LEO THE GREAT, SERMONS LXXIII TO XCV
SERMON LXXIII.
(On the Lord's Ascension, I.)
I. The events recorded as happening after the Resurrection were intended to
convince its truth.
Since the blessed and glorious Resurrection of our LoRD Jesus Christ,
whereby the Divine power in three days raised the true Temple of GOD, which the
wickedness of the Jews had overthrown, the sacred forty days, dearly-beloved are
to-day ended, which by most holy appointment were devoted to our most profitable
instruction, so that, during the period that the LORD thus protracted the
lingering of His bodily presence, our faith in the Resurrection might be fortified
by needful proofs. For Christ's Death had much disturbed the disciples' hearts,
and a kind of torpor of distrust had crept over their grief-laden minds at His
torture on the cross, at His giving up the ghost, at His lifeless body's
burial. For, when the holy women, as the Gospel-story has revealed, brought word of
tile stone rolled away from the tomb, the sepulchre emptied of the body, and
the angels bearing witness to the living LORD, their words seemed like ravings
to the Apostles and other disciples. Which doubtfulness, the result of human
weakness, the Spirit of Truth would most assuredly not have permitted to exist in
His own preacher's breasts, had not their trembling anxiety and careful
hesitation laid the foundations of our faith. It was our perplexities and our dangers
that were provided for in the Apostles: it was ourselves who in these men were
taught how to meet the cavillings of the ungodly and the arguments of earthly
wisdom. We are instructed by their lookings, we are taught by their hearings, we
are convinced by their handlings. Let us give thanks to the Divine management
and the holy Fathers' necessary slowness of belief. Others doubted, that we
might not doubt.
II. And therefore they are in the highest degree instructive.
Those days, therefore, dearly-beloved, which intervened between the Lord's
Resurrection and Ascension did not pass by in uneventful leisure, but great
mysteries[9] were ratified in them, deep truths[9] revealed. In them the fear of
awful death was removed, and the immortality not only of the soul but also of
the flesh established. In them, through the Lord's breathing upon them, the Holy
Ghost is poured upon all the Apostles, and to the blessed Apostle Peter beyond
the rest the care of the Lord's flock is entrusted, in addition to the keys of
the kingdom. Then it was that the Lord joined the two disciples as a companion
on the way, and, to the sweeping away of all the clouds of our uncertainty,
upbraided them with the slowness of their timorous hearts. Their enlightened
hearts catch the flame of faith, and lukewarm as they have been, are made to burn
while the Lord unfolds the Scriptures. In the breaking of bread also their eyes
are opened as they eat with Him: how far more blessed is the opening of their
eyes, to whom the glorification of their nature is revealed than that of our
first parents, on whom fell the disastrous consequences of their transgression.
III. The prove the Resurrection of the flesh.
And in the course of these and other miracles, when the disciples were
harassed by bewildering thoughts, and the Lord had appeared in their midst and
said, "Peace be unto you[1]," that what was passing through their hearts might not
be their fixed opinion (for they thought they saw a spirit not flesh), He
refutes their thoughts so discordant with the Truth, offers to the doubters' eyes
the marks of the cross that remained in His hands and feet, and invites them to
handle Him with careful scrutiny, because the traces of the nails and spear had
been retained to heal the wounds of unbelieving hearts, so that not with
wavering faith, but with most stedfast knowledge they might comprehend that the
Nature which had been lain in the sepulchre was to sit on God the Father's throne.
IV. Christ's Ascension has given us greater privileges and joys than the devil
had taken from us.
Accordingly, dearly-beloved, throughout this time which elapsed between
the Lord's Resurrection and Ascension, God's Providence had this in view, to
teach and impress upon both the eyes and hearts of His own people that the Lord
Jesus Christ might be acknowledged to have as truly risen, as He was truly born,
suffered, and died. And hence the most blessed Apostles and all the disciples,
who had been both bewildered at His death on the cross and backward in
believing His Resurrection, were so strengthened by the clearness of the truth that
when the Lord entered the heights of heaven, not only were they affected with no
sadness, but were even filled with great joy. And truly great and unspeakable
was their cause for joy, when in the sight of the holy multitude, above the
dignity of all heavenly creatures, the Nature of mankind went up, to pass above the
angels' ranks and to rise beyond the archangels' heights, and to have Its
uplifting limited by no elevation until, received to sit with the Eternal Father, It
should be associated on the throne with His glory, to Whose Nature It was
united in the Son. Since then Christ's Ascension is our uplifting, and the hope of
the Body is raised, whither the glory of the Head has gone before, let us
exult, dearly-beloved, with worthy joy and delight in the loyal paying of thanks.
For to-day not only are we confirmed as possessors of paradise, but have also in
Christ penetrated the heights of heaven, and have gained still greater things
through Christ's unspeakable grace than we had lost through the devil's malice.
For us, whom our virulent enemy had driven out from the bliss of our first
abode, the Son of God has made members of Himself and placed at the right hand of
the Father, with Whom He lives and reigns in the unity of the Holy Spirit, God
for ever and ever. Amen.
SERMON LXXIV.
(On the Lord's Ascension, II.)
I. The Ascension completes our faith in Him, Who was God as well as man.
The mystery of our salvation, dearly-beloved, which the Creator of the
universe valued at the price of His blood, has now been carried out under
conditions of humiliation from the day of His bodily birth to the end of His Passion.
And although even in "the form of a slave" many signs of Divinity have beamed
out, yet the events of all that period served particularly to show the reality of
His assumed Manhood. But after the Passion, when the chains of death were
broken, which had exposed its own strength by attacking Him, Who was ignorant of
sin, weakness was turned into power, mortality into eternity, contumely into
glory, which the Lord Jesus Christ showed by many clear proofs in the sight of
many, until He carried even into heaven the triumphant victory which He had won
over the dead. As therefore at the Easter commemoration, the Lord's Resurrection
was the cause of our rejoicing; so the subject of our present gladness is His
Ascension, as we commemorate and duly venerate that day on which the Nature of
our humility in Christ was raised above all the host of heaven, over all the
ranks of angels, beyond the height of all powers, to sit with God the Father. On
which Providential order of events we are founded and built up, that God's Grace
might become more wondrous, when, notwithstanding the removal from men's sight
of what was rightly felt to command their awe, faith did not fail, hope did not
waver, love did not grow cold. For it is the strength of great minds and the
light of firmly-faithful souls, unhesitatingly to believe what is not seen with
the bodily sight, and there to fix one's affections whither you cannot direct
your gaze. And whence should this Godliness spring up in our hearts, or how
should a man be justified by faith, if our salvation rested on those things only
which lie beneath our eyes? Hence our Lord said to him who seemed to doubt of
Christ's Resurrection, until he had tested by sight and touch the traces of His
Passion in His very Flesh, "because thou hast seen Me, thou hast believed:
blessed are, they who have not seen and yet have believed[2]."
II. The Ascension renders our faith more excellent and stronger.
In order, therefore, dearly-beloved, that we may be capable of this
blessedness, when all things were fulfilled which concerned the Gospel preaching and
the mysteries of the New Testament, our Lord Jesus Christ, on the fortieth day
after the Resurrection in the presence of the disciples, was raised into
heaven, and terminated His presence with us in the body, to abide on the Father's
right hand until the times Divinely fore-ordained for multiplying the sons of the
Church are accomplished, and He comes to judge the living and the dead in the
same flesh in which He ascended. And so that which till then was visible of our
Redeemer was changed into a sacramental presence[3], and that faith might be
more excellent and stronger, sight gave way to doctrine, the authority of which
was to be accepted by believing hearts enlightened with rays from above.
III. The marvellous effects of this Faith on all.
This Faith, increased by the Lord's Ascension and established by the gift
of the Holy Ghost, was not terrified by bonds, imprisonments, banishments,
hunger, fire, attacks by wild beasts, refined torments of cruel persecutors. For
this Faith throughout the world not only men, but even women, not only beardless
boys, but even tender maids, fought to the shedding of their blood. This Faith
cast out spirits, drove off sicknesses, raised the dead: and through it the
blessed Apostles themselves also, who after being confirmed by so many miracles
and instructed by so many discourses, had yet been panic-stricken by the horrors
of the Lord's Passion and had not accepted the truth of His resurrection
without hesitation, made such progress after the Lord's Ascension that everything
which had previously filled them with fear was turned into joy. For they had
lifted the whole contemplation of their mind to the Godhead of Him that sat at the
Father's right hand, and were no longer hindered by the barrier of corporeal
sight from directing their minds' gaze to That Which had never quitted the
Father's side in descending to earth, and had not forsaken the disciples in ascending
to heaven.
IV. His Ascension refines our Faith: the ministering of angels to Hint shows
the extent of His authority.
