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HOMILIES OF ST. JOHN CHRYSOSTOM
ARCHBISHOP OF CONSTANTINOPLE
ON THE GOSPEL ACCORDING TO
ST. MATTHEW
HOMILIES XXXII & XXXIV (MATT. 9 & 10)
HOMILY XXXII.
MATT. IX. 27 -- 30.
"And
when Jesus departed thence, two blind men followed Him, crying, and saying,
Thou Son of David,
have mercy
on us.(1) And when He was come into
the house, the blind men came to Him: and Jesus saith unto them, Believe ye
that I am able to do this? They say unto Him, Yea, Lord. Then touched He their
eyes, saying, According to your faith be it(2) unto you. And their eyes were
opened."
WHEREFORE can it be that He puts them off,(3) and they crying out? Here again
teaching us utterly to repel the glory that cometh from the multitude. For
because the house was near, He leads them thither to heal them in private.
And this is evident from the fact, that He charged them moreover to tell no
man.
But this
is no light charge against the Jews; when these men, though their eyes were
struck out, receive
the
faith by hearing alone, but they beholding
the miracles, and having their sight to witness what was. happening, do all
just contrary. And see their earnestness also, both by their cry, and by their
prayer itself. For they did not merely approach Him, but with loud cries, and
alleging nought else but "mercy."
And they
called Him "Son of David," because
the name was thought to be honorable. In many passages, for instance, did
the prophets(4) likewise
so call the kings, whom they wished to honor, and to declare great.
And having
brought them into the house, He puts to them a further question. For in many
cases He
made a point
of healing on entreaty, lest any should suppose
Him to be rushing(1) upon these miracles through vainglory: and not on this
account alone, but to indicate also that they deserve healing, and that no
one should say, "If it was of mere mercy that He saved, all men ought
to be saved." For even His love to man hath a kind of proportion; depending
on the faith of them that are healed. But not for these causes only doth He
require faith of them, but forasmuch as they called Him "Son of David," He
to lead them up to what is higher, and to teach them to entertain the imaginations
they ought of Himself, saith, "Believe ye that I am able to do this?" He
did not say, "Believe ye that I am able to entreat my Father, that I am
able to pray" but, "that I am able to do this?"
What then
is their word? "Yea, Lord." They
call Him no more Son of David, but soar higher, and acknowledge His dominion.
And then
at last He for His part lays His hand upon them, saying, "According
to your faith be it unto you." And this He doth to confirm their faith,
and to show that they are participators in the good work, and to witness that
their words were not words of flattery. For neither did He say, "Let your
eyes be opened," but, "According to your faith be it unto you;" which
He saith to many of them that came unto Him; before the healing of their bodies,
hastening to proclaim the faith in their soul; so as both to make them more
approved, and to render others more serious.
Thus with
respect to the sick of the palsy also; for there too before giving nerve
to the body, He
raises
up the fallen soul, saying, "Son, be of good
cheer, thy sins be forgiven thee."(2) And the young damsel too, when He
had raised her up, He detained, and by the food taught her her Benefactor;
and in the case of the centurion also He did in like manner, leaving the whole
to his faith; and as to His disciples again, when delivering them from the
storm on the sea. He delivered them first from their want of faith. Just so
likewise in this case: He knew indeed, even before their cry, the secrets of
their mind; but that He might lead on others also to the same earnestness,
He makes them known to the rest as well, by the result of their cure proclaiming
their hidden faith.
Then after their cure He commands them to tell no man; neither doth He merely
command them, but with much strictness.
"For Jesus," it is said, "straitly charged them, saying, See
that no man know it. But they, when they were departed, spread abroad His fame
in all that country."(3)
They however did not endure this, but became preachers, and evangelists; and
when bidden to hide what had been done, they endured it not.
And if
in another place we find Him saying, "Go thy way, and declare
the glory of God,"(4) that is not contrary to this, but even highly in
agreement herewith. For He instructs us to say nothing ourselves, concerning
ourselves, but even to forbid them that would eulogise us: but if the glory
be referred to God, then not only not to forbid, but to command men to do this.
2. "And as they went out," it is said, "behold, they brought
unto Him a dumb man possessed with a devil."(5)
For the affliction was not natural, but the device of the evil Spirit; wherefore
also he needs others to bring him. For he could neither make entreaty himself,
being speechless, nor supplicate others, when the evil spirit had bound his
tongue, and together with his tongue had fettered his soul.
For this cause neither doth He require faith of him, but straightway heals
the disease.
"For when the devil was cast out," it saith, "the dumb spake:
and the multitudes marvelled, saying, It was never so seen in Israel."(6)
Now this especially vexed the Pharisees, that they preferred Him to all, not
only that then were, but that had ever been. And they preferred Him, not for
His healing, but for His doing it easily and quickly, and to diseases innumerable
and incurable.
And thus the multitude; but the Pharisees quite contrariwise; not only disparaging
the works, but saying things contradictory to themselves, and not ashamed.
Such a thing is wickedness. For what say they?
"He casteth out devils through the prince of the devils."(7)
What can be more foolish than this? For in the first place, as He also saith
further on, it is impossible that a devil should cast out a devil for that
being is wont to repair what belongs to himself, not to pull it down. But He
did not cast out devils only, but also cleansed lepers, and raised the dead,
and curbed the sea, and remitted sins, and preached the kingdom, and brought
men unto the Father; things which a demon would never either choose, or at
any time be able to effect. For the devils bring men to idols, and withdraw
them from God, and persuade them to disbelieve the life to come. The devil
doth not bestow kindness when he is insulted; forasmuch as even when not insulted,
he harms those that court and honor him.
But He doeth the contrary.For after these their insults and revilings,
3. "He went about," it is said, "all the cities and villages,
teaching in their synagogues, and preaching the gospel of the kingdom, and
healing every sickness and every disease."(1)
And so far from punishing them for their insensibility, He did not even simply
rebuke them; at once both evincing His meekness, and so refuting the calumny;
and at the same time minded also by the signs which followed to exhibit His
proof more completely: and then to adduce also the refutation by words. He
went about therefore both in cities, and in countries, and in their synagogues;
instructing us to requite our calumniators, not with fresh calumnies, but with
greater benefits. Since, if not for man's sake, but God's, thou doest good
to thy fellow-servants; whatsoever they may do, leave not thou off doing them
good, that thy reward may be greater; since he surely, who upon their calumny
leaves off his doing good, signifies that for their praise' sake, not for God's
sake, he applies himself to that kind of virtue.
For this cause Christ, to teach us that of mere goodness He had entered on
this, so far from waiting for the sick to come to Him, of Himself hastened
unto them, bearing them two of the greatest blessings; one, the gospel of the
kingdom; another, the perfect cure of all their diseases. And not a city did
He overlook, not a village did He hasten by, but visited every place.
4. And not even at this doth He stop, but He exhibits also another instance
of His forethought. That is,
"When He saw," it is said, "the multitudes, He was moved with
compassion on them, because they were troubled,(2) and scattered abroad, as
sheep having no shepherd. Then saith He unto His disciples, The harvest truly
is plenteous, but the laborers are few, pray ye therefore the Lord of the harvest,
that He will send forth laborers into His harvest."(3)
See again His freedom from vainglory. That He may not draw all men unto Himself,
He sends out His disciples.
And not with this view only, but that He might also teach them, after practising
in Palestine, as in a sort of training-school, to strip themselves for their
conflicts with the world. For this purpose then He makes the exercises even
more serious than the actual conflicts, so far as pertained to their own virtue;
that they might more easily engage in the struggles that were to ensue; as
it were a sort of tender nestlings whom He was at length leading out to fly.
And for the present He makes them physicians of bodies, dispensing to them
afterwards the cure of the soul, which is the principal thing.
And mark
how He points out the facility and necessity of the thing. For what saith
He? "The harvest truly is plenteous, but the laborers are few." That
is, "not to the sowing," saith He, "but to the reaping do I
send you." Which in John He expressed by, "Other men labored, and
ye are entered into their labors."(4)
And these things he said, at once repressing their pride, and preparing them
to be of good courage, and signifying that the greater part of the labor came
first.
And contemplate
Him here too beginning from love to man, not with any requital. "For
He had compassion, because they were troubled and scattered abroad as sheep
having no shepherd." This is His charge against the rulers of the Jews,
that being shepherds they acted the part of wolves. For so far from amending
the multitude, they even marred their progress. For instance, when they were
marvelling and saying, "It was never so seen in Israel:" these were
affirming the contrary, "He casteth out devils through the prince of the
devils."(5)
But of
what laborers doth He speak here? Of the twelve disciples. What then? whereas
He had said, "But the laborers are few," did He add to their
number? By no means, but He sent them out alone. Wherefore then did He say, "Pray
ye the Lord of the harvest, that He would(6) send forth laborers into His harvest;
and made no addition to their number? Because though they were but twelve,
He made them many from that time forward, not by adding to their number, but
by giving them power.
