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HOMILIES OF
ST. JOHN CHRYSOSTOM
ON THE SECOND EPISTLE OF
ST. PAUL THE APOSTLE
TO TIMOTHY
HOMILIES I TO V (CHAPTERS 1 & 2)
HOMILY I
2 TIMOTHY i. 1, 2.
"Paul,
an apostle of Jesus Christ by the will of God, according to the promise of
life which
is in Jesus
Christ, to Timothy, my dearly beloved son:
Grace, mercy, and peace, from God the Father and Christ Jesus our Lord."
WHAT is
the reason of his writing this second Epistle to Timothy? He had said, "I
hope to come unto thee shortly" (1 Tim. iii. 14), and as this had not
taken place, instead of coming to him, he consoles him by a letter, when he
was grieving perhaps for his absence, and oppressed by the cares of the government,
which he had now taken in hand. For even great men, when they are placed at
the helm, and are charged with the direction of the Church, feel the strangeness
of their position, and are overwhelmed, as it were, by the waves of business.
This was particularly the case when the Gospel was first preached, when the
ground was everywhere unturned, and all was opposition and hostility. There
were, besides, heresies commencing from the Jewish teachers, as he has shown
in his former Epistle. Nor does he only comfort him by letters, he invites
him to come to him: "Do thy diligence," he says, "to come shortly
unto me," and, "when thou comest, bring with thee the books, but
especially the parchments." (2 Tim. iv. 9 and 13.) And he seems to have
written this Epistle when his end was approaching. For he says, "I am
now ready to be offered up"; and again, "At my first answer no man
stood with me." (2 Tim. iv. 6 and 16.) To set all this right, he both
offers consolation from his own trials, and also says,
"Paul,
an apostle of Jesus Christ by the will of God, according to the promise of
life which
is in Christ
Jesus."
Thus at
the very commencement he raises up his mind. Tell me not, he says, of the
dangers here. These obtain
for us eternal life, where there is no peril,
where grief and mourning flee away. For He hath not made us Apostles only that
we might encounter dangers, but that we might even suffer and die.(1) And as
it would not be a consolation to recount to him his own troubles, but rather
an increase of his grief, he begins immediately with offering comfort, saying, "According
to the promise of life which is in Jesus Christ." But if it is a "promise," seek
it not here. For, "hope that is seen is not hope." (Rom. viii. 24.)
Ver. 2. "To
Timothy, my dearly beloved son."
Not merely
his "son," but, "dearly beloved"; since it
is possible for sons not to be beloved. Not such, he means, art thou; I call
thee not merely a son, but a "dearly beloved son." As he calls the
Galatians his children, but at the same time complains of them; "My little
children," he says, "of whom I travail in birth again." (Gal.
iv. 19.) And he bears particular testimony to his virtue by calling him "beloved." For
where love does not arise from nature, it must arise from the merit of the
object. Those who are born of us, are loved not only on account of their virtue,
but from the force of nature; but when those who are of the faith are beloved,
it is on account of nothing but their merit, for what else can it be? And this
especially in the case of Paul, who never acted from partiality. And further,
he shows by calling him his "beloved son," that it was not because
he was offended with him, or despised him, or condemned him; that he did not
come to him.
Ver. 2. "Grace,
mercy, and peace, from God the Father, and Christ Jesus our Lord."
These
things which he before prayed for, he again invokes upon him. And observe
how, at the very
beginning, he
excuses himself for not having come to him,
nor seen him. For his words, "Till I come," and, "Hoping to
come to thee shortly," had led Timothy to expect his coming soon. For
this he excuses himself, but he does not immediately mention the cause of his
not coming, lest he should grieve him mightily. For he was detained in prison
by the emperor. But when at the end of the Epistle he invited him to come to
him, then he informed him of it. He does not at the outset plunge him into
sorrow, but encourages the hope that he shall see him. "Greatly desiring
to see thee," and "Do thy diligence to come unto me shortly." (2
Tim. i. 4, and iv. 9.) Immediately therefore he raises him up, and proceeds
to praise him.
Ver. 3,
4. "I thank
God, whom I serve from my forefathers with pure conscience, that without
ceasing I
have remembrance of thee in my prayers night and day;
greatly desiring to see thee, being mindful of thy tears, that I might be filled
with joy."
"'I thank God,' he says, 'that I remember thee,' so much do I love thee." This
is a mark of excessive love, when a man glories in his affection from loving
so much. "I thank God," he says, "Whom I serve": and how? "With
a pure conscience," for he had not violated his conscience. And here he
speaks of his blameless life, for he everywhere calls his life his conscience.
Or because I never gave up any good that I purposed, for any human cause, not
even when I was a persecutor. Wherefore he says, "I obtained mercy, because
I did it ignorantly in unbelief" (1 Tim. i. 13); all but saying, "Do
not suspect that it was done of wickedness." He properly commends his
own disposition, that his love may appear sincere. For what he says is in fact, "I
am not false, I do not think one thing and profess another." So in the
book of Acts we read he was compelled to praise himself. For when they slandered
him as a seditious man and an innovator, he said in his own defense, "Ananias
said to me, The God of our fathers hath chosen thee that thou shouldest know
His will, and see that Just One, and shouldest hear the voice of His mouth.
For thou shalt be His witness unto all men of what thou hast seen and heard." (Acts
xxii. 14, 15.) In the same manner here, that he may not, as if he bad been
forgetful, have the character of one void of friendship and conscience, he
justly praises himself, saying, that "without ceasing I have remembrance
of thee," and not simply that, but "in my prayers." That is,
it is the business of my prayers, that which I constantly continue to perform.
For this he shows by saying, "For this I besought God day and night, desiring
to see thee." Mark his fervent desire, the intensity(1) of his love. And
again, his humility, how he apologizes to his disciples, and then he shows
that it was not on light or vain grounds; and this he had shown us before,
but again gives proof of it. "Being mindful of thy tears." It was
natural for Timothy, when parting from him,(2) to mourn and weep, more than
a child torn away from the milk and from the breast of its mother. "That
I may be filled with joy; greatly desiring to see thee." I would not willingly
have deprived myself of so great a pleasure, though I had been of an unfeeling
and brutal nature, for those tears coming to my remembrance would have been
enough to soften me. But such is not my character. I am one of those who serve
God purely; so that many strong motives urged me to come to thee. So then he
wept. And he mentions another cause, and that of a consolatory kind.
Ver. 5. "When
I call to remembrance the unfeigned faith that is in thee."
This is another commendation, that Timothy came not of Gentiles, nor of unbelievers,
but of a family that served Christ from the first. (Acts xvi. 1, 3.)
"Which
dwelt first in thy grandmother Lois, and thy mother Eunice."
For Timothy,
it says, "was the son of a certain woman which was a Jewess,
and believed." How a Jewess? how believing? Because she was not of the
Gentiles, "but on account of his father, who was a Greek, and of the Jews
that were in those quarters, he took and circumcised him." Thus, as these
mixtures of Jews and Gentiles took place, the Law began gradually to be dissolved.
And mark in how many ways he shows that he did not despise him. "I serve
God," he says, "I have a true conscience" for my part, and thou
hast thy "tears," and not thy tears only, but for "thy faith," because
thou art a laborer for the Truth, because there is no deceit in thee. As therefore
thou showest thyself worthy of love, being so affectionate, so genuine a disciple
of Christ; and as I am not one of those who are devoid of affection, but of
those who earnestly pursue the Truth; what hindered me from coming to thee?
"And
I am persuaded that in thee also."
From the
beginning, he means, thou hast had this excellency. Thou receivedst from
thy forefathers
the faith
unfeigned. For the praises of our ancestors,
when we share in them, redound also to us. Otherwise they avail nothing, but
rather condemn us; wherefore he has said, "I am persuaded that in thee
also." It is not a conjecture, he means, it is my persuasion; I am fully
assured of it. If therefore from no human motive thou hast embraced it, nothing
will be able to shake thy faith.
Ver. 6. "Wherefore
I put thee in remembrance that thou stir up the gift of God, which is in
thee by the
putting on of my hands."
You see
how greatly dispirited and dejected he considers him to be. He almost says, "Think not that I despise thee, but be assured that I do not condemn
thee, nor have I forgotten thee. Consider, at any rate, thy mother and thy
grandmother. It is because I know that thou hast unfeigned faith that I put
thee in remembrance." For it requires much zeal to stir up the gift of
God. As fire requires fuel, so grace requires our alacrity, that it may be
ever fervent. "I put thee in remembrance that thou stir up the gift of
God, that is in thee by the putting on of my hands," that is, the grace
of the Spirit, which thou hast received, for presiding over the Church, for
the working of miracles, and for every service. For this grace it is in our
power to kindle or to extinguish; wherefore he elsewhere says," Quench
not the Spirit." (1 Thess. v. 19.) For by sloth and carelessness it is
quenched, and by watchfulness and diligence it is kept alive. For it is in
thee indeed, but do thou render it more vehement, that is, fill it with confidence,
with joy and delight. Stand manfully.
Ver. 7. "For
God bath not given us the spirit of fear, but of power, and of love, and
of a
sound mind."
That is,
we did not receive the Spirit, that we should shrink from exertion, but that
we may. speak with
boldness. For to many He gives a spirit of fear,
as we read in the wars of the Kings. "A spirit of fear fell upon them." (Ex.
xv. 16?) That is, he infused terror into them. But to thee He has given, on
the contrary, a spirit of power, and of love toward Himself. This, then, is
of grace, and yet not merely of grace, but when we have first performed our
own parts. For the Spirit that maketh us cry, "Abba, Father," inspires
us with love both towards Him, and towards our neighbor, that we may love one
another. For love arises from power, and from not fearing. For nothing is so
apt to dissolve love as fear, and a suspicion of treachery.
