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METHODIUS
THE BANQUET OF THE TEN VIRGINS
OR
CONCERNING CHASTITY
DISCOURSES VI & VII
DISCOURSE VI.--AGATHE.
CHAP. I.--THE EXCELLENCE OF THE ABIDING GLORY OF VIRGINITY; THE SOUL MADE
IN THE IMAGE OF THE IMAGE OF GOD, THAT IS OF HIS SON; THEDEVIL A SUITOR
FOR THE SOUL.
With great confidence of being able to persuade, and to carry on this
admirable discourse, O Arete, if thou go with me, will I also endeavour,
according to my ability, to contribute something to the discussion of the
subject before us; something commensurate to my own power, and not to be
compared with that which has already been spoken. For I should be unable
to put forth in philosophizing anything that could compete with those things
which have already been so variously and brilliantly worked out. For I
shall seem to bear away the reproach of silliness, if I make an effort
to match myself with my superiors in wisdom. If, however, you will bear
even with those who speak as they can, I will endeavour to speak, not lacking
at least in good will. And here let me begin.
We
have all come into this world, O virgins, endowed with singular beauty,
which has a relationship
and affinity to divine wisdom. For the souls of
men do then most accurately resemble Him who begat and formed them, when,
reflecting the unsullied representation of His likeness, and the features
of that countenance, to which God looking formed them to have an immortal
and indestructible shape, they remain such. For the unbegotten and incorporeal
beauty, which neither begins nor is corruptible, but is unchangeable, and
grows not old and has need of nothing, He resting in Himself, and in the
very light which is in unspeakable and inapproachable places,(1) embracing
all things in the circumference of His power, creating and arranging, made
the soul after the image of His image. Therefore, also, it is reasonable
and immortal. For being made after the image of the Only-begotten, as I
said, it has an unsurpassable beauty, and therefore evil spirits(2) love
it, and plot and strive to defile its godlike and lovely image, as the
prophet Jeremiah shows, reproaching Jerusalem, "Thou hadst a whore's
forehead, thou refusedst to be ashamed;"(3) speaking of her who prostituted
herself to the powers which came against her to pollute her. For her lovers
are the devil and his angels, who plan to defile and pollute our reasonable
and clear-sighted beauty of mind by intercourse with themselves, and desire
to cohabit with every soul which is betrothed to the Lord.
CHAP. II.--THE PARABLE OF THE TEN VIRGINS.(4)
If, then, any one will keep this beauty inviolate and unharmed, and such
as He who constructed it formed and fashioned it, imitating the eternal
and intelligible nature of which man is the representation and likeness,
and will become like a glorious and holy image, he will be transferred
thence to heaven, the city of the blessed, and will dwell there as in a
sanctuary. Now our beauty is then best preserved undefiled and perfect
when, protected by virginity, it is not darkened by the heat of corruption
from without; but, remaining in itself, it is adorned with righteousness,
being brought as a bride to the Son of God; as He also Himself suggests,
exhorting that the light of chastity should be kindled in their flesh,
as in lamps; since the number of the ten virgins s signifies the souls
that have believed in Jesus Christ, symbolizing by the ten the only right
way to heaven. Now five of them were prudent and wise; and five were foolish
and unwise, for they had not the forethought to fill their vessels with
oil, remaining destitute of righteousness. Now by these He signifies those
who strive to come to the boundaries of virginity, and who strain every
nerve to fulfil this love, acting virtuously and temperately, and who profess
and boast that this is their aim; but who, making light of it, and being
subdued by the changes of the world, come rather to be sketches of the
shadowy image of virtue, than workers who represent the living truth itself.
CHAP. III.--THE SAME ENDEAVOUR AND EFFORT AFTER VIRGINITY, WITH A DIFFERENT
RESULT.
