HOMILIES OF ST. JOHN CHRYSOSTOM ON THE GOSPEL ACCORDING TO ST. MATTHEW,
HOMILIES XLIX & LII (MATT. 14 & 15)
HOMILY XLIX.
MATT. XIV. 13.
"But when Jesus heard of it, He departed thence by ship into a desert place
apart; and when the multitudes had heard thereof, they followed Him on foot out
of all the cities."
SEE Him on every occasion "departing,"(2) both when John was delivered
up,(3) and when he was slain, and when the Jews heard that He was making more
disciples.(4) For it is His will ordinarily to conduct things after the manner of a
man, the time not yet calling Him to reveal His Godhead plainly. Wherefore
also He bade His disciples "tell no man that He is the Christ;"(5) for His will
was that this should be better known after His resurrection. Wherefore upon those
of the Jews that were for a time obstinate in their unbelief He was not very
severe, but even disposed to be indulgent to them.
And on retiring, He departs not into a city, but into a wilderness, and in
a vessel, so that no man should follow.
But do thou mark, I pray thee, how the disciples of John had now come to
be more attached to Jesus. For it was they that told Him of the event; for
indeed they have left all, and take refuge henceforth in Him. Thus, besides their
calamity, His provision before made in that answer(1) did no small good.
But wherefore did He not retire before they brought Him the tidings, when
yet He knew the fact before they reported it? To signify all means the reality
of His economy.(2) For not by His appearance only, but by His actions He would
have this confirmed, because He knew the devil's craft, and that he would leave
nothing undone to destroy this doctrine.
He then for this end retires; but the multitudes not even so withdraw
themselves from Him, but they follow, riveted to Him, and not even John's tragical
end alarmed them. So great a thing is earnest desire, so great a thing is love;
in such wise doth it overcome and dispel all dangers.
Therefore they straightway also received their reward. For "Jesus," it is
said, "went forth, and saw a great multitude, and was moved with compassion
toward them, and He healed their sick."(3)
For great as their assiduity was, yet nevertheless His doings exceeded
what any diligence could earn. Wherefore He sets forth also His motive for so
healing them, His mercy, intense mercy: and He healeth all.
And He requires not faith here. For both by coming to Him, and by leaving
their cities, and by diligently seeking Him, and by abiding with Him even when
hunger was pressing, they display their own faith.
But He is about to feed them also. And He doth not this of Himself, but
waits to be entreated; on every occasion, as I have said, maintaining this rule,
not to spring onward to His miracles, preventing them, but upon some call.(4)
And why did none of the multitude come near and speak for them? They
reverenced Him exceedingly, and felt not even their hunger, through their longing to
stay with Him. Neither indeed do His disciples, when they were come to Him,
say, "Feed them;" for as yet they were rather in an imperfect state; but what?
"And when it was evening,' it is said, "His disciples came to Him, saying,
This is a desert place, and the time is now passed; send the multitude away,
that they may go and buy themselves victuals."(5)
For if even after the miracle they forgot what had been done, and after
the baskets, supposed Him to be speaking of loaves, when He gave the name of
"leaven" to the doctrine of the Pharisees;(6) much less, when they had never yet
had experience of such a miracle, would they have expected any such thing. And
yet He had made a beginning by actually healing many sick; but nevertheless, not
even from this did they expect the miracle of the loaves; so imperfct were they
as yet.
But mark thou, I pray, the Teacher's skill, how distinctly He summons them
on towards believing. For He said not at once, "I feed them;" which indeed
would not have been easily received; but what?
"But Jesus," so it is written, "said unto them, "They need not depart;
give ye them to eat."(7)
He said not, "I give them," but, "Give ye them;" for as yet their regard
to Him was as to a man. But they not even so are awakened, but still reason as
with a man, saying,
"We have but five loaves, and two fishes."(8)
Wherefore Mark also saith, "They understood not the saying, for their
heart was hardened."(9)
They continuing therefore to crawl on the ground, then at length He brings
in His own part, and saith, "Bring them hither to me." For although the place
be desert, yet He that feeds the world is here; and although the time be now
past, yet He that is not subject to time is discoursing with you.
But John saith also, that they were "barley loaves,"(10) not mentioning it
without object, but teaching us to trample under foot the pride of costly
living. Such was the diet of the prophets also.(11)
2. "He took therefore the five loaves, and the two fishes, and commanded
the multitude," it is said, "to sit down upon the grass, and looking up to
Heaven, He blessed, and brake, and gave to His disciples, and the disciples to the
multitude.(12) And they did all eat and were filled, and they took up of the
fragments that remained twelve baskets full. And they that had eaten were about
five thousand men, beside women and children.
Wherefore did He look up to Heaven, and bless? It was to be believed of
Him, both that He is of the Father, and that He is equal to Him. But the proofs
of these things seemed to oppose one another. For while His equality was
indicated by His doing all with authority, of His origin from the Father they could no
otherwise be persuaded, than by His doing all with great lowliness, and with
reference to Him, and invoking Him on His works. Wherefore we see that He
neither did these actions only, nor those, that both might be confirmed; and now He
works miracles with authority, now with prayer.
Then again, that what He did might not seem an inconsistency, in the
lesser things He looks up to Heaven, but in the greater doth all with authority; to
teach thee in the lesser also, that not as receiving power from elsewhere, but
as honoring Him that begat Him, so He acts. For example: when He forgave sins,
and opened paradise, and brought in the thief, and most utterly set aside the
old law, and raised innumerable dead, and bridled the sea, and reproved the
un-uttered thoughts of men, and created an eye;--which are achievements of God only
and of none else;--we see Him in no instance praying: but when He provided for
the loaves to multiply themselves, a far less thing than all these, then He
looks up to Heaven; at once establishing these truths which I have spoken of, and
instructing us not to touch a meal, until we have given thanks to Him who
giveth us this food.
And why doth He not make it of things that are not? Stopping the mouth of
Marcion, and of Manichaens, who alienate His creation from Him, and teaching by
His very works, that even all the things that are seen are His works and
creatures, and signifying that it is Himself who gives the fruits, who said at the
beginning, "Let the earth put forth the herb of grass," and "Let the waters
bring forth things moving with living souls."(1)
For this is not at all a less work than the other. For though those were
made of things that are not, yet nevertheless were they of water; and it was no
greater thing to produce fruits out of the earth, and moving things with life
out of the water, than out of five loaves to make so many; and of fishes again,
which was a sign that He was ruler both of the earth and of the sea.
Thus, since the sick were constantly the subject of His miracles, He works
also a general benefit, that the many might not be spectators only of what
befell others, but themselves also partakers of the gift.
And that which in the wilderness seemed to the Jews marvellous, (they said
at least, "Can He give bread also? or prepare a table in the wilderness?)"(2)
this He shows forth in His works. With this view also He leads them into the
wilderness, that the miracle might be very far beyond suspicion, and that no one
might think that any village lying near contributed ought to the meal. For this
reason He mentions the hour also, not the place only.
And another thing too we learn, the self-restraint of the disciples which
they practised in necessary things, and how little they accounted of food. For
being twelve, they had five loaves only and two fishes; so secondary to them
were the things of the body: so did they cling to the things spiritual only.
And not even that little did they hold fast, but gave up even it when
asked. Whereby we should be taught, that though we have but little, this too we
ought to give up to them that are in need. Thus, when commanded to bring the five
loaves, they say not, "and whence are we to have food? whence to appease our
own hunger?" but they obey at once.
And besides what I have mentioned, to this end, as I at least think, He
makes it out of the materials which they had, namely, that He might lead them to
faith; for as yet they were rather in a weak state.(3)
Wherefore also "He looks up to Heaven." For of the other miracles they had
many examples, but of this none.(3)
3. "He took the loaves," therefore, "and brake them, and gave them by His
disciples," hereby to honor them; and not in honor to them only, but also that,
when the miracle had been done they might not disbelieve it, nor forget it
when it had past, their own hands bearing them witness.(3)
Wherefore also He suffers the multitudes first to have a sense of hunger,
and waits for these to come to Him first and ask Him, and by them makes the
people sit down, and by them distributes; being minded by their own confessions
and actions to prepossess them every one.(3)
Therefore also, from them He receives the loaves, that the testimonies of
what was doing might be many, and that they might have memorials of the
miracle. For if even after these occurrences they forgot,(4) what would not have been
their case, had He omitted those provisions?
And He commands them to sit down on the trampled grass, instructing the
multitudes in self-denial. For His will was not to feed their bodies only, but
also to instruct their souls. As well by the place therefore, as by His giving
them nothing more than loaves and fishes, and by setting the same before all,
and making it common, and by affording no one more than another, He was teaching
them humility, and temperance, and charity, and to be of like mind one towards
another, and to account all things common.
"And He brake and gave to the disciples, and the disciples to the
multitude." The five loaves He brake and gave, and the five multiplied themselves in
the hands of the disciples. And not even here doth He stay the miracle, but He
made them even to exceed; to exceed, not as whole loaves, but as fragments; to
signify that of those loaves these were remains, and in order that the absent
might learn what had been done.
For this purpose indeed He suffered the multitudes to hunger, that no one
might suppose what took place to be illusion.
For this also He caused just twelve baskets to remain over, that Judas
also might bear one. For He was able indeed to have appeased their hunger, but the
disciples would not have known His power, since in Elijah's case also this
took place.(1)
At all events, so greatly were the Jews amazed at Him for this, that they
wished even to make Him a king,(2) although with regard to the other miracles
they did not so m any instance.
What reasoning now may set forth, how the loaves multiplied(3) themselves;
how they flowed together in the wilderness; how they were enough for so many
(for there were "five thousand men beside women and children;" which was a very
great commendation of the people, that both women and men attended Him); how
the remnants had their being (for this again is not less than the former), and
became so abundant, that the baskets were equal in number to the disciples, and
neither more nor less?
Having then taken the fragments, He gave them not to the multitudes, but
to the disciples, and that, because the multitudes were m a more imperfect state
than the disciples.
And, having wrought the miracle, "straightway He constrained His disciples
to get into a ship, and to go before Him unto the other side, while He sent
the multitudes away."(4)
For even if He had seemed, when in sight, to be presenting an illusion,
and not to have wrought a truth; yet surely not in His absence also. For this
cause then, submitting His proceedings to an exact test, He commanded those that
had got the memorials, and the proof of the miracles, to depart from Him.
And besides this, when He is doing great works, He disposes elsewhere of
the multitudes and the disciples, instructing us in nothing to follow after the
glory that comes from the people, nor to collect a crowd about us.