"For God hath not given us the spirit of fear, but of power, and of love,
and of a sound mind":(1) he calls a healthy state of the soul a sound
mind, or it may mean sobriety of mind, or else a sobering of the mind, that
we may be sober-minded, and that if any evil befall us, it may sober us, and
cut off superfluities.
MORAL.
Let us then not be distressed at the evils that happen to us. This is sobriety
of mind. "In the season of temptation," he says, "make
not haste." (Ecclus. ii. 2.) Many have their several griefs at home, and
we share in each other's sorrows, though not in their sources. For one is unhappy
on account of his wife, another on account of his child, or his domestic, another
of his friend, another of his enemy, another of his neighbor, another from
some loss. And various are the causes of sorrow, so that we can find no one
free from trouble and unhappiness of some kind or other, but some have greater
sorrows and some less. Let us not therefore be impatient, nor think ourselves
only to be unhappy.
For there
is no such thing in this mortal life as being exempt from sorrow. If not
to-day, yet to-morrow;
if
not to-morrow, yet some later day trouble
comes. For as one cannot sail, I mean, over a long sea, and not feel disquietude,
so it is not possible to pass through this life, without experience of sorrow,
yea though you name a rich man; for in that he is rich, he hath many occasions
of inordinate desires,(2) yea, though the king himself, since he too is ruled
by many, and cannot do all that he would. Many favors he grants contrary to
his wishes, and more than all men is obliged to do what he would not. How so?
Because he has many about him who wish to receive his gifts. And just think
how(3) great is his chagrin, when he is desirous to effect something, but is
unable, either from fear or suspicion, or hindered by enemies or by friends.
Often when he has succeeded in achieving some end, he loses all the pleasure
of it, from many becoming at enmity with him. Again, do you think that they
are free from grief, who live a life of ease? It is impossible. As a man cannot
escape death, so neither can he escape sorrow. How many troubles must they
endure, which we cannot express in words, and which they only can know by experience!
How many have prayed a thousand times to die, in the midst of their wealth
and luxury! For luxury by no means puts men out of the reach of grief: it is
rather the very thing to produce sorrows, diseases, and uneasiness, often when
there is no real ground for it. For when such is the habit of the soul, it
is apt to grieve even without a cause. Physicians say that from a weak state
of the stomach arise sorrows(1) without any occasion; and does not the like
happen to ourselves, to feel uneasy, without knowing any cause for it? In short,
we can find no one who is exempted from sorrow. And if he has less occasion
for grief than ourselves, yet he thinks otherwise, for he feels his own sorrows,
more than those of other men. As they who suffer pain in any part of their
bodies, think that their sufferings exceed their neighbor's. He that has a
disease of the eye, thinks there is nothing so painful, and he that has a disorder
in the stomach, considers that the sorest of diseases, and each thinks that
the heaviest of sufferings, with which he is himself afflicted. So it is with
sorrow, each thinks his own present grief the most severe. For of this he judges
by his own experience. He that is childless considers nothing so sad as to
be without children; he that is poor, and has many children, complains of the
extreme evils of a large family. He who has hut one, looks upon this as the
greatest misery, because that one, being set too much store by, and never corrected,
becomes willful, and brings grief upon his father. He who has a beautiful wife,
thinks nothing so bad as having a beautiful wife, because it is the occasion
of jealousy and intrigue. He who has an ugly one, thinks nothing worse than
having a plain wife, because it is constantly disagreeable. The private man
thinks nothing more mean, more useless, than his mode of life. The soldier
declares that nothing is more toilsome, more perilous, than warfare; that it
would he better to live on bread and water than endure such hardships. He that
is in power thinks there can be no greater burden than to attend to the necessities
of others. He that is subject to that power, thinks nothing more servile than
living at the beck of others. The married man considers nothing worse than
a wife, and the cares of marriage. The unmarried declares there is nothing
so wretched as being unmarried, and wanting the repose of a home. The merchant
thinks the husbandman happy in his security. The husbandman thinks the merchant
so in his wealth. In short, all mankind are somehow hard to please, and discontented
and impatient. When condemning the whole race, he saith, "Man is a thing
of nought" (Ps. cxliv. 4), implying that the whole kind is a wretched
unhappy creature. How many long for old age! How many think youth a happy time!
Thus each different period has its unhappiness. When we find ourselves censured
on account of our youth, we say, why are we not old? and when our heads are
hoary, we ask whither has our youth flown? Numberless, in short, are the occasions
of sorrow. There is one path only by which this unevenness can be escaped.
It is the path of virtue. Yet that too has its sorrows, only they are sorrows
not unprofitable, but productive of gain and advantage. For if any one has
sinned, he washes away his sin by the compunction that comes of his sorrow.
Or, if he has grieved in sympathizing with a fallen brother, this is not without
its recompense. For sympathy with those that are in misery gives us great confidence
towards God.
Hear therefore
what philosophy is taught by the example of Job in holy Scripture! Hear also
what Paul saith: "Weep with them that weep"; and again, "Condescend
to men of low estate." (Rom. xii. 15, 16.) For, by the communication of
sorrow, the extreme burden of it is lightened. For as in the case of a heavy
load, he that hears part of the weight relieves him who was bearing it alone,
so it is in all other things.
But now,
when any one of our relatives dies, there are many who sit by and console
us. Nay, we
often raise up even
an ass that has fallen; hut when the
souls of our brethren are falling. we overlook them and pass by, as if they
were of less value than an ass. And if we see any one entering into a tavern
indecently; nay, if we see him drunk, or guilty of any other unseemly action,
we do not restrain him, we rather join him in it. Whence Paul has said: "They
not only do these things, but have pleasure in them that do them." (Rom.
i. 32.) The greater part even form associations(2) for the purposes of drunkenness.
But do thou, O man, form associations to restrain the madness of inebriety.
Such friendly doings are beneficial to those who are in bonds or in affliction.
Something of this kind Paul enjoined to the Corinthians, alluding to which
he says, "That there be no gatherings when I come." (1 Cor. xvi.
2.) But now everything is done with a view to luxury, reveling, and pleasure.
We have a common seat, a common table, we have wine in common, and common expenses,
but we have no community of alms. Such were the friendly doings in the time
of the Apostles; they brought all their goods into the common stock. Now I
do not require you to bestow all, but some part. "Let each lay by him
in store on the first day of the week, as God has prospered him," and
lay it down as a tribute for the seven days. In this way give aims, whether
more or less. "For thou shalt not appear before the Lord empty." (Ex.
xxiii. 15.) This was said to the Jews, how much more then to us. For this cause
the poor stand before the doors, that no one may enter empty, but each may
do alms at his entrance. Thou enterest to implore mercy. First show mercy.
He that comes later owes the more. For when we have been first, he that is
second pays down more.(1) Make God thy debtor, and then offer thy prayers.
Lend to Him, and then ask a return, and thou shalt receive it with usury. God
wills this, and does not retract. If thou ask with alms, He holds himself obliged.
If thou ask with alms, thou lendest and receivest interest. Yes, I beseech
you! It is net for stretching out thy hands thou shalt be heard stretch forth
thy hands, not to heaven, but to the poor. If thou stretch forth thy hand to
the hands of the poor, thou hast reached the very summit of heaven. For He
who sits there receives thine alms. But if thou liftest them up without a gift,
thou gainest nothing. If the king, arrayed in purple, should come to thee and
ask an alms, wouldest thou not readily give all that thou hast? But now when
thou art entreated through the poor, not by an earthly but a heavenly King,
dost thou stand regardless, and defer thy gift? What punishment then dost thou
not deserve? For the being heard depends not upon the lifting up of thy hands,
nor on the multitude of thy words, but upon thy works. For hear the prophet, "When
ye" spread "forth your hands, I will hide mine eyes from you: yea,
when ye make many prayers, I will not hear." (Isa. i. 15.) For he ought
to be silent, who needs mercy, and not even to look up to heaven; he that hath
confidence may say(3) much. But what says the Scripture, "Judge for the
fatherless, plead for the widow, learn to do good." (Isa. i. 17.) In this
way we shall be heard, though we lift not up our hands, nor utter a word, nor
make request. In these things then let us be zealous, that we may obtain the
promised blessings, through the grace and lovingkindness, &c.
HOMILY II.
2 TIMOTHY i. 8-10.
"Be
not thou therefore ashamed of the testimony of our Lord, nor of me His prisoner:
but be thou
partaker
of the afflictions of the Gospel according
to the power of God; Who hath saved us, and called us with an holy calling,
not according to our works, but according to His own purpose and grace, which
was given us in Christ Jesus before the world began; but is now made manifest
by the appearing of our Saviour Jesus Christ."
THERE
is nothing worse than that man should measure and judge of divine things
by human reasonings.
For thus
he will fall from that rock(2) a vast distance,
and be deprived of the light. For if he who wishes with human eyes to apprehend
the rays of the sun will not only not apprehend them, but, besides this failure,
will sustain great injury; so, but in a higher degree, is he in a way to suffer
this, and abusing the gift of God, who would by human reasonings gaze intently
on that Light. Observe accordingly how Marcion, and Manes, and Valentinus,
and others who introduced their heresies and pernicious doctrines(4) into the
Church of God, measuring divine things by human reasonings, became ashamed
of the Divine economy. Yet it was not a subject for shame, but rather for glorying;
I speak of the Cross of Christ. For there is not so great a sign of the love
of God for mankind, not heaven, nor sea, nor earth, nor the creation of all
things out of nothing, nor all else beside, as the Cross. Hence it is the boast
of Paul, "God forbid that I should glory, save in the Cross of our Lord
Jesus Christ." (Gal. vi. 14.) But natural men, and those who attribute
to God no more than to human beings, stumble, and become ashamed. Wherefore
Paul from the first exhorts his disciple, and through him all others, in these
words: "Be not thou ashamed of the testimony of our Lord," that is,(5)
Be not ashamed, that thou preachest One that was crucified, but rather glory
in it." For in themselves death and imprisonment and chains are matters
of shame and reproach. But when the cause is added before us, and the mystery
viewed aright, they will appear full of dignity, and matter for boasting. For
it was that death which saved the world, when it was perishing. That death
connected earth with heaven, that death destroyed the power of the devil, and
made men angels, and sons of God: that death raised our nature to the kingly
throne. Those chains were the conversion of many. "Be not" therefore "ashamed," he
says, "of the testimony of our Lord, nor of me His prisoner: but be thou
partaker of the afflictions of the Gospel"; that is, though thou shouldest
suffer the same things, be not thou ashamed. For that this is implied appears
from what he said above; "God hath given us a spirit of power, and of
love, and of a sound mind"; and by what follows, "Be thou partaker
of the sufferings of the Gospel": not merely be not ashamed of them, but
be not ashamed even to experience them.