The Son of Man and Son of God, therefore, dearly-beloved, then attained a
more excellent and holier fame, when He betook Himself back to the glory of the
Father's Majesty, and m an ineffable manner began to be nearer to the Father
in respect of His Godhead, after having become farther away in respect of His
manhood. A better instructed faith then began to draw closer to a conception of
the Son's equality with the Father without the necessity of handling the
corporeal substance in Christ, whereby He is less than the Father, since, while the
Nature of the glorified Body still remained the faith of believers was called
upon to touch not with the hand of flesh, but with the spiritual understanding the
Only-begotten, Who was equal with the Father. Hence comes that which the Lord
said after His Resurrection, when Mary Magdalene, representing the Church,
hastened to approach and touch Him: "Touch Me not, for I have not yet ascended to
My Father[4]:" that is, I would not have you come to Me as to a human body, nor
yet recognize Me by fleshly perceptions: I put thee off for higher things, I
prepare greater things for thee: when I have ascended to My Father, then thou
shall handle Me more perfectly and truly, for thou shall grasp what thou canst not
touch and believe what thou canst not see. But when the disciples[1] eyes
followed the ascending Lord tO heaven with upward gaze of earnest wonder, two
angels stood by them in raiment shining with wondrous brightness, who also said, "Ye
men of Galilee, why stand ye gazing into heaven ? This Jesus Who was taken up
from you into heaven shall so come as ye saw Him going into heaven[5]." By
which words all the sons of the Church were taught to believe that Jesus Christ
will come visibly in the same Flesh wherewith He ascended, and not to doubt that
all things are subjected to Him on Whom the ministry of angels had waited from
the first beginning of His Birth. For, as an angel announced to the blessed
Virgin that Christ should be conceived by the Holy Ghost, so the voice of heavenly
beings sang of His being born of the Virgin also to the shepherds. As
messengers from above were the first to attest His having risen from the dead, so the
service of angels was employed to foretell His coming in very Flesh to judge the
world, that we might understand what great powers will come with Him as Judge,
when such great ones ministered to Him even in being judged.
V. We must despise earthly things and rise to things above, especially by
active works of mercy and love.
And so, dearly-beloved, let us rejoice with spiritual joy, and let us with
gladness pay God worthy thanks and raise our hearts' eyes unimpeded to those
heights where Christ is. Minds that have heard the call to be uplifted must not
be pressed down by earthly affections[6], they that are fore-ordained to things
eternal must not be taken up with the things that perish; they that have
entered on the way of Truth must not be entangled in treacherous snares, and the
faithful must so take their course through these temporal things as to remember
that they are sojourning in the vale of this world, in which, even though they
meet with some attractions, they must not sinfully embrace them, but bravely pass
through them. For to this devotion the blessed Apostle Peter arouses us, and
entreating us with that loving eagerness which he conceived for feeding Christ's
sheep by the threefold profession of love for the Lord, says, "dearly-beloved,
I beseech you, as strangers and pilgrims, abstain from fleshly lusts which war
against the soul[7]." But for whom do fleshly pleasures wage war, if not for
the devil, whose delight it is to fetter souls that strive after things above,
with the enticements of corruptible good things, and to draw them away from
those abodes from which he himself has been banished ? Against his plots every
believer must keep careful watch that he may crush his foe on the side whence the
attack is made. And there is no more powerful weapon, dearly-beloved, against
the devil's wiles than kindly mercy and bounteous charity, by which every sin is
either escaped or vanquished. But this lofty power is not attained until that
which is opposed to it be overthrown. And what so hostile to mercy and works of
charity as avarice from the root of which spring all evils[7a] ? And unless it
be destroyed by lack of nourishment, there must needs grow in the ground of
that heart in which this evil weed has taken root, the thorns and briars of vices
rather than any seed of true goodness. Let us then, dearly-beloved, resist
this pestilential evil and "follow after charity[7a]," without which no virtue can
flourish, that by this path of love whereby Christ came down to us, we too may
mount up to Him, to Whom with God the Father and the Holy Spirit is honour and
glory for ever and ever. Amen.
SERMON LXXV.
(ON WHITSUNTIDE, I.)
I. The giving of the Law by Moses prepared the way for the outpouring of the
Holy Ghost.
The hearts of all catholics, beloved, realize that to-day's solemnity is
to be honoured as one of the chief feasts, nor is there any doubt that great
respect is due to this day, which the Holy Spirit has hallowed by the miracle of
His most excellent gift. For from the day on which the Lord ascended up above
all heavenly heights to sit down at God the Father's right hand, this is the
tenth which has shone, and the fiftieth from His Resurrection, being the very day
on which it began[8], and containing in itself great revelations of mysteries
both new and old, by which it is most manifestly revealed that Grace was
fore-announced through the Law and the Law fulfilled through Grace. For as of old, when
the Hebrew nation were released from the Egyptians, on the fiftieth day after
the sacrificing of the lamb the Law was given on Mount Sinai, so after the
suffering of Christ, wherein the true Lamb of God was slain on the fiftieth day
from His Resurrection, the Holy Ghost came down upon the Apostles and the
multitude of believers, so that the earnest Christian may easily perceive that the
beginnings of the Old Testament were preparatory to the beginnings of the Gospel,
and that the second covenant was rounded by the same Spirit that had instituted
the first.
II. How marvellous was the gift of "divers tongues."
For as the Apostles' story testifies: "while the days of Pentecost were
fulfilled and all the disciples were together in the same place, there occurred
suddenly from heaven a sound as of a violent wind coming, and filled the whole
house where they were sitting. And there appeared to them divided tongues as of
fire and it sat upon each of them. And they were all filled with the Holy
Spirit, and began to speak with other tongues, as the Holy Spirit gave them
utterance[9]." Oh ! how swift are the words of wisdom. and where God is the Master, how
quickly is what is taught, learnt. No interpretation is required for
understanding, no practice for using, no time for studying, but the Spirit of Truth
blowing where He wills[9a], the languages peculiar to each nation become common
property in the mouth of the Church. And therefore from that day the trumpet of
the Gospel-preaching has sounded loud: from that day the showers of gracious
gifts, the rivers of blessings, have watered every desert and all the dry land,
since to renew the face of the earth the Spirit of God "moved over the
waters[9a]," and to drive away the old darkness flashes of new light shone forth, when by
the blaze of those busy tongues was kindled the Lord's bright Word and fervent
eloquence, in which to arouse the understanding, and to consume sin there lay
both a capacity of enlightenment and a power of burning.
III. The three Persons in the Trinity are perfectly equal in all things.
But although, dearly-beloved, the actual form of the thing done was
exceeding wonderful, and undoubtedly in that exultant chorus of all human languages
the Majesty of the Holy Spirit was present, yet no one must think that His
Divine substance appeared in what was seen with bodily eyes. For His Nature, which
is invisible and shared in common with the Father and the Son, showed the
character of His gift and work by the outward sign that pleased Him, but kept His
essential property within His own Godhead: because human sight can no more
perceive the Holy Ghost than it can the Father or the Son. For in the Divine Trinity
nothing is unlike or unequal, and all that can be thought concerning Its
substance admits of no diversity either in power or glory or eternity. And while in
the property of each Person the Father is one, the Son is another, and the Holy
Ghost is another, yet the Godhead is not distinct and different; for whilst the
Son is the Only begotten of the Father, the Holy Spirit is the Spirit of the
Father and the Son, not in the way that every creature is the creature of the
Father and the Son, but as living and having power with Both, and eternally
subsisting of That Which is the Father and the Son[1]. And hence when the Lord before
the day of His Passion promised the coming of the Holy Spirit to His
disciples, He said, "I have yet many things to say to you, but ye cannot bear them now.
But when He, the Spirit of Truth shall have come, He shall guide you into all
the Truth. For He shall not speak from Himself, but whatsoever He shall have
heard, He shall speak and shall announce things to come unto you. All things that
the Father hath are Mine: therefore said I that He shall take of Mine, and
shall announce it to you[2]." Accordingly, there are not some things that are the
Father's, and other the Son's, and other the Holy Spirit's: but all things
whatsoever the Father has, the Son also has, and the Holy Spirit also has: nor was
there ever a time when this communion did not exist, because with Them to have
all things is to always exist. In them let no times, no grades, no differences
be imagined[3], and, if no one can explain that which is true concerning God,
let no one dare to assert what is not true. For it is more excusable not to make
a full statement concerning His ineffable Nature than to frame an actually
wrong definition. And so whatever loyal hearts can conceive of the Father's eternal
and unchangeable Glory, let them at the same time understand it of the Son and
of the Holy Ghost without any separation or difference. For we confess this
blessed Trinity to be One God for this reason, because in these three Persons
there is no diversity either of substance, or of power, or of will, or of
operation.
IV. The Macedonian heresy is as blasphemous as the Arian.
As therefore we abhor the Arians, who maintain a difference between the
Father and the Son, so also we abhor the Macedonians[4], who, although they
ascribe equality to the Father and the Son, yet think the Holy Ghost to be of a
lower nature, not considering that they thus fall into that blasphemy, which is not
to be forgiven either in the present age or in the judgment to come, as the
Lord says: "whosoever shall have spoken a word against the Son of Man, it shall
be forgiven him, but he that shall have spoken against the Holy Ghost, it shall
not be forgiven him either in this age or in the age to come[5]." And so to
persist in this impiety is unpardonable, because it cuts him off from Him, by Whom
he could confess: nor will he ever attain to healing pardon, who has no
Advocate to plead for him. For from Him comes the invocation of the Father, from Him
come the tears of penitents, from Him come the groans of suppliants, and "no
one can call Jesus the Lord save in the Holy Ghost[6],'' Whose Omnipotence as
equal and Whose Godhead as one, with the Father and the Son, the Apostle most
clearly proclaims, saying, "there are divisions of graces but the same Spirit; and
the divisions of ministrations but the same Lord; and there are divisions of
operations but the same God, Who worketh all things in all[6]."