Then to
signify how great the gift is, He saith, "Pray ye the Lord of
the harvest;" and indirectly declares it to be His own prerogative. For
after having said, "Pray ye the Lord of the harvest;" when they had
not made any entreaty nor prayer, He Himself at once ordains them, reminding
them also of the sayings of John,(1) of the threshing floor, and of the Person
winnowing, and of the chaff, and of the wheat. Whence it is evident that Himself
is the husbandman, Himself the Lord of the harvest, Himself the master and
owner of the prophets. For if He sent them to reap, clearly it was not to reap
what belongs to another, but what Himself had sown by the prophets.
But not in this way only was He indirectly encouraging them, in calling their
ministry a harvest; but also by making them able for the ministry.
"And when He had called unto Him," it saith, "His twelve disciples,
He gave them power against(2) unclean spirits, to cast them out, and to heal
all manner of sickness, and all manner of disease."(3)
Still
the Spirit was not yet given. For "there was not yet," it
saith, "a Spirit, because that Jesus was not yet glorified."(4) How
then did they cast out the spirits? By His command, by His authority.
And mark, I pray thee, also, how well timed was the mission. For not at the
beginning did He send them; but when they had enjoyed sufficiently the advantage
of following Him, and had seen a dead person raised, and the sea rebuked, and
devils expelled, and a paralytic new-strung, and sins remitted, and a leper
cleansed, and had received a sufficient proof of His power, both by deeds and
words, then He sends them forth: and not to dangerous acts, for as yet there
was no danger in Palestine, but they had only to stand against evil speakings.
However, even of this He forewarns them, I mean of their perils; preparing
them even before the time, and making them feel as in conflict by His continual
predictions of that sort.
5. Then, since He had mentioned to us two pairs of apostles, that of Peter,
and that of John, and after those had pointed out the calling of Matthew, but
had said nothing to us either of the calling or of the name of the other apostles;
here of necessity He sets down the list of them, and their number, and makes
known their names, saying thus:
"Now the names of the twelve apostles are these; first, Simon, who is
called Peter."(5)
Because there was also another Simon, the Canaanite; and there was Judas Iscariot,
and Judas the brother of James; and James the son of Alphaeus, and James the
son of Zebedee.
Now Mark doth also put them according to their dignity; for after the two
leaders, He then numbers Andrew; but our evangelist not so, but without distinction;
or rather He sets before himself even Thomas who came far short of him.
But let us look at the list of them from the beginning.
"First,
Simon, who is called Peter, and Andrew his brother."
Even this is no small praise. For the one he named from his virtue, the other
from his high kindred, which was in conformity to his disposition.
Then, "James
the son of Zebedee, and John his brother."
Seest thou how He arranges them not according to their dignity. For to me
John seems to be greater, not only than the others, but even than his brother.
After
this, when he had said, "Philip, and Bartholomew," he added, "Thomas,
and Matthew the Publican."(6)
But Luke not so, but in the opposite order, and he puts him before Thomas
Next, "James the son of Alphaeus." For there was, as I have already
said, the son of Zebedee also. Then after having mentioned "Lebbaeus,
whose surname was Thaddaeus,"(7) and "Simon" Zelotes, whom he
calls also "the Canaanite," he comes to the traitor. And not as a
sort of enemy or foe, but as one writing a history, so hath he described him.
He saith not, "the unholy, the all unholy one," but hath named him
from his city, "Judas Iscariot." Because there was also another Judas, "Lebbaeus,
whose surname was Thaddaeus," who, Luke saith, was the brother of James,
saying, "Judas the brother of James."(8) Therefore to distinguish
him from this man, it saith, "Judas Iscariot, who also betrayed Him."(9)
And he is not ashamed to say, "who also betrayed Him." So far were
they from ever disguising aught even of those things that seem to be matters
of reproach.
And first
of all, and leader of the choir,(1) is the "unlearned, the
ignorant man."(2)
But let us see whither, and to whom, He sends them.
"These twelve," it is said, "Jesus sent forth."(3)
What manner of men were these? The fishermen, the publicans: for indeed four
were fishermen and two publicans, Matthew and James, and one was even a traitor.
And what saith He to them? He presently charges them, saying,
"Go not into the way(4) of the Gentiles, and into any city of the Samaritans
enter ye not; but go rather to the lost sheep of the house of Israel."(5)
"For think not at all," saith He, "because they insult me,
and call me demoniac, that I hate them and turn away from them. Nay, as I sought
earnestly to amend them in the first place, so keeping you away from all the
rest, to them do I send you as teachers and physicians. And I not only forbid
you to preach to others before these, but I do not suffer you so much as to
touch upon the road that leads thither, nor to enter into such a city." Because
the Samaritans too are in a state of enmity with the Jews. And yet it was an
easier thing to deal with them, for they were much more favorably disposed
to the faith; but the case of these was more difficult. But for all this, He
sends them on the harder task, indicating his guardian care of them, and stopping
the mouths of the Jews, and preparing the way for the teaching of the apostles,
that people might not hereafter blame them for "entering in to men uncircumcised,"(6)
and think they had a just cause for shunning and abhorring them. And he calls
them "lost," not "stray," "sheep," in every way
contriving how to excuse them, and whining their mind to himself.
6. "And as ye go," saith He, "preach, saying, The kingdom of
Heaven is at hand."(7)
Seest thou the greatness of their ministry? Seest thou the dignity of apostles?
Of nothing that is the object of sense are they commanded to speak, nor such
as Moses spake of, and the prophets before them, but of some new and strange
things. For while the former preached no such things, but earth, and the good
things in the earth, these preached the kingdom of Heaven, and whatever is
there.
And not from this circumstance only were these the greater, but also from
their obedience: in that they shrink not, nor are they backward, like those
of old;(8) but, warned as they are of perils, and wars, and of those insupportable
evils, they receive with great obedience His injunctions, as being heralds
of a kingdom.
"And what marvel," saith one, "if having nothing to preach
that is dismal or grievous, they readily obeyed?" What sayest thou? nothing
grievous enjoined them? Dost thou not hear of the prisons, the executions,
the civil wars, the hatred of all men? all which, He said a little while after,
they must undergo. True, as to other men, He sent them to be procurers and
heralds of innumerable blessings: but for themselves, He said and proclaimed
beforehand, that they were to suffer terrible and incurable ills.
After this, to make them trustworthy,(9) He saith,
"Heal
the sick, cleanse the lepers,(10) cast out devils: freely ye have received,
freely give."
See how
He provides for their conduct, and that no less than for their miracles,
implying that the
miracles without
this are nothing. Thus He both quells their
pride by saying, "Freely ye have received, freely give;" and takes
order for their being clear of covetousness. Moreover, lest it should be thought
their own work,(11) and they be lifted up by the signs that were wrought, He
saith, "freely ye have received." "Ye bestow no favor on them
that receive you, for not for a price did ye receive these things, nor after
toil: for the grace is mine. In like manner therefore give ye to them also,
for there is no finding a price worthy of them."
7. After this plucking up immediately the root of the evils,(12) He saith,
"Provide neither gold, nor silver, nor brass in your purses, nor scrip
for your journey, neither two coats, neither shoes, nor yet a staff."(13)
He said
not, "take them not with you," but, "even if you can
obtain them from another, flee the evil disease." And you see that hereby
He was answering many good purposes; first setting His disciples above suspicion;
secondly, freeing them from all care, so that they might give all their leisure
to the word; thirdly, teaching them His own power. Of this accordingly He quite
speaks out to them afterwards, "Lacked ye anything, when I sent you naked
and unshod?"(1)
He did
not at once say, "Provide not," but when He had said, "Cleanse
the lepers, cast out devils," then He said, "Provide nothing; freely
ye have received, freely give;" by His way of ordering things consulting
at once for their interest, their credit, and their ability.
But perhaps
some one may say, that the rest may not be unaccountable, but "not
to have a scrip for the journey, neither two coats, nor a staff, nor shoes," why
did He enjoin this? Being minded to train them up unto all perfection; since
even further back, He had suffered them not to take thought so much as for
the next day. For even to the whole world He was to send them out as teachers.
Therefore of men He makes them even angels (so to speak); releasing them from
all worldly care, so that they should be possessed with one care alone, that
of their teaching; or rather even from that He releases them, saying, "Take
no thought how or what ye shall speak."(2)
And thus, what seems to be very grievous and galling, this He shows to be
especially light and easy for them. For nothing makes men so cheerful as being
freed from anxiety and care; and especially when it is granted them, being
so freed, to lack nothing, God being present, and becoming to them instead
of all things.
Next,
lest they should say, "whence then are we to obtain our necessary
food?" He saith not unto them, "Ye have heard that I have told you
before, 'Behold the fowls of the air;'"(3) (for they were not yet able
to realise(4) this commandment in their actions); but He added what came far
short of this, saying, "For the workman is worthy of his meat;"(5)
declaring that they must be nourished by their disciples, that neither they
might be high minded towards those whom they were teaching, as though giving
all and receiving nothing at their hands; nor these again break away, as being
despised by their teachers.
After
this, that they may not say, "Dost thou then command us to live
by begging?" and be ashamed of this, He signifies the thing to be a debt,
both by calling them "workmen," and by terming what was given, "hire."(6)
For "think not," saith He, "because the labor is in words, that
the benefit conferred by you is small; nay, for the thing hath much toil; and
whatsoever they that are taught may give, it is not a free gift which they
bestow, but a recompence which they render: "for the workman is worthy
of his meat." But this He said, not as declaring so much to be the worth
of the apostles' labors, far from it; God forbid: but as both making it a law
for them to seek nothing more, and as convincing the givers, that what they
do is not an act of liberality, but a debt.
