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METHODIUS
THE BANQUET OF THE TEN VIRGINS
OR
CONCERNING CHASTITY
DISCOURSES VIII & IX
DISCOURSE VIII.--THEKLA.
CHAP.
I.--METHODIUS' DERIVATION OF THE WORD VIRGINITY:(5) WHOLLY DIVINE; VIRTUE,
IN GREEK <greek>areth</greek>,
WHENCE SO CALLED.
Well,
then, let us first say, beginning from the origin of the name, for what
cause this
supreme and
blessed pursuit was called <greek>parqenia</greek>,
what it aims at, what power it has, and afterwards, what fruits it gives
forth. For almost all have been ignorant of this virtue as being superior
to ten thousand other advantages of virtue which we cultivate for the purification
and adornment of the soul. For virginity s is divine by the change of one
letter,k(6) as she alone makes him who has her, and is initiated by her
incorruptible rites like unto God, than which it is impossible to find
a greater good, removed, as it is, from pleasure and grief; and the wing
of the soul sprinkled by it becomes stronger and lighter, accustomed daily
to fly from human desires.
For since the children of the wise have said that our life is a festival,
and that we have come to exhibit in the theatre the drama of truth, that
is, righteousness, the devil and the demons plotting and striving against
us, it is necessary for us to look upwards and to take our flight aloft,
and to flee from the blandishments of their tongues, and from their forms
tinged with the outward appearance of temperance, more than from the Sirens
of Homer. For many, bewitched by the pleasures of error, take their flight
downwards, and are weighed down when they come into this life, their nerves
being relaxed and unstrung, by means of which the power of the wings of
temperance is strengthened, lightening the downward tendency of the corruption
of the body. Whence, O Arete, whether thou hast thy name, signifying, virtue,
because thou art worthy of being chosen(1) for thyself, or because thou
raisest(2) and liftest up to heaven, ever going in the purest minds, come,
give me thy help in my discourse, which thou hast thyself appointed me
to speak.
CHAP. II.--THE LOFTY MIND AND CONSTANCY OF THE SACRED VIRGINS; THE INTRODUCTION
OF VIRGINS INTO THE BLESSED ABODES BEFORE OTHERS.
Those who take a downward flight, and fall into pleasures, do not desist
from grief and labours until, through their passionate desires, they fulfil
the want of their intemperance, and, being degraded and shut out from the
sanctuary, they are removed from the scene of truth, and, instead of procreating
children with modesty and temperance, they rave in the wild pleasures of
unlawful amours. But those who, on light wing, ascend into the supramundane
life, and see from afar what other men do not see, the very pastures of
immortality, bearing in abundance flowers of inconceivable beauty, are
ever turning themselves again to the spectacles there; and, for this reason,
those things are thought small which are here considered noble --such as
wealth, and glory, and birth, and marriage; and they think no more of those
things.(3) But yet if any of them should choose to give up their bodies
to wild beasts or to fire, and be punished, they are ready to have no care
for pains, for the desire of them or the fear of them; so that they seem,
while in the world, not to be in the world, but to have already reached,
in thought and in the tendency of their desires, the assembly of those
who are in heaven.
Now it is not right that the wing of virginity should, by its own nature,
be weighed down upon the earth, but that it should soar upwards to heaven,
to a pure atmosphere, and to the life which is akin to that of angels.
Whence also they, first of all, after their call and departure hence, who
have rightly and faithfully contended as virgins for Christ, bear away
the prize of victory, being crowned by Him with the flowers of immortality.
For, as soon as their souls have left the world, it is said that the angels
meet them with much rejoicing, and conduct them to the very pastures already
spoken of, to which also they were longing to come, contemplating them
in imagination from afar, when, while they were vet dwelling in their bodies,
they appeared to them divine.
CHAP. III.--THE LOT AND INHERITANCE OF VIRGINITY.
Furthermore,
when they have come hither, they see wonderful and glorious and blessed
things
of beauty,
and such as cannot be spoken to men. They
see there righteousness itself and prudence, and love itself, and truth
and temperance, and other flowers and plants of wisdom, equally splendid,
of which we here behold only the shadows(4) and apparitions, as in dreams,
and think that they consist of the actions of men, because there is no
clear image of them here, but only dim copies, which themselves we see
often when making dark copies of them. For never has any one seen with
his eyes the greatness or the form or the beauty of righteousness itself,
or of understanding, or of peace; but there, in Him whose name is I AM,(5)
they are seen perfect and clear, as they are. For there is a tree of temperance
itself, and of love, and of understanding, as there are plants of the fruits
which grow here--as of grapes, the pomegranate, and of apples; and so,
too, the fruits of those trees are gathered and eaten, and do not perish
and wither, but those who gather them grow to immortality and a likeness
to God. Just as he from whom all are descended, before the fall and the
blinding of his eyes, being in paradise, enjoyed its fruits, God appointing
man to dress and to keep the plants of wisdom. For it was entrusted to
the first Adam to cultivate those fruits. Now Jeremiah saw that these things
exist specially in a certain place, removed to a great distance from our
world, where, compassionating those who have fallen from that good state,
he says:(6) "Learn where is wisdom, where is strength, where is understanding;
that thou mayest know also where is length of days, and life, where is
the light of the eyes, and peace. Who hath found out her place? or who
hath come into her treasures?" The virgins having entered into the
treasures of these things, gather the reasonable fruits of the virtues,
sprinkled with manifold and well-ordered lights, which, like a fountain,
God throws up over them, irradiating that state with unquenchable lights.
And they sing harmoniously, giving glory to God. For a pure atmosphere
is shed over them, and one which is not oppressed by the sun.
CHAP. IV.--EXHORTATION TO THE CULTIVATION OF VIRGINITY; A PASSAGE FROM
THE APOCALYPSE(7) IS PROPOSED TO BE EXAMINED.
Now, then, O Virgins, daughters of undefiled temperance, let us strive
for a life of blessedness and the kingdom of heaven. And do ye unite with
those before you in an earnest desire for the same glory of chastity, caring
little for the things of this life. For immortality and chastity do not
contribute a little to happiness, raising up the flesh aloft, and drying
up its moisture and its clay-like weight, by a greater force of attraction.
And let not the uncleanness which you hear creep in and weigh you down
to the earth; nor let sorrow transform your joy, melting away your hopes
in better things; but shake off incessantly the calamities which come upon
you, not defiling your mind with lamentations. Let faith conquer wholly,
and let its light drive away the visions of evil which crowd around the
heart. For, as when the moon brightly shining fills the heaven with its
light, and all the air becomes clear, but suddenly the clouds from the
west, enviously rushing in, for a little while overshadow its light, but
do not destroy it, since they are immediately driven away by a blast of
the wind; so ye also, when causing the light of chastity to shine in the
world, although pressed upon by afflictions and labours, do not grow weary
and abandon your hopes. For the clouds which come from the Evil One are
driven away by the Spirit,(1) if ye, like your Mother, who gives birth
to the male Virgin in heaven, fear nothing the serpent that lies in wait
and plots against you; concerning whom I intend to discourse to you more
plainly; for it is now time.
