HOMILIES OF ST. JOHN CHRYSOSTOM ON THE GOSPEL ACCORDING TO ST. MATTHEW,
HOMILIES LXIX & LXXIII (MATT. 22 & 23)
HOMILY LXIX.
MATT. XXII. 1--14.
"And Jesus answered and spake again(1) in parables. The kingdom of Heaven is
like unto a certain king, which made a marriage(2) for his son; and sent forth
his servants to call them which were bidden to the wedding; and they would not
come. Again, he sent forth other servants, saying, Tell them which are bidden, I
have prepared my dinner; my oxen and my fatlings are killed, and all things
are ready; come unto the marriage. But they made light of it, and went their
ways, one to his farm, another to his merchandise: and the remnant took his
servants, and entreated them spitefully, and slew them."(3)
Seest thou both in the former parable and in this the difference between
the Son and the servants? Seest thou at once the great affinity between both
parables, and the great difference also? For this also indicates God's
long-suffering, and His great providential care, and the Jews' ingratitude.
But this parable hath something also more than the other. For it proclaims
beforehand both the casting out of the Jews, and the calling of the Gentiles;
and it indicates together with this also the strictness of the life required,
and how great the punishment appointed for the careless.
And well is this placed after the other. For since He had said, "It shall
be given to a nation bringing forth the fruits thereof," He declares next to
what kind of nation; and not this only, but He also again sets forth His
providential care towards the Jews as past utterance. For there He appears before His
crucifixion bidding them; but here even after He is slain, He still urges them,
striving to win them over. And when they deserved to have suffered the most
grievous punishment, then He both presses them to the marriage, and honors them
with the highest honor. And see how both there He calls not the Gentiles first,
but the Jews, and here again. But as there, when they would not receive Him, but
even slew Him when He was come, then He gave away the vineyard; thus here too,
when they were not willing to be present at the marriage, then He called
others.
What then could be more ungrateful than they, when being bidden to a
marriage they rush away? For who would not choose to come to a marriage, and that a
King's marriage, and of a King making a marriage for a Son?
And wherefore is it called a marriage? one may say. That thou mightest
learn God's tender care, His yearning towards us, the cheerfulness of the state of
things, that there is nothing sorrowful there, nor sad, but all things are
full of spiritual joy: Therefore also John calls Him a bridegroom, therefore Paul
again saith, "For I have espoused you to one husband;"(1) and, "This is a great
mystery, but I speak concerning Christ and the Church."(2)
Why then is not the bride said to be espoused to Him, but to the Son?
Because she that is espoused to the Son, is espoused to the Father. For it is
indifferent in Scripture that the one or the other should be said, because of the
identity(3) of the substance.
Hereby He proclaimed the resurrection also. For since in what went before
He had spoken of the death, He shows that even after the death, then is the
marriage, then the bridegroom.
But not even so do these become better men nor more gentle, than which
what can be worse? For this again is a third accusation. The first that they
killed the prophets; then the son; afterwards that even when they had slain Him, and
were bidden unto the marriage of Him that was slain, by the Very one that was
slain, they come not, but feign excuses, yokes of oxen, and pieces of ground,
and wives. And yet the excuses seem to be reasonable; but hence we learn, though
the things which hinder us be necessary, to set the things spiritual at a
higher price than all.
And He not suddenly, but a long time before. For, "Tell," He saith, "them
that are bidden;" and again, "Call them that were bidden;" which circumstance
makes the charge against them heavier. And when were they bidden? By all the
prophets; by John again; for unto Christ he would pass all on, saying, "He must
increase, I must decrease;"(4) by the Son Himself again, "Come unto me, all ye
that labor and are heavy laden, and I will refresh you;"(5) and again, "If any
man thirst, let him come unto me, and drink."(6)
But not by words only, but also by actions did He bid them, after His
ascension by Peter, and those with him. "For He that wrought effectually in Peter,"
it is said, "to the apostleship of the circumcision, was mighty also in me
towards the Gentiles."(7)
For since on seeing the Son, they were wroth and slew Him, He bids them
again by His servants. And unto what cloth He bid them? Unto labors, and toils,
and sweat? Nay but unto pleasure. For, "My oxen," He saith, "and my fatlings are
killed." See how complete His banquet? how great His munificence.
And not even this shamed them, but the more long-suffering He showed, so
much the more were they hardened. For not for press of business, but from
"making light of they did not come.
"How then do some bring forward marriages, others yokes of oxen? these
things surely are of want of leisure."
By no means, for when spiritual things call us, there is no press of
business that has the power of necessity.
And to me they seem moreover to make use of these excuses, putting forward
these things as cloke for their negligence, And not this only is the grievous
thing, that they came not, but also that which is a far more violent and
furious act, to have even beaten them that came, and to have used them despitefully,
and to have slain them; this is worse than the former. For those others came,
demanding produce and fruits, and were slain; but these, bidding them to the
marriage of Him that had been slain by them, and these again are murdered.
What is equal to this madness? This Paul also was laying to their charge,
when he said, "Who both killed the Lord, and their own prophets, and have
persecuted us."(1)
Moreover, that they may not say, "He is an adversary of God, and therefore
we do not come," hear what they say who are bidding them; that it is the
father who is making the marriage, and that it is He who is bidding them.
What then did He after these things? Since they were not willing to come,
yea and also slew those that came unto them; He burns up their cities, and sent
His armies and slew them.
And these things He saith, declaring beforehand the things that took place
under Vespasian and Titus, and that they provoked the father also, by not
believing in Him; it is the father at any rate who was avenging.
And for this reason let me add, not straightway after Christ was slain did
the capture take place, but after forty years, that He might show His long
suffering, when they had slain Stephen, when they had put James to death, when
they had spitefully entreated the apostles.
Seest thou the truth of the event, and its quickness? For while John was
yet living, and many other of them that were with Christ, these things came to
pass, and they that had heard these words were witnesses of the events.
See then care utterable. He had planted a vineyard; He had done all
things, and finished; when His servants had been put to death, He sent other
servants; when those had been slain, He sent the son; and when He was put to death, He
bids them to the marriage. They would not come, After this He sends other
servants, and they slew these also.
Then upon this He slays them, as being incurably diseased. For that they
were incurably diseased, was proved not by their acts only, but by the fact,
that even when harlots and publicans had believed, they did these things. So that,
not by their own crimes alone, but also from what others were able to do
aright, these men are condemned,
But if any one should say, that not then were they out of the Gentiles
called, I mean, when the apostles had been beaten and had suffered ten thousand
things, but straightway after the resurrection (for then He said to them, "Go ye
and make disciples of all nations."(2) We would say, that both before the
crucifixion, and after the crucifixion, they addressed themselves to them first. For
both before the crucifixion, He saith to them, "Go to the lost sheep of the
house of Israel;"(3) and after the crucifixion, so far from forbidding, He even
commanded them to address themselves to the Jews. For though He said, "Make
disciples of all nations," yet when on the point of ascending into Heaven, He
declared that unto those first they were to address themselves; For, "ye shall
receive power," saith He, "after that the Holy Ghost is come upon you, and ye shall
be witnesses unto me both in Jerusalem, and in all Judaea, and unto the
uttermost part of the earth;"(4) and Paul again, "He that wrought effectually in Peter
to the apostleship of the circumcision, was mighty in me also toward the
Gentiles."(5) Therefore the apostles also went first unto the Jews, and when they
had tarried a long time in Jerusalem, and then had been driven away by them, in
this way they were scattered abroad unto the Gentiles.
2. And see thou even herein His bounty; "As many as ye shall find," saith
He, "bid to the marriage. For before this, as I said, they addressed
themselves both to Jews and Greeks, tarrying for the most part in Judaea; but since they
continued to lay plots against them, hear Paul interpreting this parable, and
saying thus, "It was necessary that the word of God should first have been
spoken to you, but since ye judge yourselves unworthy, lo, we turn to the
Gentiles.(6)
Therefore Christ also saith, "The wedding is ready, but they which were
bidden were not worthy."
He knew this indeed even before, but that He might leave them no pretext
of a shameless sort of contradiction, although He knew it, to them first He both
came and sent, both stopping their mouths, and teaching us to fulfill all our
parts, though no one should derive any profit.
Since then they were not worthy, go ye, saith He, into the highways, and
as many as ye shall find, bid; both the common sort, and the outcasts. For
because He had said m every way.(7) "The harlots and publicans shall inherit
heaven;" and, "The first shall be last, and the last first;" He shows thai justly do
these things come to pass; which more than anything stung the Jews, and goaded
them far more grievously than their overthrow, to see those from the Gentiles
brought into their privileges, and into far greater than theirs.
Then in order that not even these should put confidence in their faith
alone, He discourses unto them also concerning the judgment to be passed upon
wicked actions; to them that have not yet believed, of coming unto Him by faith,
and to them that have believed, of care with respect to their life. For the
garment is life and practice.
And yet the calling was of grace; wherefore then doth He take a strict
account? Because although to be called and to be cleansed was of grace, yet, when
called and clothed in clean garments, to continue keeping them so, this is of
the diligence of them that are called.
The being called was not of merit, but of grace. It was fit therefore to
make a return for the grace, and not to show forth such great wickedness after
the honor. "But I have not enjoyed," one may say, "so much advantage as the
Jews." Nay, but thou hast enjoyed far greater benefits. For what things were being
prepared for them throughout all their time, these thou hast received at once,
not being worthy. Wherefore Paul also saith, "And that the Gentiles might
glorify God for His mercy."(1) For what things were due to them, these thou hast
received.
Wherefore also great is the punishment appointed for them that have been
remiss. For as they did despite by not coming, so also thou by thus sitting down
with a corrupt life. For to come in with filthy garments is this namely, to
depart hence having one's life impure; wherefore also he was speechless.
Seest thou how, although the fact was so manifest, He doth not punish at
once, until he himself, who has sinned, has passed the sentence? For by having
nothing to reply he condemned himself, and so is taken away to the unutterable
torments.
For do not now, on hearing of darkness, suppose he is punished by this, by
sending into a place where there is no light only, but where" there is "also"
weeping and gnashing of teeth."(2) And this He saith, indicating the
intolerable pains.
Hear ye, as many as having partaken of the mysteries, and having been
present at the marriage, clothe your souls with filthy deeds Hear whence ye were
called.
From the highway. Being what? Lame and halt in soul, which is a much more
grievous thing than the mutilation of the body. Reverence the love of Him, who
called you, and let no one continue to have filthy garments, but let each of
you busy himself about the clothing of your soul.
Hear, ye women; hear, ye men; we need not these garments that are
bespangled with gold, that adam our outward parts,(3) but those others, that adorn the
inward. Whilst we have these former, it is difficult to put on those latter. It
is not possible at the same time to deck both soul and body. It is not
possible at the same time both to serve mam-mon, and to obey Christ as we ought.