8. "And into whatsoever city or town ye shall enter, inquire who in it
is worthy: and there abide till ye go thence."(7)
That is, "it follows not," saith He, "from
my saying, 'The workman is worthy of his meat,' that I have opened to you
all men's doors:
but herein also do I require you to use much circumspection. For this will
profit you both in respect of your credit, and for your very maintenance. For
if he is worthy, he will surely give you food; more especially when ye ask
nothing beyond mere necessaries."
And He
not only requires them to seek out worthy persons, but also not to change
house for house,
whereby
they would neither vex him that is receiving
them, nor themselves get the character of gluttony and self-indulgence.(8)
For this He declared by saying, "There abide till ye go thence." And
this one may perceive from the other evangelists also.(9)
Seest thou how He made them honorable by this also, and those that received
them careful; by signifying that they rather are the gainers, both in honor,
and in respect of advantage?
Then pursuing again the same subject, He saith,
"And when ye come into an house, salute it. And if the house be worthy,
let your peace come upon it; but if it be not worthy, let your peace return
to you."(10)
Seest thou how far He declines not to carry His injunctions? And very fitly.
For as champions of godliness, and preachers to the whole world, was He training
them. And in that regard disposing them to practise moderation, and making
them objects of love, He saith,
"And whosoever shall not receive you, nor hear your words, when ye depart
out of that house or city, shake off the dust of your feet. Verily I say unto
you, it shall be more tolerable for the land of Sodom and Gomorrah in the day
of judgment, than for that city."(1)
That is, "do not," saith He, "because ye are teachers, therefore
wait to be saluted by others, but be first in showing that respect." Then,
implying that this is not a mere salutation, but a blessing, He saith, "If
the house be worthy, it shall come upon it," but if it deal insolently,
its first punishment will be, not to have the benefit of your peace; and the
second, that it shall suffer the doom of Sodom." "And what," it
will be said, "is their punishment to us?" Ye will have the houses
of such as are worthy.
But what
means, "Shake off the dust of your feet?" It
is either to signify their having received nothing of them, or to be a witness
to them
of the long journey, which they had travelled for their sake.
But mark, I pray thee, how He doth not even yet give the whole to them. For
neither doth He as yet bestow upon them foreknowledge, so as to learn who is
worthy, and who is not so; but He bids them inquire, and await the trial. How
then did He Himself abide with a publican? Because he was become worthy by
his conversion.
And mark, I pray thee, how when He had stripped them of all, He gave them
all, by suffering them to abide in the houses of those who became disciples,
and to enter therein, having nothing. For thus both themselves were freed from
anxiety, and they would convince the others, that for their salvation only
are they come; first by bringing in nothing with them. then by requiring no
more of them than necessaries, lastly, by not entering all their houses without
distinction.
Since
not by the signs only did He desire them to appear illustrious, but even
before the signs,
by their
own virtue. For nothing so much characterizes
strictness of life,(2) as to be free from superfluities, and so far as may
be, from wants. This even the false apostles knew. Wherefore Paul also said, "That
wherein they glory, they may be found even as we."(3)
But if when we are in a strange country, and are going unto persons unknown
to us, we must seek nothing more than our food for the day, much more when
abiding at home.
9. These things let us not hear only, but also imitate. For not of the apostles
alone are they said, but also of the saints afterwards. Let us therefore become
worthy to entertain them. For according to the disposition of the entertainers
this peace both comes and flies away again. For not only on the courageous
speaking of them that teach, but also on the worthiness of them that receive,
doth this effect follow.
Neither
let us account it a small loss, not to enjoy such peace. For this peace the
prophet also
from of old
proclaims, saying, "How beautiful are
the feet of them that bring good tidings of peace."(4) Then to explain
the value thereof he added, "That bring good tidings of good things."
This peace
Christ also declared to be great, when He said, "Peace I leave
with you, my peace I give unto you."(5) And we should do all things, so
as to enjoy it, both at home and in church. For in the very church too the
presiding minister gives peace.(6) And this which we speak of is a type of
that. And you should receive it with all alacrity, in heart(7) before the actual
communion.(8) For if not to impart it after the communion(9) be disgusting,
how much more disgusting to repel from you him that pronounces it!
For thee
the presbyter sits, for thee the teacher stands, laboring and toiling. What
plea then wilt
thou have,
for not affording him so much welcome as to
listen to Him? For indeed the church is the common home of all, and when ye
have first occupied it, we enter in, strictly observing the type which they
exhibited. For this cause we also pronounce "peace" in common to
all, directly as we enter, according to that law.
Let no one therefore be careless, no one inattentive,(10) when the priests
have entered in and are teaching; for there is really no small punishment appointed
for this. Yea, and I for one would rather enter into any of your houses ten
thousand times, and find myself baffled, than not be heard when I speak here.
This latter is to me harder to bear than the other, by how much this house
is of greater dignity; our great possessions being verily laid up here, here
all the hopes we have. For what is here, that is not great and awful? Thus
both this table is far more precious and delightful than the other,(1) and
this candle-stick than the candlestick there. And this they know, as many as
have put away diseases by anointing themselves with oil(2) in faith and in
due season. And this coffer too is far better and more indispensable than that
other chest; for it hath not clothes but alms shut up in it; even though they
be few that own them. Here too is a couch better than that other; for the repose
of the divine Scriptures is more delightful than any couch.
And had
we attained to excellence in respect of concord, then had we no other home
beside this.
And that there
is nothing over-burdensome in this saying,
the "three thousand,"(3) bear witness, and the "five thousand,"(4)
who had but one home, one table, one soul; for "the multitude of them
that believed," we read, "were of one heart and of one soul."(5)
But since we fall far short of their virtue, and dwell scattered in our several
homes, let us at least, when we meet here, be earnest in so doing. Because
though in all other things we be destitute and poor, yet in these we are rich.
Wherefore here at least receive us with love when we come in unto you. And
when I say, "Peace be unto you,"(6) and ye say, "And with thy
spirit," say it not with the voice only, but also with the mind; not in
mouth, but in understanding also. But if, while here thou sayest, "Peace
also to thy spirit," out of doors thou art mine enemy, spitting at and
calumniating me. and secretly aspersing me with innumerable reproaches; what
manner of peace is this?
For I indeed, though thou speak evil of me ten thousand times, give thee that
peace with a pure heart, with sincerity of purpose, and I can say nothing evil
at any time of thee; for I have a father's bowels. And if I rebuke thee at
any time, I do it out of concern for thee. But as for thee, by thy secret carping
at me, and not receiving me in the Lord's house, I fear lest thou shouldest
in return add to my despondency; not for thine insulting me, not for thy casting
me out, but for thy rejecting our peace, and drawing down upon thyself that
grievous punishment.
For though I shake not off the dust, though I turn not away, what is threatened
remains unchanged. For I indeed oftentimes pronounce peace to you, and will
not cease from continually speaking it; and if, besides your insults, ye receive
me not, even then I shake not off the dust; not that I am disobedient to our
Lord, but that I vehemently burn for you. And besides, I have suffered nothing
at all for you; I have neither come a long journey, nor with that garb and
that voluntary poverty am I come (therefore we first blame ourselves), nor
without shoes and a second coat; and perhaps this is why ye also fail of your
part. However, this is not a sufficient plea for you; but while our condemnation
is greater, to you it imparts no excuse.
10. Then the houses were churches, but now the church is become a house. Then
one might say nothing worldly in a house, now one may say nothing spiritual
in a church, but even here ye bring in the business from the market place,
and while God is discoursing, ye leave off listening in silence to His sayings,
and bring in the contrary things, and make discord. And I would it were your
own affairs, but now the things which are nothing to you, those ye both speak
and hear.
For this
I lament, and will not cease lamenting. For I have no power to quit this
house, but here
we must
needs remain until we depart from this present
life. "Receive us"(7) therefore, as Paul commanded. For his language
in that place related not to a meal, but to the temper and mind. This we also
seek of you, even love, that fervent and genuine affection. But if ye endure
not even this, at least love yourselves, and lay aside your present remissness.
This is sufficient for our consolation, if we see you approving yourselves,
and becoming better men. So will I also myself show forth increased love, even "though
the more abundantly I love you, the less I be loved."(8)
For indeed there are many things to bind us together. One table is set before
all, one Father begat us, we are all the issue of the same throes, the same
drink hath been given to all; or rather not only the same drink, but also to
drink out of one cup. For our Father desiring to lead us to a kindly affection,
hath devised this also, that we should drink out of one cup; a thing which
belongs to intense love.
But "there is no comparison between the apostles and us." I
confess it too, and would never deny it. For I say not, to themselves, but
not even
to their shadows are we comparable.
But nevertheless, let your part be done. This will have no tendency to disgrace
you but rather to profit you the more. For when even to unworthy persons ye
show so much love and obedience, then shall ye receive the greater reward.
