LEO THE GREAT, SERMONS LIV TO LXXII
SERMON LIV.
ON THE PASSION, III.; DELIVERED ON THE SUNDAY BEFORE EASTER.
I. The two-fold Nature of Christ set forth.
Among all the works of GOD's mercy, dearly-beloved, which from the
beginning have been bestowed upon men's salvation, none is more wondrous, and none
more sublime, than that Christ was crucified for the world. For to this mystery
all the mysteries of the ages preceding led up, and every variation which the
will of GOD ordained in sacrifices, in prophetic signs, and in the observances of
the Law, foretold that this was fixed, and promised its fulfilment: so that now
types and figures are at an end, and we find our profit in believing that
accomplished which before we found our profit in looking forward to. In all things,
therefore, dearly-beloved, which pertain to the Passion of our LORD Jesus
Christ, the Catholic Faith maintains and demands that we acknowledge the two
Natures to have met in our Redeemer, and while their properties remained, such a
union of both Natures to have been effected that, from the thee when, as the cause
of mankind required, in the blessed Virgin's womb, "the Word became flesh," we
may not think of Him as GOD without that which is man, nor as man without that
which is GOD. Each Nature does indeed express its real existence by actions
that distinguish it, but neither separates itself from connexion with the other.
Nothing is wanting there on either side; in the majesty the humility is
complete, in the humility the majesty is complete: and the unity does not introduce
confusion, nor does the distinctiveness destroy the unity. The one is passible,
the other inviolable; and yet the degradation belongs to the same Person, as
does the glory. He is present at once in weakness and in power; at once capable
of death and the vanquisher of it. Therefore, GOD took on Him whole Manhood,
and so blended the two Natures together by means of His mercy and power, that
each Nature was present in the other, and neither passed out of its own properties
into the other.
II. The two Natures acted conjointly, and the human sufferings were not
compulsory, but in accordance with the Divine will.
But because the design of that mystery which was ordained for our
restoration before the eternal ages, was not to be carried out without human weakness
and without Divine power[3], both "form" does that which is proper to it in
common with the other, the Word, that is, performing that which is the Word's and
the flesh that which is of the flesh. One of them gleams bright with miracles,
the other i succumbs to injuries. The one departs not from equality with the
Father's glory, the other leaves not the nature of our race. But nevertheless even
His very endurance of sufferings does not so far expose Him to a participation
in our humility as to separate Him from the power of the Godhead. All the
mockery and insults, all the persecution and pain which the madness of the wicked
inflicted on the LORD, was not endured of necessity, but undertaken of
free-will: "for the Son of Man came to seek and to save that which had perished[4]:" and
He used the wickedness of His persecutors for the redemption of all men in
such a way that in the mystery of His Death and Resurrection even His murderers
could have been saved, if they had believed.
III Judas' infamy has never been exceeded.
And hence, Judas, thou art proved more criminal and unhappier than all;
for when repentance should have called thee back to the LORD, despair dragged
thee to the halter. Thou shouldest have awaited the completion of thy crime, and
have put off thy ghastly death by hanging, until Christ's Blood was shed for all
sinners. And among the many miracles and gifts of the LORDS which might have
aroused thy conscience, those holy mysteries, at least, might have rescued thee
from thy headlong fall, which at the Paschal supper thou hadst received, being
even then detected in thy treachery by the sign of Divine knowledge. Why dost
thou distrust the goodness of Him, Who did not repel thee from the communion of
His body and blood, Who did not deny thee the kiss of peace when thou camest
with crowds and a band of armed men to seize Him. But O man that nothing could
convert, O "spirit going and not returning[5]," thou didst follow thy heart's
rage, and, the devil standing at thy right hand, didst turn the wickedness, which
thou hadst prepared against the life of all the saints, to thine own
destruction, so that, because thy crime had exceeded all measure of punishment, thy
wickedness might make thee thine own judge, thy punishment allow thee to be thine
own hangman.
IV. Christ voluntarily bartered His glory for our weakness.
When, therefore, "GOD was in Christ reconciling the world to Himself[6],"
and the Creator Himself was wearing the creature which was to be restored to
the image of its Creator; and after the Divinely-miraculous works had been
performed, the performance of which the spirit of prophecy had once predicted, "then
shall the eyes of the blind be opened and the ears of the deaf shall hear; then
shall the lame man leap as a hart, and the tongue of the dumb shall be
plain[7];" Jesus knowing that the thee was now come for the fulfilment of His glorious
Passion, said, "My soul is sorrowful even unto death[8];" and again, "Father,
if it be possible, let this cup pass from Me[8]." And these words, expressing a
certain fear, show His desire to heal the affection of our weakness by sharing
them, and to check our fear of enduring pain by undergoing it. In our Nature,
therefore, the LORD trembled with our fear, that He might fully clothe our
weakness and our frailty with the completeness of His own strength. For He had come
into this world a rich and merciful Merchant from the skies, and by a wondrous
exchange had entered into a bargain of salvation with us, receiving ours and
giving His, honour for insults, salvation for pain, life for death: and He Whom
more than 12,000 of the angel-hosts might have served[9] for the annihilation
of His persecutors, preferred to entertain our fears, rather than employ His own
power.
V. S. Peter was the first to' benefit by his Master's humiliation.
And how much this humiliation conferred upon all the faithful, the most
blessed Apostle Peter was the first to prove, who, after the fierce blast of
threatening cruelty had dismayed him, quickly changed, and was restored to vigour,
finding remedy from the great Pattern, so that the suddenly-shaken member
returned to the firmness of the Head. For the bond-servant could not be "greater
than the lord, nor the disciple greater than the master and he could not have
vanquished the trembling of human frailty had not the Vanquisher of Death first
feared. The LORD, therefore, "looked back upon Peter[9a]," and amid the calumnies
of priests, the falsehoods of witnesses, the injuries of those that scourged
and spat upon Him, met His dismayed disciple with those eyes wherewith He had
foreseen his dismay: and the gaze of the Truth entered into him, on whose heart
correction must be wrought, as if the LORD'S voice were making itself heard
there, and saying, Whither goest thou, Peter? why retirest thou upon thyself? turn
thou to Me, put thy trust in Me, follow Me: this is the thee of My Passion, the
hour of thy suffering is not yet come. Why dost thou fear what thou, too, shalt
overcome? Let not the weakness, in which I share, confound thee. I was
fearful for thee; do thou be confident of Me.
VI. The mad counsel of the Jews was turned to their own destruction.
"And when morning was come all the chief priests and elders of the people
took counsel against Jesus to put him to death[1]." This morning, O ye Jews,
was for you not the rising, but the setting of the sun, nor did the wonted
daylight visit your eyes, but a night of blackest darkness brooded on your naughty
hearts. This morning overthrew for you the temple and its altars, did away with
the Law and the Prophets, destroyed the Kingdom and the priesthood, turned all
your feasts into eternal mourning. For ye resolved on a mad and bloody counsel,
ye "fat bulls," ye "many oxen," ye "roaring" wild beasts, ye rabid "dogs[1a],"
to give up to death the Author of life and the LORD of glory; and, as if the
enormity of your fury could be palliated by employing the verdict of him, who
ruled your province, you lead Jesus bound to Pilate's judgment, that the
terror-stricken judge being overcome by your persistent shouts, you might choose a man
that was a murderer for pardon, and demand the crucifixion of the Saviour of the
world. After this condemnation of Christ, brought about more by the cowardice
than the power of Pilate, who with washed hands but polluted mouth sent Jesus
to the cross with the very lips that had pronounced Him innocent, the licence of
the people, obedient to the looks of the priests, heaped many insults on the
LORD, and the frenzied mob wreaked its rage on Him, Who meekly and voluntarily
endured it all. But because, dearly-beloved, the whole story is too long to go
through to-day, let us put off the rest till Wednesday, when the reading of the
LORD'S Passion will be repeated[2]. For the LORD will grant to your prayers,
that of His own free gift we may fulfil our promise: through our LORD Jesus
Christ, Who liveth and reigneth for ever and ever. Amen.
SERMON LV.
ON THE LORD'S PASSION IV., DELIVERED ON WEDNESDAY IN HOLY WEEK.
I. The difference between the penitence and blasphemy of the two robbers is a
type of the human race.
That which we owe to your expectations, dearly-beloved, must be paid
through the LORD'S bountiful answer to your prayers that He Who has made you eager
in the demanding would make us fit for the performing.
In speaking but lately of the LORD'S Passion we reached the point in the
Gospel story, where Pilate is said to have yielded to the Jews' wicked shouts
that Jesus should be crucified. And so when all things had been accomplished,
which the Godhead veiled in frail flesh[3] permitted, Jesus Christ the Son of GOD
was fixed to the cross which He had also been carrying, two robbers being
similarly crucified, one on His right hand, and the other on the left: so that even
in the incidents of the cross might be displayed that difference which in His
judgment must be made in the case of all men; for the believing robber's faith
was a type of those who are to be saved, and the blasphemer's wickedness
prefigured those who are to be damned. Christ's Passion, therefore, contains the
mystery of our salvation, and of the instrument which the iniquity of the Jews
prepared for His punishment, the Redeemer's power has made for us the
stepping-stone to glory[4]: and that Passion the LORD Jesus so underwent for the salvation
of all men that, while hanging there nailed to the wood, He entreated the
Father's mercy for His murderers, and said, "Father, forgive them, for they know' not
what they do[5]."
II. The chief priests showed utter ignorance of Scripture in their taunts.
But the chief priests, for whom the Saviour sought forgiveness, rendered
the torture of the cross yet worse by the barbs of railery; and at Him, on Whom
they could vent no more fury with their hands, they hurled the weapons of their
tongues, saying, "He saved others; Himself he cannot save. If He is the King
of Israel, let Him now come down from the cross, and we believe Him[6]." From
what spring of error, from what pool of hatred, O ye Jews, do ye drink such
poisonous blasphemies? What master informed you, what teaching convinced you that
you ought to believe Him to be King of Israel and Son Of GOD, who should either
not allow Himself to be crucified, or should shake Himself free from the binding
nails. The mysteries of the Law, the sacred observances of the Passover, the
mouths of the Prophets never told you this: whereas you did find truly and
oft-times written that which applies to your abominable wicked-doing and to the
LORD'S voluntary suffering. For He Himself says by Isaiah, "I gave My back to the
scourges, My cheeks to the palms of the hand, I turned not My face from the
shame of spitting[7]." He Himself says by David, "They gave Me gall for My food,
and in My thirst they supplied Me with vinegar[8]." and again, "Many dogs came
about Me, the council of evil-doers beset Me. They pierced My hands and My feet,
they counted all My bones. But they themselves watched and gazed on Me, they
parted My raiment among them, and for My robe they cast lots[8]." And lest the
course of your own evil doings should seem to have been foretold, and no power in
the Crucified predicted, ye read not, indeed, that the LORD descended from the
cross, but ye did read, "The LORD reigned on the tree[9]."
