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COMMENTARY OF
ST. JOHN CHRYSOSTOM
ON THE EPISTLE TO THE ROMANS
HOMILIES XIII & XIV (ROM. 7 & 8)
HOMILY XIII.
ROM. VII. 14.
"For
we know that the Law is spiritual: but I am carnal, sold under sin."
After
having said that great evils had taken place, and that sin, taking occasion
by the commandment,
had grown
stronger, and the opposite of what the Law mainly
aimed at had been the result, and after having thrown the hearer into a great
deal of perplexity, he goes on next to give the rationale of these events,
after first clearing the Law of any ill suspicion. For lest--upon hearing that
it was through the commandment that sin took that occasion, and that it was
when it came that sin revived, and through it deceived and killed--any one
should suppose the Law to be the source of these evils, he first sets forth
its defence with considerable advantage, not clearing it from accusation only,
but encircling it also with the utmost praise. And this he lays down, not as
granting it for his own part, but as declaring a universal judgment. "For
we know," he says, "that the Law is spiritual." As if he had
said, This is an allowed thing, and self-evident, that it "is spiritual," so
far is it from being the cause of sin, or to blame for the evils that have
happened. And observe, that he not only clears it of accusation, but bestows
exceeding great praise upon it. For by calling it spiritual, he shows it to
be a teacher of virtue and hostile to vice; for this is what being spiritual
means, leading off from sin of every kind' And this the Law did do, by frightening,
admonishing, chastening, correcting, recommending every kind of virtue. Whence
then, was sin produced, if the teacher was so admirable? It was from the listlessness
of its disciples. Wherefore he went on to say, "but I am carnal;" giving
us a sketch now of man, as comporting himself in the Law, and before the Law.[*] "Sold
under sin." Because with death (he means) the throng of passions also
came in. For when the body had become mortal, it was henceforth a necessary
thing for it to receive concupiscence, and anger, and pain, and all the other
passions, which required a great deal of wisdom <greek>FilsoFas</greek> to
prevent their flooding us, and sinking reason in the depth of sin. For in themselves
they were not sin,[1] but, when their extravagancy was unbridled, it wrought
this effect. Thus (that I may take one of them and examine it as a specimen)
desire is not sin: but when it has run into extravagance, being not minded
to keep within the laws of marriage,[2] but springing even upon other men's
wives; then the thing henceforward becomes adultery, yet not by reason of the
desire, but by reason of its exorbitancy. And observe the wisdom of Paul. For
after praising the Law, he hastens immediately to the earlier period, that
he may show the state of our race, both then and at the time it received the
Law, and make it plain how necessary the presence of grace was, a thing he
labored on every occasion to prove. For when he says, "sold under sin," he
means it not of those who were under the Law only, but of those who had lived
before the Law also, and of men from the very first. Next he mentions the way
in which they were sold and made over.
Ver. 15. "For
that which I do, I know not."
What does
the "I know not" mean?--I am ignorant. And when could
this ever happen? For nobody ever sinned in ignorance. Seest thou, that if
we do not receive his words with the proper caution, and keep looking to the
object of the Apostle, countless incongruities will follow? For if they sinned
through ignorance, then they did not deserve to be punished. As then he said
above, "for without the Law sin is dead," not meaning that they did
not know they were sinning, but that they knew indeed, but not so distinctly;
wherefore they were punished, but not so severely: and again; "I should
not have known lust;" not meaning an entire ignorance of it, but referring
to the most distinct knowledge of it; and said, that it also "wrought
in me all manner of concupiscence, not meaning to say that the commandment
made the concupiscence, but that sin through the commandment introduces an
intense degree of concupiscence;so here it is not absolute ignorance that he
means by saying, "For what I do, I know not;" since how then would
he have pleasure in the law of God in his inner man? What then is this, "I
know not?" I get dizzy, he means, I feel carried away,[1] I find a violence
done to me, I get tripped up without knowing how. Just as we often say, Such
an one came and carried me away with him, without my knowing how; when it is
not ignorance we mean as an excuse, but to show a sort of deceit, and circumvention,
and plot. "For what I would, that I do not: but what I hate, that I do." How
then canst thou be said not to know what thou art doing? For if thou willest
the good, and hatest the evil, this requires a perfect knowledge. Whence it
appears that he says, "that I would not," not as denying free will,
or as adducing any constrained necessity. For if it was not willingly, but
by compulsion, that we sinned, then the punishments that took place before
would not be justifiable. But as in saying "I know not," it was not
ignorance he set before us, but what we have said; so in adding the "that
I would not," it is no necessity he signifies, but the disapproval he
felt of what was done.[2] Since if this was not his meaning in saying, "That
which I would not, that I do:" he would else have gone on, "But I
do what I am compelled and enforced to." For this is what is opposed to
willing and power <greek>exousia</greek>. But now he does not say
this, but in the place of it he has put the word, "that I hate," that
you might learn how when he says, "that I would not," he does not
deny the power. Now, what does the "that I would not" mean? It means,
what I praise not, what I do not approve, what I love not. And in contradistinction
to this, he adds what follows; "But what I hate, that I do."
Ver. 16. "If
then I do that which I would not, I consent unto the Law, that it is good."
You see
here, that the understanding is not yet perverted, but keeps up its own noble
character
even during the
action. For even if it does pursue vice,
still it hates it the while, which would be great commendation, whether of
the natural or the written Law. For that the Law is good, is (he says) plain,
from the fact of my accusing myself, when I disobey the Law, and hate what
has been done. And yet if the Law was to blame for the sin, how comes it that
he felt a delight in it, yet hated what it orders to be done? For, "I
consent," he says, "unto the Law, that it is good."
Ver 17,
18. "Now
then it is no more I that do it, but sin that dwelleth in me. For I know
that in me,
that is, in my flesh, dwelleth no good thing."
On this
text, those who find fault with the flesh, and contend it was no part of
God's creation,
attack us.
What are we to say then? Just what we did before,
when discusssing the Law: that as there he makes sin answerable for everything
so here also. For he does not say, that the flesh worketh it, but just the
contrary, "it is not I that do it, but sin that dwelleth in me." But
if he does say that "there dwelleth no good thing in it," still this
is no charge against the flesh. For the fact that "no good thing dwelleth
in it," does not show that it is evil itself. Now we admit, that the flesh
is not so great as the soul, and is inferior to it, yet not contrary, or opposed
to it, or evil; but that it is beneath the soul, as a harp beneath a harper,
and as a ship under the pilot. And these are not contrary to those who guide
and use them, but go with them entirely, yet are not of the same honor with
the artist. As then a person who says, that the art resides not in the harp
or the ship, but in the pilot or harper, is not finding fault with the instruments,
but pointing out the great difference between them[1] and the artist; so Paul
in saying, that "in my flesh dwelleth no good thing," is not finding
fault with the body, but pointing out the soul's superiority.. For this it
is that has the whole duty or pilotage put into its hands, and that of playing.
And this Paul here points out, giving the governing power to the soul, and
after dividing man into these two things, the soul and the body, he says, that
the flesh has less of reason, and is destitute of discretion, and ranks among
things to be led, not among things that lead. But the soul has more wisdom,
and can see what is to be done and what not, yet is not equal to pulling in
the horse as it wishes. And this would be a charge not against the flesh only,
but against the soul also, which knows indeed what it ought to do, but still
does not carry out in practice what seems best to it. "For to will," he
says, "is present with me; but how to perforth that which is good, I find
not." Here again in the words, "I find not," he does not speak
of any ignorance or perplexity, but a kind of thwarting and crafty assault
made by sin, which he therefore points more clearly out in the next words.
Ver. 19,
20. "For
the good that I would I do not: but the evil which I would not that I do.
Now if I
do that I would not, it is no more Ithat do
it but sin that dwelleth in me."
Do you
see, how he acquits the essence of the soul, as well as the essence of the
flesh, from accusation,
and removes it entirely to sinful actions? For
if the soul willeth not the evil, it is cleared: and if he does not work it
himself, the body too is set free, and the whole may be charged upon the evil
moral choice. Now the essence of the soul and body and of that choice are not
the same, for the two first are God's works, and the other is a motion from
ourselves, towards whatever we please to direct it For willing is indeed natural <greek>emFuton</greek>,
and is from God:but willing on this wise is our own, and from our own mind.
Ver. 21. "I
find then a law, that when I would do good, evil is present with me."
What he
says is not very clear. What then is it that is said? I praise the law, he
says, in my conscience,
and I find it pleads on my side so far as I
am desirous of doing what is right, and that it invigorates this wish For as
I feel a pleasure in it, so does it yield praise to my decision. Do you see
how he shows, that the knowledge of what is good and what is not such is an
original and fundamental part of our nature, and that the Law of Moses praises
it, and getteth praise from it? For above he did not say so much as I get taught
by the Law, but "I consent to the Law;" nor further on that I get
instructed by it, but "I delight in" it. Now what is" I delight?" It
is, I agree with it as right, as it does with me when wishing to do what is
good. And so the willing what is good and the not willing what is evil was
made a fundamental part of us from the first. But the Law, when it came, was
made at once a stronger accuser in what was bad, and a greater praiser in what
was good. Do you observe that in every place be bears witness to its having
a kind of intensitiveness and additional advantage, yet nothing further? For
though it praises and I delight in it, and wish what is good the "evil
is" still "present with me," and the agency of it has not been
abolished. And thus the Law, with a man who determines upon doing anything
good, only acts so far as auxiliary to him, as that it has the same wish as
himself. Then since he had stated it indistinctly, as he goes on he gives a
yet more distinct interpretation, by showing how the evil is present, how too
the Law is a law to such a person only who has a mind to do what is good.
Ver. 22. "For I delight," he says, "in
the law of God after the inward man."
He means, for I knew even before this what was good, but when I find it set
down in writing, I praise it.
Ver. 23. "But
I see another law warring against the law of my mind."
Here again
he calls sin a law warring against the other, not in respect of good order,
but from the
strict obedience
yielded to it by those who comply
with it. As then it gives the name of master <greek>kurion</greek> Matt.
vi. 24; Luke xvi. 13) to Mammon, and of god (Phil. iii. 19) to the belly, not
because of their intrinsically deserving it, but because of the extreme obsequiousness
of their subjects so here he calls sin a law, owing to those who are so obsequious
to it, and are afraid to leave it, just as those who have received the Law
dread leaving the Law. This then, he means, is opposed to the law of nature;
for this is what is meant by "the law of my mind." And he next represents
an array and battle, and refers[1] the whole struggle to the law of nature.