John,
in the course of the Apocalypse, says:(2) "And there appeared
a great wonder in heaven; a woman clothed with the sun, and the moon under
her feet, and upon her head a crown of twelve stars: and she, being with
child, cried, travailing in birth, and pained to be delivered. And there
appeared another wonder in heaven; and behold a great red dragon, having
seven heads and ten horns, and seven crowns upon his heads. And his tail
drew the third part of the stars of heaven, and did cast them to the earth:
and the dragon stood before the woman which was ready to be delivered,
for to devour her child as soon as it was born. And she brought forth a
man-child, who was to rule all nations with a rod of iron: and her child
was caught up unto God, and to His throne. And the woman fled into the
wilderness, where she hath a place prepared of God, that they should feed
her there a thousand two hundred and threescore days." So far we have
given, in brief, the history of the woman and the dragon. But to search
out and explain the solution of them is beyond my powers. Nevertheless,
let me venture, trusting in Him who commanded to search the Scriptures.(3)
If, then, you agree with this, it will not be difficult to undertake it;
for you will quite pardon me, if I am unable sufficiently to explain the
exact meaning of the Scripture.
CHAP. V.--THE WOMAN WHO BRINGS FORTH, TO WHOM THE DRAGON IS OPPOSED, THE
CHURCH; HER ADORNMENT AND GRACE.
The
woman who appeared in heaven clothed with the sun, and crowned with twelve
stars, and having
the moon
for her footstool, and being with child,
and travailing in birth, is certainly, according to the accurate interpretation,
our mother,(4) O virgins, being a power by herself distinct from her children;
whom the prophets, according to the aspect of their subjects, have called
sometimes Jerusalem, sometimes a Bride, sometimes Mount Zion, and sometimes
the Temple and Tabernacle of God. For she is the power which is desired
to give light in the prophet, the Spirit crying to her:(5) "Arise,
shine; for thy light is come, and the glory of the Lord is risen upon thee.
For, behold, the darkness shalI cover the earth, and gross darkness the
people: but the Lord shall arise upon thee, and His glory shall be seen
upon thee. And the Gentiles shall come to thy light, and kings to the brightness
of thy rising. Lift up thine eyes round about, and see; all they gather
themselves together, they come to thee: thy sons shall come from far, and
thy daughters shall be nursed at thy side." It is the Church whose
children shall come to her with all speed after the resurrection, running
to her from all quarters. She rejoices receiving the light which never
goes down, and clothed with the brightness of the Word as with a robe.
For with what other more precious or honourable ornament was it becoming
that the queen should be adorned, to be led as a Bride to the Lord, when
she had received a garment of light, and therefore was called by the Father?
Come, then, let us go forward in our discourse, and look upon this marvelous
woman as upon virgins prepared for a marriage, pure and undefiled, perfect
and radiating a permanent beauty, wanting nothing of the brightness of
light; and instead of a dress, clothed with light itself; and instead of
precious stones, her head adorned with shining stars. For instead of the
clothing which we have, she had light; and for gold and brilliant stones,
she had stars; but stars not such as those which are set in the invisible
heaven, but better and more resplendent, so that those may rather be considered
as their images and likenesses.
CHAP. VI.--THE WORKS OF THE CHURCH, THE BRINGING FORTH OF CHILDREN IN
BAPTISM; THE MOON IN BAPTISM, THE FULL MOON OF CHRIST'S PASSION.
Now the statement that she stands upon the moon, as I consider, denotes
the faith of those who are cleansed from corruption in the laver of regeneration,
because the light of the moon has more resemblance to tepid water, and
all moist substance is dependent upon her. The Church, then, stands upon
our faith and adoption, under the figure of the moon, until the fulness
of the nations come in, labouring and bringing forth natural men as spiritual
men; for which reason too she is a mother. For just as a woman receiving
tim unformed seed of a man, within a certain time brings forth a perfect
man, in the same way, one should say, does the Church conceive those who
flee to the Word, and, forming them according to the likeness and form
of Christ, after a certain time produce them as citizens of that blessed
state. Whence it is necessary that she should stand upon the layer, bringing
forth those who are washed in it. And in this way the power which she has
in connection with the layer is called the moon,(1) because the regenerate
shine being renewed with a new ray,(2) that is, a new light. Whence, also,
they are by a descriptive term called newly-enlightened;(3) the moon ever
showing forth anew to them the spiritual full moon, namely, the period
and the memorial of the passion, until the glory and the perfect light
of the great day arise.
CHAP. VII.--THE CHILD OF THE WOMAN IN THE APOCALYPSE NOT CHRIST, BUT THE
FAITHFUL WHO ARE BORN IN THE LAVER.
If
any one, for there is no difficulty in speaking distinctly, should be
vexed, and reply to
what
we have said: "But how, O virgins, can
this explanation seem to you to be according to the mind of Scripture,
when the Apocalypse plainly defines that the Church brings forth a male,
while you teach that her labour-pains have their fulfilment in those who
are washed in the layer?" We will answer, But, O faultfinder, not
even to you will it be possible to show that Christ Himself(4) is the one
who is born. For long before the Apocalypse, the mystery of the Incarnation
of the Word was fulfilled. And John speaks concerning things present and
things to come. But Christ, long ago conceived, was not caught up to the
throne of God when He was brought forth, from fear of the serpent injuring
Him. But for this was He begotten, and Himself came down from the throne
of the Father, that He should remain and subdue the dragon who made an
assault upon the flesh. So that you also must confess that the Church labours
and gives birth to those who are baptized. As the spirit says somewhere
in Isaiah:(5) "Before she travailed, she brought forth; before her
pain came, she was delivered of a man-child. Who hath heard such a thing?
who hath seen such things? Shall the earth be made to bring forth in one
day? or shall a nation be born at once? for as soon as Zion travailed,
she brought forth her children."(6) From whom did he flee? Surely
from the dragon, that the spiritual Zion might bear a masculine people,
who should come back from the passions and weakness of women to the unity
of the Lord, and grow strong in manly virtue.
CHAP. VIII.--THE FAITHFUL IN BAPTISM MALES, CONFIGURED TO CHRIST; THE
SAINTS THEMSELVES CHRISTS.
Let
us then go over the ground again from the beginning, until we come in
course to the end,
explaining
what we have said. Consider if the passage
seems to you to be explained to your mind. For I think that the Church
is here said to give birth to a male; since the enlightened(7) receive
the features, and the image, and the manliness of Christ, the likeness
of the form of the Word being stamped upon them, and begotten in them by
a true knowledge and faith, so that in each one Christ is spiritually born.
And, therefore, the Church swells and travails in birth until Christ is
formed in us,(8) so that each of the saints, by partaking of Christ, has
been born a Christ. According to which meaning it is said in a certain
scripture,(9) "Touch not mine anointed,(10) and do my prophets no
harm," as though those who were baptized into Christ had been made
Christs(11) by communication of the Spirit, the Church contributing here
their clearness and transformation into the image of the Word. And Paul
confirms this, teaching it plainly, where he says:(12) "For this cause
I bow my knees unto the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, of whom the whole
family in heaven and earth is named, that He would grant you, according
to the riches of His glory, to be strengthened I with might by His Spirit
in the inner man; that Christ may dwell in your hearts by faith." For
it is necessary that the word of truth should be imprinted and stamped
upon the souls of the regenerate.