III. The triumph of the Cross is immediate and effective.
The Cross of Christ, therefore, symbolizes[1] the true altar of prophecy,
on which the oblation of man's nature should be celebrated by means of a
salvation-bringing Victim. There the blood of the spotless Lamb blotted out the
consequences of the ancient trespass: there the whole tyranny of the devil's hatred
was crushed, and humiliation triumphed gloriously over the lifting up of pride:
for so swift was the effect of Faith that of the robbers crucified with
Christ, the one who believed in Christ as the Son of GOD entered paradise justified.
Who can unfold the mystery of so great a boon? who can state the power of so
wondrous a change? In a moment of thee the guilt of long evil-doing is done
away; clinging to the cross, amid the cruel tortures of his struggling soul, he
passes over to Christ; and to him, on whom his own wickedness had brought
punishment, Christ's grace now gives a crown.
IV. When the last act in the tragedy was over how must the Jews have felt?
And then, having now tasted the vinegar, the produce of that vineyard
which had degenerated in spite of its Divine Planter, and had turned to the
sourness of a foreign vine[1a], the LORD says, "it is finished;" that is, the
Scriptures are fulfilled: there is no more for Me to abide from the fury of the raging
people: I have endured all that I foretold I should suffer. The mysteries of
weakness are completed, let the proofs of power be produced. And so He bowed the
head and yielded up His Spirit and gave that Body, Which should be raised again
on the third day, the rest of peaceful slumber. And when the Author of Life
was undergoing this mysterious phase, and at so great a condescension of GOD'S
Majesty, the foundations of the whole world were shaken, when all creation
condemned their wicked crime by its upheaval, and the very elements of the world
delivered a plain verdict against the criminals, what thoughts, what
heart-searchings had ye, O Jews, when the judgment of the universe went against you, and your
wickedness could not be recalled, the crime having been done? what confusion
covered you? what torment seized your hearts?
V. Chastity, and charity are the two things most needful in preparing for
Easter Communion.
Seeing therefore, dearly-beloved, that GOD'S Mercy is so great, that He
has deigned to justify. by faith many even from among such a nation, and had
adopted into the company of the patriarchs and into the number of the chosen people
us who were once perishing in the deep darkness of our old ignorance, let us
mount to the summit of our hopes not sluggishly nor in sloth; but prudently and
faithfully reflecting from what captivity and from how miserable a bondage,
with what ransom we were purchased, by how strong an arm led out, let us glorify
GOD in our body: that we may show Him dwelling in us, even by the uprightness of
our manner of life: And because no virtues are worthier or more excellent than
merciful loving-kindness and unblemished chastity, let us more especially
equip ourselves with these weapons, so that, raised from the earth, as it were on
the two wings of active charity and shining purity, we may win a place in
heaven. And whosoever, aided by GOD'S grace, is filled with this desire and glories
not in himself, but in the LORD, over his progress, pays due honour to the
Easter mystery. His threshold the angel of destruction does not cross, for it is
marked with the Lamb's blood and the sign of the cross[1b]. He fears not the
plagues of Egypt, and leaves his foes overwhelmed by the same waters by which he
himself was saved. And so, dearly-beloved, with minds and bodies purified let us
embrace the wondrous mystery of our salvation, and, cleansed from all "the
leaven of our old wickedness, let us keep[1b]" the LORD'S Passover with due
observance: so that, the Holy Spirit guiding us, we may be "separated" by no
temptations "from the love of Christ[1b]," Who bringing peace by His blood to all things,
has returned to the loftiness of the Father's glory, and yet not forsaken the
lowliness of those who serve Him to Whom is the honour and the glory for ever
and ever. Amen.
SERMON LVIII.
(ON THE PASSION, VII.)
I. The reason of Christ suffering at the Paschal Feast.
I know indeed, dearly-beloved, that the Easter festival partakes of so
sublime a mystery as to surpass not only the slender perceptions of my humility,
but even the powers of great intellects. But I must not consider the greatness
of the Divine work in such a way as to distrust or to feel ashamed of the
service which I owe; for we may not hold our peace upon the mystery of man's
salvation, even if it cannot be explained. But, your prayers aiding us, we believe
GOD'S Grace will be granted, to sprinkle the barrenness of our heart with the dew
of His inspiration: that by the pastor's mouth things may be proclaimed which
are useful to the ears of his holy flock. For when the Lord, the Giver of all
good things, says: "open thy mouth, and I will fill it[2]," we dare likewise to
reply in the prophet's words: "Lord, Thou shale open my lips, and my mouth shall
shew forth Thy praise[3]." Therefore beginning, dearly-beloved, to handle once
more the Gospel-story of the Lord's Passion, we understand it was part of the
Divine plan that the profane chiefs of the Jews and the unholy priests, who had
often sought occasion of venting their rage on Christ, should receive the power
of exercising their fury at no other time than the Paschal festival. For the
things which had long been promised under mysterious figures had to be fulfilled
in all clearness; for instance, the True Sheep had to supersede the sheep
which was its antitype, and the One Sacrifice to bring to an end the multitude of
different sacrifices. For all those things which had been divinely ordained
through Moses about the sacrifice of the lamb had prophesied of Christ and truly
announced the slaying of Christ. In order, therefore, that the shadows should
yield to the substance and types cease in the presence of the Reality, the ancient
observance is removed by a new Sacrament, victim passes into Victim, blood is
wiped away by Blood, and the law-ordained Feast is fulfilled by being changed.
II. The leading Jews broke their own Law, as well as failed to apprehend the
new dispensation in destroying Christ.
And hence, when the chief priests gathered the scribes and elders of the
people together to their council, and the minds of all the priests were occupied
with the purpose of doing wrong to Jesus, the teachers of the law put
themselves without the law, and by their own voluntary failure in duty abolished their
ancestral ceremonies. For when the Paschal feast began, those who ought to have
adorned the temple, cleansed the vessels, provided the victims, and employed a
holier zeal in the purifications that the law enjoined, seized with the fury
of traitorous hate, give themselves up to one work, and with uniform cruelty
conspire for one crime, though they were doomed to gain nothing by the
punishment of innocence and the condemnation of righteousness, except the failure to
apprehend the new mysteries and the violation of the old. The chiefs, therefore,
in providing against a tumult arising on a holy day[4], showed zeal not for the
festival, but for a heinous crime; and their anxiety served not the cause of
religion, but their own incrimination. For these careful pontiffs and anxious
priests feared the occurrence of seditious riots on the principal feast-day, not
lest the people should do wrong, but lest Christ should escape.
III. Jesus instituting the Blessed Sacrament showed mercy to the Traitor Judas
to the last.
But Jesus, sure of His purpose and undaunted in carrying out His Father's
will, fulfilled the New Testament and founded a new Passover. For while the
disciples were lying down with Him at the mystic Supper, and when discussion was
proceeding in the hall of Caiaphas how Christ might be put to death, He,
ordaining the Sacrament of His Body and Blood, was teaching them what kind of Victim
must be offered up to God, and not even from this mystery was the betrayer kept
away, in order to show that he was exasperated by no personal wrong, but had
determined beforehand of his own free-will upon his treachery. For he was his own
source of ruin and cause of perfidy, following the guidance of the devil and
refusing to have Christ as director. And so when the Lord said, "Verily I say to
you that one of you is about to betray Me," He showed that His betrayer's
conscience was well known to Him, not confounding the traitor by harsh or open
rebukes, but meeting him with mild and silent warnings that he who had never been
sent astray by rejection, might the easier be set right by repentance. Why,
unhappy Judas, dose thou not make use of so great long-suffering? Behold, the Lord
spares thy wicked attempts; Christ betrays thee to none save thyself. Neither
thy name nor thy person is discovered, but only the secrets of thy heart are
touched by the word of truth and mercy. The honour of the apostolic rank is not
denied thee, nor yet a share in the Sacraments. Return to thy right mind; lay
aside thy madness and be wise. Mercy invites thee, Salvation knocks at the door,
Life recalls thee to life. Lo, thy stainless and guiltless fellow-disciples
shudder at the hint of thy crime, and all tremble for themselves till the author of
the treachery is declared. For they are saddened not by the accusations of
conscience, but by the uncertainty of man's changeableness; fearing lest what each
knew against himself be less true than what the Truth Himself foresaw. But
thou abusest the Lord's patience in this panic of the saints, and believest that
thy bold front hides thee. Thou addest impudence to guilt, and art not
frightened by so clear a test And when the others refrain from the food in which the
Lord had set His judgment, thou dost not withdraw thy band from the dish, because
thy mind is not turned aside from the crime.
IV. Various incidents of the Passion .further explained and the reality of
Christ's sufferings asserted.
And thus it followed, dearly-beloved, that as John the Evangelist has
narrated, when the Lord offered the bread which He had dipped to His betrayer, more
clearly to point him out, the devil entirely seized Judas, and now, by his
veritable act of wickedness, took possession of one whom he had already bound down
by his evil designs. For only in body was he lying there with those at meat:
in mind he was arming the hatred of the priests, the falseness of the
witnesses, and the fury of the ignorant mob, At last the Lord, seeing on what a gross
crime bent says, "What thou doest do Judas was quickly[5]." This is the voice not
of command but of permission, and not of fear but of readiness: He, that has
power over all times, shows that He puts no hindrance in the way of the traitor,
and carries out the Father's will for the redemption of the world in such a
way as neither to promote nor to fear the crime which His persecutors were
preparing. When Judas, therefore, at the devil's persuasion, departed from Christ,
and cut himself off from the unity of the Apostolic body, the Lord, without
bring disturbed by any fear, but anxious only for the salvation of those He came to
redeem, spent all the time that was free from His persecutors' attack on
mystic conversation and holy teaching, as is declared in St. John's gospel: raising
His eyes to heaven and beseeching the Father for the whole Church that all whom
the Father had and would give the Son might become one and remain undivided to
the Redeemer's glory, and adding lastly that prayer in which He says, "Father,
if it be possible, let this cup pass from Me[6]." Wherein it is not to be
thought that the Lord Jesus wished to escape the Passion and the Death, the
sacraments of which He had already committed to His disciples' keeping, seeing that He
Himself forbids Peter, when he was burning with devoted faith and love, to use
the sword, saying, "The cup which the Father hath given Me, shall I not drink
it[7]?" and seeing that that is certain which the Lord also says, according to
John's Gospel, "For God so loved the world that He gave His only begotten Son,
that everyone who believes in Him may not perish, but have eternal life[8]";"
as also what the Apostle Paul says, "Christ loved us and gave Himself for us, a
victim to God for a sweet-smelling savour[9]." For the saving of all through
the Cross of Christ was the common will and the common plan of the Father and the
Son; nor could that by any means be disturbed which before eternal ages had
been mercifully determined and unchangeably fore-ordained. Therefore in assuming
true and entire manhood He took the true sensations of the body and the true
feelings of the mind. And it does not follow because everything in Him was full
of sacraments, full of miracles, that therefore He either shed false tears or
took food from pretended hunger or reigned slumber. It was in our humility that
He was despised, with our grief that He was saddened, with our pain that He was
racked on the cross. For His compassion underwent the sufferings of our
mortality with the purpose of healing them, and His power encountered them with the
purpose of conquering them. And this Isaiah has most plainly prophesied,
saying, "He carries our sins and is pained for us, and we thought Him to be in pain
and in stripes and in vexation. But He was wounded for our sins, and was
stricken for our offences, and with His braises we are healed[1]."
