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ST. AUGUSTIN
OF HOLY VIRGINITY
DE VIRGINITATE
1.
WE lately put forth a book "of the Good of Marriage," in which
also we admonished and admonish the virgins of Christ, not, on account of that
greater gift which they have received, to despise, in comparison of themselves,
the fathers and mothers of the People of God; and not to think those men,'
(whom the Apostle sets forth as the olive, that the engrafted wild olive be
not proud,) who did service to Christ about to come hereafter, even by the
begetting of sons, on this account of less desert, because by divine right
continence is preferred to wedded life, and pious virginity to marriage. Forsooth
in them were being prepared and brought forth future things, which now we see
fulfilled in a marvellous and effectual manner, whose married life also was
prophetic: whence, not after the wonted custom of human wishes and joys, but
by the very deep counsel of God, in certain of them fruitfulness obtained to
be honored, in certain also barrenness to be made fruitful. But at this time,
towards them unto whom it is said, "if they contain not, let them be married,"(2)
we must use not consolation, but exhortation. But them, unto whom it is said, "Whoso
can receive, let him receive,"(3) we must exhort,that they be not alarmed;
and alarm that they be not lifted up. Wherefore virginity is not only to be
set forth, that it may be loved, but also to be admonished, that it be not
puffed up.
2. This we have undertaken in our present discourse: may Christ help us, the
Son of a virgin, and the Spouse of virgins, born after the flesh of a virgin
womb, and wedded after the Spirit in virgin marriage. Whereas, therefore, the
whole Church itself is a virgin espoused unto one Husband Christ,(4) as the
Apostle saith, of how great honor are its members worthy, who guard this even
in the flesh itself, which the whole Church guards in the faith ? which imitates
the mother of her husband, and her Lord. For the Church also is both a mother
and a virgin. For whose virgin purity consult we for, if she is not a virgin
? or whose children address we, if she is not a mother? Mary bare the Head
of This Body after the flesh, the Church bears the members of that Body after
the Spirit. In both virginity hinders not fruitfulness: in both fruitfulness
takes not away virginity. Wherefore, whereas the whole Church is holy both
in body and spirit, and yet the whole is not virgin in body but in spirit;
how much more holy is it in these members, wherein it is virgin both in body
and spirit?
3. It
is written in the Gospel, of the mother and brethren of Christ, that is,
His kindred after
the flesh,
that, when word had been brought to Him, and
they were standing without, because they could not come to Him by reason of
the crowd, He made answer, "Who is My mother ? or who are My brethren
? and stretching forth His Hand over His disciples, He saith, These are My
brethren: and whosoever shall have done the will of My Father, that man is
to Me brother, and mother, and sister."(1) What else teaching us, than
to prefer to kindred after the flesh, our descent after the Spirit: and that
men are not blessed for this reason, that they are united by nearness of flesh
unto just and holy men, but that, by obeying and following, they cleave unto
their doctrine and conduct. Therefore Mary is more blessed in receiving the
faith of Christ, than in conceiving the flesh of Christ. For to a certain one
who said, "Blessed is the womb, which bare Thee,"(2) He Himself made
answer, "Yea, rather, blessed are they who hear the Word of God, and keep
it." Lastly, to His brethren, that is, His kindred after the flesh, who
believed not in Him, what profit was there in that being of kin ? Thus also
her nearness as a Mother would have been of no profit to Mary, had she not
borne Christ in her heart after a more blessed manner than in her flesh.
4. Her
virginity also itself was on this account more pleasing and accepted, in
that it was not
that Christ
being conceived in her, rescued it beforehand
from a husband who would violate it, Himself to preserve it; but, before He
was conceived, chose it, already dedicated to God, as that from which to be
born. This is shown by the words which Mary spake in answer to the Angel announcing
to her her conception; "How," saith she, " shall this be, seeing
I know not a man?"(3) Which assuredly she would not say, unless she had
before vowed herself unto God as a virgin. But, because the habits of the Israelites
as yet refused this, she was espoused to a just man, who would not take from
her by violence, but rather guard against violent persons, what she had already
vowed. Although, even if she had said this only, "How shall this take
place?" and had not added, "seeing I know not a man," certainly
she would not have asked, how, being a female, she should give birth to her
promised Son, if she had married with purpose of sexual intercourse. She might
have been bidden also to continue a virgin, that in her by fitting miracle
the Son of God should receive the form of a servant, but, being to be a pattern
to holy virgins, lest it should be thought that she alone needed to be a virgin,
who had obtained to conceive a child even without sexual intercourse, she dedicated
her virginity to God, when as yet she knew not what she should conceive, in
order that the imitation of a heavenly life in an earthly and mortal body should
take place of vow, not of command; through love of choosing, not through necessity
of doing service. Thus Christ by being born of a virgin, who, before she knew
Who was to be born of her, had determined to continue a virgin, chose rather
to approve, than to command, holy virginity. And thus, even in the female herself,
in whom He took the form of a servant, He willed that virginity should be free.
5. There
is, therefore, no reason why the virgins of God be sad, because themselves
also cannot,
keeping their
virginity, be mothers of the flesh. For Him alone
could virginity give birth to with fitting propriety, Who in His Birth could
have no peer. However, That Birth of the Holy Virgin is the ornament of all
holy virgins; and themselves together with Mary are mothers of Christ, if they
do the will of His Father. For Mary also is on this account the Mother of Christ
in a way more full of praise and blessing, according to His sentence mentioned
above. "Whosoever doeth the will of my Father Who is in heaven, that one
is to Me brother, and sister, and mother." All these degrees of nearness
of kin to Himself, He shows forth in a spiritual manner, in the People whom
He hath redeemed: as brothers and sisters He hath holy men and holy women,
forasmuch as they all are co-heirs in the heavenly inheritance. His mother
is the whole Church, because she herself assuredly gives birth to His members,
that is, His faithful ones. Also His mother is every pious soul, doing the
will of His Father with most fruitful charity, in them of whom it travaileth,
until Himself 4 be formed in them. Mary, therefore, doing the will of God,
after the flesh, is only the mother of Christ, but after the Spirit she is
both His sister and mother.
6. And
on this account, that one female, not only in the Spirit, but also in the
flesh, is both a
mother and
a virgin. And a mother indeed in the Spirit,
not of our Head, Which is the Saviour Himself, of Whom rather she was born
after the Spirit: forasmuch as all, who have believed in Him, among whom is
herself also, are rightly called "children of the Bridegroom:"(1)
but clearly the mother of His members, which are we: in that she wrought together
by charity, that faithful ones should be born in the Church, who are members
of That Head: but in the flesh, the mother of the Head Himself. For it behoved
that our Head, on account of a notable miracle, should be born after the flesh
of a virgin, that He might thereby signify that His members would be born after
the Spirit, of the Church a virgin: therefore Mary alone both in Spirit and
in flesh is a mother and a virgin: both the mother of Christ, and a virgin
of Christ; but the Church, in the Saints who shall possess the kingdom of God,
in the Spirit indeed is altogether the mother of Christ, altogether a virgin
of Christ: but in the flesh not altogether, but in certain a virgin of Christ,
in certain a mother, but not of Christ. Forsooth both faithful women who are
married, and virgins dedicated to God, by holy manners, and charity out of
a pure heart,(2) and good conscience, and faith unfeigned, because they do
the will of the Father, are after a spiritual sense mothers of Christ. But
they who in married life give birth to (children) after the flesh, give birth
not to Christ, but to Adam, and therefore run, that their offspring having
been dyed(3) in His Sacraments, may become members of Christ, forasmuch as
they know what they have given birth to.
7. I have
said this, lest haply married fruitfulness dare to vie with virgin chastity,
and to set forth
Mary
herself, and to say unto the virgins of God,
She had in her flesh two things worthy of honor, virginity and fruitfulness;
inasmuch as she both continued a virgin, and bore: this happiness, since we
could not both have the whole, we have divided, that ye be virgins, we be mothers:
for what is wanting to you in children, let your virginity, that hath been
preserved, be a consolation: for us, let the gain of children make up for our
lost virginity. This speech of faithful women married, unto holy virgins, would
any how be to be endured, if they gave birth to Christians in the flesh; that
in this alone, save virginity, the fruitfulness of Mary in the flesh should
be more excellent, that she gave birth to the Head Himself of these members,
but they to the members of That Head: but now, although by this speech there
vie such as on this one account wed and have intercourse with husbands, that
they may have sons, and have no other thought of their sons, than to gain them
for Christ, and do this so soon as they can: yet are not Christians born of
their flesh, but made so afterwards: the Church giving them birth, through
this, that in a spiritual manner she is the mother of the members of Christ,
of Whom also after a spiritual manner she is the virgin. And unto this holy
birth mothers also who have not borne in the flesh Christians, are workers
together, that they may become what they know that they could not give birth
to in the flesh: yet are they workers together through this, wherein themselves
also are virgins and mothers(4) of Christ, that is to say, in "faith which
worketh through love."(5)
8. Therefore no fruitfulness of the flesh can be compared to holy virginity
even of the flesh. For neither is itself also honored because it is virginity,
but because it hath been dedicated to God, and, although it be kept in the
flesh, yet is it kept by religion and devotion of the Spirit. And by this means
even virginity of body is spiritual, which continence of piety vows and keeps.
For, even as no one makes an immodest use of the body, unless the sin have
been before conceived in the spirit, so no one keeps modesty in the body, unless
chastity have been before implanted in the spirit. But, further, if modesty
of married life, although it be guarded in the flesh, is yet attributed to
the soul, not to the flesh, under the rule and guidance of which, the flesh
itself hath no intercourse with any beside its own proper estate of marriage;
how much more, and with how much greater honor, are we to reckon among the
goods of the soul that continence, whereby the virgin purity of the flesh is
vowed, consecrated, and kept, for the Creator Himself of the soul and flesh.
9. Wherefore neither are we to believe that their fruitfulness of the flesh,
who at this time seek in marriage nothing else save children, to make over
unto Christ, can be set against the loss of virginity. Forsooth, in former
times, unto Christ about to come after the flesh, the race itself of the flesh
was needful, in a certain large and prophetic nation: but now, when from out
every race of men, and from out all nations, members of Christ may be gathered
unto the People of God, and City of the kingdom of heaven, whoso can receive
sacred virginity, let him receive it; and let her only, who contains not, be
married.(6) For what, if any rich woman were to expend much money on this good
work, and to buy, from out different nations, slaves to make Christians, will
she not provide for the giving birth to members of Christ in a manner more
rich, and more numerous, than by any, how great soever, fruitfulness of the
womb? And yet she will not therefore dare to compare her money to the offering(1)
of holy virginity. But if for the sake of making such as shall be born Christians,
fruitfulness of the flesh shall with just reason be set against the loss of
chastity, this matter will be more fruitful, if virginity be lost at a great
price of money, whereby many more children may be purchased to be made Christians,
than could be born from the womb, however fruitful, of a single person. But,
if it be extreme folly to say this, let the faithful women that are married
possess their own good, of which we have treated, so far as seemed fit, in
another volume; and let them more highly honor, even as they are most rightly
used to do, in the sacred virgins, their better good, of which we are treating
in our present discourse.