CHAP. IX.--THE SON OF GOD, WHO EVER IS, IS TO-DAY BEGOTTEN IN THE MINDS
AND SENSE OF THE FAITHFUL.
Now,
in perfect agreement and correspondence with what has been said, seems
to be this which was
spoken
by the Father from above to Christ when
He came to be baptized in the water of the Jordan, "Thou art my son:
this day have I begotten thee;"(1) for it is to be remarked that He
was declared to be His Son unconditionally, and without regard to time;
for He says "Thou art," and not "Thou hast become," showing
that He had neither recently attained to the relation of Son, nor again,
having begun before, after this had an end, but having been previously
begotten,(2) that He was to be, and was the same. But the expression, "This
day have I begotten thee," signifies that He willed that He who existed
before the ages in heaven should be begotten on the earth--that is, that
He who was before unknown should be made known. Now, certainly, Christ
has never yet been born in those men who have never perceived the manifold
wisdom of God--that is, has never been known, has never been manifested,
has never appeared to them. But if these also should perceive the mystery
of grace, then in them too, when they were converted and believed, He would
be born in knowledge and understanding. Therefore from hence the Church
is fitly said to form and beget the male Word in those who are cleansed.(3)
So far I have spoken according to my ability concerning the travail of
the Church; and here we must change to the subject of the dragon and the
other matters. Let us endeavour, then, to explain it in some measure, not
deterred by the greatness of the obscurity of the Scripture; and if anything
difficult comes to be considered, I will again help you to cross it like
a river.
CHAP. X.--THE DRAGON, THE DEVIL; THE STARS STRUCK FROM HEAVEN BY THE TAIL
OF THE DRAGON, HERETICS; THE NUMBERS OF THE TRINITY, THAT IS, THE PERSONS
NUMBERED; ERRORS CONCERNING THEM.
The dragon, which is great, and red, and cunning, and manifold, and seven-headed,
and horned, and draws down the third part of the stars, and stands ready
to devour the child of the woman who is travailing, is the devil, who lies
in wait to destroy the Christ-accepted mind of the baptized, and the image
and clear features of the Word which had been brought forth in them. But
he misses and fails of his prey, the, regenerate being caught up on high
to the throne of God--that is, the mind of those who are renovated is lifted
up around the divine seat and the basis of truth against which there is
no stumbling, being taught to look upon and regard the things which are
there, so that it may not be deceived by the dragon weighing them down.
For it is not allowed to him to destroy those whose thoughts and looks
are upwards. And the stars, which the dragon touched with the end of his
tail, and drew them down to earth, are the bodies of heresies; for we must
say that the stars, which are dark, obscure, and falling, are the assemblies
of the heterodox; since they, too, wish to be acquainted with the heavenly
ones, and to have believed in Christ, and to have the seat of their soul
in heaven, and to come near to the stars as children of light. But they
are dragged down, being shaken out by the folds of the dragon, because
they did not remain within the triangular forms of godliness, falling away
from it with respect to an orthodox service. Whence also they are called
the third part of the stars, as having gone astray with regard to one of
the three Persons of the Trinity. As when they say, like Sabellios, that
the Almighty Person of the Father Himself suffered;(4) or as when they
say, like Artemas, that the Person of the Son was born and manifested only
in appearance;(5) or when they contend, like the Ebionites, that the prophets
spoke of the Person of the Spirit, of their own motion. For of Marcion
and Valentinus, and those about Elkesaios and others, it is better not
even to make mention.
CHAP. XI.--THE WOMAN WITH THE MALE CHILD IN THE WILDERNESS THE CHURCH;
THE WILDERNESS BELONGS TO VIRGINS AND SAINTS; THE PERFECTION OF NUMBERS
AND MYSTERIES; THE EQUALITY AND PERFECTION OF THE NUMBER SIX; THE NUMBER
SIX RELATED TO CHRIST; FROM THIS NUMBER, TOO, THE CREATION AND HARMONY
OF THE WORLD COMPLETED.
Now she who brings forth, and has brought forth, the masculine Word in
the hearts of the faithful, and who passed, undefiled and uninjured by
the wrath of the beast, into the wilderness, is, as we have explained,
our mother the Church. And the wilderness into which she comes, and is
nourished for a thousand two hundred and sixty days, which is truly waste
and unfruitful of evils, and barren of corruption, and difficult of access
and of transit to the multitude; but fruitful and abounding in pasture,
and blooming and easy of access to the holy, and full of wisdom, and productive
of life, is this most lovely, and beautifully wooded and well-watered abode
of Arete.(6) Here the south wind awakes, and the north wind blows, and
the spices flow out,(7) and all things are filled with refreshing dews,
and crowned with the unfading plants of immortal life; in which we now
gather flowers, and weave with sacred fingers the purple and glorious crown
of virginity for the queen. For the Bride of the Word is adorned with the
fruits of virtue. And the thousand two hundred and sixty days that we are
staying here, O virgins, is the accurate and perfect understanding concerning
the Father, and the Son, and the Spirit, in which our mother increases,
and rejoices, and exults throughout this time, until the restitution of
the new dispensation, when, coming into the assembly in the heavens, she
will no longer contemplate the I AM through the means of human knowledge,
but will clearly behold entering in together with Christ. For a thousand,(1)
consisting of a hundred multiplied by ten, embraces a full and perfect
number, and is a symbol of the Father Himself, who made the universe by
Himself, and rules all things for Himself. Two hundred embraces two perfect
numbers united together, and is the symbol of the Holy Spirit, since He
is the Author of our knowledge of the Son and the Father. But sixty has
the number six multiplied by ten, and is a symbol of Christ, because the
number six proceeding(2) from unity is composed of its proper parts, so
that nothing in it is wanting or redundant, and is complete when resolved
into its parts. Thus it is necessary that the number six, when it is divided
into even parts by even parts, should again make up the same quantity from
its separated segment.(3) For, first, if divided equally, it makes three;
then, if divided into three parts, it makes two; and again, if divided
by six, it makes one, and is again collected into itself. For when divided
into twice three, and three times two, and six times one, when the three
and the two and the one are put together, they complete the six again.
But everything is of necessity perfect which neither needs anything else
in order to its completion, nor has anything over. Of the other numbers,
some are more than perfect, as twelve. For the half of it is six, and the
third four, and the fourth three, and the sixth two, and the twelfth one.
The numbers into which it can be divided, when put together, exceed twelve,
this number not having preserved itself equal to its parts, like the number
six. And those which are imperfect, are numbers like eight. For the half
of it is four, and the fourth two, and the eighth one. Now the numbers
into which it is divided, when put together, make seven, and one is wanting
to its completion, not being in all points harmonious with itself, like
six, which has reference to the Son of God, who came from tile fulness
of the Godhead into a human life. For having emptied Himself,(4) and taken
upon Him the form of a slave, He was restored again to His former perfection
and dignity. For He being humbled, and apparently degraded, was restored
again from His humiliation and degradation to His former completeness and
greatness, having never been diminished from His essential perfection.