V. The resignation of Christ is an undying lesson to the Church
And so, dearly beloved, when the Son of God says, "Father, if it be
possible, let this cup pass from Me[2]," He uses the outcry of our nature, and pleads
the cause of human frailty and trembling: that our patience may be
strengthened and our fears driven away in the things which we have to bear. At length,
ceasing even to ask this now that He had in a measure palliated our weak fears,
though it is not expedient for us to retain them, He passes into another mood,
and says, "Nevertheless, not as I will but as Thou;" and again, "If this cup can
not pass from Me, except I drink it, Thy will be done[2]." These words of the
Head are the salvation of the whole Body: these words have instructed all the
faithful, kindled the zeal of all the confessors, crowned all the martyrs. For
who could overcome the world's hatred, the blasts of temptations, the terr onsf
persecutors, had not Christ, in the name of all and for all, said, to the
Father, "Thy will be done?" Then let the words be learnt by all the Church's sons who
have been purchased at so great a price, so freely justified: and when the
shock of some violent temptation has fallen on them, let them use the aid of this
potent prayer, that they may conquer their fear and trembling, and learn to
suffer patiently. From this point, dearly-beloved, our sermon must pass to the
consideration of the details of the Lord's Passion, and lest we should burden you
with prolixity, we will divide our common task, and put off the rest[3] till
the fourth day of the week. God's grace will be vouchsafed to you if you pray Him
to give me the power of carrying out my duty: through our Lord Jesus Christ,
&c.
SERMON LIX.
(ON THE PASSION, VIII.: ON WEDNESDAY IN HOLY WEEK.)
I. Christ's arrest fulfils His own eternal purpose.
Having discoursed, dearly beloved, in our last sermon, on the events which
preceded the Lord's arrest, it now remains, by the help of God's grace, to
discuss, as we promised, the details of the Passion itself. When the Lord had made
it clear by the words of His sacred prayer that the Divine and the Human
Nature was most truly and fully present in Him, showing that the unwillingness to
suffer proceeded from the one, and from the other the determination to suffer by
the expulsion of all frail fears and the strengthening of His lofty power, then
did He return to His eternal purpose, and "in the form of a" sinless "slave"
encounter the devil who was savagely attacking Him by the hands of the Jews:
that He in Whom alone was all men's nature without fault, might undertake the
cause of all. The sins of darkness, therefore, assailed the true Light, and, for
all their torches and lanterns[4], could not escape the night of their own
unbelief, because they did not recognize the Fount of Light. They arrest Him, and He
is ready to be seized; they lead Him away, and He is willing to be led; for
though, if He had willed to resist, their wicked hands could have done Him no
harm, yet thereby the world's redemption would have been impeded, and He, who was
to die for all men's salvation, would have saved none at all.
II. How great was Pilate's crime in allowing himself to be led astray & the
Jews.
Accordingly, permitting the infliction on Himself of all that the people's
fury inflamed by the priests dared do, He is brought to Annas, father-in-law
to Caiaphas, and thence Annas passes Him on to Caiaphas: and after the
calumniators' mad accusations, after the lying falsehoods of suborned witnesses, He is
transferred to Pilate's hearing by the delegation of the two high-priests, who
in neglecting the Divine law, and exclaiming that they had "no king but Caesar,"
as if they were devoted to the Roman laws, and had left the whole judgment in
the hands of the governor, really sought for an accomplisher of their cruelty
rather than an umpire of the case. For they gave up Jesus, bound in hard bonds,
bruised by many buffets and blows, spat upon, already condemned by their
shouts: so that amidst so many signs of their own verdict Pilate might not dare to
acquit One Whom all desired to perish. In fact, the very inquiry shows both that
he found in the Accused no fault and that in his judgment he did not adhere to
his purpose: for as judge he condemns One Whom he pronounces guiltless,
invoking on the unrighteous people the blood of the Righteous Man with Whom he felt by
his own conviction, and knew from his wife's dream[4a], he must have nothing
to do. That stained soul is not cleansed by the washing of hands, there is no
expiation in water-besprinkled fingers for the crime abetted by that wicked mind.
Pilate's fault is indeed, less than the Jews' crime; for it was they that
terrified him with Caesar's name, chode him with hateful words, and drove him to
perpetrate his wickedness. But he also did not escape incrimination for playing
into the hands of those that made the uproar, for abandoning his own judgment,
and for acquiescing in the charges of others.
III. Yet the Jews' guilt was infinitely greater.
In bowing, therefore, dearly-beloved, to the madness of the impacable
people, in permitting Jesus to be dishonoured by much mocking, and harassed with
excessive insults, and in displaying Him to the eyes of His persecutors lacerated
with scourges, crowned with thorns, and clothed in a robe of scorn, Pilate
doubtless thought to appease the enemies' minds, so that when they had glutted
their cruel hate, they might cease further to persecute One Whom they beheld
subjected to such a variety of afflictions. But their wrath was still in full blaze,
and they cried out to him to release Barabbas and thus, Jesus bear the penalty
of the cross, and thus, when with consenting murmur the crowd said "His blood
be on us and on our sons[4a]," those wicked folk gained, to their own damnation
what they had persistently demanded, "whose teeth," as the prophet bore
witness, "were arms and arrows, and their tongue a sharp sword[5]." For in vain did
they keep their own hands from crucifying the Lord of glory when they had hurled
at Him the tongue's deadly darts and the poisoned weapons of words. On you, on
you, false Jews and unholy leaders of the people, falls the full weight of
that crime: and although the enormity of the guilt involves the governor and the
soldiers also, yet you are the primary and chief offenders. And in Christ's
condemnation, whatsoever wrong was done either by Pilate's judgment or by the
cohorts carrying out of his commands, makes you only the more deserving of the
hatred of mankind, because the impulse of your fury would not let even those be free
from guilt who were displeased at your unrighteous acts.
IV. Christ bearing His own cross is an eternal lesson to the Church.
And so the Lord was handed over to their savage wishes, and in mockery of
His kingly state, ordered to be the bearer of His own instrument of death, that
what Isaiah the prophet foresaw might be fulfilled, saying, "Behold a Child is
born, and a Son is given to us whose government is upon His shoulders[6]."
When, therefore, the Lord carried the wood of the cross which should turn for Him
into the sceptre of power, it was indeed in the eyes of the wicked a mighty
mockery, but to the faithful a mighty mystery was set forth, seeing that He, the
glorious vanquisher of the Devil, and the strong defeater of the powers that
were against Him, was carrying in noble sort the trophy of His triumph, and on the
shoulders of His unconquered patience bore into all realms the adorable sign
of salvation: as if even then to confirm all His followers by this mere symbol
of His work, and say, "He that taketh not his cross and followeth Me, is not
worthy of Me[6a]."
V. The transference of the cross from the Lord to Simon of Cyrene signifies
the participation of the Gentiles in His sufferings.
But as the multitudes went with Jesus to the place of punishment, a
certain Simon of Cyrene was found on whom to lay the wood of the cross instead of the
Lord; that even by this act might be pre-signified the Gentiles' faith, to
whom the cross of Christ was to be not shame but glory. It was not accidental,
therefore, but symbolical and mystical, that while the Jews were raging against
Christ, a foreigner was found to share His sufferings, as the Apostle says, "if
we suffer with Him, we shall also reign with Him[7]"; so that no Hebrew nor
Israelite, but a stranger, was substituted for the Saviour in His most holy
degradation. For by this transference the propitiation of the spotless Lamb and the
fulfilment of all mysteries passed from the circumcision to the uncircumcision,
from the sons according to the flesh to the sons according to the spirit: since
as the Apostle says, "Christ our Passover is sacrificed for us[8]," Who
offering Himself to the Father a new and true sacrifice of reconciliation, was
crucified not in the temple, whose worship was now at an end, and not within the
confines of the city which for its sin was doomed to be destroyed, but outside,
"without the camp[9]," that, on the cessation of the old symbolic victims, a new
Victim might be placed on a new altar, and the cross of Christ might be the altar
not of the temple but of the world.
VI. We are to see not only the crass but the meaning of it.
Accordingly, dearly-beloved, Christ being lifted up upon the cross, let
the eyes of your mind not dwell only on that sight which those wicked sinners
saw, to whom it was said by the mouth of Moses, "And thy life shall be hanging
before thine eyes, and thou shalt fear day and night, and shalt not be assured of
thy life[1]." For in the crucified Lord they could think of nothing but their
wicked deed, having not the fear, by which true faith is justified, but that by
which an evil conscience is racked. But let our understandings, illumined by
the Spirit of Truth, foster with pure and free heart the glory of the cross which
irradiates heaven and earth, and see with the inner sight what the Lord meant
when He spoke of His coming Passion: "The hour is come that the Son of man may
be glorified[2] :" and below He says, "Now is My spirit troubled. And what
shall I say? Father, save Me from this hour, but for this cause came I unto this
hour. Father, glorify Thy Son." And when the Father's voice came from heaven,
saying, "I have both glorified it and will glorify it again," Jesus in reply said
to those that stood by, "This voice came not for Me but for you. Now is the
world's judgment, now shall the prince of this world be cast out. And I, if I be
lifted up from the earth, will draw all things unto Me[2].''