For that of Moses was subsequently added over and above: yet still both the
one and the other, the one as teaching, the other as praising what was right,
wrought no great effects in this battle; so great was the thraldom of sin,
overcoming and getting the upper hand as it did. And this Paul setting, forth,
and showing the decided <greek>kata</greek> <greek>k</greek>,s232><greek>atos</greek> victory
it had, says, "I see another law warring against the law of my mind, and
bringing me into captivity." He does not use the word conquering only,
but "bringing me into captivity to the law of sin." He does not say
the bent of the flesh, or the nature of the flesh, but "the law of sin." That
is, the thrall, the power. In what sense then does he say, "Which is in
my members?" Now what is this? Surely it does not make the members to
be sin, but makes them as distinct from sin as possible. For that which is
in a thing is diverse from that wherein it is. As then the commandment also
is not evil, because by it sin took occasion, so neither is the nature of the
flesh, even if sin subdues us by means of it. For in this way the soul will
be evil, and much more so too, since it has authority in matters of action.
But these things are not so, certainly they are not. Since neither if a tyrant
and a robber were to take possession of a splendid mansion and a king's court,
would the circumstance be any discredit to the house, inasmuch as the entire
blame would come on those who contrived such an act. But the enemies of the
truth, along with their impiety, fall unawares also into great unreasonableness.
For they do not accuse the flesh only, but they also disparage the Law. And
yet if the flesh were evil, the Law would be good. For it wars against the
Law, and opposes it. If, however, the Law be not good, then the flesh is good.[*]
For it wars and fights against it even by their own account. How come they
then to assert that both belong to the devil, putting things opposed to each
other before us? Do you see, along with their impiety, how great is their unreasonableness
also? But such doctrines as these are not the Church's, for it is the sin only
that she condemns; and both the Laws which God has given, both that of nature
and that of Moses, she says are hostile to this, and not to the flesh; for
the flesh she denies to be sin, for it is a work of God's, and one very useful
too in order to virtue, if we live soberly.
Ver. 24. "O
wretched man that I am! who shall deliver me from the body of this death?"
Do you
notice what a great thraldom that of vice is, in that it overcomes even a
mind that delighted
in the Law?
For no one can rejoin, he means, that
I hate the Law and abhor it, and so sin overcomes me. For "I delight in
it, and consent to it," and flee for refuge to it, yet still it had not
the power of saving one who had fled to it. But Christ saved even one that
fled from Him. See what a vast advantage grace has! Yet the Apostle has not
stated it thus; but with a sigh only, and a great lamentation, as if devoid
of any to help him, he points out by his perplexity the might of Christ, and
says, "O wretched man that I am! who shall deliver me from the body of
this death?" The Law has not been able: conscience has proved unequal
to it, though it praised what was good, and did not praise it only, but even
fought against the contrary of it. For by the very words "warreth against" he
shows that he was marshalled against it for his part. From what quarter then
is one to hope for salvation?
Ver. 25. "I
thank God through Jesus Christ our Lord."
Observe
how he shows the necessity of having grace present with us, and that the
well-doings heroin
belong alike
to the Father and the Son. For if it is
the Father Whom he thanketh, still the Son is the cause of this: thanksgiving.
But when you hear him say, "Who shall deliver me from the body of this
death?" do not suppose him to be accusing the flesh. For he does not say "body
of sin," but "body of death:" that is, the mortal body--that
which hath been overcome by death, not that which gendered death. And this
is no proof of the evil of the flesh, but of the marring <greek>ephreias</greek>,
thwarting) it has undergone. As if any one who was take captive by the savages
were to be said to belong to the savages, not as being a savage, but as being
detained by them: so the body is said to be of death, as being held down thereby,
not as producing it. Wherefore also it is not the body that he himself wishes
to be delivered from, but the mortal body, hinting, as I have often said, that
from its becoming subject to suffering,[1] it also became an easy prey to sin.
Why then, it may be said, the thraldom of sin being so great before the times
of grace, were men punished for sinning? Because they had such commands given
them as might even under sin's dominion be accomplished. For he did not draw
them to the highest kind of conversation, but allowed them to enjoy wealth,
and did not forbid having several wives, and to gratify anger in a just cause,
and to make use of luxury within bounds.[2] (Matt. v. 38.) And so great was
this condescension, that the written Law even required less than the law of
nature. For the law of nature ordered one man to associate with one woman throughout.
And this Christ shows in the words, "He which made them at the beginning,
made them male and female." (ib. xix. 4.) But the Law of Moses neither
forbade the putting away of one and the taking in of another, nor prohibited
the having of two[3] at once! (ib. v. 31.) And besides this there are also
many other ordinances of the Law, that one might see those who were before
its day fully performing, being instructed by the law of nature. They therefore
who lived under the old dispensation had no hardship done them by so moderate
a system of laws being imposed upon them. But if they were not, on these terms,
able to get the upper hand, the charge is against their own listlessness. Wherefore
Paul gives thanks, because Christ, without any rigorousness about these things,
not only demanded no account of this moderate amount,[4] but even made us able
to have a greater race set before us. And therefore he says, "I thank
my God through Jesus Christ." And letting the salvation which all agreed
about pass, he goes from the points he had already made good, to another further
point, in which he states that it was not our former sins only that we were
freed from, but we were also made invincible for the future. For "there
is," he says, "now no condemnation to them which are in Christ Jesus,
who walk not after the flesh." Yet he did not say it before he had first
recalled to mind our former condition again in the words, "So then with
the mind I myself serve the law of God, but with the flesh the law of sin."
Chap.
viii. ver. 1. "There
is therefore no condemnation to them which are in Christ Jesus."
Then as
the fact that many fall into sin even after baptism presented a difficulty <greek>antepipten</greek>,
he consequently hastened to meet it, and says not merely "to them that
are in Christ Jesus," but adds, "who walk not after the flesh;" so
showing that all afterward comes of our listlessness. For now we have the power
of walking not after the flesh, but then it was a difficult task. Then he gives
another proof of it by the sequel, in the words,
Ver. 2. "For
the law of the Spirit of life hath made me free."
It is
the Spirit he is here calling the law of the Spirit. For as he calls sin
the law of sin, so
he here calls
the Spirit the law of the Spirit. And
yet he named that of Moses as such, where he says, "For we know that the
Law is spiritual." What then is the difference? A great and unbounded
one. For that was spiritual, but this is a law of the Spirit. Now what is the
distinction between this and that? The other was merely given by the Spirit,
but this even furnisheth those that receive it with the Spirit in large measure.
Wherefore also he called it the law of life[5] in contradistinction to that
of sin, not that of Moses. For when he says, It freed me[6] from the law of
sin and death, it is not the law of Moses that he is here speaking of, since
in no case does he style it the law of sin: for how could he one that he had
called "just and holy" so often, and destructive of sin too? but
it is that which warreth against the law of the mind. For this grievous war
did the grace of the Spirit put a stop to, by slaying sin, and making the contest
light to us and crowning us at the outstart, and then drawing us to the struggle
with abundant help. Next as it is ever his wont to turn from the Spirit to
the Son and the Father, and to reckon all our estate to lean upon the Trinity?
so doth he here also. For after saying, "Who shall deliver me from the
body of this death," he pointed at the Father as doing this by the Son,
then again at the Holy Spirit along with the Son. "For the law of the
Spirit of Life in Christ Jesus hath made me free, he says. Then again, at the
Father and the Son;
Ver. 3. "For what the Law could not do," he saith, "in
that it was weak through the flesh God sending His own Son in the likeness
of sinful
flesh, and for sin, condemned sin in the flesh."
Again,
he seems indeed to be disparaging the Law. But if any one attends strictly,
he even highly
praises it, by showing
that it harmonizes with Christ, and gives
preference to the same things. For he does not speak of the badness of the
Law, but of "what it could not do;" and so again, "in that it
was weak," not, "in that it was mischievous, or designing." And
even weakness he does not ascribe to it, but to the flesh, as he says, "in
that it was weak through the flesh," using the word "flesh" here
again not for the essence and subsistency itself, but giving its name to the
more carnal sort of mind. In which way lie acquits both the body and the Law
of any accusation. Yet not in this way only, but by what comes next also. For
supposing the Law to be of the contrary part, how was it Christ came to its
assistance, and fulfilled its requisitions, and lent it a helping hand by condemning
sin in the flesh? For this was what was lacking, since in the soul the Lord
had condemned it long ago. What then? is it the greater thing that the Law
accomplished, but the less that the Only-Begotten did? Surely not. For it was
God that was the principal doer of that also, in that He gave us the law of
nature, and added the written one to it. Again, there were no use of the greater,
if the lesser had not been supplied. For what good is it to know what things
ought to be done, if a man does not follow it out? None, for it were but a
greater condemnation. And so He that hath saved the soul it is, Who hath made
the flesh also easy to bridle. For to teach is easy, but to show besides a
way in which these things were easily done, this is the marvel. Now it was
for this that the Only-Begotten came, and did not depart before He had set
us free from this difficulty. But what is greater, is the method of the victory;
for He took none other flesh, but this very one which was beset with troubles.