Let us put off us therefore this grievous tyranny. For neither if any one
were to adorn thy house by hanging it with golden curtains, and were to make
thee sit there in rags, naked, wouldest thou endure it with meekness. But lo, now
thou doest this to thyself, decking the house of thy soul, I mean the body,
with curtains beyond number, but leaving the soul itself to sit in rags. Knowest
thou not that the king ought to be adorned more than the city? so therefore
while for the city hangings are prepared of linen, for the king there is a purple
robe and a diadem. Even so do thou wrap the body with a much meaner dress, but
the mind do thou clothe in purple, and put a crown on it, and set it on a high
and conspicuous chariot. For now thou art doing the opposite, decking the city
in various ways, but suffering the king, the mind, to be dragged bound after
the brute passions.
Rememberest thou not, that thou art bidden to a marriage, and to God's
marriage? Considerest thou not how the soul that is bidden ought to enter into
those chambers, clad, and decked with fringes of gold.
3. Wilt thou that I show thee them that are clad thus, them that have on a
marriage garment?
Call to mind those holy persons, of whom I discoursed to you of late, them
that wear garments of hair, them that dwell in the deserts. These above all
are the wearers of the garments of that wedding; this is evident from hence, that
how many soever purple robes thou weft to give them, they would not choose to
receive them; but much as a king, if any one were to take the beggar's rags,
and exhort him to put them on, would abhor the clothing, so would those persons
also his purple robe. And from no other cause have they this feeling, but
because of knowing the beauty of their own raiment. Therefore even that purple robe
they spurn like the spider's web. For these things hath their sackcloth taught
them; for indeed they are far more exalted and more glorious than the very king
who reigns.
And if thou wert able to open the doors of the mind, and to look upon
their soul, and all their ornaments within, surely thou wouldest fall down upon the
earth, not bearing the glory of their beauty, and the splendor of those
garments, and the lightning brightness of their conscience.
For we could tell also of men of old, great and to be admired; but since
visible examples lead on more those of grosset souls, therefore do I send you
even to the tabernacles of those holy persons. For they have nothing sorrowful,
but as if in heaven they had pitched their tents, even so are they encamped far
off the wearisome things of this present life, in campaign against the devils;
and as in choirs, so do they war against him. Therefore I say, they have fixed
their tents, and have fled from cities, and markets, and houses. For he that
warreth cannot sit in a house, but he must make his habitation of a temporary
kind, as on the point of removing straightway, and so dwell. Such are all those
persons, contrary to us. For we indeed live not as in a camp, but as in a city at
peace.
For who in a camp ever lays foundation, and builds himself a house, which
he is soon after to leave? There is not one; but should any one attempt it, he
is put to death as a traitor. Who in a camp buys acres of land, and makes for
himself trades? There is not one, and very reasonably. "For thou art come here,"
they would say, "to fight, not to traffic; why then dost thou trouble thyself
about the place, which in a little time thou wilt leave? When we are gone away
to our country, do these things."
The same do I now say to thee also. When we have removed to the city that
is. above, do these things: or rather thou wilt have no need of labors there;
after that the king will do all things for thee. But here it is enough to dig a
ditch round only, and to fix a palisade, but of building houses there is no
need.
Hear what was the life of the Scythians, that lived in their wagons, such,
as they say, are the habits of the shepherd tribes. So ought Christians to
live; to go about the world, warring against the devil, rescuing the captives held
in subjection by him, and to be in freedom from all worldly things.
Why preparest thou a house, O man, that thou mayest bind thyself more? Why
dost thou bury a treasure, and invite the enemy against thyself? Why dost thou
compass thyself with walls, and prepare a prison for thyself?
But if these things seem to thee to be hard, let us go away unto the tents
of those men, that by their deeds we may learn the easiness thereof. For they
having set up huts, if they must depart from these, depart like as soldiers,
having left their camp in peace. For so likewise are they encamped, or rather
even much more beautifully.
For indeed it is more pleasant to behold a desert containing huts of monks
in close succession, than soldiers stretching the canvas in a camp, and fixing
spears, and suspending from the point of the spears saffron garments,(1) and a
multitude of men having heads of brass, and the bosses of the shields
glistening much, and men armed all throughout with steel. and royal courts hastily
made, and ground levelled far, and men dining and piping. For neither is this
spectacle so delightful as that of which I now speak.
For if we were to go away into the wilderness, and look at the tents of
Christ's soldiers, we shall see not canvas stretched, neither points of spears,
nor golden garments making a royal pavilion; but like as if any one upon an
earth much larger than this earth, yea infinite, had stretched out many heavens,
strange and awful would be the sight he showed; even so may one see here.
For in nothing are their lodging-places in a condition inferior to the
heavens; for the angels lodge with them, and the Lord of the angels. For if they
came to Abraham, a man having a wife, and bringing up children, because they
saw him hospitable; when they find much more abundant virtue, and a man delivered
from the body, and in the flesh disregarding the flesh, much more do they
tarry there, and celebrate the choral feast that becomes them. For there is
moreover a table amongst them pure from all covetousness, and full of self-denial.
No streams of blood are amongst them, nor cutting up of flesh, nor
heaviness of head, nor dainty cooking, neither are there unpleasing smells of meat
amongst them, nor disagreeable smoke, neither runnings and tumults, and
disturbances, and wearisome clamors; but bread and water, the latter from a pure
fountain, the former from honest labor. But if any time they should be minded to feast
more sumptuously, their sumptuousness consists of fruits, and greater is the
pleasure there than at royal tables. There is no fear there, or trembling; no
ruler accuses, no wife provokes, no child casts into sadness, no disorderly mirth
dissipates, no multitude of flatterers puffs up; but the table is an angel's
table free from all such turmoil.
And for a couch they have grass only beneath them, like as Christ did when
making a dinner in the wilderness. And many of them do this, not being even
under shelter, but for a roof they have heaven, and the moon instead of the light
of a candle, not wanting oil, nor one to attend to it; on them alone does it
shine worthily from on high.
4. This table even angels from heaven beholding are delighted and pleased.
For if over one sinner that repenteth they rejoice, over so many just men
imitating them, what will they not do? There are not master and slave; all are
slaves, all free men. And do not think the saying to be a dark proverb, for they
are indeed slaves one of another, and masters one of another.
They have no occasion to be in sadness when evening has overtaken them, as
many men feel, revolving the anxious thoughts that spring from the evils of
the day. They have no occasion after their supper to be careful about robbers,
and to shut the doors, and to put bars against them, neither to dread the other
ills, of which many are afraid, extinguishing their candles with strict care,
lest a spark anywhere should set the house on fire.
And their conversation again is full of the whereof we discourse, that are
nothing to us; such a one is made governor, such a one has ceased to be
governor; such a one is dead, and another has succeeded to the inheritance, and all
such like, but always about the things to come do they speak and seek wisdom;
and as though dwelling in another world, as though they had migrated unto heaven
itself, as living there, even so all their conversation is about the things
there, about Abraham's bosom, about the crowns of the saints, about the choiring
with Christ; and of things present they have neither any memory nor thought, but
like as we should not deign to speak at all of what the ants do in their holes
and clefts; so neither do they of what we do; but about the King that is
above, about the war in which they are engaged, about the devil's crafts, about the
good deeds which the saints have achieved.
Wherein therefore are we different from ants, when compared with them? For
like as they care for the things of the body, so also do we; and would it were
for these alone: but now it is even for things far worse. For not for
necessary things only do we care like them, but also for things superfluous. For those
insects pursue a business free from all blame, but we follow after all
covetousness, and not even the ways of ants do we imitate, but the ways of wolves, but
the ways of leopards, or rather we are even worse than these. For to them
nature has assigned that they should be thus fed, but us God hath honored with
speech, and a sense of equity,(1) and we are become worse than the wild beasts.
And whereas we are worse than the brutes, those men are equal to the
angels, being strangers and pilgrims as to the things here; and all things in them
are made different from us, clothing, and food, and house, and shoes, and
speech. And if any one were to hear them conversing and us, then he would know full
well, how they indeed are citizens of heaven, but we are not worthy so much as
of the earth.
So that therefore, when any one invested with rank is come unto them, then
is all inflated pride found utterly vain. For the laborer there, and he that
hath no experience of worldly affairs, sits near him that is a commander of
troops, and prides himself on his authority, upon the grass, upon a mean cushion.
For there are none to extol him, none to puff him up; but the same result takes
place, as if any one were to go to a goldsmith, and a garden of roses, for he
receives some brightness from the gold and from the roses; so they too, gaining
a little from the splendor of these, are delivered from their former arrogance.
And like as if any were to go upon a high place, though he be exceedingly
short, he appears high; so these too, coming unto their exalted minds, appear like
them, so long as they abide there, but when they are gone down are abased
again, on descending from that height.
A king is nothing amongst them, a governor is nothing; but like as we,
when children are playing at these things, laugh; so do they also utterly spurn
the inflamed pride of them who strut without. And this is evident from hence,
that if any one would give them a kingdom to possess in security, they would never
take it; yet they would take it, unless their thoughts were upon what is
greater than it, unless they accounted the thing to be but for a season.
What then? Shall we not go over unto blessedness so great? Shall we not
come unto these angels; shall we not receive clean garments, and join in the
ceremonies of this wedding feast; but shall we continue begging, in no respect in a
better condition than the poor in the streets, or rather in a state far worse
and more wretched? For much worse than these are they that are rich in evil
ways, and it is better to beg than to spoil, for the one hath excuse, but the
other brings punishment; and the beggar in no degree offends God, but this other
both men and God; and undergoes the labors of rapine, but all the enjoyment
thereof other men often reap.
Knowing then these things, let us lay aside all covetousness, and covet
the things above, with great earnestness "taking the kingdom by force."(1) For it
cannot be, it cannot be that any one who is remiss should enter therein.
But God grant that we all having become earnest, and watchful may attain
thereto, by the grace and love towards man of our Lord Jesus Christ, to whom be
glory and might, world without end. Amen.
HOMILY LXX.
MATT. XXII. 15.
"Then went the Pharisees, and took counsel how they might entangle Him in His
talk."
THEN. When? When most of all they ought to have been moved to compunction,
when they should have been amazed at His love to man, when they should have
feared the things to come, when from the past they ought to have believed
touching the future also. For indeed the things that had been said cried aloud in
actual fulfillment I mean, that publicans and harlots believed, and prophets and
righteous men were slain, and from these things they ought not to have gainsaid
touching their own destruction, but even to believe and to be sobered.
But nevertheless not even so do their wicked acts cease, but travail and
proceed further. And forasmuch as they could not lay hands. on Him (for they
feared the multitude), they took another way with the intention of bringing Him
into danger, and making Him guilty of crimes against the state.
For "they sent out unto Him their disciples with the Herodians saying,
Master, we know that thou art true, and teachest the way of God in truth, neither
carest thou for any man; for thou regardest not the person of men. Tell us
therefore, What thinkest thou? Is it lawful to give tribute unto Cęsar or not?(1)
For they were now tributaries, their state having passed under the rule of
the Romans. Forasmuch then as they saw that Theudas and Judas(2) with their
companies for this cause were put to death, as having prepared for a revolt, they
were minded to bring Him too by these words into such a suspicion. Therefore
they sent both their own disciples, and Herod's soldiers, digging, as they
thought, a precipice on either side, and in every direction setting the snare, so
that, whatever He should say, they might lay hold of it; and if He should answer
in favor of the Herodians, themselves might find fault with Him, but if in
their favor, the others should accuse Him. And yet He had given the didrachmas,(3)
but they knew not that.
