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XI. FRAGMENTS FOUND IN GREEK ONLY IN THE OXFORD EDITION / XII. FRAGMENTS
NOT GIVEN IN THE OXFORD EDITION
XI.--FRAGMENTS FOUND IN GREEK ONLY IN THE OXFORD EDITION.
FROM THE LAST WORK ON THE PASSOVER.
Quoted in the Paschal Chronicle.
Accordingly,
in the years gone by, Jesus went to eat the passover sacrificed by the
Jews,
keeping the
feast. But when he had preached He who was the
Passover, the Lamb of God, led as a sheep to the slaughter, presently taught
His disciples the mystery of the type on the thirteenth day, on which also
they inquired, "Where wilt Thou that we prepare for Thee to eat the
passover?"[1] It was on this day, then, that both the consecration
of the unleavened bread and the preparation for the feast took place. Whence
John naturally describes the disciples as already previously prepared to
have their feet washed by the Lord. And on the following day our Saviour
suffered, He who was the Passover, propitiously sacrificed by the Jews.
THE SAME.
Suitably, therefore, to the fourteenth day, on which He also suffered,
in the morning, the chief priests and the scribes, who brought Him to Pilate,
did not enter the Praetorium, that they might not be defiled, but might
freely eat the passover in the evening. With this precise determination
of the days both the whole Scriptures agree, and the Gospels harmonize.
The resurrection also attests it. He certainly rose on the third day, which
fell on the first day of the weeks of harvest, on which the law prescribed
that the priest should offer up the sheaf.
MACARIUS CHRYSOCEPHALUS: PARABLE OF THE PRODIGAL SON, LUKE XV. ORATION
ON LUKE XV., TOWARDS THE CLOSE.
1. What choral dance and high festival is held in heaven, if there is
one that has become an exile and a fugitive from the life led under the
Father, knowing not that those who put themselves far from Him shall perish;
if he has squandered the gift, and substance, and inheritance of the Father;
if there is one whose faith has failed, and whose hope is spent, by rushing
along with the Gentiles into the same profligacy of debauchery; and then,
famished and destitute, and not even filled with what the swine eat, has
arisen and come to his Father!
But the kind Father waits not till the son comes to Him. For perchance
he would never be able or venture to approach, did he not find Him gracious.
Wherefore, when he merely wishing, when he straightway made a beginning,
when he took the first step, while he was yet a great way off, He [the
Father] was moved with compassion, and ran, and fell upon his neck and
kissed him. And then the son, taking courage, confessed what he had done.
Wherefore
the Father bestows on him the glory and honour that was due and meet,
putting on
him the
best robe, the robe of immortality; and a
ring, a royal signet and divine seal,--impress of consecration, signature
of glory, pledge of testimony (for it is said, "He hath set to his
seal that God is true,")[1] and shoes, not those perishable ones which
he hath set his foot on holy ground is bidden take off, nor such as he
who is sent to preach the kingdom of heaven is forbidden to put on, but
such as wear not, and ate suited for the journey to heaven, becoming and
adorning the heavenly path, such as unwashed feet never put on, but those
which are washed by our Teacher and Lord.
Many,
truly, are the shoes of the sinful soul, by which it is bound and cramped.
For each
man is
cramped by the cords of his own sins. Accordingly,
Abraham swears to the king of Sodom, "I will not take of all that
is thine, from a thread to a shoe-latchet."[2] On account of these
being defiled and polluted on the earth, every kind of wrong and selfishness
engrosses life. As the Lord reproves Israel by Amos, saying, "For
three iniquities of Israel, yea, for four, I will not turn him back; because
they have given away the righteous for silver, and the needy for a pair
of shoes, which tread upon the dust of the ground."[3]
2.
Now the shoes which the Father bids the servant give to the repentant
son who has be-taken
himself
to Him, do not impede or drag to the earth
(for the earthly tabernacle weighs down the anxious mind); but they are
buoyant, and ascending, and waft to heaven, and serve as such a ladder
and chariot as he requires who has turned his mind towards the Father.