Now by saying, "He constrained them," He indicates the very close
attendance of the disciples.
And His pretext indeed for dismissing them was the multitude, but He was
Himself minded to go up into the mountain; and He did this, instructing us
neither to be always in intercourse with multitudes, nor always to fly from the
crowd, but each of the two as may be expedient, and giving each duly his turn.
4. Let us learn therefore ourselves also to wait upon Jesus; but not for
His bounty in things sensible, lest we be upbraided like the Jews. For "ye seek
me," saith He, "not because ye saw the miracles,(5) but because ye did eat of
the loaves, and were filled."(6) Therefore neither doth He work this miracle
continually, but a second time only; that they might be taught not to be slaves to
their belly, but to cling incessantly to the things of the Spirit.
To these then let us also cling, and let us seek the heavenly bread, and
having received it, let us cast away all worldly care. For if those men left
houses, and cities, and kinsmen, and all, and abode in the wilderness, and when
hunger was pressing, withdrew not; much more ought we, when approaching such a
table, to show forth a more abundant self-command, and to set our love on the
things of the Spirit, and to seek the things of sense as secondary to these.
Since even they were blamed, not because they sought Him for the bread,
but because it was for this only they sought Him, and for this primarily. For
should any one despise the great gifts, but cling to the small, and to those which
the giver would have him despise. He loses these latter too: as on the other
hand, if we love those, He adds these also. For these are but an appendage to
the others; so vile are they and trifling, compared with those, although they be
great. Let us not therefore spend our diligence on them, but account both the
acquisition and loss of them alike indifferent, even as Job also neither clung
to them when present, nor sought them absent. For on this account, they are
called <greek>krhata</greek>, (1) not that we should bury them in the earth, but
that we should use them aright.
And as of artisans every one hath his peculiar skill, even so the rich
man, as he knows not how to work in brass, nor to frame ships, nor to weave, nor
to build houses, nor any such thing;--let him learn then to use his wealth
aright, and to pity the poor; so shall he know a better art than all those.
For indeed this is above all those arts. Its workshop is builded in
Heaven. It hath its tools not of iron and brass, but of goodness and of a right will.
Of this art Christ is the Teacher, and His Father. "For be ye merciful," saith
He, "as your Father which is in Heaven."(2)
And what is indeed marvellous, being so much superior to the rest, it
needs no labor, no time for its perfection; it is enough to have willed, and the
whole is accomplished.
But let us see also the end thereof, what it is. What then is the end of
it? Heaven, the good things in the heavens, that unspeakable glory, the
spiritual bride-chambers, the bright lamps, the abiding with the Bridegroom; the other
things, which no speech, nor even understanding, is able to set forth.
So that herein likewise great is its difference from all others. For most
of the arts profit us for the present life, but this for the life to come also.
5. But if it so far excels the arts that are necessary to us for the
present, as medicine, for instance, and house-building, and all others like them:
much more the rest, which if any one were nicely to examine, he would not even
allow them to be arts. Wherefore I at least would not call those others, as they
are unnecessary, so much as arts at all. For wherein is delicate cookery and
making sauces profitable to us? Nowhere: yea, they are greatly unprofitable and
hurtful, doing harm both to body and soul, by bringing upon us the parent of all
diseases and sufferings, luxury, together with great extravagance.(3)
But not these only, but not even painting, or embroidery, would I for one
allow to be an art, for they do but throw men into useless expense. But the
arts ought to be concerned with things necessary and important to our life, to
supply and work them up. For to this end God gave us skill at all, that we might
invent methods, whereby to furnish out our life. But that there should be
figures(4) either on walls, or on garments, wherein is it useful, I pray thee? For
this same cause the sandal-makers too, and the weavers, should have great
retrenchments made in their art. For most things in it they have carried into vulgar
ostentation,(5) having corrupted its necessary use, and mixed with an honest art
an evil craft; which has been the case with the art of building also. But even
as to this, so long as it builds houses and not theatres, and labors upon
things necessary, and not superfluous, I give the name of an art; so the business
of weaving too, as long as it makes clothes, and coverlids, but does not imitate
the spiders, and overwhelm men with much absurdity, and unspeakable
effeminacy, so long I call it an art.
And the sandal-makers' trade, so long as it makes sandals, I will not rob
of the appellation of art; but when it perverts men to the gestures of women,
and causes them by their sandals to grow wanton and delicate, we will set it
amidst the things hurtful and superfluous, and not so much as name it an art.
And I know well, that to many I seem over-minute in busying myself about
these things; I shall not however refrain for this. For the cause of all our
evils is this, such faults being at all counted trifling, and therefore
disregarded.
And what sin, say you, can be of less account than this, of having an
ornamented and glittering sandal, which fits the foot; if indeed it seem right at
all to denominate it a sin?
Will ye then that I let loose my tongue upon it, and show its
unseemliness, how great it is? and will ye not be angry? Or rather, though ye be angry, I
care not much. Nay, for yourselves are to blame for this folly, who do not so
much as think it is a sin, and hereby constrain us to enter upon the reproof of
this extravagance. Come then, let us examine it, and let us see what sort of an
evil it is. For when the silken threads, which it is not seemly should be even
inwoven in your garments, these are sewn by you into your shoes, what reproach,
what derision do these things deserve?
And if thou despise our judgments, hear the voice of Paul, with great
earnestness forbidding these things, and then thou wilt perceive the absurdity of
them. What then saith he? "Not with braided hair, or gold, or pearls, or costly
array."(6) Of what favor then canst thou be worthy; when, in spite of Paul's
prohibiting the married woman to have costly clothing, thou extendest this
effeminacy even to thy shoes, and hast no end of contrivances for the sake of this
ridicule and reproach? Yes: for first a ship is built, then rowers are mustered,
and a man for the prow, and a helmsman, and a sail is spread, and an ocean
traversed, and, leaving wife and children and country, the merchant commits his
very life to the waves, and comes to the land of the barbarians, and undergoes
innumerable dangers for these threads, that after it all thou mayest take them,
and sew them into thy shoes, and ornament the leather. And what can be done worse
than this folly?
But the old ways are not like these, but such as become men. Wherefore I
for my part expect that in process of time the young men amongst us will wear
even women's shoes, and not be ashamed. And what is more grievous, men's fathers
seeing these things are not much displeased, but do even account it an
indifferent matter.
Would ye that I should add what is still more grievous; that these things
are done even when there are many poor? Would ye that I bring before you
Christ, an hungered, naked, wandering everywhere, in chains? And how many
thunderbolts must ye not deserve, overlooking Him in want of necessary food, and adorning
these pieces of leather with so much diligence? And He indeed, when He was
giving law to His disciples, would not so much as suffer them to have shoes at all,
but we cannot bear to walk, I say not barefooted, but even with feet shod as
they ought to be.
7. What then can be worse than this unseemliness, this absurdity? For the
thing marks a soul, in the first place effeminate, then unfeeling and cruel,
then curious and idly busy. For when will he be able to attend to any necessary
matter, who is taken up with these superfluous things? when will such a youth
endure to take heed to his soul, or to consider so much as that he hath a soul?
Yes, he surely will be a trifler who cannot help admiring such things; he cruel,
who for their sake neglects the poor; he void of virtue, who spends all his
diligence on them.
For he that is curious about the beauty of threads, and the bloom of
colors, and the tendrils made of such woven work, when will he be able to look upon
the heaven? when will he admire the beauty there, who is excited about a kind
of beauty that belongs to pieces of leather, and who is bending to the earth?
And whereas God hath stretched out the Heaven, and lighted up the sun, drawing
thy looks upwards; thou constrainest thyself to look downwards, and to the earth,
like the swine, and obeyest the devil. For indeed this wicked demon hath
devised this unseemliness, to draw thee off from that beauty. For this intent hath
he drawn thee this way; and God, showing Heaven, is outvied by a devil showing
certain skins, or rather not even skins (for indeed these too are God's works),
but effeminacy and a bad kind of skill.
And the young man goes about bending down towards the earth, he that is
required to seek wisdom concerning the things in Heaven; priding himself more on
these trifles than if he had accomplished some great and good work, and walking
on tiptoe in the forum, and hereby begetting to himself superfluous sorrows
and distresses, lest he should stain them with the mud when it is winter; lest he
should cover them with the dust, when summer is come.
What sayest thou, O man? Hast thou cast thy whole soul into the mire
through this extravagance, and dost thou overlook it trailing on the ground, and
art thou so anxious about a pair of shoes? Mark their use, and respect the
verdict thou passest on them. For to tread on mud and mire, and all the spots on
the pavement, for this were thy shoes made. Or if thou canst not bear this, take
and hang them from thy neck, or put them on thy head.
And ye indeed laugh at hearing this. But I am inclined to weep for these
men's madness, and their earnest care about these matters. For in truth they
would rather stain their body with mud, than those pieces of leather.
Triflers then they become in this way, and fond of money again in another
way. For he that has been used to be frantic and eager upon such matters,
requires also for his clothes and for all other things much expense, and a large
income.
And if he have a munificent father, his thraldom becomes worse, his absurd
fancy more intense; but if a parsimonious one, he is driven to other
unseemliness, by way of getting together a little money for such expenses.
Hence many young men have even sold their manhood, and have become
parasites to the rich, and have undertaken other servile offices, purchasing thereby
the fulfillment of such desires.
So then, that this man is sure to be at once fond of money, and a trifler,
and about important things the most indolent of all men, and that he will be
forced to commit many sins, is hereby evident. And that he is cruel and
vainglorious, neither this will any one gainsay: cruel, in that when he sees a poor
man, through the love of finery he makes as though he did not even see him, but
while he is decking out these things with gold, overlooks him perishing of
hunger; vainglorious, since even in such little matters he trains himself to hunt
after the admiration of the beholders. For I suppose no general prides himself so
much on his legions and trophies, as our profligate youths on the decking out
of their shoes, on their trailing garments, on the dressing of their hair; yet
surely all these are works of other persons, in their trades. But if men do not
cease from vain boasting in the works of others, when will they cease from it
in their own?
8. Shall I mention yet other things more grievous than these? or are even
these enough for you? Well then; I must end my speech here; since even this
have I said, because of the disputatious, who maintain the thing not to be so very
wrong.
And although I know that many of the young will not so much as attend to
what I have said, being once for all intoxicated with this fancy, I yet ought
not therefore to keep silence. For such fathers as have understanding, and are as
yet sound, will be able to force them, even against their will, to a becoming
decency.