V. The Spirit's work is still continued in the Church.
By these and other numberless proofs, dearly-beloved, with which the
authority of the Divine utterances is ablaze, let us with one mind be incited to pay
reverence to Whitsuntide, exulting in honour of the Holy Ghost, through Whom
the whole catholic Church is sanctified, and every rational soul quickened; Who
is the Inspirer of the Faith, the Teacher of Knowledge, the Fount of Love, the
Seal of Chastity, and the Cause of all Power. Let the minds of the faithful
rejoice, that throughout the world One God, Father, Son, and Holy Ghost, is
praised by the confession of all tongues, and that that sign of His Presence, which
appeared in the likeness of fire, is still perpetuated in His work and gift. For
the Spirit of Truth Himself makes the house of His glory shine with the
brightness of His light, and will have nothing dark nor lukewarm in His temple. And
it is through His aid and teaching also that the purification of fasts and alms
has been established among us. For this venerable day is followed by a most
wholesome practice, which all the saints have ever found most profitable to them,
and to the diligent observance of which we exhort you with a shepherd's care,
to the end that if any blemish has been contracted in the days just passed
through heedless negligence, it may be atoned for by the discipline of fasting and
corrected by pious devotion. On Wednesday and Friday, therefore, let us fast,
and on Saturday for this very purpose keep vigil with accustomed devotion,
through Jesus Christ our Lord, Who with the Father and the Holy Ghost lives and
reigns for ever and ever. Amen.
SERMON LXXVII.
(On Whitsuntide, III.)
I. The Holy Ghost's work did not begin at Pentecost, but was continued because
the Holy Trinity is One in action and in will.
To-day's festival, dearly-beloved, which is held in reverence by the whole
world, has been hallowed by that advent of the Holy Ghost, which on the
fiftieth day after the Lord's Resurrection, descended on the Apostles and the
multitude of believers[7], even as it was hoped. And there was this hope, because the
Lord Jesus had promised that He should come, not then first to be the Indweller
of the saints, but to kindle to a greater heat, and to fill with larger
abundance the hearts that were dedicated to Him, increasing, not commencing His
gifts, not fresh in operation because richer in bounty. For the Majesty of the Holy
Ghost is never separate from the Omnipotence of the Father and the Son, and
whatever the Divine government accomplishes in the ordering of all things,
proceeds from the Providence of the whole Trinity. Therein exists unity of mercy and
loving-kindness, unity of judgment and justice: nor is there any division in
action where there is no divergence of will. What, therefore, the Father
enlightens, the Son enlightens, and the Holy Ghost enlightens: and while there is one
Person of the Sent, another of the Sender, and another of the Promiser both the
Unity and the Trinity are at the same time revealed to us, so that the Essence
which possesses equality and does not admit of solitariness is understood to
belong to the same Substance but not the same Person.
II. Each Person in the Trinity look part in our Redemption.
The fact, therefore, that, with the co-operation of the inseparable
Godhead still perfect, certain things are performed by the Father, certain by the
Son, and certain by the Holy Spirit, in particular belongs to the ordering of our
Redemption and the method of our salvation. For if man, made after the image
and likeness of God, had retained the dignity of his own nature, and had not been
deceived by the devil's wiles into transgressing through lust the law laid
down for him, the Creator of the world would not have become a Creature, the
Eternal would not have entered the sphere of time, nor God the Son, Who is equal
with God the Father, have assumed the form of a slave and the likeness of sinful
flesh. But because "by the devil's malice death entered into the world[8]," and
captive humanity could not otherwise be set free without His undertaking our
cause, Who without loss of His majesty should both become true Man, and alone
have no taint of sin, the mercy of the Trinity divided for Itself the work of our
restoration in such a way that the Father should be propitiated, the Son
should propitiate[9], and the Holy Ghost enkindle. For it was necessary that those
who are to be saved should also do something on their part, and by the turning
of their hearts to the Redeemer should quit the dominion of the enemy, even as
the Apostle says, "God sent the Spirit of His Son into our hearts, crying Abba,
Father[1],"And where the Spirit of the Lord is, there is liberty[2]," and "no
one can call Jesus Lord except in the Holy Spirit[3]."
III. But this apportionment of functions does not mar the Unity of the Trinity.
If, therefore, under guiding grace, dearly-beloved, we faithfully and
wisely understand what is the particular work of the Father, of the Son, and of the
Holy Ghost, and what is common to the Three in our restoration, we shall
without doubt so accept what has been wrought for us by humiliation and in the body
as to think nothing unworthy about the One and Selfsame Glory of the Trinity.
For although no mind is competent to think, no tongue to speak about God, yet
whatever that is which the human intellect apprehends about the essence of the
Father's Godhead, unless one and the selfsame truth is held concerning His
Only-begotten or the Holy Spirit, our meditations are disloyal, and beclouded by the
intrusions of the flesh, and even that is lost, which seemed a right conclusion
concerning the Father, because the whole Trinity is forsaken, if the Unity
therein is not maintained; and That Which is different by any inequality can in no
true sense be One.
IV. In thinking upon God, we must put aside all material notions.
When, therefore, we fix our minds on confessing the Father and the Son and
the Holy Ghost, let us keep far from our thoughts the forms of things visible,
the ages of beings born in time, and all material bodies and places. Let that
which is extended in space, that which is enclosed by limit, and whatever is
not always everywhere and entire be banished from the heart. The conception of
the Triune Godhead must put aside the idea of interval or of grade[4], and if a
man has attained any worthy thought of God, let him not dare to withhold it from
any Person therein, as if to ascribe with more honour to the Father that which
he does not ascribe to the Son and Spirit. It is not true Godliness to put the
Father before the Only-begotten: insult to the Son is insult to the Father:
what is detracted from the One is detracted from Both. For since Their Eternity
and Godhead are alike common, the Father is not accounted either Almighty and
Unchangeable, if He begot One less than Himself or gained by having One Whom
before He had not[5].
V. Christ as Man is less than the Father, as God co-equal.
The Lord Jesus does, indeed, say to His disciples, as was read in the
Gospel lection, "if ye loved Me, ye would assuredly rejoice, because I go to the
Father, because the Father is greater than I[6];" but those ears, which have
often heard the words, "I and the Father are One[6]," and "He that sees Me, sees
the Father also[6]," accept the saying without supposing a difference of Godhead
or understanding it of that Essence which they know to be co-eternal and of the
same nature with the Father. Man's uplifting, therefore, in the Incarnation of
the Word, is commended to the holy Apostles also, and they, who were
distressed at the announcement of the Lord's departure from them, are incited to eternal
joy over the increase in their dignity; "If ye loved Me," He says, "ye would
assuredly rejoice, because I go to the Father:" that is, if, with complete
knowledge ye saw what glory is bestowed on you by the fact that, being begotten of
GOD the Father, I have been born of a human mother also, that being invisible I
have made Myself visible, that being eternal "in the form of God" I accepted
the "form of a slave," "ye would rejoice because I go to the Father." For to you
is offered this ascension, and your humility is in Me raised to a place above
all heavens at the Father's right hand. But I, Who am with the Father that which
the Father is, abide undivided with My Father, and in coming from Him to you I
do not leave Him, even as in returning to Him from you I do not forsake you.
Rejoice, therefore, "because I go to the Father, because the Father is greater
than I." For I have united you with Myself, and am become Son of Man that you
might have power to be sons of God. And hence, though I am One in both forms, yet
in that whereby I am conformed to you I am less than the Father, whereas in
that whereby I am not divided from the Father I am greater even than Myself. And
so let the Nature, which is less than the Father, go[7] to the Father, that the
Flesh may be where the Word always is, and that the one Faith of the catholic
Church may believe that He Whom as Man it does not deny to be less, is equal as
God with the Father.
VI. And this equality which the Son has with the Father, the Holy Ghost also
has.
Accordingly, dearly-beloved, let us despise the vain and blind cunning of
ungodly heretics, which flatters itself over its crooked interpretation of this
sentence, and when the LORD says, "All things that the Father hath are
Mines,'' does not understand that it takes away from the Father whatever it dares to
deny to the Son, and is so foolish in matters even which are human as to think,
that what is His Father's has ceased to belong to His Only-begotten, because He
has taken on Him what is ours. Mercy in the case of GoD does not lessen power,
nor is the reconciliation of the creature whom He loves a falling off of
Eternal glory. What the Father has the Son also has, and what the Father and the Son
have, the Holy Ghost also has, because the whole Trinity together is One God.