Moreover, it is evident that the creation of the world was accomplished
in harmony with this number, God having made heaven and earth, and the
things which are in them, in six days; the word of creative power containing
the number six, in accordance with which the Trinity is the maker of bodies.
For length, and breadth, and depth make up a body. And the number six is
composed of triangles. On these subjects, however, there is not sufficient
time at present to enlarge with accuracy, for fear of letting the main
subject slip, in considering that which is secondary.
CHAP. XII.--VIRGINS ARE CALLED TO THE IMITATION OF THE CHURCH IN THE WILDERNESS
OVERCOMING THE DRAGON.
The
Church, then, coming hither into this wilderness, a place unproductive
of evils, is
nourished, flying
on the heavenward wings of virginity, which
the Word called the "wings of great eagle,"(5) having conquered
the serpent, and driven away from her full moon the wintry clouds. It is
for the sake of these things, meanwhile, that all these discourses are
held, teaching us, O fair virgins, to imitate according to our strength
our mother, and not to be troubled by the pains and changes and afflictions
of life, that you may enter in exulting with her into the bride-chamber,
showing your lamps. Do not, therefore, lose courage on account of the schemes
and slanders of the beast, but bravely prepare for the battle, armed with
the helmet of salvation,(6) and the breastplate, and the greaves. For you
will bring upon him an immense consternation when you attack him with great
advantage and courage; nor will he at all resist, seeing his adversaries
set in array by One more powerful; but the many-headed and many-faced beast
will immediately allow you to carry off the spoils of the seven contests:--
"Lion
in front, but dragon all behind,
And in the midst a she-goat breathing forth Profuse the violence of flaming
fire.
Her slew Bellerophon in truth. And this
Slew Christ the King; for many she destroyed,
Nor could they bear the fetid foam which burst
From
out the fountain of her horrid jaws;"(7)
unless Christ had first weakened and overcome her, making her powerless
and contemptible before us.
CHAP. XIII.--THE SEVEN CROWNS OF THE BEAST TO BE TAKEN AWAY BY VICTORIOUS
CHASTITY; THE TEN CROWNS OF THE DRAGON, THE VICES OPPOSED TO THE DECALOGUE;
THE OPINION OF FATE THE GREATEST EVIL.
Therefore,
taking to you a masculine and sober mind, oppose your armour to the swelling
beast, and
do not at all give way, nor be troubled because
of his fury. For you will have immense glory if you overcome him, and take
away the seven crowns which are upon him, on account of which we have to
struggle and wrestle, according to our teacher Paul. For she who having
first overcome the devil, and destroyed his seven heads, becomes possessed
of the seven crowns of virtue, having gone through the seven great struggles
of chastity. For incontinence and luxury is a head of the dragon; and whoever
bruises this is wreathed with the crown of temperance. Cowardice and weakness
is also a head; and he who treads upon this carries off the crown of martyrdom.
Unbelief and folly, and other similar fruits of wickedness, is another
head; and he who has overcome these and destroyed them carries off the
honours connected with them, the power of the dragon being in many ways
rooted up. Moreover, the ten borns and stings which he was said to have
upon his heads are the ten opposites, O virgins, to the Decalogue, by which
he was accustomed to gore and cast down the souls of many imagining and
contriving things in opposition to the law, "Thou shalt love the Lord
thy God,"(1) and to the other precepts which follow. Consider now
the fiery and bitter horn of fornication, by which he casts down the incontinent;
consider adultery, consider falsehood, covetousness, theft, and the other
sister and related vices, which flourish by nature around his murderous
heads, which if you root out with the aid of Christ, you will receive,
as it were, divine heads, and will bloom with the crowns gained from the
dragon. For it is our duty to prefer and to set forward the best things,
who have received, above the earth-born, a commanding and voluntary mind,
and one free from all necessity, so as to make choice like masters of the
things which please us, not being in bondage to fate or fortune. And so
no man would be master of himself and good, unless selecting the human
example of Christ, and bringing himself to the likeness of Him, he should
imitate Him in his manner of life. For of all evils the greatest which
is implanted in many is that which refers the causes of sins to the motions
of the stars, and says that our life is guided by the necessities of fate,
as those say who study the stars, with much insolence. For they, trusting
more in guessing than in prudence, that is, in something between truth
and falsehood, go far astray from the sight of things as they are. Whence,
if you permit me, O Arete, now that I have completed the discourse which
you, my mistress, appointed to be spoken, I will endeavour, with your assistance
and favour, to examine carefully the position of those who are offended,
and deny that we speak the truth, when we say that man is possessed of
free-will, and prove that
"They
perish self-destroyed,
By
their own fault,"(2)
choosing the pleasant in preference to the expedient.
ARETE. I do permit you and assist you; for your discourse will be perfectly
adorned when you have added this to it.
CHAP. XIV.--THE DOCTRINE OF MATHEMATICIANS NOT WHOLLY TO BE DESPISED,
WHEN THEY ARE CONCERNED ABOUT THE KNOWLEDGE OF THE STARS; THE TWELVE SIGNS
OF THE ZODIAC MYTHICAL NAMES.
THEKLA.
Resuming then, let us first lay bare, in speaking of those things according
to our power,
the imposture of those who boast as though they
alone had comprehended from what forms the heaven is arranged, in accordance
with the hypothesis of the Chaldeans and Egyptians. For they say that the
circumference of the world is likened to the turnings of a well-rounded
globe, the earth having a central point. For its outline being spherical,
it is necessary, they say, since there are the same distances of the parts,
that the earth should be the centre of the universe, around which, as being
older, the heaven is whirling. For if a circumference is described from
the central point, which seems to be a circle,--for it is impossible for
a circle to be described without a point, and it is impossible for a circle
to be without a point,--surely the earth consisted before all, they say,
in a state of chaos and disorganization. Now certainly the wretched ones
were overwhelmed in the chaos of error, "because that, when they knew
God, they glorified Him not as God, neither were thankful; but became vain
in their imaginations, and their foolish heart was darkened;"(3) and
their wise men said that nothing earth-born was more honourable or more
ancient than the Olympians. Whence they are not mere children who know
Christ, like the Greeks, who, burying the truth in fairies and fictions,
rather than in artistic words, ascribing human calamities to the heavens,
are not ashamed to describe the circumference of the world by geometrical
theorems and figures, and explain that the heaven is adorned with the images
of birds and of animals that live in water and on dry land, and that the
qualities of the stars were made from the calamities of the men of old,
so that the movements of the planets, in their opinion, depended upon the
same kind of bodies. And they say that the stars revolve around the nature
of the twelve signs of the Zodiac, being drawn along by the passage of
the circle of the Zodiac, so that through their intermingling they see
the things which happen to many, according to their conjunctions and departures,
their rising and setting.