Now
when it is said(5) that "the kingdom of heaven is likened unto
ten virgins, which took their lamps and went forth to meet the bridegroom," this
means that the same way towards the goal had been entered upon, as is shown
by the mark X.(6) By profession they had equally proposed the same end,
and therefore they are called ten, since, as I have said, they chose the
same profession; but they did not, for all that, go forth in the same way
to meet the bridegroom. For some provided abundant future nourishment for
their lamps which were fed with oil, but others were careless, thinking
only of the present. And, therefore, they are divided into two equal numbers
of five, inasmuch as the one class preserved the five senses, which most
people consider the gates of wisdom, pure and undefiled by sins; but the
others, on the contrary, corrupted them by multitudes of sins, defiling
themselves with evil. For having restrained them, and kept them free from
righteousness, they bore a more abundant crop of transgressions, in consequence
of which it came to pass that they were forbidden, and shut out from the
divine courts. For whether, on the one hand, we do right, or, on the other,
do wrong through these senses, our habits of good and evil are confirmed.
And as Thallousa said that there is a chastity of the eyes, and of the
ears, and of the tongue, and so on of the other senses; so here she who
keeps inviolate the faith of the five pathways of virtue--sight, taste,
smell, touch, and hearing--is called by the name of the five virgins, because
she has kept the five forms of the sense pure to Christ, as a lamp, causing
the light of holiness to shine forth clearly from each of them. For the
flesh is truly, as it were, our five-lighted lamp, which the soul will
bear like a torch, when it stands before Christ the Bridegroom, on the
day of the resurrection, showing her faith springing out clear and bright
through all the senses, as He Himself taught, saying,(1) "I am come
to send fire on the earth; and what will I if it be already kindled?" meaning
by the earth our bodies, in which He wished the swift-moving and fiery
operation of His doctrine to be kindled. Now the oil represents wisdom
and righteousness; for while the soul rains down unsparingly, and pours
forth these things upon the body, the light of virtue is kindled unquenchably,
making its good actions to shine before men, so that our Father which is
in heaven may be glorified.(2)
CHAP.IV.--WHAT THE OIL IN THE LAMPS MEANS.
Now
they offered, in Leviticus,(3) oil of this kind, "pure oil olive,
beaten for the light, to cause the lamps to burn continually, without the
veil . . . before the Lord." But they were commanded to have a feeble
light from the evening to the morning. For their light seemed to resemble
the prophetic word, which gives encouragement to temperance, being nourished
by the acts and the faith of the people. But the temple (in which the light
was kept burning) refers to "the lot of their inheritance,"(4)
inasmuch as a light can shine in only one house. Therefore it was necessary
that it should be lighted before day. For he says,(5) "they shall
burn it until the morning," that is, until the coming of Christ. But
the Sun of chastity and of righteousness having arisen, there is no need
of other light.
So
long, then, as this people treasured up nourishment for the light, supplying
oil by
their works,
the light of continence was not extinguished
among them, but was ever shining and giving light in the "lot of their
inheritance." But when the oil failed, by their turning away from
the faith to incontinence, the light was entirely extinguished, so that
the virgins have again to kindle their lamps by light transmitted from
one to another, bringing the light of incorruption to the world from above.
Let us then supply now the oil of good works abundantly, and of prudence,
being purged from all corruption which would weigh us down; lest, while
the Bridegroom tarries, our lamps may also in like manner be extinguished.
For the delay is the interval which precedes the appearing of Christ. Now
the slumbering and sleeping of the virgins signifies the departure from
life; and the midnight is the kingdom of Antichrist, during which the destroying
angel passes over the houses.(6) But the cry which was made when it was
said,(7) "Behold the bridegroom cometh, go ye out to meet him," is
the voice which shall be heard from heaven, and the trumpet, when the saints,
all their bodies being raised, shall be caught up, and shall go on the
clouds to meet the Lord.(8)
For
it is to be observed that the word of God says, that after the cry all
the virgins arose,
that
is, that the dead shall be raised after the
voice which comes from heaven, as also Paul intimates,(9) that "the
Lord Himself shall descend from heaven with a shout, with the voice of
the archangel, and with the trump of God: and the dead in Christ shall
rise first;" that is the tabernacles,(10) for they died, being put
off by their souls. "Then we which are alive shall be caught up together
with them," meaning our souls.(11) For we truly who are alive are
the souls which, with the bodies, having put them on again, shall go to
meet Him in the clouds, bearing our lamps trimmed, not with anything alien
and worldly, but like stars radiating the light of prudence and continence,
full of ethereal splendour.