And he
does not say, "Do not fear," but, the more to encourage him, "be
not ashamed," as if there were no further danger, if he could overcome
the shame. For shame is only then oppressive, when one is overcome by it. Be
not therefore ashamed, if I, who raised the dead, who wrought miracles, who
traversed the world, am now a prisoner. For I am imprisoned, not as a malefactor,
but for the sake of Him who was crucified. If my Lord was not ashamed of the
Cross, neither am I of chains. And with great propriety, when he exhorts him
not to be ashamed, he reminds him of the Cross. If thou art not ashamed of
the Cross, he means, neither be thou of chains; if our Lord and Master endured
the Cross, much more should we chains. For he who is ashamed of what He endured,
is ashamed of Him that was crucified. Now it is not on my own account that
I bear these chains; therefore do not give way to human feelings, but bear
thy part in these sufferings. "Be partaker of the afflictions of the Gospel." He
says not this, as if the Gospel could suffer injury, but to excite his disciple
to suffer for it.
"According
to the power of God; Who hath saved us, and called us with a holy calling,
not according
to our works, but according to His own purpose
and grace, which was given us in Christ Jesus before the world began."
More especially
because it was a hard thing to say, "Be partakers of
afflictions," he again consoles him.(1) Reckon that thou sustainest these
things, not by thine own power, but by the power of God. For it is thy part
to choose and to be zealous, but God's to alleviate sufferings and bid them
cease.(2) He then shows him the proofs of His power. Consider how thou wast
saved, how thou wast called. As he elsewhere says, "According to His power
that worketh in us." (Eph. iii. 20.) So much was it a greater exercise
of power to persuade the world to believe, than to make the Heavens. But how
was he "called with a holy calling"?(3) This means, He made them
saints, who were sinners and enemies. "And this not of ourselves, it was
the gift of God." If then He is mighty in calling us, and good, in that
He hath done it of grace and not of debt, we ought not to fear. For He Who,
when we should have perished,(4) saved us, though enemies, by grace, will He
not much more cooperate with us, when He sees us working? "Not according
to our own works," he says, "but according to his own purpose and
grace," that is, no one compelling, no one counseling Him, but of His
own purpose, from the impulse of His own goodness, He saved us; for this is
the meaning of "according to His own purpose." "Which was given
us before the world began." That is, it was determined without beginning
that these things should be done in Christ Jesus. This is no light consideration,
that from the first He willed it. It was not an after-thought. How then is
not the Son eternal? for He also willed it from the beginning.
Ver. 10. "But
is now made manifest by the appearing of our Saviour Jesus Christ, Who hath
abolished
death, and hath brought life and immortality to
light by the Gospel."
Thou seest
the power, thou seest the gift bestowed not by works, but through the Gospel.
These
are objects
of hope: for both were wrought in His Body. And
how will they be wrought in ours? "By the Gospel."
Ver. 11. "Whereunto
I am appointed a preacher and an Apostle, and a teacher of the Gentiles."
Why does
he so constantly repeat this, and call himself a teacher of the Gentiles?
Because he wishes
to persuade
them that they also ought to draw close to the
Gentiles. Be not therefore dismayed at my sufferings. The sinews of death are
unstrung. It is not as a malefactor that I suffer, but because I am "a
teacher of the Gentiles." At the same time he makes his discourse worthy
of credit.
Ver. 12. "For
the which cause I also suffer these things, nevertheless I am not ashamed.
For
I know Whom
I have believed, and am persuaded that He
is able to keep that which I have committed unto Him against that day."
"I am not ashamed," he says. For are chains, are sufferings, a matter
for shame? Be not then ashamed! Thou seest how he illustrates his teaching
by his works. "These things," he says, "I suffer": I am
cast into prison, I am banished; "For I know Whom I have believed, and
am persuaded that He is able to keep that which I have committed to Him(1)
against That Day." What is(2) "that which is committed"?(3)
The faith, the preaching of the Gospel. He, who committed this to him, he says,
will preserve it unimpaired. I suffer everything, that I may not be despoiled
of this treasure, and I am not ashamed at these things, so long as it is preserved
uninjured. Or he calls the Faithful the charge which God committed to him,
or which he committed to God. For he says, "Now I commit you to the Lord." (Acts
xx. 32.) That is, these things will not be unprofitable to me. And in Timothy
is seen the fruit of the charge thus "committed." You see that he
is insensible to sufferings, from the hope that he entertains of his disciples.
MORAL.
Such ought a Teacher to be, so to regard his disciples, to think them everything. "Now we live," he says, "if ye stand fast in the
Lord." And again, "What is our hope, or joy, or crown of rejoicing?
are not even ye in the presence of our Lord Jesus Christ?" (1 Thess. iii.
8, and ii. 19.) You see his anxiety in this matter, his regard for the good
of his disciples, not less than for his own.(4) For teachers ought to surpass
natural parents, to be more zealous than they. And it becomes their children
to be kindly affectioned towards them. For he says, "Obey them that have
the rule over you, and submit yourselves: for they watch for your souls as
they that must give account." (Heb. xiii. 17.) For say, is he subject
to so dangerous a responsibility, and art thou not willing to obey him, and
that too, for thy own benefit? For though his own state should be good, yet
as long as thou art in a bad condition his anxiety continues, he has a double
account to render. And consider what it is to be responsible and anxious for
each of those who are under his rule. What honor wouldest thou have reckoned
equal, what service, in requital of such dangers? Thou canst not offer an equivalent.
For thou hast not yet devoted thy soul for him, but he lays down his life for
thee, and if he lays it not down here, when the occasion requires it, he loses
it There. But thou art not willing to submit even in words. This is the prime
cause of all these evils, that the authority of rulers is neglected, that there
is no reverence, no fear. He says, "Obey them that have the rule over
you, and submit yourselves." But now all is turned upside down and confounded.
And this I say not for the sake of the rulers; (for what benefit will they
have of the honor they receive from us,(5) except so far as we are rendered
obedient;) but I say it for your advantage. For with respect to the future,
they will not be benefited by the honor done them, but receive the greater
condemnation, neither will they he injured as to the future by ill treatment,
but will have the more excuse. But all this I desire to be done for your own
sakes. For when rulers are honored by their people, this too is reckoned against
them; as in the case of Eli it is said, "Did I not choose him out of his
father's house?" (1 Sam. ii. 27.) But when they are insulted, as in the
instance of Samuel, God said, "They have not rejected thee, but they have
rejected Me." (1 Sam. viii. 7.) Therefore insult is their gain, honor
their burden. What I say, therefore, is for your sakes, not for theirs. He
that honors the Priest, will honor God also; and he who has learnt to despise
the Priest, will in process of time insult God. "He that receiveth you," He
saith, "receiveth Me." (Matt. x. 40.) "Hold my priests in honor" (Ecclus.
vii. 31?), He says. The Jews learned to despise God, because they despised
Moses, and would have stoned him. For when a man is piously disposed towards
the Priest, he is much more so towards God. And even if the Priest be wicked,
God seeing that thou respectest him, though unworthy of honor, through reverence
to Him, will Himself reward thee. For if "he that receiveth a prophet
in the name of a prophet shall receive a prophet's reward" (Matt. x. 41);
then he who honoreth and submitteth and giveth way to the Priest shall certainly
be rewarded. For if in the case of hospitality, when thou knowest not the guest,
thou receivest so high a recompense, much more wilt thou be requited, if thou
obeyest him whom He requires thee to obey. "The Scribes and Pharisees," He
says, "sit in Moses' seat; all therefore, whatsoever they bid you observe,
that observe and do, but do not ye after their works." (Matt. xxiii. 2,
3.) Knowest thou not what the Priest is? He is an Angel(6) of the Lord. Are
they his own words that he speaks? If thou despisest him, thou despisest not
him, but God that ordained him. But how does it appear, thou askest, that he
is ordained of God? Nay, if thou suppose it otherwise, thy hope is rendered
vain. For if God worketh nothing through his means, thou neither hast any Laver,
nor art partaker of the Mysteries, nor of the benefit of Blessings; thou art
therefore not a Christian. What then, you say, does God ordain all, even the
unworthy? God indeed doth not ordain all, but He worketh through all, though
they be themselves unworthy, that the people may be saved. For if He spoke,
for the sake of the people, by an ass, and by Balaam, a most wicked man, much
more will He speak by the mouth of the Priest. What indeed will not God do
or say for our salvation? By whom doth He not act? For if He wrought through
Judas and those other that "prophesied," to whom He will say," I
never knew you; depart from Me, ye workers of iniquity" (Matt. vii. 22,
23); and if others "cast out devils" (Ps. vi. 8); will He not much
more work through the Priests? Since if we were to make inquisition into the
lives of our rulers, we should then become the ordainers(1) of our own teachers,
and all would be confusion; the feet would be uppermost, the head below. Hear
Paul saying, "But with me it is a very small thing that I should be judged
of you, or of man's judgment." (1 Cor. iv. 3.) And again, "Why dost
thou judge thy brother?" (Rom. xiv. 10.) For if we may not judge our brother,
much less our teacher. If God commands this indeed, thou doest well, and sinnest
if thou do it not; but if the contrary, dare not do it, nor attempt to go beyond
the lines that are marked out. After Aaron had made the golden calf, Corah,
Dathan, and Abiram raised an insurrection against him. And did they not perish?