10. For not even herein ought such as are married to compare themselves with
the deserts of the continent, in that of them virgins are born: for this is
not a good of marriage, but of nature: which was so ordered of God, as that
of every sexual intercourse whatever of the two sexes of human kind, whether
in due order and honest, or base and unlawful, there is born no female save
a virgin, yet is none born a sacred virgin: so it is brought to pass that a
virgin is born even of fornication, but a sacred virgin not even of marriage.
11. Nor
do we ourselves set forth this in virgins, that they are virgins; but that
they are virgins
dedicated
unto God by pious continence. For it is
not at a venture that I may say, a married woman seems to me happier than a
virgin about to be married: for the one hath what the other as yet desires,
especially if she be not yet even the betrothed of any one. The one studies
to please one, unto whom she hath been given; the other many, in doubt unto
whom she is to be given: by this one thing she guards modesty of thought from
the crowd, that she is seeking, not an adulterer, but a husband, in the crowd.
Therefore that virgin is with good reason set before a married woman, who neither
sets herself forth for the multitude to love, whereas she seeks from out the
multitude the love of one; nor, having now found him, orders herself(2) for
one, taking thought of the things of the world, "how to please her husband;"(3)
but hath so loved "Him of fair beauty above the sons of men,"(4)
as that, because she could not, even as Mary, conceive Him in her flesh, she
hath kept her flesh also virgin for Him conceived in her heart. This kind of
virgins no fruitfulness of the body hath given birth to: this is no progeny
of flesh and blood. If of these the mother be sought for, it is the Church.
None bears sacred virgins save a sacred virgin, she who hath been espoused
to be presented chaste unto one Husband, Christ.(5) Of her, not altogether
in body, but altogether in spirit virgin, are born holy virgins both in body
and in spirit.
12. Let marriages possess their own good, not that they beget sons, but that
honestly, that lawfully, that modestly, that in a spirit of fellowship they
beget them, and educate them, after they have been begotten, with cooperation,
with wholesome teaching, and earnest purpose: in that they keep the faith of
the couch one with another; in that they violate not the sacrament of wedlock.
All these, however, are offices of human duty: but virginal chastity and freedom
through pious continence from all sexual intercourse is the portion of Angels,
and a practice,(6) in corruptible flesh, of perpetual incorruption. To this
let all fruitfulness of the flesh yield, all chastity of married life; the
one is not in (man's) power, the other is not in eternity; free choice hath
not fruitfulness of the flesh, heaven hath not chastity of married life. Assuredly
they will have something great beyond others in that common immortality, who
have something already not of the flesh in the flesh.
13. Whence
they are marvellously void of wisdom, who think that the good of this continence
is not necessary
for the sake of the kingdom of heaven, but
for the sake of the present world: in that, forsooth, married persons are strained
different ways by earthly cares more and more straitened, from which trouble
virgins and continent persons are free: as though on this account only it were
better not to be married, that the straits of this present time may be escaped,
not that it is of any profit unto a future life. And, that they may not seem
to have put forth this vain opinion from out the vanity of their own heart,
they take the Apostle to witness, where he saith, "But concerning virgins
I have not command of the Lord, but I give counsel, as having obtained mercy
from God to be faithful. Therefore I think that this is good on account of
the present necessity, because it is good for a man so to be."(7) Lo,
say they, where the Apostle shows "that this is good on account of the
present necessity," not on account of the future eternity. As though the
Apostle would have regard for the present necessity, otherwise than as providing
and consulting for the future; whereas all his dealing(1) calls not save unto
life eternal.
14. It
is, therefore, the present necessity that we are to avoid, but yet such as
is a hindrance
to somewhat
of the good things to come; by which necessity
the married life is forced to have thought of the things of the world, how
to please, the husband the wife or the wife the husband. Not that these separate
from the kingdom of God, as there are sins, which are restrained by command,
not by counsel, on this account, because it is matter of condemnation not to
obey the Lord when He commands: but that, which, within the kingdom of God
itself, might be more largely possessed, if there were larger thoughts how
they were to please God, will assuredly be less, when as this very thing is
less thought of by necessity of marriage. Therefore he says, "Concerning
virgins I have not command of the Lord."(2) For whosoever obeys not a
command, is guilty and liable for punishment. Wherefore, because it is not
sin to marry a wife or to be married, (but if it were a sin, it would be forbidden
by a "Commands") on this account there is no "Command" of
the Lord concerning virgins. But since, after we have shunned or had forgiveness
of sins, we must approach eternal life, wherein is a certain or more excellent
glory, to be assigned not unto all who shall live for ever, but unto certain
there; in order to obtain which it is not enough to have been set free from
sins, unless there be vowed unto Him, Who setteth us free, something, which
it is no matter of fault not to have vowed, but matter of praise to have vowed
and performed; he saith, "I give counsel, as having obtained mercy from
God that I should be faithful." For neither ought I to grudge faithful
counsel, who not by my own merits, but by the mercy of God, am faithful. "I
think therefore that this is good, by reason of the present necessity."(3)
This, saith he, on which I have not command of the Lord, but give counsel,
that is concerning virgins, I think to be good by reason of the present necessity.
For I know what the necessity of the present time, unto which marriages serve,
compels, that the things of God be less thought of than is enough for the obtaining
that glory, which shall not be of all, although they abide in eternal life
and salvation: "For star differeth from star in brightness; so also the
Resurrection of the dead.(4) It is," therefore, "good for a man so
to be."
15. After
that the same Apostle adds, and says, "Thou art bound to a
wife, seek not loosening: thou art loosed from a wife, seek not a wife."(5)
Of these two, that, which be set first, pertains unto command, against which
it is not lawful to do. For it is not lawful to put away a wife, save because
of fornication,(6) as the Lord Himself saith in the Gospel. But that, which
he added, "Thou art loosed from a wife, seek not a wife," is a sentence
of counsel, not of command; therefore it is lawful to do, but it is better
not to do. Lastly, he added straightway, "Both if thou shalt have taken
a wife, thou hast not sinned; and, if a virgin shall have been married, she
sinneth not."(7) But, after that former saying of his, "Thou art
bound to a wife, seek not loosening," he added not, did he, "And
if thou shalt have loosed, thou hast not sinned?" For he had already said
above, "But to these, who are in marriage, I command, not I, but the Lord,
that the wife depart not from her husband: but, if she shall have departed,
that she remain unmarried, or be reconciled unto her own husband;" for
it may come to pass that she depart, not through any fault of her own, but
of her husband. Then he saith, "And let not the man put away his wife," which,
nevertheless, he set down of command of the Lord: nor did he then add, And,
if he shall have put her away, he sinneth not. For this is a command, not to
obey which is sin: not a counsel, which if you shall be unwilling to use, you
will obtain less good, not do any ill. On this account, after he had said, "Thou
art loosed from a wife, seek not a wife;" because he was not giving command,
in order that there be not evil done, but was giving counsel, in order that
there be done what is better: straightway he added, "Both, if thou shall
have taken a wife, thou hast not sinned; and, if a virgin shall have been married,
she sinneth not."
16. Yet
he added, "But such shall have tribulation of the flesh, but
I spare you:"(8) in this manner exhorting unto virginity, and continual
continence, so as some little to alarm also from marriage, with all modesty,
not as from a matter evil and unlawful, but as from one burdensome and troublesome.
For it is one thing to incur dishonor of the flesh, and another to have tribulation
of the flesh: the one is matter of crime to do, the other of labor to suffer,
which for the most part men refuse not even for the most honorable duties.
But for the having of marriage, now at this time, wherein there is no service
done unto Christ about to come through descent of flesh by the begetting of
the family itself, to take upon one to bear that tribulation of the flesh,
which the Apostle foretells to such as shall be married, would be extremely
foolish, did not incontinent persons fear, lest, through the temptation of
Satan, they should fall into damnable sins. But whereas he says that he spares
them, who he saith will have tribulation of the flesh, there suggests itself
to me in the mean while no sounder interpretation, than that he was unwilling
to open, and unfold in words, this self-same tribulation of the flesh which
he fore-announced to those who choose marriage, in suspicions Of jealousy of
married life, in the begetting and nurture of children, in fears and sorrows
of childlessness. For how very few, after they have bound themselves with the
bonds of marriage, are not drawn and driven to and fro by these feelings? And
this we ought not to exaggerate, lest we spare not the very persons, who the
Apostle thought were to be spared.
17. Only
by this, which I have briefly set down, the reader ought to be set on his
guard against
those,
who, in this that is written, "but such shall
have tribulation of the flesh but I spare you," falsely charge marriage,
as indirectly condemned by this sentence; as though he were unwilling to utter
the condemnation itself, when he saith, "But I spare you;" so that,
forsooth, when he spares them, he spared not his own soul, as saying falsely, "And,
if thou shalt have taken a wife, thou hast not sinned; and if a virgin shall
have been married, she sinneth not." And this, whoso believe or would
have believed concerning holy Scripture, they, as it were prepare for themselves
a way for liberty of lying, or for defense of their own perverse opinion, in
whatever case they hold other sentiments than what sound doctrine demands.
For if there shall be alleged any plain statement from the divine books, whereby
to refute their errors, this they have at hand as a shield, whereby defending
themselves as it were against the truth, they lay themselves bare to be wounded
by the devil: to say that the author of the book did not speak the truth in
this instance, at one time in order to spare the weak, at another in order
to alarm despisers: just as a case shall come to hand, wherein to defend their
own perverse opinion: and thus, whilst they had rather defend than amend their
own opinions, they essay to break the authority of holy Scripture, whereby
alone all proud and hard necks are broken.
18. Wherefore
I admonish both men and women who follow after perpetual continence and holy
virginity,
that
they so set their own good before marriage, as that
they judge not marriage an evil: and that they understand that it was in no
way of deceit, but of plain truth that it was said by the Apostle, "Whoso
gives in marriage does well; and whoso gives not in marriage, does better;
and, if thou shalt have taken a wife, thou hast not sinned; and, if a virgin
shall have been married, she sinneth not;"1 and a little after, "But
she wilt be more blessed, if she shall have continued so, according to my judgment." And,
that the judgment should not be thought human, he adds, "But I think I
also have the Spirit of God." This is the doctrine of the Lord, this of
the Apostles, this true, this sound, so to choose greater gifts, as that the
lesser be not condemned. The truth of God, in the Scripture of God, is better
than virginity of man in the mind or flesh of any. Let what is chaste be so
loved, as that what is true be not denied. For what evil thought may they not
have even concerning their own flesh, who believe that the tongue of the Apostle,
in that very place, wherein he was commending virginity of body, was not virgin
from corruption of lying. In the first place, therefore, and chiefly, let such
as choose the good of virginity, hold most firmly that the holy Scriptures
have in nothing spoken lies; and, thus, that that also is true which is said, "And
if thou shall have taken a wife, thou hast not sinned; and, if a virgin shall
have been married, she sinneth not." And let them not think that the so
great good of virgin chastity is made less, if marriage shall not be an evil.