For neither are they our own words which we speak, since ye have no teacher
at all on earth; but what we have received, that we also give, and in giving
we seek for nothing else from you, but to be loved only. And if we be unworthy
even of this, yet by our loving you we shall quickly be worthy. Although we
are commanded to love not them only that love us, but even our enemies. Who
then is so hardhearted, who so savage, that after having received such a law,
he should abhor and hate even them that love him, full as he may be of innumerable
evils?
We have partaken of a spiritual table, let us be partakers also of spiritual
love. For if robbers, on partaking of salt, forget their character; what excuse
shall we have, who are continually partaking of the Lord's body, and do not
imitate even their gentleness? And yet to many, not one table only, but even
to be of one city, hath sufficed for friendship; but we, when we have the same
city, and the same house, and table, and way, and door, and root, and life,
and head, and the same shepherd, and king, and teacher, and judge, and maker,
and father, and to whom all things are common; what indulgence can we deserve,
if we be divided one from another?
11. But the miracles, perhaps, are what ye seek after, such as they wrought
when they entered in; the lepers cleansed, the devils driven out, and the dead
raised? Nay, but this is the great indication of your high birth, and of your
love, that ye should believe God without pledges. And in fact this, and one
other thing, were the reasons why God made miracles to cease. I mean, that
if when miracles are not performed, they that plume themselves on other advantages,--for
instance, either on the word of wisdom, or on show of piety,--grow vainglorious,
are puffed up, are separated one from another; did miracles also take place,
how could there but be violent rendings? And that what I say is not mere conjecture,
the Corinthians bear witness, who from this cause were divided into many parties.
Do not thou therefore seek signs, but the soul's health. Seek not to see one
dead man raised; nay, for thou hast learnt that the whole world is arising.
Seek not to see a blind man healed, but behold all now restored unto that better
and more profitable sight; and do thou too learn to look chastely, and amend
thine eye.
For in truth, if we all lived as we ought, workers of miracles would not be
admired so much as we by the children of the heathen. For as to the signs,
they often carry with them either a notion of mere fancy, or another evil suspicion,
although ours be not such. But a pure life cannot admit of any such reproach;
yea, all men's mouths are stopped by the acquisition of virtue.
Let virtue then be our study: for abundant are her riches, and great the wonder
wrought in her. She bestows the true freedom, and causes the same to be discerned
even in slavery, not releasing from slavery, but While men continue slaves,
exhibiting them more honorable than freemen; which is much more than giving
them freedom: not making the poor man rich, but while he continues poor, exhibiting
him wealthier than the rich.
But if
thou wouldest work miracles also, be rid of transgressions, and thou hast
quite accomplished
it. Yea,
for sin is a great demon, beloved; and if
thou exterminate this, thou hast wrought a greater thing than they who drive
out ten thousand demons. Do thou listen to Paul, how he speaks, and prefers
virtue to miracles. "But covet earnestly," saith he, "the best
gifts: and yet show I unto you a more excellent way."(1) And when he was
to declare this "way," he spoke not of raising the dead, not of cleansing
of lepers, not of any other such thing; but in Mace of all these he set charity.
Hearken also unto Christ, saying, "Rejoice not that the demons obey you,
but that your names are written in Heaven."(2) And again before this, "Many
will say to me in that day, Have we not prophesied in Thy name, and cast out
devils, and done many mighty works, and then I will profess unto them, I know
you not."(3) And when He was about to be crucified, He called His disciples,
and said unto them, "By this shall all men know that ye are my disciples," not "if
ye cast out devils," but "if ye have love one to another."(1)
And again, "Hereby shall all men know that Thou hast sent me;" not "if
these men raise the dead," but, "if they be one."(2)
For, as to miracles, they oftentimes, while they profiled another, have injured
him who had the power, by lifting him up to pride and vainglory, or haply in
some other way: but in our works there is no place for any such suspicion,
but they profit both such as follow them, and many others.
These then let us perform with much diligence. For if thou change from inhumanity
to almsgiving, thou hast stretched forth the hand that was withered. If thou
withdraw from theatres and go to the church, thou hast cured the lame foot.
If thou draw back thine eyes from an harlot, and from beauty not thine own,
thou hast opened them when they were blind. If instead of satanical songs,
thou hast learnt spiritual psalms, being dumb, thou hast spoken.
These are the greatest miracles, these the wonderful signs. If we go on working
these signs, we shall both ourselves be a great and admirable sort of persons
through these, and shall win over all the wicked unto virtue, and shall enjoy
the life to come; unto which may we all attain, by the grace and love towards
man of our Lord Jesus Christ, to whom be glory and might forever and ever.
Amen.
HOMILY XXXIII.
MATT. X. 16.
"Behold,
I send you forth as sheep in the midst of wolves; be ye therefore wise as
serpents,
and harmless
as doves."
HAVING
made them feel confident about their necessary food, and opened unto them
all men's houses,
and having
invested their entrance with an appearance
to attract veneration, charging them not to come in as wanderers, and beggars,
but as much more venerable than those who received them (for this He signifies
by His saying, "the workman is worthy of his hire;" and by His commanding
them to inquire, who was worthy, and there to remain, and enjoining them to
salute such as receive them; and by His threatening such as receive them not
with those incurable evils): having I say, in this way cast out their anxiety,
and armed them with the display of miracles, and made them as it were all iron
and adamant, by delivering them from all worldly things, and enfranchising
them from all temporal care: He speaks in what follows of the evils also that
were to befall them; not only those that were to happen soon after, but those
too that were to be in long course of time; from the first, even long beforehand,
preparing them for the war against the devil Yea, and many advantages were
hence secured; and first, that they learnt the power of His foreknowledge;
secondly, that no one should suspect, that through weakness of their Master
came these evils upon them; thirdly, that such as undergo these things should
not be dismayed by their falling out unexpectedly, and against hope; fourthly,
that they might not at the very time of the cross be troubled on hearing these
things. For indeed, they were just so affected at that time; when also He upbraided
them, saying, "Because I have said these things unto you, sorrow hath
filled your hearts; and none of you asketh me, whither goest Thou?"(1)
And yet He had said nothing as yet touching Himself, as that He should be bound,
and scourged, and put to death, that He might not hereby also confound their
minds; but for the present He announces before what should happen to themselves.
Then,
that they might learn that this system of war is new, and the manner of the
array unwonted;
as He sends
them bare, and with one coat, and unshod,
and without staff, and without girdle or scrip, and bids them be maintained
by such as receive them; so neither here did He stay His speech, but to signify
His unspeakable power, He saith, "Even thus setting out, exhibit the gentleness
of "sheep," and this, though ye are to go unto "wolves;" and
not simply unto wolves, but "into the midst of wolves."
And He
bids them have not only gentleness as sheep, but also the harmlessness of
the dove. "For
thus shall I best show forth my might, when sheep get the better of wolves,
and
being in the midst of wolves, and receiving a thousand
bites, so far from being consumed, do even work a change on them a thing far
greater and more marvellous than killing them, to alter their spirit, and to
reform their mind; and this, being only twelve, while the whole world is filled
with the wolves."
Let us then be ashamed, who do the contrary, who set like wolves upon our
enemies. For so long as we are sheep, we conquer: though ten thousand wolves
prowl around, we overcome and prevail. But if we become wolves, we are worsted,
for the help of our Shepherd departs from us: for He feeds not wolves, but
sheep: and He forsakes thee, and retires, for neither dost thou allow His might
to be shown. Because, as He accounts the whole triumph His own, if thou being
ill used, show forth gentleness; so if thou follow it up and give blows, thou
obscurest His victory.
2. But do thou consider, I pray thee, who they are that hear these injunctions,
so hard and laborious: the timid and ignorant; the unlettered and uninstructed;
such as are in every respect obscure, who have never been trained up in the
Gentile laws, who do not readily present themselves in the public, places;
the fishermen, the publicans, men full of innumerable deficiencies. For if
these things were enough to confound even the lofty and great, how were they
not enough to cast down and dismay them that were in all respects untried,
and had never entertained any noble imagination? But they did not cast them
down.
"And very naturally," some one may perhaps say; "because He
gave them power to cleanse lepers, to drive out devils." I would answer
as follows: Nay, this very thing was enough especially to perplex them, that
for all their raising the dead, they were to undergo these intolerable evils,
both judgments, and executions, and the wars which all would wage on them,
and the common hatred of the world; and that such terrors await them, while
themselves are working miracles.
3. What
then is their consolation for all these things? The power of Him that sends
them. Wherefore
also He
puts this before all, saying, "Behold, I
send you." This suffices for your encouragement, this for confidence,
and fearing none of your assailants.
Seest
thou authority? seest thou prerogative? seest thou invincible might? Now
His meaning is like
this: "Be not troubled" (so He speaks), "that
sending you among wolves, I command you to be like sheep and like doves. For
I might indeed have done the contrary, and have suffered you to undergo nothing
terrible, nor as sheep to be exposed to wolves; I might have rendered you more
formidable than lions; but it is expedient that so it should be. This makes
you also more glorious; this proclaims also my power."