Say not then, "this is of no consequence, that is of no consequence;" for
this, this hath ruined all. For even hereby ought you to train them, and by the
things which seem trifling to make them grave, great of soul, superior to
outward habiliments; so shall we find them approved in the great things also. For
what is more ordinary than the learning of letters? nevertheless thereby do men
become rhetoricians,(1) and sophists, and philosophers, and if they know not
their letters, neither will they ever have that knowledge.
And this we have spoken not to young men only, but to women also, and to
young damsels. For these too are liable to the like charges, and much more,
inasmuch as seemliness is a thing appropriate to a virgin.
What has been said therefore to the others; do ye account to have been
said to you also, that we may not repeat again the same things.
For it is full time now to close our discourse with prayer. All of you
then pray with us, that the young men of the church above all things may be
enabled to live orderly, and to attain an old age becoming them. Since for those
surely who do not so live, it were well not to come to old age at all. But for them
that have grown old even in youth, I pray that they may attain also to the
very deep of gray hairs, and become fathers of approved children, and may be a joy
to them that gave them birth, and above all surely to the God that made them,
and may exterminate every distempered fancy, not that about their shoes, nor
about their clothes only, but every other kind also.
For as untilled land, such is also youth neglected, bringing forth many
thorns from many quarters. Let us then send forth on them the fire of the Spirit,
and burn up these wicked desires, and let us break up our fields, and make
them ready for the reception of the seed, and the young men amongst us let us
exhibit with soberer minds than the old elsewhere. For this in fact is the
marvellous thing, when temperance shines forth in youth; since he surely that is
temperate in old age cannot have a great reward, having in perfection the security
from his age. But what is wonderful, is to enjoy a calm amidst waves, and in a
furnace not to be burnt, and in youth not to run wanton.
With these things then in our minds, let us emulate that blessed Joseph,
who shone through all these trials, that we may attain unto the same crowns with
him; unto which may we all attain, by the grace and love towards man of our
Lord Jesus Christ, with whom be glory unto the Father, together with the Holy
Ghost, now and always, and world without end. Amen.
HOMILY L.
MATT. XIV. 23, 24.
"And when He had sent the multitudes away, He went up into the mountain apart
to pray: and when the evening was come, He was there alone. But the ship was
now in the midst of the sea, tossed with waves:(1) for the wind was contrary."
For what purpose doth He go up into the mountain? To teach us, that
loneliness and retirement is good, when we are to pray to God. With this view, you
see, He is continually withdrawing into the wilderness, and there often spends
the whole night in prayer, teaching us earnestly to seek such quietness in our
prayers, as the time and place may confer. For the wilderness is the mother of
quiet; it is a calm and a harbor, delivering us from all turmoils.
He Himself then went up thither with this object, but the disciples are
tossed with the waves again, and undergo a storm, equal even to the former. But
whereas before they had Him in the ship when this befell them, now they were
alone by themselves. Thus gently and by degrees He excites and urges them on for
the better, even to the bearing all nobly. Accordingly we see, that when they
were first near that danger, He was present, though asleep, so as readily to give
them relief; but now leading them to a greater degree of endurance, He doth
not even this, but departs, and in mid sea permits the storm to arise, so that
they might not so much as look for a hope of preservation from any quarter; and
He lets them be tempest-tost all the night, thoroughly to awaken, as I suppose,
their hardened heart.
For such is the nature of the fear, which the time concurs with the rough
weather in producing. And together with the compunction, He cast them also into
a greater longing for Himself, and a continual remembrance of Him.
Accordingly, neither did He present Himself to them at once. For, "in the
fourth watch," so it is said, "of the night, He went unto them, walking upon
the sea;"(2) instructing them not hastily to seek for deliverance; from their
pressing dangers, but to bear all occurrences manfully. At all events, when they
looked to be delivered, then was their fear again heightened. For,
"When the disciples," it is said, "saw Him walking on the sea, they were
troubled, saying, It is a spirit: and they cried out for fear."(3)
Yea, and He constantly doth so; when He is on the point of removing our
terrors, He brings upon us other worse things, and more alarming: which we see
took place then also. For together with the storm, the sight too troubled them,
no less than the storm. Therefore neither did He remove the darkness, nor
straightway make Himself manifest, training them, as I said, by the continuance of
these fears, and instructing them to be ready to endure. This He did in the case
of Job also; for when He was on the point of removing the terror and the
temptation, then He suffered the end to grow more grievous; I mean not for his
children's death, or the words of his wife, but because of the reproaches, both of
his servants and of his friends. And when He was about to rescue Jacob from his
affliction in the strange land, He allowed his trouble to be awakened and
aggravated: in that his father-in-law first overtook him and threatened death, and
then his brother coming immediately after, suspended over him the extremest
danger.
For since one cannot be tempted both for a long time and severely; when
the righteous are on the point of coming to an end of their conflicts, He,
willing them to gain the more, enhances their struggles. Which He did in the case of
Abraham too, appointing for his last conflict that about his child. For thus
even things intolerable will be tolerable, when they are so brought upon us, as
to have their removal near, at the very doors.
So did Christ at that time also, and did not discover Himself before they
cried out. For the more intense their alarm, the more did they welcome His
coming. Afterward when they had exclaimed, it is said,
"Straightway Jesus spake unto them, saying, Be of good cheer, it is I; be
not afraid."(1)
This word removed their fear, and caused them to take confidence. For as
they knew Him not by sight, because of His marvellous kind of motion, and
because of the time, He makes Himself manifest by His voice.
2. What then saith Peter, everywhere ardent, and ever starting forward
before the rest?
"Lord, if it be Thou," saith he, "bid me come unto Thee on the water."(2)
He said not, "Pray and entreat," but, "bid." Seest thou how great his
ardor, how great his faith? Yet surely he is hereby often m danger, by seeking
things beyond his measure. For so here too he required an exceedingly great thing,
for love only, not for display. For neither did he say, "Bid me walk on the
water," but what? "Bid me come unto Thee." For none so loved Jesus.
This he did also after the resurrection; he endured not to come with the
others, but leapt forward.(3) And not love only, but faith also doth he display.
For he not only believed that He was able Himself to walk on the sea, but that
He could lead upon it others also; and he longs to be quickly near Him.
"And he said, Come. And when Peter was come down out of the ship, he
walked on the water, and came(4) to Jesus. But when he saw the wind boisterous,(5)
he was afraid; and beginning to sink, he cried, saying, Lord, save me. And
immediately Jesus stretched forth His hand and caught him, and saith unto him, O
thou of little faith, wherefore didst thou doubt?"(6)
This is more wonderful than the former. Therefore this is done after that.
For when He had shown that He rules the sea, then He carries on the sign to
what is yet more marvellous. Then He rebuked the winds only; but now He both
walks Himself, and permits another to do so; which thing if He had required to be
done at the beginning, Peter would not have so well received it, because he had
not yet acquired so great faith.
Wherefore then did Christ permit him? Why, if He had said, "thou canst
not," Peter being ardent would have contradicted Him again. Wherefore by the facts
He convinces him, that for the future he may be sobered.
But not even so doth he endure. Therefore having come down, he becomes
dizzy; for he was afraid. And this the surf caused, but his fear was wrought by
the wind.
But John saith, that "they willingly received Him into the ship; and
immediately the ship was at the land whither they went,"(7) relating this same
circumstance. So that when they were on the point of arriving at the land, He
entered the ship.
Peter then having come down from the ship went unto Him, not rejoicing so
much in walking on the water, as in coming unto Him. And when he had prevailed
over the greater, he was on the point of suffering evil from the less, from the
violence of the wind, I mean, not of the sea. For such a thing is human
nature; not seldom effecting great things, it exposes itself in the less; as Elias
felt toward Jezebel, as Moses toward the Egyptian, as David toward Bathsheba.
Even so then this man also; while their fear was yet at the height, he took
courage to walk upon the water, but against the assault of the wind he was no longer
able to stand; and this, being near Christ. So absolutely nothing doth it avail
to be near Christ, not being near Him by faith.
And this also showed the difference between the Master and the disciple,
and allayed the feelings of the others. For if in the case of the two brethren
they had indignation, much more here; for they had not yet the Spirit vouchsafed
unto them.
But afterwards they were not like this. On every occasion, for example,
they give up the first honors to Peter, and put him forward in their addresses to
the people, although of a rougher vein than any of them.(8)
And wherefore did He not command the winds to cease, but Himself stretched
forth His hand and took hold of him? Because in him faith was required. For
when our part is wanting, then God's part also is at a stand.
Signifying therefore that not the assault of the wind, but his want of
faith had wrought his overthrow, He saith, "Wherefore didst thou doubt, O thou of
little faith?" So that if his faith had not been weak, he would have stood
easily against the wind also. And for this reason, you see, even when He had caught
hold of Him, He suffers the wind to blow, showing that no hurt comes thereby,
when faith is steadfast.
And as when a nestling has come out of the nest before the time, and is on
the point of falling, its mother bears it on her wings, and brings it back to
the nest; even so did Christ.
"And when they were come into the ship, then the wind ceased."(1)
Whereas before this they had said, "What manner of man is this, that even
the winds and the sea obey Him!"(2) now it is not so. For "they that were in
the ship," it is said, "came and worshipped Him, saying, Of a truth Thou art Son
of God."(3) Seest thou, how by degrees he was leading them all higher and
higher? For both by His walking on the sea, and by His commanding another to do so,
and preserving him in jeopardy; their faith was henceforth great. For then
indeed He rebuked the sea, but now He rebukes it not, in another way signifying His
power more abundantly. Wherefore also they said, "Of a truth Thou art Son of
God."
What then? Did He rebuke them on their so speaking? Nay, quite the
contrary, He rather confirmed what they said, with greater authority healing such as
approached Him, and not as before.
"And when they were gone over," so it is said, "they came into the land of
Gennesaret. And when the men of that place had knowledge of Him, they sent out
into all that country round about, and brought unto Him all that were
diseased; and besought Him that they might touch the hem of His garment; and as many as
touched were made perfectly whole."(4)
For neither did they approach Him as before, dragging Him into their
houses, and seeking a touch of His hand, and directions from Him in words; but in a
far higher strain, and with more of self-denial, and with a more abundant faith
did they try to win themselves a cure; for she that had the issue of blood
taught them all to be severe in seeking wisdom.
And the evangelist, implying also that at long intervals He visited the
several neighborhoods, saith, "The men of that place took knowledge of Him, and
sent out into the country round about, and brought unto Him them that were
diseased." But yet the interval, so far from abolishing their faith, made it even
greater, and preserved it in vigor.