So it is as if any one were to see in the street a vile woman of the baser
sort being beaten, and were to say he was her son, when he was the king's,
and so to get her free from those who ill treated her. And this He really did,
in that He confessed that He was the Son of Man, and stood by it (i.e. the
flesh), and condemned the sin. However, He did not endure to smite it besides;
or rather, He smote it with the blow of His death, but in this very act it
was not the smitten flesh which was condemned and perished, but the sin which
had been smiting. And this is the greatest possible marvel. For if it were
not in the flesh that the victory took place, it would not be so astonishing,
since this the Law also wrought. But the wonder is, that it was with the flesh <greek>meta</greek> <greek>sarkos</greek> that
His trophy was raised, and that what had been overthrown numberless times by
sin, did itself get a glorious victory over it. For behold what strange things
there were that took place! One was, that sin did not conquer the flesh; another,
that sin was conquered, and conquered by it too. For it is not the same thing
not to get conquered, and to conquer that which was continually overthrowing
us. A third is, that it not only conquered it, but even chastised it. For by
not sinning it kept from being conquered, but by dying also, He overcame and
condemned it, having made the flesh, that before was so readily made a mock
of by it, a plain object of fear to it. In this way then, He at once unnerved
its power, and abolished the death by it introduced. For so long as it took
hold of sinners, it with justice kept pressing to its end. But after finding
a sinless body, when it had given it up to death, it was condemned as having
acted unjustly. Do you observe, how many proofs of victory there are? The flesh
not being conquered by sin, Its even conquering and condemning it, Its not
condemning it barely, but condemning it as having sinned. For after having
convicted it of injustice, he proceeds to condemn it, and that not by power
and might barely, but even by the rules of justice. For this is what he means
by saying, "for sin condemned sin in the flesh." As if he had said
that he had convicted it of great sin, and then condemned it. So you see it
is sin that getteth condemned everywhere, and not the flesh, for this is even
crowned with honor, and has to give sentence against the other. But if he does
say that it was "in the likeness" of flesh that he sent the Son,
do not therefore suppose that His flesh was of a different kind. For as he
called it "sinful," this was why he put the word "likeness."[1]
For sinful flesh it was not that Christ had, but like indeed to our sinful
flesh, yet sinless, and in nature the same with us. And so even from this it
is plain that by nature the flesh was not evil. For it was not by taking a
different one instead of the former, nor by changing this same one in substance,
that Christ caused it to regain the victory: but He let it abide in its own
nature, and yet made it bind on the crown of victory over sin, and then after
the victory raised it up, and made it immortal. What then, it may be said,
is this to me, whether it was this flesh that these things happened in? Nay,
it concerns thee very much. Wherefore also he proceeds:
Ver. 4. "That
the righteousness[1] of the Law might be fulfilled in us, who walk not after
the flesh."
What meaneth
this word, righteousness? Why, the end, the scope, the well-doing. For what
was its
design, and what
did it enjoin? To be without sin. This then
is made good to us <greek>katmrqwtai</greek> <greek>hmin</greek> now
through Christ. And the making a stand against it, and the getting the better
of it, came from Him. But it is for us to enjoy the victory. Then shall we
never sin henceforth? We never shall unless we have become exceedingly relaxed
and supine. And this is why he added, "to them that walk not after the
flesh. For lest, after hearing that Christ hath delivered thee from the war
of sin, and that the requisition <greek>dikaiwma</greek> of the
Law is fulfilled in thee, by sin having been "condemned in the flesh," thou
shouldest break up all thy defences; therefore, in that place also, after saying, "there
is therefore no condemnation," he added, "to them that walk not after
the flesh;" and here also, "that the requisition of the Law might
be fulfilled in us," he proceeds with the very same thing; or rather,
not with it only, but even with a much stronger thing.[2] For after saying, "that
the righteousness of the Law might be fulfilled in us that walk not after the
flesh," he proceeds, "but after the Spirit."
So showing,
that it is not only binding upon us to keep ourselves from evil deeds, but
also to be
adorned <greek>koman</greek> with
good. For to give thee the crown is His; but it is thine to hold it fast
when given.
For the righteousness of the Law, that one should not become liable to its
curse, Christ has accomplished for thee. Be not a traitor then to so great
a gift, but keep guarding this goodly treasure. For in this passage he shows
that the Font will not suffice to save us, unless, after coming from it, we
display a life worthy of the Gift. And so he again advocates the Law in saying
what he does. For when we have once become obedient to Christ, we must use
all ways and plans so that its righteousness, which Christ fulfilled, may abide
in us, and not come to naught.
Ver. 5. "For
they that are after the flesh do mind the things of the flesh."
Yet even
this is no disparaging of the flesh. For so long as it keeps its own place,
nothing amiss cometh
to pass. But when we let it have its own will
in everything, and it passes over its proper bounds, and rises up against the
soul, then it destroys and corrupts everything, yet not owing to its own nature,
but to its being out of proportion, and the disorder thereupon ensuing. "But
they that are after the Spirit do mind the things of the Spirit."
Ver. 6. "For to be carnally minded is death." He does not speak
of the nature of the flesh, or the essence of the body, but of being carnally "minded," which
may be set right again, and abolished. And in saying thus, he does not ascribe
to the flesh any reasoning power of its own. Far from it. But to set forth
the grosset motion of the mind, and giving this a name from the inferior part,
and in the same way as he often is in the habit of calling man in his entireness,
and viewed as possessed of a soul, flesh. "But to be spiritually minded." Here
again he speaks of the spiritual mind, in the same way as he says further on, "But
He that searcheth the hearts knoweth what is the mind of the spirit" (ver.
27); and he points out many blessings resulting from this, both in the present
life, and in that which is to come. For as the evils which being carnally minded
introduces, are far outnumbered by those blessings which a spiritual mind affords.
And this he points out in the words "life and peace." The one is
in contraposition to the first--for death is what he says to be carnally minded
is. And the other in contraposition to the following. For after mentioning
peace, he goes on,
Ver. 7. "Because the carnal mind is enmity against God:" and this
is worse than death. Then to show how it is at once death and enmity; "for
it is not subject to the Law of God," he says, "neither indeed can
be." But be not troubled at hearing the "neither indeed can be." For
this difficulty admits of an easy solution. For what he here names "carnal
mindedness" is the reasoning (or "way of thinking," <greek>loUismon</greek> that
is earthly, gross, and eager-hearted after the things of this life and its
wicked doings. It is of this he says "neither yet can" it "be
subject" to God. And what hope of salvation is there left, if it be impossible
for one who is bad to become good? This is not what he says. Else how would
Paul have become such as he was? how would the (penitent) thief, or Manasses,
or the Ninevites or how would David after falling have recovered himself? How
would Peter after the denial have raised himself up? (1 Cor. v. 5.) How could
he that had lived in fornication have been enlisted among Christ's fold? (2
Cor. ii. 6-11.) How could the Galatians who had "fallen from grace" (Gal.
v. 4), have attained their former dignity again? What he says then is not that
it is impossible for a man that is wicked to become good, but that it is impossible
for one who continues wicked to be subject to God. Yet for a man to be changed,
and so become good, and subject to Him, is easy. For he does not say that man
cannot be subject to God, but, wicked doing cannot be good. As if he had said,
fornication cannot be chastity, nor vice virtue. And this it says in the Gospel
also, "A corrupt tree cannot bring forth good fruit" (Matt. vii.
18), not to bar the change from virtue to vice, but to say how incapable continuance
in vice is of bringing forth good fruits. For He does not say that an evil
tree cannot become a good one, but that bring forth good fruit it cannot, while
it continues evil. For that it can be changed, He shows from this passage,
and from another parable, when He introduces the tares as becoming wheat, on
which score also He forbids their being rooted up; "Lest," lie says, "ye
root up also the wheat with them (ib. xiii. 29);that is, that which will spring <greek>Uinesqai</greek> 4
Mss. <greek>tiktesqai</greek> from them. It is vice then he means
by carnal mindedness, and by spiritual mindedness the grace given, and the
working of it discernible in the right determination of mind, not discussing
in any part of this passage, a substance and an entity, but virtue and vice.
For that which thou hadst no power to do under the Law, now, he means, thou
wilt be able to do, to go on uprightly, and with no intervening fall, if thou
layest hold of the Spirit's aid. For it is not enough not to walk after the
flesh, but we must also go after the Spirit, since turning away from what is
evil will not secure our salvation, but we must also do what is good. And this
will come about, if we give our souls up to the Spirit, and persuade our flesh
to get acquainted with its proper position, for in this way we shall make it
also spiritual; as also if we be listless we shall make our soul carnal. For
since it was no natural necessity which put the gift into us, but the freedom[1]
of choice placed it in our hands, it rests with thee henceforward whether this
shall be or the other. For He, on His part, has performed everything. For sin
no longer warreth against the law of our mind, neither doth it lead us away
captive as heretofore, for all that state has been ended and broken up, and
the affections cower in fear and trembling at the grace of the Spirit. But
if thou wilt quench the light, and cast out the holder of the reins, and chase
the helmsman away, then charge the tossing thenceforth upon thyself. For since
virtue hath been now made an easier thing (for which cause also we are under
far stricter obligations of religious living), consider how men's condition
lay when the Law prevailed, and how at present, since grace hath shone forth.
The things which aforetime seemed not possible to any one, virginity, and contempt
of death, and of other stronger sufferings, are now in full vigor through every
part of the world, and it is not with us alone, but with the Scythians, and
Thracians, and Indians, and Persians, and several other barbarous nations,
that there are companies of virgins, and clans of martyrs, and congregations
of monks, and these now grown even more numerous than the married, and strictness
of fasting, and the utmost renunciation of property. Now these are things which,
with one or two exceptions, persons who lived under the Law never conceived
even in a dream. Since thou seest then the real state of things voiced with
a shriller note than any trumpet, let not thyself grow soft and treacherous
to so great a grace. Since not even after the faith is it possible for a listless
man to be saved! For the wrestlings are made easy that thou mayest strive and
conquer, nor that thou shouldest sleep, or abuse the greatness of the grace
by making it a reason for listlessness, so wallowing again in the former mire.
And so he goes on to say,
Ver. 8. "So
then they that are in the flesh cannot please God."
What then?
Are we, it will be said, to cut our bodies in pieces to please God, and to
make our
escape from the
flesh? and would you have us be homicides,
and so lead us to virtue? You see what inconsistencies are gendered by taking
the words literally. For by "the flesh" in this passage, he does
not mean the body, or the essence of the body, but that life which is fleshly
and worldly, and uses self-indulgence and extravagance to the full, so making
the entire man flesh. For as they that have the wings of the Spirit, make the
body also spiritual, so do they who bound off from this, and are the slaves
of the belly, and of pleasure, make the soul also flesh, not that they change
the essence of it, but that they mar its noble birth. And this mode of speaking
is to be met with in many parts of the Old Testament also, to signify by flesh
the gross and earthly life, which is entangled in pleasures that are not convenient.
For to Noah He says, "My Spirit shall not always make its abode in these
men, because they are flesh." (Gen. vi. 3 as the LXX. give it.) And yet
Noah was himself also compassed about with flesh. But this is not the complaint,
the being compassed about with the flesh, for this is so by nature, but the
having chosen a carnal life. Wherefore also Paul saith, "But they that
are in the flesh cannot please God." Then he proceeds:
Ver. 9. "But
ye are not in the flesh, but in the Spirit."