But this Faith is not the discovery of earthly wisdom nor the conviction of
man's opinion: the Only-begotten Son has taught it Himself, and the Holy Ghost has
established it Himself, concerning Whom no other conception must be formed
than is formed concerning the Father and the Son. Because albeit He is not the
Father nor the Son, yet He is not separable from the Father and the Son: and as He
has His own personality in the Trinity, so has He One substance in Godhead
with the Father and the Son, filling all things, containing all things, and with
the Father and the Son controlling all things, to Whom is the honour and glory
for ever and ever. Amen.
SERMON LXXVIII.
(On The Whitsuntide Fast, I.)
I. Since the Apostles' day till now self-restraint is the best defence against
the devil's assaults.
To-day's festival, dearly-beloved, hallowed by the descent of the Holy
Ghost, is followed, as you know by a solemn fast, which being a salutary
institution for the healing of soul and body, we must keep with devout observance. For
when the Apostles had been filled with the promised power, and the Spirit of
Truth had entered their hearts, we doubt not that among the other mysteries of
heavenly doctrine this discipline of spiritual self-restraint was first thought of
at the prompting of the Paraclete in order that minds sanctified by fasting
might be fitter for the chrism to be bestowed on them[9]. The disciples of Christ
had the protection of the Almighty aid, and the chiefs of the infant Church
were guarded by the whole Godhead of the Father and the Son through the presence
of the Holy Ghost. But against the threatened attacks of persecutors, against
the terrifying shouts of the ungodly, they could not fight with bodily strength
or pampered flesh, since that which delights the outer does most harm to the
inner man, and the more one's fleshly substance is kept in subjection, the more
purified is the reasoning soul.
II. The templer is foiled in attacks upon those who have learnt these tactics.
And so those teachers, who have instructed all the Church's sons by their
examples and their traditions, began the rudiments of the Christian warfare
with holy fasts, that, having to fight against spiritual wickednesses, they might
take the armour of abstinence, wherewith to slay the incentives to vice. For
invisible foes and incorporeal enemies will have no strength against us, if we be
not entangled in any lusts of the flesh. The desire to hurt us is indeed ever
active in the tempter, but he will be disarmed and powerless, if he find no
vantage around within us from which to attack us. But who, encompassed with this
frail flesh, and placed in this body of death, even one who has made much
decided progress, can be so sure of his safety now, as to believe himself free from
the peril of all allurements? Although Divine Grace gives daily victory to His
saints[1], yet He does not remove the occasion for fighting, because this very
fact is part of our Protector's Mercy, Who has always designed that something
should remain for our ever-changing nature to win, lest it should boast itself on
the ending of the battle.
III. And so this fast comes very opportunely after the feast of Whitsuntide.
Therefore, after the days of holy gladness, which we have devoted to the
honour of the LORD rising from the dead and then ascending into heaven, and
after receiving the gift of the Holy Ghost, a fast is ordained as a wholesome and
needful practice, so that, if perchance through neglect or disorder even amid
the joys of the festival any undue licence has broken out, it may be corrected by
the remedy of strict abstinence, which must be the more scrupulously carried
out in order that what was on this day Divinely bestowed on the Church may abide
in us. For being made the Temple of the Holy Ghost, and watered with a greater
supply than ever of the Divine Stream, we ought not to be conquered by any
lusts nor held in possession by any vices in order that the habitation of Divine
power may be stained with no pollution.
IV. And by proper use of it we shall win God's favour.
And this assuredly it is possible for all to obtain, God helping and
guiding us, if by the purification of fasting and by merciful liberality, we take
pains to be set free from the filth of sins, and to be rich in the fruits of
love. For whatever is spent in feeling the poor, in healing the sick, in ransoming
prisoners, or in any other deeds of piety, is not lessened but increased, nor
will that ever be lost in the sight of God which the loving-kindness of the
faithful has expended, seeing that whatever a man gives in relief, he lays up for
his own reward. For "blessed are the merciful, since God shall have mercy on
them[2];" nor wilt shortcomings be remembered, where the presence of true religion
has been attested. On Wednesday and Friday, therefore, let us fast, and on
Saturday let us keep vigil in the presence of the most blessed Apostle, Peter, by
whose prayers we surely trust to be set free both from spiritual foes and
bodily enemies; through our Lord Jesus Christ, who with the Father and the Holy
Ghost, lives and reigns for ever and ever. Amen.
SERMON LXXXII.
ON THE FEAST[3] OF THE APOSTLES PETER AND PAUL (JUNE 29).
I. Rome owes its high position to these Apostles.
The whole world, dearly-beloved, does indeed take part in all holy
anniversaries, and loyalty to the one Faith demands that whatever is recorded as done
for all men's salvation should be everywhere celebrated with common rejoicings.
But, besides that reverence which to-day's festival has gained from all the
world, it is to be honoured with special and peculiar exultation in our city,
that there may be a predominance of gladness on the day of their martyrdom in the
place where the chief of the Apostles met their glorious end[4]. For these are
the men, through whom the light of Christ's gospel shone on thee, O Rome, and
through whom thou, who wast the teacher of error, wast made the disciple of
Truth. These are thy holy Fathers and true shepherds, who gave thee claims to be
numbered among the heavenly kingdoms, and built thee under much better and
happier auspices than they, by whose zeal the first foundations of thy walls were
laid: and of whom the one that gave thee thy name defiled thee with his brother's
blood[5]. These are they who promoted thee to such glory, that being made a
holy nation, a chosen people, a priestly and royal state[5a], and the head of the
world through the blessed Peter's holy See thou didst attain a wider sway. by
the worship of God than by earthly government. For although thou weft increased
by many victories, and didst extend thy rule on land and sea, yet what thy
toils in war subdued is less than what the peace of Christ has conquered.
II. The extension of the Roman empire was part of the Divine scheme.
For the good, just, and Almighty God, Who has never withheld His mercy
from mankind, and has ever instructed all men alike in the knowledge of Himself by
the most abundant benefits, has by a more secret counsel and a deeper love
shown pity upon the wanderers' voluntary blindness and proclivities to evil, by
sending His co-equal and co-eternal Word. Which becoming flesh so united the
Divine Nature with the human that He by lowering His Nature to the uttermost has
raised our nature to the highest. But that the result of this unspeakable Grace
might be spread abroad throughout the world, God's Providence made ready the
Roman empire, whose growth has reached such limits that the whole multitude of
nations are brought into close connexion. For the Divinely-planned work
particularly required that many kingdoms should be leagued together under one empire, so
that the preaching of the world might quickly reach to all people, when they
were held beneath the rule of one state. And yet that state, in ignorance of the
Author of its aggrandisement though it rule almost all nations, was enthralled
by the errors of them all, and seemed to itself to have fostered religion
greatly, because it rejected no falsehood. And hence its emancipation through Christ
was the more wondrous that it had been so fast bound by Satan.
III. On the dispersing of the Twelve, St. Peter was sent to Rome.
For when the twelve Apostles, after receiving through the Holy Ghost the
power of speaking with all tongues, had distributed the world into parts among
themselves, and undertaken to instruct it in the Gospel, the most blessed Peter,
chief of the Apostolic band, was appointed to the citadel of the Roman empire,
that the light of Truth which was being displayed for the salvation of all the
nations, might spread itself more effectively throughout the body of the world
from the head itself. What nation had not representatives then living in this
city; or what peoples did not know what Rome had learnt? Here it was that the
tenets of philosophy must be crushed, here that the follies of earthly wisdom
must be dispelled, here that the cult of demons must be refuted, here that the
blasphemy of all idolatries must be rooted out, here where the most persistent
superstition had gathered together all the various errors which had anywhere
been devised.
IV. St. Peter's love conquered his fears in coming to Rome.
To this city then, most blessed Apostle Peter, thou dost not fear to come,
and when the Apostle Paul; the partner of thy glory, was still busied with
regulating other churches, didst enter this forest of roaring beasts, this deep,
stormy ocean with greater boldness than when thou didst walk upon the sea. And
thou who hadst been frightened by the high priest's maid in the house of
Caiaphas, hadst no fear of Rome the mistress of the world. Was there any less power in
Claudius, any less cruelty in Nero than in the judgment of Pilate or the Jews'
savage rage? So then it was the force of love that conquered the reasons for
fear: and thou didst not think those to be feared whom thou hadst undertaken to
love. But this feeling of fearless affection thou hadst even then surely
conceived when the profession of thy love for the Lord was confirmed by the mystery
of the thrice-repeated question. And nothing else was demanded of this thy
earnest purpose than that thou shouldst bestow the food wherewith thou hadst thyself
been enriched, on feeding His sheep whom thou didst love.
V. S. Peter was providentially prepared for his great mission.
Thy confidence also was increased by many miraculous signs, by many gifts
of grace, by many proofs of power. Thou hadst already taught the people, who
from the number of the circumcised had believed: thou hadst already founded the
Church at Antioch, where first the dignity of the Christian name arose: thou
hadst already instructed Pontus, Galatia, Cappadocia, Asia, and Bithynia, in the
laws of the Gospel-message: and, without doubt as to the success of the work,
with full knowledge of the short span of thy life didst carry the trophy of
Christ's cross into the citadel of Rome, whither by the Divine fore-ordaining there
accompanied thee the honour of great power and the glory of much suffering.