For the whole heaven being spherical, and having the earth for its central
point, as they think,(1) because all the straight lines from the circumference
falling upon the earth are equal to one another, holds back from the circles
which surround it, of which the meridian is the greatest; and the second,
which divides it into two equal parts, is the horizon; and the third, which
separates these, the equinoctial; and on each side of this the two tropics,
the summer and the winter--the one on the north, and the other on the south.
Beyond is that which is called the axis, around which are the greater and
lesser Bears, and beyond them is the tropic. And the Bears, turning about
themselves, and weighing upon the axis, which passes through the poles,
produce the motion of the whole world, having their heads against each
other's loins, and being untouched by our horizon.
Then they say that the Zodiac touches all the circles, making its movements
diagonally, and that there are in it a number of signs, which are called
the twelve signs of the Zodiac, beginning with the Ram, and going on to
the Fishes, which, they say, were so determined from mythical causes; saying
that it was the Ram that conveyed Helle, the daughter of Athamas, and her
brother Phryxos into Scythia; and that the head of the Ox is in honour
of Zeus, who, in the form of a Bull, carried over Europe into Crete; and
they say the circle called the Galaxy, or milky way, which reaches from
the Fishes to the Ram, was poured forth for Herakles from the breasts of
Hera, by the commands of Zeus. And thus, according to them, there was no
natal destiny before Europe or Phryxos, and the Dioscuroi, (2) and the
other signs of the Zodiac, which were placed among the constellations,
from men and beasts. But our ancestors lived without destiny. Let us endeavour
now to crush falsehood, like physicians, taking its edge off, and quenching
it with the healing medicine of words, here considering the truth.
CHAP. XV.--ARGUMENTS FROM THE NOVELTY OF FATE AND GENERATION; THAT GOLDEN
AGE, EARLY MEN; SOLID ARGUMENTS AGAINST THE MATHEMATICIANS.
If it were better, O wretched ones, that man should be subject to the
star of his birth,than that he should not, why was not his generation and
birth from the very time when the race of man began to be? And if it was,
what is the need of those which had lately been placed among the stars,
of the Lion, the Crab, the Twins, the Virgin, the Bull, the Balance, the
Scorpion, the Ram, the Archer, the Fishes, the Goat, the Watercarrier,
Perseus, Cassiopeia, Cepheus, Pegasus, Hydra, the Raven, the Cup, the Lyre,
the Dragon, and others, from which you introduce, by your instructions,
many to the knowledge of mathematics, or, rather, to a knowledge which
is anathema?(3) Well, then, either there was generation among those before,
and the removal of these creatures above was absurd; or else there was
not, and God changed human life into a better state and government than
that of those who before that lived an inferior life. But the ancients
were better than those of the present time; whence theirs was called the
golden age. There was then no natal destiny.
If the sun, driving through the circles and passing along the signs of
the Zodiac in his annual periods, accomplishes the changes and turnings
of the seasons, how did those who were born before the signs of the Zodiac
were placed among the stars, and the heaven was adorned with them, continue
to exist, when summer, autumn, winter, and spring, were not as yet separated
from each other, by means of which the body is increased and strengthened?
But they did exist, and were longer lived and stronger than those who live
now, since God then disposed the seasons in the same manner. The heaven
was not then diversified by such shapes.
If the sun and the moon and the other stars were made for the division
and protection of the members of the time,(4) and for the adornment of
the heaven, and the changes of the seasons, they are divine, and better
than men; for these must needs pass a better life, and a blessed and peaceful
one, and one which far exceeds our own life in righteousness and virtue,
observing a motion which is well-ordered and happy. But if they are the
causes of the calamities and mischief of mortals, and busy themselves in
working the lasciviousness, and the changes and vicissitudes of life, then
they are more miserable than men, looking upon the earth, and their weak
and lawless actions, and doing nothing better than men, if at least our
life depends upon their revolutions and movements.
CHAP. XVI.--SEVERAL OTHER THINGS TURNED AGAINST THE SAME MATHEMATICIANS.
If no action is performed without a previous desire, and there is no desire
without a want, yet the Divine Being has no wants, and therefore has no
conception of evil. And if the nature of the stars be nearer in order to
that of God, being better than the virtue of the best men, then the stars
also are neither productive of evil, nor in want.
And besides, every one of those who are persuaded that the sun and moon
and stars are divine, will allow that they are far removed from evil, and
incapable of human actions which spring from the sense of pleasure and
pain; for such abominable desires are unsuitable to heavenly beings. But
if they are by nature exempt from these, and in no want of anything, how
should they be the causes to men of those things which they do not will
themselves, and from which they are exempt?
Now those who decide that man is not possessed of free-will, and affirm
that he is governed by the unavoidable necessities of fate, and her unwritten
commands, are guilty of impiety towards God Himself, making Him out to
be the cause and author of human evils. For if He harmoniously orders the
whole circular motion of the stars, with a wisdom which man can neither
express nor comprehend, directing the course of the universe; and the stars
produce the qualities of virtue and vice in human life, dragging men to
these things by the chains of necessity; then they declare God to be the
Cause and Giver of evils. But God is the cause of injury to no one; therefore
fate(1) is not the cause of all things.
Whoever has the least intelligence will confess that God is good, righteous,
wise, true, helpful, not the cause of evils, free from passion, and everything
of that kind. And if the righteous be better than the unrighteous, and
unrighteousness be abominable to them, God, being righteous, rejoices in
righteousness, and unrighteousness is hateful to Him, being opposed and
hostile to righteousness. Therefore God is not the author of unrighteousness.
If that which profits is altogether good, and temperance is profitable
to one's house and life and friends, then temperance is good. And if temperance
be in its nature good, and licentiousness be opposed to temperance, and
that which is opposed to good be evil, then licentiousness is evil. And
if licentiousness be in its nature evil, and out of licentiousness come
adulteries, thefts, quarrels, and murders, then a licentious life is in
its nature evil. But the Divine Being is not by nature implicated in evils.
Therefore our birth is not the cause of these things.
If the temperate are better than the incontinent, and incontinence is
abominable to them, and God rejoices in temperance, being free from the
knowledge of passions, then incontinence is hateful also to God. Moreover,
that the action which is in accordance with temperance, being a virtue,
is better than that which is in accordance with incontinence, which is
a vice, we may learn from kings and rulers, and commanders, and women,
and children, and citizens, and masters, and servants, and pedagogues,
and teachers; for each of these is useful to himself and to the public
when he is temperate; but when he is licentious he is injurious to himself
and to the public. And if there be any difference between a filthy man
and a noble man, a licentious and a temperate; and if the character of
the noble and the temperate be the better, and that of the opposite the
worse; and if those of the better character be near to God and His friends,
and those of the worse be far from Him and His enemies, those who believe
in fate make no i distinction between righteousness and unrighteousness,
between filthiness and nobility, between licentiousness and temperance,
which is a contradiction. For if good be opposed to evil, and unrighteousness
be evil, and this be opposed to righteousness and righteousness be good,
and good be hostile to evil, and evil be unlike to good, then righteousness
is different from un-righteousness. And therefore God is not the cause
of evils, nor does He rejoice in evils. Nor does reason commend them, being
good. If, then, any are evil, they are evil in accordance with the wants
and desires of their minds, and not by necessity.