Here again,
he does not mean flesh absolutely, but such sort of flesh, that which was
in a whirl
and thraldom
of passions. Why then, it may be said, does
he not say so, nor state any difference? It is to rouse the hearer, and to
show that he that liveth aright is not even in the body. For inasmuch as it
was in a manner clear to every one that the spiritual man was not in sin, he
states the greater truth that it was not in sin alone, that the spiritual man
was not, but hot even in the flesh was he henceforward, having become from
that very moment an Angel, and ascended into heaven, and henceforward barely
carrying the body about. Now if this be thy reason for disparaging the flesh,
because it is by its name that he calls the fleshly life, at this rate you
are also for disparaging the world, because wickedness is often called after
it, as Christ also said to His disciples, "Ye are not of this world ;" and
again to His brethren, He says, "The world cannot hate you, but me it
hateth." (John xv. 19, ib. vii. 7.) And the soul too Paul must afterwards
be calling estranged from God, since to those that live in error, he gives
the name of men of the soul (1 Cor. ii. 14, <greek>yukikos</greek> A.
V. natural). But this is not so, indeed it is not so. For we are not to look
to the bare words, but always to the sentiment of the speaker, and so come
to a perfectly distinct knowledge of what is said. For some things are good,
some bad, and some indifferent. Thus the soul and the flesh belong to things
indifferent, since each may become either the one or the other. But the spirit
belongs to things good, and at no thee becometh any other thing. Again, the
mind of the flesh, that is, ill-doing, belongs to things always bad. "For
it is not subject to the law of God." If then thou yieldest thy soul and
body to the better, thou wilt have become of its part. If on the other hand
thou yield to the worse, then art thou made a partaker of the ruin therein,
not owing to the nature of the soul and the flesh, but owing to that judgment
which has the power of choosing either. And to show that these things are so,
and that the words do not disparage the flesh, let us take up the phrase itself
again, and sift it more thoroughly. "But ye are not in the flesh but in
the Spirit," he says. What then? were they not in the flesh, and did they
go about without any bodies? What sense would this be? You see that it is the
carnal life that he intimates. And why did he not say, But ye are not in sin?
It is that you may come to know that Christ hath not extinguished the tyranny
of sin only, but hath even made the flesh to weigh us down less, and to be
more spiritual, not by changing its nature, but rather by giving it wings.
For as when fire cometh in company with iron, the iron also becomes fire, though
abiding in its own nature still; thus with them that believe, and have the
Spirit, the flesh henceforth goeth over into that manner of working, and becometh
wholly spiritual, crucified in all parts, and flying with the same wings as
the soul, such as was the body of him who here speaks. Wherefore all self-indulgence
and pleasure he made scorn of, and found his self-indulgence in hunger, and
stripes, and prisons, and did not even feel pain in undergoing them. (2 Cor.
xi.) And it was to show this that he said, "For our light affliction,
which is but for a moment," etc. (ib. iv. 17.) Sowell had he tutored even
the flesh to be in harmony with the spirit. "If so be that the Spirit
of God dwell in you" <greek>eiper</greek> He often uses this "if
so be," not to express any doubt, but even when he is quite persuaded
of the thing, and instead of "since," as when he says, "If it
is a righteous thing," for "seeing it is a righteous thing with God
to recompense tribulation to them that trouble you." (2 Thess. i. 6.)
Again, "Have ye suffered so many things in vain, if it be yet in vain?" (Gal.
iii. 4.)
"Now if any man have not the Spirit of Christ." He does not say,
if ye have not, but he brings forward the distressing word, as applied to other
persons. "He is none of His." he says.
Ver. 10. "And
if Christ be in you."
Again,
what is good he applies to them,[1] and the distressing part was short and
parenthetic. And
that
which is an object of desire, is on either side of
it, and put at length too, so as to throw the other into shade. Now this he
says, not as affirming that the Spirit is Christ, far from it, but to show
that he who hath the Spirit not only is called Christ's, but even hath Christ
Himself. For it cannot but be that where the Spirit is, there Christ is also.
For wheresoever one Person of the Trinity is, there the whole Trinity is present.
For It is undivided in Itself, and hath a most entire Oneness. What then, it
may be said, will happen, if Christ be in us? "The body is dead because
of sin; but the Spirit is life because of righteousness." You see the
great evils that come of not having the Holy Spirit death, enmity against God,
inability to satisfy His laws, not being Christ's as we should be the want
of His indwelling. Consider now also what great blessings come of having the
Spirit. Being Christ's, having Christ himself, vying with the Angels (for this
is what mortifying the flesh is), and living an immortal life, holding henceforward
the earnests of the Resurrection, running with ease the race of virtue. For
he does not say so little as that the body is henceforward inactive for sin,
but that it is even dead, so magnifying the ease of the race. For such an one
without troubles and labors gains the crown. Then afterward for this reason
he adds also, "to sin," that you may see that it is the viciousness,
not the essence of the body, that He hath abolished at once. For if the latter
had been done, many things even of a kind to be beneficial to the soul would
have been abolished also. This however is not what he says, but while it is
vet alive and abiding, he contends, it is dead. For this is the sign of our
having the Son, of the Spirit being in us, that our bodies should be in no
respect different from those that lie on the bier with respect to the working
of sin (so the Mss. Say. "of the body." The preceding words are slightly
corrupt.) But be not affrighted at hearing of mortifying. For in it you have
what is really life, with no death to succeed it: and such is that of the Spirit.
It yieldeth not to death any more, but weareth out death and consumeth it,
and that which it receiveth, it keepeth it immortal. And this is why after
saying "the body is dead," he does not say, "but the Spirit
'liveth,'" but, "is life," to point out that He (the Spirit)
had the power of giving this to others also. Then again to brace up his hearer,
he tells him the cause of the Life, and the proof of it. Now this is righteousness;
for where there is no sin, death is not to be seen either; but where death
is not to be seen, life is indissoluble.
Ver. 11. "But
if the Spirit of Him that raised up Jesus from the dead dwell in you, He
that
raised up
our Lord shall also quicken your mortal bodies
by His Spirit that dwelleth in you."
Again,
he touches the point of the Resurrection, since this was the most encouraging[2]
hope to
the hearer,
and gave him a security from what had happened unto Christ.
Now be not thou afraid because thou art compassed about with a dead body. Let
it have the Spirit, and it shall assuredly rise again. What then, shall the
bodies which have not the Spirit not rise? How then must "all stand before
the judgment-seat of Christ?" (Rom. xiv. 10) or how will the account of
hell be trustworthy? For if they that have not the Spirit rise not, there will
not be a hell at all. What then is it which is said? All shall rise, yet not
all to life, but some to punishment and some to life. (John v. 29.) This is
why he did not say, shall raise up, but shall quicken. (Dan. xii. 2.) And this
is a greater thing than resurrection, and is given to the just only. And the
cause of this honor be adds in the words, "By His Spirit: that dwelleth
in you." And so if while here thou drive away the grace of the Spirit,
and do not depart with it still safe, thou wilt assuredly perish, though thou
dost rise again. For as He will not endure then, if he see His Spirit shining
in thee, to give thee up to punishment, so neither will He allow them, if He
see It quenched, to bring thee into the Bride-chamber, even as He admitted
not those virgins. (Matt. xxv. 12.)
Suffer
not thy body then to live in this world, that it may live then! Make it die,
that it die not.
For if
it keep living, it will not live: but if it
die, then shall it live. And this is the case with resurrection in general.
For it must die first and be buried, and then become immortal. But this has
been done in the Font. It has therefore had first its crucifixion and burial,
and then been raised. This has also happened with the Lord's Body. For that
also was crucified and buried (7 Mss. died) and rose again. This then let us
too be doing: let us keep continually mortifying it in its works. I do not
mean in its substance--far be it from me--but in its inclinations towards evil
doings. For this is a life too, or rather this only is life, undergoing nothing
that is common to man, nor being a slave to pleasures. For he who has set himself
under the rule of these, has no power even to live through the low spirits,
the fears, and the dangers, and the countless throng of ills, that rise from
them. For if death must be expected, he hath died, before death, of fear. And
if it be disease he dreads, or affront, or poverty, or any of the other ills
one cannot anticipate, he is ruined and hath perished. What then can be more
miserable than a life of this sort? But far otherwise is he that liveth to
the Spirit, for he stands at once above fears and grief and dangers and every
kind of change: and that not by undergoing no such thing, but, what is much
greater, by thinking scorn of them when they assail him. And how is this to
be? It will be if the Spirit dwell in us continually. For he does not speak
of any short stay made thereby, but of a continual indwelling. Hence he does
not say "the Spirit which" dwelt, but "which dwelleth in us," so
pointing to a continual abiding. He then is most truly alive, who is dead to
this life. Hence he says, "The Spirit is life because of righteousness." And
to make the thing clearer, let me bring[1] before you two men, one who is given
up to extravagances and pleasures, and the deceitfulness of this life; and
the other made dead to all these; and let us see which is more really the living
one. For let one of these two be very rich and much looked up to, keeping parasites
and flatterers,[2] and let us suppose him to spend the whole day upon this,
in revelling and drunkenness: and let the other live in poverty, and fasting,
and hard fare, and strict rules <greek>FilosoFia</greek>, and at
evening partake of necessary food only; or if you will let him even pass two
or three days without food.[3] Which then of these two think we (3 Mss. you)
is most really alive? Men in general will, I know, reckon the former so, the
man that takes his pleasure (Sav. <greek>skrtpnta</greek>, Mss. <greek>truFpnta</greek> and
squanders his goods. But we reckon the man that enjoys the moderate fare. Now
then since it is still a subject of contest and opposition let us go into the
houses of them both, and just at the very thee too when in your judgment the
rich man is living in truest sense, in the very season of self-indulgence,
and when we have got in, let us look and see the real condition of each of
these men. For it is from the actions that it appears which is alive and which
dead. Shall we not find the one among his books, or in prayer and fasting,
or some other necessary duty, awake and sober, and conversing with God? but
the other we shall see stupid in drunkenness, and in no better condition than
a dead man. And if we wait till the evening, we shall see this death coming
upon him more and more, and then sleep again succeeding to that: but the other
we shall see even in the night keeping from wine and sleep. Which then shall
We pronounce to be most alive, the man that lies in a state of insensibility,
and is an open laughing-stock to everybody? or the man that is active, and
conversing with God? For if you go up to the one, and tell him some thing he
ought to know, you will not hear him say a word, any more than a dead man.
