, why should not medicine for
the soul, applied in one and the same preaching, be of power to meet moral
diseases in diverse directions: which medicine is the more subtle in its operation
in that invisible things are dealt with?
CHAPTER XXXVIII.
That sometimes lighter vices are to be left alone, that more grievous ones may
be removed.
But since, when the sickness of two vices attacks a man, one presses upon
him more lightly, and the other perchance more heavily, it is undoubtedly right
to haste to the succour of that through which there is the more rapid tendency
to death. And, if the one cannot be restrained from causing the death which is
imminent unless the other which is contrary to it increase, the preacher must
be content by skilful management in his exhortation to suffer one to increase,
to the end that he may keep the other back from causing the death which is
imminent. When he does this, he does not aggravate the disease, but preserves the
life of his sufferer to whom he administers the medicine, that he may find a
fitting time for searching out means of recovery. For there is often one who,
while he puts no restraint on his gluttony in food, is presently pressed hard by
the stings of lechery, which is on the point of overcoming him, and who, when,
terrified by the fear of this struggle, he strives to restrain himself through
abstinence, is harassed by the temptation of vain-glory: in which case certainly
one vice is by no means extinguished unless the other be fostered. Which plague
then should be the more ardently attacked but that which presses on the man
the more dangerously? For it is to be tolerated that through the virtue of
abstinence arrogance should meanwhile grow against one that is alive, test through
gluttony lechery should cut him off from life entirely. Hence it is that Paul,
when he considered that his weak hearer would either continue to do evil or
rejoice in the reward of human praise for well-doing, said, Will thou not be afraid
of the power? Do that which is good, and thou shall have praise of the same
(Rom. xiii. 3). For it is not that good things should be done in order that no
human power may be feared, or that the glory of transitory praise may be thereby
won; but, considering that the weak soul could not rise to so great strength as
to shun at the same time both wickedness and praise, the excellent preacher in
his admonition offered something and took away something. For by conceding mild
ailments he drew off keener ones; that, since the mind could not rise all at
once to the relinquishing of all its vices, it might, while left in familiarity
with some one of them, be taken off without difficulty from another.
CHAPTER XXXIX.
That deep things ought not to be preached at all to weak souls.
But the preacher should know how to avoid drawing the mind of his hearer
beyond its strength, test, so to speak, the string of the soul, when stretched
more than it can bear, should be broken. For all deep things should be covered
up before a multitude of hearers, and scarcely opened to a few. For hence the
Truth in person says, Who, thinkest than, is the faithful and wise steward, whom
his lord has appointed over his household, to give them their measure of wheat
in due season? (Luke xii. 42), Now by a measure of wheat is expressed a portion
of the Word, test, when anything is given to a narrow heart beyond its
capacity, it be spill. Hence Paul says, I could not speak unto you as unto spiritual,
but as unto carnal. As it were to babes in Christ, I have given you milk to
drink, and not meat (1 Cor. iii. 1, 2). Hence Moses, when he comes on from the
sanctuary of God, veils his shining face before the people; because in truth He
shews not to multitudes the secrets of inmost brightness (Exod. xxxiv. 33, 35).
Hence it is enjoined on him by the Divine voice that if any one should dig a
cistern, and not cover it, and an ox or ass should fall into it, he should pay
the price (Exod. xxi. 33, 34), because when one who has arrived at the deep
streams of knowledge covers them not up before the brutish hearts of his hearers, he
is adjudged as liable to penalty, if through his words a soul, whether clean
or unclean, be caught on a stumbling-stone. Hence it is said to the blessed Job,
Who hath given understanding unto the cock? (Job xxxviii. 36), For a holy
preacher, crying aloud in time of darkness, is as the cock crowing in the night,
when he says, It is even now the hour for us to arise from sleep (Rom. xiii. 11).
And again, Awake ye righteous, and sin not (1 Cor. xv. 34). But the cock is
wont to utter loud chants in the deeper hours of the night; but, when the time of
morning is already at hand, he frames small and slender tones; because, in
fact, he who preaches aright cries aloud plainly to hearts that are still in the
dark, and shews them nothing of hidden mysteries, that they may then hear the
more subtle teachings concerning heavenly things, when they draw nigh to the
light of truth.
CHAPTER XL.
Of the work and the voice of preaching.
But in the midst of these things we are brought back by the earnest desire
of charity to what we have already said above; that every preacher should give
forth a sound more by his deeds than by his words, and rather by good living
imprint footsteps for men to follow than by speaking shew them the way to walk
in. For that cock, too, whom the Lord in his manner of speech takes to represent
a good preacher, when he is now preparing to crow, first shakes his wings, and
by smiting himself makes himself more awake; since it is surely necessary that
those who give utterance to words of holy preaching should first be well awake
in earnestness of good living, lest they rouse others with their voice while
themselves torpid in performance; that they should first shake themselves up by
lofty deeds, and then make others solicitous for good living; that they should
first smite themselves with the wings of their thoughts; that whatsoever in
themselves is unprofitably torpid they should discover by anxious investigation,
and correct by strict animadversion, and then at length set in order the life of
others by speaking; that they should take heed to punish their own faults by
bewailings, and then denounce what calls for punishment in others; and that,
before they give voice to words of exhortation, they should proclaim in their
deeds all that they are about to speak.
PART IV.