Yea rather, let her hence feel confident, rather, that there is prepared for
her a palm of greater glory, who feared not to be condemned, in case she were
married, but desired to receive a more honorable crown, in that she was not
married. Whoso therefore shall be willing to abide without marriage, let them
not flee from marriage as a pitfall of sin; but let them surmount it as a hill
of the lesser good, in order that they may rest in the mountain of the greater,
continence. It is on this condition, forsooth, that this hill is dwelt on;
that one leave it not when he will. For, "a woman is bound, so long as
her husband liveth."2 However unto widowed continence one ascends from
it as from a step: but for the sake of virgin continence, one must either turn
aside from it by not consenting to suitors, or overleap it by anticipating
suitors.
19. But
lest any should think that of two works, the good and the better, the rewards
will be equal,
on this
account it was necessary to treat against
those, who have so interpreted that saying of the Apostle, "But I think
that this is good by reason of the present necessity,"1 as to say that
virginity is of use not in order to the kingdom of heaven, but in order to
this present time: as though in that eternal life, they, who had chosen this
better part, would have nothing more than the rest of men. And in this discussion
when we came to that saying of the same Apostle, "But such shall have
tribulation of the flesh, but I spare you;"2 we fell in with other disputants,
who so far from making marriage equal to perpetual virginity, altogether condemned
it. For whereas both are errors, either to equal marriage to holy virginity,
or to condemn it: by fleeing from one another to excess, these two errors come
into open collision, in that they have been unwilling to hold the mean of truth:
whereby, both by sure reason and authority of holy Scriptures, we both discover
that marriage is not a sin, and yet equal it not to the good either of virginal
or even of widowed chastity. Some forsooth by aiming at virginity, have thought
marriage hateful even as adultery: but others, by defending marriage, would
have the excellence of perpetual continence to deserve nothing more than married
chastity; as though either the good of Susanna be the lowering of Mary: or
the greater good of Mary ought to be the condemnation of Susanna.
20. Far
be it, therefore, that the Apostle so said, unto such as are married or are
about to marry, "But I spare you," as if he were unwilling
to say what punishment is due to the married in another life. Far be it that
she, whom Daniel set free from temporal judgment, be cast by Paul into hell!
Far be it that her husband's bed be unto her punishment before the judgment
seat of Christ, keeping faith to which she chose, under false charge of adultery,
to meet either danger, or death! To what effect that speech, "It is better
for me to fall into your hands, than to sin in the sight of God:" 3 if
God had been about, not to set her free because she kept married chastity,
but to condemn her because she had married? And now so often as married chastity
is by truth of holy Scripture justified against such as bring calumnies and
charges against marriage, so often is Susanna by the Holy Spirit defended against
false witnesses, so often is she set free from a false charge, and with much
greater ado. For then against one married woman, now against all; then of hidden
and untrue adultery, now of true and open marriage, an accusation is laid.
Then one woman, upon what the unjust elders said, now all husbands and wives,
upon what the Apostle would not say, are accused. It was, forsooth, your condemnation,
say they, that he was silent on, when he said, "But I spare you." Who
(saith) this? Surely he, who had said above; "And, if thou shalt have
taken a wife, thou hast not sinned; and, if a virgin shall have been married,
she sinneth not."4 Why, therefore, wherein he hath been silent through
modesty, suspect yea charge against marriage; and wherein he hath spoken openly,
recognize ye not a defense of marriage? What, doth he condemn by his silence
them whom he acquitted by his words? Is it not now a milder charge, to charge
Susanna, not with marriage, but with adultery itself, than to charge the doctrine
of the Apostle with falsehood? What in so great peril could we do, were it
not as sure and plain that chaste marriage ought not to be condemned, as it
is sure and plain that holy Scripture cannot lie?
21. Here
some one will say, What has this to do with holy virginity, or perpetual
continence, the
setting
forth of which was undertaken in this discourse? To
whom I make answer in the first place, what I mentioned above, that the glory
of that greater good is greater from the fact that, in order to obtain it,
the good of married life is surmounted, not the sin of marriage shunned. Otherwise
it would be enough for perpetual continence, not to be specially praised, but
only not to be blamed: if it were maintained on this account, because it was
a crime to wed. In the next place, because it is not by human judgment, but
by authority of Divine Scripture, that men must be exhorted unto so excellent
a gift, we must plead not in a common-place manner, or merely by the way, that
divine Scripture itself seem not to any one in any matter to have lied. For
they discourage rather than exhort holy, virgins, who compel them to continue
so by passing sentence on marriage. For whence can they feel sure that that
is true, which is written, "And he, who gives her not in marriage, does
better:"5 if they think that false, which yet is written close above, "Both
he, who gives his virgin, does well?" But, if they shall without all doubt
have believed Scripture speaking of the good of marriage, confirmed by the
same most true authority of the divine oracle, they will hasten beyond unto
their own better part with glowing and confident eagerness. Wherefore we have
already spoken enough for the business which we have taken in hand, and, so
far as we could, have shown, that neither that saying of the Apostle, "But
I think that this is good by reason of the present necessity,"1 is so
to be understood, as though in this life holy virgins are better than faithful
women married, but are equal in the kingdom of heaven, and in a future life:
nor that other, where he saith of such as wed, "But such shall have tribulation
of the flesh, but I spare you;" 2 is to be so understood, as though he
chose rather to be silent on, than to speak of, the sin and condemnation of
marriage. Forsooth two errors, contrary the one to the other, have, through
not understanding them, taken hold of each one of these two sentences. For
that concerning the present necessity they interpret in their own favor, who
contend to equal such as wed to such as wed not: but this, where it is said, "But
I spare you," they who presume to condemn such as wed. But we, according
to the faith and sound doctrine of holy Scriptures, both say that marriage
is no sin, and yet set its good not only below virginal, but also below widowed
continence; and say that the present necessity of married persons is an hindrance
to their desert, not indeed unto life eternal, but unto an excellent glory
and honor, which is reserved for perpetual continence: and that at this time
marriage is not expedient save for such as contain not; and that on the tribulation
of the flesh, which cometh from the affection of the flesh, without which marriages
of incontinent persons cannot be, the Apostle neither wished to be silent,
as forewarning what was true, nor to unfold more fully, as sparing man's weakness.
22. And
now by plainest witnesses of divine Scriptures, such as according to the
small measure of
our memory
we shall be able to remember, let it more
clearly appear, that, not on account of the present life of this world, but
on account of that future life which is promised in the kingdom of heaven,
we are to choose perpetual continence. But who but must observe this in that
which the same Apostle says a little after, "Whoso is without a wife has
thought of the things of the Lord, how to please the Lord: but whoso is joined
in marriage has thought of the things of the world, how to please his wife.
And a woman unmarried and a virgin is divided;3 she that is unmarried is careful
about the things of the Lord, to be holy both in body and spirit: but she that
is married is careful about the things of the world, how to please her husband.''4
Certainly he saith not, hath thought of the things of a state without care
in this world, to pass her time without weightier troubles; nor doth he say
that a woman unmarried and a virgin is divided, that is, distinguished, and
separated from her who is married, for this end, that the unmarried woman be
without care in this life, in order to avoid temporal troubles, which the married
woman is not free from: but, "She hath thought," saith he, "of
the things of the Lord, how to please the Lord; and is careful about the things
of the Lord, to be holy both in body and spirit." Unless to such a degree,
perchance, each be foolishly contentious, as to essay to assert, that it is
not on account of the kingdom of heaven, but on account of this present world,
that we wish to "please the Lord," or that it is on account of this
present life, not on account of life eternal, that they are "holy both
in body and spirit." To believe this, what else is it, than to be more
miserable than all men? For so the Apostle saith, "If in this life only
we are hoping in Christ, we are more miserable than all men."5 What? is
he who breaks his bread to the hungry, if he do it only on account of this
life, a fool; and shall he be prudent, who chastens his own body even unto
continence, whereby he hath no intercourse even in marriage, if it shall profit
him nought in the kingdom of heaven?
23. Lastly,
let us hear the Lord Himself delivering most plain judgment on this matter.
For, upon
His speaking
after a divine and fearful manner concerning
husband and wife not separating, save on account of fornication, His disciples
said to Him, "If the case be such with a wife, it is not good to marry.''6
To whom He saith, "Not all receive this saying. For there are eunuchs
who were so born: but there are others who were made by men: and there are
eunuchs, who made themselves eunuchs for the sake of the kingdom of heaven:
whoso can receive, let him receive." What could be said more true, what
more clear? Christ saith, the Truth saith, the Power and Wisdom of God saith,
that they, who of pious purpose have contained from marrying a wife, make themselves
eunuchs for the sake of the kingdom of heaven: and against this, human vanity
with impious rashness contends, that they, who do so, shun only the present
necessity of the troubles of married life, but in the kingdom of heaven have
no more than others.
24. But
concerning what eunuchs speaketh God by the prophet Isaiah, unto whom He
saith that He will
give
in His house and in His wall a place by name, much
better than of sons and daughters,(1) save concerning these, who make themselves
eunuchs for the sake of the kingdom of heaven? For for these, whose bodily
organ is without strength, so that they cannot beget, (such as are the eunuchs
of rich men and of kings,) it is surely enough, when they become Christians,
and keep the commands of God, yet have this purpose, that, if they could, they
would have wives, to be made equal to the rest of the faithful in the house
of God, who are married, who bring up in the fear of God a family which they
have lawfully and chastely gotten, teaching their sons to set their hope on
God; but not to receive a better place than of sons and daughters. For it is
not of virtue of the soul, but of necessity of the flesh, that they marry not
wives. Let who will contend that the Prophet foretold this of those eunuchs
who have suffered mutilation of body; that even also helps the cause which
we have undertaken. For God hath not preferred these eunuchs to such as have
no place in His house, but assuredly to those who keep the desert of married
life in begetting sons. For, when He saith, "I will give unto them a place
much better;" He shows that one is also given unto the married, but much
inferior. Therefore, to allow that in the house of God there will be the eunuchs
after the flesh spoken of above, who were not in the People of Israel: because
we see that these also themselves, whereas they become not Jews, yet become
Christians: and that the Prophet spake not of them, who through purpose of
continence seeking not marriage, make themselves eunuchs for the sake of the
kingdom of heaven: is any one so madly opposed to the truth as to believe that
eunuchs made so in the flesh have a better place than married persons in the
house of God, and to contend that persons being of pious purpose continent,
chastening the body even unto contempt of marriage, making themselves eunuchs,
not in the body, but in the very root of concupiscence, practising an heavenly
and angelic life in an earthly mortal state, are on a level with the deserts
of the married; and, being a Christian, to gainsay Christ when He praises those
who have made themselves eunuchs, not for the sake of this world, but for the
sake of the kingdom of heaven, affirming that this is of use for the present
life, not for a future? What else remains for these, save to assert that the
kingdom of heaven itself pertains unto this temporal life, wherein we now are?