And in either way indeed they expected to lay hold of Him; but they
desired rather that He should say something against the Herodians. Wherefore they
send their disciples also to urge. Him thereto by their presence, that they might
deliver Him to the governor as an usurper. For this Luke also intimates and
shows, by saying, that they asked also in the presence of the multitude, so that
the testimony should be the stronger.
But the result was altogether opposite; for in a larger body of spectators
they afforded the demonstration of their folly.
And see their flattery, and their hidden craft. "We know," their words
are, "that Thou art true." How said ye then, "He is a deceiver," and "deceiveth
the people," and "hath a devil," and "is not of God?"(4) how a little while
before did ye devise to slay Him?
But they are at everything, whatsoever their craft against Him may
suggest. For since, when a little before they had said in self will, "By what
authority doest Thou these things?"(1) they did not meet with an answer to the
question, they look to puff Him up by their flattery, and to persuade Him to say
something against the established laws, and opposed to the prevailing government.
Wherefore also they testify the truth unto Him, confessing what was really
so, nevertheless, not with an upright mind, nor willingly; and add thereto,
saying, "Thou carest not for any man." See how plainly they are desiring to urge
Him to these sayings, that would make Him both offend Herod, and incur the
suspicion of being an usurper, as standing up against the laws, so that they might
punish Him, as a mover of sedition, and an usurper. For in saying, "Thou carest
not for any man," and, "Thou regardest not the person of man," they were
hinting at Herod and Cęsar,
"Tell us therefore, what thinkest Thou?" Now ye honor Him, and esteem Him
a Teacher, having despised and insulted Him oftentimes, when He was discoursing
of the things that concern your salvation.Whence also they are become
confederates.
And see their craftiness. They say not, Tell us what is good, what is
expedient, what is lawful? but, "What thinkest Thou?" So much did they look to this
one object, to betray Him, and to set Him at enmity with the rulers. And Mark
declaring this, and more plainly discovering their self-will, and their
murderous disposition, affirms them to have said, "Shall we give Cęsar tribute, or
shall we not give?"(2) So that they were breathing anger, and travailing with a
plot against Him, yet they feigned respect.
What then saith He? "Why tempt ye me, ye hypocrites?" Seest thou how He
talks with them with more than usual severity? For since their wickedness was now
complete and manifest, He cuts the deeper, first confounding and silencing
them, by publishing their secret thoughts, and making it manifest to all with what
kind of intent they are coming unto Him.
And these things He did, repulsing their wickedness, so that they might
not suffer hurt in attempting the same things again. And yet their words were
full of much respect, for they both called Him Master, and bore witness to His
truth, and that He was no respecter of persons; but being God, He was deceived by
none of these things. Wherefore they also ought to have conjectured, that the
rebuke was not the result of conjecture, but a sign of His knowing their secret
thoughts.
2. He stopped not, however, at the rebuke, although it was enough merely
to have convicted them of their purpose, and to have put them to shame for their
wickedness; but He stoppetn not at this, but in another way closes their
mouths; for, "Shew me," saith He, "the tribute money." And when they had shown it,
as He ever doth, by their tongue He brings out the decision, and causes them to
decide, that it is lawful; which was a clear and plain victory. So that. when
He asks, not from ignorance doth He ask, but because it is His will to cause
them to be bound by their own answers. For when, on being asked, "Whose is the
image?" they said, "Cęsar's;" He saith, "Render unto Cęsar the things that are
Cęsar's."(3) For this is not to give but to render, and this He shows both by the
image, and by the superscription.
Then that they might not say, Thou art subjecting us to men, He added,
"And unto God the things that are God's." For it is possible both to fulfill to
men their claims and to give unto God the things that are due to God from us.
Wherefore Paul also saith, "Render unto all their dues; tribute to whom tribute is
due, custom to whom custom, fear to whom fear."(4)
But thou, when thou hearest, "Render unto Cęsar the things which are Ct,
"Renęsar's" know that He is speaking only of those things, which are no
detriment to godliness; since if it be any such thing as this, such a thing is no
longer Cęsar's tribute, but the devil's.
When they heard these things, their mouths were stopped, and they
"marvelled" at His wisdom. Ought they not then to have believed, ought they not to have
been amazed. For indeed, He gave them proof of His Godhead, by revealing the
secrets of their hearts, and with gentleness did He silence them.
What then? did they believe? By no means, but they "left Him, and went
their way;" and after them, "came to Him the Sadducees."
O folly! When the others had been put to silence, these made the attack,
when they ought to have been the more backward. But such is the nature of
rashness, shameless, and importunate, and attempting things impossible. Therefore the
evangelist also, amazed at their folly, signified this very thing, by saying,
"On that day came to Him."(5) On that day. On what day? In which He had
convicted their craftiness, and put them to shame. But who are these? A sect of the
Jews different from the Pharisees, and much worse than they, who said, "that
there is no resurrection, nor angel, nor spirit.(1) For these were some of a
grosset sort, and eager after the things of the body. For there were many sects even
amongst the Jews. Wherefore Paul also saith, "I am a Pharisee, of the strictest
sect amongst us."(2)
And they say nothing indeed directly about a resurrection; but they feign
a story, and make up a case, which, as I suppose, never so much as had an
existence; thinking to drive Him to perplexity, and desiring to overthrow both
things, both the existence of a resurrection, and of such a resurrection.
And again, these too attack Him with a show of moderation, saying,
"Master, Moses said, If a man die, not having children, his brother shall marry his
wife, and raise up seed unto his brother. Now there were with us seven brethren:
and the first, when he had married a wife, deceased; and, having no issue,(3)
left his wife unto his brother. Likewise the second also, and the third, unto
the seventh. And last of all the woman died also. Therefore, in the resurrection,
whose wife shall she be of the seven?"(4)
See Him answering these like a teacher. For though out of craft they came
unto Him, yet was their question rather one of ignorance. Therefore neither
doth He say unto them, "Ye hypocrites."
Moreover, in order that He might not blame, saying, "Wherefore had seven
one wife?" they add the authority of Moses; although, as I have said before, it
was a fiction, in my judgment at least. For the third would not have taken her,
when he saw the two bridegrooms dead; or if the third, yet not the fourth or
the fifth; and if even these, much more the sixth or the seventh would not have
come unto the woman, but have shrunk from her. For such is the nature of the
Jews. For if now many have this feeling, much more then had they; when at least,
even without this, they often avoided marrying in this way, and that when the
law was constraining them. Thus, at any rate, Ruth, that Moabitish woman, was
thrust off to him that was further off from her kindred; and Tamar too was thus
compelled to obtain, by stealth, seed from her husband's kinsman.
And wherefore did they not feign two or three, but seven? In order the
more abundantly to bring derision, as they thought, upon the resurrection.
Wherefore they further say, "they all had her," as driving Him into some difficulty.
What then saith Christ? He replies unto both, as taking His stand not
against the words, but the purpose, and on every occasion revealing the secrets of
their hearts; and at one time exposing them, at another time leaving the
refutation of them that question Him to their conscience. See, at any rate here, how
He proves both points, as well that there will be a resurrection, as that it
will not be such a resurrection as they suspect.
For what saith He? "Ye do err, not knowing the Scriptures, nor the power
of God."(5) For since, as if they knew them, they put forward Moses and the law,
He shows that this question is that of men very ignorant of the Scriptures.
For hence also arose their tempting Him, from their being ignorant of the
Scriptures, and from their not knowing the power of God as they ought.
"For what marvel then is it," He saith, "if ye tempt me, who am as yet
unknown to you, when at least ye know not so much as the power of God, of which ye
have had so much experience, and neither from common sense nor from the
Scriptures have become acquainted with it;" if indeed even common sense causes us to
know this, that to God all things are possible. And in the first place He
answers to the question asked. For since this was the cause for their not believing
a resurrection, that they think the order of things is like this, He cures the
cause, then the symptom also (for thence arose the disease too), and shows the
manner of the resurrection. "For in the resurrection," saith He, "they neither
marry, nor are given in marriage, but are as angels of God in Heaven."(6) But
Luke saith, "As Sons of God."(7)
If then they marry not, the question is vain. But not because they do not
marry, therefore are they angels, but because they are as angels, therefore
they do not marry. By this He removed many other difficulties also, all which
things Paul intimated by one word, saying, "For the fashion of this world passeth
away."(8)
And by these words He declared how great a thing the resurrection is; and
that moreover there is a resurrection, He proves. And indeed this too was
demonstrated at the same time by what He had said, nevertheless over and above He
adds again to His word by what He saith now. For neither at their question only
did He stop, but at their thought. Thus when they are not deafing with great
craft, but are asking in ignorance, He teaches even over and above, but when it is
of wickedness only, not even to their question doth He answer.
And again by Moses doth He stop their mouths, since they too had brought
forward Moses; and He saith, "But as touching the resurrection of the dead, have
ye not read, I am the God of Abraham, and the God of Isaac, and the God of
Jacob? He is not the God of the dead, but of the living."(1) Not of them that are
not His meaning is, and that are utterly blotted out, and are to rise no more.
For He said not, I was, but, I am; of them that are, and them that live. For
like as Adam, although he lived on the day that he ate of the tree, died in the
sentence: even so also these, although they had died, lived in the promise of
the resurrection.
How then doth He say elsewhere, "That He might be Lord both of the dead
and of the living?"(2) But this is not contrary to that. For here He speaks of
the dead, who are also themselves to live. And moreover too, "I am the God of
Abraham," is another thing from, "That He might be Lord both of the dead and of
the living." He knew of another death too, concerning which He saith, "Let the
dead bury their dead."(3)
"And when the multitudes heard this, they were astonished at His
doctrine."(4) Yet not even here the Sadducees; but these go away defeated, while the
impartial multitude reap the benefit.
Since then the resurrection is like this, come let us do all things, that
we may obtain the first honors there. But, if ye will, let us show you some
even before the resurrection here pursuing and reaping these blessings, again
having made our resort to the deserts. For again will I enter upon the same
discourse, since I see you listening with more pleasure.
Let us behold then to-day also the spiritual camps, let us behold their
pleasure unalloyed with fear. For not with spears are they encamped like the
soldiers, for at this point I lately ended my discourse, neither with shields and
breastplates; but bare of all these wilt thou see them, yet achieving such
things, as not even with arms do they.