VII. The power of the crass is universally attractive.
O wondrous power of the Cross! O ineffable glory of the Passion, in which is
contained the Lord's tribunal, the world's judgment, and the power of the
Crucified! For thou didst draw all things unto Thee, Lord and when Thou hadst
stretched out Thy hands all the day, long to an unbelieving people that gainsaid
Thee[2a], the whole world at last was brought to confess Thy majesty. Thou didst
draw all things unto Thee, Lord, when all the elements combined to pronounce
judgment in execration of the Jews' crime, when the lights of heaven were darkened,
and the day turned into night, and the earth also was shaken with unwonted
shocks, and all creation refused to serve those wicked men. Thou didst draw all
things unto Thee, Lord. for the veil of the temple was rent, and the Holy of
Holies existed no more for those unworthy high-priests: so that type was turned into
Truth, prophecy into Revelation law into Gospel. Thou didst draw all things
unto Thee, Lord, so that what before was done in the one temple of the Jews in
dark signs, was now to be celebrated everywhere by the piety of all the nations
in full and open rite. For now there is a nobler rank of Levites, there are
elders of greater dignity and priests of holier anointing: because Thy cross is the
fount of all blessings, the source of all graces, and through it the believers
receive strength for weakness, glory for shame, life for death. Now, too, the
variety of fleshly sacrifices has ceased, and the one offering of Thy Body and
Blood fulfils all those different victims: for Thou art the true "Lamb of God,
that takest away the sins of the world[3]," and in Thyself so accomplishest all
mysteries, that as there is but one sacrifice instead of many victims, so
there is but one kingdom instead of many nations.
VIII. We must live not for ourselves but for Christ, who died for us.
Let us, then, dearly-beloved, confess what the blessed teacher of the
nations, the Apostle Paul, confessed, saying, "Faithful is the saying, and worthy
of all acceptation, that Christ Jesus came into the world to save sinners[4]."
For God's mercy towards us is the more wonderful that Christ died not for the
righteous nor for the holy, but for the unrighteous and wicked; and though the
nature of the Godhead could not sustain the sting of death, yet at His birth He
took from us that which He might offer for us. For of old He threatened our
death with the power of His death, saying. by the mouth of Hosea the prophet, "O
death, I will be thy death, and I will be thy destruction, O hell[5]." For by
dying He underwent the laws of hell, but by rising again He broke them, and so
destroyed the continuity of death as to make it temporal instead of eternal. "For
as in Adam all die, even so in Christ shall all be made alive[6]." And so,
dearly-beloved, let that come to pass of which S. Paul speaks, "that they that
live, should henceforth not live to themselves but to Him who died for all and rose
again[7]." And because the old things have passed away and all things are
become new, let none remain in his old carnal life, but let us all be renewed by
daily progress and growth in piety. For however much a man be justified, yet so
long as he remains in this life, he can always be more approved and better. And
he that is not advancing is going back, and he that is gaining nothing is
losing something. Let us run, then, with the steps of faith, by the works of mercy,
in the love of righteousness, that keeping the day of our redemption
spiritually, "not in the old leaven of malice and wickedness, but in the unleavened bread
of sincerity and truth[8]," we may deserve to be partakers of Christ's
resurrection, Who with the Father and the Holy Ghost liveth and reigneth for ever and
ever. Amen.
SERMON LXII.
(ON THE PASSION, XI.)
I. The mystery of the Passion passes man's comprehension.
The Feast of the Lord's Passion[9] that we have longed for and that the
whole world may well desire, has come, and suffers us not to keep silence in the
tumult of our spiritual joys: because though it is difficult to speak often on
the same thing worthily and appropriately, yet the priest is not free to
withhold from the people's ears instruction by sermon on this great mystery of God'S
mercy, inasmuch as the subject itself, being unspeakable, gives him ease of
utterance, and what is said cannot altogether fail where what is said can never be
enough. Let human frailty, then, succumb to God's glory, and ever acknowledge
itself unequal to the unfolding of His works of mercy. Let us toil in thought,
fail in insight, falter in utterance: it is good that even our right thoughts
about the Lord's Majesty should be insufficient. For, remembering what the
prophet says, "Seek ye the Lord and be strengthened: seek His face always[1]," no
one must assume that he has found all he seeks, lest he fail of coming near, if
he cease his endeavours. And amidst all the works of God which weary out man's
wondering contemplation, what so delights and so baffles our mind's gaze as the
Saviour's Passion? Ponder as we may upon His omnipotence, which is of one and
equal substance with the Father, the humility in God is more stupendous than the
power, and it is harder to grasp the complete emptying of the Divine Majesty
than the infinite uplifting of the" slave's form" in Him. But we are much aided
in our understanding of it by the remembrance that though the Creator and the
creature, the Inviolable God and the possible flesh, are absolutely different,
yet the properties of both substances meet together in Christ's one Person in
such a way that alike in His acts of weakness and of power the degradation
belongs to the same Person as the glory.
II. The Creed takes up S. Peter's confession as the fundamental doctrine of
the Church.
In that rule of Faith, dearly-beloved, which we have received in the very
beginning of the Creed, on the authority of apostolic teaching, we acknowledge
our Lord Jesus Christ, whom we call the only Son of God the Father Almighty, to
be also born of the Virgin Mary by the Holy Ghost. Nor do we reject His
Majesty when we express our belief in His crucifixion, death, and resurrection on the
third day. For all that is God's and all that is Man's are simultaneously
fulfilled by His Manhood and His Godhead, so that in virtue of the union of the
Possible with the Impossible, His power cannot be affected by His weakness, nor
His weakness overcome by His power. And rightly was the blessed Apostle Peter
praised for confessing this union, who when the Lord was inquiring what the
disciples knew of Him, quickly anticipated the rest and said, "Thou art Christ, the
Son of the living God[2]." And this assuredly he saw, not by the revelation of
flesh or blood, which might have hindered his inner sight, but by the very
Spirit of the Father working in his believing heart, that in preparation for ruling
the whole Church he might first learn what he would have to teach, and for the
solidification of the Faith, which he was destined to preach, might receive the
assurance, "Thou art Peter, and upon this rock I will build My Church, and the
gates of hell shall not prevail against it[3]." The strength, therefore, of
the Christian Faith, which, built upon an impregnable rock, fears not the gates
of death, acknowledges the one Lord Jesus Christ to be both true God and true
Man, believing Him likewise to be the Virgin's Son, Who is His Mother's Creator:
born also at the end of the ages, though He is the Creator of time: Lord of all
power, and yet one of mortal stock: ignorant of sin, and yet sacrificed for
sinners after the likeness of sinful flesh.
III. The devil's devices were turned against himself.
And in order that He might set the human race free from the bonds of
deadly transgression, He hid the power of His majesty from the raging devil, and
opposed him with our frail and humble nature. For if the cruel and proud foe could
have known the counsel of God's mercy, he would have aimed at soothing the
Jews' minds into gentleness rather than at firing them with unrighteous hatred,
lest be should lose the thraldom of all his captives in assailing the liberty of
One Who owed him nought. Thus he was foiled by his malice: he inflicted a
punishment on the Son of God, which was turned to the healing of all the sons of
men. He shed righteous Blood, which became the ransom and the drink for the
world's atonement. The Lord undertook that which He chose according to the purpose of
His own will. He permitted madmen to lay their wicked hands upon Him: hands
which, in ministering to their own doom, were of service to the Redeemer's work.
And yet so great was His loving compassion for even His murderers, that He
prayed to the Father on the cross, and begged not for His own vengeance but for
their forgiveness, saying, "Father, forgive them, for they know not what they
do[3]." And such was the power of that prayer, that the hearts of many of those who
had said, "His blood be on us and on our sons[3a]," were turned to penitence
by the Apostle Peter's preaching, and on one day there were baptized about 3,000
Jews: and they all were "of one heart and of one soul[4]," being ready now to
die for Him, Whose crucifixion they had demanded.
IV. Why Judas could not obtain forgiveness through Christ.
To this forgiveness the traitor Judas could not attain: for he, the son of
perdition, at whose right the devil stood[5], gave himself up to despair
before Christ accomplished the mystery of universal redemption. For in that the Lord
died for sinners, perchance even he might have found salvation if he had not
hastened to hang himself. But that evil heart, which was now given up to
thievish frauds, and now busied with treacherous designs, had never entertained aught
of the proofs of the Saviour's mercy. Those wicked ears had heard the Lord's
words, when He said, "I same not to call the righteous but sinners(6)," and "The
Son of man came to seek and to save that which was lost(7)," but they conveyed
not to his understanding the clemency of Christ, which not only healed bodily
infirmities, but also cured the wounds of sick souls, saying to the paralytic
man, "Son, be of good cheer, thy sins are forgiven thee saying also to the
adulteress that was brought to Him, "neither will I condemn thee; go and sin no
more(9)," to show in all His works that He had come as the Saviour, not the Judge
of the world. But the wicked traitor refused to understand this, and took
measures against himself, not in the self-condemnation of repentance, but in the
madness of perdition, and thus he who had sold the Author of life to His murderers,
even in dying increased the amount of sin which condemned him.
V. The cruelty oaf Christ's crucifixioni s lost in its wondrous power.
Accordingly that which false witnesses, cruel leaders of the people,
wicked priests did against the Lord Jesus Christ, through the agency of a coward
governor and an ignorant band of soldiers, has been at once the abhorrence and the
rejoicing of all ages. For though the Lord's cross was part of the cruel
purpose of the 'Jews, yet is it of wondrous power through Him they crucified. The
people's fury was directed against One, and the mercy of Christ is for all
mankind. That which their cruelty inflicts He voluntarily undergoes. in order that
the work of His eternal will may be carried out through their unhindered crime.
And hence the whole order of events which is most fully narrated in the Gospels
must be received by the faithful in such a way that by implicit belief in the
occurrences which happened at the time of the Lord's Passion, we should
understand that not only was the remission of sins accomplished by Christ, but also the
standard of justice satisfied. But that this may be more thoroughly discussed
by the Lord's help, let us reserve this portion of the subject till the fourth
day of the week(9a) God's grace, we hope, will be vouchsafed at your entreaties
to help us to fulfil our promise: through Jesus Christ our Lord, &c. Amen.
SERMON LXIII.
(ON THE PASSION, XII.: PREACHED ON WEDNESDAY.)