CHAP. V.--THE REWARD OF VIRGINITY.
These,
O fair virgins, are the orgies of our mysteries; these the mystic rites
of those who
are
initiated in virginity; these the "undefiled
rewards"(12) of the conflict of virginity. I am betrothed to the Word,
and receive as a reward the eternal crown of immortality and riches from
the Father; and I triumph in eternity, crowned with the bright and unfading
flowers of wisdom. I am one in the choir with Christ dispensing His rewards
in heaven, around the unbeginning and never-ending King. I have become
the torch-bearer of the unapproachable lights, (1) and I join with their
company in the new song of the archangels, showing forth the new grace
of the Church; for the Word says that the company of virgins always follow
the Lord, and have fellowship with Him wherever He is. And this is what
John signifies in the commemoration of the hundred and forty-four thousand.(2)
Go
then, ye virgin band of the new ages. Go, fill your vessels with righteousness,
for the
hour
is coming when ye must rise and meet the bridegroom. Go, lightly
leaving on one side the fascinations and the pleasures of life, which confuse
and bewitch the soul; and thus shall ye attain the promises, "This
I swear by Him who has shown me the way of life." This crown, woven
by the prophets, I have taken from the prophetic meadows, and offer to
thee, O Arete.
Agathe having thus admirably brought her discourse to an end, she said,
and having been applauded for what she had uttered, Arete again commanded
Procilla to speak. And she, rising and passing before the entrance, spoke
thus.
DISCOURSE VII.--PROCILLA.
CHAP. I.--WHAT THE TRUE AND SEEMLY MANNER OF PRAISING; THE FATHER GREATER
THAN THE SON, NOT IN SUBSTANCE, BUT IN ORDER; VIRGINITY THE LILY; FAITHFUL
SOULS AND VIRGINS, THE ONE BRIDE OF THE ONE CHRIST.
It
is not lawful for me to delay, O Arete, after such discourses, seeing
that I confide undoubtingly
in the manifold wisdom of God, which gives
richly and widely to whomsoever it wills. For sailors who have experience
of the sea declare that the same wind blows on all who sail; and that different
persons, managing their course differently, strive to reach different ports.
Some have a fair wind; to others it blows across their course; and yet
both easily accomplish their voyage. Now, in the same way, the "understanding
Spirit,(3) holy, one only,"(4) gently breathing down from the treasures
of the Father above, giving us all the clear fair wind of knowledge, will
suffice to guide the course of our words without offence. And now it is
time for me to speak. This, O virgins, is the one true and seemly mode
of praising, when he who praises brings forward a witness better than all
those who are praised. For thence one may learn with certainty that the
commendation is given not from favour, nor of necessity, nor from repute,
but in accordance with truth and an unflattering judgment. And so the prophets
and apostles, who spoke more fully concerning the Son of God, and assigned
to Him a divinity above other men, did not refer their praises of Him to
the teaching of angels, but to Him upon whom all authority and power depend.
For it was fitting that He who was greater than all things after the Father,
should have the Father, who alone is greater than Himself,(5) as His witness.
And so I will not bring forward the praises of virginity from mere human
report, but from Him who cares for us, and who has taken up the whole matter,
showing that He is the husbandman of this grace, and a lover of its beauty,
and a fitting witness. And this is quite clear, in the Song of Songs,(6)
to any one who is willing to see it, where Christ Himself, praising those
who are firmly established in virginity, says,(7) "As the lily among
thorns, so is my love among the daughters;" comparing the grace of
chastity to the lily, on account of its purity and fragrance, and sweetness
and joyousness. For chastity is like a spring flower, always softly exhaling
immortality from its white petals. Therefore He is not ashamed to confess
that He loves the beauty of its prime, in the following words:(8) "Thou
hast ravished my heart, my sister, my spouse; thou hast ravished my heart
with one of thine eyes, with one chain of thy neck. How fair is thy love,
my sister, my spouse! how much better is thy love than wine! and the smell
of thine ointments than all spices! Thy lips, O my spouse, drop as the
honeycomb; honey and milk are under thy tongue; and the smell of thy garments
is like the smell of Lebanon. A garden enclosed is my sister, my spouse;
a spring shut up, a fountain sealed."