And if thou art able to observe, come and stretch forth thy hand to me,
and let us go unto this war, both of us, and let us see their battle array. For
these too fight every day, and slay their adversaries, and conquer all the
lusts that are plotting against us; and thou wilt see these cast out on the ground,
and not able so much as to struggle, but proving by very deed that saying of
the apostle, "They that are Christ's have crucified the flesh with the
affections and lusts."(5)
Seest thou a multitude of dead lying there, slain by the sword of the
Spirit? Therefore in that place is no drunkenness nor gluttony. And their table
proves it, and the trophy that is set thereon. For drunkenness and gluttony lie
dead, put to the rout by the drinking of water, though this be multiform, and a
many-headed monster. For like as in the fabled Scylla and Hydra, so in
drunkenness may one see many heads, on one side fornication growing up, on another
wrath; on one hand sloth, on another lawless lusts; but all these things are taken
away. And yet all those other armies, though they get the better in ten thousand
wars, are taken captive by these; and neither arms, nor spears, nor whatever
else there may be, is able to stand against these phalanxes; but the very
giants, the heroes, those that do countless brave deeds, thou wilt find without bonds
bound by sleep and drunkenness, without slaughter or wounds lying like the
wounded, or rather in more grievous case. For those at least struggle; but these
do not even this, but straightway give up.
Seest thou that this host is greater and more to be admired? For the
enemies that got the better of the others it destroys by its mere will. For they do
so weaken the mother of all thor evils, that she cannot even trouble them any
more; and the leader being overthrown, and the head removed, the rest of the
body also lies still.
And this victory one may see each of them, that abide there, achieving.
For it is not as in these wars of ours, where, if any enemy hath received a blow
from one, he is no more grievous to another, having been once overthrown; but
it is necessary for all to smite this monster; and he that hath not smitten and
overthrown her, is surely troubled by her.
Seest thou a glorious victory? For such a trophy as the hosts in all pans
of the world having met together have not power to erect, this each one of
those men erects; and all things that from the army of drunkenness lie mingled
together wounded, delirious words of frenzy, insane thoughts, unpleasing
haughtiness. And they imitate their own Lord, at whom the Scripture marvelling saith, "He
shall drink of the brook in the way, therefore shall He lift up the head."(6)
Would ye see also another multitude of dead? Let us see the lusts that
arise from luxurious living, those that are cherished by the makers of sauces, by
the cooks, the furnishers of feasts, the confectioners. For I am ashamed indeed
to speak of all; however, I will tell of the birds from Phasis, the soups that
are mixed from various things: the moist, the dry dishes, the laws made about
these things. For like as if ordering some city and mashalling hosts, even so
these too make laws, and ordain such a thing first, and such a thing second, and
some bring in first birds roasted on the embers, filled within with fish; and
others make of other material the beginnings of these unlawful feasts; and them
is much rivalry about these things, about quality, and about order, and about
quantity; and they take a pride in the things, for which they ought to bury
themselves for shame; some saying that they have spent the half of the day, some
all of it, some that they have added the night too. Behold, O wretched man, the
measure of thy belly, and be ashamed of thy unmeasured earnestness!
But there is nothing like this amongst those angels; but all these desires
also are dead. For their meals are not unto fullness, and unto luxurious
living, but unto necessity. No bird hunters are there, no fishermen, but bread and
water. But this confusion, and the disturbance, and the turmoils, are all
removed from thence, alike from the house and from the body, and great is the haven,
but amongst these great the tempest.
Burst open now in thought the belly of them who feed on such things, and
thou wilt see the vast refuse, and the unclean channel, and the whited sepulchre.
But what come after these I am even ashamed to tell, the disagreeable
erucations, the vomitings, the discharges downwards and upwards.
But go and see even these desires dead there, and those more violent lusts
that spring from these; I mean, those of impurity. For these too thou wilt see
all overthrown, with their horses, with their beasts of burden. For the beast
of burden, and the weapon, and the horse of a filthy deed, is a filthy word.
But thou wilt see such like horse and rider together, and their weapons thrown
down; but here quite the contrary, and souls cast down dead. But not at their
meal only is the victory of these holy men glorious, but in the other things also,
in money, in glory, in envy, in all diseases of the soul.
Surely does not this host seem to thee mightier than that, and the meal
better? Nay, who will gainsay it? None, not even of those persons themselves,
though he be very mad. For this guides us on to Heaven, that drags to hell; this
the devil lays out, that Christ; for this luxury gives laws, and intemperance,
for that self-denial and sobriety, here Christ is present, there the devil. For
where there is drunkenness, the devil is there; where there are filthy words,
where there is surfeiting, there the devils hold their choirs. Such a table had
that rich man, therefore not even of a drop of water was he master.
But these have not such a table, but they already practise the ways of the
angels. They marry not, they are not given in marriage, neither do they sleep
excessively, nor live luxuriously, but except a few things they are even
bodiless.
Now who is there that so easily overcomes his enemies as he that sets up a
trophy while at his dinner? Therefore also the prophet saith, "Thou hast
prepared a table before me, in the presence of them that trouble me."(1) One could
not be wrong in repeating this oracle about this table. For nothing so troubles
a soul as disorderly concupiscence, and luxury, and drunkenness, and the evils
that spring from these; and this they know full well who have had experience
thereof.
And if thou wast to learn also, whence this table is procured, and whence
that; then thou wouldest see wall the difference between each. Whence then is
this procured. From countless tears, from widows defrauded, from orphans
despoiled; but the other from honest labor. And this table is like to a fair and
wall-favored woman, needing nothing external, but having her beauty from nature; but
that to some ugly and ill-favored harlot, wearing much paint, but not able to
disguise her deformity, but the nearer she is, the more convicted. For this
too, when it is nearer to him that is at it, then shows its ugliness more. For
look not I tell thee, at the banqueters, as they come only, but also as they go
away, and then thou wilt see its ugliness. For that, as being free, suffers them
that come unto it to say nothing shameful; but this nothing seemly, as being a
harlot, and dishonored. This seeks the profit of him that is at it that the
hurt. And one not but that we must offend Him.
Let us go away therefore unto those men. Thence we shall learn with how
many bonds we are encompassed. Thence shall we learn to set before ourselves a
table full of countless blessings, most sweet, without cost, delivered from care,
free from envy and jealousy and every disease, and full of good hope, and
having its many trophies. No turmoil of soul there, no sorrow, no wrath; all is
calm, all is peace.
For tell me not of the silence of them that serve in the houses of the
rich, but of the clamor of them that dine; I mean, not that which they make one to
another (for this too is worthy of derision), but that within, that in the
soul, that brings on them a great captivity, the tumults of the thoughts, the
sleet, the darkness, the tempest, by which all things are mingled and confused, and
are like to some night battle. But not in the monks' tents are such things as
these; but great is the calm, great the quietness. And that table is succeeded
by a sleep that is like death, but this by sobriety and wakefulness; that by
punishment, this by the kingdom of heaven, and the immortal rewards.
This then let us follow, that we may enjoy also the fruits thereof; unto
which God grant we may all attain, by the grace and love towards man of our Lord
Jesus Christ to whom be glory and might world without end. Amen.
HOMILY LXXI.
MATT. XXII. 34--36.
"But when the Pharisees had heard that He had put the Sadducees to silence,
they were gathered together; and one of them, which was a lawyer, asked Him a
question, tempting Him, and saying, Master, which is the great commandment in the
law?"
AGAIN doth the evangelist express the cause, for which they ought to have
held their peace, and marks their boldness by this also. How and in what way?
Because when those others were put to silence, these again assail Him. For when
they ought even for this to hold their peace, they strive to urge further their
former endeavors,(1) and put forward the lawyer, not desiring to learn, but
making a trial of Him, and ask, "What is the first commandment?"
For since the first commandment was this, "Thou shalt love the Lord thy
God," thinking that He would afford them some handle, as though He would amend
it, for the sake of showing that Himself too was God, they propose the question.
What then saith Christ? Indicating from what they were led to this; from having
no charity, from pining with envy. from being seized by jealousy, He saith,
"Thou shalt love the Lord thy God. This is the first and great commandment.(2)
And the second is like unto this(3) Thou shalt love thy neighbor as thyself."(4)
But wherefore "like unto this?" Because this makes the way for that, and
by it is again established; "For every one that doeth evil hateth the light,
neither cometh to the light;'(5) and again, "The fool hath said in his heart,
There is no God." And what in conssequence of this? "They are corrupt, and become
abminable in their ways."(6) And again, "The love of money is the root of all
evils; which while some coveted after they have erred from the faith; "(7) and,
"He that loveth me, will keep my commandment."(8)
But His commandments, and the sum of them, are, "Thou shalt love the Lord
thy God, and thy neighbor as thyself." If therefore to love God is to love
one's neighbor, "For if thou lovest me," He saith, "O Peter, feed my sheep,"(9)
but to love one's neighbor worketh a keeping of the commandments, with reason
doth He say, "On these hang all the law and the prophets."(10) "For charity
envieth not."(1) By this He shows Himself to be submissive both to the law and to the
prophets.
But wherefore doth Matthew say that he asked, tempting Him, but Mark the
contrary? "For when Jesus," he saith, "saw that he answered discretly, He said
unto him, Thou art not far from the kingdom of God."(2)
They are not contradicting each other, but indeed fully agreeing. For he
asked indeed, tempting, at the beginning, but being benefitted by the answer,
was commended. For not at the beginning did He commend him, but when he had said,
"That to love his neighbor is more than whole burnt sacrifices," then He
saith, "Thou art not far from the kingdom;" because he overlooked low things, and
embraced the first principle of virtue. For indeed all those are for the sake of
this, as well the Sabbath as the rest.
And not even so did He make His commendation perfect, but yet deficient.
For His saying, "Thou art not far off," indicates that he is yet falling short,
that he might seek after what was deficient.
But if, when He said, "There is one God, and there is none other but He,"
He commended him, wonder not, but by this too observe, how He answers according
to the opinion of them that come unto Him. For although men say ten thousand
things about Christ unworthy of His glory, yet this at any rate they will not
dare to say, that He is not God at all. Wherefore then doth He praise him that
said, that beside the Father, there is no other God?
Not excepting Himself from being God; away with the thought; but since it
was not yet time to disclose His Godhead, He suffers him to remain in the
former doctrine, and praises him for knowing well the ancient principles, so as to
make him fit for the doctrine of the New Testament, which He is bringing in its
season.
And besides, the saying, "There is one God, and there is none other but
He," both in the Old Testament and everywhere, is spoken not to the rejection of
the Son, but to make the distinction from idols. So that when praising this man
also, who had thus spoken, He praises him in this mind.
Then since He had answered, He asks also: in turn, "What think ye of
Christ, whose Son is He? They say unto Him, The Son of David."(3)
See after how many miracles, after how many signs, after how many
question, after how great a display of His unanimity with the Father, as well in words,
as in deeds; after having praised this man that said, that there is one God,
He asks the question, that they may not be able to say, that He did miracles
indeed, yet was an adversary to the law, and a foe to God.
Therefore, after so many things, He asks these questions, secretly leading
them on to confess Him also to be God. And the disciples He asked first what
the others say, and then themselves; but these not so; for surely they would
have said a deceiver, and a wicked one, as speaking all things without fear. So
for this cause He inquires for the opinion of these men themselves.
For since He was now about to go on to His passion, He sees forth the
prophecy that plainly proclaims Him to be Lord; and not as having come to do this
without occasion, nor as having made this His aim, but from a reasonable cause.