Let each attend to his own department. For if he teach perverted doctrine,
though he be an Angel, obey him not; but if he teach the truth, take heed not
to his life, but to his words. Thou hast Paul to instruct thee in what is right
both by words and works. But thou sayest, "He gives not to the poor, he
does not govern well." Whence knowest thou this? Blame not, before thou
art informed. Be afraid of the great account. Many judgments are formed upon
mere opinion. Imitate thy Lord, who said, "I will go down now, and see
whether they have done altogether according to the cry of it, and if not, I
will know." (Gen. xviii. 21.) But if thou hast enquired, and informed
thyself, and seen; yet await the Judge, and usurp not the office of Christ.
To Him it belongs, and not to thee, to make this inquisition. Thou art an inferior
servant, not a master. Thou art a sheep, be not curious concerning the shepherd,
lest thou have to give account of thy accusations against him. But you say,
How does he teach me that which he does not practice himself? It is not he
that speaks to thee. If it be he whom thou obeyest, thou hast no reward. It
is Christ that thus admonishes thee. And what do I say? Thou oughtest not to
obey even Paul, if he speaks of himself, or anything human, but the Apostle,
that has Christ speaking in him. Let not us judge one another's conduct, but
each his own. Examine thine own life.
But thou
sayest, "He ought to be better than I." Wherefore? "Because
he is a Priest." And is he not superior to thee in his labors, his dangers,
his anxious conflicts and troubles? But if he is not better, oughtest thou
therefore to destroy thyself? These are the words of arrogance.(2) For how
is he not better than thyself? He steals, thou sayest, and commits sacrilege!
How knowest thou this? Why dost thou cast thyself down a precipice? If thou
shouldest hear it said that such an one hath a purple robe,(3) though thou
knewest it to be true, and couldest convict him, thou declinest to do it, and
pretendest ignorance, not being willing to run into unnecessary danger. But
in this case thou art so far from being backward, that even without cause thou
exposest thyself to the danger. Nor think thou art not responsible for these
words. Hear what Christ says, "Every idle word that men shall speak, they
shall give account thereof in the day of judgment." (Matt. xii. 36.) And
dost thou think thyself better than another, and dost thou not groan, and beat
thy breast, and bow down thy head, and imitate the Publican?
And then
thou destroyest thyself, though thou be better. Be silent, that thou cease
not to be better.
If thou
speak of it, thou hast done away the merit;
if thou thinkest it, I do not say so; if thou dost not think it, thou hast
added much. For if a notorious sinner, when he confessed, "went home justified," he
who is a sinner in a less degree, and is conscious of it, how will he not be
rewarded? Examine thy own life. Thou dost not steal; but thou art rapacious,
and overbearing, and guilty of many other such things. I say not this to defend
theft; God forbid! deeply lament if there is any one really guilty of it, but
I do not believe it. How great an evil is sacrilege, it is impossible to say.
But I spare you. For I would not that our virtue should be rendered vain by
accusing others. What was worse than the Publican? For it is true that he was
a publican, and guilty of many offenses, yet because the Pharisee only said, "I
am not as this publican," he destroyed all his merit. I am not, thou sayest,
like this sacrilegious Priest. And dost not thou make all in vain?
This I
am compelled to say, and to enlarge upon in my discourse, not so much because
I am concerned
for them,
but because I fear for you, lest you should
render your virtue vain by this boasting of yourselves, and condemnation of
others. For hear the exhortation of Paul, "Let every one prove his own
work, and then shall he have rejoicing in himself alone, and not in another." (Gal.
vi. 4.)
If you
had a wound, tell me, and should go to a physician, would you stay him from
salving and dressing
your
own wound, and be curious to enquire whether
the physician had a wound, or not? and if he had, would you mind it? Or because
he had it, would you forbear dressing your own, and say, A physician ought
to be in sound health, and since he is not so, I shall let my wound go uncured?
For will it be any palliation(1) for him that is under rule, that his Priest
is wicked? By no means. He will suffer the destined punishment, and you too
will meet with that which is your due. For the Teacher now only fills a place.
For "it is written, They shall all be taught of God." (John vi. 45;
Isa. liv. 13.) "Neither shall they say, Know the Lord. For all shall know
Me from the least to the greatest." (Jer. xxxi. 34.) Why then, you will
say, does he preside? Why is he set over us? I beseech you, let us not speak
ill of our teachers, nor call them to so strict an account, lest we bring evil
upon ourselves. Let us examine ourselves, and we shall not speak ill of others.
Let us reverence that day, on which he enlightened(2) us. He who has a father,
whatever faults he has, conceals them all. For it is said, "Glory not
in the dishonor of thy father; for thy father's dishonor is no glory unto thee.
And if his understanding fail, have patience with him." (Ecclus. iii.
10-12.) And if this be said of our natural fathers, much more of our spiritual
fathers. Reverence him, in that he every day ministers to thee, causes the
Scriptures to be read, sets the house in order for thee, watches for thee,
prays for thee, stands imploring God on thy behalf, offers supplications for
thee, for thee is all his worship. Reverence all this, think of this, and approach
him with pious respect. Say not, he is wicked. What of that? He that is not
wicked,(3) doth he of himself bestow upon thee these great benefits? By no
means. Everything worketh according to thy faith. Not even the righteous man
can benefit thee, if thou art unfaithful, nor the unrighteous harm thee, if
thou art faithful. God, when He would save His people, wrought for the ark
by Oxen.(4) Is it the good life or the virtue of the Priest that confers so
much on thee? The gifts which God bestows are not such as to be effects of
the virtue of the Priest. All is of grace. His part is but to open his mouth,
while God worketh all: the Priest only performs a symbol.(5) Consider how wide
was the distance between John and Jesus. Hear John saying, "I have need
to be baptized of Thee" (Matt. iii. 14), and, "Whose shoe's latchet
I am not worthy to unloose." (John i. 27.) Yet notwithstanding this difference,
the Spirit descended. Which John had not. For "of His fullness," it
is said, "we all have received." (John i. 16.) Yet nevertheless,
It descended not till He was baptized. But neither was it John who caused It
to descend. Why then is this done? That thou mayest learn that the Priest performs
a symbol.(6) No man differs so widely from another man, as John from Jesus,
and yet with him(7) the Spirit descended, that we may learn, that it is God
who worketh all, that all is God's doing. I am about to say what may appear
strange, but be not astonished nor startled at it. The Offering is the same,
whether a common man, or Paul or Peter offer it. It is the same which Christ
gave to His disciples, and which the Priests now minister. This is nowise inferior
to that, because it is not men that sanctify even this, but the Same who sanctified
the one sanctifies the other also. For as the words which God spake are the
same which the Priest now utters, so is the Offering the same, and the Baptism,
that which He gave. Thus the whole is of faith. The Spirit immediately fell
upon Cornelius, because he had previously fulfilled his part, and contributed
his faith. And this is His Body, as well as that. And he who thinks the one
inferior to the other, knows not that Christ even now is present, even now
operates. Knowing therefore these things, which we have not said without reason,
but that we may conform your minds in what is right, and render you more secure
for the future, keep carefully in mind what has been spoken. For if we are
always hearers, and never doers, we shall reap no advantage from what is said.
Let us therefore attend diligently to the things spoken. Let us imprint them
upon our minds. Let us have them ever engraved upon our consciences, and let
us continually ascribe glory to the Father, and to the Son, and to the Holy
Ghost.
HOMILY III.
2 TIMOTHY i. 13-18.
"Hold
fast the form of sound words, which thou hast heard of me, in faith and love
which is in
Christ
Jesus. That good thing which was committed unto
thee keep by the Holy Ghost Which dwelleth in us. This thou knowest, that all
they which are in Asia be turned away from me; of whom are Phygellus and Hermogenes.
The Lord give mercy unto the house of Onesiphorus; for he oft refreshed me,
and was not ashamed of my chain: but, when he was in Rome, he sought me out
very diligently, and found me. The Lord grant unto him that he may find mercy
of the Lord in that day: and in how many things he ministered unto me at Ephesus,
thou knowest very well."
NOT by
letters alone did Paul instruct his disciple in his duty, but before by words
also which he
shows, both in
many other passages, as where he says, "whether
by word or our Epistle" (2 Thess. ii. 15), and especially here. Let us
not therefore suppose that anything relating to doctrine was spoken imperfectly.
For many things he delivered to him without writing. Of these therefore he
reminds him, when he says, "Hold fast the form of sound words, which thou
hast heard of me." After the manner of artists, I have impressed on thee
the image of virtue, fixing in thy soul a sort of rule, and model, and outline
of all things pleasing to God. These things then hold fast, and whether thou
art meditating any matter of faith or love, or of a sound mind, form from hence
your ideas of them. It will not be necessary to have recourse to others for
examples, when all has been deposited within thyself.
"That good thing which was committed unto thee keep,"--how?--"by
the Holy Ghost which dwelleth in us." For it is not in the power of a
human soul, when instructed with things so great, to be sufficient for the
keeping of them. And why? Because there are many robbers, and thick darkness,
and the devil still at hand to plot against us; and we know not what is the
hour, what the occasion for him to set upon us. How then, he means, shall we
be sufficient for the keeping of them? "By the Holy Ghost"; that
is if we have the Spirit: with us, if we do not expel grace, He will stand
by us. For, "Except the Lord build the house, they labor in vain that
build it. Except the Lord keep the city, the watchman waketh but in vain." (Ps.
cxxvii. 1.) This is our wall, this our castle, this our refuge. If therefore
It dwelleth in us, and is Itself our guard, what need of the commandment? That
we may hold It fast, may keep It, and not banish It by our evil deeds.
Then he
describes his trials and temptations, not to depress his disciple, but to
elevate him,
that if he
should ever fall into the same, he may not think
it strange, when he looks back and remembers what things happened to his Teacher.