For, beautiful after being first beautifully adorned with all these things
without, he enters into the gladness within. For "Bring out" was
said by Him who had first said, "While he was yet a great way off,
he ran and fell upon his neck." For it is here[4] that all the preparation
for entrance to the marriage to which we are invited must be accomplished.
He, then, who has been made ready to enter will say, "This my joy
is fulfilled."[5] But the unlovely and unsightly man will hear, "Friend,
how camest thou in here, without having a wedding garment?"[6] And
the fat and unctuous food,--the delicacies abundant and sufficing of the
blessed,--the fatted calf is killed; which is also again spoken of as a
lamb (not literally); that no one may suppose it small; but it is the great
and greatest. For not small is "the Lamb of God who taketh away the
sin of the world,"[7] who "was led as a sheep to the slaughter," the
sacrifice full of marrow, all whose fat, according to the sacred law, was
the Lord's. For He was wholly devoted and consecrated to the Lord; so well
grown, and to such excessive size, as to reach and extend over all, and
to fill those who eat Him and feed upon Him. For He is both flesh and bread,
and has given Himself as both to us to be eaten.
To
the sons, then, who come to Him, the Father gives the calf, and it is
slain and eaten.
But those
who do not come to Him He pursues and disinherits,
and is found to be a most powerful bull. Here, by reason of His size and
prowess, it is said of Him, "His glory is as that of an unicorn."[8]
And the prophet Habakkuk sees Him bearing horns, and celebrates His defensive
attitude--"horns in His hands."[9] Wherefore the sign shows His
power and authority,--horns that pierce on both sides, or rather, on all
sides, and through everything. And those who eat are so strengthened, and
retain such strength from the life-giving food in them, that they themselves
are stronger than their enemies, and are all but armed with the horns of
a bull; as it is said, "In thee shall we butt our enemies."[10]
3. Gladness there is, and music, and dances; although the eider son, who
had ever been with and ever obedient to the Father, takes it ill, when
he who never had himself been dissipated or profligate sees the guilty
one made happy.
Accordingly
the Father calls him, saying, "Son, thou art ever with
me." And what greater joy and feast and festivity can be than being
continually with God, standing by His side and serving Him? "And all
that is mine is thine." And blessed is the heir of God, for whom the
Father holds possession,--the faithful, to whom the whole world of possessions
belongs.
"It was meet that we should be glad, and rejoice; for thy brother
was dead, and is alive again." Kind Father, who givest all things
life, and raisest the dead. "And was lost, and is found." And "blessed
is the man whom Thou hast chosen and accepted,"[1] and whom having
sought, Thou dost find. "Blessed are those whose iniquities are forgiven,
whose sins are covered."[2] It is for man to repent of sins; but let
this be accompanied with a change that will not be checked. For he who
does not act so shall be put to shame, because he has acted not with his
whole heart, but in haste.
And
it is ours to flee to God. And let us endeavour after this ceaselessly
and energetically.
For He
says, "Come unto Me, all ye that labour
and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest."[3] And prayer and
confession with humility are voluntary acts. Wherefore it is enjoined, "First
tell thy sins, that thou mayest be justified."[4] What afterwards
we shall obtain, and what we shall be, it is not for us to judge.
4.
Such is the strict meaning of the parable.[5] The repentant son came
to the pitying Father,
never
hoping for these things,--the best robe, and
the ring, and the shoes,--or to taste the fatted calf, or to share in gladness,
or enjoy music and dances; but he would have been contented with obtaining
what in his own estimation he deemed himself worth. "Make me," he
had made up his mind to say, "as one of thy hired servants." But
when he saw the Father's welcome meeting him, he did not say this, but
said what he had in his mind to say first, "Father, I have sinned
against Heaven, and before thee." And so both his humility and his
accusation became the cause of justification and glory. For the righteous
man condemns himself in his first words. So also the publican departed
justified rather than the Pharisee. The son, then, knew not either what
he was to obtain, or how to take or use or put on himself the things given
him; since he did not take the robe himself, and put; it on. But it is
said, "Put it on him." He did not himself put the ring on his
finger, but those who were bidden "Put a ring on his hand." Nor
did he put the shoes on himself, but it was they who heard, "and shoes
on his feet."
