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CONSTITUTIONS OF
THE HOLY APOSTLES
BOOK VII
CONCERNING THE CHRISTIAN LIFE, AND THE EUCHARIST, AND THE INITIATION INTO
CHRIST.
SEC. I.--ON THE TWO WAYS,(1)--THE WAY OF LIFE AND THE WAY OF DEATH.
THAT THERE ARE TWO WAYS,--THE ONE NATURAL, OF LIFE, AND THE OTHER INTRODUCED
AFTERWARDS, OF DEATH; AND THAT THE FORMER IS FROM GOD, AND THE LATTER OF ERROR,
FROM THE SNARES OF THE ADVERSARY.
I. THE
lawgiver Moses said to the Israelites, "Behold, I have set before
your face the way of life and the way of death;"(2) and added, "Choose
life, that thou mayest live."(3) Elijah the prophet also said to the people: "How
long will you halt with both your legs? If the Lord be God, follow Him."(4)
The Lord Jesus also said justly: "No one can serve two masters: for either
he will hate the one, and love the other; or else he will hold to the one,
and despise the other."(5) We also, following our teacher Christ, "who
is the Saviour of all men, especially of those that believe,"(6) are obliged
to say that there are two ways--the one of life, the other of death;(7) which
have no comparison one with another, for they are very different,(8) or rather
entirely separate; and the way of life is that of nature, but that of death
was afterwards introduced,--it not being according to the mind of God, but
from the snares of the adversary.(9)
MORAL EXHORTATIONS OF THE LORD'S CONSTITUTIONS AGREEING WITH THE ANCIENT PROHIBITIONS
OF THE DIVINE LAWS. THE PROHIBITION OF ANGER, SPITE, CORRUPTION, ADULTERY,
AND EVERY FORBIDDEN ACTION.
II. The
first way, therefore, is that of life; and is this,(10) which the law also
does appoint: "To love the Lord God with all thy mind, and with
all thy soul, who is the one and only God, besides whom there is no other;"(11) "and
thy neighbour as thyself."(12)And whatsoever thou wouldest not should
be done to thee, that do not thou to another."(13) "Bless them that
curse you; pray for them that despitefully use you."(14) "Love your
enemies; for what thanks is it if ye love those that love you? for even the
Gentiles do the same."(15) "But do ye love those that hate you, and
ye shall have no enemy." For says He, "Thou shalt not hate any man;
no, not an Egyptian, nor an Edomite;"(16) for they are all the workmanship
of God. Avoid not the persons, but the sentiments, of the wicked. "Abstain
from fleshly and worldly lusts."(17) "If any one gives thee a stroke
on thy right cheek, turn to him the other also."(18) Not that revenge
is evil, but that patience is more honourable. For David says, "If I have
made returns to them that repaid me evil."(19) "If any one compel
thee to go a mile, go with him twain."(20) And, "He that will sue
thee at the law, and take away thy coat, let him have thy cloak also."(21) "And
from him that taketh thy goods, require them not again."(22) "Give
to him that asketh thee, and from him that would borrow of thee do not shut
thy hand."(23) For "the righteous man is pitiful, and lendeth."(24)
For your Father would have you give to all, who Himself "maketh His sun
to rise on the evil and on the good, and sendeth His rain on the just and on
the unjust."(25) It is therefore reasonable to give to all out of thine
own labours; for says He, "Honour the Lord out of thy righteous labours,"(1)
but so that the saints be preferred.(2) "Thou shalt not kill;"(3)
that is, thou shalt not destroy a man like thyself: for thou dissolvest what
was well made. Not as if all killing were wicked, but only that of the innocent:
but the killing which is just is reserved to the magistrates alone. "Thou
shalt not commit adultery:" for thou dividest one flesh into two. "They
two shall be one flesh:"(4) for the husband and wife are one in nature,
in consent, in union, in disposition, and the conduct of life; but they are
separated in sex and number. "Thou shall not corrupt boys:"(5) for
this wickedness is contrary to nature, and arose from Sodom, which was therefore
entirely consumed with fire sent from God.(6) "Let such a one be accursed:
and all the people shall say, So be it."(7) "Thou shall not commit
fornication:" for says He, "There shall not be a fornicator among
the children of Israel."(8) "Thou shalt not steal:" for Achan,
whet he had stolen in Israel at Jericho, was stoned to death;(9) and Gehazi,
who stole, and told a lie, inherited the leprosy of Naaman;(10) and Judas,
who stole the poor's money, betrayed the Lord of glory to the Jews,(11) and
repented, and hanged himself, and burst asunder in the midst, and all his bowels
gushed out;(12) and Ananias, and Sapphira his wife, who stole their own goods,
and "tempted the Spirit of the Lord," were immediately, at the sentence
of Peter our fellow-apostle, struck dead.(13)
THE PROHIBITION OF CONJURING, MURDER OF INFANTS, PERJURY, AND FALSE WITNESS.
III. Thou
shalt not use magic.(14) Thou shalt not use witchcraft; for He says, "Ye
shall not suffer a witch to live."(15) Thou shall not slay thy child by
causing abortion, nor kill that which is begotten; for "everything that
is shaped, and has received a soul from God, if it be slain, shall be avenged,
as being unjustly destroyed."(16) "Thou shalt not covet the things
that belong to thy neighbour, as his wife, or his servant, or his ox, or his
field." "Thou shalt not forswear thyself; for it is said, "Thou
shalt not swear at all."(17) But if that cannot be avoided, thou shalt
swear truly; for "every one that swears by Him shall be commended."(18) "Thou
shalt not bear false witness;" for "he that falsely accuses the needy
provokes to anger Him that made him."(19)
THE PROHIBITION OF EVIL-SPEAKING AND PASSION, OF DECEITFUL CONDUCT, OR IDLE
WORDS, LIES, COVETOUSNESS, AND HYPOCRISY.
IV. Thou
shall not speak evil;(20) for says He, "Love not to speak evil,
lest thou beest taken away." Nor shalt thou be mindful of injuries; for "the
ways of those that remember injuries are unto death."(21) Thou shall not
be double-minded nor double-tongued; for "a man's own lips are a strong
snare to him,"(22) and "a talkative person shall not be prospered
upon earth."(23) Thy words shall not be vain; for "ye shall give
an account of every idle word."(24) Thou shalt not tell lies: for says
He, "Thou shalt destroy all those that speak lies."(25) Thou shalt
not be covetous nor rapacious: for says He, "Woe to him that is covetous
towards his neighbour with an evil covetousness."(26)
THE PROHIBITION OF MALIGNITY, ACCEPTATION OF PERSONS, WRATH, MALICE, AND ENVY.
V. Thou
shalt not be an hypocrite, lest thy "portion be with them."(27)
Thou shalt not be ill-natured nor proud: for "God resisteth the proud."(28) "Thou
shalt not accept persons in judgment; for the judgment is the Lord's." "Thou
shalt not hate any man; thou shalt surely reprove thy brother, and not become
guilty on his account;"(29) and, "Reprove a wise man, and he will
love thee."(30) Eschew all evil, and all that is like it: for says He, "Abstain
from injustice, and trembling shall not come nigh thee."(31) Be not soon
angry, nor spiteful, nor passionate, nor furious, nor daring, lest thou undergo
the fate of Cain, and of Saul, and of Joab: for the first of these slew his
brother Abel, because Abel was found to be preferred before him with God, and
because Abel's sacrifice was preferred;(32) the second persecuted holy David,
who had slain Goliah the Philistine, being envious of the praises of the women
who danced;(33) the third slew two generals of armies--Abner of Israel, and
Amasa of Judah.(1)
CONCERNING AUGURY AND ENCHANTMENTS.