HOW THE PREACHER, WHEN HE HAS ACCOMPLISHED ALL ARIGHT, SHOULD RETURN TO
HIMSELF, LEST EITHER HIS LIFE OR HIS PREACHING LIFT HIM UP.
But since often, when preaching is abundantly poured forth in fitting
ways, the mind of the speaker is elevated in itself by a hidden delight in
self-display, great care is needed that he may gnaw himself with the laceration of
fear, lest he who recalls the diseases of others to health by remedies should
himself swell through neglect of his own health; lest in helping others he desert
himself, lest in lifting up others he fall. For to some the greatness of their
virtue has often been the occasion of their perdition; causing them, while
inordinately secure in confidence of strength, to die unexpectedly through
negligence. For virtue strives with vices; the mind flatters itself with a certain
delight in it; and it comes to pass that the soul of a well-doer casts aside the
fear of its circumspection, and rests secure in self-confidence; and to it, now
torpid, the cunning seducer enumerates all things that it has done well, and
exalts it in swelling thoughts as though superexcellent beyond all beside. Whence
it is brought about, that before the eyes of the just judge the memory of virtue
is a pitfall of the soul; because, in calling to mind what it has done well,
while it lifts itself up in its own eyes, it fails before the author of
humility. For hence it is said to the soul that is proud, For that than art more
beautiful, go down, and sleep with the uncircumcised (Ezek. xxxii. 19): as if it were
plainly said, Because thou liftest thyself up for the comeliness of thy
virtues, thou art driven by thy very beauty to fall. Hence under the figure of
Jerusalem the soul that is proud in virtue is reproved, when it is said, Thou wert
perfect in my comeliness which I had put upon thee, saith the Lord, and having
confidence in thy beauty thou hast committed fornication in thy renown (Ibid.
xvi. 14, 15). For the mind is lifted up by confidence in its beauty, when, glad
for the merits of its virtues, it glories within itself in security. But through
this same confidence it is led to fornication; because, when the soul is
deceived by its own thoughts, malignant spirits, which take possession of it, defile
it through the seduction of innumerable vices But it is to be noted that it is
said, Thou hast committed fornication in thy renown: for when the soul leaves
off regard for the supernal ruler, it forthwith seeks its own praise, and begins
to arrogate to itself all the good which it has received for shewing forth the
praise of the giver; it desires to spread abroad the glory of its own
reputation, and busies itself to become known as one to be admired of all. In its
renown, therefore, it commits fornication, in that, forsaking the wedlock of a
lawful bed, it prostitutes itself to the defiling spirit in its lust of praise.
Hence David says, He delivered their virtue into captivity, and their beauty into
the enemy's hands (Ps. lxvii. 61(4)). For virtue is delivered into captivity and
beauty into the enemy's hands, when the old enemy gets dominion over the
deceived soul because of elation in well doing. And yet this elation in virtue
tempts somewhat, though it does not fully overcome, the mind even of the elect.
But it, when lifted up, is forsaken, and, being forsaken, it is recalled
to fear. For hence David says again, I said in mine abundance, I shall not be
moved for ever (Ps. xxix. 7(5)). But he added a little later what he underwent
for having been puffed up with confidence in his virtue, Thou didst turn thy face
from me, and I was troubled (Ibid. v. 8). As if he would say plainly, I
believed myself strong in the midst of virtues, but, being forsaken, I become aware
how great was my infirmity. Hence he says again, I have sworn and am stedfastly
purposed to keep the judgments of thy righteousness (Ps. cxviii. 106(6)). But,
because it was beyond his powers to continue the keeping which he sware,
straightway, being troubled, he found his weakness. Whence also he all at once betook
himself to the aid of prayer, saying, I am humbled all together; quicken me, O
Lord, according to Thy word (Ibid. v. 107). But sometimes Divine government,
before advancing a soul by gifts, recalls to it the memory of its infirmity,
lest it be puffed up for the virtues it has received. Whence the Prophet Ezekiel,
before being led to the contemplation of heavenly things, is first called a son
of man; as though the Lord plainly admonished him, saying, Lest thou shouldest
lift up thy heart in elation for these things which thou seest, perpend
cautiously what thou art; that, when thou penetratest the highest things, thou mayest
remember that thou art a man, to the end that, when rapt beyond thyself, thou
mayest be recalled in anxiety to thyself by the curb of thine infirmity. Whence
it is needful that, when abundance of virtues flatters us, the eye of the soul
should return to its own weaknesses, and salubriously depress itself; that it
should look, not at the right things that it has done, but those that it has
left undone; so that, while the heart is bruised by recollection of infirmity, it
may be the more strongly confirmed in virtue before the author of humility.
For it is generally for this purpose that Almighty God, though perfecting in
great part the minds of rulers, still in some small part leaves them imperfect; in
order that, when they shine with wonderful virtues, they may pine with disgust
at their own imperfection, and by no means lift themselves up for great things,
while still labouring in their struggle against the least; but that, since
they are not strong enough to overcome in what is last and lowest, they may not
dare to glory in their chief performances.
See now, good man, how, compelled by the necessity laid upon me by thy
reproof, being intent on shewing what a Pastor ought to be, I have been as an
ill-favoured painter pourtraying a handsome man; and how I direct others to the
shore of perfection, while myself still tossed among the waves of transgressions.
But in the shipwreck of this present life sustain me, I beseech thee, by the
plank of thy prayer, that, since my own weight sinks me down, the hand of thy
merit may raise me up.