These praises does Christ proclaim to those who have come to the boundaries
of virginity, describing them all under the one name of His spouse; for
the spouse must be betrothed to the Bridegroom, and called by His name.
And, moreover, she must be undefiled and unpolluted, as a garden sealed,
in which all the odours of the fragrance of heaven are grown, that Christ
alone may come and gather them, blooming with incorporeal seeds. For the
Word loves none of the things of the flesh, because He is not of such a
nature as to be contented with any of the things which are corruptible,
as hands, or face, or feet; but He looks upon and delights in the beauty
which is immaterial and spiritual, not touching the beauty of the body.
CHAP. II.--THE INTERPRETATION OF THAT PASSAGE OF THE CANTICLES.(1)
Consider
now, O virgins, that, in saying to the bride, "Thou hast
ravished my heart, my sister, my spouse," He shows the clear eye of
the understanding, when the inner man has cleansed it and looks more clearly
upon the truth. For it is clear to every one that there is a twofold power
of sight, the one of the soul, and the other of the body. But the Word
does not profess a love for that of the body, but only that of the understanding,
saying, "Thou hast ravished my heart with one of thine eyes, with
one chain of thy neck;" which means, By the most lovely sight of thy
mind, thou hast urged my heart to love, radiating forth from within the
glorious beauty of chastity. Now the chains of the neck are necklaces which
are composed of various precious stones; and the souls which take care
of the body, place around the outward neck of the flesh this visible ornament
to deceive those who behold; but those who live chastely, on the other
hand, adorn themselves within with ornaments truly composed of various
precious stones, namely, of freedom, of magnanimity, of wisdom, and of
love, caring little for those temporal decorations which, like leaves blossoming
for an hour, dry up with the changes of the body. For there is seen in
man a twofold beauty, of which the Lord accepts that which is within and
is immortal, saying, "Thou hast ravished my heart with one chain of
thy neck;" meaning to show that He had been drawn to love by the splendour
of the inner man shining forth in its glory, even as the Psalmist also
testifies, saying, "The King's daughter is all glorious within."(2)
CHAP. III.--VIRGINS BEING MARTYRS FIRST AMONG THE COMPANIONS OF CHRIST.
Let
no one suppose that all the remaining company of those who have believed
are condemned,
thinking
that we who are virgins alone shall be led on to
attain the promises, not understanding that there shall be tribes and families
and orders, according to the analogy of the faith of each. And this Paul,
too, sets forth, saying,(3) "There is one glory of the sun, and another
glory of the moon, and another glory of the stars: for one star differeth
from another star in glory. So also is the resurrection of the dead." And
the Lord does not profess to give the same honours to all; but to some
He promises that they shall be numbered in the kingdom of heaven, to others
the inheritance of the earth, and to others to see the Father.(4) And here,
also, He announces that the order and holy choir of the virgins shall first
enter in company with Him into the rest of the new dispensation, as into
a bridal chamber. For they were martyrs, not as bearing the pains of the
body for a little moment of time, but as enduring them through all their
life, not shrinking from truly wrestling in an Olympian contest for the
prize of chastity; but resisting the fierce torments of pleasures and fears
and griefs, and the other evils of the iniquity of men, they first of all
carry off the prize, taking their place in the higher rank of those who
receive the promise. Undoubtedly these are the souls whom the Word calls
alone His chosen spouse and His sister, but the rest concubines and virgins
and daughters, speaking thus:(5) "There are threescore queens and
fourscore concubines, and virgins without number. My dove, my undefiled,
is but one; she is the only one of her mother, she is the choice one of
her that bare her: the daughters saw her and blessed her: yea, the queens
and the concubines, and they praised her." For there being plainly
many daughters of the Church, one alone is the chosen and most precious
in her eyes above all, namely, the order of virgins.