And these things were perhaps incredible to him and to others, and unexpected
before they took place; but gladly received and praised were the gifts
with which he was presented.
5. The parable exhibits this thought, that the exercise of the faculty
of reason has been accorded to each man. Wherefore the prodigal is introduced,
demanding from his father his portion, that is, of the state of mind, endowed
by reason. For the possession of reason is granted to all, in order to
the pursuit of what is good, and the avoidance of what is bad. But many
who are furnished by God with this make a bad use of the knowledge that
has been given them, and land in the profligacy of evil practices, and
wickedly waste the substance of reason,--the eye on disgraceful sights,
the tongue on blasphemous words, the smell on foetid licentious excesses
of pleasures, the mouth on swinish gluttony, the hands on thefts, the feet
on running into plots, the thoughts on impious counsels, the inclinations
on indulgence on the love of ease, the mind on brutish pastime. They preserve
nothing of the substance of reason unsquandered. Such an one, therefore,
Christ represents in the parable,--as a rational creature, with his reason
darkened, and asking from the Divine Being what is suitable to reason;
then as obtaining from God, and making a wicked use of what had been given,
and especially of the benefits of baptism, which had been vouchsafed to
him; whence also He calls him a prodigal; and then, after the dissipation
of what had been given him, and again his restoration by repentance, [He
represents] the love of God shown to him.
6.
For He says, "Bring hither the fatted calf, kill it, and let us
eat and be merry; for this my son"--a name of nearest relationship,
and significative of what is given to the faithful--"was dead and
lost,"--an expression of extremest alienation; for what is more alien
to the living than the lost and dead? For neither can be possessed any
more. But having from the nearest relationship fallen to extremest alienation,
again by repentance he returned to near relationship. For it is said, "Put
on him the best robe," which was his the moment he obtained baptism.
I mean the glory of baptism, the remission of sins, and the communication
of the other blessings, which he obtained immediately he had touched the
font.
"And put a ring on his hand." Here
is the mystery of the Trinity; which is the seal impressed on those who
believe.
"And put shoes on his feet," for "the preparation of the
Gospel of peace,"[6] and the whole course that leads to good actions.
7.
But whom Christ finds lost, after sin committed since baptism, those
Novatus, enemy of
God, resigns
to destruction. Do not let us then reckon
any fault if we repent; guarding against falling, let us, if we have fallen,
retrace our steps. And while dreading to offend, let us, after offending,
avoid despair, and be eager to be confirmed; and on sinking, let us haste
to rise up again. Let us obey the Lord, who calls to us, "Come unto
Me, all ye that labour, and I will give you rest."[1] Let us employ
the gift of reason for actions of prudence. Let us learn now abstinence
from what is wicked, that we may not be forced to learn in the future.
Let us employ life as a training school for what is good; and let us be
roused to the hatred of sin. Let us bear about a deep love for the Creator;
let us cleave to Him with our whole heart; let us not wickedly waste the
substance of reason, like the prodigal. Let us obtain the joy laid up,
in which Paul exulting, exclaimed, "Who shall separate us from the
love of Christ?"[2] To Him belongs glory and honour, with the Father
and the Holy Spirit, world without end. Amen.
MACARIUS CHRYSOCEPHALUS: ORATION VIII. ON MATT. VIII., AND BOOK VII. ON
LUKE XIII.
Therefore
God does not here take the semblance of man, but of a dove, because He
wished
to show the
simplicity and gentleness of the new manifestation
of the Spirit by the likeness of the dove. For the law was stem, and punished
with the sword; but grace is joyous, and trains by the word of meekness.
Hence the Lord also says to the apostles, who said that He should punish
with fire those who would not receive Him, after the manner of Elias: "Ye
know not what manner of spirit ye are of."[3]
FROM THE SAME.--BOOK XIII. CHAP. IX.