"They
perish self-destroyed,
By
their own fault."(2)
If destiny(3) leads one on to kill a man, and to stain his hands with
murder, and the law forbids this, punishing criminals, and by threats restrains
the decrees of destiny, such as committing injustice, adultery, theft,
poisoning, then the law is in opposition to destiny; for those things which
destiny appointed the law prohibits, and those things which the law prohibits
destiny compels men to do. Hence law is hostile to destiny. But if it be
hostile, then lawgivers do not act in accordance with destiny; for by passing
decrees in opposition to destiny they destroy destiny. Either, then, there
is destiny and there was no need of laws; or there are laws and they are
not in accordance with destiny. But it is impossible that anyone should
be born or anything done apart from destiny; for they say it is not lawful
for anyone even to move a finger apart from fate. And therefore it was
in accordance with destiny that Minos and Dracon, and Lycurgus, and Solon,
and Zaleukos were law-givers and appointed laws, prohibiting adulteries,
murders, violence, rape, thefts, as things which neither existed nor took
place in accordance with destiny. But if these things were in accordance
with destiny, then the laws were not in accordance with destiny. For destiny
itself would not be destroyed by itself, cancelling itself, and contending
against itself; here appointing laws forbidding adultery and murders, and
taking vengeance upon and punishing the wicked, and there producing murders
and adulteries. But this is impossible: for nothing is alien and abhorrent
to itself, and self-destructive, and at variance with itself. And, therefore,
there is no destiny.
If everything in the world falls out in accordance with destiny, and nothing
without it, then the law must needs be produced by destiny. But the law
destroys destiny, teaching that virtue should be learnt, and diligently
performed; and that vice should be avoided, and that it is produced by
want of discipline. Therefore there is no destiny.
If destiny makes men to injure one another, and to be injured by one another,
what need is there of laws? But if laws are made that they may check the
sinful, God having a care for those who are injured, it were better that
the evil should not act in accordance with Fate, than that they should
be set right, after having acted. But God is good and wise, and does what
is best. Therefore there is no fixed destiny. Either education and habit
are the cause of sins, or the passions of the soul, and those desires which
arise through the body. But whichever of these be the cause, God is not
the cause. If it is better to be righteous than to be unrighteous, why
is not man made so at once from his birth? But if afterwards he is tempered
by instruction and laws, that he may become better, he is so tempered as
possessing free-will, and not by nature evil. If the evil are evil in accordance
with destiny, by the decrees of Providence, they are not blameworthy and
deserving of the punishment which is inflicted by the laws, since they
live according to their own nature, and are not capable of being changed.
And, again, if the good, living according to their own proper nature,
are praiseworthy, their natal destiny being the cause of their goodness;
yet the wicked, living according to their own proper nature, are not blamable
in the eye of a righteous judge. For, if we must speak plainly, he who
lives according to the nature which belongs to him, in no way sins. For
he did not make himself thus, but Fate; and he lives according to its motion,
being urged on by unavoidable necessity. Then no one is bad. But some men
are bad: and vice is blameworthy, and hostile to God, as reason has shown.
But virtue is lovable and praiseworthy, God having appointed a law for
the punishment of the wicked. Therefore there is no Fate.
CHAP, XVII.--THE LUST OF THE FLESH AND SPIRIT: VICE AND VIRTUE.
But why do I draw out my discourse to such length, spending the time with
arguments, having set forth the things which are most necessary for persuasion,
and to gain approval for that which is expedient; and having made manifest
to all, by a few words, the inconsistency of their trick, so that it is
now possible even for a child to see and perceive their error; and that
to do good or evil is in our own power, and not decided by the stars. For
there are two motions in us, the lust of the flesh and that of the soul,
differing from each other,(1) whence they have received two names, that
of virtue and that of vice. And we ought to obey the most noble and most
useful leading of virtue, choosing the best in preference to the base.
But enough on these points. I must come to the end of my discourse; for
I fear, and am ashamed, after these discourses on chastity, that I should
be obliged to introduce the opinions of men who study the heavens, or rather
who study nonsense, who waste their life with mere conceits, passing it
in nothing but fabulous figments. And now may these offerings of ours,
composed from the words which are spoken by God, be acceptable to thee,
O Arete, my mistress.
EUBOULIOS. How bravely and magnificently, O Gregorion, has Thekla debated!
GREGORION. What, then, would you have said, if you had listened to herself,
speaking fluently, and with easy expression, with much grace and pleasure?
So that she was admired by every one who attended, her language blossoming
with words, as she set forth intelligently, and in fact picturesquely,
the subjects on which she spoke, her countenance suffused with the blush
of modesty; for she is altogether brilliant in body and soul.
EUBOULIOS. Rightly do you say this, Gregorion, and none of these things
is false; for I knew her wisdom also from other noble actions, and what
sort of things she succeeded in speaking, giving proof of supreme love
to Christ; and how glorious she often appeared in meeting the chief conflicts
of the martyrs, procuring for herself a zeal equal to her courage, and
a strength of body equal to the wisdom of her counsels.
GREGORION. Most truly do you also speak. But let us not waste time; for
we shall often be able to discuss these and other subjects. But I must
now first relate to you the discourses of the other virgins which followed,
as I promised; and chiefly those of Tusiane and Domnina; for these still
remain. When, then, Thekla ceased speaking these things, Theopatra said
that Arete directed Tusiane to speak; and that she, smiling, passed before
her and said.
DISCOURSE IX.--TUSIANE.
CHAP. I.--CHASTITY THE CHIEF ORNAMENT OF THE TRUE TABERNACLE; SEVEN DAYS
APPOINTED TO THE JEWS FOR CELEBRATING THE FEAST OF TABERNACLES: WHAT THEY
SIGNIFY; THE SUM OF THIS SEPTENARY UNCERTAIN; NOT CLEAR TO ANY ONE WHEN
THE CONSUMMATION OF THE WORLD WILL BE; EVEN NOW THE FABRIC OF THE WORLD
COMPLETED.
O Arete, thou dearest boast to the lovers of virginity, I also implore
thee to afford me thine aid, lest I should be wanting in words, the subject
having been so largely and variously handled. Wherefore I ask to be excused
exordium and introductions, lest, whilst I delay in embellishments suitable
to them, I depart from the subject: so glorious, and honourable, and renowned
a thing is virginity.
God,
when He appointed to the true Israelites the legal rite of the true feast
of the tabernacles,
directed, in Leviticus, how they should keep
and do honour to the feast; above all things, saying that each one should
adorn his tabernacle with chastity. I will add the words themselves of
Scripture, from which, without any doubt, it will be shown how agreeable
to God, and acceptable to Him, is this ordinance of virginity: "In
the fifteenth day of the seventh month, when ye have gathered in the fruit
of the land, ye shall keep a feast unto the Lord seven days: on the first
day shall be a Sabbath, and on the eighth day shall be a Sabbath. And ye
shall take you on the first day the boughs of goodly trees, branches of
palm-trees, and the boughs of thick trees, and willows(1) of the brook;
and ye shall rejoice before the Lord your God seven days. And ye shall
keep it a feast unto the Lord seven days in the year. It shall be a statute
for ever in your generations; ye shall celebrate it in the seventh month.