VI. Many noble martyrs have sprung from the blood of SS. Peter and Paul.
Thither came also thy blessed brother-Apostle Paul, "the vessel of
election[5b]," and the special teacher of the Gentiles, and was associated with thee
at a time when all innocence, all modesty, all freedom was into jeopardy under
Nero's rule. Whose fury, inflamed by excess of all vices, hurled him headlong
into such a fiery furnace of madness that he was the first to assail the
Christian name with a general persecution, as if God's Grace could be quenched by the
death of saints, whose greatest gain it was to win eternal happiness by contempt
of this fleeting life. "Precious," therefore, "in the eyes of the LORD is the
death of His saints[6]:" nor can any degree of cruelty destroy the religion
which is founded on the mystery of Christ's cross. Persecution does not diminish
but increase the church, and the LORD'S field is clothed with an ever richer
crop, while the grains, which fall singly, spring up and are multiplied a
hundred-fold[7]. Hence how large a progeny have sprung from these two Heaven-sown seeds
is shown by the thousands of blessed martyrs, who, rivalling the Apostles'
triumphs, have traversed the city far and wide in purple-clad and ruddy-gleaming
throngs, and crowned it, as it were with a single diadem of countless gems.
VII. No distinction must be drawn between the merits of the two.
And over this band, dearly-beloved, whom GOD has set forth for our example
in patience and for our confirmation in the Faith, there must be rejoicing
everywhere in the commemoration of all the saints, but of these two Fathers'
excellence we must rightly make our boast in louder joy, for God's Grace has raised
them to so high a place among the members of the Church, that He has set them
like the twin light of the eyes in the body, whose Head is Christ. About their
merits and virtues, which pass all power of speech, we must not make
distinctions, because they were equal in their election[8], alike in their toils,
undivided in their death. But as we have proved for Ourselves, and our forefathers
maintained, we believe, and are sure that, amid all the toils of this life, we must
always be assisted in obtaining God's Mercy by the prayers of special
interceders, that we may be raised by the Apostles' merits in proportion as we are
weighed down by our own sins. Through our Lord Jesus Christ, &c.
SERMON LXXXIV[9].
CONCERNING THE NEGLECT OF THE COMMEMORATION.
I. The Churchmen of Rome are in danger of forgetting past judgments and
mercies, and becoming ungrateful to God.
The fewness of those who were present has of itself shown, dearly-beloved,
that the religious devotion wherewith, in commemoration of the day of our
chastisement and release, the whole body of the faithful used to flock together in
order to give God thanks, has on this last occasion been almost entirely
neglected: and this has caused me much sadness of heart and great fear. For there is
much danger of men becoming ungrateful to GOD, and through forgetfulness of His
benefits not feeling sorrow for the chastisement, nor joy for the liberation.
Accordingly I fear, dearly-beloved, lest that utterance of the Prophet be
addressed in rebuke to such men, which says, "thou hast scourged them and they have
not grieved: thou hast chastised them, and they have refused to receive
correction[1]" For what amendment is shown by them in whom such aversion to GOD'S
service is found? One is ashamed to say it, but one must not keep silence: more is
spent upon demons than upon the Apostles, and mad spectacles draw greater
crowds than blessed martyrdoms[2]. Who was it that restored this city to safety?
that rescued it from captivity? the games of the circus-goers or the care of the
saints? surely it was by the saints' prayers that the sentence of Divine
displeasure was diverted, so that we who deserved wrath, were reserved for pardon.
II. Let them avail themselves betimes of God's long-suffering and return to
Him.
I entreat you, beloved, let those words of the Saviour touch your hearts,
Who, when by the power of His mercy He had cleansed ten lepers, said that only
one of them all had returned to give thanks[2a]: meaning without doubt that,
though the ungrateful ones had gained soundness of body, yet their failure in
this godly duty arose from ungodliness of heart. And therefore, dearly-beloved,
that this brand of ingratitude may not be applied to you, return to the Lord,
remembering the marvels which He has deigned to perform among us; and ascribing.
our release not, as the ungodly suppose, to the influences of the stars, but to
the unspeakable mercy of Almighty God, Who has deigned to soften the hearts of
raging barbarians, betake yourselves to the commemoration of so great a benefit
with all the vigour of faith. Grave neglect must be atoned for by yet greater
tokens of repentance. Let us use the Mercy of Him, Who has spared us, to our
own amendment, that the blessed Peter and all the saints, who have always been
near us in many afflictions, may deign to aid our entreaties for you to the
merciful GOD, through Jesus Christ our LORD. Amen.
SERMON LXXXV.
ON THE FEAST OF S. LAURENCE THE MARTYR[3] (Aug. 10).
I. The example of the martyrs is most valuable
Whilst the height of all virtues, dearly-beloved, and the fulness of all
righteousness is born of that love, wherewith GOD and one's neighbour is loved,
surely in none is this love found more conspicuous and brighter than in the
blessed martyrs; who are as near to our LORD Jesus, Who died for all men, in the
imitation of His love, as in the likeness of their suffering. For, although that
Love, wherewith the LORD has redeemed us, cannot be equalled by any man's
kindness, because it is one thing that a man who is doomed to die one day should
die for a righteous man, and another that One Who is free from the debt of sin
should lay down His life for the wicked[3a]: yet the martyrs also have done great
service to all men, in that the Lord Who gave them boldness, has used it to
show that the penalty of death and the pain of the cross need not be terrible to
any of His followers, but might be imitated by many of them. If therefore no
good man is good for himself alone, and no wise man's wisdom befriends himself
only, and the nature of true virtue is such that it leads many away from the dark
error on which its light is shed, no model is more useful in teaching God's
people than that of the martyrs. Eloquence may make intercession easy, reasoning
may effectually persuade; but yet examples are stronger than words, and there
is more teaching in practice than in precept.
II. The Saint's martyrdom described.
And how gloriously strong in this most excellent manner of doctrine the
blessed martyr Laurentius is, by whose sufferings to-day is marked, even his
persecutors were able to feel, when they found that his wondrous courage, born
principally of love for Christ, not only did not yield itself, but also
strengthened others by the example of his endurance. For when the fury of the gentile
potentates was raging against Christ's most chosen members, and attacked those
especially who were of priestly rank, the wicked persecutor's wrath was vented on
Laurentius the deacon, who was pre-eminent not only in the performance of the
sacred rites, but also in the management of the church's property[4], promising
himself double spoil from one man's capture: for if he forced him to surrender
the sacred treasures, he would also drive him out of the pale of true religion.
And so this man, so greedy of money and such a foe to the truth, arms himself
with double weapon: with avarice to plunder the gold; with impiety to carry off
Christ. He demands of the guileless guardian of the sanctuary that the church
wealth on which his greedy mind was set should be brought to him. But the holy
deacon showed him where he had them stored, by pointing to the many troops of
poor saints, in the feeding and clothing of whom he had a store of riches which
he could hot lose, and which were the more entirely safe that the money had been
spent on so holy a cause.
III.The description of his sufferings continued.
The baffled plunderer, therefore, frets, and blazing out into hatred of a
religion, which had put riches to such a use, determines to pillage a still
greater treasure by carrying off that sacred deposit[5], wherewith he was
enriched, as he could find no solid hoard of money in his possession. He orders
Laurentius to renounce Christ, and prepares to ply the deacon's stout courage with
frightful tortures: and, when the first elicit nothing, fiercer follow. His limbs,
torn and mangled by many cutting blows, are commanded to be broiled upon the
fire in an iron framework[6], which was of itself already hot enough to burn
him, and on which his limbs were turned from time to time, to make the torment
fiercer, and the death more lingering.
IV. Laurentius has conquered his persecutor.
Thou gainest nothing, thou prevailest nothing, O savage cruelty. His
mortal frame is released from thy devices, and, when Laurentius departs to heaven,
thou art vanquished. The flame of Christ's love could not be overcome by thy
flames, and the fire which burnt outside was less keen than that which blazed
within. Thou didst but serve the martyr in thy rage, O persecutor: thou didst but
swell the reward in adding to the pain. For what did thy cunning devise, which
did not redound to the conqueror's glory, when even the instruments of torture
were counted as part of the triumph? Let us rejoice, then, dearly-beloved, with
spiritual joy, and make our boast over the happy end of this illustrious man in
the Lord, Who is "wonderful in His saints[6a]," in whom He has given us a
support and an example, and has so spread abroad his glory throughout the world,
that, from the rising of the sun to its going down, the brightness of his
deacon's light doth shine, and Rome is become as famous in Laurentius as Jerusalem was
ennobled by Stephen. By his prayer and intercession[7] we trust at all times
to be assisted; that, because all, as the Apostle says, "who wish to live holily
in Christ, suffer persecutions[8]," we may be strengthened with the spirit of
love, and be fortified to overcome all temptations by the perseverance of
steadfast faith. Through our LORD Jesus Christ, &c.