3. Let us also then touch the hem of His garment, or rather, if we be
willing, we have Him entire. For indeed His body is set before us now, not His
garment only, but even His body; not for us to touch it only, but also to eat, and
be filled. Let us now then draw near with faith, every one that hath an
infirmity. For if they that touched the hem of His garment drew from Him so much
virtue, how much more they that possess Him entire? Now to draw near with faith is
not only to receive the offering, but also with a pure heart to touch it; to be
so minded, as approaching Christ Himself. For what, if thou hear no voice? Yet
thou seest Him laid out; or rather thou dost also hear His voice, while He is
speaking by the evangelists.
Believe, therefore, that even now it is that supper, at which He Himself
sat down. For this is in no respect different from that. For neither doth man
make this and Himself the other; but both this and that is His own work. When
therefore thou seest the priest delivering it unto thee, account not that it is
the priest that doeth so, but that it is Christ's hand that is stretched out.
Even as when he baptizes, not he doth baptize thee, but it is God that
possesses thy head with invisible power, and neither angel nor archangel nor any
other dare draw nigh and touch thee; even so now also. For when God begets, the
gift is His only. Seest thou not those who adopt to themselves sons here, how
they commit not the act to slaves, but are themselves present at the
judgment-seat? Even so neither hath God committed His gift to angels, but Himself is
present, commanding and saying, "Call no man Father on earth;"(5) not that thou
shouldest dishonor them that gave thee birth, but that thou shouldest prefer to all
those Him that made thee, and enrolled thee amongst His own children. For He
that hath given the greater, that is, hath set Himself before thee, much more
will He not think scorn to distribute unto thee of His body. Let us hear
therefore, both priests and subjects, what we have had vouchsafed to us; let us hear
and tremble. Of His own holy flesh He hath granted us our fill; He hath set
before us Himself sacrificed.
What excuse shall we have then, when feeding on such food, we commit such
sins? when eating a lamb, we become wolves? when feeding on a sheep, we spoil
by violence like the lions?
For this mystery He directs to be always clear, not from violence only,
but even from bare enmity. Yea, for this mystery is a mystery of peace; it allows
us not to cling to wealth. For if He spared not Himself for us, what must we
deserve, sparing our wealth, and being lavish of a soul, in behalf of which He
spared not Himself?
Now upon the Jews God every year bound in their feasts a memorial of His
peculiar favors to them: but for thee, every day, as I may say, through these
mysteries.
Be not therefore ashamed of the cross: for these are our venerable things,
these our mysteries; with this gift do we adorn ourselves, with this we are
beautified.
And if I say, He stretched out the heaven, He spread out the earth and the
sea, He sent prophets and angels, I say nothing in comparison. For the sum of
His benefits is this, that "He spared not His own Son,"(1) in order to save His
alienated servants.
4. Let no Judas then approach this table, no Simon; nay, for both these
perished through covetousness. Let us flee then from this gulf; neither let us
account it enough for our salvation, if after we have stripped widows and
orphans, we offer for this table a gold and jewelled cup. Nay, if thou desire to honor
the sacrifice, offer thy soul, for which also it was slain; cause that to
become golden; but if that remain worse than lead or potter's clay, while the
vessel is of gold, what is the profit?
Let not this therefore be our aim, to offer golden vessels only, but to do
so from honest earnings likewise. For these are of the sort that is more
precious even than gold, these that are without injuriousness. For the church is not
a gold foundry nor a workshop for silver, but an assembly of angels. Wherefore
it is souls which we require, since in fact God accepts these for the souls'
sake.
That table at that time was not of silver nor that cup of gold, out of
which Christ gave His disciples His own blood; but precious was everything there,
and awful, for that they were full of the Spirit.(2)
Wouldest thou do honor to Christ's body Neglect Him not when naked; do not
while here thou honorest Him with silken garments, neglect Him perishing
without of cold and nakedness. For He that said, "This is my body," and by His word
confirmed the fact, "This same said, "Ye saw me an hungered, and fed me not;"
and, "Inasmuch as ye did it not to one of the least of these, ye did it not to
me."(3) For This indeed needs not coverings, but a pure soul; but that requires
much attention.
Let us learn therefore to be strict in life, and to honor Christ as He
Himself desires. For to Him who is honored that honor is most pleasing, which it
is His own will to have, not that which we account best. Since Peter too thought
to honor Him by forbidding Him to wash his feet, but his doing so was not an
honor, but the contrary.
Even so do thou honor Him with this honor, which He ordained, spending thy
wealth on poor people. Since God hath no need at all of golden vessels, but of
golden souls.
And these things I say, not forbidding such offerings to be provided; but
requiring you, together with them, and before them, to give alms. For He
accepts indeed the former, but much more the latter. For in the one the offerer alone
is profited, but in the other the receiver also. Here the act seems to be a
ground even of ostentation; but there all is mercifulness, and love to man.
For what is the profit, when His table indeed is full of golden cups, but
He perishes with hunger? First fill Him, being an hungered, and then abundantly
deck out His table also. Dost thou make Him a cup of gold, while thou givest
Him not a cup of cold water? And what is the profit? Dost thou furnish His table
with cloths bespangled with gold, while to Himself thou affordest not even the
necessary covering? And what good comes of it? For tell me, should you see one
at a loss for necessary food, and omit appeasing his hunger, while you first
overlaid his table with silver; would he indeed thank thee, and not rather be
indignant? What, again, if seeing one wrapped in rags, and stiff with cold, thou
shouldest neglect giving him a garment, and build golden columns, saying, "thou
weft doing it to his honor," would he not say that thou wert mocking, and
account it an insult, and that the most extreme?
Let this then be thy thought with regard to Christ also, when He is going
about a wanderer, and a stranger, needing a roof to cover Him; and thou,
neglecting to receive Him, deckest out a pavement, and walls, and capitals of
columns, and hangest up silver chains by means of lamps,(4) but Himself bound in
prison thou wilt not even look upon.
5. And these things I say, not forbidding munificence in these matters,
but admonishing you to do those other works together with these, or rather even
before these. Because for not having done these no one was ever blamed, but for
those, hell is threatened, and unquenchable fire, and the punishment with evil
spirits. Do not therefore while adorning His house overlook thy brother in
distress, for he is more properly a temple than the other.
And whereas these thy stores will be subject to alienations both by
unbelieving kings, and tyrants, and robbers; whatever thou mayest do for thy brother,
being hungry, and a stranger, and naked, not even the devil will be able to
despoil, but it will be laid up in an inviolable treasure.
Why then doth He Himself say, "The poor always ye have with you, but me ye
have not always?"(1) Why, for this reason most of all should we give alms,
that we have Him not always an hungered, but in the present life only. But if thou
art desirous to learn also the whole meaning of the saying, understand that
this was said not with a view to His disciples, although it seem so, but to the
woman's weakness. That is, her disposition being still rather imperfect, and
they doubting about her; to revive her He said these things. For in proof that for
her comfort He said it, He added, "Why trouble ye the woman?"(2) And with
regard to our having Him really always with us, He saith, "Lo, I am with you alway,
even unto the end of the world."(3) From all which it is evident, that for no
other object was this said, but that the rebuke of the disciples might not
wither the faith of the woman, just then budding.
Let us not then bring forward these things now, which were uttered because
of some economy, but let us read all the laws, those in the New and those in
the Old Testament, that are set down about almsgiving, and let us be very
earnest about this matter. For this cleanses from sin. For "give alms, and all things
will be clean unto you."(4) This is a greater thing than sacrifice. "For I
will have mercy, and not sacrifice."(5) This opens the heavens. For "thy prayers
and thine alms are come up for a memorial before God."(6) This is more
indispensable than virginity: for thus were those virgins cast out of the bridechamber;
thus were the others brought in.
All which things let us consider, and sow liberally, that we may reap in
more ample abundance, and attain unto the good things to come, by the grace and
love towards man of our Lord Jesus Christ, to whom be glory forever. Amen.
HOMILY LI.
MATT. XV. 1.
"Then came to Jesus Scribes and Pharisees, which were of Jerusalem, saying,
Why do Thy disciples," etc.(1)
THEN; when? when He had wrought His countless miracles; when He had healed
the infirm by the touch of the hem of His garment. For even with this intent
doth the evangelist mark the time, that He might signify their unspeakable
wickedness, by nothing repressed.
But what means, "The Scribes and Pharisees, which were of Jerusalem?"(2)
In every one of the tribes were they scattered abroad, and divided into twelve
parts; but they who occupied the chief city were worse than the others, as both
enjoying more honor, and having contracted much haughtiness.
But mark, I pray thee, how even by the question itself they are convicted;
in not saying, "Why do they transgress the law of Moses," but, "the tradition
of the elders." Whence it is evident that the priests were inventing many
novelties, although Moses, with much terror and with much threatening, had enjoined
neither to add nor take away. "For ye shall not add," saith he, "unto the word
which I command you this day, and ye shall not take away from it."(3)
But not the less were they innovating; as in this instance, that one ought
not to eat with unwashen hands, that we must wash cups and brazen vessels,
that we must wash also ourselves. Thus, when men were henceforth, as time
advanced, to be freed from their observances, at that very time they bound them with
the same in more and more instances, fearing lest any one should take away their
power, and wishing to strike more dread, as though they were themselves also
lawgivers. The thing in fact proceeded so far in enormity, that while their own
commandments were kept, those of God were transgressed; and they so far
prevailed, that the matter had actually become a ground of accusation. Which was a
twofold charge against them, in that they both invented novelties, and were so
strict exactors on their own account, while of God they made no reckoning.
And omitting to speak of the other things, the pots and the brazen vessels
(for it was too ridiculous), what seemed more reasonable than the rest, that
they bring forward, wishing, as seems at least to me, in that way to provoke Him
to anger. Wherefore also they made mention of the elders, in order that He, as
setting them at nought, might give occasion against Himself.
But it were meet first to inquire, why the disciples ate with unwashen
hands. Wherefore then did they so eat? Not as making a point of it, but as
overlooking henceforth the things that are superfluous, and attending to such as are
necessary; having no law to wash or not to wash, but doing either as it
happened. For they that despised even their own necessary food, how were they to hold
these things worth much consideration? This then having often happened
unintentionally,--for instance, when they ate in the wilderness, when they plucked the
ears of corn,--is now put forward as a charge by these persons, who are always
transgressing in the great things, and making much account of the superfluous.