But the latter, whether you choose to be in his company at night or by day,
you will see to be an angel rather than a man, and will hear him speak wisdom
about things in Heaven. Do you see how one of them is alive above all men living,
and the other in a more pitiable plight even than the dead? And even if he
have a mind to stir he sees one thing instead of another and is like people
that are mad, or rather is in a worse plight even than they. For if any one
were to do them any harm, we should at once feel pity for the sufferer, and
rebuke the doer of the wrong. But this man, if we were to see a person trample
on him, we should not only be disinclined to pity, but should even give judgment
against him, now that he was fallen. And will you tell me this is life, and
not a harder lot than deaths unnumbered? So you see the self-indulgent man
is not only dead, but worse than dead, and more miserable than a man possessed.
For the one is the object of pity, the other of hatred. And the one has allowance
made him, the other suffers punishment for his madness. But if externally he
is so ridiculous, as having his saliva tainted, and his breath stinking of
wine, just consider what case his wretched soul, inhumed as it were in a grave,
in such a body as this, is probably in. For one may look upon this as much
the same as if one were to permit a damsel, comely, chaste, free-born, of good
family, and handsome, to be trampled on, and every way insulted by a serving
woman, that was savage, and disgustful, and impure; drunkenness being something
of this sort. And who, being in his senses, would not choose to die a thousand
deaths, rather than live a single day in this way? For even if at daylight
he were to get up, and seem to be sober from that revelling (or absurd show, <greek>kwmwdias</greek>,
1 Ms. <greek>kwmou</greek> of his, still even then it is not the
clear brightness of temperance which he enjoys, since the cloud from the storm
of drunkenness still is hanging before his eyes. And even if we were to grant
him the clearness of sobriety, what were he the better? For this soberness
would be of no service to him, except to let him see his accusers. For when
he is in the midst of his unseemly deeds, he is so far a gainer in not perceiving
those that laugh at him. But when it is day he loses this comfort even, and
while his servants are murmuring, and his wife is ashamed, and his friends
accuse him, and his enemies make sport of him, he knows it too. What can be
more miserable than a life like this, to be laughed at all day by everybody,
and when it is evening to do the same unseemly things afresh. But what if you
would let me put the covetous before you? For this is another, and even a worse
intoxication. But if it be an intoxication, then it must be a worse death by
far than the former, since the intoxication is more grievous. And indeed it
is not so sad to be drunk with wine as with covetousness. For in the former
case, the penalty ends with the sufferings (several Ms. "sufferer,")
and results in insensibility, and the drunkard's own ruin. But in this case
the mischief passes on to thousands of souls, and kindles wars of sundry kinds
upon all sides. Come then and let us put this beside the other, and let us
see what are the points they have in common, and in what again this is worse
than it, and let us make a comparison of drunkards to-day. For with that blissful
man, who liveth to the Spirit, let them not be put at all in comparison, but
only tried by one another. And again, let us bring the money-table before you,
laden as it is with blood. What then have they in common, and in what are they
like each other? It is in the very nature of the disease. For the species of
drunkenness is different, as one comes of wine, the other of money, but its
way of affecting them is similar, both being alike possessed with an exorbitant
desire. For he who is drunken with wine, the more glasses he has drunk off,
the more he longs for; and he that is in love with money, the more he compasses,
the more he kindles the flame of desire, and the more importunate he renders
his thirst. In this point then they resemble each other. But in another the
covetous man has the advantage (in a bad sense). Now what is this? Why that
the other's affection is a natural one. For the wine is hot, and adds to one's
natural drought, and so makes drunkards thirsty. But what is there to make
the other man always keep desiring more? how comes it that when he is increased
in riches, then he is in the veriest poverty? This complaint then is a perplexing
one, and has more of paradox about it. But if you please, we will take a view
of them after the drunkenness also. Or rather, there is no such thing as ever
seeing the covetous man after his drunkenness, so continual a state of intoxication
is he in Let us then view them both in the state of drunkenness, and let us
get a distinct notion which is the most ridiculous, and let us again figure
to ourselves a correct sketch of them. We shall see then the man who dotes
with his wine at eventide with his eves open, seeing no one, but moving about
at mere haphazard, and stumbling against such as fall in his way, and spewing:
and convulsed, and exposing his nakedness m an unseemly manner. (See Habak.
ii. 16.) And if his wife be there, or his daughter, or his maid-servant, or
anybody else, they[1] will laugh at him heartily. And now let us bring before
you the covetous man. Here what happens is not deserving of laughter only,
but even of a curse, and exceeding wrath, and thunderbolts without number.
At present however let us look at the ridiculous part, for this man as well
as the other has an ignorance of all, whether friend or foe. And like him too,
though his eyes are open, he is blinded. And as the former takes all he sees
for wine, so does this man take all for money. And his spewing is even more
disgusting. For it is not food that he vomits, but words of abuse, of insolence,
of war, of death, that draws upon his own head lightnings without number from
above. And as the body of the drunkard is livid and dissolving, so also is
the other's soul. Or rather, even his body is not free from this disorder,
but it is taken even worse, care eating it away worse than wine does (as do
anger too and want of sleep), and by degrees exhausting it entirely. And he
that is seized with illness from wine, after the night is over may get sober.
But this person is always drunken day and night, watching or sleeping, so paying
a severer penalty for it than any prisoner, or person at work in the mines,
or suffering any punishment more grievous than this, if such there be. Is it
then life pray, and not death? or rather, is it not a fate more wretched than
any death? For death gives the body rest, and sets it free from ridicule, as
well as disgrace and sins: but these drunken fits plunge it into all these,
stopping up the ears, dulling the eyesight, keeping down the understanding
in great darkness. For it will not bear the mention of anything but interest,
and interest upon interest, and shameful gains, and odious traffickings, and
ungentlemanly and slavelike transactions, barking like a dog at everybody,
and hating everybody, averse to everybody, at war with everybody, without any
reason for it, rising up against the poor, grudging at the rich, and civil
to nobody. And if he have a wife, or Children, or friends, if he may not use
them all towards getting gain, these are to him more his enemies than natural
enemies. What then can be worse than madness of this sort, and what more wretched?
when a man is preparing rocks for his own self on every side, and shoals, and
precipices, and gulfs, and pits without number, while he has but one body,
and is the slave of one belly. And if any thrust thee into a state office,
thou wilt be a runaway, through fear of expense. Yet to thyself thou art laying
up countless charges far more distressing than those, enlisting thyself for
services not only more expensive, but also more dangerous, to be done for mammon,
and not paying this tyrant a money contribution only, nor of bodily labor,
torture to the soul, and grief, but even of thy blood itself, that thou mayest
have some addition to thy property (miserable and sorrow-stricken man!) out
of this barbarous slavery. Do you not see those who are taken day by day to
the grave, how they are carried to tombs naked and destitute of all things,
unable to take with them aught that is in the house, but bearing what clothes
they have about them to the worm? Consider these day by day, and perchance
the malady will abate, unless you mean even by such an occasion to be still
more mad at the expensiveness of the funeral rites--for the malady is importunate,
the disease terrible! This then is why we address you upon this subject at
every meeting, and constantly foment your hearing, that at all events by your
growing accustomed to such thoughts, some good many come. But be not contentious,
for it is not only at the Day to come. but even before it, that this manifold
malady brings with it sundry punishments. For if I were to tell you of those
who pass their days in chains, or of one nailed to a lingering disease, or
of one struggling with famine, or of any other thing whatsoever, I could point
out no one who suffers so much as they do who love money. For what severer
evil can befall one, than being hated by all men, than hating all men, than
not having kindly feeling towards any, than being never satisfied, than being
in a continual thirst, than struggling with a perpetual hunger, and that a
more distressing one than what all men esteem such? than having pains day by
day, than being never sober, than being continually in worries and harasses?
For all these things, and more than these, are what the covetous set their
shoulder to; in the midst of their gaining having no perception of pleasure,
though scraping to themselves from all men, because of their desiring more.
But in the case of their incurring a loss, if it be but of a farthing, they
think they have suffered most grievously, and have been cast out of life itself.
What language then can put these evils before you? And if their fate here be
such, consider also what comes after this life, the being cast out of the kingdom,
the pain that comes from hell, the perpetual chains, the outer darkness, the
venomous worm, the gnashing of teeth, the affliction, the sore straitening,
the rivers of fire, the furnaces that never get quenched. And gathering all
these together, and weighing them against the pleasure of money, tear up now
this disease root and branch, that so receiving the true riches, and being
set free from this grievous poverty, thou mayest obtain the present blessings,
and those to come, by the grace and love toward man, etc.
HOMILY XIV.
ROM. VIII. 12, 13.
"Therefore,
brethren, we are debtors, not to the flesh to live after the flesh. For if
ye live
after the
flesh, ye shall die; but if ye through
the Spirit do mortify the deeds of the body, ye shall live."