VI. Be
not a diviner, for that leads to idolatry;(2) for says Samuel, "Divination
is sin;"(3) and, "There shall be no divination in Jacob, nor soothsaying
in Israel."(4) Thou shalt not use enchantments or purgations for thy child.
Thou shall not be a soothsayer nor a diviner by great or little birds. Nor
shalt thou learn wicked arts; for all these things has the law forbidden.(5)
Be not one that wishes for evil, for thou wilt be led into intolerable sins.
Thou shalt not speak obscenely, nor use wanton glances, nor be a drunkard;
for from such causes arise whoredoms and adulteries. Be not a lover of money,
lest thou "serve mammon instead of God."(6) Be not vainglorious,
nor haughty, nor high-minded. For from all these things arrogance does spring.
Remember him who said: "Lord, my heart is not haughty, nor mine eyes lofty:
I have not exercised myself in great matters, nor in things too high for me;
but I was humble."(7)
THE PROHIBITION OF MURMURING, INSOLENCE, PRIDE, AND ARROGANCE.
VII. Be
not a murmurer, remembering the punishment which those underwent who murmured
against Moses.
Be not self-willed,
be not malicious, be not hard-hearted,
be not passionate, be not mean-spirited; for all these things lead to blasphemy.
But be meek, as were Moses and David,(8) since "the meek shall inherit
the earth."(9)
CONCERNING LONG-SUFFERING, SIMPLICITY, MEEKNESS, AND PATIENCE.
VIII.
Be slow to wrath; for such a one is very prudent, since "he that
is hasty of spirit is a very fool."(10) Be merciful; for "blessed
are the merciful: for they shall obtain mercy."(11) Be sincere, quiet,
good, "trembling at the word of God."(12) Thou shalt not exalt thyself,
as did the Pharisee; for "every one that exalteth himself shall be abased,"(13)
and "that which is of high esteem with man is abomination with God."(14)
Thou shalt not entertain confidence in thy soul; for "a confident man
shall fall into mischief."(15) Thou shalt not go along with the foolish,
but with the wise and righteous; for "he that walketh(16) with wise men
shall be wise, but he that walketh with the foolish shall be known."(17)
Receive the afflictions that fall upon thee with an even mind, and the chances
of life without over-much sorrow, knowing that a reward shall be given to thee
by God, as was given to Job and to Lazarus.(18)
THAT IT IS OUR DUTY TO ESTEEM OUR CHRISTIAN TEACHERS ABOVE OUR PARENTS--THE
FORMER BEING THE MEANS OF OUR WELL-BEING, THE OTHER ONLY OF OUR BEING.
IX. Thou shalt honour him that speaks to thee the word of God, and be mindful
of him day and night; and thou shalt reverence him,(19) not as the author of
thy birth, but as one that is made the occasion of thy well-being. For where
the doctrine concerning God is, there God is present. Thou shalt every day
seek the face of the saints, that thou mayest acquiesce in their words.
THAT WE OUGHT NOT TO DIVIDE OURSELVES FROM THE SAINTS, BUT TO MAKE PEACE BETWEEN
THOSE THAT QUARREL, TO JUDGE RIGHTEOUSLY, AND NOT TO ACCEPT PERSONS.
X. Thou
shalt not make schisms among the saints, but be mindful of the followers
of Corah.(20) Thou
shalt
make peace between those that are at variance, as
Moses did when he persuaded them to be friends.(21) Thou shalt judge righteously;
for "the judgment is the Lord's."(22) Thou shalt not accept persons
when thou reprovest for sins; but do as Elijah and Micaiah did to Ahab, and
Ebedmelech the Ethiopian to Zedekiah, and Nathan to David, and John to Herod.(23)
CONCERNING HIM THAT IS DOUBLE-MINDED AND DESPONDING.
XI. Be
not of a doubtful mind in thy prayer, whether it shall be granted or no.
For the Lord said
to me Peter
upon the sea: "O thou of little faith,
wherefore didst thou doubt?"(24) "Be not thou ready to stretch out
thy hand to receive, and to shut it when thou shouldst give."(25)
CONCERNING DOING GOOD.
XII. If
thou hast by the work of thy hands, give, that thou mayest labour for the
redemption of thy
sins;
for "by alms and acts of faith sins are
purged away."(1) Thou shalt not grudge to give to the poor, nor when thou
hast given shalt thou murmur; for thou shalt know who will repay thee thy reward.
For says he: "He that hath mercy on the poor man lendeth to the Lord;
according to his gift, so shall it be repaid him again."(2) Thou shalt
not turn away from him that is needy; for says he: "He that stoppeth his
ears, that he may not hear the cry of the needy, himself also shall call, and
there shall be none to hear him."(3) Thou shall communicate in all things
to thy brother, and shall not say thy gods are thine own; for the common participation
of the necessaries of life is appointed to all men by God. Thou shalt not take
off thine hand from thy son or from thy daughter, but shalt teach them the
fear of God from their youth; for says he: "Correct thy son, so shall
he afford thee good hope."(4)
HOW MASTERS OUGHT TO BEHAVE THEMSELVES TO THEIR SERVANTS, AND HOW SERVANTS
OUGHT TO BE SUBJECT.
XIII.
Thou shall not command thy man-servant, or lily maid-servant, who trust in
the same God, with bitterness
of soul, lest they groan against thee, and
wrath be upon thee from God. And, ye servants, "be subject to your masters,"(5)
as to the representatives of God, with attention and fear, "as to the
Lord, and not to men."(6)
CONCERNING HYPOCRISY, AND OBEDIENCE TO THE LAWS, AND CONFESSION OF SINS.
XIV. Thou
shalt hate all hypocrisy; and whatsoever is pleasing to the Lord, that shalt
thou do. By
no means forsake
the commands of the Lord. But thou
shalt observe what things thou hast received from Him, neither adding to them
nor taking away from them. "For thou shalt not add unto His words, lest
He convict thee, and thou becomest a liar."(7) Thou shalt confess thy
sins unto the Lord thy God; and thou shalt not add unto them, that it may be
well with thee from the Lord thy God, who willeth not the death of a sinner,
but his repentance.
CONCERNING THE OBSERVANCE DUE TO PARENTS.
XV. Thou
shalt be observant to thy father and mother as the causes of thy being born,
that thou mayest
live
long on the earth which the Lord thy God
giveth thee. Do not overlook thy brethren or thy kinsfolk; for "thou shalt
not overlook those nearly related to thee."(8)
CONCERNING THE SUBJECTION DUE TO THE KING AND TO RULERS.
XVI. Thou shalt fear the king, knowing that his appointment is of the Lord.
His rulers thou shalt honour as the ministers of God, for they are the revengers
of all unrighteousness; to whom pay taxes, tribute, and every oblation with
a willing mind.
CONCERNING THE PURE CONSCIENCE OF THOSE THAT PRAY.
XVII. Thou shalt not proceed to thy prayer in the day of thy wickedness, before
thou hast laid aside thy bitterness. This is the way of life, in which may
ye be found, through Jesus Christ our Lord.