SERMON LXXXVIII.
ON THE FAST OF THE SEVENTH MONTH, III[9].
I. The Fasts, which the ancient prophets proclaimed, are still necessary.
Of what avail, dearly-beloved, are religious fasts in winning the mercy of
God, and in renewing the fortunes of human frailty, we know from the
statements of the holy Prophets, who proclaim that justice of God, Whose vengeance the
people of Israel had again and again incurred through their iniquities, cannot
be appeased save by fasting. Thus it is that the Prophet Joel warns them,
saying, "thus saith the LORD your GOD, turn ye to Me with all your heart, with
fasting and weeping and mourning, and rend your hearts and not your garments, and
turn ye to the Lord your GOD, for He is merciful and patient, and of great
kindness, and very merciful[1]," and again, "sanctify a fast, proclaim a healing,
assemble the people, sanctify the church[1]." And this exhortation must in our days
also be obeyed, because these healing remedies must of necessity be proclaimed
by us too, in order that in the observance of the ancient sanctification
Christian devotion may gain what Jewish transgression lost.
II. Public services are of a higher character than private.
But the respect that is paid to the Divine decrees always brings a special
blessing, whatever may be the extent of our voluntary services, so that
publicly proclaimed celebrations are of a higher character than those which rest on
private institution[2]. For the exercise of self-restraint, which each
individual imposes on himself at his own discretion, concerns the benefit of a certain
portion only of the Church, but the fast which the whole Church undergoes leaves
out no one from the general purification, and God's people' then become
strongest, when the hearts of all the faithful meet together in one common act of
holy obedience, when in the camp of the Christian army there is on all sides the
same making ready for the fight and for defence. Though the cruel enemy rage in
restless fury, and spread all round his hidden snares, yet he will be able to
catch no one and wound no one, if he find no one off his guard, no one given up
to sloth, nO one inactive in works of piety.
III. The September fast calls us in this public way to self-amendment.
To this unconquerable strength of unity, therefore, dearly-beloved, we are
even now invited by the solemn Fast of the Seventh Month, that we may lift our
souls to the Lord free from worldly cares and earthly concerns. And because,
always needful as this endeavour is, we cannot all adhere to it perpetually, and
often through human frailty we fall back from higher things to the things of
earth, let us at least on these days, which are most healthfully ordained for
our correction, withdraw ourselves from worldly occupations, and steal a little
time for promoting our eternal welfare. "For in many things," as it is written,
"we all stumble(3)." And though by the daily gift of GOD(4) we be cleansed from
divers pollutions, yet there cling to unwary souls for the most part darker
stains, which need a greater care to wash them out, a stronger effort to destroy
them. And the fullest abolition of sins is obtained when the whole Church
offers up one prayer and one confession. For if the LORD has promised fulfilment of
all they shall ask, to the holy and devout agreement of two or three, what
shall be denied to many thousands of the people who unite in one act of worship,
and with one breath make their common supplications(5)?
IV. Community of goods and of actions is most precious in GOD's sight.
It is a great and very precious thing, beloved, in the LORD'S sight, when
Christ's whole people engage together in the same duties, and all ranks and
degrees of either sex co-operate with the same intent: when one purpose animates
all alike of declining from evil and doing good; when GOD is glorified in the
works of His slaves, and the Author of all godliness(6) is blessed in unstinted
giving of thanks. The hungry are nourished, the naked are clothed, the sick are
visited, and men seek not their own but "that which is another's(7)," so long
as in relieving the misery of others each one makes the most of his own means;
and it is easy to find "a cheerful giver(7), "where a man's performances are
only limited by the extent of his power. By this grace of GOD, "which worketh all
in all(7)," the benefit: and the deserts of the faithful are both enjoyed in
common. For they, whose income is not like, can yet think alike, and when one
rejoices over another's bounty his feelings put him on the same level with him
whose powers of spending are on a different level. In such a community there is
no disorder nor diversity, for all the members of the whole body agree in one
strong purpose of godliness, and he who glories in the wealth of others is not
put to shame at his own poverty. For the excellence of each portion is the glory
of the whole body, and when we are all led by GOD's Spirit, not only are the
things we do ourselves our own but those of others also over the doing of which
we rejoice.
V. Let us then make the best use possible of the opportunity.
Let us then, dearly-beloved, lay hold upon this most sacred unity in all
its blessed integrity and engage in the solemn fast with the concordant purpose
of a good will. Nothing hard, nothing harsh is asked of anyone, nor is anything
imposed beyond our strength, whether in the discipline of abstinence or in the
amount of alms. Each knows what he can and what he cannot do: let every one
pay his quota, assessing himself at a just and reasonable rate, that the
sacrifice of mercy be not offered sadly nor reckoned among losses. Let so much be
expended on pious work, as will justify the heart, wash the conscience, and in a
word profit both giver and receiver. Happy indeed is that soul and truly to be
admired which in its love of doing good fears not the failing of the means, and
has no distrust that He will give him money still to spend, from Whom he had what
he spent in the past. But because few possess this greatness of heart, and yet
it is truly a pious thing for each one not to forsake the care of his own, we,
without prejudice to the more perfect sort, lay down for you this general rule
and exhort you to perform GOD's bidding according to the measure of your
ability. For cheerfulness becomes the benevolent man, who should so manage his
liberality that while the poor rejoice over the help supplied, home needs may not
suffer. "And He that ministers seed to the sower, shall both provide bread to be
eaten and multiply your seed and increase the fruits of your righteousness(8)."
On Wednesday and Friday therefore let us fast; and on Saturday keep vigil all
together(9) in the presence of the most blessed Apostle Peter, by whose merits
and prayers we are sure GOD's mercy will be vouchsafed to us in all things
through our LORD Jesus Christ, Who lives and reigns for ever and ever. Amen.
SERMON XC.
(ON THE FAST OF SEVENTH MONTH, V.)
I.We must always be seeking pardon, because we are always liable to sin.
We proclaim the holy Fast of the Seventh Month, dearly-beloved, for the
exercise of common devotions, confidently inciting you with fatherly exhortations
to make Christian by your observance that which was formerly Jewish(1). For it
is at all times suitable and in agreement with both the New and Old Testament,
that the Divine Mercy should be sought with chastisement both of mind and
body, because nothing is more effectual in prevailing with GOD than that a man
should judge himself and never cease from asking pardon, knowing that he is never
without fault For human nature has this flaw in itself, not planted there by the
Creator but contracted by the transgressor(2), and transmitted to his
posterity by the law of generations, so that from the corruptible body springs that
which may corrupt the soul also. Hence although the inner man be now reborn in
Christ and rescued from the bonds of captivity, it has unceasing conflicts with
the flesh, and has to endure resistance in seeking to restrain vain desires. And
in this strife such perfect victory is not easily obtained that even those
habits which must be broken off do not still encumber us, and those vices which
must be slain do not wound. However wisely and prudently the mind presides as
judge over the outer senses, yet even amid the pains it takes to rule and the
limits it imposes on the appetites of the flesh, the temptation is always too close
at hand. For who so abstracts himself from pleasure or pain of body that his
mind is not affected by that which delights or racks it from without? Joy and
sorrow are inseparable from a man: no part of him is free from the kindlings of
wrath, the over-powerings of delight, the castings down of affliction. And what
turning away from sin can there be, where ruler and ruled alike are liable to
the same passions? Rightly does the LORD exclaim that "the spirit indeed is
willing but the flesh is weak(4)."
II. Christ is Himself the Way, which He bids us tread.
And lest we should be led by despair into sheer inaction, He promises that
the Divine power shall make those things possible which are to man impossible
from his own lack of power: "for narrow and strait is the way which leadeth
unto life(5)," and no one could set foot on it, no one could advance one step,
unless Christ by making Himself the Way unbarred the difficulties of approach:
and thus the Ordainer of the journey becomes the Means whereby we are able to
accomplish it, because not only does He impose the labour, but also brings us to
the haven of rest. In Him therefore we find our Model of patience, in Whom we
have our Hope of life eternal; for "if we suffer with Him, we shall also reign
with Him(6)," since, as the Apostle says, "he that saith he abideth in Christ
ought himself also to walk as He walked(7)." Otherwise we make a vain presence and
show, if we follow not His steps, Whose name we glory in, and assuredly they
would not be irksome to us, but would free us from all dangers, if we loved
nothing but what He commanded us to love.