I. God those to save man by strength made perfect in weakness.
The glory, dearly-beloved, of the Lord's Passion, on which we promised to
speak again to-day, is chiefly wonderful for its mystery of humility, which has
both ransomed and instructed us all, that He, Who paid the price, might also
impart His righteousness to us. For the Omnipotence of the Son of God, whereby
He is by the same Essence equal to the Father, might have rescued mankind from
the dominion of the devil by the mere exercise of Its will, had it not better
suited the Divine working to conquer the opposition of the foe's wickedness by
that which had been conquered, and to restore our nature's liberty by that very
nature by which bondage had come upon the whole race. But, when the evangelist
says, "The Word became flesh and dwelt in us '," and the Apostle," God was in
Christ reconciling the world to Himself(2),'' it was shown that the Only-begotten
of the Most High Father entered on such a union with human humility, that,
when He took the substance of oar flesh and soul, He remained one and the same Son
of God by exalting our properties, not His own: because it was the weakness,
not the power that had to be reinforced, so that upon the union of the creature
with the Creator there should be nothing wanting of the Divine to the assumed,
nor of the human to the Assuming.
II. God's plan was always partially understood, and is now of universal
application.
This plan of God's mercy and justice, though in the ages past it was in a
measure enshrouded in darkness, was yet not so completely hidden that the
saints, who have most merited praise from the beginning till the coming of the Lord,
were precluded from understanding it: seeing that the salvation, which was to
come through Christ, was promised both by the words of prophecy and by the
significance of events, and this salvation not only they attained who foretold it,
but all they also who believed their predictions. For the one Faith justifies
the saints of all ages, and to the self-same hope of the faithful pertains all
that by Jesus Christ, the Mediator between God and man, we acknowledge done, or
our fathers reverently accepted as to be done. And between Jew and Gentile
there is no distinction, since, as the Apostle says, "Circumcision is nothing, and
uncircumcision is nothing, but the keeping of God's commands(3)," and if they
be kept in entirety of faith, they make Christians the true sons of Abraham,
that is perfect, for the same Apostle says, "For whosoever of you were baptized in
Christ Jesus, have put on Christ. There is neither Jew nor Greek: there is
neither slave nor free: there is neither male nor female. For ye are all one in
Christ. But if ye are Christ's, then are ye Abraham's seed, heirs according to
promise(4.)."
III. The union of the Divine Head with its members inseparable.
There is no doubt therefore, dearly-beloved, that man's nature has been
received by the Son of Go/3 into such a union that not only in that Man Who is
the first-begotten of all creatures, but also in all His saints there is one and
the self-same Christ, and as the Head cannot be separated from the members, so
the members cannot be separated from the Head. For although it is not in this
life, but in eternity that God is to be "all in all 4.," yet even now He is the
inseparable Inhabitant of His temple, which is the Church, according as He
Himself promised, saying, "Lo! I am with you all the days till the en of the
age(5)." And agreeably therewith the Apostle says, "He is the head of the body, the
Church, which is the beginning, the first-begotten from the dead, that in all
things He may have the pre-eminence, because in Him it was pleasing that all
fulness (of the Godhead) should dwell, and that through Him all things should be
reconciled in Himself(6)."
IV. Christ's passion provided a saving mystery and an example for us to follow.
And what is suggested to our hearts by these and many other references,
save that we should in all things be renewed in His image Who, remaining "in the
form of God(6a)," deigned to "take the form" of sinful flesh ? For all our
weaknesses, which come from sin, He took on Him without sharing in sin, so that He
felt the sensation of hunger and thirst and sleep and fatigue, and grief and
weeping, and suffered the fiercest pangs up to the extremity of death, because no
one could be loosed from the snares of death, unless He in Whom alone all men s
nature was guileless allowed Himself to be slain by the hands of wicked men.
And hence our Saviour the Son of God provided for all that believe in Him both a
mystery and an example(7), that they might apprehend the one by being born
again, and follow the other by imitation. For the blessed Apostle Peter teaches
this, saying, "Christ suffered for us, leaving you an example that ye should
follow His steps. Who did no sin, neither was guile found in His mouth. Who when He
was reviled, reviled not: when He suffered, threatened not, but gave Himself
up to His unjust judge. Who Himself bare our sins in His body on the tree, that
being dead to sins, we may live to righteousness(8)."
V. Christ not destroyed, but fulfilled and elevated the Law.
As therefore there is no believer, dearly-beloved, to whom the gifts of
grace are denied, so there is no one who is not a debtor in the matter of
Christian discipline; because, although the severity of the mystic Law is done away,
yet the benefits of its voluntary observance have increased, as the evangelist
John says, "Because the Law was given through Moses, but grace and truth came
through Jesus Christy." For all things that, according to the Law, went before,
whether in the circumcision of the flesh, or in the multitude of victims, or in
the keeping of the Sabbath, testified of Christ, and foretold the grace of
Christ. And He is "the end of the Law(1)," not by annulling, but by fulfilling its
meanings. For although He is at once the Author of the old and of the new, yet
He changed the symbolic rites connected with the promises, because He
accomplished the promises and put an end to the announcement by the coming of the
Announced. But in the matter of moral precepts, no decrees of the earlier Testament
are rejected, but many of them are amplified by the Gospel teaching: so that the
things which give salvation are more perfect and clearer than those which
promise a Saviour.
VI. The present effect of Christ's Passion is daily realized by Christians,
especially in Hall, Baptism.
All therefore that the Son of God did and taught for the world's
reconciliation, we not only know as a matter of past history, but appreciate in the
power of its present effect. It is He Who, born of the Virgin Mother by the Holy
Ghost, fertilizes His unpolluted Church with the same blessed Spirit, that the
birth of Baptism an innumerable multitude of sons may be born to God, of Whom it
is said, "who were born not of blood, nor of the will of the flesh, nor of the
will of man, but of God(2)." It is He, in Whom the seed of Abraham is blessed
by the adoption of the whole world ", and the patriarch becomes the father of
nations by the birth. through faith not flesh, of the sons of promise. It is He
Who, without excluding any nation, makes one flock of holy sheep froth every
nation under heaven, and daily fulfils what He promised, saying, "Other sheep also
I have which are not of this fold; them also I must bring, and they shall hear
My: voice, and there shall be one flock and one shepherd(3)." For though to
the blessed Peter first and foremost He says, "Feed My sheep(4) ;" yet the one
LORD directs the charge of all the shepherds, and feeds those that come to the
rock with such glad and well-watered pastures, that countless sheep are
nourished by the richness of His love, and hesitate not to perish for the Shepherd's
sake, even as the good Shepherd Himself was content to lay down His life for His
sheep. It is He whose sufferings are shared not only by the martyrs' glorious
courage, but also in the very act of regeneration by the faith of all the
new-born. For the renunciation of the devil and belief in God(5), the passing from
the old state into newness of life, the casting off of the earthly image, and the
putting on of the heavenly form--all this is a sort of dying and rising again,
whereby he that is received by Christ and receives Christ is not the same
after as he was before he came to the font, for the body of the regenerate becomes
the flesh of the Crucified(6).
VII. The good works of Christians are only part of Christ's good works.
This change, dearly-beloved, is the handiwork of the Most High(7), Who
"worketh all things in all," so that by the good manner of life observed in each
one of the faithful, we know Him to be the Author of all just works, and give
thanks to God's mercy, Who so adorns the whole body of the Church with countless
gracious gifts, that through the many rays of the one Light the same brightness
is everywhere diffused, and that which is well done by any Christian
whatsoever cannot but be part the glory of Christ. This is that true which justifies and
enlightens every man. This it is that rescues from the power of darkness and
transfers us into the Kingdom of the Son of God. This it is that by newness of
life exalts the desires of the mind and quenches the lusts of the flesh. This it
is whereby the Lord's Passover is duly kept "With the unleavened bread of
sincerity and truth" by the casting away of" the old leaven of wickedness " and the
inebriating and feeding of the new creature with the very Lord. For naught
else is brought about by the partaking of the and Blood of Christ than that we
pass into that which we then take(8), and both in spirit and in body carry
everywhere Him, in and with Whom we were dead, buried, and rose again, as the Apostle
says, "For ye are dead, and your life is hid with Christ in God. For when
Christ, your life, shall appear, then shall ye also appear with Him in glory(9)."
Who with the Father, &c.
SERMON LXVII.
(ON THE PASSION, XVI.: DELIVERED ON THE SUNDAY.)
I. The contemplation of the prophecies of Christ's suffering are a great
source of pious delight.
The minds of the faithful, beloved, ought indeed always to be occupied
with wonder at God's works and their reasoning faculties devoted particularly to
those reflexions by which they may gain increase of faith. For so long as the
pious heart's attention is directed either to the benefits which all enjoy, or to
special gifts of His grace, it keeps aloof from many vanities and retires from
bodily cares into a spiritual seclusion. But this must be the more eagerly and
thoroughly done at the season of the Lord Passion, that what is then read in
the sacred lections may surely be received with the ears of understanding, and
that the themes which are great in word may be seen to be yet greater from the
mysterious realities which underlie them. For the first reason for our lifting
up our hearts ' is that the voices of the prophets have sung of the things which
the truth of the Gospel has also narrated, not as destined to happen, but as
having happened, and that what man's ears had not yet learnt was to be
accomplished, was already being proclaimed as fulfilled by the (Holy 2) Spirit. For King
David, whose seed according to the flesh is Christ, completed his lifetime
more than 1,100(2a) years before the day of the Lord's Crucifixion, and endured
none of those punishments which he relates as inflicted upon himself. But because
by his mouth One spoke Who was to take suffering flesh of his stock, the story
of the cross is tightly anticipated in the person of him who was the bodily
ancestor of the Saviour. For David truly suffered in Christ, because Jesus was
truly crucified in the flesh which He had from David.
II. The Divine foreknowledge does not account for the Jews' wickedness so as
to excuse them.
Since then all things which Jewish ungodliness committed against the Lord
of Majesty were foretold so long before(3), and the language of the prophets is
concerned not so much with things to come as with things last, what else is
thereby revealed to us but the unchangeable order of God's eternal decrees, with
Whom the things which are to be decided are already determined, and what will
be is already accomplished ? For since both the character of our actions and the
fulfilment of all our wishes are fore-known to God,. how much better known to
Him are His own works ? And He was rightly pleased that things should be
recorded as if done which nothing could hinder from being done. And hence when the
Apostles also, being full of the Holy Ghost, suffered the threats and cruelty of
Christ's enemies, they said to God with one consent, "For truly in this city
against Thy holy Servant Jesus, Whom Thou hast anointed, Herod and Pontius
Pilate, with the Gentiles and the peoples of Israel were gathered together to do what
Thy hand and Thy counsel ordained to come to pass(4)." Did then the wickedness
of Christ's persecutors spring from God's plan, and was that unsurpassable
crime prefaced and set in motion by the hand of God ? Clearly we must not think
this of the highest Justice: that which was fore-known in respect of the Jews'
malice is far different, indeed quite contrary to what was ordained in respect of
Christ's Passion. Their desire to slay Him did not proceed from the same
source as His to die: nor were their atrocious crime and the Redeemer's endurance
the offspring of One Spirit. The Lord did not incite but permit those madmen's
naughty hands: nor in His foreknowledge of what must be accomplished did He
compel its accomplishment, even though it was in order to its accomplishment that He
had taken flesh.