What then says he? Since it was probable that Timothy might be apprehended,
and be deserted, and be relieved by no friendly attention, or influence, or
assistance, but be abandoned even by his friends and the faithful themselves,
hear what he says, "This thou knowest, that all they which are in Asia
be turned away from me." It seems that there were then in Rome many persons
from the regions of Asia. "But no one stood by me," he says, no one
acknowledged me, all were alienated. And observe the philosophy of his soul.
He only mentions their conduct, he does not curse them, but he praises him
that showed kindness to him, and invokes a thousand blessings upon him, without
any curse on them. "Of whom is Phygellus and Hermogenes. The Lord give
mercy to the house of Onesiphorus, for he oft refreshed me, and was not ashamed
of my chain. But, when he was in Rome, he sought me out diligently and found
me." Observe how he everywhere speaks of the shame, and not of the danger,
lest Timothy should be alarmed. And yet it was a thing that was full of peril.
For he gave offense to Nero by making friends with one of his prisoners.(2)
But when he was in Rome, he says, he not only did not shun intercourse with
me, but "sought me out very diligently, and found me."
"The
Lord grant unto him that he may find mercy of the Lord in that day: and in
how many things
he ministered
unto me at Ephesus, thou knowest very
well."
Such ought
the faithful to be. Neither fear, nor threats, nor disgrace, should deter
them from assisting
one another, standing by them and succoring them
as in war. For they do not so much benefit those who are in danger, as themselves,
by the service they render to them, making themselves partakers of the crowns
due to them. For example, is any one of those who are devoted to God visited
with affliction and distress, and maintaining the conflict with great fortitude;
whilst thou art not yet brought(3) to this conflict? It is in thy power if
thou wilt, without entering into the course, to be a sharer of the crowns reserved
for him, by standing by him, preparing his mind,(1) and animating and exciting
him. Hence it is that Paul elsewhere says, "Ye have done well that ye
did communicate with my affliction. For even in Thessalonica ye sent once and
again unto my necessity." (Phil. iv. 14, 16.) And how could they that
were far off share in the affliction of him that was not with them? How? He
says, "ye sent once and again unto my necessities." Again he says,
speaking of Epaphroditus, "Because he was nigh unto death, not regarding
his life, that he might supply your lack of service toward me." (Phil.
ii. 30.) For as in the service of kings, not only those who fight the battle,
but those who guard the baggage, share in the honor; and not merely so, but
frequently even have an equal portion of the spoils, though they have not imbrued
their hands in blood, nor stood in array, nor even seen the ranks of the enemy;
so it is in these conflicts. For he who relieves the combatant, when wasted
with hunger, who stands by him, encouraging him by words, and rendering him
every service, he is not inferior to the combatant.
For do
not suppose Paul the combatant, that irresistible and invincible one, but
some one of the
many, who, if he
had not received much consolation and
encouragement, would not perhaps have stood, would not have contended. So those
who are out of the contest may perchance be the cause of victory to him, who
is engaged in it, and may be partakers of the crowns reserved for the victor.
And what wonder, if he who communicates to the living is thought worthy of
the same rewards with those who contend, since it is possible to communicate
after death even with the departed, with those who are asleep, who are already
crowned, who want for nothing. For hear Paul saying, "Partaking in the
memories of the Saints."(2) And how may this be done? When thou admirest
a man,(3) when thou doest any of those acts for which he was crowned, thou
art evidently a sharer in his labors, and in his crowns.
"The Lord grant unto him that he may find mercy of the Lord in that day." He
had compassion on me, he says, he shall therefore have the like return in that
terrible Day, when we shall have need of much mercy. "The Lord grant him
to find mercy from the Lord." Are there two Lords then? By no means. But "to
us there is one Lord Christ Jesus, and one God." (1 Cor. viii. 6.) Here
those who are infected with the heresy of Marcion assail this expression; but
let them learn that this mode of speech is not uncommon in Scripture; as when
it is said, "The Lord said unto my Lord" (Ps. cx. 1); and again, "I
said unto the Lord, Thou art my Lord" (Ps. xvi. 2); and, "The Lord
rained fire from the Lord." (Gen. xix. 24.) This indicates that the Persons
are of the same substance, not that there is a distinction of nature. For we
are not to understand that there are two substances differing from each other,
but two Persons, each being of the same substance.
Observe
too, that he says, "The Lord grant him mercy." For as he
himself had obtained mercy from Onesiphorus, so he wished him to obtain the
same from God. MORAL. And if Onesiphorus, who exposed himself to danger, is
saved by mercy, much more are we also saved by the same. For terrible indeed,
terrible is that account, and such as needs great love for mankind, that we
may not hear that awful sentence, "Depart from me ... I never knew you,
ye that work iniquity" (Matt. vii. 23); or that fearful word, "Depart,
ye cursed, into everlasting fire, prepared for the devil and his angels" (Matt.
xxv. 40): that we may not hear, "Between us and you there is a great gulf
fixed" (Luke xvi. 16): that we may not hear that voice full of horror, "Take
him away, and cast him into outer darkness": that we may not hear those
words full of terror, "Thou wicked and slothful servant." (Matt.
xxii. 13, and xxv. 26.) For awful truly and terrible is that tribunal. And
yet God is gracious and merciful. He is called a God "of mercies and a
God of comfort" (2 Cor. i. 3); good as none else is good, and kind, and
gentle, and full of pity, Who "willeth not the death of a sinner, but
that he should be converted and live." (Ez. xviii. 24; xxxiii. 11.) Whence
then, whence is that Day so full of agony and anguish? A stream of fire is
rolling before His face. The books of our deeds are opened. The day itself
is burning as an oven, the angels are flying around, and many furnaces are
prepared. How then is He good and merciful, and full of lovingkindness to man?
Even herein is He merciful, and He shows in these things the greatness of His
lovingkindness. For He holds forth to us these terrors, that being constrained
by them, we may be awakened to the desire of the kingdom.
And observe
how, besides commending Onesiphorus, he specifies his kindness, "he
oft refreshed me"; like a wearied wrestler overcome by heat, he refreshed
and strengthened him in his tribulations. And in how many things he ministered
to me at Ephesus, thou knowest very well. Not only at Ephesus, but here also
he refreshed me. For such ought to be the conduct of one on the watch and awakened
to good actions. not to work once, or twice, or thrice, but through the whole
of life. For as our body is not fed once for all, and so provided with sustenance
for a whole life, but needs also daily food, so in this too, godliness requires
to be supported every day by good works. For we ourselves have need of great
mercy. It is on account of our sins that God, the Friend of man, does all these
things, not that He needs them Himself, but He does all for us. For therefore
it is that He has revealed them all, and made them known to us, and not merely
told us of them, but given us assurance of them by what He has done. Though
He was worthy of credit upon His word only, that no one may think it is said
hyperbolically, or in the way of threatening merely, we have further assurance
by His works. How? By the punishments which He has inflicted both publicly
and privately. And that thou mayest learn by the very examples, at one time
he punished Pharaoh, at another time He brought a flood of water upon the earth,
and that utter destruction, and again at another time a flood of fire: and
even now we see in many instances the wicked suffering vengeance, and punishments,
which things are figures of Hell.
For lest
we should slumber and be slothful, and forget His word, He awakens our minds
by deeds; showing
us, even here, courts of justice, judgment seats,
and trials. Is there then among men so great a regard for justice, and doth
God, whose ordinance even these things are, make no account of it? Is this
credible? In a house, in a market-place, there is a court of justice. The master
daily sits in judgment upon his slaves, calls them to account for their offenses,
punishes some and pardons others. In the country, the husbandman and his wife
are daily at law. In a ship, the master is judge, and in a camp the general
over his soldiers, and everywhere one may see judicial proceedings. In trades,
the master judges the learner. In short all, publicly and privately, are judges
to one another. In nothing is the consideration of justice overlooked, and
all in every place give account of their actions. And is the inquisition for
justice here thus spread through cities, through houses, and among individuals;
and is there no regard for what is justice there, where "the right hand
of God is full of righteousness" (Ps. xlviii. 10), and "His righteousness
is as the mountains of God"? (Ps. xxxvi. 6.)
How is
it then that God, "the righteous Judge, strong and patient" (Ps.
vii. 11, Sept.), bears thus with men, and does not exact punishment? Here thou
hast the cause, He is longsuffering, and thereby would lead thee to repentance.
But if thou continuest in sin, thou "after thy hardness and impenitent
heart treasurest up unto thyself wrath." (Rom. ii. 5.) If then He is just,
He repays according to desert, and does not overlook those who suffer wrongfully,
but avenges them. For this is the part of one who is just. If He is powerful,
He requites after death, and at the Resurrection: for this belongs to him who
is powerful. And if because He is longsuffering He bears with men, let us not
be disturbed, nor ask, why He does not prosecute vengeance here? For if this
were done, the whole human race before this would have been swept away, if
every day He should call us to account for our transgressions, since there
is not, there is not indeed, a single day pure from sin, but in something greater
or less we offend; so that we should not one of us have arrived at our twentieth
year, but for His great long-suffering, and His goodness, that grants us a
longer space for repentance, that we may put off our past transgressions.
Let each
therefore, with an upright conscience, entering into a review of what he
has done, and bringing
his
whole life before him, consider, whether
he is not deserving of chastisements and punishments without number? And when
he is indignant that some one, who has been guilty of many bad actions, escapes
with impunity; let him consider his own faults, and his indignation will cease.
For those crimes appear great, because they are in great and notorious matters;
but if he will enquire into his own, he will perhaps find them more numerous.
For to rob and to defraud is the same thing, whether it be done for gold or
silver; since both proceed from the same mind. He that will steal a little
would not refuse to steal much, if it fell in his way; and that it does not,
is not his own choice, but an accidental circumstance. A poor man, who robs
a poorer, would not hesitate to rob the rich if he could. His forbearance arises
from weakness, and not from choice. Such an one, you say, is a ruler; and takes
away the property of those who are under his rule. And say, dost not thou steal?
