Subscribe
to CF
Be
first to know
Read our AAA review
from Catholic Culture
Our Mission
To
bring Jesus Christ; the Way, the Truth and the Life; to all who will follow,
according to scripture and tradition, per the Magisterium
of the Roman Catholic Church.
While you visit!
Listen
to
Radio
For the Sacred
Heart of Jesus and the Immaculate Heart of Mary. |
PETER, ARCHBISHOP OF ALEXANDRIA
FRAGMENTS FROM THE WRITINGS OF PETER
I.--LETTER TO THE CHURCH AT ALEXANDRIA.(1)
Peter, to the brethren beloved and established in the faith of God, peace
in the Lord. Since I have found out that Meletius acts in no way for the
common good,--for neither is he contented with the letter of the most holy
bishops and martyrs,--but, invading my parish,(2) hath assumed so much
to himself as to endeavour to separate from my authority the priests,(3)
and those who had been entrusted with visiting the needy;(4) and, giving
proof of his desire for pre-eminence, has ordained in the prison several
unto himself; now, take ye heed to this, and hold no communion with him,
until I meet him in company with some wise and discreet men, and see what
the designs are which he has thought upon. Fare ye well.
II.--ON THE GODHEAD.(5)
Since
certainly "grace and truth came by Jesus Christ,"(6) whence
also by grace we are saved, according to that word of the apostle, "and
that not of yourselves, nor of works, Jest any man should boast;"(7)
by the will of God, "the Word was made flesh,"(8) and "was
found in fashion as a man."(9) But yet He was not left without His
divinity. For neither "though He was rich did He become poor"(10)
that He might absolutely be separated from His power and glory, but that
He might Himself endure death for us sinners, the just for the unjust,
that He might bring us to God, "being put to death in the flesh, but
quickened by the Spirit;" and afterwards other things. Whence the
evangelist also asserts the truth when he says, "The Word was made
flesh, and dwelt among us;" then indeed, from the time when the angel
had saluted the virgin, saying, "Hail, thou that art highly favoured,
the Lord is with thee." Now when Gabriel said, "The Lord is with
thee," he meant God the Word is with thee. For he shows that He was
conceived in the womb, and was to become flesh; as it is written, "The
Holy Ghost shall come upon thee, and the power of the Highest shall overshadow
thee; therefore also that holy thing which shall be born of thee shall
be called the Son of God;"(11) and afterwards other things. Now God
the Word, in the absence of a man, by the will of God, who easily effects
everything, was made flesh in the womb of the virgin, not requiring the
operation of the presence of a man. For more efficacious than a man was
the power of God overshadowing the virgin, together with the Holy Ghost
also who came upon her.
III.--ON THE ADVENT OF OUR SAVIOUR.(12)
And
He said unto Judas, "Betrayest thou the Son of God with a kiss?"(13)
These things and the like, and all the signs which He showed, and His miracles,
prove that He is God made man. Both things therefore are demonstrated,
that He was God by nature, and that He was man by nature.
IV.--ON THE SOJOURNING OF CHRIST WITH US.(14)
Both therefore is proved, that he was God by nature, and was made man
by nature.
V.--THAT UP TO THE TIME OF THE DESTRUCTION OF JERUSALEM, THE JEWS RIGHTLY
APPOINTED THE FOURTEENTH DAY OF THE FIRST LUNAR MONTH.
I.(15)
1.
Since the mercy of God is everywhere great, let us bless Him, and also
because He has
sent unto
us the Spirit of truth to guide us into all truth.
For for this cause the month Abib was appointed by the law to be the beginning
of months, and was made known unto us as the first among the months of
the year; both by the ancient writers who lived before, and by the later
who lived after the destruction of Jerusalem, it was shown to possess a
most clear and evidently definite period, especially because in some places
the reaping is early, and sometimes it is late, so as to be sometimes before
the time and sometimes after it, as it happened in the very beginning of
the giving of the law, before the Passover, according as it is written, "But
the wheat and the rye were not smitten, for they were not grown up."(1)
Whence it is rightly prescribed by the law, that from the vernal equinox,
in whatsoever week the fourteenth day of the first month shall fall, in
it the Passover is to be celebrated, becoming and conformable songs of
praise having been first taken up for its celebration. For this first month,
says he, "shall be unto you the beginning of months,"(2) when
the sun in the summer-time sends forth a far stronger and clearer light,
and the days are lengthened and become longer, whilst the nights are contracted
and shortened. Moreover, when the new seeds have sprung up, they are thoroughly
purged, and borne into the threshing floor; nor only this, but also all
the shrubs blossom, and burst forth into flower. Immediately therefore
they are discovered to send forth in alternation various and diverse fruits,
so that the grape-clusters are found at that time; as says the lawgiver, "Now,
it was the time of spring, of the first ripe grapes;"(3) and when
he sent the men to spy out the land, they brought, on bearers, a large
cluster of grapes, and pomegranates also, and figs. For then, as they say,
our eternal God also, the Maker and Creator of all things, framed all things,
and said to them, "Let the earth bring forth grass, the herb yielding
seed, and the fruit tree yielding fruit after his kind, whose seed is in
itself upon the earth" Then he adds, "And it was so; and God
saw that it was good."(4) Moreover, he makes quite clear that the
first month amongst the Hebrews was appointed by law, which we know to
have been observed by the Jews up to the destruction of Jerusalem, because
this has been so handed down by the Hebrew tradition. But after the destruction
of the city it was mocked at by some hardening of heart, which we observing,
according to the law, with sincerity have received; and in this, according
to the Word, when he speaks of the day of our holy festivity, which the
election bath attained: but the rest have become hardened,(5) as said the
Scripture; and after other things.