THAT THE WAY WHICH WAS AFTERWARD INTRODUCED BY THE SNARES OF THE ADVERSARY
IS FULL OF IMPIETY AND WICKEDNESS.
XVIII. But the way of death(9) is known by its wicked practices: for therein
is the ignorance of God, and the introduction of many evils, and disorders,
and disturbances; whereby come murders, adulteries, fornications, perjuries,
unlawful lusts, thefts, idolatries, magic arts, witchcrafts, rapines, false-witnesses,
hypocrisies, double-heartedness, deceit, pride, malice, insolence, covetousness,
obscene talk, jealousy, confidence, haughtiness, arrogance, impudence, persecution
of the good, enmity to truth, love of lies, ignorance of righteousness. For
they who do such things do not adhere to goodness, or to righteous judgment:
they watch not for good, but for evil; from whom meekness and patience are
far off, who love vain things, pursuing after reward, having no pity on the
poor, not labouring for him that is in misery, nor knowing Him that made them;
murderers of infants, destroyers of the workmanship of God, that turn away
from the needy, adding affliction to the afflicted, the flatterers of the rich,
the despisers of the poor, full of sin. May you, children, be delivered from
all these.
THAT WE MUST NOT TURN FROM THE WAY OF PIETY EITHER TO THE RIGHT HAND OR TO
THE LEFT. AN EXHORTATION OF THE LAWGIVER.
XIX. See
that no one seduce thee(10) from piety; for says He: "Thou mayst
not turn aside from it to the right hand, or to the left, that thou mayst have
understanding in all that thou doest."(1) For if thou dost not turn out
of the right way, thou wilt not be ungodly.
SEC. II.--ON THE FORMATION OF THE CHARACTER OF BELIEVERS, AND ON GIVING OF
THANKS TO GOD.
THAT WE OUGHT NOT TO DESPISE ANY OF THE SORTS OF FOOD THAT ARE SET BEFORE
US, BUT GRATEFULLY AND ORDERLY TO PARTAKE OF THEM.
XX. Now
concerning the several sorts of food, the Lord says to thee, "Ye
shall eat the good things of the earth;"(2) and, "All sorts of flesh
shall ye eat, as the green herb;"(3) but, "Thou shalt pour out the
blood."(4) For "not those things that go into the mouth, but those
that come out of it, defile a man;"(5) I mean blasphemies, evil-speaking,
and if there be any other thing of the like nature.(6) But "do thou eat
the fat of the land with righteousness."(7) For "if there be anything
pleasant, it is His; and if there be anything good, it is His. Wheat for the
young men, and wine to cheer the maids." For "who shall eat or who
shall drink without Him?"(8) Wise Ezra(9) does also admonish thee and
say: "Go your way, and eat the fat, and drink the sweet, and be not sorrowful."(10)
THAT WE OUGHT TO AVOID THE EATING OF THINGS OFFERED TO IDOLS.
XXI. But do ye abstain from things offered to idols;(11) for they offer them
in honour of demons, that is, to the dishonour of the one God, that ye may
not become partners with demons.
A CONSTITUTION OF OUR LORD, HOW WE OUGHT TO BAPTIZE, AND INTO WHOSE DEATH.
XXII.
Now concerning baptism,(12) O bishop, or presbyter, we have already given
direction, and we now say,
that thou shalt so baptize as the Lord commanded
us, saying: "Go ye, and teach all nations, baptizing them in the name
of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost(teaching them to observe
all things whatsoever I have commanded you):"(13) of the Father who sent,
of Christ who came, of the Comforter who testified. But thou shalt beforehand
anoint the person with the holy oil, and afterward baptize him with the water,
and in the conclusion shall seal him with the ointment; that the anointing
with oil may be the participation of the Holy Spirit, and the water the symbol
of the death of Christ, and the ointment the seal of the covenants. But if
there be neither oil nor ointment, water is sufficient both for the anointing,
and for the seal, and for the confession of Him that is dead, or indeed is
dying together with Christ. But before baptism, let him that is to be baptized
fast; for even the Lord, when He was first baptized by John, and abode in the
wilderness, did afterward fast forty days and forty nights.(14) But He was
baptized, and then fasted, not having Himself any need of cleansing, or of
fasting, or of purgation, who was by nature pure and holy; but that He might
testify the truth to John, and afford an example to us. Wherefore our Lord
was not baptized into His own passion, or death, or resurrection--for none
of those things had then happened--but for another purpose. Wherefore He by
His own authority fasted after His baptism, as being the Lord of John. But
he who is to be initiated into His death ought first to fast, and then to be
baptized. For it is not reasonable that he who has been buried with Christ,
and is risen again with Him, should appear dejected at His very resurrection.
For man is not lord of our Saviour's constitution, since one is the Master
and the other the servant.
WHICH DAYS OF THE WEEK WE ARE TO FAST, AND WHICH NOT, AND FOR WHAT REASONS.
XXIII. But let not your fasts be with the hypocrites;(15) for they fast on
the second and fifth days of the week. But do you either fast the entire five
days, or on the fourth day of the week, and on the day of the Preparation,
because on the fourth day the condemnation went out against the Lord, Judas
then promising to betray Him for money; and you must fast on the day of the
Preparation, because on that day the Lord suffered the death of the cross under
Pontius Pilate. But keep the Sabbath, and the Lord's day festival; because
the former is the memorial of the creation, and the latter of the resurrection.
But there is one only Sabbath to be observed by you in the whole year, which
is that of our Lord's burial, on which men ought to keep a fast, but not a
festival. For inasmuch as the Creator was then under the earth, the sorrow
for Him is more forcible than the joy for the creation; for the Creator is
more honourable by nature and dignity than His own creatures.
WHAT SORT OF PEOPLE OUGHT TO PRAY THAT PRAYER THAT WAS GIVEN BY THE LORD.
XXIV.
Now, "when ye pray, be not ye as the hypocrites; "(1) but
as the Lord has appointed us in the Gospel, so pray ye: "Our Father which
art in heaven, hallowed be Thy name; Thy kingdom come; Thy will be done, as
in heaven, so on earth; give us this day our daily bread; and forgive us our
debts, as we forgive our debtors; and lead us not into temptation, but deliver
us from evil; for Thine is the kingdom for ever. Amen."(2) Pray thus thrice
in a day, preparing yourselves beforehand, that ye may be worthy of the adoption
of the Father; lest, when you call Him Father unworthily, you be reproached
by Him, as Israel once His first-born son was told: "If I be a Father,
where is my glory? And if I be a Lord, where is my fear?"(3) For the glory
of fathers is the holiness of their children, and the honour of masters is
the fear of their servants, as the contrary is dishonour and confusion. For
says He: "Through you my name is blasphemed among the Gentiles."(4)
A MYSTICAL THANKSGIVING.
XXXV.
Be ye always thankful, as faithful and honest servants; and concerning the
eucharistical thanksgiving
say thus:(5) We thank Thee, our Father, for
that life which Thou hast made known to us by Jesus Thy Son, by whom Thou madest
all things, and takest care of the whole world; whom Thou hast sent to become
man for our salvation; whom Thou hast permitted to suffer and to die; whom
Thou hast raised up, and been pleased to glorify, and hast set Him down on
Thy right band; by whom Thou hast promised us the resurrection of the dead.