Possibly
by the "iota and the tittle" His righteousness exclaims, "If
ye come right to me, I also will come right to you; if ye walk crooked,
I also will walk crooked, saith the Lord of hosts,"[4] alluding to
the offences of sinners under the name of crooked ways. For the straight
way, and that according to nature, which is pointed out by the iota of
Jesus, is His goodness, which is immoveable towards those who have obediently
believed. There shall not then pass away from the law neither the iota
nor the tittle; that is, neither the promise that applies to the straight
in the way, nor the punishment threatened against those that diverge. For
the Lord is good to the straight in the way; but "those that turn
aside after their crooked ways He shall lead forth with those that work
iniquity."[5] "And with the innocent He is innocent, and with
the froward He is froward; "[6] and to the crooked He sends crooked
ways.
His own luminous image God impressed as with a seal, even the greatest,--on
man made in His likeness, that he might be ruler and lord over all things,
and that all things might serve him. Wherefore God judges man to be wholly
His, and His own image. He is invisible; but His image, man, is visible.
Whatever one, then, does to man, whether good or bad, is referred to Himself.
Wherefore from Him judgment shall proceed, appointing to all according
to desert; for He will avenge His own image.
XII.--FRAGMENTS NOT GIVEN IN THE OXFORD EDITION.
1. IN ANASTASIUS SINAITA, QUEST. 96.
As
it is possible even now for man to form men, according to the original
formation of
Adam, He
no longer now creates, on account of His having granted
once for all to man the power of generating men, saying to our nature, "Increase,
and multiply, and replenish the earth."[7] So also, by His omnipotent
and omniscient power, He arranged that the dissolution and death of our
bodies should be effected by a natural sequence and order, through the
change of their elements, in accordance with His divine knowledge and comprehension.
2. JOANNES VECCUS, PATRIARCH OF CONSTANTINOPLE, ON THE PROCESSION OF THE
SPIRIT. IN LEO ALLATIUS, VOL. I. P. 248.
Further,
Clement the Stromatist, in the various definitions which he framed, that
they might
guide the
man desirous of studying theology in every dogma
of religion, defining what spirit is, and how it is called spirit, says: "Spirit
is a substance, subtle, immaterial, and which issues forth without form."
3. FROM THE UNPUBLISHED DISPUTATION AGAINST ICONOCLASTS, OF NICEPHORUS
OF CONSTANTINOPLE; EDITED IN GREEK AND LATIN BY LE NOURRY IN HIS APPARATUS
TO THE LIBRARY OF THE FATHERS, VOL. I. P. 1334 A.B. FROM CLEMENT THE PRESBYTER
OF ALEXANDRIA'S BOOK AGAINST JUDAIZERS.
Solomon
the son of David, in the books styled "The Reigns of the
Kings," comprehending not only that the structure of the true temple
was celestial and spiritual, but had also a reference to the flesh, which
He who was both the son and Lord of David was to build up, both for His
own presence, where, as a living image, He resolved to make His shrine,
and for the church that was to rise up through the union of faith, says
expressly, "Will God in very deed dwell with men on the earth?"[8]
Please
choose an option. He dwells on the earth clothed in flesh, and His abode
with men is effected
by the conjunction and harmony which obtains
among the righteous, and which build and rear a new temple. For the righteous
are the earth, being still encompassed with the earth; and earth, too,
in comparison with the greatness of the Lord. Thus also the blessed Peter
hesitates not to say, "Ye also, as living stones, are built up, a
spiritual house, a holy temple, to offer up spiritual sacrifices, acceptable
to God by Jesus Christ."
And
with reference to the body, which by circumscription He consecrated as
a hallowed place
for Himself
upon earth, He said," Destroy this
temple, and in three days I will raise it up again. The Jews therefore
said, In forty-six years was this temple built, and wilt thou raise it
up in three days ? But He spake of the temple of His body."[2]
4. FROM MS. MARKED 2431 IN THE LIBRARY OF THE MOST CHRISTIAN KING.--IBID.
P. 1336 -- A. FROM THE VERY HOLY AND BLESSED CLEMENT, PRESBYTER OF ALEXANDRIA,
THE STROMATIST'S BOOK ON PROVIDENCE.
What
is God? "God," as the Lord saith, "is a Spirit." Now
spirit is properly substance, incorporeal, and uncircumscribed. And that
is incorporeal which does not consist of a body, or whose existence is
not according to breadth, length, and depth. And that is uncircumscribed[3]
which has no place, which is wholly in all, and in each entire, and the
same in itself.