CHAP. IV.--THE PASSAGE(5) EXPLAINED; THE QUEENS, THE HOLY SOULS BEFORE
THE DELUGE; THE CONCUBINES, THE SOULS OF THE PROPHETS; THE DIVINE SEED
FOR SPIRITUAL OFFSPRING IN THE BOOKS OF THE PROPHETS; THE NUPTIALS OF THE
WORD IN THE PROPHETS AS THOUGH CLANDESTINE.
Now if any one should have a doubt about these things, inasmuch as the
points are nowhere fully wrought out, and should still wish more fully
to perceive their spiritual significance, namely, what the queens and the
concubines and the virgins are, we will say that these may have been spoken
concerning those who have been conspicuous for their righteousness from
the beginning throughout the progress of time; as of those before the flood,
and those after the flood, and so on of those after Christ. The Church,
then, is the spouse. The queens are those royal souls before the deluge,
who became well-pleasing to God, that is, those about Abel and Seth and
Enoch. The concubines(6) those after the flood, namely, those of the prophets,
in whom, before the Church was betrothed to the Lord, being united to them
after the manner of concubines, He sowed true words in an incorrupt and
pure philosophy, so that, conceiving faith, they might bring forth to Him
the Spirit of salvation. For such fruits do the souls bring forth with
whom Christ has had intercourse, fruits which bear an ever-memorable renown.
For if you will look at the books of Moses, or David, or Solomon, or Isaiah,
or of the prophets who follow, O virgins, you will see what offspring they
have left, for the saving of life, from their intercourse with the Son
of God. Hence the Word has with deep perception called the souls of the
prophets concubines, because He did not espouse them openly, as He did
the Church, having killed for her the fatted calf.(1)
CHAP. V.--THE SIXTY QUEENS: WHY SIXTY, AND WHY QUEENS; THE EXCELLENCE
OF THE SAINTS OF THE FIRST AGE.
In addition to these matters, there is this also to be considered, so
that nothing may escape us of things which are necessary, why He said that
the queens were sixty, and the concubines eighty, and the virgins so numerous
as not to be counted from their multitude, but the spouse one. And first
let us speak of the sixty. I imagine that He named under the sixty queens,
those who had pleased God from the first-made man in succession to Noah,
for this reason, since these had no need of precepts and laws for their
salvation, the creation of the world in six days being still recent. For
they remembered that in six days God formed the creation, and those things
which were made in paradise; and how man, receiving a command not to touch(2)
the tree of knowledge, ran aground, the author of evil having led him astray.(3)
Thence he gave the symbolical name of sixty queens to those souls who,
from the creation of the world, in succession chose God as the object of
their love, and were almost, so to speak, the offspring of the first age,
and neighbours of the great six days' work, from their having been born,
as I said, immediately after the six days. For these had great honour,
being associated with the angels, and often seeing God manifested visibly,
and not in a dream. For consider what confidence Seth had towards God,
and Abel, and Enos, and Enoch, and Methuselah, and Noah, the first lovers
of righteousness, and the first of the first-born children who are written
in heaven,(4) being thought worthy of the kingdom, as a kind of first-fruits
of the plants for salvation, coming out as early fruit to God. And so much
may suffice concerning these.
CHAP. VI.--THE EIGHTY CONCUBINES, WHAT; THE KNOWLEDGE OF THE INCARNATION
COMMUNICATED TO THE PROPHETS.
It still remains to speak concerning the concubines. To those who lived
after the deluge the knowledge of God was henceforth more remote, and they
needed other instruction to ward off the evil, and to be their helper,
since idolatry was already creeping in. Therefore God, that the race of
man might not be wholly destroyed, through forgetfulness of the things
which were good, commanded His own Son to reveal to the prophets His own
future appearance in the world by the flesh, in which the joy and knowledge
of the spiritual eighth day s shall be proclaimed, which would bring the
remission of sins and the resurrection, and that thereby the passions and
corruptions of men would be circumcised. And, therefore, He called by the
name of the eighty virgins the list of the prophets from Abraham, on account
of the dignity of circumcision, which embraces the number eight, in accordance
with which also the law is framed; because they first, before the Church
was espoused to the Word, received the divine seed, and foretold the circumcision
of the spiritual eighth day.