2.
And He says as follows: "All these things will they do unto you
for My name's sake, because they know not Him that sent Me."(6) But
if they knew not Him who sent, and Him who was sent, there is no reason
to doubt but that they have been ignorant of the Passover as prescribed
by the law, so as not merely to err in their choice of the place, but also
in reckoning the beginning of the month, which is the first amongst the
months of the year, on the fourteenth day of which, being accurately observed,
after the equinox, the ancients celebrated the Passover according to the
divine command; whereas the men of the present day now celebrate it before
the equinox, and that altogether through negligence and error, being ignorant
how they celebrated it in its season, as He confesses who in these things
was described.
3.
Whether therefore the Jews erroneously sometimes celebrate their Passover
according to
the course
of the moon in the month Phamenoth, or according
to the intercalary month, every third year in the month Pharmuthi(7) matters
not to us. For we have no other object than to keep the remembrance of
His Passion, and that at this very time; as those who were eye-witnesses
of it have from the beginning handed down, before the Egyptians believed.
For neither by observing the course of the moon do they necessarily celebrate
it on the sixteenth day of Phamenoth, but once every three years in the
month Pharmuthi; for from the beginning, and before the advent of Christ,
they seem to have so done. Hence, when the Lord reproves them by the prophet,
He says, "They do always err in their heart; and I have sworn in My
wrath that they shall not enter into My rest."(8)
4. Wherefore, as thou seest, even in this thou appearest to be lying greatly,
not only against men, but also against God. First, indeed, since in this
matter the Jews never erred, as consorting with those who were eye-witnesses
and ministers, much less from the beginning before the advent of Christ.
For God does not say that they did always err in their heart as regards
the precept of the law concerning the Passover, as thou hast written, but
on account of all their other disobedience, and on account of their evil
and unseemly deeds, when, indeed, He perceived them turning to idolatry
and to fornication.
5.
And after a few things. So that also in this respect, since thou hast
slumbered, rouse
thyself
much, and very much, with the scourge of the Preacher,
being mindful especially of that passage where he speaks of "slipping
on the pavement, and with the tongue."(9) For, as thou seest again,
the charge cast by thee upon their leaders is reflected back; nay, and
one may suspect a great subsequent danger, inasmuch as we hear that the
stone which a man casts up on high falls back upon his head. Much more
reckless is he who, in this respect, ventures to bring a charge against
Moses, that might), servant of God, or Joshua, the son of Nun. who succeeded
him, or those who in succession rightly followed them and ruled; the judges,
I mean, and the kings who appeared, or the prophets whom the Holy Spirit
inspired, and those who amongst the high-priests were blameless, and those
who, in following the traditions, changed nothing, but agreed as to the
observance of the Passover in its season, as also of the rest of their
feasts.
6. And after other things. But thou oughtest rather to have pursued a
safer and more auspicious course, and not to have mitten rashly and slanderously,
that they seem from the beginning, and always, to have been in error about
the Passover, which you cannot prove, whatever charge you may wish to bring
against those who, at the present time, have erred with a grievous wandering,
having fallen away from the commandment of the law concerning the Passover
and other things. For the ancients seem to have kept it after the vernal
equinox, which you can discover if you read ancient books, and those especially
which were written by the learned Hebrews.
7.
That therefore up to the period of the Lord's Passion, and at the time
of the last destruction
of Jerusalem, which happened under Vespasian, the
Roman emperor, the people of Israel, rightly observing the fourteenth day
of the first lunar month, celebrated on it the Passover of the law, has
been briefly demonstrated. Therefore, when the holy prophets, and all,
as I have said, who righteously and justly walked in the law of the Lord,
together with the entire people, celebrated a typical and shadowy Passover,
the Creator and Lord of every visible and invisible creature, the only-begotten
Son, and the Word co-eternal with the Father and the Holy Spirit, and of
the same substance with them, according to His divine nature, our Lord
and God, Jesus Christ, being in the end of the world born according to
the flesh of our holy and glorious lady, Mother of God, and Ever-Virgin,
and, of a truth, of Mary the Mother of God; and being seen upon earth,
and having true and real converse as man with men, who were of the same
substance with Him, according to His human nature, Himself also, with the
people, in the years before His public ministry and during His public ministry,
did celebrate the legal and shadowy Passover, eating the typical lamb.