5. FROM THE SAME MS.--IBID. 1335
<greek>Fusis</greek> (nature) is so called from <greek>to</greek> <greek>pefukenai</greek> (to
be born). The first substance is everything which subsists by itself, as
a stone is called a substance. The second is a substance capable of increase,
as a plant grows and decays. The third is animated and sentient substance,
as animal, horse. The fourth is animate, sentient, rational substance,
as man. Wherefore each one of us is made as consisting of all, having an
immaterial soul arid a mind, which is the image of God.
6. IN JOHN OF DAMASCUS--PARALLEL--VOL. II. P. 307.
The fear of God, who is impassible, is free of perturbation. For it is
not God that one dreads, but the falling away from God. He who dreads this,
dreads falling into what is evil, and dreads what is evil. And he that
fears a fall wishes himself to be immortal and passionless.
7.THE SAME, P. 341.
Let there be a law against those who dare to look at things sacred and
divine irreverently, and in a way unworthy of God, to inflict on them the
punishment of blindness.
8. THE SAME, P. 657.
Universally, the Christian is friendly to solitude, and quiet, and tranquillily,
and peace.
9. FROM THE CATENA ON THE PENTATEUCH, PUBLISHED IN LATIN BY FRANCIS ZEPHYRUS,
P. 146.
That
mystic name which is called the Tetragrammaton, by which alone they who
had access to the
Holy of
Holies were protected, is pronounced Jehovah,
which means, "Who is, and who shall be." The candlestick which
stood at the south of the altar signified the seven planets, which seem
to us to revolve around the meridian, [4] on either side of which rise
three branches; since the sun also like the lamp, balanced in the midst
of the planets by divine wisdom, illumines by its light those above and
below. On the other side of the altar was situated the table on which the
loaves were displayed, because from that quarter of the heaven vital and
nourishing breezes blow.
10. FROM J. A. CRAMER'S CATENAE GRAECORUM PATRUM IN NOV. TEST. OXFORD
1840 VOL. III.
On Acts vii. 24, 25. The mystics say that it was by his word alone that
Moses slew the Egyptian; as certainly afterwards it is related in the Acts
that [Peter] slew with his word those who kept back part of the price of
the land, and lied.
11. THE SAME, VOL. IV. P. 291.
On
Rom. viii. 38. "Or life, that of our present existence," and "death,"--that
caused by the assault of persecutors, and "angels, and principalities,
and powers," apostate spirits.
12. P. 369, CHAP. X. 3.
And having neither known nor done the requirement of the law, what they
conceived, that they also thought that the law required. And they did not
believe the law, as prophesying, but the bare word; and followed it from
fear, but not with their disposition and in faith.
13. VOL. VI . P. 385.
On
2 Cor. v. 16. "And
if we have known Christ after the flesh."
And so far, he says, no one any longer lives after the flesh. For that
is not life, but death. For Christ also, that He might show this,[1] ceased
to live after the flesh. How? Not by putting off the body! Far be it! For
with it as His own He shall come, the Judge of all. But by divesting Himself
of physical affections, such as hunger, and thirst, and sleep, and weariness.
For now He has a body incapable of suffering and of injury.
As "after the flesh" in our case is being in the midst of sins,
and being out of them is to be "not after the flesh;" so also
after the flesh, in the case of Christ, was His subjection to natural affections,
and not to be subject to them was not to be "after the flesh." "But," he
says, "as He was released, so also are we." Let there be no longer,
he says, subjection to the influences of the flesh. Thus Clement, the fourth
book of the Hypotyposes.
14. FROM THE SAME, P. 391.
On
2 Cor. vi. 11. "Our heart is enlarged." For as heat is wont
to expand, so also love. For love is a thing of warmth. As if he would
say, I love you not only with mouth, but with heart, and have you all within.
Wherefore he says: "ye are not straitened in us, since desire itself
expands the soul." "Our heart is enlarged" to teach you
all things; "but ye are straitened in your own bowels," that
is, in love to God, in which you ought to love me. Thus Clement, in the
fourth book of the Hypotyposes.