For having asked them first, since they answered not the truth concerning
Him (for they said He was a mere man), to overthrow their mistaken opinion, He
thus introduces David proclaiming His Godhead. For they indeed supposed that He
was a mere man, wherefore also they said, "the Son of David;"(4) but He to
correct this brings in the prophet witnessing to His being Lord, and the
genuineness of His Sonship, and His equality in honor with His Father.
And not even at this doth He stop, but in order to move them to fear, He
adds what followeth also, saying, "Till I make Thine enemies Thy footstool;"(5)
that at least in this way He might gain them over.
And that they may not say, that it was in flattery he so called Him, and
that this was a human judgment, see what He saith, "How then doth David in
spirit call Him Lord?" See how submissively He introduces the sentence and judgment
concerning Himself. First. He had said, "What think ye? Whose Son is He?" so by
a question to bring them to an answer. Then since they said, "the Son of
David," He said not, "And yet David saith these things," but again in this order of
a question, "How then doth David in spirit call Him Lord?" in order that the
sayings might not give offense to them. Wherefore neither did He say, What think
ye of me, but of Christ. For this reason the apostles also reasoned
submissively, saying, "Let us speak freely of the Patriarch David, that he is both dead
and buried."(1)
And He Himself too in like manner for this cause introduces the doctrine
in the way of question and inference, saying, "How then doth David in spirit
call Him Lord, saying, The Lord said unto my Lord, Sit Thou on my right hand,
until I make Thy foes Thy footstool;"(2) and again, "If David then call Him Lord,
how is He then his Son,"(3) not taking away the fact that He is his Son, away
with the thought; for He would not then have reproved Peter for this,(4) but to
correct their secret thoughts. So that when He saith, "Howls He his Son?" He
meaneth this, not so as ye say. For they said, that He is Son only, and not also
Lord. And this after the testimony, and then submissively, "If David then call
Him Lord, how is He his Son?"
But, nevertheless, even when they had heard these things, they answered
nothing, for neither did they wish to learn any of the things that were needful.
Wherefore He Himself addeth and saith, that "He is his Lord." Or rather not
even this very thing doth He say without support, but having taken the prophet
with Him, because of His being exceedingly distrusted by them, and evil reported
of amongst them. To which fact we ought to have especial regard, and if anything
be said by Him that is lowly and submissive, not to be offended, for the cause
is this, with many other things also, that He talks with them in condescension.
Wherefore now also He delivers His doctrine in the manner of question and
answer; but He darkly intimates even in this way His dignity. For it was not as
much to be called Lord of the Jews, as of David.
But mark thou also, I pray thee, how seasonable it is. For when He had
said, "There is one Lord," then He spake of Himself that He is Lord, and showed it
by prophecy, no more by His works only. And He showeth the Father Himself
taking vengeance upon them in His behalf, for He saith, "Until I make Thine enemies
Thy footstool," and great unanimity even hereby on the part of Him that begat
Him towards Himself, and honor. And upon His reasonings with them He doth set
this end high and great, and sufficient to close fast their mouths.
For they were silent from thenceforth, not willingly, but from their
having nothing to say; and they received so deadly a blow, as no longer to dare to
attempt the same things any more. For, "no one," it is said, "durst from that
day forth ask Him any more questions."(5)
And this was no little advantage to the multitude.(6) Therefore also unto
them doth He henceforth direct His word, having removed the wolves, and having
repulsed their plots.
For those men gained nothing, taken captive by vainglory, and having
fallen upon this terrible passion. For terrible is this passion and many-headed, for
some set their heart upon power for the sake of this, some on wealth, some on
strength. But proceeding in order it goes on unto almsgiving also, and fasting,
and prayers, and teaching, and many are the heads of this monster.
But to be vainglorious indeed about those other things is nothing
wonderful; but to be so about fasting and prayer, this is strange and lamentable.
But that we may not again blame only, come and let us tell the means, by
which we shall avoid this. Against whom shall we prepare to contend first,
against those that are vainglorious of money, or those of dress, or those of places
of power, or those of sciences, or those of art, or those of their person, or
those of beauty, or those of ornaments, or those of cruelty, or those of
humanity and almsgiving, or those of wickedness, or those of death, or those after
death? For indeed, as I have said, this passion hath many links? and goes on
beyond our life. For such a one, it is said, is dead, and that he may be held in
admiration, hath charged that such and such things be done; and therefore such a
one is poor, such a one rich.
For the grievous thing is this, that even of opposite things is it made up.
Against whom then shall we stand, and let ourselves in array first? For
one and the same discourse suffices not against all. Will ye then that it be
against them that are vainglorious about almsgiving?
To me at least it seems well; for exceedingly do I love this thing, and am
pained at seeing it marred, and vainglory plotting against it, like a
pandering nurse against some royal damsel. For she feeds her indeed, but for disgrace
and mischief, prostituting her and commanding her to despise her father; but to
deck herself to please unholy and often despicable men; and invests her with
such a dress, as strangers wish, disgraceful, and dishonorable, not such as the
father.
Come now, then, let us take our aim against these; and let there be an
almsgiving made in abundance for display to the multitude. Surely then, first
vainglory leads her out of her Father's chamber. And whereas her Father requires
not to appear so much as to the left hand,(1) she displays her to the slaves, and
to the vulgar, that have not even known her.
Seest thou a harlot, and pander, casting her into the love of foolish men,
that according as they require, so she may order herself? Dost thou desire to
see how it renders such a soul not a harlot only, but insane also?
Mark then her mind. For when she lets go heaven and runs after fugitives
and menial slaves, pursuing through streets and lanes them that hate her, the
ugly and deformed, them that are not willing so much as to look at her, them
that, when she burns with love towards them, hate her, what can be more insane than
this? For no one do the multitude hate so much, as those that want the glory
they have to bestow. Countless accusations at least do they frame against them,
and the result is the same, as if any one were to bring down a virgin daughter
of the king from the royal throne, and to require her to prostitute herself to
gladiators, who abhorred her. These then, as much as thou pursuest them, so
much do they turn away from thee; but God, if thou seek the glory that cometh from
Him, so much the more both draws thee unto Himself, and commends thee, and
great is the reward He renders unto thee.
But if thou art minded in another way also to discern the mischief
thereof, when thou givest for display and ostentation, consider how great the sorrow
that then comes upon thee, and how continual the desponding, while Christ's
voice is heard in thine ears, saying,(2) "Thou hast lost all thy reward." For in
every matter indeed vainglory is a bad thing. yet most of all in beneficence, for
it is the utmost cruelty, making a show of the calamities of others, and all
but upbraiding those in poverty. For if to mention one's own good actions is to
upbraid, what dost thou think it is to publish them even to many others.
How then shall we escape the danger? If we learn how to give alms, if we
see after whose good report we are to seek. For tell me, who has the skill of
almsgiving? Plainly, it is God, who hath made known the thing. who best of all
knows it, and practises it without limit. What then? If thou art learning to be a
wrestler, to whom dost thou look? or to whom dost thou display thy doings in
the wrestling school, to the seller of herbs, and of fish, or to the trainer?
And ye they are many, and he is one. What then, if while the admires thee, others
deride thee. wilt thou not with him deride them?
What, if thou art learning to box, wilt thou not look in like manner to
him who knows how to teach this? And if thou art practising oratory, wilt thou
not accept the praise of the teacher of rhetoric, and despise the rest.
How then is it other than absurd, in other arts to look to the teacher
only, but here to do the contrary? although the loss be not equal. For there, if
you wrestle according to the opinion of the multitude, and not that of the
teacher, the loss is in the wrestling; but here it is in eternal life. Thou art
become like to God in giving alms; be thou then like Him in not making a display.
For even He said, when healing, that they should tell no man.
But dost thou desire to be called merciful amongst men? And what is the
gain? The gain is nothing; but the loss infinite. For these very persons, whom
thou callest to be witnesses. become robbers of thy treasures that are in the
heavens; or rather not these, but ourselves, who spoil our own possessions, and
scatter what we have laid up above.
O new calamity! this strange passion. Where moth corrupteth not, nor thief
breaketh through, vainglory scattereth. This is the moth of those treasures
there; this the thief of our wealth in heaven; this steals away the riches that
cannot be spoiled; this mars and corrupts all. For because the devil saw that
that place is impregnable to thieves and to the worm, and the other plots against
them, he by vainglory steals away the wealth.
But dost thou desire glory? Doth not then that suffice thee which is given
by the receiver himself, that from our gracious God, but dost thou set thine
heart on that from men also? Take heed, lest thou undergo the contrary, lest
some condemn thee as not showing mercy, but making a display, and seeking honor,
as making a show of the calamities of others.
For indeed the showing of mercy is a mystery. Shut therefore the doors,
that none may see what it is not pious to display. For our mysteries too are
above all things, a showing of God's mercy and loving-kindness. According to His
great mercy, He had mercy on us being disobedient.
And the first prayer too is full of mercy, when we entreat for the
energumens; and the second again, for others under penance seeking for much mercy; and
the third also for ourselves, and this puts forward the innocent children of
the people entreating God for mercy. For since we condemn ourselves for sins,
for them that have sinned much and deserve to be blamed we ourselves cry; but for
ourselves the children; for the imitators of whose simplicity the kingdom of
heaven is reserved. For this image shows this, that they who are like those
children, lowly and simple, these above all men are able to deliver the guilty by
their prayers.
But the mystery itself, of how much mercy, of how much love to man it is
full, the initiated know.
Do thou then, when according to thy power thou art showing mercy to a man,
shut the doors, let the object of thy mercy see it only; but if it be
possible, not even he. But if thou set them open, thou art profanely exposing thy
mystery.
Consider that the very person, whose praise thou seekest, even himself
will condemn thee; and if he be a friend, will accuse thee to himself; but if an
enemy, he will deride thee unto others also. And thou wilt undergo the opposite
of what thou desirest. For thou indeed desirest that he should call thee the
merciful man; but he will not call thee this, but the vainglorious, the
man-pleaser, and other names far more grievous than these.
But if thou shouldest hide it, he will call thee all that is opposite to
this; the merciful, the kind. For God suffers it not to be hidden; but if thou
conceal it, the other will make it known, and greater will be the admiration,
and more abundant the gain. So that even for this very object of being glorified,
to make a display is against us; for with respect to the thing unto which we
most hasten and press, as to this most especially is this thing against us. For
so far from obtaining the credit of being merciful, we obtain even the
contrary, and besides this, great is the loss we undergo.
For every motive then let us abstain from this, and set our love on God's
praise alone. For thus shall we both attain to honor here, and enjoy the
eternal blessings, by the grace and love towards man of our Lord Jesus Christ, to
whom be glory and might world without end. Amen.
HOMILY LXXII.
MATT. XXIII. 1--3.
Then spake Jesus to the multitudes and to His disciples, saying, The Scribes
and the Pharisees sit in Moses' seat: all therefore whatsoever they bid you do,
that do;(1) but do not after their works."
Then. When? When He had said these things, when He had stopped their
mouths; when He had brought them that they should no more dare to tempt Him; when He
had shown their state incurable.