For why should not blind presumption advance even to this madness? And what
more full of phrensy than this assertion? For, although at times the Church,
even that which is at this time, is called the kingdom of heaven; certainly
it is so called for this end, because it is being gathered together for a future
and eternal life. Although, therefore, it have the promise of the present,
and of a future life, yet in all its good works it looks not to "the things
that are seen, but to what are not seen. For what are seen are temporal; but
what are not seen, are eternal."(2)
25. Nor
indeed hath the Holy Spirit failed to speak what should be of open and unshaken
avail against
these men,
most shamelessly and madly obstinate,
and should repel their assault, as of wild beasts, from His sheep-fold, by
defences that may not be stormed. For, after He had said concerning eunuchs, "I
will give unto them in My house and in My wall a named place, much better than
of sons and daughters;"(3) lest any too carnal should think that there
was any thing temporal to be hoped for in these words, straightway He added, "An
eternal name I will give unto them, nor shall it ever fail:" as though
He should say, Why dost thou draw back, impious blindness? Why dost thou draw
back? Why dost thou pour the clouds of thy perverseness over the clear (sky)
of truth? Why in so great light of Scriptures dost thou seek after darkness
from out which to lay snares? Why dost thou promise temporal advantage only
to holy persons exercising continence? "An eternal name I will give unto
them:" why, where persons keep from all sexual intercourse, and also in
the very fact that they abstain from these, have thought of the things of the
Lord, how to please the Lord, do you essay to refer them unto earthly advantage? "An
eternal name I will give unto them." Why contend you that the kingdom
of heaven, for the sake of which holy eunuchs have made themselves eunuchs,
is to be understood in this life only? "An eternal name I will give unto
them." And if haply in this place you endeavor to take the word itself
eternal in the sense of lasting for a long time, I add, I heap up, I tread
in, "nor shall it ever fail." What more seek you? What more say you?
This eternal name, whatever it be, unto the eunuchs of God, which assuredly
signifies a certain peculiar and excellent glory, shall not be in common with
many, although set in the same kingdom, and in the same house. For on this
account also, perhaps, it is called a name, that it distinguishes those, to
whom it is given, from the rest.
26. What
then, say they, is the meaning of that penny, which is given in payment to
all alike when
the work
of the vineyard is ended? whether it be to those
who have labored from the first hour, or to those who have labored one hour?(1)
What assuredly doth it signify, but something, which all shall have in common,
such as is life eternal itself, the kingdom of heaven itself, where shall be
all, whom God hath predestinated, called, justified, glorified? "For it
behoveth that this corruptible put on incorruption, and this mortal put on
immortality."(2) This is that penny, wages for all. Yet "star differeth
from star in glory; so also the resurrection of the dead."(3) These are
the different merits of the Saints. For, if by that penny the heaven were signified,
have not all the stars in common to be in the heaven? And yet, "There
is one glory of the sun, another glory of the moon, another of the stars." If
that penny were taken for health of body, have not all the members, when we
are well, health in common; and, should this health continue even unto death,
is it not in all alike and equally? And yet, "God hath set the members,
each one of them, in the body, as He would;"(4) that neither the whole
be an eye, nor the whole hearing, nor the whole smelling: and, whatever else
there is, it hath its own property, although it have health equally with all.
Thus because life eternal itself shall be alike to all, an equal penny was
assigned to all; but, because in that life eternal itself the lights of merits
shall shine with a distinction, there are "many mansions" in the
house of the Father:(5) and, by this means, in the penny not unlike, one lives
not longer than another; but in the many mansions, one is honored with greater
brightness than another.
27. Therefore
go on, Saints of God, boys and girls, males and females, unmarried men, and
women; go on
and
persevere unto the end. Praise more sweetly the Lord,
Whom ye think on more richly: hope more happily in Him, Whom ye serve more
instantly: love more ardently Him, whom ye please more attentively. With loins
girded, and lamps burning, wait for the Lord, when He cometh from the marriage.(6)
Ye shall bring unto the marriage of the Lamb a new song, which ye shall sing
on your harps. Not surely such as the whole earth singeth, unto which it is
said, "Sing unto the Lord a new song; sing unto the Lord, the whole earth"(7):
but such as no one shall be able to utter but you. For thus there saw you in
the Apocalypse a certain one(8) beloved above others by the Lamb, who had been
wont to lie on His breast, and who used to drink in, and burst(9) forth, the
Word of God above wonders of heaven. He saw you twelve times twelve thousand
of holy harpers, of undefiled virginity in body, of inviolate truth in heart;
and he wrote of you, that ye follow the Lamb whithersoever He shall go. Where
think we that This Lamb goeth, where no one either dares or is able to follow
save you? Where think we that He goeth? Into what glades and meadows? Where,
I think, the grass are joys; not vain joys of this world, lying madnesses;
nor joys such as shall be in the kingdom of God itself, for the rest that are
not virgins; but distinct from the portion of joys of all the rest. Joy of
the virgins of Christ, of Christ, in Christ, with Christ, after Christ, through
Christ, for Christ. The joys peculiar to the virgins of Christ, are not the
same as of such as are not virgins, although of Christ. For there are to different
persons different joys, but to none such. Go (enter) into these, follow the
Lamb, because the Flesh of the Lamb also is assuredly virgin. For this He retained
in Himself when grown up, which He took not away from His Mother by His conception
and birth. Follow Him, as ye deserve,(10) in virginity of heart and flesh,
wheresoever He shall have gone. For what is it to follow, but to imitate? Because "Christ
hath suffered for us,"(11) leaving us an example, as saith the Apostle
Peter, "that we should follow His steps." Him each one follows in
that, wherein he imitates Him: not so far forth as He is the only Son of God,
by Whom all things were made; but so far forth as, the Son of Man, He set forth
in Himself, what behoved for us to imitate. And many things in Him are set
forth for all to imitate: but virginity of the flesh not for all; for they
have not what to do in order to be virgins, in whom it hath been already brought
to pass that they be not virgins.
28. Therefore
let the rest of the faithful, who have lost virginity, follow the Lamb, not
whithersoever
He
shall have gone, but so far as ever they shall
have been able. But they are able every where, save when He walks in the grace
of virginity. "Blessed are the poor in spirit;"(12) imitate Him,
Who, "whereas "He was rich, was made poor for your sakes."(13) "Blessed
are the meek;" imitate Him, Who said, "Learn of Me, for I am meek
and lowly of heart."(1) "Blessed are they that mourn;" imitate
Him, Who "wept over" Jerusalem.(2) "Blessed are they, who hunger
and thirst after righteousness:" imitate Him, Who said, "My meat
is to do the will of Him Who sent Me."(3) "Blessed are the merciful;" imitate
Him, Who came to the help of him who was wounded by robbers, and who lay in
the way half-dead and despaired of.(4) "Blessed are the pure in heart;" imitate
Him, "Who did no sin, neither was guile found in His mouth."(5) "Blessed
are the peace. makers;" imitate Him, Who said on behalf of His persecutors, "Father,
forgive them, for they know not what they do."(6) "Blessed are they,
who suffer persecution for righteousness sake;" imitate Him, Who "suffered
for you, leaving you an example, that ye follow His steps."(7) These things,
whoso imitate, in these they follow the Lamb. But surely even married persons
may go in those steps, although not setting their foot perfectly in the same
print,(8) yet walking in the same paths.
29. But, 10, That Lamb goeth by a Virgin road, how shall they go after Him,
who have lost what there is no way for them to recover? Do ye, therefore, do
ye go after Him, His virgins; do ye thither also go after Him, in that on this
one account whithersoever He shall have gone, ye follow Him: for unto any other
gift whatsoever of holiness, whereby to follow Him, we can exhort married persons,
save this which they have lost beyond power of recovery. Do ye, therefore,
follow Him, by holding with perseverance what ye have vowed with ardor. Go
when ye can, that the good of virginity perish not from you, unto which ye
can do nothing, in order that it may return. The rest of the multitude of the
faithful will see you, which cannot unto this follow the Lamb; it will see
you, it will not envy you: and by rejoicing together with you, what it hath
not in itself, it will have in you. For that new song also, which is your own,
it will not be able to utter; but it will not be unable to hear, and to be
delighted with your so excellent good: but ye, who shall both utter and hear,
in that what ye shall say, this ye shall hear of yourselves, will exult with
greater happiness, and reign with greater joy. But they will have no sorrow
on account of your greater joy, to whom this shall be wanting. Forsooth That
Lamb, Whom ye shall follow whithersoever He shall have gone, will not desert
those who cannot follow Him, where you can. Almighty is the Lamb, of Whom we
speak. He both will go before you, and will not depart from them, when God
shall be all in all.(9) And they, who shall have less, shall not turn away
in dislike from you: for, where there is no envying, difference exists with
concord. Take to you,(10) then, have trust, be strong, continue, ye who vow
and pay unto the Lord your God vows of perpetual continence, not for the sake
of this present world, but for the sake of the kingdom of Heaven.
30. Ye
also who have not yet made this vow, who are able to receive it, receive
it.(11) Run with perseverance,
that ye may obtain.(12) Take ye each his sacrifices,
and enter ye into the courts(13) of the Lord, not of necessity, having power
over your own will.(14) For not as, "Thou shall not commit adultery, Thou
shall not kill,"(15) can it so be said, Thou shalt not wed. The former
are demanded, the latter are offered. If the latter are done, they are praised:
unless the former are done, they are condemned. In the former the Lord commands
us what is due; but in the latter, if ye shall have spent any thing more, on
His return He will repay you.(16) Think of (whatever that be) within His wall "a
place named, much better than of sons and of daughters."(17) Think of "an
eternal name" there.(18) Who unfolds of what kind that name shall be?
Yet, whatever it shall be, it shall be eternal. By believing and hoping and
loving this, ye have been able, not to shun marriage, as forbidden, but to
fly past it, as allowed.