AFTER
showing how great the reward of a spiritual life is, and that it maketh Christ
to dwell in
us, and that
it quickeneth our mortal bodies, and wingeth
them to heaven, and rendereth the way of virtue easier, he next fitly introduces
an exhortation to this purpose. "Therefore" we ought "not to
live after the flesh." But this is not what he says, for he words it in
a much more striking and powerful way, thus, "we are debtors to the Spirit." For
saying, "we are debtors not to the flesh," indicates this. And this
is a point he is everywhere giving proof of, that what God hath done for us
is not matter of debt, but of mere grace. But after this, what we do is no
longer matter of free-will offering, but of debt. For when he saith, "Ye
are bought with a price, be not ye the servants of men" (1 Cor. vii. 23);
and when he writes, "Ye are not your own" (ib. vi. 19); and again
in another passage he calls these selfsame things to their mind, in these words, "If
(most Mss. ore. "if") One died for all, then all died(1) that they
should not henceforth live unto themselves." (2 Cor. v. 15.) And it is
to establish this that he says here also, "We are debtors;" then
since he said we are "not" debtors "to the flesh," lest
you should again take him to be speaking against the nature of the flesh, he
does not leave speaking, but proceeds, "to live after the flesh." For
there are many things which we do owe it, as giving it food, warmth, and rest,
medicine when out of health, clothing, and a thousand other attentions. To
prevent your supposing then that it is this ministration he is for abrogating
when he says, "We are not debtors to the flesh," he explains it by
saying, "to live after the flesh." For the care that i am for abrogating
is, he means, that which leadeth to sin, as I should be for its having what
is healing to it. And this he shows further on. For when he says, "Make
not provision for the flesh," he does not pause at this, but adds, "to
fulfil the lusts thereof." (Rom. xiii. 14.) And this instruction he gives
us here also, meaning, Let it have attention shown it indeed, for we do owe
it this, yet let us not live according to the flesh, that is, let us not make
it the mistress of our life. For it must be the follower, not the leader, and
it is not it that must regulate our life, but the laws of the Spirit must it
receive. Having then defined this point, and having proved that we are debtors
to the Spirit, to show next for what benefits it is that we are debtors, he
does not speak of those past (a thing which serves as a most striking proof
of his judgment), but those which were to come; although even the former were
enough for the purpose. Yet still he does not set them down in the present
case or mention even those unspeakable blessings, but the things to come. For
a benefit once for all conferred does not, for the most part, draw men on so
much as one which is expected, and is to come. After adding this then, he first
uses the pains and ills that come of living after the flesh, to put them in
fear, in the following words; "For if ye live after the flesh ye shall
die," so intimating to us that deathless death, punishment, and vengeance
in hell. Or rather if one were to look accurately into this, such an one is,
even in this present life, dead. And this we have made clear to you in the
last discourse. "But if ye through the Spirit, do mortify the deeds of
the body, ye shall live." You see that it is not the essence of the body
whereof we are discoursing, but the deeds of the flesh. For he does not say, "if
ye through the Spirit do mortify" the essence "of the body," but "the
deeds of" it, and these not all deeds, but such as are evil. And this
is plain in what follows: for if ye do this, "ye shall live," he
says. And how is it in the nature of things for this to be, if it was all deeds
that his language applied to? for seeing and hearing and speaking and walking
are deeds of the body; and if we mortify these, we shall be so far from, living,
that we shall have to suffer the punishment of a manslayer. What sort of deeds
then does he mean us to mortify? Those which tend toward wickedness, those
which go after vice, which there is no other way of mortifying save through
the Spirit. For by killing yourself you may put an end to the others.(2) And
this you have no right to do. But to these (you can put an end) by the Spirit
only. For if This be present, all the billows are laid low, and the passions
cower under It, and nothing can exalt itself against us.(3) So you see how
it is on things to come, as I said before, that he grounds his exhortations
to us, and shows that we are debtors not owing to what has been already done
only. For the advantage of the Spirit is not this only, that He hath set us
free from our former sins, but that He rendereth us impregnable against future
ones, and counts us worthy of the immortal life. Then, to state another reward
also, he proceeds:
Ver. 14. "For
as many as are led by the Spirit of God, they are the sons of God."
Now this
is again a much greater honor than the first. And this is why he does not
say merely, As
many as
live(4) by the Spirit of God, but, "as
many as are led by the Spirit of God," to show that he would have Him
use such power over our life as a pilot doth over a ship, or a charioteer over
a pair of horses. And it is not the body only, but the soul itself too, that
he is for setting under reins of this sort. For he would not have even that
independent, but place its authority(5) also under the power of the Spirit.
For lest through a confidence in the Gift of the Font they should turn negligent
of their conversation after it, he would say, that even supposing you receive
baptism, yet if you are not minded to be "led by the Spirit" afterwards,
you lose the dignity bestowed upon you, and the preeminence of your adoption.
This is why he does not say, As many as have received the Spirit, but, "as
many as are led by the Spirit," that is, as many as live up to this all
their life long, "they are the sons of God." Then since this dignity
was given to the Jews also, for it says, "I said ye are Gods, and all
of you children of the Most High" (Ps. lxxxii. 6); and again, "I
have nourished and brought up children" (Is. i. 2); and so, "Israel
is My first-born" (Ex. iv. 22); and Paul too says, "Whose is the
adoption" (Rom. ix. 4)--he next asserts the great difference between the
latter and the former honor. For though the names are the same, he means, still,
the things are not the same. And of these points he gives a clear demonstration,
by introducing a comparison drawn both from the persons so advanced <greek>katorqoiuntwn</greek> and
from what was given them, and from what was to come. And first he shows what
they of old had given them. What then was this? "A spirit of bondage:" and
so he thus proceeds,
Ver. 15. "For
ye have not received the spirit of bondage again to fear."
Then not
staying to mention that which stand's in contradistinction to bondage, that
is, the spirit of
freedom,
he has named what is far greater, that of adoption,
through which he at the same time brings in the other, saying, "But ye
have received the Spirit of adoption."
But this
is plain. But what the spirit of bondage may be, is not so plain, and there
is need of
making it
clearer. Now what he says is so far from being
clear, that it is in fact very perplexing. For the people of the Jews did not
receive the Spirit. What then is his meaning here? It is the letter he giveth
this name to, for spiritual it was, and so he called the Law spiritual also,
and the water from the Rock, and the Manna. "For they did eat," he
says, "of the same spiritual meat, and all drank of the same spiritual
drink." (1 Cor. x. 3, 4.) And to the Rock he gives this name, when he
says, "For they drank of that spiritual Rock which followed them." Now
it is because all the rites then wrought were above nature that he calls them
spiritual, and not. because those who then partook of them received the Spirit.
And in what sense were those letters, letters of bondage? Set before yourself
the whole dispensation, and then you will have a clear view of this also. For
recompenses were with them close at hand, and the reward followed forthwith,
being at once proportionate, and like a kind of daily ration given to domestic
servants, and terrors in abundance came to their height before their eyes,
and their purifications concerned their bodies, and their continency extended
but to their actions. But with us it is not so, since the imagination even
and the conscience getteth purged out. For He does not say, "Thou shalt
do no murder," only, but even thou shall not be angry: so too, it is not, "Thou
shall not commit adultery," but thou shall not look unchastely. So that
it is not to be from fear of present punishment, but out of desire towards
Himself, that both our being habitually virtuous, and all our single good deeds
are to come. Neither doth he promise a land flowing with milk and honey, but
maketh us joint-heir with the Only-Begotten, so making us by every means stand
aloof from things present, and promising to give such things especially as
are worth the acceptance of men made sons of God, nothing, that is, of a sensible
kind or corporeal, but spiritual all of them. And so they, even if they had
the name of sons, were but as slaves; but we as having been made free, have
received the adoption, and are waiting for Heaven. And with them He discoursed
through the intervention of others, with us by Himself. And all that they did
was through the impulse of fear, but the spiritual act through a coveting and
a vehement desire. And this they show by the fact of their(1) overstepping
the commandments. They, as hirelings and obstinate persons, so never left murmuring:
but these do all for the pleasing of the Father. So too they blasphemed when
they had benefits done them: but we are thankful at being jeoparded; And if
there be need of punishing both of us upon our sinning, even in this case the
difference is great. For it is not on being stoned and branded and maimed by
the priests, as they were, that we are brought round. But it is enough for
us to be cast out from our Father's table, and to be out of sight for certain
days. And with the Jews the honor of adoption was one of name only, but here
the reality followed also, the cleansing of Baptism, the giving of the Spirit,
the furnishing of the other blessings. And there are several other points besides,
which go to show our high birth and their low condition. After intimating all
these then by speaking of the Spirit, and fear, and the adoption, he gives
a fresh proof again of having he Spirit of adoption. Now what is this? That "we
cry, Abba, Father." And how great this is, the initiated know (St. Cyr.
Jer. Cat. 23, § 11, p. 276, O. T.), being with good reason bidden to use
this word first in the Prayer of the initiated. What then, it may be said,
did not they also call God Father? Dost thou not hear Moses, when he says, "Thou
desertedst the God that begot thee?" (Deut. xxxii. 15. LXX.) Dost thou
not hear Malachi reproaching them, and saying, that "one God formed you," and
there is "one Father of you all?" (Mal. ii. 10. LXX.) Still, if these
words and others besides are used, we do not find them anywhere calling God
by the name, or praying in this language. But we all, priests and laymen, rulers
and ruled, are ordered to pray herein. And this is the first language we give
utterance to, after those marvellous throes, and that strange and unusual mode
of labor. If in any other instances they so called Him, that was only of their
own mind. But those in the state of grace do it through being moved by the
in-working of the Spirit. For as there is a Spirit of Wisdom, after which they
that were unwise became wise, and this discloses itself in their teaching:
and a Spirit of Power there is, whereby the feeble raised up the dead, and
drove out devils; a Spirit also of the gift of healing, and a Spirit of prophecy,
and a Spirit of tongues, so also a Spirit of adoption. And as we know the Spirit
of prophecy, in that he who hath it foretelleth things to come, not speaking
of his own mind, but moved by the Grace; so too is the Spirit of adoption,
whereby he that is gifted with it calleth God, Father, as moved by the Spirit.
Wishing to express this as a most true descent, he used also the Hebrew(1)
tongue, for he does not say only, "Father," but "Abba, Father," which
name is a special sign of true-born children to their fathers. After mentioning
then the diversity resulting from their conversation, that resulting from the
grace which had been given, and that from their freedom, he brings forward
another demonstration of the superiority which goes with this adoption. Now
of what kind is this?
Ver. 16. "The
Spirit Itself beareth witness with our spirit, that we are the children of
God."
For it
is not from the language merely, he says, that I make my assertion, but from
the cause out
of which
the language has its birth; since it is from
the Spirit suggesting it that we so speak. And this in another passage he has
put into plainer words, thus: "God hath sent forth the Spirit of his Son
into our hearts, crying, Abba Father." (Gal. iv. 6.) And what is that, "Spirit
beareth witness with spirit?" The Comforter, he means, with that Gift,
which is given unto us. For it is not of the Gift alone that it is the voice,
but of the Comforter also who gave the Gift, He Himself having taught us through
the Gift so to speak. But when the "Spirit beareth witness"what farther
place for doubtfulness? For if it were a man, or angel, or archangel, or any
other such power that promised this, then there might be reason in some doubting.