And since He had made mention of "the Lord" and "my Lord,"2 He recurs
again to the law. And yet the law said nothing of this kind, but, "The Lord thy God
is one Lord."(3) But Scripture calls the whole Old Testament the law.
But these things He saith, showing by all thinks His full agreement with
Him that begat Him. For if He were opposed, He would have said the opposite
about the law; but now He commands so great reverence to be shown towards it, that,
even when they that teach it are depraved, He charges them to hold to it. But
here He is discoursing about their life and morals, since this was chiefly the
cause of their unbelief, their depraved life, and the love of glory. To amend
therefore His hearers; that which in the first place most contributes to
salvation, not to despise our teachers, neither to rise up against our priests, this
doth He command with superabundant earnestness. But He does not only command it,
but also Himself doth it. For though they were depraved, He doth not depose
them from their dignity; to them rendering their condemnation heavier, and to His
disciples leaving no cloke for disobedience.
I mean, that lest any one should say, that because my teacher is bad,
therefore am I become more remiss, He takes away even this pretext. So much at any
rate did He establish their authority, although they were wicked men, as even
after so heavy an accusation to say, "All whatsoever they command you to do,
do." For they speak not their own words, but God's, what He appointed for laws by
Moses. And mark how much honor He showed towards Moses, again showing His
agreement with the Old Testament; since indeed even by this doth He make them
objects of reverence. "For they sit," He saith, "on Moses' seat." For because He was
not able to make them out worthy of credit by their life, He doth it from the
grounds that were open to Him, from their seat, and their succession from him.
But when thou hearest all, do not understand all the law, as, for instance, the
ordinances about meats, those about sacrifices, and the like for how was He to
say so of these things, which He had taken away beforehand? but He meant all
things that correct the moral principle, and amend the disposition, and agree
with the laws of the New Testament, and suffer them not any more to be under the
yoke of the law.
Wherefore then doth He give these things divine authority, not from the
law of grace, but from Moses? Because it was not yet time, before the
crucifixion, for these things to be plainly declared.
But to me He seems, in addition to what has been said, to be providing for
another object, in saying these things. For since He was on the point of
accusing them, that He might not seem in the sight of the foolish to set His heart
on this authority of theirs, or for enmity to be doing these things, first He
removed this thought, and having set himself clear from suspicion, then begins
His accusation. And for what intent doth He convict them, and run out into a long
discourse against them? To set the multitude on their guard, so that they
might not fall into the same sins. For neither is dissuading like pointing out
those that have offended; much as recommending what is right, is not like bringing
forward those that have done well. For this cause also He is beforehand in
saying, "Do not after their works." For, lest they should suppose, because of their
listening to them, they ought also to imitate them, He uses this means of
correction, and makes what seems to be their dignity a charge against them. For
what can be more wretched than a teacher, when the preservation of his disciples
is, not to give heed to his life? So that what seemeth to be their dignity is a
most heavy charge against them, when they are shown to live such a life, as
they that imitate are ruined.
For this cause He also falls upon His accusations against them, but not
for this only, but that He might show, that both their former unbelief wherewith
they had not believed, and the crucifixion after this, which they dared to
perpetrate, were not a charge against Him who was crucified and disbelieved, but
against their perverseness.
But see whence He begins, and whence He aggravates His blame of them. "For
they say," He saith, and do not." For every one is worthy of blame in
transgressing the law, but especially he that bears the authority of teaching, for
doubly and triply doth he deserve to be condemned. For one cause, because he
transgresses; for another, that as he ought to amend others, and then halteth, he is
worthy of a double punishment, because of his dignity; and in the third place,
that he even corrupts the more, as committing such transgression in a teacher's
place.
And together with these He mentions also another charge against them, that
they are harsh to those accountable to them.
"For they bind heavy burdens, and grievous to be borne, and lay them on
men's shoulders, but they will not move them with their finger."(1) He mentions
here a twofold wickedness, their requiring great and extreme strictness of life,
without any indulgence, from those over whom they rule, and their allowing to
themselves great security; the opposite to which the truly good ruler ought to
hold; in what concerns himself, to be an unpardoning and severe judge, but in
the matters of those whom he rules, to be gentle and ready to make allowances;
the contrary to which was the conduct of these men.
2. For such are all they who practise self restraint in mere words,
unpardoning and grievous to bear as having no experience of the difficulty in
actions. And this itself too is no small fault, and in no ordinary way increases the
former charge.
But do thou mark, I pray thee, how He aggravates this accusation also. For
He did not say, "they cannot," but, "they will not." And He did not say, "to
bear," but, "to move with a finger," that is, not even to come near them, nor to
touch them.
But wherein are they earnest, and vigorous? In the things forbidden. For,
"all their works they do," He saith, "to be seen of men."(1) These things He
saith, accusing them in respect of vainglory, which kind of thing was their ruin.
For the things before were signs of harshness and remissness, but these of the
mad desire of glory. This drew them off from God, this caused them to strive
before other spectators, and ruined them. For whatever kind of spectators any
one may have, since it hath become his study to please these, such also are the
contests he exhibits And he that wrestles among the noble, such also are the
conflicts he takes in hand, but he among the cold and supine, himself also becomes
more remiss. For instance, hath any one a beholder that delights in ridicule?
he himself too becomes a mover of ridicule, that he may delight the spectator:
hath another one who is earnest minded, and practises self-government? he
endeavors himself to be such as he is, since such is the disposition of him who
praises him.
But see again that here too the charge is with aggravation. For neither is
it that they do some things in this way, some in another way, but all things
absolutely this way.
Then, having blamed them for vainglory, He shows that it is not even about
great and necessary things they are vainglorious (for neither had they these,
but were destitute of good works), but for things without warmth or worth, and
such as were certain proofs of their baseness, the phylacteries, the borders;
of their garments. "For they make broad their phylacteries," He saith, "and
enlarge the borders of their garments."(1)
And what are these phylacteries, and these borders? Since they were
continually forgetting God's benefits, He commanded His marvellous works to be
inscribed on little tablets, and that these should be suspended from their hands
(wherefore also He said, "They shall be immoveable in thine eyes"),(2) which they
called phylacteries; as many of our women now wear Gospels hung from their
necks. And in order that by another thing again they may be reminded, like as many
often do, binding round their finger with a piece of linen or a thread, as being
likely to forget, this God enjoined them as children to do, "to sew a ribbon
of blue on their garments, upon the fringe that hung round their feet, that they
might look at it, and remember the commandments;"(3) and they were called
"borders."
In these things then they were diligent, making wide the strips of the
tablets, and enlarging the borders of their garments; which was a sign of the most
extreme vanity. For wherefore art thou vainglorious, and dost make these
wide? what, is this thy good work? what cloth it profit thee at all, if thou gain
not the good results from them. For God seeks not the enlarging of these and
making them wide, but our remembering His benefits. But if for almsgiving and
prayer, although they be attended with labor, and be good deeds on our parts, we
must not seek vainglory, how dost thou, O Jew, pride thyself in these things,
which most of all convict thy remissness.
But they not in these only, but in other little things, suffered from this
disease.
For, "they love," He saith, "the uppermost rooms(4) at feasts, and the
chief seats in the synagogues, and greetings in the markets, and to be called of
men, Rabbi."(5) For these things, although one may think them small, yet are
they a cause of great evils. These things have overthrown both cities and churches.
And it comes upon me now even to weep, when I hear of the first seats, and
the greetings, and consider how many ills were hence engendered to the
churches of God, which it is not necessary to publish to you now; nay rather as many
as are aged men do not even need to learn these things from us.(6)
But mark thou, I pray thee, how vainglory prevailed; when they were
commanded not to be vainglorious, even in the synagogues, where they had entered to
discipline others.
For to have this feeling at feasts, to howsoever great a degree, doth not
seem to be so dreadful a thing; although even there the teachers ought to be
held in reverence, and not in the church only, but everywhere. And like as a
man, wherever he may appear, is manifestly distinguished from the brutes; so also
ought the teacher, both speaking and holding his peace, and dining, and doing
whatever it may be, to be distinguished as well by his gait, as by his look, and
by his garb, and by all things generally. But they were on every account
objects of ridicule, and in every respect disgraced themselves, making it their
study to follow what they ought to flee. For they love them, it is said; but if the
loving them be a matter of blame, what a thing must the doing them be; and to
hunt and strive after them, how great an evil.
3. The other things then He carried no further than to accuse them, as
being small and trifling, and as though His disciples. needed not at all to be
corrected about these matters; but what was a cause of all the evils, even
ambition, and the violent seizing of the teacher's chair, this He brings forward, and
corrects with diligence, touching this vehemently and earnestly charging them.
For what saith He? "Bat be not ye called Rabbi." Then follows the cause
also; "For one is your master, and all ye are brethren;"(1) and one hath nothing
more than another, in respect of his knowing nothing from himself. Wherefore
Paul also saith, "For who is Paul, and who is Apollos, but ministers?"(2) He said
not masters. And again, "Call not, father,"(3) not that they should not call,
but they may know whom they ought to call Father, in the highest sense. For
like as the master is not a master principally; so neither is the father. For He
is cause of all, both of the masters, and of the fathers.
And again He adds, "Neither be ye called guides, for one is your guide,
even Christ;"(4) and He said not, I. For like as above He said, "What think ye of
Christ?"(5) and He said not, "of me," so here too.
But I should be glad to ask here, what they would say, who are repeatedly
applying the term one, one, to the Father alone, to the rejection of the
Only-begotten. Is the Father guide? All would declare it, and none would gainsay it.
And yet "one," He saith, "is your guide, even Christ." For like as Christ,
being called the one guide, casts not out the Father from being guide; even so the
Father, being called Master, doth not cast out the Son from being Master. For
the expression, one, one, is spoken in contra-distinction to men, and the rest
of the creation.
Having warned them therefore against this grievous pest, and amended them,
He instructs also how they may escape it; by humility. Wherefore He adds also,
"He that is greatest among you shall be your servant. For whosoever shall
exalt himself shall be abased, and whosoever shall abase himself shall be
exalted."(6)
For nothing is equal to the practice of modesty, wherefore He is
continually reminding them of this virtue, both when He brought the children into the
midst, and now. And, when on the mount, beginning the beatitudes, He began from
hence. And in this place, He plucks it up by the roots hereby, saying, "He that
abaseth himself shall be exalted."
Seest thou how He draws off the hearer right over to the contrary thing.
For not only doth He forbid him to set his heart upon the first place, but
requires him to follow after the last. For so shalt thou obtain thy desire, He
saith. Wherefore he that pursues his desire for the first, must follow after the
last place. "For he that abaseth himself shall be exalted."
And where shall we find this humility? Will ye that we go again to the
city of virtue, the tents of the holy men, the mountains. I mean, and the groves?
For there too shall we see this height of humility.
For men, some illustrious from their rank in the world, some from their
wealth, in every way put themselves down, by their vesture, by their dwelling, by
those to whom they minister; and, as in written characters, they throughout
all things inscribe humility.