This He
said also unto Paul: "My grace is sufficient for thee, for my
strength is made perfect in weakness."(1) "It is I, now mark it,
who have caused you so to be." For in saying, "I send you forth as
sheep," He intimates this. "Do not therefore despond, for I know,
I know certainly, that in this way more than any other ye will be invincible
to all."
After
this, that they may contribute something on their own part also, and that
all might not seem
to be of His
grace, nor they supposed to be crowned
at random, and vainly, He saith, "Be ye therefore wise as serpents, and
harmless as doves." "But what," it might be said, "will
our wisdom avail in so great dangers? nay, how shall we be able to have wisdom
at all, when so many waves are drenching us all over? For let a sheep be ever
so wise, when it is in the midst of wolves, and so many wolves, what will it
be able to do? Let the dove be ever so harmless, what will it profit, when
so many hawks are assailing it?" In the brutes indeed, not at all: but
in you as much as possible.
But let us see what manner of wisdom He here requires. That of the serpent,
He saith. For even as that animal gives up everything, and if its very body
must be cut off, doth not very earnestly defend it, so that it may save its
head; in like manner do thou also, saith He, give up every thing but the faith;
though goods, body, life itself, must be yielded. For that is the head and
the root; and if that be preserved, though thou lose all, thou wilt recover
all with so much the more splendor.(2)
On this
account then He neither commanded to be merely a simple and single-hearted
sort of person,
nor merely
wise; but hath mixed up both these, so that they
may become virtue; taking in the wisdom of the serpent that we may not be wounded
in our vitals; and the harmlessness of the dove, that we may not retaliate
on our wrongdoers, nor avenge ourselves on them that lay snares; since wisdom
again is useless, except this be added. Now what, I ask, could be more strict
than these injunctions? Why, was it not enough to suffer wrong? Nay, saith
He, but I do not permit thee so much as to be indignant. For this is "the
dove." As though one should cast a reed into fire, and command it not
to be burnt by the fire, but to quench it.
However, let us not be troubled; nay, for these things have come to pass,
and have had an accomplishment, and have been shown in very deed, and men became
wise as serpents, and harmless as doves; not being of another nature, but of
the same with us.
Let not
then any one account His injunctions impracticable. For He beyond all others
knows the nature
of things;
He knows that fierceness is not quenched
by fierceness, but by gentleness. And if in men's actual deeds too thou wouldest
see this result, read the book of the Acts of the Apostles, and thou wilt see
how often, when the people of the Jews had risen up against them and were sharpening
their teeth, these men, imitating the dove, and answering with suitable meekness,
did away with their wrath, quenched their madness, broke their impetuosity.
As when they said, "Did not we straitly command you, that ye should not
speak in this name?"(1) although able to work any number of miracles,
they neither said nor did anything harsh, but answered for themselves with
all meekness, saying, "Whether it be right to hearken unto you more than
unto God, judge ye." (2)
Hast thou
seen the harmlessness of the dove? Behold the wisdom of the serpent. "For
we cannot but speak the things, which we know and have heard."(3) Seest
thou how we must be perfect on all points, so as neither to be abased by dangers,
nor provoked by anger?
4. Therefore He said also,(4)
"Beware
of men, for they shall deliver you up to councils, and they shall scourge
you in their
synagogues:
and ye shall be brought before governors and
kings for my sake, for a testimony to them and the Gentiles."
Thus again
is He preparing them to be vigilant, in every case assigning to them the
sufferance of wrong,
and permitting the infliction of it to others;
to teach thee that the victory is in suffering evil, and that His glorious
trophies are thereby set up. For He said not at all, "Fight ye also, and
resist them that would vex you," but only, "Ye shall suffer the utmost
ills."
O how
great is the power of Him that speaks! How great the self-command of them
that hear! For indeed
we
have great cause to marvel, how they did not
straightway dart away from Him on hearing these things, apt as they were to
be startled at every sound, and such as had never gone further than that lake,
around which they used to fish; and how they did not reflect, and say to themselves, "And
whither after all this are we to flee? The courts of justice against us, the
kings against us, the governors, the synagogues of the Jews, the nations of
the Gentiles, the rulers, and the ruled." (For hereby He not only forewarned
them of Palestine, and the ills therein, but discovered also the wars throughout
the world, saying, "Ye shall be brought before kings and governors;" signifying
that to the Gentiles also He was afterwards to send them as heralds.) "Thou
hast made the world our enemy, Thou hast armed against us all them that dwell
on the earth, peoples, tyrants, kings."
And what follows again is much more fearful, since men are to become on our
account murderers of brothers, of children, of fathers.
"For the brother," saith He, "shall deliver up the brother
to death, and the father the child; and children shall rise up against their
parents, and cause them to be put to death."(5)
"How, then," one might say, "will the rest of men believe,
when they see on our account, children slain by their fathers, and brethren
by brethren, and all things filled with abominations?" What? will not
men, as though we were destructive demons, will they not, as though we were
devoted, and pests of the world, drive us out from every quarter, seeing the
earth filled with blood of kinsmen, and with so many murderers? Surely fair
is the peace (is it not?) which we are to bring into men's houses and give
them, while we are filling those houses with so many slaughters. Why, had we
been some great number of us, instead of twelve; had we been, instead of "unlearned
and ignorant," wise, and skilled in rhetoric, and mighty in speech; nay
more, had we been even kings, and in possession of armies and abundance of
wealth; how could we have persuaded any, while kindling up civil wars, yea,
and other wars far worse than they? Why, though we were to despise our own
safety, which of all other men will give heed to us?"
But none
of these things did they either think or say, neither did they require any
account of His
injunctions,
but simply yielded and obeyed. And this came
not from their own virtue only, but also of the wisdom of their Teacher. For
see how to each of the fearful things He annexed an encouragement; as in the
ease of such as received them not, He said, "It shall be more tolerable
for the land of Sodom and Gomorrha in the day of judgment, than for that city;" so
here again, when He had said, "Ye shall be brought before governors and
kings," He added, "for my sake, for a testimony to them, and the
Gentiles." And this is no small consolation, that they are suffering these
things both for Christ, and for the Gentiles' conviction. Thus God, though
no one regard, is found to be everywhere doing His own works. Now these things
were a comfort to them, not that they desired the punishment of other men,
but that they might have ground of confidence, as sure to have Him everywhere
present with them, who had both foretold and foreknown these things; and because
not as wicked men, and as pests, were they to suffer all this.
And together with these, He adds another, and that no small consolation for
them, saying,
"But when they deliver you up, take no thought(1) how or what ye shall
speak, for it shall be given you in that hour what ye shall speak. For it is
not ye that speak, but the Spirit of your Father that speaketh in you."(2)
For lest
they should say, "How shall we be able to persuade men, when
such things are taking place?" He bids them be confident as to their defense
also. And elsewhere indeed He saith, "I will give you a mouth and wisdom;"(3)
but here, "It is the Spirit of your Father that speaketh in you," advancing
them unto the dignity of the prophets. Therefore, when He had spoken of the
power that was given, then He added also the terrors, the murders, and the
slaughters.
"For the brother shall deliver up the brother," saith He, "to
death, and the father the child, and the children shall rise up against their
parents, and cause them to be put to death."(4)
And not
even at this did He stop, but added also what was greatly more fearful, and
enough to shiver
a rock
to pieces: "And ye shall be hated of all men." And
here again the consolation is at the doors, for, "For my name's sake," saith
He, "ye shall suffer these things." And with this again another, "But
he that endureth to the end, the same shall be saved."(5)
And these things in another point of view likewise were sufficient to rouse
up their spirits; since at any rate the power of their gospel was to blaze
up so high, as that nature should be despised, and kindred rejected, and the
Word preferred to all, chasing all mightily away. For if no tyranny of nature
is strong enough to withstand your sayings, but it is dissolved and trodden
under foot, what else shall be able to get the better of you? Not, however,
that your life will be in security, because these things shall be; but rather
ye will have for your common enemies and foes them that dwell in the whole
world.
5. Where now is Plato? Where Pythagoras? Where the long chain(6) of the Stoics?
For the first, after having enjoyed great honor, was so practically refuted,
as even to be sold out of the country,(7) and to succeed in none of his objects,
no, not go much as in respect of one tyrant: yea, he betrayed his disciples,
and ended his life miserably. And the Cynics, mere pollutions as they were,
have all passed by like a dream and a shadow. And yet assuredly no such thing
ever befell them, but rather they were accounted glorious for their heathen
philosophy, and the Athenians made a public monument of the epistles of Plato,
sent them by Dion; and they passed all their time at ease, and abounded in
wealth not a little. Thus, for instance, Aristippus was used to purchase costly
harlots; and another made a will, leaving no common inheritance; and another,
when his disciples had laid themselves down like a bridge, walked on them;
and he of Sinope, they say, even behaved himself unseemly in the market place.
Yea, these are their honorable things. But there is no such thing here, but
a strict temperance, and a perfect decency, and a war against the whole world
in behalf of truth and godliness, and to be slain every day, and not until
hereafter their glorious trophies.