2. What then saith Christ? He did not set Himself against it, neither made
He any defense, but straightway blames them again, plucking down their
confidence, and signifying that he who commits great sins ought not to be strict with
others concerning small matters. "What? when you ought to be blamed," saith He,
"do ye even blame?"
But do thou observe, how when it is His will to set aside any of the
things enjoined by the law, He does it in the form of an apology; and so He did in
that case. For by no means doth He proceed at once to transgress it, nor doth He
say, "It is nothing;" for surely He would have made them more audacious; but
first He clean cuts away their boldness, bringing forward the far heavier
charge, and directing it upon their head. And He neither saith, "they do well in
transgressing it," lest He should give them a hold on Him; nor doth He speak ill of
their proceeding, lest He should confirm the law: nor again, on the other
hand, doth He blame the elders, as lawless and unholy men; for doubtless they would
have shunned Him as a reviler and injurious: but all these things He gives up,
and proceeds another way. And He seems indeed to be rebuking the persons
themselves who had come to Him, but He is reprehending them that enacted these laws;
nowhere indeed making mention of the elders, but by His charge against the
Scribes casting down them also, and signifying that their sin is twofold, first in
disobeying God, next in doing so on men's account; as though He had said, "Why
this, this hath ruined you, your obeying the elders in all things."
Yet He saith not so, but this is just what He intimates, by answering them
as follows:
"Why do ye also transgress the commandment of God by(1) your tradition?
For God commanded, saying, Honor thy father and thy mother: and, He that curseth
father or mother, let him die the death. But ye say, Whosoever shall say to his
father or his mother, It is a gift, by whatsoever thou mightest be profited by
me, and(2) honor not his father or his mother(3)--And ye have made void the
commandment(4) of God by your tradition.(5)
And He said not, "the eiders' tradition," but "your own." And, "ye say;"
again He said not, "the elders say:" in order to make His speech less galling.
That is, because they wanted to prove the disciples transgressors of the law, He
signifies that they themselves are doing so, but that these are free from
blame. For of course that is not a law, which is enjoined by men (wherefore also He
calls it "a tradition"), and especially by men that are transgressors of the
law.
And since this had no shade of contrariety to the law, to command men to
wash their hands, He brings forward another tradition, which is opposed to the
law. And what He saith is like this. "They taught the young, under the garb of
piety, to despise their fathers." How, and in what way? "If one of their parents
said to his child, Give me this sheep that thou hast, or this calf, or any
such thing, they used to say, 'This is a gift to God, whereby thou wouldest be
profited by me, and thou canst not have it.' And two evils hence arose: on the one
hand they did not bring them to God, on the other they defrauded their parents
under the name of the offering, alike insulting their parents for God's sake,
and God for their parents' sake." But He doth not say this at once, but first
rehearses the law, by which He signifies His earnest desire that parents should
be honored. For, "honor," saith He, "thy father and thy mother, that thou
mayest live long upon the earth."(1) And again, "He that curseth father or mother,
let him die the death."(2)
But He, omitting the first, the reward appointed for them that honor their
parents, states that which is more awful, the punishment, I mean, threatened
to such as dishonor them; desiring both to dismay them, and to conciliate such
as have understanding; and He implies them to be for this worthy of death. For
if he who dishonors them in word is punished, much more ye, who do so in deed,
and who not only dishonor, but also teach it to others. "Ye then who ought not
so much as to live, how find ye fault with the disciples?"
"And what wonder is it, if ye offer such insults to me, who am as yet
unknown, when even to the Father ye are found doing the like?" For everywhere He
both asserts and implies, that from Him they began with this their arrogance.
But some do also otherwise interpret, "It is a gift, by whatsoever thou
mightest be profited by me;" that is, I owe thee no honor, but it is a free gift
from me to thee, if indeed I do honor thee. But Christ would not have mentioned
an insult of that sort.
And Mark again makes this plainer, by saying, "It is Corban, by whatsoever
thou mightest be profiled by me;"(3) which means, not a gift and present, but
properly an offering.
Having then signified that they who were trampling on the law could not be
justly entitled to blame men for transgressing a command of certain elders, He
points out this same thing again from the prophet likewise. Thus, having once
laid hold of them severely, He proceeds further: as on every occasion He doth,
bringing forward the Scriptures, and so evincing Himself to be in accordance
with God.
And what saith the prophet? "This people honoreth me with their lips, but
their heart is far from me. But in vain do they worship me, teaching for
doctrines the commandments of men."(4)
Seest thou a prophecy in exact accordance with His sayings, and from the
very first proclaiming beforehand their wickedness? For what Christ laid to
their charge now, of this Isaiah also spake from the very first; that the words of
God they despise, "for in vain do they worship me," saith He; but of their own
they make much account, "teaching," saith He, "for doctrines the commandments
of men." Therefore with reason the disciples keep them not.
3. Having, you see, given them their mortal blow; and from the facts
first, then from their own suffrage, then from the prophet having aggravated the
charge, with them indeed He discourses not at all, incorrigibly disposed as they
are now come to be, but directs His speech to the multitudes, so as to introduce
His doctrine, great and high, and full of much strictness; and taking occasion
from the former topic, He proceeds to insert that which is greater, casting
out also the observance of meats.
But see when. When He had cleansed the leper, when He had repealed the
Sabbath, when He had shown Himself King of earth and sea, when He had made laws,
when He had remitted sins, when He had raised dead men, when He had afforded
them many proofs of His Godhead, then He discourses of meats.
For indeed all the religion of the Jews is comprised in this; if thou take
this away, thou hast even taken away all. For hereby He signifies, that
circumcision too must be abrogated. But of Himself He doth not prominently introduce
this (forasmuch as that was older than the other commandments, and had higher
estimation), but He enacts it by His disciples. For so great a thing was it,
that even the disciples after so long a time being minded to do it away, first
practise it, and so put it down.(5)
But see how He introduces His law: how "He called the multitude, and said
unto them, Hear and understand."(6)
Thus He doth by no means simply reveal it to them, but by respect and
courtesy, first, He makes His saying acceptable (for this the evangelist declares
by saying, "He called them unto Him"): and secondly, by the time also; in that
after their refutation, and His victory over them, and the accusation by the
prophet, then He begins His legislation, when they too would more easily receive
His sayings.
And He doth not merely call them unto Him, but also makes them more
attentive. For "understand," saith He, that is, "consider, rouse yourselves; for of
that sort is the law now about to be enacted. For if they set aside the law,
even unseasonably, for their own tradition, and ye hearkened; much more ought ye
to hearken unto me, who at the proper season am leading you unto a higher rule
of self restraint."
And He did not say, "The observance of meats is nothing, neither that
Moses had given wrong injunctions, nor that of condescension He did so;" but in the
way of admonition and counsel, and taking His testimony from the nature of the
things, He saith: "Not the things that go into the mouth, defile the man, but
the things that go out of the mouth;"(1) resorting to nature herself both in
His enactment and in His demonstration. Yet they hearing all this, made no reply,
neither did they say, "What sayest Thou? When God hath given charges without
number concerning the observance of meats, dost thou make such laws?" But since
He had utterly stopped their mouths, not by refuting them only, but also by
publishing their craft, and exposing what was done by them in secret, and
revealing the secrets of their mind; their mouths were stopped, and so they went away.
But mark, I pray thee, how He doth not yet venture distinctly to set
Himself with boldness against the meats. Therefore neither did He say "the meats,"
but, "the things that enter in defile not the man;" which it was natural for
them to suspect concerning the unwashen hands also. For He indeed was speaking of
meats, but it would be understood of these matters too.
Why, so strong was the feeling of scruple about the meats, that even after
the resurrection Peter said, "Not so, Lord, for I have never eaten anything
common or unclean."(2) For although it was for the sake of others that He said
this, and in order to leave Himself a justification against his censurers, by
pointing out that he actually remonstrated, and not even so was excused,
nevertheless it implies the depth of their impression on that point.
Wherefore you see He Himself also at the beginning spake not openly
concerning meats, but, "The things that go into the mouth;" and again, when He had
seemed afterwards to speak more plainly, He veiled it by His conclusion, saying,
"But to eat with unwashen hands defileth not the man:"(3) that He might seem to
have had His occasion from thence, and to be still discoursing of the same.
Therefore He said not, "To eat meats defileth not a man," but is as though He
were speaking on that other topic; that they may have nothing to say against it.
4. When therefore they had heard these things, "the Pharisees," it is
said, "were offended,"(4) not the multitudes. For "His disciples," so it is said,
"came and said unto Him, Knowest thou that the Pharisees were offended, when
they heard the saying?" Yet surely nothing had been said unto them.
What then saith Christ? He did not remove the offense in respect of them,
but reproved them, saying, "Every plant which my heavenly Father hath not
planted, shall be rooted up."(5) For He is wont both to despise offenses, and not to
despise them. Elsewhere, for example, He saith, "But lest we should offend
them, cast an hook into the sea:"(6) but here He saith, "Let them alone, they be
blind leaders of the blind: and if the blind lead the blind, both shall fall
into the ditch."(7)
But these things His disciples said, not as grieving for those men only,
but as being themselves also slightly perplexed. But because they durst not say
so in their own person, they would fain learn it by their telling Him of
others. And as to its being so, hear how after this the ardent and ever-forward Peter
came to Him, and saith, "Declare unto us this parable,"(8) discovering the
trouble in his soul, and not indeed venturing to say openly, "I am offended," but
requiring that by His interpretation he should be freed from his perplexity;
wherefore also he was reproved.
What then saith Christ? "Every plant which my heavenly Father hath not
planted, shall be rooted up."
This, they that are diseased with the Manichaean pest affirm to be spoken
of the law; but their months are stopped by what had been said before. For if
He was speaking of the law, how doth He further back defend it, and fight for
it, saying, "Why do ye transgress the commandments of God for your tradition?"
And how doth He bring forward the prophet? But of themselves and of their
traditions He so speaks. For if God said, "Honor thy father and thy mother," how is
not that of God's planting, which was spoken by God?
And what follows also indicates, that of themselves it was said, and of
their traditions. Thus He added, "They are blind leaders of the blind." Whereas,
had He spoken it of the law, He would have said, "It is a blind leader of the
blind." But not so did He speak, but, "They are blind leaders of the blind:"
freeing it from the blame, and bringing it all round upon them.
Then to sever the people also from them, as being on the point of falling
into a pit by their means, He saith, "If the blind lead the blind, both shall
fall into the ditch."
It is a great evil merely to be blind, but to be in such a case and have
none to lead him, nay, to occupy the place of a guide, is a double and triple
ground of censure. For if it be a dangerous thing for the blind man not to have a
guide, much more so that he should even desire to be guide to another.