31. Whence
the greatness of this service,(19) unto the undertaking of which we have
according to our
strength
exhorted, the more excellent and divine it
is, the more doth it warn our anxiety, to say something not only concerning
most glorious chastity, but also concerning safest humility. When then such
as make profession of perpetual chastity, comparing themselves with married
persons, shall have discovered, that, according to the Scriptures, the others
are below both in work and wages, both in vow and reward, let what is written
straightway come into their mind, "By how much thou art great, by so much
humble thyself in all things: and thou shalt find favor before God."(20)
The measure of humility for each hath been given from the measure of his greatness
itself: unto which pride is full of danger, which layeth the greater wait against
persons the greater they be. On this followeth envying, as a daughter in her
train; forsooth pride straightway giveth birth to her, nor is she ever without
such a daughter and companion. By which two evils, that is, pride and envying,
is the devil (a devil). Therefore it is against pride, the mother of envying,
that the whole Christian discipline chiefly wars. For this teaches humility,
whereby both to gain and to keep charity; of which after that it had been said, "Charity
envieth not;"(1) as though we were asking the reason, how it comes to
pass that it envieth not, he straightway added, "is not puffed up;" as
though he should say, on this account it hath not envying, in that neither
hath it pride. Therefore the Teacher of humility, Christ, first "emptied
Himself, taking the form of a servant, made in the likeness of men, and found
in fashion as a man, He humbled Himself, made obedient even unto death, even
the death of the Cross."(2) But His teaching itself, how carefully it
suggests humility, and how earnest and instant it is in commanding this, who
can easily unfold, and bring together all witnesses for proof of this matter?
This let him essay to do, or do, whosoever shall wish to write a separate treatise
on humility; but of this present work the end proposed is different, and it
hath been undertaken on a matter so great, as that it hath chiefly to guard
against pride.
32. Wherefore
a few witnesses, which the Lord deigns to suggest to my mind, I proceed to
mention, from out
the teaching of Christ concerning humility,
such as perhaps may be enough for my purpose. His discourse, the first which
He delivered to His disciples at greater length, began from this. "Blessed
are the poor in spirit, for theirs is the Kingdom of Heaven."(3) And these
without all controversy we take to be humble. The faith of that Centurion He
on this account chiefly praised, and said that He had not found in Israel so
great faith, because he believed with so great humility as to say, "I
am not worthy that thou shouldest enter under my roof."(4) Whence also
Matthew for no other reason said that he "came" unto Jesus, (whereas
Luke most plainly signifies that he came not unto Him himself, but sent his
friends,) save that by his most faithful humility he himself came unto Him
more than they whom he sent. Whence also is that of the Prophet, "The
Lord is very high, and hath respect unto things that are lowly: but what are
very high He noteth afar off;"(5) assuredly as not coming unto Him. Whence
also He saith to that woman of Canaan, "O woman, great is thy faith; be
it done unto thee as thou wilt;"(6) whom above He had called a dog, and
had made answer that the bread of the sons was not to be cast to her. And this
she taking with humility had said, "Even so, Lord; for the dogs also eat
of the crumbs which fall from their masters' table." And thus what by
continual crying she obtained not, by humble confession she earned.(7) Hence
also those two are set forth praying in the Temple, the one a Pharisee, and
the other a Publican, for the sake of those who seem to themselves just and
despise the rest of men, and the confession of sins is set before the reckoning
up of merits. And assuredly the Pharisee was rendering thanks unto God by reason
of those things wherein he was greatly self-satisfied. "I render thanks
to Thee," saith he, "that I am not even as the rest of men, unjust,
extortioners, adulterers, even as also this publican. I fast twice in the week,
I give tithes of all things whatsoever I possess. But the Publican was standing
afar off, not daring to lift up his eyes to Heaven, but beating his breast,
saying, God be merciful unto me a sinner." But there follows the divine
judgment, "Verily I say unto you, the Publican went down from the Temple
justified more than that Pharisee."(8) Then the cause is shown, why this
is just; "Forasmuch as he who exalteth himself shall be humbled, and whoso
humbleth himself shall be exalted." Therefore it may come to pass, that
each one both shun real evils, and reflect on real goods in himself, and render
thanks for these unto "the Father of lights, from Whom cometh down every
best gift, and every perfect gift,"(9) and yet be rejected by reason of
the sin of haughtiness, if through pride, even in his thought alone, which
is before God, he insult other sinners, and specially when confessing their
sins in prayer, unto whom is due not upbraiding with arrogance, but pity without
despair. What is it that, when His disciples were questioning among themselves,
who of them should be greater, He set a little child before their eyes, saying, "Unless
ye shall be as this child, ye shall not enter into the Kingdom of Heaven?"(10)
Did He not chiefly commend humility, and set in it the desert of greatness?
Or when unto the sons of Zebedee desiring to be at His side in lofty seats
He so made answer,(11) as that they should rather think of having to drink
the Cup of His Passion, wherein He humbled Himself even unto death, even the
death of the Cross,(12) than with proud desire demand to be preferred to the
rest; what did He show, save, that He would be a bestower of exaltation upon
them, who should first follow Him as a teacher of humility? And now, in that,
when about to go forth unto His Passion, He washed the feet of His disciples,
and most openly taught them to do for their fellow-disciples and fellow-servants
this, which He their Lord and Master had done for them; how greatly did He
commend humility?(1) And in order to commend this He chose also that time,
wherein they were looking on Him, as immediately about to die, with great longing;
assuredly about to retain in their memory this especially, which their Master,
Whom they were to imitate, had pointed out to them as the last thing. But He
did this at that time, which surely He could have done on other days also before,
wherein He had been conversant with them; at which time if it were done, this
same would indeed be delivered, but certainly would not be so received.
33. Whereas,
then, all Christians have to guard humility, forasmuch as it is from Christ
that they
are called
Christians, Whose Gospel no one considers
with care, but that he discovers Him to be a Teacher of humility; specially
is it becoming that they be followers and keepers of this virtue, who excel
the rest of men in any great good, in order that they may have a great care
of that, which I set down in the beginning, "By how much thou art great,
by so much humble thyself in all things, and thou shall find grace before God."(2)
Wherefore, because perpetual Continence and specially virginity, is a great
good in the Saints of God, they must with all watchfulness beware, that it
be not corrupted with pride.
34. Paul
the Apostle censures evil unmarried women, curious and prating, and says
that this fault comes
of idleness. "But at the same time," saith
he, "being idle they learn to go about to houses: but not only idle, but
curious also and prating, speaking what they ought not."(3) Of these he
had said above, "But younger widows avoid; for when they have past their
time in delights, they wish to wed in Christ; having condemnation, in that
they have made void their first faith:" that is, have not continued in
that, which they had vowed at the first. And yet he saith not, they marry,
but "they wish to marry." For many of them are recalled from marrying,
not by love of a noble purpose, but by fear of open shame, which also itself
comes of pride, whereby persons fear to displease men more than God. These,
therefore, who wish to marry, and do not marry on this account, because they
cannot with impunity, who would do better to marry than to be burned, that
is, than to be laid waste in their very conscience by the hidden flame of lust,
who repent of their profession, and who feel their confession irksome; unless
they correct and set right their heart, and by the fear of God again overcome
their lust, must be accounted among the dead; whether they pass their time
in delights, whence the Apostle says, "But she who passes her time in
delights, living, is dead;"(4) or whether in labors and fastings, which
are useless where there is no correction of the heart, and serve rather for
display than amendment. I do not, for my part, impose on such a great regard
for humility, in whom pride itself is confounded, and bloodstained by wound
of conscience. Nor on such as are drunken, or covetous, or who are lying in
any other kind whatever of damnable disease, at the same time that they have
profession of bodily continence, and through perverse manners are at variance
with their own name, do I impose this great anxiety about pious humility: unless
haply in these evils they shall dare even to make a display of themselves,
unto whom it is not enough, that the punishments of these are deferred. Nor
am I treating of these, in whom there is a certain aim of pleasing, either
by more elegant dress than the necessity of so great profession demands, or
by remarkable manner of binding the head, whether by bosses of hair swelling
forth, or by coverings so yielding, that the fine net-work below appears: unto
these we must give precepts, not as yet concerning humility, but concerning
chastity itself, or virgin modesty. Give me one who makes profession of perpetual
continence, and who is free from these, and all such faults and spots of conduct;
for this one I fear pride, for this so great good I am in alarm from the swelling
of arrogance. The more there is in any one on account of which to be self-pleased,
the more I fear, lest, by pleasing self, he please not Him, Who "resisteth
the proud, but unto the humble giveth grace."(5)
35. Certainly
we are to contemplate in Christ Himself, the chief instruction and pattern
of virginal
purity.
What further precept then concerning humility
shall I give to the continent, than what He saith to all, "Learn of Me,
in that I am meek and lowly of heart?"(6) when He had made mention above
of His greatness, and, wishing to show this very thing, how great He was, and
how little He had been made for our sakes, saith, "I confess to Thee,
O Father, Lord of heaven and earth, in that Thou hast hidden these things from
the wise and prudent, and hast revealed them unto little children. Even so,
O Father, in that so it hath been pleasing before Thee. All things have been
delivered unto Me of My Father: and no one knoweth the Son, save the Father;
and no one knoweth the Father, save the Son, and he to whom the Son shall have
willed to reveal Him. Come unto Me, all ye who labor and are burdened, and
I will refresh you. Take My yoke upon you, and learn of Me, in that I am meek
and lowly of heart."(1) He, He, unto Whom the Father hath delivered all
things, and Whom no one knoweth but the Father, and Who alone, (and he, unto
whom He shall have willed to reveal Him), knoweth the Father, saith not, "Learn
of Me" to make the world, or to raise the dead, but, "in that I am
meek and lowly of heart." O saving teaching? O Teacher and Lord of mortals,
unto whom death was pledged and passed on in the cup of pride, He would not
teach what Himself was not, He would not bid what Himself did not. I see Thee,
O good Jesu, with the eyes of faith, which Thou hast opened for me, as in an
assembly of the human race, crying out and saying, "Come unto Me, and
learn of Me." What, I beseech Thee, through Whom all things were made,
O Son of God, and the Same Who was made among all things, O Son of Man: to
learn what of Thee, come we to Thee? "For that I am meek," saith
He, "and lowly of heart." Is it to this that all the treasures of
wisdom and knowledge hidden in Thee(2) are brought, that we learn this of Thee
as a great thing, that Thou art "meek and lowly of heart?" Is it
so great a thing to be little, that it could not at all be learned unless it
were brought to pass by Thee, Who art so great? So indeed it is. For by no
other way is there found out rest for the soul, save when the unquiet swelling
hath been dispersed, whereby it was great unto itself, when it was not sound
unto Thee.