But there are some also, one may say, skilled in war amongst them; as Themistocles,
Pericles. But these things too are children's toys, compared with the acts
of the fishermen. For what canst thou say? That he persuaded the Athenians
to embark in their ships, when Xerxes was marching upon Greece? Why in this
case, when it is not Xerxes marching, but the devil with the whole world, and
his evil spirits innumerable assailing these twelve men, not at one crisis
only, but throughout their whole life, they prevailed and vanquished; and what
was truly marvellous, not by slaying their adversaries, but by converting and
reforming them.
For this
especially you should observe throughout, that they slew not, nor destroyed
such as were
plotting
against them, but having found them as bad
as devils, they made them rivals of angels, enfranchising human nature from
this evil tyranny, while as to those execrable demons that were confounding
all things, they drave them out of the midst of markets, and houses, or rather
even from the very wilderness. And to this the choirs of the monks bear witness,
whom they have planted everywhere, clearing out not the habitable only, but
even the uninhabitable land. And what is yet more marvellous, they did not
this in fair conflict, but in the enduring of evil they accomplished it all.
Since men actually had them in the midst, twelve unlearned persons, binding,
scourging, dragging them about, and were not able to stop their mouths; but
as it is impossible to bind the sunbeam, so also their tongue. And the reason
was, "it was not they" themselves "that spake," but the
power of the Spirit. Thus for instance did Paul overcome Agrippa, and Nero,
who surpassed all men in wickedness. "For the Lord," saith he, "stood
with me, and strengthened me, and delivered me out of the mouth of the lion."(1)
But do
thou also admire them, how when it was said to them, "Take no
thought," they yet believed, and accepted it, and none of the terrors
amazed them. And if thou say, He gave them encouragement enough, by saying, "It
shall be the Spirit of your Father that shall speak;" even for this am
I most amazed at them, that they doubted not, nor sought deliverance from their
perils; and this, when not for two or three years were they to suffer these
things, but all their life long. For the saying, "He that endureth to
the end, the same shall be saved," is an intimation of this.
For His
will is, that not His part only should be contributed, but that the good
deeds should be
also done of
them. Mark, for instance, how from the first,
part is His, part His disciples'. Thus, to do miracles is His, but to provide
nothing is theirs. Again, to open all men's houses, was of the grace from above;
but to require no more than was needful, of their own self-denial. "For
the workman is worthy of his hire." Their bestowing peace was of the gift
of God, their inquiring for the worthy, and not entering in without distinction
unto all, of their own self command. Again, to punish such as received them
not was His, but to retire with gentleness from them, without reviling or insulting
them, was of the apostles' meekness. To give the Spirit, and cause them not
to take thought, was of Him that sent them, but to become like sheep and doves,
and to bear all things nobly, was of their calmness and prudence. To be hated
and not to despond, and to endure, was their own; to save them that endured,
was of Him who sent them.
Wherefore
also He said, "He that endureth to the end, the same shall
be saved." That is, because the more part are wont at the beginning indeed
to be vehement, but afterwards to faint, therefore saith He, "I require
the end." For what is the use of seeds, flourishing indeed at first, but
a little after fading away? Therefore it is continued patience that He requires
of them. I mean, lest any say, He wrought the whole Himself, and it was no
wonder that they should prove such, suffering as they did nothing intolerable;
therefore He saith unto them, "There is need also of patience on your
part. For though I should rescue you from the first dangers, I am reserving
you for others more grievous, and after these again others will succeed; and
ye shall not cease to have snares laid for you, so long as ye have breath.
For this He intimated in saying, "But he that endureth to the end, the
same shall be saved."
For this
cause then, though He said, "Take no thought what ye shall speak;" yet
elsewhere He saith, "Be ready to give an answer to every man that asketh
you a reason of the hope that is in you."(2) That is, as long as the contest
is among friends, He commands us also to take thought; but when there is a
terrible tribunal, and frantic assemblies, and terrors on all sides, He bestows
the influence from Himself, that they may take courage and speak out, and not
be discouraged, nor betray the righteous cause.
For in
truth it was a very great thing, for a man occupied about lakes, and skins,
and receipt
of custom,
when tyrants were on their thrones, and satraps,
and guards standing by them, and the swords drawn, and all standing on their
side; to enter in alone, bound, hanging down his head, and yet be able to open
his mouth. For indeed they allowed them neither speech nor defense with respect-to
their doctrines, but set about torturing them to death, as common pests of
the world. For "They," it is said, "that have turned the world
upside down, are come hither also;" and again, "They preach things
contrary to the decrees of Caesar, saying that Jesus Christ is king."(1)
And everywhere the courts of justice were preoccupied by such suspicions, and
much influence from above was needed, for their showing both the truth of the
doctrine they preached, and that they are not violating the common laws; so
that they should neither, while earnest to speak of the doctrine, fall under
suspicion of overturning the laws; nor again, while earnest to show that they
were not overturning the common government, corrupt the perfection of their
doctrines: all which thou wilt see accomplished with all due consideration,
both in Peter and in Paul, and in all the rest. Yea, and as rebels and innovators,
and revolutionists, they were accused all over the world; yet nevertheless
they both repelled this impression, and invested themselves with the contrary,
all men celebrating them as saviors, and guardians, and benefactors. And all
this they achieved by their much patience. Wherefore also Paul said, "I
die daily;"(2) and he continued to "stand in jeopardy" unto
the end.
6. What then must we deserve, having such high patterns, and in peace giving
way to effeminacy, and remissness? With none to make war (it is too evident)
we are slain; we faint when no man pursues, in peace we are required to be
saved, and even for this we are not sufficient. And they indeed, when the world
was on fire, and the pile was being kindled over the whole earth, entering,
snatched from within, out of the midst of the flame, such as were burning;
but thou art not able so much as to preserve thyself.
What confidence
then will there be for us? What favor? There are no stripes, no prisons,
no rulers,
no synagogues,
nor aught else of that kind to set upon
us; yea, quite on the contrary we rule and prevail. For both kings are godly,
and there are many honors for Christians, and precedences, and distinctions,
and immunities, and not even so do we prevail. And whereas they being daily
led to execution, both teachers and disciples, and bearing innumerable stripes,
and continual brandings, were in greater luxury than such as abide in Paradise;
we who have endured no such thing, not even in a dream, are softer than any
wax. "But they," it will be said, "wrought miracles." Did
this then keep them from the scourge? did it free them from persecution? Nay,
for this is the strange thing, that they suffered such things often even at
the hands of them whom they benefited, and not even so were they confounded,
receiving only evil for good. But thou if thou bestow on any one any little
benefit, and then be requited with anything unpleasant, art confounded, art
troubled, and repentest of that which thou hast done.
If now it should happen, as I pray it may not happen nor at any time fall
out, that there be a war against churches, and a persecution, imagine how great
will be the ridicule, how sore the reproaches. And very naturally; for when
no one exercises himself in the wrestling school, how shall he be distinguished
in the contests? What champion, not being used to the trainer, will be able,
when summoned by the Olympic contests, to show forth anything great and noble
against his antagonist? Ought we not every day to wrestle and fight and run?
See ye not them that are called Pentathli, when they have no antagonists, how
they fill a sack with much sand, and hanging it up try their full strength
thereupon? And they that are still younger, practise the fight against their
enemies upon the persons of their companions.
These do thou also emulate, and practise the wrestlings of self denial. For
indeed there are many that provoke to anger, and incite to lust, and kindle
a great flame. Stand therefore against thy passions, bear nobly the mental
pangs, that thou mayest endure also those of the body.
7. For so the blessed Job, if he had not exercised himself well before his
conflicts, would not have shone so brightly in the same. Unless he had practised
freedom from all despondency, he would have uttered some rash word, when his
children died. But as it was he stood against all the assaults, against ruin
of fortune, and destruction of so great affluence: against loss of children,
against his wife's commiseration, against plagues in body, against reproaches
of friends, against revilings of servants.
And if
thou wouldest see his ways of exercise also, hear him saying, how he used
to despise wealth: "If I did but rejoice," saith he. "because
my wealth was great: if I set gold up for a heap, if I put my trust in a precious
stone."(3) Therefore neither was he confounded at their being taken away,
since he desired them not when present.
Hear how he also managed what related to his children, not giving way to undue
softness, as we do, but requiring of them all circumspection. For he who offered
sacrifice even for their secret sins, imagine how strict a judge he was of
such as were manifest.(1)
And if
thou wouldest also hear of his strivings after continence, hearken to him
when he saith, "I made a covenant with mine eyes. that I should
not think upon a maid."(2) For this cause his wife did not break his spirit,
for he loved her even before this, not however immoderately, but as is due
to a wife.
Wherefore I am led even to marvel, whence it came into the devil's thought
to stir up the contest, knowing as he did of his previous training. Whence
then did it occur to him? The monster is wicked, and never despairs: and this
turns out to us a very great condemnation that he indeed never gives up the
hope of our destruction, but we despair of our own salvation.
But for
bodily mutilation and indignity, mark how he practised himself. Why, inasmuch
as he himself
had never undergone
any such thing, trot had continued
to live in wealth and luxury, and in all other splendor, he used to divine
other men's calamities, one by one. And this he declared, when he said, "For
the thing which I greatly feared is come upon me; and that which I was afraid
of is come unto me."(3) And again, "But I wept for every helpless
man, and groaned when I saw a man in distress."(4)
So because of this, nothing of what happened confounded him, none of those
great and intolerable ills. For I bid thee not look at the ruin of his substance,
nor at the loss of his children, nor at that incurable plague, nor at his wife's
device against him; but at those things which are far more grievous than these.