What then saith Peter? He saith not, "What can this be which Thou hast
said?" but as though it were full of obscurity, he puts his question. And he saith
not, "Why hast thou spoken contrary to the law?" for he was afraid, lest he
should be thought to have taken offense, but asserts it to be obscure. However,
that it was not obscure, but that he was offended, is manifest, for it had
nothing of obscurity.
Wherefore also He rebukes him, saying, "Are ye also yet without
understanding?"(1) For as to the multitude, they did not perhaps so much as understand
the saying; but themselves were the persons offended. Wherefore, whereas at
first, as though asking in behalf of the Pharisees, they were desirous to be told;
when they heard Him denouncing a great threat, and saying, "Every plant, which
my heavenly Father hath not planted, shall be rooted up," and," They are blind
leaders of the blind," they were silenced. But he, always ardent, not even so
endures to hold his peace, but saith, "Declare unto us this parable."(2)
What then saith Christ? With a sharp rebuke He answers, "Are ye also yet
without understanding? Do ye not yet understand?"
But these things He said, and reproved them, in order to cast out their
prejudice; He stopped not however at this, but adds other things also, saying,
"That whatsoever entereth in at the mouth goeth into the belly, and is cast out
into the draught; but those things which proceed out of the mouth come forth
from the heart, and they defile the man. For out of the heart proceed evil
thoughts, murders, adulteries, fornications, thefts, blasphemies, false-witnessings:
and these are the things that defile the man: but to eat with unwashen hands
defileth not the man."(3)
Seest thou how sharply He deals with them, and in the way of rebuke?
Then He establishes His saying by our common nature, and with a view to
their cure. For when He saith, "It goeth into the belly, and is cast out into the
draught," he is still answering according to the low views of the Jews. For He
saith, "it abides not, but goes out:" and what if it abode? it would not make
one unclean. But not yet were they able to hear this.
And one may remark, that because of this the lawgiver allows just so much
time, as it may be remaining within one, but when it is gone forth, no longer.
For instance, at evening He bids you wash yourself, and so be clean; measuring
the time of the digestion, and of the excretion.(4) But the things of the
heart, He saith, abide within, and when they are gone forth they defile, and not
when abiding only. And first He puts our evil thoughts, a kind of thing which
belonged to the Jews; and not as yet doth He make His refutation from the nature of
the things, but from the manner of production from the belly and the heart
respectively, and from the fact that the one sort remains, the other not; the one
entering in from without, and departing again outwards, while the others are
bred(5) within, and having gone forth they defile, and then more so, when they
are gone forth. Because they were not yet able, as I said, to be taught these
things with all due strictness.
But Mark saith, that "cleansing the meats,"(6) He spake this. He did not
however express it, nor at all say, "but to eat such and such meats defileth not
the man," for neither could they endure to be told it by Him thus distinctly.
And accordingly His conclusion was, "But to eat with unwashen hands defileth
not the man."(1)
5. Let us learn then what are the things that defile the man; let us
learn, and let us flee them. For even in the church we see such a custom prevailing
amongst the generality, and men giving diligence to come in clean garments, and
to have their hands washed; but how to present a clean soul to God, they make
no account.
And this I say, not forbidding them to wash hands or mouth; but willing
men so to wash as is meet, not with water only, but instead of water, with all
virtues. For the filth of the mouth is evil speaking, blasphemy, reviling, angry
words, filthy talking, laughter, jesting: if then thou art conscious to thyself
of uttering none of them, neither of being defiled with this filth, draw near
with confidence; but if thou hast times out of number received these stains,
why dost thou labor in vain, washing thy tongue indeed with water, but bearing
about on it such deadly and hurtful filth? For tell me, hadst thou dung on thy
hands, and mire, wouldest thou indeed venture to pray? By no means. And yet this
were no hurt; but that is ruin. How then art thou reverential in the different
things, but in the forbidden remiss?
What then? should not we pray? saith one. We should indeed, but not while
defiled, and having upon us mire of that sort.
"What then, if I have been overtaken?" saith one. Cleanse thyself. "How,
and in what way?" Weep, groan, give alms, apologize to him that is affronted,
reconcile him to thyself hereby, wipe clean thy tongue, lest thou provoke God
more grievously. For so if one had filled his hands with dung, and then should lay
hold of thy feet, entreating thee, far from hearing him, thou wouldest rather
spurn him with thy foot; how then durst thou in such sort draw nigh to God?
Since in truth the tongue is the hand of them that pray, and by it we lay hold on
the knees of God. Defile it not therefore, lest to thee also He say, "Though ye
make many prayers, I will not hearken."(2) Yea, and "in the power of the
tongue are death and life;"(3) and, "By thy words thou shalt be justified, and by
thy words thou shalt be condemned."(4)
I bid thee then watch thy tongue more than the apple of thine eye. The
tongue is a royal steed. If then thou put a bridle on it, and teach it to pace
orderly, the King will rest and take His seat thereon; but if thou suffer it to
rush about unbridled and leap wantonly, it becomes a beast for the devil and bad
spirits to ride on. And while thou, fresh from the company of thine own wife,
darest not pray, although this is no blame at all; dost thou lift up thine
hands, fresh from reviling and insult, which brings after it no less than hell,
before thou hast well cleansed thyself? And how dost thou not shudder? tell me.
Hast thou not heard Paul, saying, "Marriage is honorable, and the bed
undefiled?"(5) But if on rising from the undefiled bed, thou darest not draw nigh in
prayer, how dost thou coming from the bed of the devil call on that awful and
terrible name? For it is truly the devil's bed, to wallow in insults and reviling. And
like some wicked adulterer, wrath dailies with us in great delight, casting
into us deadly seed, and making us give birth to diabolical enmity, and doing all
things in a way opposite to marriage. For whereas marriage causes the two to
become one flesh, wrath severs into many parts them that were united, and
cleaves and cuts in pieces the very soul.
That thou mayest therefore with confidence draw nigh to God, receive not
wrath, when it comes in upon thee, and desires to be with thee, but drive it
away like a mad dog.
For so Paul too commanded: his phrase being, "lifting up holy hands
without wrath and disputing."(6) Dishonor not then thy tongue, for how will it
entreat for thee, when it hath lost its proper confidence? but adorn it with
gentleness, with humility, make it worthy of the God who is entreated, fill it with
blessing, with much almsdoing. For it is possible even with words to do alms. "For
a word is a better thing than a gift,"(7) and "answer the poor man peaceably
with meekness."(8) And all the rest of thy time too adorn it with the rehearsing
of the laws of God; "Yea, let all thy communication be in the law of the Most
High."(9)
Having thus adorned ourselves, let us come to our King, and fall at His
knees,(10) not with the body only, but also with the mind. Let us consider whom
we are approaching, and on whose behalf, and what we would accomplish. We are
drawing nigh unto God, whom the seraphim behold and turn away their faces, not
bearing His brightness; at sight of whom the earth trembles. We draw nigh unto
God, "who dwelleth in the light, which no man can approach unto."(11) And we draw
nigh unto Him for deliverance from hell, for remission of sins, for escape
from those intolerable punishments, for attaining to the Heavens, and to the good
things that are there. Let us, I say, fall down before Him both in body and in
mind, that He may raise us up when we are down; let us converse with all
gentleness and meekness.
And who is so wretched and miserable, one may say, as not to become gentle
in prayer? He that prays with an imprecations and fills himself with wrath,
and cries out against his enemies.
6. Nay, if thou wilt accuse, accuse thyself. If thou wilt whet and sharpen
thy tongue, let it be against thine own sins. And tell not what evil another
hath done to thee, but what thou hast done to thyself; for this is most truly an
evil; since no other will really be able to injure thee, unless thou injure
thyself. Wherefore, if thou desire to be against them that wrong thee, approach
as against thyself first; there is no one to hinder; since by coming into court
against another, thou hast but the greater injury to go away with.
And what injury at all hast thou really to mention? That such an one
insulted and spoiled thee by violence, and encompassed thee with dangers? Nay, this
is receiving not injury, but if we be sober, the very greatest benefit; the
injured being he that did such things, not he that suffered them. And this is more
than any one thing the cause of all our evils, that we do not so much as know
at all who is the injured, and who the injurious person. Since if we knew this
well, we should not ever injure ourselves, we should not pray against another,
having learnt that it is impossible to suffer ill of another. For not to be
spoiled, but to spoil, is an evil. Wherefore, if thou hast spoiled, accuse
thyself; but if thou hast been spoiled, rather pray for him that spoiled thee, because
he hath done thee the greatest good. For although the intent of the doer was
not such, yet thou hast received the greatest benefit, if thou hast endured it
nobly. For him, both men, and the laws of God declare to be wretched, but thee,
the injured party, they crown, and proclaim thy praise.
For so if any one sick of a fever had violently taken from any other a
vessel containing water, and had had his fill of his pernicious desire, we should
not say that the despoiled had been injured, but the spoiler; for he has
aggravated his fever, and made his disease more grievous. Now in this way I bid thee
reason concerning him also that loves wealth and money. For he too, having a
far worse fever than the other, has by this rapine fanned the flame in himself.
Again,were some madman to snatch a sword from any one, and destroy
himself, which again is the injured? He that hath been robbed, or the robber? It is
quite clear, he that did the robbery.
Well then, in the case of seizing property also, let us give the same
suffrage. For what a sword is to a madman, much the same is wealth to a covetous
man; nay, it is even a worse thing. For the madman, when he has taken the sword,
and thrust it through himself, is both delivered from his madness, and hath no
second blow to receive; but the lover of money receives daily ten thousand
wounds more grievous than his, without delivering himself from his madness, but
aggravating it more exceedingly: and the more wounds he receives, the more doth he
give occasion for other more grievous blows.
Reflecting then on these things, let us flee this sword; let us flee the
madness; though late, let us become temperate. For this virtue too ought to be
called temperance, not less than that which is used to be so called among all
men. For whereas there the dominion of one lust is to be struggled against, here
we have to master many lusts, and those of all kinds.
Yea, nothing, nothing is more foolish(1) than the slave of wealth. He
thinks he overcomes when he is overcome. He thinks he is master, when he is a
slave, and putting bonds on himself, he rejoices; making the wild beast fiercer, he
is pleased; and becoming a captive, he prides himself, and leaps for joy; and
seeing a dog rabid and flying at his soul, when he ought to bind him and weaken
him by hunger, he actually supplies him with abundance of food, that he may
leap upon him more fiercely, and be more formidable.