III. Christ was in no sense the Author of His murderer's guilt.
In fact, the case of the Crucified is so different from that of His
crucifiers that what Christ undertook could not be reversed, while what they did
could be wiped out. For He Who came to save sinners did not refuse mercy even to
His murderers, but changed the evil of the wicked into the goodness of the
believing, that God's grace might be the more wonderful, being mercifully put in
force, not according to men's merits, but according to the multitude of the riches
of God's wisdom anti knowledge, seeing that they also who had shed the
Saviour's blood were received into the baptismal flood. For, as says the Scripture,
which contains the Apostles' acts when the preaching of the blessed Apostle Peter
pierced the hearts of the Jews, and they acknowledged the iniquity of their
crime, saying, "what shall we do, brethren?" the same Apostle said, "Repent and be
baptized, each one of you, in the name of Jesus Christ for the remission of
your sins, and ye shall receive the gift of the Holy Ghost. For to you is the
promise, and to your sons, and to all that are afar off, whomsoever our Lord God
has called," and soon after the Scripture goes on to say: "they therefore that
received his word were baptized, and there were added on that day about 3,000
souls(5)." And so, in being willing to suffer their furious rage, the Lord Jesus
Christ was in no way the Author of their crimes; nor did He force them to
desire this, but permitted them to be able, and used the madness of the blinded
people just as He did also the treachery of His betrayer, whom by kindly acts and
words He vouchsafed to recall from the awful crime he had conceived, by taking
him for a disciple, by promoting him to be an apostle, by warning him with
signs, by admitting him to the revelation of holy mysteries(6), that one who had
lacked no degree of kindness to correct him, might have no pretext for his crime
at all.
IV. The enormity of Judas' crime is set forth.
But O ungodliest of men, "thou seed of Chanaan and not of Juda(7)," and no
longer "a vessel of election," but "a son of perdition" and death, thou didst
think the devil's instigations would profit thee better, so that, inflamed with
the torch of greed, thou wert ablaze to gain 30 pieces of silver and sawest
not what riches thou wouldst lose. For even if thou didst not think the Lord's
promises were to be believed, what reason was there for preferring so small a sum
of money to what thou hadst already received ? Thou wast wont to command the
evil spirits, to heal the sick, to receive honour with the rest of the apostles,
and that thou mightest satisfy thy thirst for gain, it was open to thee to
steal from the box that was in thy charge(8). But thy mind, which lusted after
forbidden things, was more strongly stimulated by that which was less allowed: and
the amount of the price pleased thee not so much as the enormity of the sin.
Wherefore thy wicked bargain is not so detestable merely because thou countedst
the LORD sO cheap, but because thou didst sell Him Who was the Redeemer, yea,
even thieve, and badst no pity on thyself(9). And justly was thy punishment put
into thine own hands because none could be found more cruelly bent on thy
destruction than thyself.
V. Christ's Passion was for our Redemption by mystery and example.
The fact, therefore, that at the time appointed, according to the purpose
of His will, jesus Christ was crucified, dead, and buried was not the doom
necessary to His own condition, but the method of redeeming us from captivity. For
"the Word became flesh" in order that from the Virgin's womb He might take our
suffering nature, and that what could not be inflicted on the Son of God might
be inflicted on the Son of Man. For although at His very birth the signs of
Godhead shone forth in Him, and the whole course of His bodily growth was full of
wonders, yet had He truly assumed our weaknesses, and without share in sin had
spared Himself no human frailty, that He might impart what was His to us and
heal what was ours in Himself. For He, the Almighty Physician, had prepared a
two-fold remedy for us in our misery, of which the one part consists of mystery
and the other of example(1), that by the one Divine powers may be bestowed, by
the other human weaknesses driven out(2). Because as GOD is the Author of our
justification, so man is a debtor to pay Him devotion.
VI.We can only attain to Christ's perfection by following in His steps.
Therefore, dearly-beloved, by this unspeakable restoration of our health
no place is left us for pride or for idleness: because we have nothing which we
did not receive(28), and we are expressly warned not to treat the gifts of
God's grace with negligence(2a). For He that comes so timely to our aid justly
urges us with precept, and He that leads us to glory mercifully incites us to
obedience. Wherefore the Lord Himself is rightly made our way, because save through
Christ there is no coming to Christ. But through Him and to Him does he take
his way who treads the path of His endurance and humiliation, and on that road
you may be sure there are not wanting the heats of toil, the clouds of sadness,
the storms of fear. The snares of the wicked, the persecutions of the
unbelieving, the threats of the powerful, the insults of the proud are I there; and all
these things the LORD of hosts and King of glory passed through in the form of
our weakness and in the likeness of sinful flesh, to the end that amid the
danger of this present life we might desire not so much to avoid and escape them as
to endure and overcome them.
VII. Christ cry of "Forsaken" on the cross was to teach us the insufficiency
of the human nature without the Zion in.
Hence it is that the Lord Jesus Christ, our Head, representing all the
members of His body in Himself, and speaking for those whom He was redeeming in
the punishment of the cross, uttered that cry which He had once uttered in the
psalm, "O God, My God, look upon Me: why hast Thou forsaken Me(3)?" That cry,
dearly-beloved, is a lesson, not a complaint. For since in Christ there is one
person of God and man, and He could not have been forsaken by Him, from Whom He
could not be separated, it is on behalf of us, trembling and weak ones, that He
asks why the flesh that is afraid to suffer has not been heard. For when the
Passion was beginning, to cure anti correct our weak fear He had said, "Father,
if it be possible, let this cup pass from Me: nevertheless not as I will but as
Thou;" and again, "Father, if this cup cannot pass except I drink it, Thy will
be done(4)." As therefore He had conquered the tremblings of the flesh, and had
now accepted the Father's will, and trampling all dread of death under foot,
was then carrying out the work of His design, wily at the very time of His
triumph over such a victory does He seek the cause and reason of His being forsaken,
that is, not heard, save to show that the feeling which He entertained in
excuse of His human fears is quite different from the deliberate choice which, in
accordance with the Father's eternal decree, He had made for the reconciliation
of the world ? And thus the very cry of "Unheard" is the exposition of a mighty
Mystery, because the Redeemer's power would have conferred nothing on mankind
if our weakness in Him had obtained what it sought. Let these words
dearly-beloved, suffice to-day, lest we burden you by the length of our discourse: let us
put off the rest till Wednesday. The Lord shall hear you if you pray that we
may keep our promise through the bounty of Him Who lives and reigns for ever and
ever. Amen.
SERMON LXVIII.
(On The Passion, XVII.: delivered on the Wednesday.)
I. Christ's Godhead never forsook Him in His Passion.
The last discourse, dearly-beloved, of which we desire now to give the
promised portion, had reached that point in the argument where we were speaking of
that cry which the crucified Lord uttered to the Father: we bade the simple
and unthinking hearer not take the words "My Con, &c.," in a sense as if, when
Jesus was fixed upon the wood of the cross, the Omnipotence of the Father's Deity
had gone away from Him; seeing that God's and Man's Nature were so completely
joined in Him that the union could not be destroyed by punishment nor by death.
For while each substance retained its own properties, God neither held aloof
from the suffering of His body nor was made passible by the flesh, because the
Godhead which was in the Sufferer did not actually suffer. And hence, in
accordance with the Nature of the Word made Man, He Who was made in the midst of all
is the same as He through Whom all things were made. He Who is arrested by the
hands of wicked men is the same as He Who is bound by no limits. He Who is
pierced with nails is the same as He Whom no wound can affect. Finally, He Who
underwent death is the same as He Who never ceased to be eternal, so that both facts
are established by indubitable signs, namely, the truth of the humiliation in
Christ and the truth of the majesty; because Divine power joined itself to
human frailty to this end, that God, while making what was ours His, might at the
same time make what was His ours. The Son, therefore, was not separated from the
Father, nor the Father from the Son; and the unchangeable Godhead and the
inseparable Trinity did not admit of any division. For although the task of
undergoing Incarnation belonged peculiarly to the Only-begotten Son of God, yet the
Father was not separated from the Son any more than the flesh was separated from
the Word(5).
II. Christ's death was voluntary an His part, and yet in saving others He
could not save Himself.
Jesus, therefore, cried with a loud voice, saying, "Why hast Thou forsaken
Me?" in order to notify to all how it behoved Him not to be rescued, not to be
defended, but to be given up into the hands of cruel men, that is to become
the Saviour of the world and the Redeemer of all men, not by misery but by mercy;
and not by the failure of succour but by the determination to die. But what
must we feel to be the intercessory power of His life Who died and rose again by
His own inherent power(6) For the blessed Apostle says the Father "spared not
His own Son, but gave Him up for us all(7);" and again, he says, "For Christ
loved the Church, and gave Himself up for her, that He might sanctify it(8)." And
hence the giving up of the Lord to His Passion was as much of the 'Father's as
of His own will, so that not only did the Father "forsake" Him, but He also
abandoned Himself in a certain sense, not in hasty flight, but in voluntary
withdrawal. For the might of the Crucified restrained itself from those wicked men,
and in order to avail Himself of a secret design, He refused to avail Himself
of His open power. For how would He who had come to destroy death and the author
of death by His Passion have saved sinners, if he had resisted His
persecutors? This, then, had been the Jews' belief, that Jesus had been forsaken by God,
against Whom they had been able to commit such unholy cruelty; for not
understanding the mystery of His wondrous endurance, they said in blasphemous mockery:
"He saved others, Himself He cannot save. If He be the King of Israel, let Him
now come down from the cross, and we believe Him(9)." Not at your blind will, O
foolish scribes and wicked priests, was the Saviour's power to be displayed,
nor in obedience to blasphemers' evil tongues was the Redemption of mankind to be
delayed; for if you had wished to recognize the Godhead of the Son of God, you
would have observed His numberless works, and they must have confirmed you in
that faith, which you so deceitfully promise. But if, as you yourselves
acknowledge, it is true that He saved others, why have those many, great miracles,
which have been done under the public gaze, done nothing to soften the hardness of
your hearts, unless it be because you have always so resisted the Holy Ghost
as to turn all God's benefits towards you into your destruction? For even though
Christ should descend from the cross, you would yet remain in your crime.