Do thou, O Lord Almighty, everlasting God, so gather together Thy Church from
the ends of the earth into Thy kingdom, as this corn was once scattered, and
is now become one loaf. We also, our Father, thank Thee for the precious blood
of Jesus Christ, which was shed for us and for His precious body, whereof we
celebrate this representation, as Himself appointed us, "to show forth
His death."(6) For through Him glory is to be given to Thee for ever.
Amen. Let no one eat of these things that is not initiated; but those only
who have been baptized into the death of the Lord. But if any one that is not
initiated conceal himself, and partake of the same, "he eats eternal damnation;"(7)
because, being not of the faith of Christ, he has partaken of such things as
it is not lawful for him to partake of, to his own punishment. But if any one
is a partaker through ignorance, instruct him quickly, and initiate him, that
he may not go out and despise you.
A THANKSGIVING AT THE DIVINE PARTICIPATION.
XXVI.
After the participation,(8) give thanks in this manner: We thank thee, O
God and Father of Jesus our
Saviour, for Thy holy name, which Thou hast made
to inhabit among us; and that knowledge, faith, love, and immortality which
Thou hast given us through Thy Son Jesus. Thou, O Almighty Lord, the God of
the universe, hast created the world, and the things that are therein, by Him;
and hast planted a law in our souls, and beforehand didst prepare things for
the convenience of men. O God of our holy and blameless fathers, Abraham, and
Isaac, and Jacob, Thy faithful servants; Thou, O God, who art powerful, faithful,
and true, and without deceit in Thy promises; who didst send upon earth Jesus
Thy Christ to live with men, as a man, when He was God the Word, and man, to
take away error by the roots: do Thou even now, through Him, be mindful of
this Thy holy Church, which Thou hast purchased with the precious blood of
Thy Christ, and deliver it from all evil, and perfect it in Thy love and Thy
truth, and gather us all together into Thy kingdom which Thou hast prepared.
Let this Thy kingdom come.(9) "Hosanna to the Son of David. Blessed be
He that cometh in the name of the Lord"(10)--God the Lord, who was manifested
to us in the flesh. If any one be holy, let him draw near; but if any one be
not such, let him become such by repentance.Permit also to your presbyters
to give thanks.
A THANKSGIVING ABOUT THE MYSTICAL OINTMENT.
XXVII. Concerning the ointment give thanks in this manner: We give Thee thanks,
O God, the Creator of the whole world, both for the fla-grancy of the ointment,
and for the immortality which Thou hast made known to us by Thy Son Jesus.
For Thine is the glory and the power for ever. Amen. Whosoever comes to you,(11)
and gives thanks in this manner, receive him as a disciple of Christ. But if
he preach another doctrine, different from that which Christ by us has delivered
to you, such a one you must not permit to give thanks; for such a one rather
affronts God than glorifies Him.
THAT WE OUGHT NOT TO BE INDIFFERENT ABOUT COMMUNICATING.
XXVIII. But whosoever comes to you, let him be first examined, and then received:
for ye have understanding, and are able to know the right hand from the left,(1)
and to distinguish false teachers from true teachers. But when a teacher comes
to you, supply him with what he wants with all readiness. And even when a false
teacher comes, you shall give him for his necessity, but shall not receive
his error. Nor indeed may ye pray together with him, lest ye be polluted as
well as he. Every true prophet or teacher(2) that comes to you is worthy of
his maintenance, as being a labourer in the word of righteousness.(3)
A CONSTITUTION CONCERNING OBLATIONS.
XXIX. All the first-fruits of the winepress, the threshing-floor, the oxen,
and the sheep, shalt thou give to the priests,(4) that thy storehouses and
garners and the products of thy land may be blessed, and thou mayst be strengthened
with corn and wine and oil, and the herds of thy cattle and flocks of thy sheep
may be increased. Thou shalt give the tenth of thy increase to the orphan,
and to the widow, and to the poor, and to the stranger. All the first-fruits
of thy hot bread of thy barrels of wine, or oil, or honey, or nuts, or grapes,
or the first-fruits of other things, shalt thou give to the priests; but those
of silver, and of garments, and of all sort of possessions, to the orphan and
to the widow.
HOW WE OUGHT TO ASSEMBLE TOGETHER, AND TO CELEBRATE THE FESTIVAL DAY OF OUR
SAVIOUR'S RESURRECTION.
XXX. On
the day of the resurrection of the Lord,(5) that is, the Lord's day, assemble
yourselves
together, without
fail, giving thanks to God, and praising
Him for those mercies God has bestowed upon you through Christ, and has delivered
you from ignorance, error, and bondage, that your sacrifice may be unspotted,
and acceptable to God, who has said concerning His universal Church: "In
every place shall incense and a pure sacrifice be offered unto me; for I am
a great King, saith the Lord Almighty, and my name is wonderful among the heathen."(6)
WHAT QUALIFICATIONS THEY OUGHT TO HAVE WHO ARE TO BE ORDAINED.
XXXI.
Do you first ordain bishops worthy of the Lord,(7) and presbyters and deacons,
pious men, righteous,
meek, free from the love of money, lovers of
truth, approved, holy, not accepters of persons, who are able to teach the
word of piety, and rightly dividing the doctrines of the Lord.(8) And do ye
honour such as your fathers, as your lords, as your benefactors, as the causes
of your well-being. Reprove ye one another, not in anger, but in mildness,
with kindness and peace. Observe all things that are commanded you by the Lord.
Be watchful for your life.(9) "Let your loins be girded about, and your
lights burning, and ye like unto men who wait for their Lord, when He will
come, at even, or in the morning, or at cock-crowing, or at midnight. For at
what hour they think not, the Lord will come; and if they open to Him, blessed
are those servants, because they were found watching. For He will gird Himself,
and will make them to sit down to meat, and will come forth and serve them."(10)
Watch therefore, and pray, that ye do not sleep unto death. For your former
good deeds will not profit you, if at the last part of your life you go astray
from the true faith.
PREDICTION CONCERNING FUTURITIES.
XXXII.
For in the last days false prophets shall be multiplied, and such as corrupt
the word; and
the sheep
shall be changed into wolves, and love into
hatred: for through the abounding of iniquity the love of many shall wax cold.
For men shall hate, and persecute, and betray one another. And then shall appear
the deceiver of the world, the enemy of the truth, the prince of lies,(11)
whom the Lord Jesus "shall destroy with the spirit of His mouth, who takes
away the wicked with His lips; and many shall be offended at Him. But they
that endure to the end, the same shall be saved. And then shall appear the
sign of the Son of man in heaven;"(12) and afterwards shall be the voice
of a trumpet by the archangel;(13) and in that interval shall be the revival
of those that were asleep. And then shall the Lord come, and all His saints
with Him,(14) with a great concussion above the clouds, with the angels of
His power,(15) in the throne of His kingdom, to condemn the devil, the deceiver
of the world, and to render to every one according to his deeds. "Then
shall the wicked go away into everlasting punishment, but the righteous shall
go into life eternal,"(16) to inherit those things "which eye hath
not seen, nor ear heard, nor have entered into the heart of man, such things
as God hath prepared for them that love Him;" (1) and they shall rejoice
in the kingdom of God, which is in Christ Jesus. Since we are vouchsafed such
great blessings from Him, let us become His suppliants, and call upon Him by
continual prayer, and say:--
A PRAYER DECLARATIVE OF GOD'S VARIOUS PROVIDENCE.