III. The love of GOD contrasted with the love of the world.
For there are two loves from which proceed all wishes, as different in
quality as they are different in their sources. For the reasonable soul, which
cannot exist without love, is the lover either of GOD or the world. In the love of
GOD there is no excess, but in the love of the world all is hurtful. And
therefore we must cling inseparably to eternal treasures, but things temporal we
must use like passers-by, that as we are sojourners hastening to return to our own
land, all the good things of this world which meet us may be as aids on the
way, not snares to detain us. Therefore the blessed Apostle makes this
proclamation, "the time is short: it remains that those who have wives be as though they
had none; and those who weep, as though they wept not; and those who rejoice,
as though they rejoiced not; and those who buy, as though they possessed not;
and those that use this world, as though they used it not. For the fashion of
this world passes away(8)." But as the world attracts us with its appearance, and
abundance and variety, it is not easy to turn away from it unless in the beauty
of things visible the Creator rather than the creature is loved; for, when He
says, "thou shale love the LORD Shy GOD from all thy heart, and from all thy
mind, and from all shy strength(9)," He wishes us in noticing to loosen ourselves
from the bonds of His love. And when He links the love of our neighbour also
to this command, He enjoins on us the imitation of His own goodness, that we
should love what He loves and do what He does. For although we be "GOD's husbandry
and GOD's building," and "neither is he that planteth anything, nor he that
watereth, but GOD that giveth the increase(1)," yet in all things He requires our
ministry and service, and wishes us to be the stewards of His gifts, that he
who bears GOD's image may do GOD's will. For this reason, in the LORD'S prayer
we say most devoutly, "Thy Kingdom come, Thy will be done as in heaven, so also
on earth." For what else do we ask for in these words but that GOD may subdue
those whom He has not yet subdued, and as in heaven He makes the angels
ministers of His will, so also on earth He may make men? And in seeking this we love
GOD, we love also our neighbour: and the love within us has but one Object, since
we desire the bond-servant to serve and the LORD to have rule.
IV. The love of GOD is fostered by good works.
This state of mind, therefore, beloved, from which earthly love is
excluded, is strengthened by the habit of well-doing, because the conscience must
needs be delighted at good deeds, and do willingly what it rejoices to have done.
Thus it is that fasts are kept, alms freely given, justice maintained, frequent
prayer resorted to, and the desires of individuals become the common wish of
all. Labour fosters patience, gentleness extinguishes anger, loving-kindness
treads down hatred, unclean desires are slain by holy, aspirations, avarice is east
out by liberality, and burdensome wealth becomes the means of virtuous
acts(2). But because the snares of the devil are not at rest even in such a state of
things, most rightly at certain seasons of the year the renewal of our vigour is
provided for: and now in particular, when one who is greedy of present good
might boast himself over the clemency of the weather and the fertility of the
land, and having stored his crops in great barns, might say to his soul, "thou
hast much goods, eat and drink," let him take heed to the rebuke of the Divine
voice, and hear it saying, "Thou fool, this night they require thy soul of thee,
and the things which thou hast prepared, whose shall they be(3)?" This should be
the wise man's most anxious consideration, in order that, as the days of this
life are short and its span uncertain, death may never come upon him unawares,
and that knowing himself mortal he may meet his end fully prepared. And so,
that this may avail both for the sanctification of out bodies and the renewal of
our souls, on Wednesday and Friday let us fast, and on Saturday let us keep
vigil with the most blessed Apostle Peter, whose prayers will help us to obtain
fulfilment of our holy desires through Christ our LORD, Who with the Father and
the Holy Ghost lives and reigns for ever and ever. Amen.
SERMON XCI
ON THE FAST OF THE SEVENTH MONTH, .VI.
I. Abstinence must include discipline of the soul as well as of the body.
There is nothing, dearly-beloved, in which the Divine Providence does not
assist the devotions of the faithful. For the very elements of the world(4)
also minister to the exercise of mind and body in holiness, seeing that the
distinctly varied revolution of days and months opens for us the different pages of
the commands, and thus the seasons also in some sense speak to us of that which
the sacred institutions enjoin. And hence, since the year's course has brought
back the seventh month to us, I feel certain that your minds are spiritually
aroused to keep the solemn fast; since you have learnt by experience how well
this preparation purifies both the outer and the inner parts of men, so that by
abstaining from the lawful, resistance becomes easier to the unlawful. But do not
limit your plan of abstinence, dearly-beloved, to the mortifying of the body,
or to the lessening of food alone. For the greater advantages of this virtue
belong to that chastity of the soul, which not only crushes the lusts of the
flesh, but also despises the vanities of worldly wisdom, as the Apostle says, "take
heed that no one deceive you through philosophy and empty deceit, according to
the tradition of men(5)."
II. And in particular we must abstain from heresy, and that of Eutyches as
well as that of Nestorius.
We must restrain ourselves, therefore, from food, but much more must we
fast from errors that the mind, given up to no carnal pleasure, may be taken
captive by no falsehood: because as in past days, so also in our own, there are not
wanting enemies of the Truth, who dare to stir up civil wars within the
catholic Church(6), in order that by leading the ignorant into agreement with their
ungodly doctrines they may boast of increase in numbers through those whom they
have been able to sever from the Body of Christ. For what is so opposed to the
Prophets, so repugnant to the Gospels, so at variance with the Apostles'
teaching as to preach one single Nature in the Lord Jesus Christ born of Mary, and
without respect to time co-eternal with the Eternal Father? If it is only man's
nature which is to be acknowledged, where is the Godhead Which saves? if only
GOD's, where is the humanity which is saved? But the catholic Faith, which
withstands all errors, refutes these blasphemies also at the same time, condemning
Nestorius, who divides the Divine from the human, and denouncing Eutyches, who
nullifies the human in the Divine; seeing that the Son of True GOD, Himself True
GOD, possessing unity and equality with the Father and with the Holy Ghost, has
vouchsafed likewise to be true Man, and after the Virgin Mother's conception
was not separated from her flesh and child-bearing, so uniting humanity to
Himself as to remain immutably GOD; so imparting Godhead to man as not to destroy
but enhance him by glorification. For He, Who became "the form of a slave,"
ceased not to be "the form of GOD," and He is not one joined with the other, but One
in Both, so that ever since "the Word became Flesh" our faith is disturbed by
no vicissitudes of circumstance, but whether in the miracles of power, or in
the degradation of suffering, we believe Him to be both GOD, Who is Man, and Man,
Who is GOD(7).
III. The Truth of the Incarnation is proved both by the Eucharistic Feast and
by the Divine institution of almsgiving.
Dearly-beloved, utter this confession with all your heart and reject the
wicked lies of heretics, that your fasting and almsgiving may not be polluted by
any contagion with error: for then is our offering of the sacrifice clean and
oar gifts of mercy holy, when those who perform them understand that which they
do. For when the LORD says, "unless ye have eaten the flesh of the Son of Man,
and drunk His blood, ye will not have life in you(8)," you ought so to be
partakers at the Holy Table, as to have no doubt whatever concerning the reality of
Christ's Body and Blood. For that is taken in the mouth which is believed in
Faith, and it is vain for them to respond Amend(9) who dispute that which is
taken. But when the Prophet says, "Blessed is he, who considereth the poor and
needy(1)," he is the praiseworthy distributor of clothes and food among the poor,
who knows he is clothing and feeding Christ in the poor: for He Himself says,
"as long as ye have done it to one of My brethren, ye have done it to Me(2)."
And so Christ is One, True GOD and True Man, rich in what is His own, poor in
what is ours, receiving gifts and distributing gifts, Partner with mortals, and
the Quickener of the dead, so that in the "name of Jesus every knee should bow,
of things in heaven, of things on earth, and of things under the earth, and that
every tongue should confess that the LORD Jesus Christ is in the glory of GOD
the Father(3)," living and reigning with the Holy Spirit for ever and ever.
Amen.
SERMON XCV.
A HOMILY ON THE BEATITUDES, ST. MATT. V. 1--9.
I. Introduction of the subject.
When our LORD Jesus Christ, beloved, was preaching the gospel of the
Kingdom, and was healing divers sicknesses through the whole of Galilee, the fame of
His mighty works had spread into all Syria: large crowds too from all parts of
Judaea were flocking to the heavenly Physician(4). For as human ignorance is
slow in believing what it does not see, and in hoping for what it does not know,
those who were to be instructed in the divine lore(5), needed to be aroused by
bodily benefits and visible miracles: so that they might have no doubt as to
the wholesomeness of His teaching when they actually experienced His benignant
power. And therefore that the LORD might use outward healings as an introduction
to inward remedies, and after healing bodies might work cures in the soul, He
separated Himself from the surrounding crowd, ascended into the retirement of a
neighbouring mountain, and called His apostles to Him there, that from the
height of that mystic seat He might instruct them in the lottier doctrines,
signifying from the very nature of the place and act that He it was who had once
honoured Moses by speaking to him: then indeed with a more terrifying justice, but
now with a holier mercifulness, that what had been promised might be fulfilled
when the Prophet Jeremiah says: "behold the days come when I will complete a
new covenant(6) for the house of Israel and for the house of Judah. After those
days, saith the LORD, I will put My laws in their minds(7), and in their heart
will I write them(8).'' He therefore who had spoken to Moses, spoke also to the
apostles, and the swift hand of the Word wrote and deposited the secrets of the
new covenant(6) in the disciples' hearts: there were no thick clouds
surrounding Him as of old, nor were the people frightened off from approaching the
mountain by frightful sounds and lightning(9), but quietly and freely His discourse
reached the ears of those who stood by: that the harshness of the law might
give way before the gentleness of grace, and "the spirit of adoption" might dispel
the terrors of bondage(1).