"And what," saith one, "did Job suffer more grievous than these?
for from his history there is nothing more than these for us to learn." Because
we are asleep, we do not learn, since he surely that is anxious, and searches
well for the pearl, will know of many more particulars than these. For the
more grievous, and apt to infuse greater perplexity, were different.
And first,
his knowing nothing certain about the kingdom of heaven, and the resurrection;
which
indeed he
also spoke of, lamenting. "For I shall not
live alway, that I should suffer long."(5) Next, his being conscious to
himself of many good works. Thirdly, his being conscious of no evil thing.
Fourthly, his supposing that at God's hands he was undergoing it; or if at
the devil's, this again was enough to offend him. Fifthly, his hearing his
friends accusing him of wickedness, "For thou hast not been scourged," say
they, "according to what thy sins deserve."(6) Sixthly, his seeing
such as lived in wickedness prospering, and exulting over him. Seventhly, not
having any other to whom he might look as even having ever suffered such things.
8. And if thou wouldest learn how great these things are, consider our present
state. For if now, when we are looking for a kingdom, and hoping for a resurrection,
and for the unutterable blessings, and are conscious to ourselves of countless
evil deeds, and when we have so many examples, and are partakers of so high
a philosophy; should any persons lose a little gold, and this often, after
hating taken it by violence, they deem life not to be lived in, having no wife
to lay sore on them, nor bereaved of children, nor reproached by friends, nor
insulted by servants, but rather having many to comfort them, some by words,
some by deeds; of how noble crowns must not he be worthy, who seeing what he
had gotten together by honest labor, snatched away from him for nought and
at random, and after all that, undergoing temptations without number, like
sleet, yet throughout all abides unmoved, and offers to the Lord his due thanksgiving
for it all?
Why, though no one had spoken any of the other taunts, yet his wife's words
alone were sufficient utterly to shake a very rock. Look, for example, at her
craft. No mention of money, none of camels, and flocks, and herds, (for she
was conscious of her husband's self command with regard to these), but of what
was harder to bear than all these, I mean, their children; and she deepens
the tragedy, and adds to it her own influence.
Now if when men were in wealth, and suffering no distress, in many things
and oft have women prevailed on them: imagine how courageous was that soul,
which repulsed her, assaulting him with such powerful weapons, and which trod
under foot the two most tyrannical passions, desire and pity. And yet many
having conquered desire, have yielded to pity. That noble Joseph, for instance,
held in subjection the most tyrannical of pleasures, and repulsed that strange
woman, plying him as she did with innumerable devices; but his tears he contained
not, but when he saw his brethren that had wronged him, he was all on fire
with that passion, and quickly cast off the mask, and discovered the part he
had been playing.(7) But when first of all she is his wife, and when her words
are piteous, and the moment favorable for her, as well as his wounds and his
stripes, and those countless waves of calamities; how can one otherwise than
rightly pronounce the soul impassive to so great a storm to be firmer than
any adamant?
Allow
me freely to say, that the very apostles, if not inferior to this blessed
man, are at least
not greater
than he was. For they indeed were comforted by
the suffering for Christ; and this medicine was so sufficient daily to relieve
them, that the Lord puts it everywhere, saying, "for me, for my sake," and, "If
they call me, the master of the house, Beelzebub."(1) But he was destitute
of this encouragement, and of that from miracles, and of that from grace; for
neither had he so great power of the Spirit.
And what
is yet greater, nourished in much delicacy, not from amongst fishermen, and
publicans, and
such as
lived frugally, but after enjoyment of so much honor,
he suffered all that he did suffer. And what seemed hardest to bear in the
case of the apostles, this same he also underwent, being hated of friends,
of servants, of enemies, of them who had received kindness of him: and the
sacred anchor, the harbor without waves, namely, that which was said to the
apostles, "for my sake," of this he had no sight.
I admire
again the three children, for that they dared the furnace, that they stood
up against a tyrant.
But
hear what they say, "We serve not thy Gods,
nor worship the image which thou hast set up."(2) A thing which was the
greatest encouragement to them, to know of a certainty that for God they are
suffering all whatsoever they suffer. But this man knew not that it was all
conflicts, and a wrestling; for had he known it, he would not have felt what
was happening. At any rate, when he heard, "Thinkest thou that I have
uttered to thee mine oracles for nought, or that thou mightest be proved righteous?"(3)
consider how straightway, at a bare word, he breathed again, how he made himself
of no account, how he accounted himself not so much as to have suffered what
he had suffered, thus saying, "Why do I plead any more, being admonished
and reproved of the Lord, hearing such things, I being nothing?"(4) And
again, "I have heard of Thee before, as far as hearing of the ear; but
now mine eye hath seen Thee; wherefore I have made myself vile, and have melted
away; and I accounted myself earth and ashes."(5)
This fortitude then, this moderation, of him that was before law and grace,
let us also emulate, who are after law and grace; that we may also be able
to share with him the eternal tabernacles; unto which may we all attain, by
the grace and love towards man of our Lord Jesus Christ, to whom be the glory
and the victory forever and ever. Amen.
HOMILY XXXIV.
MATT. X. 23.
"But
when they persecute you in this city, flee ye into the other; for verily
I say unto you, ye shall
not have gone over the cities of Israel, till
the Son of Man be come."
HAVING
spoken of those fearful and horrible things, enough to melt very adamant,
which after His
cross,
and resurrection, and assumption, were to befall them,
He directs again His discourse to what was of more tranquil character, allowing
those whom He is training to recover breath, and affording them full security.
For He did not at all command them, when persecuted, to close with the enemy,
but to fly. That is, it being so far but a beginning, and a prelude, He gave
His discourse a very condescending turn. For not now of the ensuing persecutions
is He speaking, but of those before the cross and the passion. And this He
showed by saying, "Ye shall not have gone over the cities of Israel, till
the Son of Man be come." That is, lest they should say, "What then,
if when persecuted we flee, and there again they overtake us, and drive us
out?"--to destroy this fear, He saith, "Ye shall not have gone round
Palestine first, but I will straightway come upon you."
And see
how here again He doeth not away with the terrors, but stands by them in
their perils. For
He said
not, "I will snatch you out, and will put
an end to the persecutions;' but what? "Ye shall not have gone over the
cities of Israel, till the Son of Man be come." Yea, for it sufficed for
their consolation, simply to see Him.
But do
thou observe, I pray thee, how He doth not on every occasion leave all to
grace, but requires
something
also to be contributed on their part. "For
if ye fear," saith He, "flee," for this He signified by saying, "flee
ye," and "fear not."(1) And He did not command them to flee
at first, but when persecuted to withdraw; neither is it a great distance that
He allows them, but so much as to go about the cities of lsrael.
Then again,
He trains them for another branch of self-command; first, casting out all
care for
their food:
secondly, all fear of their perils; and now, that
of calumny. Since from that first anxiety He freed them, by saying, "The
workman is worthy of his hire,"(2) and by signifying that many would receive
them; and from their distress about their dangers, by saying, "Take no
thought how or what ye shall speak," and, "He that endureth unto
the end, the same shall be saved."(3)
But since
withal it was likely that they should also bring upon themselves an evil
report, which
to many
seems harder to bear than all; see whence He
comforts them even in this case, deriving the encouragement from Himself, and
from all that had been said touching Himself; to which nothing else was equal.
For as He said in that other place, "Ye shall be hated of all men," and
added, "for my name's sake," so also here.
And in another way He mitigates it, joining a fresh topic to that former.
What kind of one then is it?
"The disciple," saith He, "is not above his Master, nor the
servant above his Lord It is enough for the disciple that he be as his Master,
and the servant as his Lord. If they have called the Master of the house Beelzebub,
how much more shall they call them of His household? Fear them not therefore."(4)
See how
He discovers Himself to be the Lord and God and Creator of all things. What
then? Is there not
any
disciple above his Master, or servant above his
Lord?(5) So long as he is a disciple, and a servant, he is not, by the nature
of that honor. For tell me not here of the rare instances, but take the principle
from the majority. And He saith not, "How much more His servants," but "them
of His household," to show how very near He felt them to be to Him.(6)
And elsewhere too He said, "Henceforth I call you not servants; ye are
my friends."(7) And He said not, If they have insulted the Master of the
houses and calumniated Him; but states also the very form of the insult, that
they "called Him Beelzebub."
Then He gives also another consolation, not inferior to this: for this indeed
is the greatest; but because for them who were not yet living strictly, there
was need also of another, such as might have special power to refresh them,
He states it likewise. And the saying seems indeed in form to be an universal
proposition, nevertheless not of all matters, but of those in hand only, is
it spoken. For what saith He?
"There is nothing covered, that shall not be revealed; nor hid, that
shall not be known."(8) Now what He saith is like this. It is indeed sufficient
for your encouragement, that I also shared with you in the same reproach; I
who am your Master and Lord. But if it still grieve you to hear these words,
consider this other thing too, that even from this suspicion ye will soon be
released. For why do ye grieve? At their calling you sorcerers and deceivers?