CHAP. VII.--THE VIRGINS,(6) THE RIGHTEOUS ANCIENTS; THE CHURCH, THE ONE
ONLY SPOUSE, MORE EXCELLENT THAN THE OTHERS.
Now
he calls by the name of virgins, who belong to a countless assembly,
those who, being
inferior
to the better ones, have practised righteousness,
and have striven against sin with youthful and noble energy. But of these,
neither the queens, nor the concubines, nor the virgins, are compared to
the Church. For she is reckoned the perfect and chosen one beyond all these,
consisting and composed of all the apostles, the Bride who surpasses all
in the beauty of youth and virginity. Therefore, also, she is blessed and
praised by all, because she saw and heard freely what those desired to
see, even for a little time, and saw not, and to hear, but heard not. For "blessed," said
our Lord to His disciples,(7) "are your eyes, for they see; and your
ears, for they hear. For verily I say unto you, That many prophets have
desired to see those things which ye see, and have not seen them; and to
hear those things which ye hear, and have not heard them." For this
reason, then, the prophets count them blessed, and admire them, because
the Church was thought worthy to participate in those things which they
did not attain to hear or see. For "there are threescore queens, and
fourscore concubines, and virgins without number. My dove, my undefiled,
is but one."(1)
CHAP. VIII.--THE HUMAN NATURE OF CHRIST HIS ONE DOVE.
Can
any one now say otherwise than that the Bride is the undefiled flesh
of the Lord, for
the sake
of which He left the Father and came down here,
and was joined to it, and, being incarnate, dwelt in it? Therefore He called
it figuratively a dove, because that creature is tame and domestic, and
readily adapts itself to man's mode of life. For she alone, so to speak,
was found spotless and undefiled, and excelling all in the glory and beauty
of righteousness, so that none of those who had pleased God most perfectly
could stand near to her in a comparison of virtue. And for this reason
she was thought worthy to become a partaker of the kingdom of the Only-begotten,
being betrothed and united to Him. And in the forty-fourth psalm,(2) the
queen who, chosen out of many, stands at the right hand of God, clothed
in the golden ornament of virtue, whose beauty the King desired,(3) is,
as I said, the undefiled and blessed flesh, which the Word Himself carried
into the heavens, and presented at the right hand of God, "wrought
about with divers colours," that is, in the pursuits of immortality,
which he calls symbolically golden fringes. For since this garment is variegated
and woven of various virtues, as chastity, prudence, faith, love, patience,
and other good things, which, covering, as they do, the unseemliness of
the flesh, adorn man with a golden ornament.
CHAP. IX.--THE VIRGINS IMMEDIATELY AFTER THE QUEEN AND SPOUSE.
Moreover,
we must further consider what the Spirit delivers to us in the rest of
the psalm,
after the enthronization
of the manhood assumed by the
Word at the right hand of the Father. "The virgins," He says,(4) "that
be her fellows shall bear her company, and shall be brought unto thee.
With joy and gladness shall they be brought, and shall enter into the King's
palace." Now, here the Spirit seems quite plainly to praise virginity,
next, as we have explained, to the Bride of the Lord, who promises that
the virgins shall approach second to the Almighty with joy and gladness,
guarded and escorted by angels. For so lovely and desirable is in truth
the glory of virginity, that, next to the Queen, whom the Lord exalts,
and presents in sinless glory to the Father, the choir and order of virgins
bear her company, assigned to a place second to that of the Bride. Let
these efforts of mine to speak to thee, O Arete, concerning chastity, be
engraven on a monument.
And Procilla having thus spoken, Thekla said, It is my turn after her
to continue the contest; and I rejoice, since I too have the favouring
wisdom of words, perceiving that I am, like a harp, inwardly attuned, and
prepared to speak with elegance and propriety.
ARETE. I most willingly hail thy readiness, O Thekla, in which I confide
to give me fitting discourse, in accordance with thy powers; since thou
wilt yield to none in universal philosophy and instruction, instructed
by Paul in what is fitting to say of evangelical and divine doctrine.
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