Reflecting then on all these things, let us loose the bonds, let us slay
the monster, let us drive away the disease, let us cast out this madness; that
we may enjoy a calm and pure health, and having with much pleasure sailed into
the serene haven, may attain unto the eternal blessings; unto which may we all
attain, by the grace and love towards man of our Lord Jesus Christ, to whom be
glory and might, now and always, and world without end. Amen.
HOMILY LII.
MATT. XV. 21, 22.
"And Jesus went thence, and departed into the coasts of Tyre and Sidon.
And, behold, a woman of Canaan came out of the same coasts, and cried unto
Him,(1) saying, Have mercy on me, O Lord, Thou Son of David; my daughter is
grievously vexed with a devil."
BUT Mark saith, that "He could not behid,"(2) though He had entered into
the house. And why did He go at all into these parts? When He had set them free
from the observance of meats, then to the Gentiles also He goes on to open a
door, proceeding in due course; even as Peter, having been first directed to
annul this law, is sent to Cornelius.(3)
But if any one should say, "How then, while saying to His disciples, "Go
not into the way of the Gentiles,"(4) doth He Himself admit her?" first, this
would be our reply, that what He enjoined upon His disciples, He was not Himself
also tied to; secondly, that not in order to preach did He depart; which
indeed Mark likewise intimating said, He even hid Himself, yet was not concealed.
For as His not hastening to them first was a part of the regular course of
His proceedings, so to drive them away when coming to Him was unworthy of His
love to man. For if the flying ought to be pursued, much more ought the
pursuing not to be avoided.
See at any rate how worthy this woman is of every benefit. For she durst
not even come to Jerusalem, fearing, and accounting herself unworthy. For were
it not for this, she would have come there, as is evident both from her present
earnestness, and from her coming out of her own coasts.
And some also taking it as an allegory say, that when Christ came out of
Judea, then the church ventured to approach Him, coming out herself also from
her own coasts. For it is said, "Forget thine own people and thy father's
house."(5) For both Christ went out of His borders, and the woman out of her borders,
and so it became possible for them to fall in with each other: thus He saith,
"Behold a woman of Canaan coming out of her own coasts."
The evangelist speaks against the woman, that he may show forth her
marvellous act, and celebrate her praise the more. For when thou hearest of a
Canaanitish woman, thou shouldest call to mind those wicked nations, who overset from
their foundations the very laws of nature. And being reminded of these,
consider also the power of Christ's advent. For they who were cast out, that they
might not pervert any Jews, these appeared so much better disposed than the Jews,
as even to come out of their coasts, and approach Christ; while those were
driving Him away, even on His coming unto them.
2. Having then come unto Him, she saith nothing else, but "Have mercy on
me," and by her cry brings about them many spectators. For indeed it was a
pitiful spectacle to see a woman crying aloud in so great affliction, and that
woman a mother, and entreating for a daughter, and for a daughter in such evil
case: she not even venturing to bring into the Master's sight her that was
possessed, but leaving her to lie at home, and herself making the entreaty.
And she tells her affliction only, and adds nothing more; neither doth she
drag the physician to her house, like that nobleman, saying, "Come and lay thy
hand upon her," and, "Come down ere my child die."(6)
But having described both her calamity, and the intensity of the disease,
she pleads the Lord's mercy, and cries aloud; and she saith not, "Have mercy on
my daughter," but, "Have mercy on me." For she indeed is insensible of her
disease, but it is I that suffer her innumerable woes; my disease is with
consciousness, my madness with perception of itself.
2. "But He answered her not a word."(7)
What is this new and strange thing? the Jews in their perverseness He
leads on, and blaspheming He entreats them, and tempting Him He dismisses them
not; but to her, running unto Him, and entreating, and beseeching Him, to her who
had been educated neither in the law, nor in the prophets, and was exhibiting
so great reverence; to her He doth not vouchsafe so much as an answer.
Whom would not this have offended, seeing the facts so opposite to the
report? For whereas they had heard, that He went about the villages healing, her,
when she had come to Him, He utterly repels. And who would not have been moved
by her affliction, and by the supplication she made for her daughter in such
evil case? For not as one worthy, nor as demanding a due, not so did she approach
Him, but she entreated that she might find mercy, and merely gave a lamentable
account of her own affliction; yet is she not counted worthy of so much as an
answer.
Perhaps many of the hearers were offended, but she was not offended. And
why say I, of the hearers? For I suppose that even the very disciples must have
been in some degree affected at the woman's affliction, and have been greatly
troubled, and out of heart.
Nevertheless not even in this trouble did they venture to say, "Grant her
this favor," but, "His disciples came and besought Him, saying, Send her away,
for she crieth after us." For we too, when we wish to persuade any one,
oftentimes say the contrary.
But Christ saith, "I am not sent, but unto the lost sheep of the house of
Israel."(1)
What then did the woman, after she heard this? Was she silent, and did she
desist? or did she relax her earnestness? By no means, but she was the more
instant. But it is not so with us; rather, when we fail to obtain, we desist;
whereas it ought to make us the more urgent.
And yet, who would not have been driven to perplexity by the word which
was then spoken? Why His silence were enough to drive her to despair, but His
answer did so very much more. For together with herself, to see them also in utter
perplexity that were pleading with her, and to hear that the thing is even
impossible to be done, was enough to cast her into unspeakable perplexity.
Yet nevertheless the woman was not perplexed, but on seeing her advocates
prevail nothing, she made herself shameless with a goodly shamelessness.
For whereas before this she had not ventured so much as to come in sight
(for "she crieth," it is said, "after us"), when one might expect that she
should rather depart further off in utter despair, at that very time she comes
nearer, and worships, saying, "Lord, help me."(2)
What is this, O woman? Hast thou then greater confidence than the
apostles? more abundant strength? "Confidence and strength," saith she, "by no means;
nay, I am even full of shame. Yet nevertheless my very shamelessness do I put
forward for entreaty; He will respect my confidence." And what is this? Heardest
thou not Him saying, "I am not sent but unto the lost sheep of the house of
Israel? "I heard," saith she, "but He Himself is Lord." Wherefore neither did she
say, "Entreat and beseech," but, "Help me."
3. What then saith Christ? Not even with all this was He satisfied, but He
makes her perplexity yet more intense again, saying,
"It is not meet to take the children's bread and to cast it to the
dogs."(3)
And when He vouchsafed her a word, then He smote her more sharply than by
His silence. And no longer doth He refer the cause to another, nor say, "I am
not sent," but the more urgent she makes her entreaty, so much the more doth He
also urge His denial. And He calls them no longer "sheep," but "children," and
her "a dog."
What then saith the woman? Out of His own very words she frames her plea.
"Why, though I be a dog," said she, "I am not an alien."
Justly did Christ say, "For judgment am I come."(4) The woman practises
high self-command, and shows forth all endurance and faith, and this, receiving
insult; but they, courted and honored, requite it with the contrary.
For, "that food is necessary for the children," saith she, "I also know;
yet neither am I forbidden, being a dog. For were it unlawful to receive,
neither would it be lawful to partake of the crumbs; but if, though in scanty
measure, they ought to be partakers, neither am I forbidden, though I be a dog; nay,
rather on this ground am I most surely a partaker, if I am a dog."
With this intent did Christ put her off, for He knew she would say this;
for this did He deny the grant, that He might exhibit her high self-command.
For if He had not meant to give, neither would He have given afterwards,
nor would He have stopped her mouth again. But as He doth in the case of the
centurion, saying, "I will come and heal him,"(5) that we might learn the godly
fear of that man, and might hear him say, "I am not worthy that Thou shouldest
come under my roof;"(1) and as He doth in the case of her that had the issue of
blood, saying, "I perceive that virtue hath gone out of me,"(2) that He might
make her faith manifest; and as in the case of the Samaritan woman, that He might
show how not even upon reproof she desists:(3) so also here, He would not that
so great virtue in the woman should be hid. Not in insult then were His words
spoken, but calling her forth, and revealing the treasure laid up in her.
But do thou, I pray thee, together with her faith see also her humility.
For He had called the Jews "children," but she was not satisfied with this, but
even called them "masters;" so far was she from grieving at the praises of
others.
"Why, the dogs also,"(4) saith she, "eat of the crumbs that fall from
their master's table."(5)
Seest thou the woman's wisdom, how she did not venture so much as to say a
word against it, nor was stung by other men's praises, nor was indignant at
the reproach? Seest thou her constancy? He said, "It is not meet," and she said,
"Truth, Lord;" He called them "children," but she "masters;" He used the name
of a dog, but she added also the dog's act. Seest thou this woman's humility?
Hear the proud language of the Jews. "We be Abraham's seed, and were never
in bondage to any man;"(6) and, "We be born of God."(7) But not so this woman,
rather she calls herself a dog, and them masters; so for this she became a
child. What then saith Christ? "O woman, great is thy faith."(8)
Yea, therefore did He put her off, that He might proclaim aloud this
saying, that He might crown the woman.
"Be it unto thee even as thou wilt." Now what He saith is like this: "Thy
faith indeed is able to effect even greater things than these; nevertheless, Be
it unto thee even as thou wilt."
This was akin to that voice that said, "Let the Heaven be, and it was."(9)
"And her daughter was made whole from that very hour."
Seest thou how this woman too contributed not a little to the healing of
her daughter? For to this purpose neither did Christ say, "Let thy little
daughter be made whole," but, "Great is thy faith, be it unto thee even as thou
wilt;" to teach thee that the words were not used at random, nor were they
flattering words, but great was the power of her faith.
The certain test, however, and demonstration thereof, He left to the issue
of events. Her daughter accordingly was straightway healed.
But mark thou, I pray thee, how when the apostles had failed, and had not
succeeded, this woman had success. So great a thing is assiduity in prayer.
Yea, He had even rather be solicited by us, guilty as we are, for those who belong
to us, than by others in our behalf. And yet they had more liberty to speak;
but she exhibited much endurance.
And by the issue He also excused Himself to His disciples for the delay,
and showed that with reason He had not assented to their request.
4. "And Jesus departed from thence, and came nigh unto the sea of Galilee;
and went up into the mountain, and sat down there. And great multitudes came
unto Him, having with them those that were lame, blind, maimed, dumb; and cast
them(10) at His feet; and He healed them, insomuch that the multitudes wondered,
when they saw the dumb to speak, the maimed to be whole, the lame to walk, and
the blind to see, and they glorified the God of Israel."(11)
Now He goes about Himself, now sits awaiting the diseased, and hath the
lame brought up unto the mountain. And no longer do they touch so much as His
garment, but advance a higher step, being cast at His feet: and they showed their
faith doubly, first, by going up into the mountain though lame, then by wanting
nothing else but to be cast at His feet only.