For "I came not to destroy the law, or the prophets, but to fulfil
them," the Saviour Himself said in the Gospel.
But
after His public ministry He did not eat of the lamb,(1) but Himself
suffered as the true
Lamb
in the Paschal feast, as John, the divine and
evangelist, teaches us in the Gospel written by him, where he thus speaks: "Then
led they Jesus from Caiaphas unto the hall of judgment: and it was early;
and they themselves went not into the judgment-hall, lest they should be
defined, but that they might eat the passover."(2) And after a few
things more. "When Pilate therefore heard that saying, he brought
Jesus forth, and sat down in the judgment-seat, in a place that is called
the Pavement, but in the Hebrew, Gabbatha. And it was the preparation of
the passover, and about the third hour,"(3) as the correct books render
it, and the copy itself that was written by the hand of the evangelist,
which, by the divine grace, has been preserved in the most holy church
of Ephesus, and is there adored by the faithful. And again the same evangelist
says: "The Jews therefore, because it was the preparation, that the
bodies should not remain upon the cross on the Sabbath-day (for that Sabbath-day
was an high day), besought Pilate that their legs might be broken, and
that they might be taken away."(4) On that day, therefore, on which
the Jews were about to eat the Passover in the evening, our Lord and Saviour
Jesus Christ was crucified, being made the victim to those who were about
to partake by faith of the mystery concerning Him, according to what is
written by the blessed Paul: "For even Christ our Passover is sacrificed
for us;"(5) and not as some who, carried along by ignorance, confidently
affirm that after He had eaten the Passover, He was betrayed; which we
neither learn from the holy evangelists, nor has any of the blessed apostles
handed it down to us. At the time, therefore, in which our Lord and God
Jesus Christ suffered for us, according to the flesh, He did not eat of
the legal Passover; but, as I have said, He Himself, as the true Lamb,
was sacrificed for us in the feast of the typical Passover, on the day
of the preparation, the fourteenth of the first lunar month. The typical
Passover, therefore, then ceased, the true Passover being present: "For
Christ our Passover was sacrificed for us," as has been before said,
and as that chosen vessel, the apostle Paul, teaches.(6)
II.(1)
Now it was the preparation, about the third hour, as the accurate books
have it, and the autograph copy itself of the Evangelist John, which up
to this day has by divine grace been preserved in the most holy church
of Ephesus, and is there adored(2) by the faithful.
VI.--OF THE SOUL AND BODY.(3)
The
things which pertain to the divinity and humanity of the Second Man from
heaven, in what has
been written above, according to the blessed apostle,
we have explained; and now we have thought it necessary to explain the
things which pertain to the first man, who is of earth and earthy, being
about, namely, to demonstrate this, that he was created at the same time
one and the same, although sometimes he is separately designated as the
man external and internal. For if, according to the Word of salvation,
He who made what is without, made also that which is within, He certainly,
by one operation, and at the same time, made both, on that day, indeed,
on which God said, "Let us make man in our image, after our likeness;"(4)
whence it is manifest that man was not formed by a conjunction of the body
with a certain pre-existent type. For if the earth, at the bidding of the
Creator, brought forth the other animals endowed with life, much rather
did the dust which God took from the earth receive a vital energy from
the will and operation of God.
VII.--FRAGMENT.(5)
Wretch that I am! I have not remembered that God observes the mind, and
hears the voice of the soul. I turned consciously to sin, saying to myself,
God is merciful, and will bear 'with me; and when I was not instantly smitten,
I ceased not, but rather despised His forbearance, and exhausted the long-suffering
of God.
VIII.--ON ST. MATTHEW.(6)
And
in the Gospel according to Matthew, the Lord said to him who betrayed
Him: "Betrayest thou the Son of Man with a kiss?" which Peter
the Martyr and Archbishop of Alexandria expounding, says, this and other
things like, "All the signs which He showed, and the miracles that
He did, testify of Him that He is God incarnate; both things therefore
are together proved, that He was God by nature, and was made man by nature."
IX.--FROM A SERMON.(7)
In
the meanwhile the evangelist says with firmness, "The Word was
made flesh, and dwelt among us."(8) From this we learn that the angel,
when he saluted the Virgin with the words, "Hail, thou that art highly
favoured, the Lord is with thee,"(9) intended to signify God the Word
is with thee, and also to show that He would arise from her bosom, and
would be made flesh, even as it is written, "The Holy Ghost shall
come upon thee, and the power of the Highest shall overshadow thee; therefore
also that holy thing which shall be born of thee shall be called the Son
of God."(10)
Back to Volume 6 Index