XXXIII.
Our eternal Saviour, the King of gods, who alone art almighty, and the Lord,
the God of all beings,
and the God of our holy and blameless fathers,
and of those before us; the God of Abraham, and of Isaac, and of Jacob; who
art merciful and compassionate, long-suffering, and abundant in mercy; to whom
every heart is naked, and by whom every heart is seen, and to whom every secret
thought is revealed: to Thee do the souls of the righteous cry aloud, upon
Thee do the hopes of the godly trust, Thou Father of the blameless, Thou hearer
of the supplication of those that call upon Thee with uprightness, and who
knowest the supplications that are not uttered: for Thy providence reaches
as far as the inmost parts of mankind; and by Thy knowledge Thou searchest
the thoughts of every one, and in every region of the whole earth the incense
of prayer and supplication is sent up to Thee. O Thou who hast appointed this
present world as a place of combat to righteousness, and hast opened to all
the gate of mercy, and hast demonstrated to every man by implanted knowledge,
and natural judgment, and the admonitions of the law, how the possession of
riches is not everlasting, the ornament of beauty is not perpetual, our strength
and force are easily dissolved; and that all is vapour and vanity; and that
only the good conscience of faith unfeigned passes through the midst of the
heavens, and returning with truth, takes hold of the right hand of the joy,
which is to come. And withal, before the promise of the restoration of all
things is accomplished, the soul itself exults in hope, and is joyful. For
from that truth which was in our forefather Abraham, when he changed his way
Thou didst guide him by a vision, and didst teach him what kind of state this
world is; and knowledge went before his faith, and faith was the consequence
of his knowledge; and the covenant did follow after his faith. For Thou saidst: "I
will make thy seed as the stars of heaven, and as the sand which is by the
seashore."(3) Moreover, when Thou hadst given him Isaac, and knewest him
to be like him in his mode of life, Thou wast then called his God, saying: "I
will be a God to thee, and to thy seed after thee."(4) And when our father
Jacob was sent into Mesopotamia, Thou showedst him Christ, and by him speakest,
saying: "Behold, I am with thee, and I will increase thee, and multiply
thee exceedingly."(5) And so spakest Thou to Moses, Thy faithful and holy
servant, at the vision of the bush: "I am He that is; this is my name
for ever, and my memorial for generations of generations."(6) O Thou great
protector of the posterity of Abraham, Thou art blessed for ever.
A PRAYER DECLARATIVE OF GOD'S VARIOUS CREATION.
XXXIV.
Thou art blessed, O Lord, the King of ages, who by Christ hast made the whole
world, and by
Him in
the beginning didst reduce into order the disordered
parts; who dividedst the waters from the waters by a firmament, and didst put
into them a spirit of life; who didst fix the earth, and stretch out the heaven,
and didst dispose every creature by an accurate constitution. For by Thy power,
O Lord, the world is beautified, the heaven is fixed as an arch over us, and
is rendered illustrious with stars for our comfort in the darkness. The light
also and the sun were begotten for days and the production of fruit, and the
moon for the change of seasons, by its increase and diminutions; and one was
called Night, and the other Day. And the firmament was exhibited in the midst
of the abyss, and Thou commandedst the waters to be gathered together, and
the dry land to appear. But as for the sea itself, who can possibly describe
it, which comes with fury from the ocean, yet rims back again, being stopped
by the sand at Thy command? For Thou hast said: "Thereby shall her waves
be broken."(7) Thou hast also made it capable of supporting little and
great creatures, and made it navigable for ships. Then did the earth become
green, and was planted with all sorts of flowers, and the variety of several
trees; and the shining luminaries, the nourishers of those plants, preserve
their unchangeable course, and in nothing depart from Thy command. But where
Thou biddest them, there do they rise and set for signs of the seasons and
of the years, making a constant return of the work of men. Afterwards the kinds
of the several animals were created--those belonging to the land, to the water,
to the air, and both to air and water; and the artificial wisdom of Thy providence
does still impart to every one a suitable providence. For as He was not unable
to produce different kinds, so neither has He disdained to exercise a different
providence towards every one. And at the conclusion of the creation Thou gavest
direction to Thy Wisdom, and formedst a reasonable creature as the citizen
of the world, saying, "Let us make man after our image, and after our
likeness;"(1) and hast exhibited him as the ornament of the world, and
formed him a body out of the four elements, those primary bodies, but hadst
prepared a soul out of nothing, and bestowedst upon him his five senses, and
didst set over his sensations a mind as the conductor of the soul. And besides
all these things, O Lord God, who can worthily declare the motion of the rainy
clouds, the shining of the lightning, the noise of the thunder, in order to
the supply of proper food, and the most agreeable temperature of the air? But
when man was disobedient, Thou didst deprive him of the life which should have
been his reward. Yet didst Thou not destroy him for ever, but laidst him to
sleep for a time; and Thou didst by oath call him to a resurrection, and loosedst
the bond of death, O Thou reviver of the dead, through Jesus Christ, who is
our hope.
A PRAYER, WITH THANKSGIVING, DECLARATIVE OF GOD'S PROVIDENCE OVER THE BEINGS
HE HAS MADE.
XXXV.
Great art thou, O Lord Almighty, and great is Thy power, and of Thy understanding
there is
no number. Our
Creator and Saviour, rich in benefits,
long-suffering, and the bestower of mercy, who dost not take away Thy salvation
from Thy creatures: for Thou art good by nature, and sparest sinners, and invitest
them to repentance; for admonition is the effect of Thy bowels of compassion.
For how should we abide if we were required to come to judgment immediately,
when, after so much long-suffering, we hardly get clear of our miserable condition?