But when it is the Highest Essence that bestoweth this Gift, and "beareth
witness" by the very words He bade us use in prayer, who would doubt any
more of our dignity? For not even when the Emperor elects any one, and proclaims
in all men's hearing the honor done him, does anybody venture to gainsay.
Ver. 17. "And if children, then heirs." Observe how he enhances
the Gift by little and little. For since it is a possible case to be children,
and yet not become heirs (for it is not by any means all children that are
heirs), he adds this besides--that we are heirs. But the Jews, besides their
not having the same adoption as we, were also cast out from the inheritance.
For "He will miserably destroy those wicked men, and will let out the
vineyard to other husbandmen" (Matt. xxi. 41): and before this, He said
that "many shall come from the East and from the West, and shall sit down
with Abraham, but the children of the Kingdom shall be cast out." (ib.
viii. 11, 12.) But even here he does not pause, but sets down something even
greater than this. What may this be then? That we are heirs of God; and so
he adds, "heirs of God." And what is more still, that we are not
simply heirs, but also "joints heirs with Christ." Observe how ambitious
he is of bringing us near to the Master. For since it is not all children that
are heirs, he shows that we are both children and heirs; next, as it is not
all heirs that are heirs to any great amount, he shows that we have this point
with us too, as we are heirs of God. Again, since it were possible to be God's
heir, but in no sense "joint heir with" the Only-Begotten, he shows
that we have this also. And consider his wisdom. For after throwing the distasteful
part into a short compass, when he was saying what was to become. of such as "live
after the flesh," for instance, that they "shall die," when
he comes to the more soothing part, he leadeth forth his discourse into a large
room, and so expands it on the recompense of rewards, and in pointing out that
the gifts too are manifold and great. For if even the being a child were a
grace unspeakable, just think how great a thing it is to be heir! But if this
be great, much more is it to be "joint heir." Then to show that the
Gift is not of grace only, and to give at the same time a credibility to what
he says, he proceed. "If so be that we suffer with Him, that we may be
also glorified together." If, he would say, we be sharers with Him in
what is painful, much more shall it be so in what is good. For He who bestowed
such blessings upon those who had wrought no good, how, when He seeth them
laboring and suffering so much, shall he do else than give them greater requital?
Having then shown that the thing was a matter of return, to make men give credit
to what was said, and prevent any from doubting, he shows further that it has
the virtue of a gift. The one he showed that what was said might gain credit
even with those that doubted, and that the receivers of it might not feel ashamed
as being evermore receiving salvation for nought; and the other, that you might
see that God outdoeth the toils by His recompenses. And the one he has shown
in the words, "If so be that we suffer with Him, that we may be also glorified
together." But the other in proceeding to add;
Ver. 18. "The sufferings of the present time are not worthy to be compared
with the glory which shall be revealed in (Gr. <greek>eis</greek>)
us."
In what
went before, he requires of the spiritual man the correcting of his habits
(Mar. and 6 Mss.
passions),
where he says, "Ye are not debtors
to live after the flesh," that such an one, for instance, should be above
lust, anger, money, vainglory, grudging. But here having reminded them of the
whole gift, both as given and as to come, and raised him up aloft with hopes,
and placed him near to Christ, and showed him to be a joint-heir of the Only-Begotten;
he now leads him forth with confidence even to dangers. For to get the better
of the evil affections in us, is not the same thing with bearing up under those
trials, scourges, famine, plunderings, bonds, chains, executions. For these
last required much more of a noble and vigorous sprat. And observe how he at
once allays and rouses the spirit of the combatants. For after he had shown
that the rewards were greater than the labors, he both exhorts to greater efforts,
and yet will not let them be elated, as being still outdone by the crowns given
in requital. And in another passage he says, "For our light affliction,
which is but for a moment, worketh a far more exceeding and eternal weight
of glory" (2 Cor. iv. 17): it being the deeper sort of persons he was
then speaking to. Here, however, he does not allow that the afflictions were
light; but still he mingles comfort with them by the compensation which good
things to come afford, in the words, "For I reckon that the sufferings
of this present time are not worthy to be compared," and he does not say,
with the rest <greek>anesin</greek> that is to come, but what is
much greater, "with the glory which is to come." For it does not
follow, that where rest is there is glory; but that where glory is there is
rest, does follow: then as he had said that it is to come, he shows that it
already is. For he does not say, that which is to be, but "which shall
be revealed in us," as if already existing but unrevealed. As also in
another place he said in clearer words, "Our life is hid with Christ in
God."(1) Be then of a good heart about it. For already hath it been prepared,
and awaiteth thy labors. But if it vexes you that it is yet to come, rather
let this very thing rejoice you. For it is owing to its being great and unutterable,
and transcending our present condition, that it is stored up there. And so
he has not put barely "the sufferings of this present time," but
he speaks so as to show that it is not in quality only, but in quantity also,
that the other life has the advantage. For these sufferings, whatever they
are, are attached to our present life; but the blessings to come reach themselves
out over ages without end. And since he had no way of giving a particular description
of these, or of putting them before us in language, he gives them a name from
what seems to be specially an object of desire with us, "glory." For
the summit of blessings and the sum of them, this seems to be. And to urge
the hearer on in another way also, he gives a loftiness to his discourse by
the mention of the creation, gaining two points by what he is next saying,
the contempt of things present, and the desire of things to come, and a third
beside these, or rather the first, is the showing how the human race is cared
for on God's part and in what honor He holds our nature. And besides this,
all the doctrines of the philosophers, which they had framed for themselves
about this world, as a sort of cobweb or child's mound,(2) he throws down with
this one doctrine. But that these things may stand in a clearer light, let
us hear the Apostle's own language.
Ver. 19,
20. "For the earnest expectation of the creation waiteth," he
says, "for the revelation of the sons of God. For the creation was made
subject to vanity, not willingly, but by reason of him who hath subjected the
same in hope."
And the
meaning is something of this kind. The creation itself is in the midst of
its pangs, waiting for
and expecting these good things whereof we have just
now spoken. For "earnest expectation" <greek>apokaradokia</greek>,
looking out) implies expecting intensely. And so his discourse becomes more
emphatic, and he personifies this whole world as the prophets also do, when
they introduce the floods clapping their hands, and little hills leaping, and
mountains skipping, not that we are to fancy them alive, or ascribe any reasoning
power to them, but that we may learn The greatness of the blessings, so great
as to reach even to things without sense also.(*) The very same thing they
do many times also in the case of afflicting things, since they bring in the
vine lamenting, and the wine too, and the mountains, and the boardings(1) of
the Temple howling, and in this case too it is that we may understand the extremity
of the evils. It is then in imitation of these that the Apostle makes a living
person of the creature here, and says that it groaneth and travaileth: not
that he heard any groan conveyed from the earth and heaven to him, but that
he might show the exceeding greatness of the good things to come; and the desire
of freedom from the ills which now pervaded them. "For the creature was
made subject to vanity, not willingly, but by reason of him who hath subjected
the same." What is the meaning of, "the creation was made subject
to vanity?" Why that it became corruptible. For what cause, and on what
account? On account of thee, O man. For since thou hast taken a body mortal
and liable to suffering, the earth too hath received a curse, and brought forth
thorns and thistles. But that the heaven, when it is waxen old along with the
earth, is to change afterwards to a better portion <greek>lhxin</greek> v.
p. 384) hear from the Prophet in his words; "Thou, O Lord, from the beginning
hast founded the earth, and the heavens are the work of Thy hands. They shall
perish, but thou shalt endure; and they all shall wax old as doth a garment,
and as a cloak shall Thou fold them up, and they shall be changed." (Ps.
cii. 25, 26.) Isaiah too declares the same, when he says, "Look to the
heaven above, and upon the earth beneath, for the heavens are as a firmament
of smoke,(2) and the earth shall wax old like a garment, and they that dwell
therein shall perish in like manner. (Is. li. 6.). Now you see in what sense
the creation is "in bondage to vanity" and how it is to be freed
from the ruined state. For the one says, "Thou shalt fold them up as a
garment, and they shall be changed;" and Isaiah says, "and they that
dwell therein shall perish in like manner," not of course meaning an utter
perishing. For neither do they that dwell therein, mankind, that is, undergo
such an one, but a temporary one, and through it they are changed into an incorruptible
(1 Cor. xv. 53) state, and so therefore will the creature be. And all this
he showed by the way, by his saying "in like manner" (2 Pet. iii.
13), which Paul also says farther on. At present, however, he speaks about
the bondage itself, and shows for what reason it became such, and gives ourselves
as the cause of it. What then? Was it harshly treated on another's account?
By no means, for it was on my account that it was made. What wrong then is
done it, which was made for my sake, when it suffereth these things for my
correction? Or, indeed, one has no need to moot the question of right and wrong
at all in the case of things void of soul and feeling. But Paul, since he had
made it a living person, makes use of none of these topics I have mentioned,
but another kind of language, as desiring to comfort the hearer with the utmost
advantage. And of what kind is this? What have you to say? he means. It was
evil intreated for thy sake, and became corruptible; yet it has had no wrong
done it. For incorruptible will it he for thy sake again. This then is the
meaning of "in hope." But when he says, it was "not willingly" that
it was made subject, it is not to show that it is possessed of judgment that
he says so, but that you may learn that the whole is brought about by Christ's
care. and this is no achievement of its own. And now say in what hope?
Ver. 21. "That
the creature itself also shall be delivered from the bondage of corruption."
Now what
is this creation? Not thyself alone, but that also which is thy inferior,
and partaketh not
of
reason or sense, this too shall be a sharer in thy blessings.
For "it shall be freed," he says, "from the bondage of corruption," that
is, it shall no longer be corruptible, but shall go along with the beauty given
to thy body; just as when this became corruptible, that became corruptible
also; so now it is made incorruptible, that also shall follow it too. And to
show this he proceeds. <greek>eis</greek> "Into the glorious
liberty of the children of God." That is, because of[1] their liberty.
For as a nurse who is bringing up a king's child, when he has come to his father's
power, does herself enjoy the good things along with him, thus also is the
creation, he means. You see how in all respects man takes the lead, and that
it is for his sake that all things are made. See how he solaces the struggler,
and shows the unspeakable love of God toward man. For why, lie would say, dost
thou fret at thy temptations? thou art suffering for thyself, the creation
for thee. Nor does he solace only, but also shows what he says to be trustworthy.