36. Let
them hear Thee, and let them come to Thee, and let them learn of Thee to
be meek and lowly,
who seek
Thy Mercy and Truth, by living unto Thee, unto
Thee, not unto themselves. Let him hear this, laboring and laden, who is weighed
down by his burthen, so as not to dare to lift up his eyes to heaven, that
sinner beating his breast, and drawing near from afar.(3) Let him hear, the
centurion, not worthy that Thou shouldest enter under his roof.(4) Let him
hear, Zaccheus, chief of publicans, restoring fourfold the gains of damnable
sins.(5) Let her hear, the woman in the city a sinner, by so much the more
full of tears at Thy feet, the more alien she had been from Thy steps.(6) Let
them hear, the harlots and publicans, who enter into the kingdom of heaven
before the Scribes and Pharisees.(7) Let them hear, every kind of such ones,
feastings with whom were cast in Thy teeth as a charge, forsooth, as though
by whole persons who sought not a physician, whereas Thou camest not to call
the righteous, but sinners to repentance.(8) All these, when they are converted
unto Thee, easily grow meek, and are humbled before Thee, mindful of their
own most unrighteous life, and of Thy most indulgent mercy, in that, "where
sin hath abounded, grace hath abounded more."(9)
37. But
regard the troops of virgins, holy boys and girls: this kind hath been trained
up in Thy Church:
there
for Thee it hath been budding from its
mother's breasts; for Thy Name it hath loosed its tongue to speak, Thy Name,
as through the milk of its infancy, it hath had poured in and hath sucked,
no one of this number can say, "I, who before was a blasphemer, and persecutor,
and in jurious, but I obtained mercy, in that I did in being ignorant, in unbelief."(10)
Yea more, that, which Thou commandedst not, but only didst set forth, for such
as would, to seize, saying, "Whoso can receive, let him receive;" they
have seized, they have vowed, and, for the sake of the kingdom of heaven, not
for that Thou threatenedst, but for that Thou exhortedst, they have made themselves
eunuchs.(11) To these cry out, let these hear Thee, in that Thou art "meek
and lowly Of heart." Let these, by how much they are great, by so much
humble themselves in all things, that they may find grace before Thee. They
are just: but they are not, are they, such as Thou, justifying the ungodly?
They are chaste: but them in sins their mothers nurtured in their wombs.(12)
They are holy, but Thou art also Holy of Holies. They are virgins, but they
are not also born of virgins. They are wholly chaste both in spirit and in
flesh: but they are not the Word made flesh.(13) And yet let them learn, not
from those unto whom Thou forgivest sins, but from Thee Thyself, The Lamb of
God Who takest away the sins of the world,(14) in that Thou art "meek
and lowly of heart."
38. I
send thee not, soul that art religiously chaste, that hast not given the
reins to fleshly appetite
even so far as to allowed marriage, that hast
not indulged thy body about to depart even to the begetting one to succeed
thee, that hast sustained aloft thy earthly members, afloat to accustom them
to heaven; I send thee not, in order that thou mayest learn humility, unto
publicans and sinners, who yet enter into the kingdom of heaven before the
proud: I send thee not to these: for they, who have been set free from the
gulf of uncleanness, are unworthy that undefiled virginity be sent to them
to take pattern from. I send thee unto the King of Heaven, unto Him, by Whom
men were created, and Who was created among men for the sake of men; unto Him,
Who is fair of beauty above the sons of men,(1) and despised by the sons of
men on behalf of the sons of men: unto Him, Who, ruling the immortal angels,
disdained not to do service unto mortals. Him, at any rate, not unrighteousness,
but charity, made humble; "Charity, which rivalleth not, is not puffed
up, seeketh not her own;"(2) forasmuch as "Christ also pleased not
Himself, but, as it is written of Him, The reproaches of such as reproached
Thee have fallen upon Me.(3) Go then, come unto Him, and learn, in that He
is "meek and lowly of heart." Thou shall not go unto him, who dared
not by reason of the burden of unrighteousness to lift up his eyes to heaven,
but unto Him, Who by the weight of charity came down from heaven.(4) Thou shalt
not go unto her, who watered with tears the feet of her Lord, seeking forgiveness
of heavy sins; but thou shalt go unto Him, Who, granting forgiveness of all
sins, washed the feet of His own disciples.(5) I know the dignity of thy virginity;
I propose not to thee to imitate the Publican humbly accusing his own faults;
but I fear for the Pharisee proudly boasting of his own merits.(6) I say not,
Be thou such as she, of whom it was said, "There are forgiven unto her
many sins, in that she hath loved much;"(7) but I fear lest, as thinking
that thou hast little forgiven to thee, thou love little.
39. I
fear, I say, greatly for thee, lest, when thou boastest that thou wilt follow
the Lamb wheresoever
He shall have gone, thou be unable by reason of
swelling pride to follow Him through strait ways. It is good for thee, O virgin
soul, that thus, as thou art a virgin, thus altogether keeping in thy heart
that thou hast been born again, keeping in thy flesh that thou hast been born,
thou yet conceive of the fear of the Lord, and give birth to the spirit of
salvation.(8) "Fear," indeed, "there is not in charity, but
perfect charity," as it is written, "casteth out fear:"9 but
fear of men, not of God: fear of temporal evils, not of the Divine Judgment
at the last. "Be not thou high-minded, but fear."(10), Love thou
the goodness of God; fear thou His severity: neither suffers thee to be proud.
For by loving you fear, lest you grievously offend One Who is loved and loves.
For what more grievous offense, than that by pride thou displease Him, Who
for thy sake hath been displeasing to the proud? And where ought there to be
more that "chaste fear abiding for ever and ever,(11) than in thee, who
hast no thought of the things of this world, how to please a wedded partner;
but of the things of the Lord, how to please the Lord?(12) That other fear
is not in charity, but this chaste fear quitteth not charity. If you love not,
fear lest you perish; if you love, fear lest you displease. That fear charity
casteth out, with this it runneth within. The Apostle Paul also says, "For
we have not received the spirit of bondage again to fear; but we have received
the spirit of adoption of sons, wherein we cry, Abba, Father."(13) I believe
that he speaks of that fear, which had been given in the Old Testament, test
the temporal goods should be lost, which God had promised unto those not yet
sons under grace, but as yet slaves under the law. There is also the fear of
eternal fire, to serve God in order to avoid which is assuredly not yet of
perfect charity. For the desire of the reward is one thing, the fear of punishment
another. They are different sayings, "Whither shall I go away from Thy
Spirit, and from Thy face whither shall I flee?"(14) and, "One thing
I have sought of the Lord, this I will seek after; that I may dwell in the
house of the Lord through all the days of my life, that I may consider the
delight of the Lord, that I be protected in His temple:"(15) and, "Turn
not away Thy face from me:"(16) and, "My soul longeth and fainteth
unto the courts of the Lord.(17) Those sayings let him have had, who dared
not to lift up his eyes to heaven; and she who was watering with tears His
feet, in order to obtain pardon for her grievous sins; but these do thou have,
who art careful about the things of the Lord, to be holy both in body and spirit.
With those sayings there companies fear which hath torment, which perfect charity
casteth forth; but with these sayings there companies chaste fear of the Lord,
that abideth for ever and ever. And to both kinds it must be said, "Be
not thou high-minded, but fear;"(1) that man neither of defense of his
sins, nor of presumption of righteousness set himself up. For Paul also himself,
who saith, "For ye have not received the spirit of bondage again to fear;"(2)
yet, fear being a companion of charity, saith, "With fear and much trembling
was I towards you:"(3) and that saying, which I have mentioned, that the
engrafted wild olive tree be not proud against the broken branches of the olive
tree, himself made use of, saying, "Be not thou high-minded, but fear;" himself
admonishing all the members of Christ in general, saith, "With fear and
trembling work out your own salvation; for it is God Who worketh in you both
to will and to do, according to His good pleasure;"(4) that it seem not
to pertain unto the Old Testament what is written, "Serve the Lord in
fear, and rejoice unto Him with trembling."(5)
40. And
what members of the holy body, which is the Church, ought more to take care,
that upon them
the holy
Spirit may rest, than such as profess virginal
holiness? But how doth He rest, where He findeth not His own place? what else
than an humbled heart, to fill, not to leap back from; to raise up, not to
weigh down? whereas it hath been most plainly said, "On whom shall rest
My Spirit? On him that is humble and quiet, and trembles at My words."(6)
Already thou livest righteously, already thou livest piously, thou livest chastely,
holily, with virginal purity; as yet, however, thou livest here, and art thou
not humbled at hearing, "What, is not human life upon earth a trial?(7)
Doth it not drive thee back from over-confident arrogance, "Woe unto the
world because of offenses?"(8) Dost thou not tremble, lest thou be accounted
among the many, whose "love waxeth cold, because that iniquity abounds?"(9)
Dost thou not smite thy breast, when thou hearest, "Wherefore, whoso thinketh
that he standeth, let him see to it lest he fall?(10) Amid these divine warnings
and human dangers, do we yet find it so hard to persuade holy virgins to humility?
41. Or
are we indeed to believe that it is for any other reason, that God suffers
to be mixed up
with the
number of your profession, many, both men and
women, about to fall, than that by the fall of these your fear may be increased,
whereby to repress pride; which God so hates, as that against this one thing
The Highest humbled Himself? Unless haply, in truth, thou shalt therefore fear
less, and be more puffed up, so as to love little Him, Who hath loved thee
so much, as to give up Himself for thee,(11) because He bath forgiven thee
little, living, forsooth from childhood, religiously, piously, with pious chastity,
with inviolate virginity. As though in truth you ought not to love with much
greater glow of affection Him, Who, whatsoever things He hath forgiven unto
sinners upon their being turned to Him, suffered you not to fall into them.
Or indeed that Pharisee,(12) who therefore loved little, because thought that
little was forgiven him, was it for any other reason that he was blinded by
this error, than because being ignorant of the righteousness of God, and seeking
to establish his own, he had not been made subject unto the righteousness of
God?(13) But you, an elect race, and among the elect more elect, virgin choirs
that follow the Lamb, even you "by grace have been saved through faith;
and this not of yourselves, but it is the gift of God: not of works, lest haply
any be elated. For we are His workmanship, created in Jesus Christ in good
works, which God hath prepared, that in them we may walk." What therefore,
by how much the more ye are adorned by His gifts, shall ye by so much the less
love Him? May He Himself turn away so dreadful madness! Wherefore forasmuch
as the Truth has spoken the truth, that he, unto whom little is forgiven, loveth
little; do ye, in order that ye may love with full glow of affection Him, Whom
ye are free to love, being loosened from ties of marriage, account as altogether
forgiven unto you, whatever of evil, by His governance, ye have not committed.
For "your eyes ever unto the Lord, forasmuch as He shall pluck out of
the net your feet? and, "Except the Lord shall have kept the city, in
vain hath he watched who keepeth it."(15) And speaking of Continence itself
the Apostle says, "But I would that all men were as I myself; but each
one hath his own proper gift from God; one in this way, and another in that
way."(17) Who therefore bestoweth these gifts? Who distributeth his own
proper gifts unto each as He will?(18) Forsooth God, with Whom there is not
unrighteousness? and by this means with what equity He makes some in this way,
and others in that way, for man to know is either impossible or altogether
hard: but that with equity He maketh, it is not lawful to doubt. "What," therefore, "hast
thou, which thou hast not received?"(1) And by what perversity dost thou
less love Him, of Whom thou hast received more?