Ye shall dwell in booths seven days; all that are Israelites born shall
dwell in booths; that your generations may know that I made the children
of Israel to dwell in booths, when I brought them out of Egypt: I am the
Lord your God."(2)
Here the Jews, fluttering about the bare letter of Scripture, like drones
about the leaves of herbs, but not about flowers and fruits as the bee,
fully believe that these words and ordinances were spoken concerning such
a tabernacle as they erect; as if God delighted in those trivial adornments
which they, preparing, fabricate from trees, not perceiving the wealth
of good things to come; whereas these things, being like air and phantom
shadows, foretell the resurrection and the putting up of our tabernacle
that had fallen upon the earth, which at length, in the seventh thousand
of years, resuming again immortal, we shall celebrate the great feast of
true tabernacles in the new and indissoluble creation, the fruits of the
earth having been gathered in, and men no longer begetting and begotten,
but God resting from the works of creation.(3)
For
since in six days God made the heaven and the earth, and finished the
whole world, and
rested on
the seventh day from all His works which
He had made, and blessed the seventh day and sanctified it,(4) so by a
figure in the seventh month, when the fruits of the earth have been gathered
in, we are commanded to keep the feast to the Lord, which signifies that,
when this world shall be terminated at the seventh thousand years, when
God shall have completed the world, He shall rejoice in us.(5) For now
to this time all things are created by His all-sufficient will and inconceivable
power; the earth still yielding its fruits, and the waters being gathered
together in their receptacles; and the light still severed from darkness,
and the allotted number of men not yet being complete; and the sun arising
to rule the day, and the moon the night; and four-footed creatures, and
beasts, and creeping things arising from the earth, and winged creatures,
and creatures that swim, from the water. Then, when the appointed times
shall have been accomplished, and God shall have ceased to form this creation,
in the seventh month, the great resurrection-day, it is commanded that
the Feast of our Tabernacles shall be celebrated to the Lord, of which
the things said in Leviticus are symbols and figures, which things, carefully
investigating, we should consider the naked truth itself, for He saith, "A
wise man will hear, and will increase learning; and a man of understanding
shall attain unto wise counsels: to understand a proverb, and the interpretation;
the words Of the wise, and their dark sayings."(1)
Wherefore let it shame the Jews that they do not perceive the deep things
of the Scriptures, thinking that nothing else than outward things are contained
in the law and the prophets; for they, intent upon things earthly, have
in greater esteem the riches of the world than the wealth which is of the
soul. For since the Scriptures are in this way divided that some of them
give the likeness of past events, some of them a type of the future, the
miserable men, going back, deal with the figures of the future as if they
were already things of the past. As in the instance of the immolation of
the Lamb, the mystery of which they regard as solely in remembrance of
the deliverance of their fathers from Egypt, when, although the first-born
of Egypt were smitten, they themselves were preserved by marking the door-posts
of their houses with blood. Nor do they understand that by it also the
death of Christ is personified, by whose blood souls made safe and sealed
shall be preserved from wrath in the burning of the world; whilst the first-born,
the sons of Satan, shall be destroyed with an utter destruction by the
avenging angels, who shall reverence the seal of the Blood impressed upon
the former.
CHAP. II.--FIGURE, IMAGE, TRUTH: LAW GRACE, GLORY; MAN CREATED IMMORTAL:
DEATH BROUGHT IN BY DESTRUCTIVE SIN.
And
let these things be said for the sake of example, showing that the Jews
have wonderfully
fallen
from the hope of future good, because they
consider things present to be only signs of things already accomplished;
whilst they do not perceive that the figures represent images, and images
are the representatives of truth. For the law is indeed the figure and
the shadow of an image, that is, of the Gospel; but the image, namely,
the Gospel, is the representative of truth itself. For the men of olden
time and the law foretold to us the characteristics of the Church, and
the Church represents those of the new dispensation which is to come. Whence
we, having received Christ, saying, "I am the truth,"(2) know
that shadows and figures have ceased; and we hasten on to the truth, proclaiming
its glorious images. For now we know "in part," and as it were "through
a glass,"(3) since that which is perfect has not yet come to us; namely,
the kingdom of heaven and the resurrection, when "that which is in
part shall be done away."(4) For then will all our tabernacles be
firmly set up, when again the body shall rise, with bones again joined
and compacted with flesh. Then shall we celebrate truly to the Lord a glad
festal-day, when we shall receive eternal tabernacles, no snore to perish
or be dissolved into the dust of the tomb. Now, our tabernacle was at first
fixed in an immoveable state, but was moved by transgression and bent to
the earth, God putting an end to sin by means of death, lest man immortal,,living
a sinner, and sin living in him, should be liable to eternal curse. Wherefore
he died, although he had not been created liable to death or corruption,
and the soul was separated from the flesh, that sin might perish by death,
not being able to live longer in one dead. Whence sin being dead and destroyed,
again I shall rise immortal; and I praise God who by means of death frees
His sons from death, and I celebrate lawfully to His honour a festal-day,
adorning my tabernacle, that is my flesh, with good works, as there did
the five virgins with the five-lighted lamps.
CHAP. III.--HOW EACH ONE OUGHT TO PREPARE HIMSELF FOR THE FUTURE RESURRECTION.
In the first day of the resurrection I am examined whether I bring these
things which are commanded, whether I am adorned with virtuous works, whether
I am overshadowed by the boughs of chastity. For account the resurrection
to be the erection of the tabernacle. Account that the things which are
taken for the putting together of the tabernacle are the works of righteousness.
I take, therefore, on the first day the things which are set down, that
is, on the day in which I stand to be judged, whether I have adorned my
tabernacle with the things commanded; if those things are found on that
day which here in time we are commanded to prepare, and there to offer
to God. But come, let us consider what follows.
"And ye shall take yon," He says, "on the first day the
boughs of goodly trees, branches of palm-trees, and the boughs of thick
trees, and willows (and the tree of chastity) of the brook; and ye shall
rejoice before the Lord your God."(5) The Jews, uncircumcised in heart,
think that the most beautiful fruit of wood is the citron wood, on account
of its size; nor are they ashamed to say that God is worshipped with cedar,
to whom not all the quadrupeds of the earth would suffice as a burnt-offering
or as incense for burning. And moreover, O hard breasts, if the citron
appear beautiful to you, why not the pomegranate, and other fruits of trees,
and amongst them apples, which much surpass the citron? Indeed, in the
Song of Songs,(1) Solomon having made mention of all these fruits, passes
over in silence the citron only. But this deceives the unwary, for they
have not understood that the tree of life(2) which Paradise once bore,
now again the Church has produced for all, even the ripe and comely fruit
of faith.