The heavens declare Thy dominion, and the earth shakes with earthquakes, and,
hanging upon nothing, declares Thy unshaken stedfastness. The sea raging with
waves, and feeding a flock of ten thousand creatures, is bounded with sand,
as standing in awe at Thy command, and compels all men to dry out: "How
great are Thy works, O Lord! in wisdom hast Thou made them all: the earth is
full of Thy creation."(2) And the bright host of angels and the intellectual
spirits say to Palmoni,(3) "There is but one holy Being;"(4) and
the holy seraphim, together with the six-winged cherubim, who sing to Thee
their triumphal song, cry out with neverceasing voices, "Holy, holy, holy,
Lord God of hosts! heaven and earth are full of Thy glory;"(5) and the
other multitudes of the orders, angels archangels, thrones, dominions, principalities,
authorities, and powers cry aloud, and say, "Blessed be the glory of the
Lord out of His place."(6) But lsrael, Thy Church on earth, taken out
of the Gentiles, emulating the heav enly powers night and day, with a full
heart and a willing soul sings, "The chariot of God is ten thousandfold
thousands of them that rejoice: the Lord is among them in Sinai, in the holy
place."(7) The heaven knows Him who fixed it as a cube of stone, in the
form of an arch, upon nothing, who united the land and water to one another,
and scattered the vital air all abroad, and conjoined fire therewith for warmth,
and the comfort against darkness. The choir of stars strikes us with admiration,
declaring Him that numbers them, and showing Him that names them; the animals
declare Him that puts life into them; the trees show Him that makes them grow:
all which creatures, being made by Thy word, show forth the greatness of Thy
power. Wherefore every man ought to send up an hymn from his very soul to Thee,
through Christ, in the name of all the rest, since He has power over them all
by Thy appointment. For Thou art kind in Thy benefits, and beneficent in Thy
bowels of compassion, who alone art almighty: for when Thou willest, to be
able is present with Thee; for Thy eternal power both quenches flame, and stops
the mouths of lions, and tames whales, and raises up the sick, and overrules
the power of all things, and over, turns the host of enemies, and casts down
a people numbered in their arrogance. Thou art He who art in heaven, He who
art on earth, He who art in the sea, He who art in finite things, Thyself unconfined
by anything. For of Thy majesty there is no boundary; for it is not ours, O
Lord, but the oracle of Thy servant, who said, "And thou shalt know in
thine heart that the Lord thy God He is God in heaven above, and on earth beneath,
and there is none other besides Thee:"(8) for there is no God besides
Thee alone, there is none holy besides Thee, the Lord, the God of knowledge,
the God of the saints, holy above all holy beings; for they are sanctified
by Thy hands. Thou art glorious, and highly exalted, invisible by nature, and
unsearchable in Thy judgments; whose life is without want, whose duration can
never alter or fail, whose operation is without toil, whose greatness is unlimited,
whose excellency is perpetual, whose habitation is inaccessible, whose dwelling
is unchangeable, whose knowledge is without beginning, whose truth is immutable,
whose work is without assistants, whose dominion cannot be taken away, whose
monarchy is without succession, whose kingdom is without end, whose strength
is irresistible, whose army is very numerous: for Thou art the Father of wisdom,
the Creator of the creation, by a Mediator, as the cause; the Bestower of providence,
the Giver of laws, the Supplier of want, the Punisher of the ungodly, and the
Rewarder of the righteous; the God and Father of Christ, and the Lord of those
that are pious towards Him, whose promise is infallible, whose judgment without
bribes, whose sentiments are immutable, whose piety is incessant, whose thanksgiving
is everlasting, through whom(1) adoration is worthily due to Thee from every
rational and holy nature.
A PRAYER COMMEMORATIVE OF THE INCARNATION OF CHRIST, AND HIS VARIOUS PROVIDENCE
TO THE SAINTS.
XXXVI. O Lord Almighty Thou hast created the world by Christ, and hast appointed
the Sabbath in memory thereof, because that on that day Thou hast made us rest
from our works, for the meditation upon Thy laws. Thou hast also appointed
festivals for the rejoicing of our souls, that we might come into the remembrance
of that wisdom which was created by Thee; how He submitted to be made of a
woman on our account;(2) He appeared in life, and demonstrated Himself m His
baptism; how He that appeared is both God and man; He suffered for us by Thy
permission, and died, and rose again by Thy power: on which account we solemnly
assemble to celebrate the feast of the resurrection on the Lord's day, and
rejoice on account of Him who has conquered death, and has brought life and
immortality to light. For by Him Thou hast brought home the Gentiles to Thyself
for a peculiar people, the true Israel beloved of God, and seeing God. For
Thou O Lord, broughtest our fathers out of the land of Egypt, and didst deliver
them out of the iron furnace, from clay and brick-making, and didst redeem
them out of the hands of Pharaoh, and of those under him, and didst lead them
through the sea as through dry land, and didst bear their manners in the wilderness,
and bestow on them all sorts of good things. Thou didst give them the law or
decalogue, which was pronounced by Thy voice and written with Thy hand. Thou
didst enjoin the observation of the Sabbath, not affording them an occasion
of idleness, but an opportunity of piety, for their knowledge of Thy power,
and the prohibition of evils; having limited them as within an holy circuit
for the sake of doctrine, for the rejoicing upon the seventh period. On this
account was there appointed one week, and seven weeks, and the seventh month,
and the seventh year, and the revolution of these, the jubilee, which is the
fiftieth year for remission, that men might have no occasion to pretend ignorance.(3)
On this account He permitted men every Sabbath to rest, that so no one might
be willing to send one word out of his mouth in anger on the day of the Sabbath.
For the Sabbath is the ceasing of the creation, the completion of the world,
the inquiry after laws, and the grateful praise to God for the blessings He
has bestowed upon men. All which the Lord's day excels,(4) and shows the Mediator
Himself, the Provider, the Lawgiver, the Cause of the resurrection, the First-born
of the whole creation, God the Word, and man, who was born of Mary alone, without
a man, who lived holily, who was crucified under Pontius Pilate, and died,
and rose again from the dead. So that the Lord's day commands us to offer unto
Thee, O Lord, thanksgiving for all.(5) For this is the grace afforded by Thee,
which on account of its greatness has obscured all other blessings.
A PRAYER CONTAINING THE MEMORIAL OF HIS PROVIDENCE, AND AN ENUMERATION OF
THE VARIOUS BENEFITS AFFORDED THE SAINTS BY THE PROVIDENCE OF GOD THROUGH CHRIST.
XXXVII. Thou who hast fulfilled Thy promises made by the prophets, and hast
had mercy on Zion, and compassion on Jerusalem, by exalting the throne of David,
Thy servant, in the midst of her, by the birth of Christ, who was born of his
seed according to the flesh, of a virgin alone; do Thou now, O Lord God, accept
the prayers which proceed from the lips of Thy people which are of the Gentiles,
which call upon Thee in truth, as Thou didst accept of the gifts of the righteous
in their generations. In the first place Thou did respect the sacrifice of
Abel,(6) and accept it as Thou didst accept of the sacrifice of Noah when he
went out of the ark;(7) of Abraham, when he went out of the land of the Chaldeans;(8)
of Isaac at the Well of the Oath;(9) of Jacob in Bethel;(10) of Moses in the
desert;(11) of Aaron between the dead and the living;(12) of Joshua the son
of Nun in Gilgal;(13) of Gideon at the rock, and the fleeces, before his sin;(14)
of Manoah and his wife in the field; of Samson in his thirst before the transgression;(15)
of Jephtha in the war before his rash vow; of Barak and Deborah in the days
of Sisera;(1) of Samuel in Mizpeh;(2) of David in the threshing-floor of Ornan
the Jebusite;(3) of Solomon in Gibeon and in Jerusalem:(4) of Elijah in Mount
Carmel;(5) of Elisha at the barren fountain;(6) of Jehoshaphat in war;(7) of
Hezekiah in his sickness, and concerning Sennacherib;(8) of Manasseh in the
land of the Chaldeans, after his transgression;(9) of Josiah in Phassa;(10)
of Ezra at the return;(11) of Daniel in the den of lions;(12) of Jonah in the
whale's belly;(13) of the three children in the fiery furnace;(14) of Hannah
in the tabernacle before the ark;(15) of Nehemiah at the rebuilding of the
walls;(16) of Zerubbabel; of Mattathias and his sons in their zeal;(17) of
Jael in blessings. Now also do Thou receive the prayers of Thy people which
are offered to Thee with knowledge, through Christ in the Spirit.
A PRAYER FOR THE ASSISTANCE OF THE RIGHTEOUS.
XXXVIII.