For tell me not that he steals talents, and you as many(1) pence. In giving
alms, some cast in gold, while the widow threw in two mites, yet she contributed
not less than they. Wherefore? Because the intention is considered, and not
the amount of the gift. And then, in the case of alms, thou wilt have God judge
thus, and wouldest, because of thy poverty, receive no less a reward for giving
two mites than he who lays down many talents of gold? and is not the same rule
applicable to wrongful dealings? How is this consistent? As she who contributed
two mites was considered equal to the greatest givers, because of her good
intention, so thou, who stealest two mites, art as culpable as those mightier
robbers. Nay, if I may give utterance to something strange, thou art a worse
robber than they. For a man would be equally an adulterer, whether he committed
the sin with the wife of a king, or of a poor man, or of a slave: since the
offense is not judged by the quality of the persons, but by the wickedness
of his will who commits it; so is it likewise in this case. Nay, I should call
him who committed the sin with an inferior perhaps more guilty, than him who
intrigued with the queen herself. For in this case, wealth, and beauty, and
other attractions might be pleaded, none of which exist in the other. Therefore
the other is the worse adulterer. Again, he seems to me a more determined drunkard,
who commits that excess with bad wine; so he is a worse defrauder, who does
not despise small thefts; for he who commits great robberies, would perhaps
not stoop to petty thefts, whereas he who steals little things would never
forbear greater, therefore he is the greater thief of the two. For how should
he despise gold, who does not despise silver? So that when we accuse our rulers,
let us recount our own faults, and we shall find ourselves more given to wrong
and robbery than they; unless we judge of right and wrong rather by the act,
than by the intention of the mind, as we ought to judge. If one should be convicted
of having stolen the goods of a poor man, another those of a rich man, will
they not both be punished alike? Is not a man equally a murderer, whether he
murder a poor and deformed, or a rich and handsome, man? When therefore we
say that such an one has seized upon another person's land, let us reflect
upon our own faults, and then we shall not condemn other men, but we shall
admire the longsuffering of God. We shall not be indignant that judgment does
not fall upon them, but we shall be more slow to commit wickedness ourselves.
For when we perceive ourselves liable to the same punishment, We shall no longer
feel such discontent, and shall desist from offenses, and shall obtain the
good things to come, through the grace and lovingkindness of our Lord Jesus
Christ, to whom with the Father, &c.
HOMILY IV.
2 TIMOTHY ii. 1-7.
"Thou
therefore, my son, be strong in the grace that is in Christ Jesus. And the
things that
thou hast
heard of me among many witnesses, the same commit
thou to faithful men, who shall be able to teach others also. Thou therefore
endure hardness, as a good soldier of Jesus Christ. no man that warreth entangleth
himself with the affairs of this life; that he may please him who hath chosen
him to be a soldier. And if a man also strive for masteries, yet is he not
crowned, except he strive lawfully. The husbandman that laboreth must be first
partaker of the fruits. Consider what I say; and the Lord give thee understanding
in all things."
THE young
sailor at sea is inspired with great confidence, if the Master of the ship
has been preserved
in a
shipwreck. For he will not consider that it
is from his inexperience that he is exposed to the storm, but from the nature
of things; and this has no little effect upon his mind. In war also the Captain,
who sees his General wounded and recovered again, is much encouraged. And thus
it produces some consolation to the faithful, that the Apostle should have
been exposed to great sufferings, and not rendered weak by the utmost of them.
And had it not been so, he would not have related his sufferings. For when
Timothy heard, that he who possessed so great powers, who had conquered the
whole world, is a prisoner, and afflicted, yet is not impatient, nor discontented
upon the desertion of his friends; he, if ever exposed to the same sufferings
himself, would not consider that it proceeded from human weakness, nor from
the circumstance of his being a disciple, and inferior to Paul, since his teacher
too suffered the like, but that all this happened from the natural course of
things. For Paul himself did this,(1) and related what had befallen him, that
he might strengthen Timothy, and renew his courage. And he shows that it was
for this reason he mentioned his trials and afflictions, in that he has added, "Thou,
therefore, my son, be strong in the grace that is in Christ Jesus." What
sayest thou? Thou hast shaken us with terrors, thou hast told us that thou
art in chains, in afflictions, that all have forsaken thee, and, as if thou
hadst said thou hadst not suffered anything, nor been abandoned by any, thou
addest, "Thou therefore, my son, be strong"?--And justly too. For
these things were to thy strengthening more than to his.(1) For if I, Paul,
endure these things, much more oughtest thou to bear them. If the master, much
more the disciple. And this exhortation he introduces with much affection,
calling him "son," and not only so, but "my son." If thou
art a son, he means, imitate thy father. If thou art a son, be strong in consideration
of the things which I have said, or rather be strong, not merely from what
I have told you, but "of God." "Be strong," he says, "in
the grace that is in Christ Jesus"; that is, "through the grace of
Christ." That is, stand firmly. Thou knowest the battle. For elsewhere
he says, "We wrestle not against flesh and blood." (Eph. vi. 12.)
And this he says not to depress but to excite them. Be sober therefore, he
means, and watch have the grace of the Lord cooperating with thee, and aiding
thee in thy contest, contribute thy own part with much alacrity and resolution. "And
the things that thou hast heard of me among many witnesses, the same commit
thou to faithful men"; to "faithful" men, not to questioners
nor to reasoners, to "faithful." How faithful? Such as betray not
the Gospel they should preach. "The things which thou hast heard," not
which thou hast searched out. For "faith cometh by hearing, and hearing
by the word of God." (Rom. x. 17.) But wherefore, "among many witnesses"?
As if he had said: Thou hast not heard in secret, nor apart, but in the presence
of many, with all openness of speech. Nor does he say, Tell, but "commit," as
a treasure committed is deposited in safety. Again he alarms his disciple,
both from things above and things below. But he says not only "commit
to faithful men"; for of what advantage is it that one is faithful, if
he is not able to convey his doctrine to others? when he does not indeed betray
the faith; but does not render others faithful? The teacher therefore ought
to have two qualities, to be both faithful, and apt to teach; wherefore he
says, "who shall be able to teach others also."
"Thou therefore endure hardness as a good soldier of Jesus Christ." Oh,
how great a dignity is this, to be a soldier of Jesus Christ! Observe the kings
on earth, how great an honor it is esteemed to serve under them. If therefore
the soldier of the king ought to endure hardness, not to endure hardness is
not the part of any soldier. So that it behooves thee not to complain, if thou
endurest hardness, for that is the part of a soldier; but to complain, if thou
dost not endure hardness.
"No
man that warreth entangleth himself with the affairs of this life, that he
may please him
who hath chosen
him to be a soldier. And if a man also
strive for masteries, yet is he not crowned except he strive lawfully."
These
things are said indeed to Timothy, but through him they are addressed to
every teacher and
disciple.
Let no one therefore of those who hold the office
of a Bishop disdain to hear these things, but let him be ashamed not to do
them. "If any one strive for masteries," he says, "he is not
crowned, except he strive lawfully." What is meant by "lawfully"?
It is not enough that he enters into the lists, that he is anointed, and even
engages, unless he comply with all the laws of the exercise, with respect to
diet, to temperance and sobriety, and all the rules of the wrestling school,
unless, in short, he go through all that is befitting for a wrestler,(2) he
is not crowned. And observe the wisdom of Paul. He mentions wrestlers and soldiers,
the one to prepare him for slaughter and blood, the other with reference to
endurance, that he might bear everything with fortitude, and be ever in exercise.
"The
husbandman that laboreth must be first partaker of the fruits."
He had first spoken from his own example as a teacher. He now speaks from
those that are more common, as wrestlers and soldiers, and in their case he
sets before him the rewards. First, that he may please him who hath chosen
him to be a soldier; secondly, that he may be crowned; now he proposes a third
example that more particularly suits himself. For the instance of the soldier
and the wrestler corresponds to those who are under rule, but that of the husbandman
to the Teacher. (Strive) not as a soldier or a wrestler only, but as a husbandman
too. The husbandman takes care not of himself alone, but of the fruits of the
earth. That is, no little reward of his labors is enjoyed by the husbandman.
Here he
both shows, that to God nothing is wanting, and that there is a reward for
Teaching, which
he shows
by a common instance. As the husbandman, he says,
does not labor without profit, but enjoys before others the fruits of his own
toils, so is it fit that the teacher should do: either he means this, or he
is speaking of the honor to be paid to teachers, but this is less consistent.
For why does he not say the husbandman simply, but him "that laboreth"?
not only that worketh, but that is worn with toil? And here with reference
to the delay of reward, that no one may be impatient, he says, thou reapest
the fruit already, or there is a reward in the labor itself. When therefore
he has set before him the examples of soldiers, of wrestlers, and husbandmen,
and all figuratively, "No one," he says, "is crowned except
he strive lawfully." And having observed that "the husbandman who
laboreth must first be partaker of the fruits," he adds,
"Consider
what I say, and the Lord give thee understanding in all things."
It is on this account that he has spoken these things in proverb and parable.
Then again to show his affectionate disposition, he ceases not to pray for
him, as fearing for his own son, and he says,
Ver. 8,
9. "Remember
that Jesus Christ, of the seed of David, was raised from the dead, according
to
my Gospel. Wherein I suffer trouble as an evil-doer,
even unto bonds."
On what
account is this mentioned? It is directed chiefly against the heretics, at
the same time
to encourage
Timothy, by showing the advantage of sufferings,
since Christ, our Master, Himself overcame death by suffering. Remember this,
he says, and thou wilt have sufficient comfort. "Remember that Jesus Christ,
of the seed of David, was raised from the dead." For upon that point many
had already begun to subvert the dispensation, being ashamed at the immensity
of God's love to mankind. For of such a nature are the benefits which God has
conferred upon us, that men were ashamed to ascribe them to God, and could
not believe He had so far condescended. "According to my Gospel." Thus
he everywhere speaks in his Epistles, saying "according to my Gospel,"(1)
either because they were bound to believe him, or because there were some who
preached "another Gospel." (Gal. i. 6.)