III. A transition was then being effect from the Old to the New Dispensation.
Therefore the insults of empty exultation were scorned, and the Lord's
mercy in restoring the lost and the fallen was not turned from the path of its
purpose by contumely or reviling. For a peerless victim was being offered to God
for the world's salvation, and the slaying of Christ the true Lamb, predicted
through so many, ages, was transferring the sons of promise into the liberty of
the Faith. The New Testament also was being ratified, and in the blood of Christ
the heirs of the eternal Kingdom were being enrolled; the High Pontiff was
entering the Holy of Holies, and to intercede with GOD the spotless Priest was
passing in through the veil of His flesh(9a). In fine, so evident a transition was
being effected from the Law to the Gospel, from the from the synagogue to Sc
the Church, from many sacrifices to the One Victim(1), that, when the LORD gave
up the ghost, that mystic veil which hung before and shut out the inner part
of the Temple and its holy recess was by sudden force torn from top (to
bottom(9a), for the reason that Truth was displacing figures, and forerunners were
needless in the presence of Him they announced. To this was added a terrible
confusion of all the elements, and nature herself withdrew her support from Christ's
crucifiers. And although the centurion in charge of the crucifixion, in fright
at what he had seen, said "truly this man was the Son of God(9a)," yet the
wicked hearts of the Jews, which were harder than all tombs and rocks, is not
reported to have been pierced by any compunction: so that it seems the Roman
soldiers were then readier to recognize the Son of God than the priests of Israel.
IV. Let us profit by fasting and good works at this sacred season of the year.
Because, then, the Jews, deprived of all the sanctification imparted by
these mysteries, turned their light into darkness and their "feasts into
mourning(1a),'' let us, dearly-beloved, prostrate our bodies and our souls and worship
God's Grace, which has been poured out upon all nations, beseeching the
merciful Father and the rich Redeemer from day to day to give us His aid and enable us
to escape all the dangers of this life. For the crafty tempter is present
everywhere, and leaves nothing free from his snares. Whom, God's mercy helping us,
which is stretched out to us amid all dangers, we must ever with stedfast faith
resist(1a) so that, though he never ceases to asail, he may never succeed in
carrying the assault. Let all, dearly-beloved, religiously keep and profit by
the fast, and let no excesses mar the benefits of such self-restraint as we have
proved convenient both for soul and body. For the things which pertain to
sobriety and temperance must be the more diligently observed at this season, that a
lasting habit may be contracted from a brief zeal; and whether in works of
mercy or in strict self-denial, no hours may be left idle by the faithful, seeing
that, as years increase and time glides by, we are bound to increase our store
of works, and not squander our opportunities. And to devout wills and religious
souls God's Mercy will be granted, that He may enable us to obtain that which
He enabled us to desire, Who liveth and reigneth with our Lord Jesus Christ His
Son, and with the Holy Ghost, for ever and ever. Amen.
SERMON LXXI.
On The Lord's Resurrection, I.; Delivered on Holy Saturday in the vigil the of
Easter(2).
I. We must all be partakers in Christ's Resurrection life.
In my last sermon(3), dearly-beloved, not inappropriately, as I think, we
explained to you our participation in the cross of Christ, whereby the life of
believers contains in itself the mystery of Easter, and thus what is honoured
at the feast is celebrated by our practice. And how useful this is you
yourselves have proved, and by your devotion have learnt, how greatly benefited souls
and bodies are by longer fasts, more frequent prayers, and more liberal alms. For
there can be hardly any one who has not profited by this exercise, and who has
not stored up in the recesses of his conscience something over which he may
rightly rejoice. But these advantages must be retained with persistent care, lest
our efforts fall away into idleness, and the devil's malice steal what God's
grace gave. Since, therefore, by our forty days' observance(4) we have wished to
bring about this effect, that we should feel something of the Cross at the
time of the Lord's Passion, we must strive to be found partakers also of Christ's
Resurrection, and "pass from death unto life(4a)," while we are in this body.
For when a man is changed by some process from one thing into another, not to be
what he was is to him an ending, and to be what he was not is a beginning. But
the question is, to what a man either dies or lives: because there is a death,
which is the cause of living, and there is a life, which is the cause of
dying. And nowhere else but in this transitory world are both sought after, so that
upon the character of our temporal actions depend the differences of the
eternal retributions. We must die, therefore, to the devil and live to God: we must
perish to iniquity that we may rise to righteousness. Let the old sink, that
the new may rise; and since, as says the Truth, "no one can serve two
masters(5)," let not him be lord who has caused the overthrow of those that stood, but Him
Who has raised the fallen to victory.
II. God did not leave His soul in hell, nor suffer His flesh to see corruption.
Accordingly, since the Apostle says, "the first man is of the earth
earthy, the second man is from heaven heavenly. As is the earthy, such also are they
that are earthy; and as is the heavenly, such also are they that are heavenly.
As we have borne the image of the earthy, so let us also bear the image of Him
Who is from heaven 6," we must greatly rejoice over this change, whereby we are
translated from earthly degradation to heavenly dignity through His
unspeakable mercy, Who descended into our estate that He might promote us to His, by
assuming not only the substance but also the conditions of sinful nature, and by
allowing the impossibility of Godhead to be affected by all the miseries which
are the lot of mortal manhood. And hence that the disturbed minds of the
disciples might not be racked by prolonged grief, He with such wondrous speed shortened
the three days' delay which He had announced, that by joining the last part of
the first and the first part of the third day to the whole of the second, He
cut off a considerable portion of the period, and yet did not lessen the number
of days. The Saviour's Resurrection therefore did not long keep His soul in
Hades, nor His flesh in the tomb; and so speedy was the quickening of His
uncorrupted flesh that it bore a closer resemblance to slumber than to death, seeing
that the Godhead, Which quitted not either part of the Human Nature which He had
assumed, reunited by Its power that which Its power had separated(7).
III. Christ's manifestation after the Resurrection showed that His Person was
essentially the same as before.
And then there followed many proofs, whereon the authority of the Faith to
be preached through the whole world might be based. And although the rolling
away of the stone, the empty tomb, the arrangement of the linen cloths, and the
angels who narrated the whole deed by themselves fully built up the truth of
the Lord's Resurrection, yet did He often appear plainly to the eyes both of the
women and of the Apostles(8) not only talking with them, but also remaining and
eating with them, and allowing Himself to be handled by the eager and curious
hands of those whom doubt assailed. For to this end He entered when the doors
were closed upon the disciples, and gave them the Holy Spirit by breathing on
them, and after giving them the light of understanding opened the secrets of the
Holy Scriptures, and again Himself showed them the wound in the side, the
prints of the nails, and all the marks of His most recent Passion, whereby it might
be acknowledged that in Him the properties of the Divine and Human Nature
remained undivided, and we might in such sort know that the Word was not what the
flesh is, as to confess God's only Son to be both Word and Flesh.
IV. But though it is the same, it is also glorified.
The Apostle of the Gentiles, Paul, dearly. beloved, does not disagree with
this belief, when he says, "even though we have known Christ after the flesh,
yet now we know Him so no more(9)." For the Lord's Resurrection was not the
ending, but the changing of the flesh, and His substance was not destroyed by His
increase of power. The quality altered, but the nature did not cease to exist:
the body was made impassible, which it had been possible to crucify: it was
made incorruptible, though it had been possible to wound it. And properly is
Christ's flesh said not to be known in that state in which it had been known,
because nothing remained passible in it, nothing weak, so that it was both the same
in essence and not the same in glory. But what wonder if S. Paul maintains this
about Christ's body, when he says of all spiritual Christians "wherefore
henceforth we know no one after the flesh." Henceforth, he says, we begin to
experience the resurrection in Christ, since the time when in Him, Who died for all,
all our hopes were guaranteed to us. We do not hesitate in diffidence, we are not
under the suspense of uncertainty, but having received an earnest of the
promise, we now with the eye of faith see the things which will be, and rejoicing in
the uplifting of our nature, we already possess what we believe.
V. Being saved by hope, we must not fulfil the lasts of the flesh.
Let us not then be taken up with the appearances of temporal matters,
neither let our contemplations be diverted from heavenly to earthly things. Things
which as yet have for the most part not come to pass must be reckoned as
accomplished: and the mind intent on what is permanent must fix its desires there,
where what is offered is eternal. For although "by hope we were saved(1)," and
still bear about with us a flesh that is corruptible and mortal, yet we are
rightly said not to be in the flesh, if the fleshly affections do not dominate us,
and are justified in ceasing to be named after that, the will of which we do not
follow. And so, when the Apostle says, "make not provision for the flesh in
the lusts thereof(2)," we understand that those things are not forbidden us,
which conduce to health and which human weakness demands, but because we may not
satisfy all our desires nor indulge in all that the flesh lusts after, we
recognize that we are warned to exercise such self-restraint as not to permit what is
excessive nor refuse what is necessary to the flesh, which is placed under the
mind's control(3). And hence the same Apostle says in another place, "For no
one ever hated his own flesh, but nourisheth and cherisheth it(4);" in so far,
of course, as it must be nourished and cherished not in vices and luxury, but
with a view to its proper functions, so that nature may recover herself and
maintain due order, the lower parts not prevailing wrongfully and debasingly over
the higher, nor the higher yielding to the lower, lest if vices overpower the
mind, slavery ensues where there should be supremacy.
VI. Our godly resolutions must continue all the year round, not be confined to
Easier only.
Let God's people then recognize that they are a new creation in Christ,
and with all vigilance understand by Whom they have been adopted and Whom they
have adopted(5). let not the things, which have been made new, return to their
ancient instability; and let not him who has "put his hand to the plough(6)"
forsake his work, but rather attend to that which he sows than look back to that
which he has left behind. Let no one fall back into that from which he has risen,
but, even though from bodily weakness he still languishes under certain
maladies, let him urgently desire to be healed and raised up. For this is the path of
health through imitation of the Resurrection begun in Christ, whereby,
notwithstanding the many accidents and falls to which in this slippery life the
traveller is liable, his feet may be guided from the quagmire on to solid ground,
for, as it is written, "the steps of a man are directed by the Lord, and He will
delight in his way. When the just man falls he shall not be overthrown, because
the Lord will stretch out His hand(7)." These thoughts, dearly-beloved, must
be kept in mind not only for the Easter festival, but also for the
sanctification of the whole life, and to this our present exercise ought to be directed,
that what has delighted the souls of the faithful by the experience of a short
observance may pass into a habit and remain unalterably, and if any fault creep
in, it may be destroyed by speedy repentance. And because the cure of
old-standing diseases is slow and difficult, remedies should be applied early, when the
wounds are fresh, so that rising ever anew from all downfalls, we may deserve to
attain to the incorruptible Resurrection of our glorified flesh in Christ Jesus
our Lord, Who lives and reigns with the Father and the Holy Ghost for ever and
ever. Amen.