And the things that are incentives of arrogance, as to dress well, and to
build houses splendidly, and to have many servants, things which often drive
men even against their will to arrogance; these are all taken away. For they
themselves light their fire, they themselves cleave the logs, themselves cook,
themselves minister to those that come there.
No one can be heard insulting there, nor seen insulted, nor commanded, nor
giving commands; but all are devoted to those that are waited on, and every
one washes the strangers' feet, and there is much contention about this. And he
doeth it, not inquiring who it is, neither if he be a slave, nor if he be free;
but in the case of every one fulfills this service. No man there is great nor
mean. What then? Is there confusion? Far from it, but the highest order. For if
any one be mean, he that is great seeth not this, but hath accounted himself
again to be inferior even to him, and so becomes great.
There is one table for all, both for them that are served, and for them
that serve; the same food, the same clothes, the same dwellings, the same manner
of life. He is great there, who eagerly seizes the mean task. There is not mine
and thine, but this expression is exterminated, that is a cause of countless
wars.
4. And why dost thou marvel, if there be one manner of life and table and
dress for all, since indeed there is even one soul to all, not in substance
only (for this is with all men also), but in love? how then should it ever be
lifted up itself against itself? There is no wealth and poverty there, honor and
dishonor; how then should haughtiness and arrogance find an entrance? For they
are indeed little and great in respect of their virtue; but, as I have said, no
one seeth this. He that is little, feels not pain, as despised; for neither is
there any one to despise him; and should any one spurn him, this above all are
they taught, to be despised, to be spurned, to be set at nought, in word and in
deed. And with the poor and maimed do they associate, and their tables are full
of these guests; so that for this are they worthy of the heavens. And one
tends the wounds of the mutilated, another leads the blind by the hand, a third
bears him that is lamed of his leg.
There is no multitude of flatterers or parasites there; or rather they
know not even what flattery is; whence then could they be lifted up at any time?
For there is great equality amongst them, wherefore also there is much facility
for virtue.
For by these are they of an inferior sort better instructed, than if they
were compelled to give up the first place to them.
For like as the impetuous man derives instruction from him that is
smitten, and submits to it; so the ambitious from him that claims not glory, but
despises it. This they do there abundantly, and as the strife is great with us to
obtain the first place, so great is it with them not to obtain it, but utterly to
refuse it; and great is their earnest desire who shall have the advantage in
honoring, not in being honored.
And besides, even their very employments persuade them to practise
moderation, and not to be high-swollen. For who, I pray thee, digging in the earth,
and watering, and planting, or making baskets, or weaving sackcloth, or
practising any other handy works, will ever be proud? Who dwelling in poverty and
wrestling with hunger, will ever be sick of this disease? There is not one. Therefore
humility is easy to them. And like as here, it is a hard thing to be lowly
minded, for the multitude of them who applaud and admire us, so there it is
exceedingly easy.
And that man gives heed only to the wilderness, and sees birds flying, and
trees waving, and a breeze blowing, and streams rushing through glens. Whence
then should he be lifted up who dwells in solitude so great?
Not however that therefore we have from this an excuse, in that we are
proud when living in the midst of men. For surely Abraham, when amidst Canaanites,
said, "I am but dust and ashes;"(1) and David, when in the midst of camps,(2)
"I am a worm, and no man;"(3) and the apostle, in the midst of the world, "I am
not meet to be called an apostle."(4) What comfort shall we have then; what
plea, when even, having such great examples, we do not practise moderation? For
even as they are worthy of countless crowns, having been the first that went the
way of virtue, even so are we deserving of countless punishments, who not even
after those that are departed, and are set before us in books, no nor even
after these that are living, and held in admiration through their deeds, are drawn
on to the like emulation.
For what couldest thou say, for not being amended? Art thou ignorant of
letters, and hast not looked into the Scriptures that thou mightest learn the
virtues of them of old? To say the truth, this is itself blameworthy, when the
church is constantly standing open, not to enter in, and partake of those sacred
streams.
However, although thou know not the departed by the Scriptures, these
living men thou oughtest to see. But is there no one to lead thee? Come to me, and
I will show thee the places of refuge of these holy men; come and learn thou of
them something useful. Shining lamps are these in every part of the earth; as
walls are they set about the cities. For this cause have they occupied the
deserts, that they may instruct thee to despise the tumults in the midst of the
world.
For they, as being strong, are able even in the midst of the raging of the
waters to enjoy a calm; but thou, who art leaky on every side, hast need of
tranquility, and to take breath a little, after the successive waves. Go then
there continually, that, having purged away the abiding stain by their prayers and
admonitions, thou mayest both pass in the best manner the present life, and
attain unto the good things to come, by the grace and love towards man of our
Lord Jesus Christ, by whom and with whom, be unto the Father, together with the
Holy Ghost, glory, might, honor, now and ever, and world with. out end. Amen.
HOMILY LXXIII.
MATT. XXIII. 14.
Woe unto you, Scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites! for ye devour widows' houses,
and for a pretense make long prayers: therefore ye shall receive greater
damnation."
AFTER this, next He derides them for gluttony: and the grievous thing was,
that not from rich men's goods, but from the poor they indulged their own
belly, and aggravated their poverty, which they should have relieved. For neither
did they merely eat, but devoured.
Moreover also the manner of their overreaching was yet more grievous, "for
a pretense making long prayers."
For every one is worthy of vengeance who doeth any evil thing; but he that
is deriving even the reason for so doing from godliness, and is using this
cloke for his wickedness, is justly liable to a far more grievous punishment. And
wherefore did He not depose them? Because the time suffered it not as yet. So
therefore He lets them alone for a time, but by His sayings, He secures that the
people be not deceived, lest, through the dignity of those men, they be drawn
on to the same emulation.
For as He had said, "Whatsoever they bid you do, that do;" He shows how
many things they do amiss, lest from thence He should be supposed amongst the
unwise to commit all to them.
"Woe unto you, for ye shut up the kingdom against men; for ye neither go
in yourselves, neither suffer ye them that are entering to go in."(2) But if to
profit no one be a charge against a man, even to hurt and hinder, what plea
hath that? But what means, "them that are entering in?" Them that are fit for it.
For when they were to lay injunctions on others, they used to make the burdens
intolerable, but when they themselves were to do any of the things required, on
the contrary, so far from doing anything, they went much beyond this in
wickedness, they even used to corrupt others. These are they that are called
pests,(3) who make their employment the ruin of others, standing right contrary to
teachers. For if it be the part of a teacher to save that which is perishing, to
destroy that which is on the point of being saved is that of a destroyer.
After this, again another charge: compass sea and land to make one
proselyte, and when he is made, ye make him twofold more the child of hell than
yourselves;"(4) that is, not even the fact that hardly ye have taken him, and with
endless toils, induces you to be sparing towards him, although of the things we
have hardly acquired, we are more sparing, but you not even this renders more
gentle.
Here He lays to their charge two things; one, that they are unprofitable
for the salvation of the many, and need much toil in order to win over even one;
another, that they were remiss in the preservation of him whom they had
gained, or rather that they were not only careless, but even traitors, by their
wickedness in their life corrupting him, and making him worse. For when the disciple
sees his teachers to be such as these, he becomes worse than they. For he
stops not at his teacher's wickedness; but as when his teacher is virtuous, he
imitates him, so when he is bad, he even goes beyond him, by reason of our
proneness to what is evil.
And He calls him "a child of hell," that is, a very hell. And He said
"twofold more than you," that He might both alarm those, and make these feel the
more severely, because they are teachers of wickedness. And not this only, but
because they labor to instill into their disciples a greater wickedness,
hardening them to a much greater depravity than they have, and this is above all a mark
of a depraved soul.
Then He derides them for folly also, because they bade them disregard the
greater commandments. And yet before He had said the opposite, that "they bind
heavy burdens, and grievous to be borne." But these things too they did again
and were doing everything for the corruption of those who were subject to them,
in little things requiring strictness, and despising the great.
"For ye pay tithe," He saith, "of mint and anise, and have omitted(1) the
weightier matters of the law, judgment, and mercy, and faith. These ought ye to
have done, and not to leave the others undone."(2)
Here then He naturally saith it, where it is tithe and almsgiving, for
what doth it hurt to give alms? But not to keep the law; for neither doth it say
thus. Therefore here indeed He saith, "These ought ye to have done;" but where
He is speaking about clean and unclean, He no longer adds this, but makes a
distinction, and shows that the inward purity is necessarily followed by the
outward, but the converse is no longer so.
For where there is a plea of love to man, He passes it over lightly, for
this very reason, and because it was not yet time expressly and plainly to
revoke the things of the law. But where it is an observance of bodily purification,
He overthrows it more plainly.
So, therefore, while with respect to alms He saith, "These ought ye to
have done, and not to leave the others undone," touching purifications He speaks
not on this wise, but what? "Ye make clean," He saith, "the outside of the cup
and the platter, but within they are full of extortion, and injustice. Cleanse
that which is within the cup, that the outside may be clean also."(3) And He
took it from a thing confessed and manifest, from a cup and platter.
2. Then, to show that there is no harm arising from despising bodily
cleansings, but very great vengeance from not regarding the purifications of the
soul, which is virtue, He called these "a gnat," for they are small and
nothing, but those other a camel, for they were beyond what men could bear.
Wherefore also He saith, "Straining at the gnat, and swallowing the camel."(4) For
indeed the one were enacted for the sake of the other, I mean of mercy and
judgment; so that not even then did they profit being done alone. For whereas the
little things were mentioned for the sake of the great, and after that these last
were neglected, and labor was spent on those alone, nothing was gained even
then by this. For the greater followed not the lesser, but the lesser were sure to
follow these greater.
But these things He saith to show, that even before grace was come, these
were not among the principal things, or amongst those upon which men should
spend their labor, but the matters required were different. But if before the
grace they were so, much more when high commandments had come, were these things
unprofitable, and it was not meet to practise them at all.
In every case then is vice a grievous thing, but especially when it does
not so much as think it needs amendment; and it is yet more grievous, when it
thinks itself sufficient even to amend others; to express which Christ calls them
"blind guides." For if for a blind man not to think he needs a guide be
extreme misery and wretchedness; when he wishes himself to guide others, see to what
a gulf it leads.
But these things He said, by all intimating their mad desire of glory, and
their exceeding frenzy concerning this pest. For this became a cause to them
of all their evils, namely, that they did all things for display. This both led
them away from the faith, and caused them to neglect what really is virtue, and
induced them to busy themselves about bodily purifyings only, neglecting the
purifications of the soul. So therefore to lead them into what really is virtue,
and to the purifyings of the soul, He makes mention of mercy, and judgment,
and faith. For these are the things that comprise our life, these are what purify
the soul, justice, love to man, truth; the one inclining us to pardon (5) and
not suffering us to be excessively severe and unforgiving to them that sin (for
then shall we gain doubly, both becoming kind to man, and hence meeting also
ourselves with much kindness from the God of all), and causing us both to
sympathize with them that are de-spitefully entreated, and to assist them; the other
not suffering them to be deceitful, and crafty.