And great was the marvel and strange, to see them that were carried
walking, the blind needing not any to lead them by the hand. Yea, both the multitude
of the healed, and the facility of their cure amazed them.
Seest thou, how the woman indeed He healed with so much delay, but these
immediately? not because these are better than she is, but because she is more
faithful than they. Therefore, while in her case He defers and delays, to
manifest her constancy; on these He bestows the gift immediately, stopping the mouths
of the unbelieving Jews, and cutting away from them every plea. For the
greater favors one hath received, so much the more is he liable to punishment, if he
be insensible, and the very honor make him no better. Therefore you see the
rich also proving wicked, are more punished than the poor, for not being softened
even by their prosperity. For tell me not that they gave alms. Since if they
gave not in proportion to their substance, not even so shall they escape; our
alms being judged not by the measure of our gifts, but by the largeness(1) of our
mind. But if these suffer punishment, much more they that are eager about
unnecessary things; who build houses of two and three stories, but despise the
hungry; who give heed to covetousness, but neglect alms-giving.
5. But since the discourse hath fallen on almsgiving, come then, let us
resume again to-day that argument, which I was making three days ago concerning
benevolence, and left unfinished. Ye remember, when lately I was speaking of
vanity about your shoes, and of that empty trouble, and the luxury of the young,
that it was from almsgiving that our discourse passed on to those charges
against you. What were the matters then at that time brought forward? That almsgiving
is a kind of art, having its workshop in Heaven, and for its teacher, not man,
but God. Then inquiring what is an art, and what not an art, we came upon
fruitless labors, and evil devices, amongst which we made mention also of this art
concerning men's shoes.
Have ye then recalled it to mind? Come now, let us to-day also resume what
we then said, and let us show how almsgiving is an art, and better than all
arts. For if the peculiarity of art is to issue in something useful, and nothing
is more useful than almsgiving, very evidently this is both an art, and better
than all arts. For it makes for us not shoes, nor doth it weave garments, nor
build houses that are of clay; but it procures life everlasting, and snatches us
from the hands of death, and in either life shows us glorious, and builds the
mansions that are in Heaven, and those eternal tabernacles.
This suffers not our lamps to go out, nor that we should appear at the
marriage having filthy garments, but washes them, and renders them purer than
snow. "For though your sins be as scarlet, I will make them white as snow."(2) It
suffers us not to fall, where that rich man fell, nor to hear those fearful
words, but it leads us into the bosom of Abraham.
And indeed of the arts of this life, each severally takes and keeps one
good work; as agriculture the feeding us; weaving the clothing us; or rather not
so much as this; for it is in no wise sufficient alone to contribute to us its
own part. And, if thou wilt, let us try agriculture first. Why, if it hath not
the smith's art, that it may borrow from it spade, and ploughshare, and sickle,
and axe, and other things besides; and that of the carpenter, so as both to
frame a plough, and to prepare a yoke and a cart to bruise the ears; and the
currier's, to make also the leathern harness; and the builder's, to build a stable
for the bullocks that plough, and houses for the husbandmen that sow; and the
woodman's, to cut wood; and the baker's after all these, it is found nowhere.
So also the art of weaving, when it produces anything, calls many arts,
together with itself, to assist it in the works set before it; and if they be not
present and stretch forth the hand, this too stands, like the former, at a
loss. And indeed every one of the arts stands in need of the other.
But when alms is to be given, we want nothing else, but the disposition
only is required. And if thou say that money is needed, and houses and clothes
and shoes; read those words of Christ, which He spake concerning the widow,(3)
and cease from this anxiety. For though thou be exceedingly poor, and of them
that beg, if thou cast in two mites, thou hast effected all; though thou give but
a barley cake, having only this, thou art arrived at the end of the art.
This science then let us receive, and bring to perfection. For truly it is
a better thing to know this, than to be a king, and to wear a diadem. For this
is not its only advantage, that it needs not other things, but it is also able
to accomplish a variety of objects, both many and of all kinds. Thus, it both
builds houses that continue forever in Heaven; and teaches them that have
brought it to perfection, how they may escape the never-dying death; and bestows on
thee treasures that are never spent, but escape all injury, both from robbers,
and from worms, and from moths, and from time.
And yet, were it but for the preservation of wheat that any one had taught
thee this, what wouldest thou not have given, to be able to preserve thy grain
unconsumed for many years? But behold, this teaches thee the same not
concerning wheat only, but concerning all things, and shows how both thy goods and thy
soul and thy body may remain unconsumed.
And why should we rehearse particularly all the good effects of this art?
For this teaches thee how thou mayest become like God, which is the sum of all
good things whatsoever.
Seest thou how the work thereof is not one, but many? Without needing any
other art, it builds houses, it weaves garments, it stores up treasures which
cannot be taken from us, it makes us get the better of death, and prevail over
the devil; it renders us like God.
What now can be more profitable than this art? For while the other arts,
as well as what I have mentioned, both end with our present life, and when the
artists are diseased, are found nowhere; and their works have no power to
endure, and they need much labor and time, and innumerable other things; this one,
when the world hath passed away, then it becomes more than ever conspicuous; when
we are dead, then it shines out brighter than ever, and exhibits the works
which it hath accomplished. And neither time nor labor, nor any such travail, doth
it need; but is active even in thy sickness, and in thine old age, and
migrates with thee into the life to come, and never forsakes thee. This makes thee to
surpass in ability both sophists and rhetoricians. For such as are approved in
those arts have many to envy them, but they who shine in this have thousands to
pray for them. And those indeed stand at men's judgment seat, pleading for
them that are wronged, and often too for them that do wrong; but this virtue
stands by the judgment seat of Christ, not only pleading, but persuading the judge
Himself to plead for him that is judged, and to give sentence in his favor:
though his sins have been very many, almsgiving doth both crown and proclaim him.
For "give alms, and all things shall be clean."(1)
And why do I speak of the things to come? Since in our present life,
should we ask men which they would rather, that there should be many sophists and
rhetoricians, or many that give alms, and love their fellow men, thou wilt hear
them choose the latter; and very reasonably. For if oratory were taken away, our
life will be nothing the worse; for indeed even before this, it had continued
a long time; but if thou take away the showing of mercy, all is lost and
undone. And as men could not sail on the sea, if harbors and roadsteads were blocked
up; so neither could this life hold together, if thou take away mercy, and
compassion, and love to man.
6. Therefore God hath not at all left them to reasoning only, but many
parts thereof He hath implanted by the absolute power of nature herself. Thus do
fathers pity children, thus mothers, thus children parents; and not in the case
of men only, but of all the brutes also; thus brothers pity brothers, and
kinsmen, and connexions; thus man pities man. For we have somewhat even from nature
prone to mercy.
Therefore also we feel indignation in behalf of them that are wronged, and
seeing men killed we are overcome, and beholding them as they mourn, we weep.
For because it is God's will that it should be very perfectly performed, He
commanded nature to contribute much hereunto, signifying that this is exceedingly
the object of His care.
Considering then these things, let us bring both ourselves and our
children and them that pertain to us unto the school of mercy, and this above all
things let man learn, since even this is man. "For a man is a great thing, and a
merciful man a precious thing;"(2) so that unless one hath this, one hath fallen
away even from being a man. This renders them wise. And why marvel at this
being man? This is God. For, "be ye," saith He, "merciful as your Father?"(3)
Let us learn therefore to be merciful on all accounts, but chiefly,
because we too need much mercy. And let us reckon ourselves as not even living, at
such time as we are not showing mercy. But by mercy, I mean that which is free
from covetousness. For if he that is contented with his own, and imparts to no
man, is not merciful, how is he that takes the goods of other men merciful,
though he give without limit? For if merely to enjoy one's own be inhumanity, much
more to defraud others. If they that have done no wrong are punished, because
they imparted not, much more they, who even take what is others.
Say not therefore this, "One is injured, another receives mercy." For this
is the grievous thing. Since it were meet that the injured should be the same
with the receiver of the mercy: but now, while wounding some, thou art healing
them whom thou hast not wounded, when thou oughtest to heal the same; or rather
not so much as to wound them. For he is not humane who smites and heals, but
he that heals such as have been smitten by others. Heal therefore thine own evil
acts, not another's; or rather do not smite at all, nor cast down (for this is
the conduct of a mocker), but raise up them that are cast down.
For neither is it possible by the same measure of almsgiving to cure the
evil result of covetousness. For if thou hast unjustly gotten a farthing, it is
not a farthing that thou needest again for almsgiving, to remove the sin that
comes of thine unjust gain, but a talent. Therefore the thief being taken pays
fourfold, but he that spoils by violence is worse than he that steals. And if
this last ought to give fourfold(1) what he stole, the extortioner should give
tenfold and much more; and it is much if even so he can make atonement for his
injustice; for of almsgiving not even then will he receive the reward. Therefore
saith Zacchaeus, "I will restore what I have taken by false accusation
fourfold, and the half of my goods I will give to the poor."(2) And if under the law
one ought to give fourfold, much more under grace; if he that steals, much more
he that spoils by violence. For besides the damage, in this case the in-suit too
is great. So that even if thou give an hundredfold, thou hast not yet given
the whole.
Seest thou how not without cause I said, If thou take but a farthing by
violence, and pay back a talent, scarcely even so dost thou remedy it? But if
scarcely by doing this; when thou reversest the order, and hast taken by violence
whole fortunes, yet bestowest but little, and not to them either that have been
wronged, but to others in their stead; what kind of plea wilt thou have? what
favor? what hope of salvation?
Wouldest thou learn how bad a deed thou doest in so giving alms? Hear the
Scripture that saith, "As one that killeth the son before his father's eyes, so
is he that bringeth a sacrifice of the goods of the poor."(3)
This denunciation then let us write in our minds before we depart, this
let us write on our walls, this on our hands, this in our conscience, this
everywhere; that at least the fear of it being vigorous in our minds, may restrain
our hands from daily murders. For extortion is a more grievous thing than murder,
consuming the poor man by little and little.
In order then that we may be pure from this pollution, let us exercise
ourselves in these thoughts, both by ourselves and to one another. For so shall we
both be more forward to show mercy, and receive undiminished the reward for
it, and enjoy the eternal good things, by the grace and love towards man of our
Lord Jesus Christ; to whom be glory and might with the Father, and the Holy
Ghost, now and always, and world without end. Amen.