SERMON LXXII.
(On The Lord's Resurrection, II.)
I. The Cross is not only the mystery of salvation, but an example to follow.
The whole of the Easter mystery, dearly-beloved, has been brought before
us in the Gospel narrative, and the ears of the mind have been so reached
through the ear of flesh that none of you can fail to have a picture of the events:
for the text of the Divinely-inspired story has clearly shown the treachery of
the Lord Jesus Christ's betrayal, the judgment by which He was condemned, the
barbarity of His crucifixion, and glory of His resurrection. But a sermon is
still required of us, that the priests' exhortation may be added to the solemn
reading of Holy Writ, as I am sure you are with pious expectation demanding of us
as your accustomed due. Because therefore there is no place for ignorance in
faithful ears, the seed of the Word which consists of the preaching of the Gospel,
ought to grow in the soil of your heart, so that, when choking thorns and
thistles have been removed, the plants of holy thoughts and the buds of right
desires may spring up freely into fruit. For the cross of Christ, which was set up
for the salvation of mortals, is both a mystery and an example(8): a sacrament
where by the Divine power takes effect, an example whereby man's devotion is
excited: for to those who are rescued from the prisoner's yoke Redemption further
procures the power of following the way of the cross by imitation. For if the
world's wisdom so prides itself in its error that every one follows the opinions
and habits and whole manner of life of him whom he has chosen as his leader,
how shall we share in the name of Christ save by being inseparably united to
Him, Who is, as He Himself asserted, "the Way, the Truth, and the Life ?" the Way
that is of holy living, the Truth of Divine doctrine, and the Life of eternal
happiness.
II. Christ look our nature upon Him for our salvation.
For when the whole body of mankind had fallen in our first parents, the
merciful GoD purposed so to succour, through His only-begotten Jesus Christ, His
creatures made after His image, that the restoration of our nature should not
be effected apart from it, and that our new estate should be an advance upon our
original position. Happy, if we had not fallen from that which God made us;
but happier, if we remain that which He has re-made us. It was much to have
received form from Christ; it is more to have a substance in Christ(1). For we were
taken up into its own proper self by that Nature (which condescended to those
limitations which loving-kindness dictated and which yet incurred no sort of
change. We were taken up by that Nature(2), which destroyed not what was His in
what was ours, nor what was ours in what was His; which made the person of the
Godhead and of the Manhood so one in Itself that by co-ordination of weakness and
power, the flesh could not be rendered inviolable through the Godhead, nor the
Godhead passible through the flesh. We were taken up by that Nature, which did
not break off the Branch from the common stock of our race, and yet excluded
all taint of the sin which has passed upon all men. That is to say, weakness and
mortality, which were not sin, but the penalty of sin, were undergone by the
Redeemer of the World in the way of punishment, that they might be reckoned as
the price of redemption. What therefore in all of us is the heritage of
condemnation, is in Christ "the mystery of godliness(3)." For being free from debt, He
gave Himself up to that most cruel creditor, and suffered the hands of Jews to
be the devil's agents in torturing His spotless flesh. Which flesh He willed to
be subject to death, even up to His(speedy)(4) resurrection, to this end, that
believers in Him might find neither persecution intolerable, nor death
terrible, by the remembrance that there was no more doubt about their sharing His
glory than there was about His sharing their nature.
III. The presence of the risen and ascended Lord is still with us.
And so, dearly-beloved, if we unhesitatingly believe with the heart what
we profess with the mouth, in Christ we are crucified, we are dead, we are
buried; on the very third day, too, we are raised. Hence the Apostle says, "If ye
have risen with Christ, seek those things which are above, where Christ is,
sitting on God's right hand: set your affections on things above, not on things on
the earth For ye are dead, and your life is hid with Christ in God. For when
Christ, your life, shall have appeared, then shall ye also appear with Him in
glory(5)." But that the hearts of the faithful may know that they have that whereby
to spurn the lusts of the world and be lifted to the wisdom that is above, the
Lord promises us His presence, saying, "Lo ! I am with you all the days, even
till the end of the age(6)." For not in vain had the Holy Ghost said by Isaiah:
"Behold ! a virgin shall conceive and shall bear a Son, and they shall call
His name Emmanuel, which is, being interpreted, God wire us(7)." Jesus,
therefore, fulfils the proper meaning of His name, and in ascending into the heavens
does not forsake His adopted brethren, though "He sitteth at the right hand of the
Father," yet dwells in the whole body, and Himself from above strengthens them
for patient waiting while He summons them upwards to His glory.
IV. We must have the same mind as was in Christ Jesus.
We must not, therefore, indulge in folly amid vain pursuits, nor give way
to fear in the midst of adversities. On the one side, no doubt, we are
flattered by deceits, and on the other weighed down by troubles; but because "the earth
is full of the mercy of the Lord(8)," Christ's victory is assuredly ours, that
what He says may be fulfilled, "Fear not, for I have overcome the world(9)."
Whether, then, we fight against the ambition of the world, or against the lusts
of the flesh, or against the darts of heresy, let us arm ourselves always with
the Lord's Cross. For our Paschal feast will never end, if we abstain from the
leaven of the old wickedness (in the sincerity of truth(1). For amid all the
changes of this life which is full of various afflictions, we ought to remember
the Apostle's exhortation; whereby he instructs us, saying, "Let this mind be in
you which was also in Christ Jesus: Who being in the form of God counted it
not robbery to be equal with God, but emptied Himself, taking the form of a
bond-servant, being made in the likeness of men and found in fashion as a man.
Wherefore God also exalted Him, and gave Him a name which is above every name, that
in the name of Jesus every knee should bow of things in heaven, of things on
earth, and of things below, and that every tongue should confess that the LORD
Jesus Christ is in the glory of God the Father(2)." If, he says, you understand
"the mystery of great godliness," and remember what the Only-begotten Son of God
did for the salvation of mankind, "have that mind in you which was also in
Christ Jesus," Whose humility is not to be scorned by any of the rich, not to be
thought shame of by any of the high-born. For no human happiness whatever can
reach so great a height as to reckon it a source of shame to himself that God,
abiding in the form of Coy, thought it not unworthy of Himself to take the form
of a slave.
V. Only he who holds t/re truth on the Incarnation can keep Easter properly.
Imitate what He wrought: love what He loved, and finding in you the Grace
of God, love in Him your nature in return, since as He was not dispossessed of
riches in poverty, lessened not glory in humility, lost not eternity in death,
so do ye, too, treading in His footsteps, despise earthly things that ye may
gain heavenly: for the taking up of the cross means the slaying of lusts, the
killing of vices, the turning away from vanity, and the renunciation of all error.
For, though the Lord's Passover can be kept by no immodest, self-indulgent,
proud, or miserly person, yet none are held so far aloof from this festival as
heretics, and especially those who have wrong views on the Incarnation of the
Word, either disparaging what belongs to the Godhead or treating what is of the
flesh as unreal. For the Son of God is true God, having from the Father all that
the Father is, with no beginning in time, subject to no sort of change,
undivided from the One God, not different from the Almighty, the eternal Only-begotten
of the eternal Father; so that the faithful intellect believing in the Father
and the Son and the Holy Ghost in the same essence of the one Godhead, neither
divides the Unity by suggesting degrees of dignity, nor confounds the Trinity
by merging the Persons in one. But it is not enough to know the Son of God in
the Father's nature only, unless we acknowledge Him in what is ours without
withdrawal of what is His own. For that self-emptying, which He underwent for man's
restoration, was the dispensation of compassion, not the loss of powers. For,
though by the eternal purpose of God there was "no other name under heaven given
to men whereby they must be saved(4)," the Invisible made His substance
visible. the Intemporal temporal, the Impassible passible: not that power might sink
into weakness, but that weakness might pass into indestructible power.
VI. A mystical application of the term "Passover" is given.
For which reason the very feast which by us is named Pascha, among the
Hebrews is called Phase, that is Pass-overs, as the evangelist attests, saying,
"Before the feast of Pascha, Jesus knowing that His hour was come that He should
pass out of this world unto the Father(6)." But what was the nature in which He
thus passed out unless it was ours, since the Father was in the Son and the
Son in the Father inseparably? But because the Word and the Flesh is one Person,
the Assumed is not separated from the Assuming nature, and the honour of being
promoted is spoken of as accruing to Him that promotes, as the Apostle says in
a passage we have already quoted, "Wherefore also God exalted Him and gave Him
a name which is above every name." Where the exaltation of His assumed Manhood
is no doubt spoken of, so that He in Whose sufferings the Godheard remains
indivisible is likewise coeternal in the glory of the Godhead. And to share in this
unspeakable gift the LORD Himself was preparing a blessed "passing over" for
His faithful ones, when on the very threshhold of His Passion he interceded not
only for His Apostles and disciples but also for the whole Church, saying, "But
not for these only I pray, but for those also who shall believe on Me through
their word, that they all may be one, as Thou also, Father, art in Me, and I in
Thee, that they also may be one in us(7)."
VII. Only true believers can keep the Easter Festival.
In this union they can have no share who deny that in the Son of God,
Himself true GoD, man's nature abides, assailing the health-giving mystery and
shutting themselves out from the Easter festival. For, as they dissent from the
Gospel and gainsay the creed, they cannot keep it with us, because although they
dare to take to themselves the Christian name, yet they are repelled by every
creature who has Christ for his Head: for you rightly exult and devoutly rejoice
in this sacred season as those who, admitting no falsehood into the Truth, have
no doubt about Christ's Birth according to the flesh, His Passion and Death,
and the Resurrection of His body: inasmuch as without any separation of the
Godhead you acknowledge a Christ, Who was truly born of a Virgin's womb, truly hung
on the wood of the cross, truly laid in an earthly tomb, truly raised in
glory, truly set on the right hand of the Father's majesty; "whence also," as the
Apostle says, "we look for a Saviour our LORD Jesus Christ. Who shall refashion
the body of our humility to become conformed to the body of His glory(8)." Who
liveth and reigneth, &c.