"Wherein I suffer trouble," he says, "as an evil-doer, even
unto bonds." Again he introduces consolation and encouragement from himself,
and he prepares(2) his hearer's mind with these two things; first, that he
should know him to endure hardness; and, secondly, that he did not so but for
a useful purpose, for in this case he will gain, in the other will even suffer
harm. For what advantage is it, that you can show that a Teacher has exposed
himself to hardship, but not for any useful purpose? But if it is for any benefit,
if for the profit of those who are taught, then it is worthy of admiration?
"But the word of God is not bound." That is, if we were soldiers
of this world, and waged an earthly warfare, the chains that confine our hands
would avail. But now God has made us such that nothing can subdue us. For our
hands are bound, but not our tongue, since nothing can bind the tongue but
cowardice and unbelief alone; and where these are not, though you fasten chains
upon us, the preaching of the Gospel is not bound. If indeed you bind a husbandman,
you prevent his sowing, for he sows with his hand: but if you bind a Teacher,
you hinder not the word, for it is sown with his tongue, not with his hand.
Our word therefore is not subjected to bonds. For though we are bound, that
is free, and runs its course. How? Because though bound, behold, we preach.
This is for the encouragement of those that are free. For if we that are bound
preach, much more does it behoove you that are loose to do so. You have heard
that I suffer these things, as an evil-doer. Be not dejected. For it is a great
wonder, that being bound I do the work of those that are free, that being bound
I overcome all, that being bound I prevail over those that bound me. For it
is the word of God, not ours. Human chains cannot bind the word of God. "These
things I suffer on account of the elect."
Ver. 10. "Therefore I endure all things," he says, "for
the elect's sake, that they may also obtain the salvation which is in Christ
Jesus
with eternal glory."
Behold
another incentive. I endure these things, he says, not for myself, but for
the salvation of
others. It
was in my power to have lived free from
danger; to have suffered none of these things, if I had consulted my own interest.
On what account then do I suffer these things? For the good of others, that
others may obtain eternal life. What then dost thou promise thyself? He has
not said, simply on account of these particular persons; but "for the
elect's sake." If God has chosen them, it becomes us to suffer everything
for their sakes. "That they also may obtain salvation." By saying, "they
also," he means, as well as we. For God hath chosen us also; and as God
suffered for our sakes, so should we suffer for their sakes. Thus it is a matter
of retribution, not of favor. On the part of God it was grace, for He having
received no previous benefit, hath done us good: but on our parts it is retribution,
we having previously received benefits from God, suffer for these, for whom
we suffer, in order "that they may obtain salvation." What sayest
thou? What salvation? Art thou who wast not the author of salvation to thyself,
but wast destroying thyself, art thou the author of salvation to others? Surely
not, and therefore he adds, "salvation that is in Christ Jesus";
that which is truly salvation, "with eternal glory." Present things
are afflictive, but they are but on earth. Present things are ignominious,
but they are temporary. They are full of bitterness and pain; but they last
only to-day and to-morrow.
Such is not the nature of the good things, they are eternal, they are in heaven.
That is true glory, this is dishonor.
MORAL. For observe, I pray, beloved, that is not glory which is on earth,
the true glory is in heaven. But if any one would be glorified, let him be
dishonored. If he would obtain rest, let him suffer affliction. If any one
would be forever illustrious, would enjoy pleasure, let him despise temporal
things. And that dishonor is glory, and glory dishonor, let us now set before
us to the best of our power, that we may see what is real glory. It is not
possible to be glorified upon earth; if thou wouldest be glorified, it must
be through dishonor. And let us prove this in the examples of two persons,
Nero and Paul. The one had the glory of this world, the other the dishonor.
How? The first was a tyrant, had obtained great success had raised many trophies,
had wealth ever flowing in, numerous armies everywhere; he had the greater
part of the world and the imperial city subject to his sway, the whole senate
crouching to him, and his palace too(1) was advancing with splendid show. When
he must be armed, he went forth arrayed in gold and precious stones. When he
was to sit still in peace, he sat clothed in robes of purple. He was surrounded
by numerous guards and attendants. He was called Lord of land and sea, Emperor,(2)
Augustus, Caesar, King, and other such high-sounding names as implied(3) flattery
and courtship; and nothing was wanting that might tend to glory. Even wise
men and potentates and sovereigns trembled at him. For beside all this, he
was said to be a cruel and violent man. He even wished to be thought a god,
and he despised both all the idols, and the very God Who is over all. He was
worshiped as a god. What greater glory than this? Or rather what greater dishonor?
For--I know not how--my tongue is carried away by the force of truth, and passes
sentence before judgment. Meanwhile let us examine the matter according to
the opinion of the multitude, and of unbelievers, and the estimation of flattery.
What is
greater in the common estimation of glory than to be reputed a god? It is
indeed a great
disgrace that any
human being should be so mad, but for
the present let us consider the matter according to the opinion of the multitude.
Nothing then was wanting to him, that contributes to human glory, but he was
worshiped by all as a god. Now in opposition to him, let us consider Paul.
He was a Cilician, and the difference between Rome and Cilicia, all know. He
was a tent-maker, a poor man, unskilled in the wisdom of those without, knowing
only the Hebrew tongue, a language despised by all, especially by the Italians.
For they do not so much despise the barbarian, the Greek, or any other tongue
as the Syriac, and this has affinity with the Hebrew. Nor wonder at this, for
if they despised the Greek, which is so admirable and beautiful, much more
the Hebrew. He was a man that often lived in hunger, often went to bed without
food, a man that was naked, and had not clothes to put on; "in cold, and
nakedness," as he says of himself. (1 Cor. xi. 27.) Nor was this all;
but he was cast into prison at the command of Nero himself, and confined with
robbers, with impostors, with gave-breakers, with murderers, and he was, as
he himself says, scourged as a malefactor. Who then is the more illustrious?
The name of the one the greater part have never heard of. The other is daily
celebrated by Greeks, and Barbarians, and Scythians, and those who inhabit
the extremities of the earth.
But let
us not yet consider what is the case now, but even at that time who was the
more illustrious,
who
the more glorious, he that was in chains, and
dragged bound from prison, or he that was clothed in a purple robe, and walked
forth from a palace? The prisoner certainly. For the other, who had armies
at his command, and sat arrayed in purple, was not able to do what he would.
But the prisoner, that was like a malefactor, and in mean attire, could do
everything with more authority. How? The one said, "Do not disseminate
the word of God." The other said, "I cannot forbear; 'the word of
God is not bound.'" Thus the Cilician, the prisoner, the poor tent-maker,
who lived in hunger, despised the Roman, rich as he was, and emperor, and ruling
over all, who enriched so many thousands; and with all his armies he availed
nothing. Who then was illustrious? who venerable? He that in chains was a conqueror,
or he that in a purple robe was conquered? He that standing below, smote, or
he that sitting above, was smitten? He that commanded and was despised, or
he who was commanded and made no account of the commands? He who being alone
was victorious, or he who with numerous armies was defeated? The king therefore
so came off, that his prisoner triumphed over him. Tell me then on whose side
you would be? For do not look to what comes afterwards, but to what was then
their state. Would you be on the side of Nero, or of Paul? I speak not according
to the estimate of faith, for that is manifest; but according to the estimate
of glory, and reverence, and preeminence. Any man of right understanding would
say, on the side of Paul. For if to conquer is more illustrious than to be
conquered, he is more glorious. And this is not yet much, that he conquered,
but that being in so mean a state he conquered one in so exalted a condition.
For I say, and will not cease to repeat it, though bound with a chain, yet
he smote him that was invested with a diadem.
Such is the power of Christ. The chain surpassed the kingly crown, and this
apparel was shown more brilliant than that. Clothed in filthy rags, as the
inhabitant of a prison, he turned all eyes upon the chains that hung on him,
rather than on the purple robe. He stood on earth bound down and stooping low,
and all left the tyrant mounted on a golden chariot to gaze on him. And well
they might. For it was customary to see a king with white horses, but it was
a strange and unwonted sight to behold a prisoner conversing with a king with
as much confidence as a king would converse with a pitiful and wretched slave.
The surrounding multitude were all slaves of the king, yet they admired not
their lord, but him who was superior to their lord. And he before whom all
feared and trembled, was trampled upon by one solitary man. See then how great
was the brightness of these very chains!
And what need to mention what followed after these things? The tomb of the
one is nowhere to be seen; but the other lies in the royal city itself, in
greater splendor than any king, even there where he conquered, where he raised
his trophy. If mention is made of the one, it is with reproach, even among
his kindred, for he is said to have been profligate. But the memory of the
other is everywhere accompanied with a good report, not among(1) us only, but
among his enemies. For when truth shines forth, it puts to shame even one's
enemies, and if they admire him not for his faith, yet they admire him for
his boldness and his manly freedom. The one is proclaimed by all mouths, as
one that is crowned, the other is loaded with reproaches and accusations. Which
then is the real splendor?
And yet
I am but praising the lion for his talons, when I ought to be speaking of
his real honors.
And what
are these? Those in the heavens. How will he come
in a shining vesture with the King of Heaven! How will Nero stand then, mournful
and dejected! And if what I say seems to thee incredible and ridiculous, thou
art ridiculous for deriding that which is no subject for laughter. For if thou
disbelievest the future, be convinced from what is past. The season for being
crowned is not yet come, and yet how great honor has the combatant gained!
What honor then will he not obtain, when the Distributor of the prizes shall
come! He was among foreigners, "a stranger and a sojourner" (Heb.
xi. 13), and thus is he admired: what good will he not enjoy, when he is amongst
his own? Now "our life is hid with Christ in God" (Col. iii. 3);
yet he who is dead worketh more and is more honored than the living. When that
our life shall come, what will he not participate? What will he not attain?