42. Wherefore
let this be the first thought for the putting on of humility, that God's
virgin think
not that
it is of herself that she is such, and not
rather that this best "gift cometh down from above from the Father of
Lights, with Whom is no change nor shadow of motion."(2) For thus she
will not think that little hath been forgiven her, so as for her to love little,
and, being ignorant of the righteousness of God, and wishing to establish her
own, not to be made subject to the righteousness of God. In which fault was
that Simon who was surpassed by the woman, unto whom many sins were forgiven,
because she loved much. But she will have more cautious and true thoughts,
that we are so to account all sins as though forgiven, from which God keeps
us that we commit them not. Witnesses are those expressions of pious prayers
in holy Scriptures, whereby it is shown, that those very things, which are
commanded by God, are not done save by His Gift and help, Who commands. For
there is a falsehood in the asking for them, if we could do them without the
help of His grace. What is there so generally and chiefly charged, as obedience
whereby the Commandments of God are kept? And yet we find this wished for. "Thou," saith
he, "hast charged, that Thy commandments be greatly kept." Then it
follows, "O that my ways were directed to keep Thy righteousnesses: then
shall I not be confounded, whilst I look unto all Thy commandments."(3)
That which he had set down above that God had commanded, that he wished might
of himself be fulfilled. This is done assuredly, that there be not sin; but,
if there hath been sin, the command is that one repent; lest by defense and
excuse of sin he perish through pride, who hath done it, whilst he is unwilling
that what he hath done perish through repentance. This also is asked of God,
so that it may be understood that it is not done, save by His grant from Whom
it is asked. "Set," saith he, "O Lord, a watch to my mouth,
and a door of continence around my lips: let not my heart turn away unto evil
words, to make excuses in sins, with men that work unrighteousness."(4)
if, therefore, both obedience, whereby we keep His commandments, and repentance
whereby we excuse not our sins, are wished for and asked, l it is plain that,
when it is done, it is by His gift that it is possessed, by His help that it
is fulfilled, yet more openly is it said by reason of obedience, "By the
Lord the steps of a man are directed, and He shall will His way:"(5) and
of repentance the Apostle says, "if haply God may grant unto them repentance."(6)
43. Concerning
continence also itself hath it not been most openly said, "And
when I knew that no one can be continent unless God give it, this also itself
was a part of wisdom, to know whose gift it was?"(7) But perhaps continence
is the gift of God, but wisdom man bestows upon himself, whereby to understand,
that that gift is, not his own, but of God. Yea, "The Lord maketh wise
the blind:"(8) and, "The testimony of the Lord is faithful, it giveth
wisdom unto little ones:"(9) and, "If any one want wisdom, let him
ask of God, Who giveth unto all liberally, and upbraideth not, and it shall
be given to him."(10) But it becometh virgins to be wise, that their lamps
be not extinguished.(11) How "wise," save "not having high thoughts,
but consenting unto the lowly."(12) For Wisdom Itself hath said unto man, "Lo,
piety is wisdom!"(13) If therefore thou hast nothing, which thou hast
not received, "Be not high-minded, but fear."(14) And love not thou
little, as though Him by Whom little hath been forgiven to thee; but, rather,
love Him much, by Whom much hath been given to thee. For if he loves, unto
whom it hath been given not to repay: how much more ought he to love, i unto
whom it hath been given to possess. For both, whosoever continues chaste from
the beginning, is ruled by Him; and whosoever is made chaste instead of unchaste,
is corrected by Him; and whosoever is unchaste even unto the end, is abandoned
by Him. But this He can do by secret counsel, by unrighteous He cannot: and
perhaps it is for this end that it lies hid, that there may be more fear, and
less pride.
44. Next
let not man, now that he knoweth that by the grace of God he is what he is,
fall into
another snare
of pride, so as by lifting up himself for the
very grace of God to despise the rest. By which fault that other Pharisee both
gave thanks unto God for the goods which he had, and yet vaunted himself above
the Publican confessing his sins. What therefore should a virgin do, what should
she think, that she vaunt not herself above those, men or women, who have not
this so great gift? For she ought not to feign humility, but to set it forth:
for the feigning of humility is greater pride. Wherefore Scripture wishing
to show that humility ought to be true, after having said, "By how much
thou art great, by so much humble thyself in all things," added soon after, "And
thou shalt find grace before God:"(1) assuredly where one could not humble
one's self deceitfully.
45. Wherefore
what shall we say? is there any thought which a virgin of God may truly have,
by reason
of which
she dare not to set herself before a faithful
woman, not only a widow, but even married? I say not a reprobate virgin; for
who knows not that an obedient woman is to be set before a disobedient virgin?
But where both are obedient unto the commands of God, shall she so tremble
to prefer holy virginity even to chaste marriage, and continence to wedded
life, the fruit an hundred-fold to go before the thirty-fold? Nay, let her
not doubt to prefer this thing to that thing; yet let not this or that virgin,
obeying and fearing God, dare to set herself before this or that woman, obeying
and fearing God; otherwise she will not be humble, and "God resisteth
the proud!"(2) What, therefore, shall she have in her thoughts? Forsooth
the hidden gifts of God, which nought save the questioning of trial makes known
to each, even in himself. For, to pass over the rest, whence doth a virgin
know, although careful of the things of the Lord, how to please the Lord? but
that haply, by reason of some weakness of mind unknown to herself, she be not
as yet ripe for martyrdom, whereas that woman, whom she rejoiced to set herself
before, may already be able to drink the Cup of the Lord's humiliation,(4)
which He set before His disciples, to drink first, when enamored of high place?
Whence, I say, doth she know but that she herself be not as yet Thecla, that
other be already Crispina.(5) Certainly unless there be present trial, there
takes place no proof of this gift.
46. But
this is so great, that certain understand it to be the fruit an hundred-fold.(6)
For the authority
of the Church bears a very conspicuous witness, in which
it is known the faithful in what place the Martyrs, in what place the holy
nuns deceased, are rehearsed at the Sacraments of the Altar.(7) But what the
meaning is of that difference of fruitfulness, let them see to it, who understand
these things better than we; whether the virginal life be in fruit an hundred-fold,
in sixty-fold the widowed, in thirty-fold the married; or whether the hundred-fold
fruitfulness be ascribed unto martyrdom, the sixty-fold unto continence, the
thirty-fold unto marriage; or whether virginity, by the addition of martyrdom,
fill up the hundred-fold, but when alone be in sixty-fold, but married persons
bearing thirty-fold arrive at sixty-fold, in case they shall be martyrs: or
whether, what seems to me more probable, forasmuch as the gifts of Divine grace
are many, and one is greater and better than another, whence the Apostle says, "But
emulate ye the better gifts;"(8) we are to understand that they are more
in number than to allow of being distributed under those different kinds. In
the first place, that we set not widowed continence either as bearing no fruit,
or set it but level with the desert of married charity, or equal it unto virgin
glory; or think that the Crown of Martyrdom, either established in habit of
mind, although proof of trial be wanting, or in actual making trial of suffering,
be added unto either one of those these chastities, without any increase of
fruitfulness. Next, when we set it down that many men and women so keep virginal
chastity, as that yet they do not the things which the Lord saith, "If
thou wiliest to be perfect, go, sell all that thou hast, and give unto the
poor, and thou shalt have treasure in Heaven: and come, follow me;"(9)
and dare not unite themselves to those dwelling together, among whom no one
saith that any thing is his own, but all things are unto them common;(10) do
we think that there is no addition of fruitfulness unto the virgins of God,
when they do this? or that the virgins of God are without any fruit, although
they do not this? Therefore there are many gifts, and some brighter and higher
than others, each than each. And at times one is fruitful in fewer gifts, but
better; another in lower gifts, but more. And in what manner they be either
made equal one to another, or distinguished one from another, in receiving
eternal honors, who of men would dare to pronounce? whereas yet it is plain
both that those differences are many, and that the better are profitable not
for the present time, but for eternity. But I judge that the Lord willed to
make mention of three differences of fruitfulness, the rest He left to such
as understand.(1) For also another Evangelist hath made mention only of the
hundred-fold:(2) we are not, therefore, are we, to think that he either rejected,
or knew not of, the other two, but rather that he left them to be understood?
47. But,
as I had begun to say, whether the fruit an hundred-fold be virginity dedicated
to God,
or whether
we are to understand that interval of fruitfulness
in some other way, either such as we have made mention of, or such as we have
not made mention of; yet no one, as I suppose, will have dared to prefer virginity
to martyrdom, and no one will have doubted that this latter gift is hidden,
if trial to test it be wanting. A virgin, therefore, hath a subject for thought,
such as may be of profit to her for the keeping of humility, that she violate
not that charity, which is above all gifts, without which assuredly whatever
other gifts she shall have had, whether few or many, whether great or small,
she is nothing. She hath, I say, a subject for thought, that she be not puffed
up, that she rival not; forsooth that she so make profession that the virginal
good is much greater and better than the married good, as that yet she know
not whether this or that married woman be not already able to suffer for Christ,
but herself as yet unable, and she herein spared, that her weakness is not
put to the question by trial. "For God," saith the Apostle, "is
faithful, Who will not suffer you to be tried above what ye are able but will
make with the trial a way out, that ye may be able to bear it."(3) Perhaps,
therefore, those men or women keeping a way of married life praiseworthy in
its kind, are already able, against an enemy forcing to unrighteousness, to
contend even by tearing in pieces of bowels, and shedding of blood; but these
men or women, continent from childhood, and making themselves eunuchs for the
sake of the Kingdom of Heaven, still are not as yet able to endure such, either
for righteousness, or for chastity itself. For it is one thing, for truth and
an holy purpose, not to consent unto one who would persuade and flatter, but
another thing not to yield even to one who tortures and strikes. These lie
hid in the powers and strength of souls, by trial they are unfolded, by actual
essay they come forth. In order, therefore, that each be not puffed up by reason
of that, which he sees clearly that he can do, let him humbly consider that
he knows not that there is perchance something more excellent which he cannot
do, but that some, who neither have nor profess that of which he is lawfully
self-conscious, are able to do this, which he himself cannot do. Thus will
be kept, not by feigned but by true humility, "In honor preventing one
another,"(4) and, "esteeming each the other higher than himself."(5)
48. What
now shall I say concerning the very carefulness and watchfulness against
sin? "Who shall boast that he hath a chaste heart? or who shall
boast that he is clean from sin?"(6) Holy virginity is indeed inviolate
from the mother's womb; but "no one," saith he, "is clean in
Thy sight, not even the infant whose life is of one day upon the earth."(7)
There is kept also in faith inviolate a certain virginal chastity, whereby
the Church is joined as a chaste virgin unto One Husband: but That One Husband
hath taught, not only the faithful who are virgin in mind and body, but all
Christians altogether, from spiritual even unto carnal, from Apostles even
unto the last penitents, as though from the height of heaven even unto the
bounds of it,(8) to pray, and in the prayer itself hath admonished them to
say, "And forgive us our debts, even as we also forgive our debtors:"(9)
where, by this which we seek, He shews what also we should remember that we
are. For neither on behalf of those debts, which for our whole past life we
trust have been forgiven unto us in Baptism through His peace, hath He charged
us to pray, saying, "And forgive us our debts, even as we also forgive
our debtors:" otherwise this were a prayer which Catechumens rather ought
to pray up to the time of Baptism; but whereas it is what baptized persons
pray, rulers and people, pastors and flocks; it is sufficiently shown that
in this life, the whole of which is a trial, no one ought to boast himself
as though free from all sins.(10)
49. Wherefore
also the virgins of God without blame indeed, "follow the
Lamb whithersoever He shall have gone," both the cleansing of sins being
perfected, and virginity being kept, which, were it lost, could not return:
but, because that same Apocalypse itself, wherein such unto one such were revealed,
in this also praises them, that "in their mouth there was not found a
lie:"(11) let them remember in this also to be true, that they dare not
say that they have not sin. Forsooth the same John, who saw that, hath said
this, "If we shall have said that we have not sin, we deceive our own
selves, and the truth is not in us; but if we shall have confessed our faults,
He is faithful and just, so as to forgive us our sins, and to cleanse us from
all unrighteousness. But if we shall have said that we have not sinned, we
shall make Him a liar, and His word shall not be in us."(1) This surely
is not said unto these or those, but unto all Christians, wherein virgins also
ought to recognize themselves. For thus they shall be without a lie, such as
in the Apocalypse they appeared. And by this means so long as there is not
as yet perfection in heavenly height, confession in lowliness maketh them Without
blame.