We give Thee thanks for all things, O Lord Almighty, that Thou hast not taken
away Thy
mercies and
Thy compassions from us; but in every succeeding
generation Thou dost save, and deliver, and assist, and protect for Thou didst
assist in the days of Enos and Enoch, in the days of Moses and Joshua, in the
days of the judges, in the days of Samuel and of Elijah and of the prophets,
in the days of David and of the kings, in the days of Esther and Mordecai,
in the days of Judith, in the days of Judas Maccabeus and his brethren, and
in our days hast Thou assisted us by Thy great High Priest, Jesus Christ Thy
Son. For He has delivered us from the sword, and hath freed us from famine,
and sustained us; has delivered us from sickness, has preserved us from an
evil tongue. For all which things do we give Thee thanks through Christ, who
has given us an articulate voice to confess withal, and added to it a suitable
tongue as an instrument to modulate withal, and a proper taste, and a suitable
touch, and a sight for contemplation, and the hearing of sounds, and the smelling
of vapours, and hands for work, and feet for walking. And all these members
dost Thou form from a little drop in the womb; and after the formation dost
Thou bestow on it an immortal soul, and producest it into the light as a rational
creature, even man. Thou hast instructed him by Thy laws, improved him by Thy
statutes; and when Thou bringest on a dissolution for a while, Thou hast promised
a resurrection. Wherefore what life is sufficient, what length of ages will
be long enough, for men to be thankful? To do it worthily it is impossible,
but to do it according to our ability is just and right. For Thou hast delivered
us from the impiety of polytheism, and from the heresy of the murderers of
Christ; Thou hast delivered us from error and ignorance; Thou hast sent Christ
among men as a man, being the only begotten God; Thou hast made the Comforter
to inhabit among us; Thou hast set angels over us; Thou hast put the devil
to shame; Thou hast brought us into being when we were not. Thou takest care
of us when made; Thou measurest out life to us; Thou affordest us food; Thou
hast promised repentance. Glory and worship be to Thee for all these things,
through Jesus Christ,(8) now and ever, and through all ages. Amen. Meditate
on these things, brethren; and the Lord be With you upon earth, and in the
kingdom of His Father, who both sent Him, and has "delivered us by Him
from the bondage of corruption into His glorious liberty;"(19) and has
promised life to those who through Him have believed in the God of the whole
world.
SEC. III.--ON THE INSTRUCTION OF CATECHUMENS, AND THEIR INITIATION INTO BAPTISM.
Now, after what manner those ought to live that are initiated into Christ,
and what thanksgivings they ought to send up to God through Christ, has been
said in the foregoing directions. But it is reasonable not to leave even those
who are not yet initiated without assistance.
HOW THE CATECHUMENS ARE TO BE INSTRUCTED IN THE ELEMENTS.
XXXIX.
Let him, therefore, who is to be taught the truth in regard to piety be instructed
before his
baptism
in the knowledge of the unbegotten God, in
the understanding of His only begotten Son, in the assured acknowledgment of
the Holy Ghost. Let him learn the order of the several parts of the creation,
the series of providence, the different dispensations of Thy laws. Let him
be instructed why the world was made, and why man was appointed to be a citizen
therein; let him also know his own nature, of what sort it is; let him be taught
how God punished the wicked with water and fire, and did glorify the saints
in every generation--I mean Seth, and Enos, and Enoch, and Noah, and Abraham
and his posterity, and Melchizedek, and Job, and Moses, and Joshua, and Caleb,
and Phineas the priest, and those that were holy in every generation; and how
God still took care of and did not reject mankind, but called them from their
error and vanity to the acknowledgment of the truth at various seasons, reducing
them from bondage and impiety unto liberty and piety, from injustice to righteousness,
from death eternal to everlasting life. Let him that offers himself to baptism
learn these and the like things during the time that he is a catechumen; and
let him who lays his hands upon him adore God, the Lord of the whole world,
and thank Him for His creation, for His sending Christ His only begotten Son,
that He might save man by blot-ring out his transgressions, and that He might
remit ungodliness and sins, and might "purify him from all filthiness
of flesh and spirit,"(1) and sanctify man according to the good pleasure
of His kindness, that He might inspire him with the knowledge of His will,
and enlighten the eyes of his heart to consider of His wonderful works, and
make known to him the judgments of righteousness, that so he might hate every
way of iniquity, and walk in the way of truth, that he might be thought worthy
of the layer of regeneration, to the adoption of sons, which is in Christ,
that "being planted together in the likeness of the death of Christ,"(2)
in hopes of a glorious communication, he may be mortified to sin, and may live
to God, as to his mind, and word, and deed, and may be numbered together in
the book of the living. And after this thanksgiving, let him instruct him in
the doctrines concerning our Lord's incarnation, and in those concerning His
passion, and resurrection from the dead, and assumption.
A CONSTITUTION HOW THE CATECHUMENS ARE TO BE BLESSED BY THE PRIESTS IN THEIR
INITIATION, AND WHAT THINGS ARE TO BE TAUGHT THEM.
XL. And
when it remains that the catechumen is to be baptized, let him learn what
concerns the renunciation
of the devil, and the joining himself with Christ;
for it is fit that he should first abstain from things contrary, and then be
admitted to the mysteries. He must beforehand purify his heart from all wickedness
of disposition, from all spot and wrinkle, and then partake of the holy things;
for as the skilfullest husbandman does first purge his ground of the thorns
which are grown up therein, and does then sow his wheat, so ought you also
to take away all impiety from them, and then to sow the seeds of piety in them,
and vouchsafe them baptism. For even our Lord did in this manner exhort us,
saying first, "Make disciples of all nations;"(3) and then He adds
this, "and baptize them into the name of the Father, and of the Son, and
of the Holy Ghost." Let, therefore, the candidate for baptism declare
thus in his renunciation:(4)--
THE RENUNCIATION OF THE ADVERSARY, AND THE DEDICATION TO THE CHRIST OF GOD.
XLI. I renounce Satan, and his works, and his pomps, and his worships, and
his angels, and his inventions, and all things that are under him. And after
his renunciation let him in his consociation say: And I associate myself to
Christ, and believe, and am baptized into one unbegotten Being, the only true
God Almighty, the Father of Christ, the Creator and Maker of all things, from
whom are all things; and into the Lord Jesus Christ, His only begotten Son,
the First-born of the whole creation, who before the ages was begotten by the
good pleasure of the Father, by whom all things were made, both those in heaven
and those on earth, visible and invisible; who in the last days descended from
heaven, and took flesh, and was born of the holy Virgin Mary, and did converse
holily according to the laws of His God and Father, and was crucified under
Pontius Pilate, and died for us, and rose again from the dead after His passion
the third day, and ascended into the heavens, and sitteth at the right hand
of the Father, and again is to come at the end of the world with glory to judge
the quick and the dead, of whose kingdom there shall be no end. And I am baptized
into the Holy Ghost, that is, the Comforter, who wrought in all the saints
from the beginning of the world, hut was afterwards sent to the apostles by
the Father, according to the promise of our Saviour and Lord, Jesus Christ;
and after the apostles, to all those that believe in the Holy Catholic Church;
into the resurrection of the flesh, and into the remission of sins, and into
the kingdom of heaven, and into the life of the world to come. And after this
vow, he comes in order to the anointing with oil.
A THANKSGIVING CONCERNING THE ANOINTING WITH THE MYSTICAL OIL.