II. The blessedness of humility discussed
The nature then of Christ's teaching is attested by His own holy
statements: that they who wish to arrive at eternal blessedness may understand the steps
of ascent to that high happiness. "Blessed," He saith, "are the poor in
spirit, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven(2)." It would perhaps be doubtful what
poor He was speaking of, if in saying "blessed are the poor" He had added nothing
which would explain the sort of poor: and then that poverty by itself would
appear sufficient to win the kingdom of heaven which many suffer from hard and
heavy necessity. But when He says "blessed are the poor in spirit," He shows
that the kingdom of heaven must be assigned to those who are recommended by the
humility of their spirits rather than by the smallness of their means. Yet it
cannot be doubted that this possession of humility is more easily acquired by the
poor than the rich: for submissiveness is the companion of those that want,
while loftiness of mind dwells with riches(3). Notwithstanding, even in many of
the rich is found that spirit which uses its abundance not for the increasing of
its pride but on works of kindness, and counts that for the greatest gain which
it expends in the relief of others' hardships. It is given to every kind and
rank of men to share in this virtue, because men may be equal in will, though
unequal in fortune: and it does not matter how different they are in earthly
means, who are found equal in spiritual possessions. Blessed. therefore, is poverty
which is not possessed with a love of temporal things, and does not seek to be
increased with the riches of the world, but is eager to amass heavenly
possessions.
III. Scriptural examples of humility.
Of this high-souled humility the Apostles first(4), after the LORD, have
given us example, who, leaving all that they had without difference at the voice
of the heavenly Master, were turned by a ready change from the catching of
fish to be fishers of men, and made many like themselves through the imitation of
their faith, when with those first-begotten sons of the Church, "the heart of
all was one, and the spirit one, of those that believed(5):" for they, putting
away the whole of their things and possessions, enriched themselves with
eternal goods, through the most devoted poverty, and m accordance with the Apostles'
preaching rejoiced to have nothing of the world and possess all things with
Christ. Hence the blessed Apostle Peter, when he was going up into the temple, and
was asked for alms by the lame man, said, "Silver and gold is not mine, but
what I have that I give thee: in the Name of Jesus Christ of Nazareth, arise and
walk(6)." What more sublime than this humility? what richer than this poverty?
He hath not stores of money(7), but he hath gifts of nature. He whom his mother
had brought forth lame from the womb, is made whole by Peter with a word; and
he who gave not Caesar's image in a coin, restored Christ's image on the man.
And by the riches of this treasure not he only was aided whose lower of walking
was restored, but 5,000 men also, who then believed at the Apostle's
exhortation on account of the wonder of this cure. And that poor man who had not what to
give to the asker, bestowed so great a bounty of Divine Grace, that, as he had
set one man straight on his feet, so he healed these many thousands of
believers in their hearts, and made them "leap as an hart" in Christ whom he had found
limping in Jewish unbelief.
IV. The blessedness of mourning discussed.
After the assertion of this most happy humility, the LORD hath added,
saying, "Blessed are they which mourn, for they shall be comforted(8)." This
mourning, beloved, to which eternal comforting is promised, is not the same as the
affliction of this world: nor do those laments which are poured out in the
sorrowings of the whole human race make any one blessed. The reason for holy
groanings, the cause of blessed tears, is very different. Religious grief mourns sin
either that of others' or one's own: nor does it mourn for that which is wrought
by GOD's justice, but it laments over that which is committed by man's
iniquity, where he that does wrong is more to be deplored than he who suffers it,
because the unjust man's wrongdoing plunges him into punishment, but the just man's
endurance leads him on to glory.
V. The blessedness of the meek.
Next the LORD says: "blessed are the meek, for they shall possess the
earth by inheritance(9)." To the meek and gentle, to the humble and modest, and to
those who are prepared to endure all injuries, the earth is promised for their
possession. And this is not to be reckoned a small or cheap inheritance, as if
it were distinct from our heavenly dwelling, since it is no other than these
who are understood to enter the kingdom of heaven. The earth, then, which is
promised to the meek, and is to be given to the gentle in possession, is the flesh
of the saints, which in reward for their humility will be changed in a happy
resurrection, and clothed with the glory of immortality, in nothing now to act
contrary to the spirit, and to be in complete unity and agreement with the will
of the soul(1). For then the outer man will be the peaceful and unblemished
possession of the inner man: then the mind, engrossed in beholding GOD, will be
hampered by no obstacles of human weakness nor will it any more have to be said
"The body which is corrupted, weigheth upon the soul, and its earthly house
presseth down the sense which thinketh many things(2):" for the earth will not
struggle against its tenant, and will not venture on any insubordination against the
rule of its governor. For the meek shall possess it in perpetual peace, and
nothing shall be taken from their rights, "when this corruptible shall have put
on incorruption, and this mortal shall have put on immortality(3):" that their
danger may turn into reward, and what was a burden become an honour(4).
VI. The blessedness of desiring righteousness.
After this the LoRD goes on to say: "blessed are they who hunger and
thirst after righteousness, for they shall be satisfied(5)." It is nothing bodily,
nothing earthly, that this hunger, this thirst seeks for: but it desires to be
satiated with the good food of righteousness, and wants to be admitted to all
the deepest mysteries, and be filled with the LORD Himself. Happy the mind that
craves this food and is eager for such drink: which it certainly would not seek
for if it had never tasted of its sweetness. But hearing the Prophet's spirit
saying to him: "taste and see that the LORD is sweet(6);" it has received some
portion of sweetness from on high, and blazed out into love of the purest
pleasure, so that spurning all things temporal, it is seized with the utmost
eagerness for eating and drinking righteousness, and grasps the truth of that first
commandment which says: "Thou shalt love the LORD thy GOD out of all thy heart,
and out of all thy mind, and out of all thy strength(7):" since to love GOD is
nothing else but to love righteousness(8). In fine, as in that passage the care
for one's neighbour is joined to the love of GOD, so, too, here the virtue of
mercy is linked to the desire for righteousness, and it is said:
VII. The blessedness of the merciful:
"Blessed are the merciful, for GOD shall have mercy on them(9)."
Recognize, Christian, the worth of thy wisdom, and understand to what rewards thou art
called, and by what methods of discipline thou must attain thereto. Mercy wishes
thee to be merciful, righteousness to be righteous, that the Creator may be
seen in His creature, and the image of GOD may be reflected in the mirror of the
human heart expressed by the lines of imitation. The faith of those who do
good' is free from anxiety: thou shalt have all thy desires, and shalt obtain
without end what thou lovest. And since through thine alms-giving all things are
pure to thee, to that blessedness also thou shalt attain which is promised in
consequence where the LORD says:
VIII. The blessedness of a pure heart.
"Blessed are the pure in heart, for they shall see GOD(2)." Great is the
happiness, beloved, of him for whom so great a reward is prepared. What, then,
is it to have the heart pure, but to strive after those virtues which are
mentioned above? And how great the blessedness of seeing GOD, what mind can conceive,
what tongue declare? And yet this shall ensue when man's nature is
transformed, so that no longer "in a mirror," nor "in a riddle," but "face to face(3)" it
sees the very Godhead "as He is(4)," which no man could see(5); and through the
unspeakable joy of eternal contemplation obtains that "which eye has not seen,
nor ear heard, neither has entered into the heart of man(5a)." Rightly is this
blessedness promised to purity of heart. For the brightness of the true light
will not be able to be seen by the unclean sight: and that which will be
happiness to minds that are bright and clean, will be a punishment to those that are
stained. Therefore, let the mists of earth's vanities be shunned. and your
inward eyes purged from all the filth of wickedness, that the sight may be free to
feed on this great manifestation of GOD. For to the attainment of this we
understand what follows to lead.
IX. The blessedness of peace-making.
"Blessed are the peace-makers, for they shall be called the sons of
GOD(6)." This blessedness, beloved, belongs not to any and every kind of agreement
and harmony, but to that of which the Apostle speaks: "have peace towards
GOD(7);" and of which the Prophet David speaks: "Much peace have they that love Thy
law, and they have no cause of offences(8)." This peace even the closest ties of
friendship and the exactest likeness of mind do not really gain, if they do not
agree with GOD's will. Similarity of bad desires, leagues in crimes,
associations of vice, cannot merit this peace. The love of the world does not consort
with the love of GOD, nor doth he enter the alliance of the sons of GOD who will
not separate himself from the children of this generation(9) Whereas they who
are in mind always with GOD, "giving diligence to keep the unity of the Spirit
in the bond of peace(1)," never dissent from the eternal law, uttering that
prayer of faith, "Thy will be done as in heaven so on earth(2)." These are "the
peacemakers," these are thoroughly of one mind, and fully harmonious, and are to
be called sons "of GOD and joint-heirs with Christ(3)," because this shall be
the record of the love of GOD and the love of our neighbour, that we shall suffer
no calamities, be in fear of no offence, but all the strife of trial ended,
rest in GOD's most perfect peace, through our LORD, Who, with the Father and the
Holy Spirit, liveth and reigneth for ever and ever. Amen.