50. But,
again, lest by occasion of this sentence, any one should sin with deadly
security, and should
allow
himself to be carried away, as though his
sins were soon by easy confession to be blotted out, he straightway added, "My
little children, these things have I written unto you, that ye sin not; and,
if one shall have sinned, we have an Advocate with the Father, Jesus Christ
the righteous, and Himself is a propitiation of our sins."(2) Let no one
therefore depart from sin as though about to return to it, nor bind himself
as it were by compact of alliance of this kind with unrighteousness, so as
to take delight rather to confess it than to shun it. But, forasmuch as even
upon such as are busy and on the watch not to sin, there creep by stealth,
in a certain way, from human weakness, sins, however small, however few, yet
not none; these same themselves become great and grievous, in case pride shall
have added to them increase and weight: but by the Priest, Whom we have in
the heavens, if by pious humility they be destroyed, they are with all ease
cleansed.
51. But
I contend not with those, who assert that a man can in this life live without
any sin:
I contend not,
I gainsay not. For perhaps we take measure
of the great from out our own misery, and, comparing ourselves with ourselves,
understand not.(3) One thing I know, that those great ones, such as we are
not, such as we have not as yet made proof of, by how much they are great,
by so much humble themselves in all things, that they may find grace before
God. For, let them be how great soever they will, "there is no servant
greater than his Lord, nor disciple greater than his master."(4) And assuredly
He is the Lord, Who saith, "All things have been delivered unto Me of
My Father;"(5) and He is the Master, Who saith, "Come unto Me, all
ye who labor, and learn of Me;" and yet what learn we? "In that I
am meek," saith He, "and lowly of heart."
52. Here
some one will say, This is now not to write of virginity, but of humility.
As though truly
it were
any kind of virginity, and not that which
is after God, which we had undertaken to set forth. And this good, by how much
I see it to be great, by so much I fear for it, lest it be lost, the thief
pride. Therefore there is none that guardeth the virginal good, save God Himself
Who gave it: and God is Charity.(6) The Guardian therefore of virginity is
Charity: but the place of this Guardian is humility. There forsooth He dwelleth,
Who said, that on the lowly and quiet, and that trembleth at His words, His
Spirit resteth.(7) What, therefore, have I done foreign from my purpose, if
wishing the good, which I have praised, to be more securely guarded, I have
taken care also to prepare a place for the Guardian? For I speak with confidence,
nor have I any fear lest they be angry with me, whom I admonish with care to
fear for themselves together with me. More easily do follow the Lamb, although
not whithersoever He shall have gone, yet so far as they shall have had power,
married persons who are humble, than virgins who are proud. For how doth one
follow Him, unto Whom one wills not to approach? or how doth one approach Him,
unto Whom one comes not to learn, "in that I am meek and lowly of heart?" Wherefore
those the Lamb leadeth following whithersoever He shall have gone, in whom
first Himself shall have found where to lay His Head. For also a certain proud
and crafty person had said to Him, "Lord, I will follow Thee whithersoever
Thou shaft have gone;"(8) to whom He made answer, "Foxes have dens,
and fowls of heaven nests: but the Son of Man hath not where to lay His Head." By
the term of foxes He reproved wily craftiness, and by the name of birds puffed-up
arrogance, wherein He found not pious humility to rest in. And by this no where
at all did he follow the Lord, who had promised that he would follow Him, not
unto a certain point of progress, but altogether whithersoever He should have
gone.
53. Wherefore
this do ye, virgins of God, this do ye: follow ye the Lamb, whithersoever
He shall
have gone.
But first come unto Him, Whom ye are to follow,
and learn, in that He is meek and lowly of heart. Come ye in lowly wise unto
the Lowly, if ye love: and depart not from Him, lest ye fall. For whoso fears
to depart from Him asks and says, "Let there not come to me foot of pride."(9)
Go on in the why of loftiness with the foot of lowliness; Himself lifteth up
such as follow in lowly wise, Who thought it not a trouble to come down unto
such as lay low. Commit ye His gifts unto Him to keep, "guard ye your
strength unto Him."(1) Whatever of evil through His guardianship ye commit
not, account as forgiven unto you by Him: lest, thinking that you have little
forgiven unto you, ye love little, and with ruinous boasting despise the publicans
beating their breasts. Concealing that strength of yours which hath been tried
beware, that ye be not puffed up, because ye have been able to bear something:
but concerning that which hath been untried pray, that ye be not tempted above
that ye are able to bear. Think that some are superior to you in secret, than
whom ye are openly better. When the good things of others, haply unknown to
you, are kindly believed by you, your own that are known to you are not lessened
by comparison, but strengthened by love: and what haply as yet are wanting,
are by so much the more easily given, by how much they are the more humbly
desired. Let such among your number as persevere, afford to you an example:
but let such as fall increase your fear. Love the one that ye may imitate it;
mourn over the other, that ye be not puffed up. Do not ye establish your own
righteousness; submit yourselves unto God Who justifies you. Pardon the sins
of others, pray for your own: future sins shun by watching, past sins blot
out by confessing.
54. Lo,
already ye are such, as that in the rest of your conduct also ye correspond
with the virginity
which
ye have professed and kept. Lo, already not only do
ye abstain from murders, devilish sacrifices and abominations, thefts, rapines,
frauds, perjuries, drunkennesses, and all luxury and avarice, hatreds, emulations,
impieties, cruelties; but even those things, which either are, or are thought,
lighter, are not found nor arise among you: not bold face, not wandering eyes,
not unbridled tongue, not petulant laugh, not scurrilous jest, not unbecoming
mien, not swelling or loose gait; already ye render not evil for evil, nor
curse for curse;(2) already, lastly, ye fulfill that measure of love, that
ye lay down your lives for your brethren.(3) Lo, already ye are such, because
also such ye ought to be. These, being added to virginity, set forth an angelic
life unto men, and the ways of heaven unto the earth. But, by how much ye are
great, whosoever of you are so great, "by so much humble yourselves in
all things, that ye may find grace before God," that He resist you not
as proud, that He humble you not as lifting up yourselves, that He lead you
not through straits as being puffed up: although anxiety be unnecessary, that,
where Charity glows, humility be not wanting.
55. If, therefore, ye despise marriages of sons of men, from which to beget
sons of men, love ye with your whole heart Him, Who is fair of form above the
sons of men; ye have leisure; your heart is free from marriage bonds. Gaze
on the Beauty of your Lover: think of Him equal to the Father, made subject
also to His Mother: ruling even in the heavens, and serving upon the earth:
creating all things, created among all things. That very thing, which in Him
the proud mock at, gaze on, how fair it is: with inward eyes gaze on the wounds
of Him hanging, the scars of Him rising again, the blood of Him dying, the
price of him that believes, the gain of Him that redeems. Consider of how great
value these are, weigh them in the scales of Charity; and whatever of love
ye had to expend upon your marriages, pay back to Him.
56. It is well that He seeks your beauty within, where He hath given unto
you power to become daughters of God:(4) He seeks not of you a fair flesh,
but fair conduct, whereby to bridle also the flesh. He is not one unto Whom
any one can lie concerning you, and make him rage through jealousy. See with
how great security ye love Him, Whom ye fear not to offend by false suspicions.
Husband and wife love each other, in that they see each other: and what they
see not, that they fear between themselves: nor have they sure delight in what
is visible, while in what is concealed they usually suspect what is not. Ye
in Him, Whom ye see not with the eyes, and behold by faith, neither have what
is real to blame, nor fear lest haply ye offend Him by what is false. If therefore
ye should owe great love to husbands, Him, for Whose sake ye would not have
husbands, how greatly ought ye to love? Let Him be fixed in your whole heart,
Who for you was fixed on the Cross: let Him possess in your soul all that,
whatever it be, that ye would not have occupied by marriage. It is not lawful
for you to love little Him, for Whose sake ye have not loved even what were
lawful. So loving Him Who is meek and lowly of heart, I have no fear for you
of pride.
57. Thus,
after our small measure, we have spoken enough both of sanctity, whereby
ye are properly
called "sanctimoniales," and of humility,
whereby whatever great name ye bear is kept. But more worthily let those Three
Children, unto whom He, Whom they loved with full glow of heart, afforded refreshing
in the fire, admonish you concerning this our little work, much more shortly
indeed in number of words, but much more greatly in weight of authority, in
the Hymn wherein God is honored by them. For joining humility unto holiness
in such as praise God, they have most plainly taught, that each, by how much
he make any more holy profession, by so much do beware that he be not deceived
by pride. Wherefore do ye also praise Him, Who grants unto you, that in the
midst of the flames of this world, although ye be not joined in marriage, yet
ye be not burned: and praying also for us, "Bless ye the Lord, ye holy
and humble men of heart; utter an hymn, and exalt Him above all forever."(2)
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