XLII. Now this is blessed by the high priest for the remission of sins, and
the first preparation for baptism. For he calls thus upon the unbegotten God,
the Father of Christ, the King of all sensible and intelligible natures, that
He would sanctify the oil in the name of the Lord Jesus, and impart to it spiritual
grace and efficacious strength, the remission of sins, and the first preparation
for the confession of baptism, that so the candidate for baptism, when he is
anointed may be freed from all ungodliness, and may become worthy of initiation,
according to the command of the Only-begotten.
A THANKSGIVING CONCERNING THE MYSTICAL WATER.
XLIII. After this he comes to the water, and blesses and glorifies the Lord
God Almighty, the Father of the only begotten God;(1) and the priest returns
thanks that He has sent His Son to become man on our account, that He might
save us; that He has permitted that He should in all things become obedient
to the laws of that incarnation, to preach the kingdom of heaven, the remission
of sins, and the resurrection of the dead. Moreover, he adores the only begotten
God Himself, after His Father, and for Him, giving Him thanks that He undertook
to die for all men by the cross, the type of which He has appointed to be the
baptism of regeneration. He glorifies Him also, for that God who is the Lord
of the whole world, in the name of Christ and by His Holy Spirit, has not cast
off mankind but has suited His providence to the difference of seasons: at
first giving to Adam himself paradise for an habitation of pleasure, and afterwards
giving a command on account of providence, and casting out the offender justly,
but through His goodness not utterly casting him off, but instructing his posterity
in succeeding ages after various manners; on whose account, in the conclusion
of the world, He has sent His Son to become man for man's sake, and to undergo
all human passions without sin. Him, therefore, let the priest even now call
upon in baptism, and let him say: Look down from heaven, and sanctify this
water, and give it grace and power, that so he that is to be baptized, according
to the command of Thy Christ, may be crucified with Him, and may die with Him,
and may be buried with Him, and may rise with Him to the adoption which is
in Him, that he may be dead to sin and live to righteousness. And after this,
when he has baptized him in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of
the Holy Ghost, he shall anoint him with ointment, and shall add as follows:--
A THANKSGIVING CONCERNING THE MYSTICAL OINTMENT.
XLIV.
O Lord God, who art without generation, and without a superior, the Lord
of the whole world,
who hast
scattered the sweet odour of the knowledge
of the Gospel among all nations, do Thou grant at this time that this ointment
may be efficacious upon him that is baptized, that so the sweet odour of Thy
Christ may continue upon him firm and fixed; and that now he has died with
Him, he may arise and live with Him. Let him say these and the like things,
for this is the efficacy of the laying on of hands on every one; for unless
there be such a recital made by a pious priest over every one of these, the
candidate for baptism does only descend into the water as do the Jews, and
he only puts off the filth of the body, not the filth of the soul. After this
let him stand up, and pray that prayer which the Lord taught us. But, of necessity,
he who is risen again ought to stand up and pray, because he that is raised
up stands upright. Let him, therefore, who has been dead with Christ, and is
raised up with Him, stand up. But let him pray towards the east.(2) For this
also is written in the second book of the Chronicles, that after the temple
of the Lord was finished by King Solomon, in the very feast of dedication the
priests and the Levites and the singers stood up towards the east, praising
and thanking God with cymbals and psalteries, and saying, "Praise the
Lord, for He is good; for His mercy endureth for ever."(3)
A PRAYER FOR THE NEW FRUITS.
XLV. But let him pray thus after the foregoing prayer, and say: O God Almighty,
the Father of Thy Christ, Thy only begotten Son, give me a body undefiled,
a heart pure, a mind watchful, an unerring knowledge, the influence of the
Holy Ghost for the obtaining and assured enjoying of the truth, through Thy
Christ, by whom(4) glory be to Thee, in the Holy Spirit, for ever. Amen. We
have thought it reasonable to make these constitutions concerning the catechumens.
SEC. IV.--ENUMERATION ORDAINED BY APOSTLES.
WHO WERE THEY THAT THE HOLY APOSTLES SENT AND ORDAINED?
XLVI.
Now concerning those bishops which have been ordained in our lifetime, we
let you know that they
are these:--James
the bishop of Jerusalem, the brother
of our Lord;(5) upon whose death the second was Simeon the son of Cleopas;
after whom the third was Judas the son of James. Of Caesarea of Palestine,
the first was Zacchaeus, who was once a publican; after whom was Cornelius,
and the third Theophilus. Of Antioch, Euodius, ordained by me Peter; and Ignatius
by Paul. Of Alexandria, Annianus was the first, ordained by Mark the evangelist;
the second Avilius by Luke, who was also an evangelist. Of the church of Rome,
Linus the son of Claudia was the first, ordained by Paul;(1) and Clemens, after
Linus' death, the second, ordained by me Peter.(2) Of Ephesus, Timotheus, ordained
by Paul; and John, by me John. Of Smyrna, Aristo the first; after whom Strataeas
the son of Lois;(3) and the third Aristo. Of Pergamus, Gains. Of Philadelphia,
Demetrius, by me. Of Cenchrea, Lucius, by Paul. Of Crete, Titus. Of Athens,
Dionysius. Of Tripoli in Phoenicia, Marathones. Of Laodicea in Phrygia, Archippus.(4)
Of Colossae, Philemon.(5) Of Borea in Macedonia, Onesimus, once the servant
of Philemon.(6) Of the churches of Galatia, Crescens.(7) Of the parishes of
Asia, Aquila and Nicetas. Of the church of AEginae, Crispus. These are the
bishops who are entrusted by us with the parishes in the Lord; whose doctrine
keep ye always in mind, and observe our words. And may the Lord be with you
now, and to endless ages, as Himself said to us when He was about to be taken
up to His own God and Father. For says He, "Lo, I am with you all the
days, until the end of the world. Amen."(8)
SEC. V.--DAILY PRAYERS.
A MORNING PRAYER.
XLVII. "Glory be to God in the highest, and upon earth peace, good-will
among men."(9) We praise Thee, we sing hymns to Thee, we bless Thee; we
glorify Thee, we worship Thee by Thy great High Priest; Thee who art the true
God, who art the One Unbegotten, the only inaccessible Being. For Thy great
glory, O Lord and heavenly King, O God the Father Almighty, O Lord God,(10)
the Father of Christ the immaculate Lamb, who taketh away the sin of the world,
receive our prayer, Thou that sittest upon the cherubim. For Thou only art
holy, Thou only art the Lord Jesus, the Christ of the God of all created nature,
and our King, by whom glory, honour, and worship be to Thee.
AN EVENING PRAYER.
XLVIII. "Ye children, praise the Lord: praise the name of the Lord."(11)
We praise Thee, we sing hymns to Thee, we bless Thee for Thy great glory, O
Lord our King, the Father of Christ the immaculate Lamb, who taketh away the
sin of the world. Praise becomes Thee, hymns become Thee, glory becomes Thee,
the God and Father,(12) through the Son, in the most holy Spirit, for ever
and ever. Amen. "Now, O Lord, lettest Thou Thy servant depart in peace,
according to Thy word; for mine eyes have seen Thy salvation, which Thou hast
prepared before the face of all people, a light for the revelation to the Gentiles,
and the glory of Thy people Israel."(13)
A PRAYER AT DINNER.
XLIX. Thou art blessed, O Lord, who nourishest me from my youth, who givest
food to all flesh. Fill our hearts with joy and gladness, that having always
what is sufficient for us, we may abound to every good work, in Christ Jesus
our Lord, through whom(14) glory, honour, and power be to Thee for ever. Amen.
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