15. FROM VOL. III. v. 286.
Heb.
i. I. "At
sundry times and divers man Since the Lord, being the Apostle of the
Almighty,
was sent to the Hebrews, it was out of modesty
that Paul did not subscribe himself apostle of the Hebrews, from reverence
for the Lord, and because he was the herald and apostle of the Gentiles,
and wrote the Epistle to the Hebrews in addition [to his proper work].[3]
16. FROM THE SAME.
The
same work contains a passage from The Instructor, book i. chap. vi.[4]
The passage is that
beginning, "For the blood is found to be," down
to "potent charms of affection."
Portions, however, are omitted. There are a good many various readings;
but although the passage in question, as found in Cramer's work, is printed
in full in Migne's edition, on the alleged ground of the considerable variation
from the text of Clement, the variation is not such as to make a translation
of the passage as found in Cramer of any special interest or value. We
have noted the following readings:--
<greek>ginetai</greek>,
where, the verb being omitted, we have inserted is: There is an obstruction,
etc.
<greek>suriggas</greek>, tubes, instead of <greek>s</greek><s212>, <greek>raggas</greek> (hollows),
hollows of the breasts. <greek>geitniaxouswn</greek>, for <greek>getniouswn</greek> neighbouring
(arteries).
<greek>epilhyei</greek>,
for interruption (such as this).
<greek>apoklhrw</greek>,<greek>s</greek>, <greek>is</greek> occurs
as in the text, for which the emendation <greek>apolhrhsis</greek>,
as specified in the note, has been adopted. <greek>htis</greek> <greek>esti</greek>,
omitted here, which is "sweet through grace," is supplied.
P. 142.
<greek>gala</greek>, milk, instead of <greek>manna</greek>,
manna, (that food) manna.
P. 149.
<greek>krh</greek> <greek>de</greek> <greek>katanohsai</greek> <greek>thn</greek> <greek>f</greek>,<greek>usi</greek>,<greek>n</greek> (but
it is necessary to consider nature), for <greek>ou</greek> <greek>katanenohkotes</greek>, <greek>t</greek>. <greek>f</greek>.,
through want of consideration of nature. <greek>katakleiomenh</greek>,
agreeing with food, for <greek>katakleiomenw</greek>, agreeing
with heat (enclosed within).
<greek>ginetai</greek> for <greek>gar</greek> (which
is untranslated), (the blood) is (a preparation) for milk.
P. 144.
<greek>toinun</greek> <greek>ton</greek> <greek>logon</greek> is
supplied, and <greek>eikotws</greek> omitted in the clause,
Paul using appropriate figurative language.
P. 145.
<greek>plhn</greek> is supplied before <greek>alla</greek> <greek>to</greek> <greek>en</greek> <greek>auth</greek>,
and the blood in it, etc., is omitted.
P. 146.
"For Diogenes Apolloniates will have it" is
omitted.
<greek>panth</greek>, rendered "in all respects," is
connected with the preceding sentence.
P. 147.
<greek>oti</greek> <greek>t</greek><ss228><greek>inun</greek>,
for <greek>Ws</greek> <greek>d</greek>. And that
(milk is produced).
<greek>thnikauta</greek> for <greek>thnikade</greek> in
the clause, "and the grass and meadows are juicy and moist," not
translated. <greek>proeirhmenw</greek>, above mentioned (milk),
omitted.
<greek>trufhs</greek> for <greek>trofhs</greek>,
(sweet) nutriment.
<greek>tw</greek> omitted before <greek>glukei</greek>,
sweet (wine), and <greek>kaqaper</greek>, "as, when suffering."
<greek>to</greek> <greek>liparon</greek> for <greek>tw</greek> <greek>liparw</greek>,
and <greek>aridhlws</greek> for <greek>aridhlou</greek>,
in the sentence: "Further, many use the fat of milk, called butter,
for the lamp, plainly," etc.
N. B.
[Le Nourry decides that the Adumbrations were not translated from the
Hypotyposes, but Kaye (p. 473) thinks on insufficient grounds. See, also
(p. 5), Kaye's learned note.]
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