But wait a little, and all men will address you as saviors, and benefactors
of the world. Yea, for time discovers all things that are concealed, it will
both refute their false accusation, and make manifest your virtue. For when
the event shows you saviors, and benefactors, and examples of all virtue, men
will not give heed to their words, but to the real state of the case; and they
will appear false accusers, and liars, and slanderers, but ye brighter than
the sun, length of time revealing and proclaiming you, and uttering a voice
clearer than a trumpet, and making all men witnesses of your virtue. Let not
therefore what is now said humble you, but let the hope of the good things
to come raise you up. For it cannot be, that what relates to you should be
hid.
2. Then, having rid them of all distress, and fears, and anxiety, and set
them above men's reproaches, then, and not till then, He seasonably discourses
to them also of boldness in their preaching.
For, "What I tell you," saith He, "in darkness, that speak
ye in light; and what ye have heard in the ear, that preach ye(9) upon the
housetops."(10)
Yet it
was not at all darkness, when He was saying these things; neither was He
discoursing unto
them in
the ear; but He used a strong figure, thus speaking.
That is, because He was conversing with them alone, and in a small corner of
Palestine, therefore He said, "in darkness," and "in the ear;" contrasting
the boldness of speech, which He was hereafter to confer on them, with the
tone of the conversation which was then going on. "For not to one, or
two, or three cities, but to the whole world ye shall preach," saith He, "traversing
land and sea, the inhabited country, and the desert; to princes alike and tribes,
to philosophers and orators, saying all with open face,(1) and with all boldness
of speech." Therefore, He said, "On the house tops," and, "In
the light," without any shrinking, and with all freedom.
And wherefore
said He not only, "Preach on the housetops." and "Speak
in the light," but added also, "What I tell you in darkness," and "What
ye hear in the ear"? It was to raise up their spirits. As therefore when
He said, "He that believeth on me, the works that I do shall he do also,
and greater works than these shall he do;"(2) even so here too, to signify
that He will do it all by them, and more than by Himself, He inserted this.
For "the beginning indeed," saith He, "I have given, and the
prelude; but the greater part it is my will to effect through you." Now
this is the language of one not commanding only, but also declaring beforehand
what was to be, and encouraging them with His sayings, and implying that they
should prevail over all, and quietly also removing(3) again their distress
at the evil report. For as this doctrine, after lying hid for a while, shall
overspread all things, so also the evil suspicion of the Jews shall quickly
perish.
Then,
because He had lifted them up on high, He again gives warning of the perils
also, adding wings
to their
mind, and exalting them high above all.
For what saith He? "Fear not them which kill the body, but are not able
to kill the soul."(4) Seest thou how He set them far above all things,
persuading them to despise not anxiety only and calumny, dangers and plots,
but even that which is esteemed of all things most terrible, death? And not
death alone, but by violence too? And He said not, "ye shall be slain," but
with the dignity that became Him, He set this before them, saying, "Fear
not them which kill the body, but are not able to kill the soul; but rather
fear Him(5) which is able to destroy both soul and body in hell;" bringing
round the argument, as He ever doth, to its opposite. For what? is your fear,
saith He, of death? and are ye therefore slow to preach? Nay for this very
cause I bid you preach, that ye fear death: for this shall deliver you from
that which is really death. What though they shall slay you? yet over the better
part they shall not prevail, though they strive ten thousand ways. Therefore
He said not, "Who do not kill the soul," but, who "are not able
to kill." For wish it as they may, they shall not prevail. Wherefore,
if thou fear punishment, fear that, the more grievous by far.
Seest thou how again He doth not promise them deliverance from death, but
permits them to die, granting them more than if He had not allowed them to
suffer it? Because deliverance from death is not near so great as persuading
men to despise death. You see now, He doth not push them into dangers, but
sets them above dangers, and in a short sentence fixes in their mind the doctrines
that relate to the immortality of the soul, and having in two or three words
implanted a saving doctrine, He comforts them also by other considerations.
Thus,
lest they should think, when killed and butchered, that as men forsaken they
suffered this,
He introduces
again the argument of God's providence, saying
on this wise: "Are not two sparrows sold for a farthing? And one of them
shall not fall into a snare(6) without your Father. But the very hairs of your
head are all numbered."(7) "For what is viler than they?" saith
He; "nevertheless, not even these shall be taken without God's knowledge." For
He means not this, "by His operation they fall," for this were unworthy
of God; but, "nothing that is done is hid from Him." If then He is
not ignorant of anything that befalls us, and loves us more truly than a father,
and so loves us, as to have numbered our very hairs; we ought not to be afraid.
And this He said, not that God numbers our hairs, but that He might indicate
His perfect knowledge, and His great providence over them. If therefore He
both knows all the things that are done, and is able to save you, and willing;
whatever ye may have to suffer, think not that as persons forsaken ye suffer.
For neither is it His will to deliver you from the terrors, but to persuade
you to despise them, since this is, more than anything, deliverance from the
terrors.
3. "Fear ye not therefore; ye are of more value than many sparrows."(1)
Seest thou that the fear had already prevailed over them? Yea, for He knew
the secrets of the heart; therefore He added, "Fear them not therefore;" for
even should they prevail, it will be over the inferior part, I mean, the body;
which though they should not kill, nature will surely take with her and depart.
So that not even this depends on them, but men have it from nature. And if
thou fear this, much more shouldest thou fear what is greater, and dread "Him
who is able to destroy both soul and body in hell." And He saith not openly
now, that it is Himself, "Who is able to destroy both soul and body," but
where He before declared Himself to be judge, He made it manifest.
But now the contrary takes place: Him, namely, who is able to destroy the
soul, that is, to punish it, we fear not, but those who slay the body, we shudder
at. Yet surely while He together with the soul punishes the body also, they
cannot even chasten the body, much less the soul: and though they chasten it
ever so severely, yet in that way they rather make it more glorious.
Seest thou how He signifies the conflicts to be easy? Because in truth, death
did exceedingly agitate their souls, inspiring terror for a time, for that
it had not as yet been made easy to overcome, neither had they that were to
despise it partaken of the grace of the Spirit.
Having, you see, cast out the fear and distress that was agitating their soul;
by what follows He also encourages them again, casting out fear by fear; and
not by fear only, but also by the hope of great prizes; and He threatens with
much authority, in both ways urging them to speak boldly for the truth; and
saith further,
"Whosoever therefore shall confess me before men, him(2) will I also
confess before my Father which is in Heaven. But whosoever shah deny me before
men, him will I also deny before my Father which is in Heaven."(3)
Thus not from the good things only, but also from the opposites, doth He urge
them; and He concludes with the dismal part.
And mark
His exact care; He said not "me," but "in me," implying
that not by a power of his own, but by the help of grace from above, the confessor
makes his confession. But of him that denies, He said not, "in me," but "me;" for
he having become destitute of the gift, his denial ensues.
"Why then is he blamed," one may say, "if being forsaken, he
denies?" Because the being forsaken is the fault of the forsaken person
himself.
But why
is He not satisfied with the faith in the mind, but requires also the confession
with the mouth?
To
train us up to boldness in speech, and a
more abundant love and determination, and to raise us on high. Wherefore also
He addresses Himself to all. Nor doth He at all apply this to the disciples
only in person, for not them, but their disciples too, He is now rendering
noble hearted. Because he that hath learnt this lesson will not only teach
with boldness, but will likewise suffer all things easily, and with ready mind.
This at any rate brought over many to the apostles, even their belief in this
word. Because both in the punishment the infliction is heavier, and in the
good things the recompense greater. I mean, whereas he that doeth right hath
the advantage in time,(4) and the delay of the penalty is counted for gain
by the sinner: He hath introduced an equivalent, or rather a much greater advantage,
the increase of the recompenses. "Hast thou the advantage," saith
He, "by having first confessed me here? I also will have the advantage
of thee, by giving thee greater things, and unspeakably greater; for I will
confess thee there." Seest thou that both the good things and the evil
things are there to be dispensed? Why then hasten and hurry thyself? and why
seek thy rewards here, thou who art "saved by hope?"(5) Wherefore,
whether thou hast done anything good, and not received its recompense here,
be not troubled (for with increase, in the time to come, the reward thereof
awaits thee): or whether thou hast done any evil, and not paid the penalty,
be not easy; for there will vengeance receive thee, if thou turn not and amend.
But if thou believe it not, from the things here form thy conjecture about
things to come also. Why, if in the season of the conflicts they that confess
are so glorious, imagine what they will be in the season of the crowns. If
the enemies here applaud, how shall that tenderest of all fathers fail to admire
and proclaim thee? Yea, then shall we have both our gifts for the good, and
our punishments for the evil. So that such as deny shall suffer harm, both
here and there; here living with an evil conscience, though they were never
to die, they shall be surely dead; and there, undergoing the last penalty:
but the other sort will profit both here and there, both here making a gain
of their death, and in this way becoming more glorious than the living, and
there enjoying those unspeakable blessings.
God then
is in no wise prompt to punish only, but also