Such
fruit it is necessary that we bring when we come to the judgment-seat
of Christ, on the first
day of the feast; for if we are without it we shall
not be able to feast with God, nor to have part, according to John,(3)
in the first resurrection. For the tree of life is wisdom first begotten
of all. "She is a tree of life to them that lay hold upon her," says
the prophet; (4) "and happy is every one that retaineth her." "A
tree planted by the waterside, that will bring forth his fruit in due season;"(5)
that is, learning and charity and discretion are imparted in due time to
those who come to the waters of redemption.
He that hath not believed in Christ, nor hath understood that He is the
first principle and the tree of life, since he cannot show to God his tabernacle
adorned with the most goodly of fruits, how shall he celebrate the feast?
How shall he rejoice? Desirest thou to know the goodly fruit of the tree?
Consider the words of our Lord Jesus Christ, how pleasant they are beyond
the children of men. Good fruit came by Moses, that is the Law, but not
so goodly as the Gospel. For the Law is a kind of figure and shadow of
things to come, but the Gospel is truth and the grace of life. Pleasant
was the fruit of the prophets, but not so pleasant as the fruit of immortality
which is plucked from the Gospel.
CHAP. IV.--THE MIND CLEARER WHEN CLEANSED FROM SIN; THE ORNAMENTS OF THE
MIND AND THE ORDER OF VIRTUE; CHARITY DEEP AND FULL; CHASTITY THE LAST
ORNAMENT OF ALL; THE VERY USE OF MATRIMONY TO BE RESTRAINED.
"And ye shall take you on the first day the boughs of goodly trees,
branches of palm-trees."(6) This signifies the exercise of divine
discipline, by which the mind that subdues the passions is cleansed and
adorned by the sweeping out and ejection from it of sins. For it is necessary
to come cleansed and adorned to the feast, arrayed, as by a decorator,
in the discipline and exercise of virtue. For the mind being cleansed by
laborious exercises from the distracting thoughts which darken it, quickly
perceives the truth; as the widow in the Gospels(7) found the piece of
money after she had swept the house and cast out the dirt, that is, the
passions which obscure and cloud the mind, which increase in us from our
luxuriousness and carelessness.
Whoso,
therefore, desires to come to that Feast of Tabernacles, to be numbered
with the
saints, let
him first procure the goodly fruit of faith,
then palm branches, that is, attentive meditation upon and study of the
Scriptures, afterwards the far-spreading and thickly-leaved branches of
charity, which He commands us to take after the palm branches; most fitly
calling charity dense boughs, because it is all thick and close and very
fruitful, not having anything hare or empty, but all full, both branches
and trunks. Such is charity, having no part void or unfruitful. For "though
I sell all my goods and give to the poor, and though I yield up my body
to the fire, and though I have so great faith that I can remove mountains,
and have not charity, I am nothing."(8) Charity, therefore, is a tree
the thickest and most fruitful of all, full and abounding copiously abounding
in graces.
After
this, what else does He will that we should take? Willow branches; by
that figure indicating
righteousness, because "the just," according
to the prophet, shall spring up "as grass in the midst of the waters,
as willows by the watercourses,"(9) flourishing in the word. Lastly,
to crown all, it is commanded that the bough of the Agnos tree be brought
to decorate the Tabernacle, because it is by its very name the tree of
chastity, by which those already named are adorned. Let the wanton now
be gone. who, through their love of pleasure, reject chastity. How shall
they enter into the feast with Christ who have not adorned their tabernacle
with boughs of chastity, that God-making and blessed tree with which all
who are hastening to that assembly and nuptial banquet ought to be begirt,
and to cover their loins? For come, fair virgins, consider the Scripture
itself, and its commands, how the Divine word has assumed chastity to be
the crown of those virtues and duties that have been mentioned, showing
how becoming and desirable it is for the resurrection, and that without
it no one will obtain the promises which we who profess viginity supremely
cultivate and offer to the Lord. They also possess it who live chastely
with their wives, and do, as it were about the trunk, yield its lowly branches
bearing chastity, not being able like us to reach its lofty and mighty
boughs, or even to touch them; yet they, too, offer no less truly, although
in a less degree, the branches of chastity.(1) But those who are goaded
on by their lusts, although they do not commit fornication, yet who, even
in the things which are permitted with a lawful wife, through the heat
of unsubdued concupiscence are excessive in embraces, how shall they celebrate
the feast? how shall they rejoice, who have not adorned their tabernacle,
that is their flesh, with the boughs of the Agnos, nor have listened to
that which has been said; that "they that have wives be as though
they had none?"(2)
CHAP. V.--THE MYSTERY OF THE TABERNACLES.
Wherefore,
above all other things, I say to those who love contests, and who are
strong-minded,
that without delay they should honour chastity,
as a thing the most useful and glorious. For in the new and indissoluble
creation, whoever shall not be found decorated with the boughs of chastity,
shall neither obtain rest, because he has not fulfilled the command of
God according to the law, nor shall he enter into the land of promise,
because he has not previously celebrated the Feast of Tabernacles. For
they only who have celebrated the Feast of Tabernacles come to the Holy
Land, setting out from those dwellings which are called tabernacles, until
they come to enter into the temple and city of God, advancing to a greater
and more glorious joy, as the Jewish types indicate. For like as the Israelites,
having left the borders of Egypt, first came to the Tabernacles,(3) and
from hence, having again set forth, came into the land of promise, so also
do we. For I also, taking my journey, and going forth from the Egypt of
this life, came first to the resurrection, which is the true Feast of the
Tabernacles, and there having set up my tabernacle, adorned with the fruits
of virtue, on the first day of the resurrection, which is the day of judgment,
celebrate with Christ the millennium of rest, which is called the seventh
day, even the true Sabbath. Then again from thence I, a follower of Jesus, "who
hath entered into the heavens,"(3) as they also, after the rest of
the Feast of Tabernacles, came into the laud of promise, come into the
heavens, not continuing to remain in tabernacles--that is, my body not
remaining as it was before, but, after the space of a thousand years, changed
from a human and corruptible form into angelic size and beauty, where at
last we virgins, when the festival of the resurrection is consummated,
shall pass froth the wonderful place of the tabernacle to greater and better
things, ascending into the very house of God above the heavens, as, says
the Psalmist, "in the voice of praise and thanksgiving, among such
as keep holy day."(5) I, O Arete, my mistress, offer as a gift to
thee this robe, adorned according to my ability.
EUBOULIOS. I am much moved, O Gregorion, considering within myself in
how great anxiety of mind Domnina must be from the character of the discourses,
perplexed in heart as she is, and with good cause, fearing lest she should
be at a loss for words, and should speak more feebly than the rest of the
virgins, since they have spoken on the subject with such ability and variety.
If, therefore, she was evidently moved, come and complete this too; for
I wonder if she had anything to say, being the last speaker.
GREGORION. Theopatra told me, Euboulios, that she was greatly moved, but
she was not perplexed from want of words. After, therefore, Tusiane had
ceased, Arete looked at her and said, Come, my daughter, do thou also deliver
a discourse, that our banquet may be quite complete. At this Domnina, blushing,
and after a long delay, scarcely looking up, rose to pray, and turning
round, invoked Wisdom to be her present helper. And when she had prayed,
Theopatra said that suddenly courage came to her, and a certain divine
confidence possessed her, and she said:--
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