But neither when He saith, "These ought ye to have done, and not to leave
the others undone," doth He say it as introducing a legal observance; away with
the thought;(6) neither with regard to the platter and the cup, when He said,
"Cleanse that which is within the cup and platter, that the outside of them may
be clean also," doth He bring us unto the old regard for little things, but on
the contrary indeed, He doth all things to show it to be superfluous. For He
said not, Cleanse the outside of them also, but that which is within, and the
outside is sure to follow.
And besides, neither is it concerning a cup and platter he is speaking,
but of soul and body, by the outside meaning the body, by the inside the soul.
But if with regard to the platter there be need of that which is within much more
with regard to thee.
But ye do the contrary, saith He, observing things trifling and external,
ye neglect what are great and inward: whence very great mischief arises, for
that thinking ye have duly performed all, ye despise the other things; and
despising them, ye do not so much as strive or attempt to perform them.
After this, He again derides them for vainglory, calling 'them "whited
sepulchers."(1) and unto all adding, "ye hypocrites;" which thing is the cause of
all their evils, and the origin of their ruin. And He did not merely call them
whited sepulchers, but said, that they were full of uncleanness and hypocrisy.
And these things He spake, indicating the cause wherefore they did not believe,
because they were full of hypocrisy and iniquity.
But these things not Christ only, but the prophets also constantly lay to
their charge, that they spoil, that their rulers judge not according to the
rule of justice, and every where you may find the sacrifices indeed refused, but
these things required. So that there is nothing strange, nothing new, neither in
the lawgiving, nor in the accusation, nay not even in the comparison of the
sepulchre. For the prophet makes mention thereof, neither did he call them merely
a sepulchre, "but their throat an open sepulchre."(2)
Such are many men now also, decking themselves indeed outwardly, but full
of iniquity within. For now too there is many a mode, and many a care for
outward purifications, but of those in the soul not so much as one. But if indeed
any one should tear open each man's conscience, many worms and much corruption
would he find, and an ill savor beyond utterance; unreasonable and wicked lusts I
mean, which are more unclean than worms.
3. But that "they" should be such persons is not "so" dreadful a thing
(although it be dreadful), but that "you," that have been counted worthy to become
temples of God, should of a sudden have become sepulchers, having as much ill
savor, this is extreme wretchedness. He in whom Christ dwells, and the Holy
Spirit hath worked, and such great mysteries, that this man should be a sepulchre,
what wretchedness is this? What mournings and lamentations doth this call for,
when the members of Christ have become a tomb of uncleanness? Consider how
thou wast born, of what things thou hast been counted worthy, what manner of
garment thou hast received, how thou wast built a temple without a breach! how fair!
not adorned with gold, neither with pearls, but with the spirit that is more
precious than these.
Consider that no sepulchre is made in a city, so then neither shalt thou
be able to appear in the city above. For if here this is forbidden, much more
there. Or rather even here thou art an object of scorn to all, bearing about a
dead soul, and not to be scorned only, but also to be shunned. For tell me. if
any one were to go round, bearing about a dead body, would not all have rushed
away? would not all have fled? Think this now likewise. For thou goest about,
bearing a spectacle far more grievous than this, a soul deadened by sins, a soul
paralyzed.
Who now will pity such a one? For when thou dost not pity thine own soul,
how shall another pity him that is so cruel, such an enemy to himself?(3) If
any one, where thou didst sleep and eat, had buried a dead body, what wouldest
thou not have done? but thou art burying a dead soul, not where thou dinest, nor
where thou sleepest, but in the members of Christ: and art thou not afraid
lest a thousand lightnings and thunderbolts be hurled from above upon thine head?
And how dost thou even dare to set foot in the churches of God, and in
holy temples, having within thee the savor of so much abomination? For if one
bearing a dead body into the king's courts and burying it would have suffered the
utmost punishment, thou setting thy foot in the sacred courts. and filling the
house with so much ill savor, consider what a punishment thou wilt undergo.
Imitate that harlot who anointed with ointment the feet of Christ, and
filled the whole house with the odor, the opposite to which thou doest to His
house! For what though thou be not sensible of the ill savor? For this most of all
is the grievous part of the disease; wherefore also thou art incurably
diseased, and more grievously than they that are maimed in their bodies, and become
fetid. For that disease indeed is both felt by the sick and is without any blame,
nay even is deserving of pity; but this of hatred and punishment.
Since then both in this respect it is more grievous, and from the sick not
being sensible of it as he ought to be; come, give thyself to my words, that I
may teach thee plainly the mischief of it.
But first listen to what thou sayest in the Psalm, "Let my prayer be set
forth in Thy sight as incense."(1) When then not incense, but a stinking smoke
arises from thee, and from thy deeds, what punishment dost thou not deserve to
undergo?
What then is the stinking smoke? Many come in gazing about at the beauty
of women; others curious about the blooming youth of boys. After this, dost thou
not marvel, how bolts are not launched, and all things are not plucked up from
their foundations? For worthy both of thunderbolts and hell are the things
that are done; but God, who is long-suffering, and of great mercy, forbears awhile
His wrath, calling thee to repentance and amendment.
What doest thou, O man? Art thou curiously looking after women's beauty,
and dost thou not shudder at thus doing despite unto the temple of God? Doth
the church seem to thee a brothel, and less honorable than the market-place. For
in a market-place indeed thou art afraid and ashamed to appear to be looking
after any woman, but in God's temple, when God Himself is discoursing unto thee,
and threatening about these things, thou art committing whoredom and adultery
at the very time in which thou art being told not to do this. And dost thou not
shudder, nor stand amazed?
These things do the spectacles of wantonness teach you, the pest that is
so hard to put down, the deleterious sorceries, the grievous snares of the
thoughtless, the pleasurable destruction of the unchaste
Therefore the prophet also blaming thee, said, "Thine eyes are not good,
neither is thine heart."(2)
It were better for such men to be blind; it were better to be diseased,
than to abuse thine eyes for these purposes.
It were meet indeed that ye had within you the wall to part you from the
women; but since ye are not so minded, our fathers thought it necessary by these
boards(3) to wall you off; since I hear from the eider ones, that of old there
were not so much as these partitions; "For in Christ Jesus there is neither
male nor female."(4) And in the apostle's time also both men and women were
together. Because the men were men, and the women women, but now altogether the
contrary; the women have urged themselves into the manners of courtezans, but the
men are in no better state than frantic horses.
Heard ye not, that the men and women were gathered together in the upper
room, and that congregation was worthy of the heavens? And very reasonably. For
even women then practised much self-denial, and the men gravity and chastity.
Hear, for instance, the seller of purple saying, "If ye have judged me to be
faithful to the Lord, come in, and abide with me."(5) Hear the women, who went
about with the apostles, having taken unto themselves manly courage, Priscilla,
Persis, and the rest; from whom our present women are as far removed as our men
from their men.
4. For then indeed even travelling into far countries women brought not on
themselves evil report; but now even though brought up in a chamber, they
hardly escape this suspicion. But these things arise from their decking of
themselves, and their luxury, Then the business of those women was to spread the word;
but now to appear beauteous, and fair, and comely in countenance. This is glory
to them, this salvation; but of lofty and great works they do not even dream.
What woman exerts herself to make her husband better? what man hath taken
to himself this care to amend his wife? There is not one: but the woman's whole
study is upon the care of ornaments of gold, and raiment, and the other
adornments of the person, and how to increase their substance; but the man's both
this, and others more than this, all however worldly.
Who, when about to marry, inquires about the disposition and nurture of
the damsel? No one; but straightway about money, and possessions, and measures of
property of various and different kinds; like as if he were about to buy
something, or to settle some common contract.
Therefore they do even so call marriage. For I have heard many say, such a
man has contracted with such a woman, that is, has married. And they offer
insult to the gifts of God, and as though buying and selling, so do they marry,
and are giver in marriage.
And writings there are, requiring greater security than those about buying
and selling. Learn how those of old married, and imitate them. How then did
they marry? They inquired about ways of life, and morals, and virtue of the soul.
Therefore they had no need of writings, nor of security by parchment and
ink; for the bride's disposition sufficed them in the place of all.
I therefore entreat you likewise not to seek after wealth and affluence,
but a good disposition, and gentleness. Seek for a pious and self-denying
damsel, and these will be to thee better than countless treasures. If thou seek the
things of God, these others will come also; but if thou pass by those, and
hasten unto these, neither will these follow.
But such a man, one will say, became rich by his wife! Art thou not
ashamed of bringing forward such examples? I had ten thousand times sooner become a
poor man, as I have heard many say, than gain wealth from a wife. For what can
be more unpleasing than that wealth? What more painful than the abundance? What
more shameful than to be notorious from thence, and for it to be said by all,
such a man became rich by a wife? For the domestic discomforts I pass by, all
that must needs result from hence, the wife's pride, the servility, the strifes,
the reproaches of the servants. "The beggar," "the ragged one." "the base one,
and sprung of base." "Why, what had he when he came in?" "Do not all things
belong to our mistress?" But thou dost not care at all about these sayings, for
neither art thou a freeman. Since the parasites likewise hear worse things than
these, and are not pained wherefore neither are these, but rather pride
themselves in their disgrace; and when we tell them of these things,"Let me have,"
saith one of them, "something pleasant and sweet, and let it choke me." Alas! the
devil,what proverbs hath he brought into the world, of power to overturn the
whole life of such persons. See at least this self-same devilish and pernicious
saying; of how much ruin it is full. For it means nothing else than these words,
Have thou no regard to what is honorable; have thou no regard to what is just;
let all those things be cast aside, seek one thing alone, pleasure. Though the
thing stifle thee, let it be thy choice; though all that meet thee spurn thee,
though they smear thy face with mire, though they drive thee away as a dog,
bear all. And what else would swine say, if they had a voice? What else would
filthy dogs? But perhaps not even they would have said such things, as the devil
hath persuaded men to rave.
Wherefore I entreat you, being conscious of the senselessness of such
words as these, to flee such proverbs, and to choose out those in the Scriptures
that are contrary to them.
But what are these? "Go not," it is said, "after thy lusts, and refrain
thyself from thine appetites."(1) And, touching an harlot again, it is said in
opposition to this proverb, "Give not heed to a bad woman: for honey droppeth
from the lips of a woman that is an harlot, which, for a season, is luscious unto
thy throat; but afterwards thou shalt find it more bitter than gall, and
sharper than a two-edged sword."(2) Unto these last then let us listen, not unto
those. For hence indeed spring our mean, hence our slavish thoughts, hence men
become brutes, because in everything they will follow after pleasure according to
this proverb, which, even without arguments of ours, is of itself ridiculous.
For after one is choked, what is the gain of sweetness?
Cease, therefore, to set up such great absurdity, and to kindle hell and
unquenchable fire; and let us look steadfastly (at length though late) as we
ought, unto the things to come, having put away the film on our eyes, that we may
both pass the present life honestly, and with much reverence and godly fear,
and attain unto the good things to come, by the grace and love towards man of our
Lord Jesus Christ, to whom be glory world without end. Amen.