For if the creation which was made entirely for thee is "in hope," much
more oughtest thou to be, through whom the creation is to come to the enjoyment
of those good things. Thus men (3 Mss. fathers) also when a son is to appear
at his coining to a dignity, clothe even the servants with a brighter garment,
to the glory of the son; so will God also clothe the Creature with incorruption
for the glorious liberty of the children.
Ver. 22. "For
we know that the whole creation groaneth and travaileth in pain together
until
now."
Observe, how he shames the hearer, saying almost, Be not thou worse than the
creation, neither find a pleasure in resting in things present. Not only ought
we not to cling to them, but even to groan over the delay of our departure
hence. For if the creation doth this, much more oughtest thou to do so, honored
with reason as thou art. But as this was not yet enough to force their attention,
he proceeds.
Ver. 23. "And
not only they, but ourselves also, which have the first-fruits of the Spirit,
even we ourselves
groan within ourselves."
That is,
having had a taste of the things to come. For even if any should be quite
stone hard,
he means
what has been given already is enough to raise
him up, and draw him off from things present, and to wing him after things
to come in two ways, both by, the greatness of the things that are given, and
by the fact that, great and numerous as they are, they are but first-fruits.
For if the first-fruits be so great that we are thereby freed even from our
sins, and attain to righteousness and sanctification, and that those of that
time both drave out devils, and raised the dead by their shadow (Acts v. 15),
or garments (ib. xix. 12), consider how great the whole must be. And if the
creation, devoid as it is of mind and reason, and though in ignorance of these
things, yet groaneth, much more should we. Next, that he may give the heretics
no handle, or seem to be disparaging our present world, we groan, he says,
not as finding fault with the present system, but through a desire of those
greater things. And this he shows in the words, "Waiting for the adoption." What
dost thou say, let me hear? Thou didst insist on it at every turn, and didst
cry aloud, that we were already made sons, and now dost thou place this good
thing among hopes, writing that we must needs wait for it? Now it is to set
this right by the sequel that he says, "to wit, the redemption[2] of our
body." That is, the perfect glory. Our lot indeed is at present uncertainty
to our last breath, since many of us that were sons have become dogs and prisoners.
But if we decease with a good hope, then is the gift unmovable, and clearer,
and greater, having no longer any change to fear from death and sin. Then therefore
will the grace be secure, when our body shall be freed from death and its countless
ailments (or passions). For this is full redemption <greek>apolutrwsis</greek>,
not a redemption[3] only, but such, that we shall never again return to our
former captivity. For that thou mayest not be perplexed at hearing so much
of glory without getting any distinct knowledge of it, he partially exposes
to thy view the things to come, setting before thee the change of thy body
(Gr. changing thy body), and along with it the change of the whole creation.
And this he has put in a clearer light in another passage, where he says, "Who
shall change our vile body, that it may be fashioned like unto His glorious
Body." (Phil. iii. 21.) And in another place again he writes and says, "But
when this mortal shall have put on immortality, then shall be brought to pass
the saying that is written, Death is swallowed up in victory." (1 Cor.
xv. 54.) But to show, that with the corruption of the body the constitution
of the things of this life will also come to an end, he wrote again elsewhere, "For
the fashion of this world passeth away." (1 Cor. vii. 31.)
Ver. 24. "For we are saved by hope," he
says.
Now since
he had dwelt upon the promise of the things to come, and this seemed to pain
the weaker
hearer,
if the blessings are all matter of hope; after proving
before that they are surer than things present and visible, and discoursing
at large on the gifts already given, and showing that we have received the
first fruits of those good things, lest we should seek our all in this world,
and be traitors to the nobility that faith gives us, he says, "For we
are (Gr. were) saved by hope." And this is about what he means. We are
not to seek our all in this life, but to have hope also. For this is the only
gift that we brought in to God, believing Him in what He promised shall come,
and it was by this way alone we were saved. If then we lose this hope, we have
lost all that was of our own contributing. For I put you this question, he
would say, Wert thou not liable for countless sins? wert thou not in despair?
wert thou not under sentence? were not all out of heart about thy salvation?
What then saved thee? It was thy hoping[1] in God alone, and trusting to Him
about His promises and gifts, and nothing besides hadst thou to bring in. If
it was this then that saved thee, hold it fast now also. For that which afforded
thee so great blessings, to a certainty will not deceive thee in regard to
things to come. For in that it found thee dead, and ruined, and a prisoner,
and an enemy, and yet made thee a friend, and a son, and a freeman, and righteous,
and a joint-heir, and yielded such great things as no one ever expected even,
how, after such munificence and attachment, will it betray 2 thee in what is
to follow? Say not to me, hopes again! expectations again! faith again! For
it is in this way thou wert saved from the beginning, and this dowry was the
only one that thou didst bring in to the Bridegroom. Hold it then fast and
keep it: for if thou demandest to have everything in this world, thou hast
lost that well-doing of thine, through which thou didst become bright, and
this is why he proceeds to say, "But hope that is seen is not hope; for
what a man seeth, why doth he yet hope for?"
Ver. 25.--"But
if we hope for that we see not, then do we with patience wait for it."
That is,
if thou art to be looking for everything in this world, what need is there
for hope? What
is hope then?
It is feeling confidence in things to
come. What great demand then doth God make upon thee, since He Himself giveth
thee blessings quite entire from His own stores? One thing only, hope, He asks
of thee, that thou too mayest have somewhat of thine own to contribute toward
thy salvation. And this he intimates in what he proceeds with: "For if
we hope for that we see not, then do we with patience wait for it." As
then God crowneth him that undergoes labors, and hardnesses, and countless
toils, so doth He him that hopeth. For the name of patience belongs to hard
work and much endurance. Yet even this He hath granted to the man that hopeth,
that He might solace the wearied soul. And then to show that for this light
task we enjoy abundant aid, he proceeds:
Ver. 26. "Likewise the Spirit also helpeth our infirmities."[*]
For the one point is thy own, that of patience, but the other comes of the
Spirit's furnishings, Who also cherisheth (Gr. anointeth) thee unto this hope,
and through it again lighteneth thy labors. Then that thou mightest know that
it is not in thy labors only and dangers that this grace standeth by thee,
but even in things the most easy seemingly,[3] it worketh with thee, and on
all occasions bears its part in the alliance, he proceeds to say,
"For
we know not what we should pray for as we ought."
And this
he said to show the Spirit's great concern about us, and also to instruct
them not to think
for certainty
that those things are desirable which
to man's reasonings appear so. For since it was likely that they, when they
were scourged, and driven out, and suffering grievances without number, should
be seeking a respite, and ask this favor of God, and think it was advantageous
to them, by no means (he says) suppose that what seem blessings to you really
are so. For we need the Spirit's aid even to do this. So feeble is man, and
such a nothing by himself. For this is why he says, "For we know not what
we should pray for as we ought." In order that the learner might not feel
any shame at his ignorance, he does not say, ye know not, but, "we know
not." And that he did not say this merely to seem moderate, he plainly
shows from other passages. For he desired in his prayers unceasingly to see
Rome. Yet the time when he obtained it was not at once when he desired it.
And "the thorn" that was given him "in the flesh" (2 Cor.
xii. 8), that is the dangers, he often besought God, and was entirely unsuccessful.[1]
And so was Moses, who in the Old Testament prays to see Palestine (Deut. iii.
26), and Jeremiah when he made supplication for the Jews (Jer. xv. 1), and
Abraham when he interceded for the people of Sodom. "But the Spirit Itself
maketh intercession for us with groanings which cannot be uttered." This
statement is not clear, owing to the cessation of many of the wonders which
then used to take place. Wherefore I must needs inform you of the state of
things at that time, and in this way the rest of the subject will be cleared.
What therefore was the state of things then? God did in those days give to
all that were baptized certain excellent gifts, and the name that these had
was spirits. For "the spirits of the Prophets," it says, "are
subject to the prophets." (1 Cor. xiv. 32.) And one had the gift of prophecy
and foretold things to come; and another of wisdom, and taught the many; and
another of healings, and cured the sick; and another of miracles, and raised
the dead; another of tongues, and spoke different languages. And with all these
there was also a gift of prayer, which also was called a spirit, and he that
had this prayed for oil the people. For since we are ignorant of much that
is profitable for us and ask things that are not profitable, the gift of prayer
came into some particular person of that day, and what was profitable for all
the whole Church alike, he was the appointed person to ask for in behalf of
all, and the instructor of the rest. Spirit then is the name that he gives
here to the grace of this character, and the soul that receiveth the grace,
and intercedeth to God, and groaneth. For he that was counted worthy of such
grace as this, standing with much compunction, and with many mental groanings
falling before God, asked the things that were profitable for all. And of this
the Deacon of the present day is a symbol when he offers up the prayers for
the people. This then is what Paul means when he says,[2] "the Spirit
itself maketh intercession for us with groanings that cannot be uttered."
Ver. 27. "But
He that searcheth the hearts."
You see
that it is not about the Comforter that he is speaking, but about the spiritual
heart. Since
if this
were not so, he ought to have said, "He
that searcheth" the Spirit. But that thou mayest learn that the language
is meant of a spiritual man, who has the gift of prayer, he proceeds, "And
he that searcheth the hearts knoweth what is the mind of the Spirit," that
is, of the spiritual man.
"Because
he maketh intercession for the saints according to the will of God."
Not (he
means) that he informs God as if ignorant, but this is done that we may learn
to pray for
proper
things, and to ask of God what is pleasing to
Him. For this is what the "according to God" is. And so this was
with a view to solace those that came to Him, and to yield them excellent instruction.
For He that furnished the gifts, anti gave besides blessings without number,
was the Comforter. Hence it says, "all these things worketh one and the
self-same Spirit." (1 Cor. xii. 11.) And it is for our instruction that
this takes place, and to show the love of the Spirit, it condescendeth even
to this. And it is from this that the person praying getteth heard, because
the prayer is made "according to the will of God."
You see
from how many points he instructs them in the love that was shown them and
the honor that
was done
them. And what is there that God hath not
done for us? The world He hath made corruptible for us, and again for us incorruptible.
He suffered His Prophets to be ill-treated for our sake, sent them into captivity
for us, let them fall into the furnace, and undergo ills without number. Nay,
He made them prophets for us, and the Apostles also He made for us. He gave
up for us His Only-Begotten, He punisheth the devil for us, He