On this
account God made him enjoy these honors, not because he wanted them. For
if when in the body
he despised
popular glory, much more will he despise
it now that he is delivered from the body. Nor only on this account has He
caused him to enjoy honor, but that those who disbelieve the future may be
convinced from the present. I say that when the Resurrection shall be, Paul
will come with the King of Heaven, and will enjoy infinite blessings. But the
unbeliever will not be convinced. Let him believe then from the present. The
tent-maker is more illustrious, more honored than the king. No emperor of Rome
ever enjoyed so great honor. The emperor is cast out, and lies, no one knows
where. The tent-maker occupies the midst of the city, as if he were a king,
and living. From these things believe, even with respect to the future. If
he enjoys so great honor here, where he was persecuted and banished, what will
he not be when he shall come hereafter? If when he was a tent-maker, he was
so illustrious, what will he be when he shall come rivaling the beams of the
sun? If in so much meanness he overcame such magnificence, to whom, at his
coming, will he not be superior? Can we avoid the conclusion? Who is not moved
by the fact, that a tent-maker became more honorable than the most honored
of kings? If here things happen so beyond the course of nature, much more will
it be so hereafter. If thou wilt not believe the future, O man, believe the
present. If thou wilt not believe invisible things, believe things that are
seen: or rather believe things which are seen, for so thou wilt believe things
which are invisible. But if thou wilt not, we may fitly say with the Apostle, "We
are pure from your blood" (Acts xx. 26): for we have testified to you
of all things, and have left out nothing that we should have said. Blame yourselves
therefore, and to yourselves(2) will ye impute the punishment of Hell. But
let us, my beloved children, be imitators of Paul, not in his faith only, but
in his life, that we may attain to heavenly glory, and trample upon that glory
that is here. Let not any things present attract us. Let us despise visible
things, that we may obtain heavenly things, or rather may(3) through these
obtain the others, but let it be our aim preeminently to obtain those, of which
God grant that we may be all accounted worthy, through the grace and lovingkindness, &c.
HOMILY V.
2 TIMOTHY ii. 11-14.
"It
is a faithful saying: for if we be dead with Him, we shall also live with
Him: if we suffer,
we
shall also reign with Him: if we deny Him, He also
will deny us: if we believe not, yet He abideth faithful: He cannot deny Himself.
Of these things put them in remembrance, charging them before the Lord, that
they strive not about words to no profit, but to the subverting of the hearers."
MANY of
the weaker sort of men give up the effort of faith, and do not endure the
deferring of their
hope.
They seek things present, and form from these
their judgment of the future. When therefore their lot here was death, torments,
and chains, and yet he says, they shall come to eternal life, they would not
have believed, but would have said, "What sayest thou? When I live, I
die; and when I die, I live? Thou promisest nothing on earth, and dost thou
give it in heaven? Little things thou dost not bestow; and dost thou offer
great things?" That none therefore may argue thus, he places beyond doubt
the proof of these things, laying it down beforehand already, and giving certain
signs. For, "remember," he says, "that Jesus Christ was raised
from the dead"; that is, rose again after death. And now showing the same
thing he says, "It is a faithful saying," that he who has attained
a heavenly life, will attain eternal life also. Whence is it "faithful"?
Because, he says, "If we be dead with Him, we shall also live with Him." For
say, shall we partake with Him in things laborious and painful; and shall we
not in things beneficial? But not even a man would act thus, nor, if one had
chosen to suffer affliction and death with him, would he refuse to him a share
in his rest, if he had attained it. But how are we "dead with Him"?
This death he means both of that in the Layer, and that in sufferings. For
he says, "Bearing about in the body the dying of the Lord Jesus" (2
Cor. iv. 10); and, "We are buried with Him by baptism into death" (Rom.
vi. 4); and, "Our old man is crucified with Him"; and, "We have
been planted together in the likeness of His death." (Rom. vi. 5, 6.)
But he also speaks here of death by trials: and that more especially, for he
was also suffering trials when he wrote it. And this is what he says, "If
we have suffered death on His account, shall we not live on His account? This
is not to be doubted. 'If we suffer, we shall also reign with Him,'" not
absolutely, we shall reign, but "if we suffer," showing that it is
not enough to die once, (the blessed man himself died daily,) but there was
need of much patient endurance; and especially Timothy had need of it. For
tell me not, he says, of your first sufferings, but that you continue to suffer.
Then on
the other side he exhorts him, not from the good, but from the evil. For
if wicked men were
to partake
of the same things, this would be no consolation.
And if having endured they were to reign with Him, but not having endured were
not indeed to reign with Him, but were to suffer no worse evil, though this
were terrible, yet it would not be enough to affect most men with concern.
Wherefore he speaks of something more dreadful still. If we deny Him, He will
also deny us. So then there is a retribution not of good things only, but of
the contrary. And consider What it is probable that he will suffer, who is
denied in that kingdom. "Whosoever shall deny Me, him will I also deny." (Matt.
x. 33.) And the retribution is not equal, though it seems so expressed. For
we who deny Him are men, but He who denies us is God; and how great is the
distance between God and man, it is needless to say.
Besides,
we injure ourselves; Him we cannot injure. And to show this, he has added, "If we believe not, He abideth faithful: He cannot deny Himself":
that is, if we believe not that He rose again, He is not injured by it. He
is faithful and unshaken, whether we say so or not. If then He is not at all
injured by our denying Him, it is for nothing else than for our benefit that
He desires our confession. For He abideth the same, whether we deny Him or
not. He cannot deny Himself, that is, His own Being. We may say that He is
not; though such is not the fact. It is not in His nature, it is not possible
for Him not to be, that is, to go into nonentity.(1) His subsistence always
abides, always is. Let us not therefore be so affected, as if we could gratify
or could injure Him. But lest any one should think that Timothy needed this
advice, he has added,
"Of these things put them in remembrance, charging them before the Lord,
that they strive not about words to no profit, but to the subverting of the
hearers." It is an overawing thing to call God to witness what we say,
for if no one would dare to set at nought the testimony of man when appealed
to, much less when the appeal is to God. If any one, for instance, entering
into a contract, or making his will, chooses to call witnesses worthy of credit,
would any transfer the things to those who are not included? Surely not. And
even if he wishes it, yet fearing the credibility of the witnesses, he avoids
it. What is "charging them before the Lord"? he calls God to witness
both what was said, and what was done.
"That they strive not about words to no profit;" and not merely
so, but "to the subverting of the hearers." Not only is there no
gain from it, but much harm. "Of these things then put them in remembrance," and
if they despise thee, God will judge them. But why does he admonish them not
to strive about words? He knows that it is a dainty(1) thing, and that the
human soul is ever prone to contend and to dispute about words. To guard against
this, he has not only charged them "not to strive about words," but
to render his discourse more alarming, he adds, "to the subverting of
the hearers."
Ver. 15. "Study
to show thyself approved unto God, a workman that needeth not to be ashamed,
rightly dividing
the word of truth."
Everywhere
this "not being ashamed"! And why is he ever so careful
to guard him against shame? Because it was natural for many to be ashamed both
of Paul himself, as being a tent-maker, and of the preaching, since its teachers
perished. For Christ had been crucified, himself was about to be beheaded,
Peter was crucified with his head downwards, and these things they suffered
from audacious and despicable men. Because such men were in power, he says, "Be
not ashamed"; that is, fear not to do anything tending to godliness, though
it be necessary to submit to slavery or any other suffering. For how does any
one become approved? By being "a workman that needeth not to be ashamed." As
the workman is not ashamed of any work, so neither should he be ashamed who
labors in the Gospel. He should submit to anything.
"Rightly
dividing the word of truth."
This he
hath well said. For many distort it, and pervert it in every way, and many
additions are
made to it.
He has not said directing it, but "rightly
dividing," that is, cut away what is spurious, with much vehemence assail
it, and extirpate it. With the sword of the Spirit cut off from your preaching,
as from a thong, whatever is superfluous and foreign to it.
Ver. 16. "And shun profane novelties of speech."(2)
For they will not stop there. For when anything new has been introduced, it
is ever producing innovations, and the error of him who has once left the safe
harbor is infinite, and never stops.
"For they will increase unto more ungodliness," he
says,
Ver. 17. "And
their word will eat as doth a canker."
It is an evil not to be restrained, not curable by any medicine, it destroys
the whole frame. He shows that novelty of doctrine is a disease, and worse
than a disease. And here he implies that they are incorrigible, and that they
erred not weakly but willfully.
"Of
whom is Hymeneus and Philetus,"
Ver. 18. "Who
concerning the truth have erred, saying that the resurrection is past already,
and overthrow
the faith of some."
He has
well said, "They will increase unto more ungodliness." For
it appears indeed to be a solitary evil, but see what evils spring out of it.
For if the Resurrection is already past, not only do we suffer loss in being
deprived of that great glory, but because judgment is taken away, and retribution
also. For if the Resurrection is past, retribution also is past. The good therefore
have reaped persecutions and afflictions, and the wicked have not been punished,
nay verily, they live in great pleasure.(3) It were better to say that there
is no resurrection, than that it is already past.
"And overthrow," he says, "the
faith of some."
"Of some," not
of all. For if there is no resurrection, faith is subverted. Our preaching
is vain,
nor is Christ risen; and if He is not risen,
neither was He born, nor has He ascended into heaven. Observe how this error,
while it seems to oppose the doctrine of the Resurrection, draws after it many
other evils. What then, says one, ought we to do nothing for those who are
subverted?(4)
Ver. 19. "Nevertheless," he says, "the
foundation of God standeth sure, having this seal, The Lord knoweth them
that are His. And, Let every
one that nameth the name of the Lord(5) depart from iniquity."
He shows that even before they were subverted, they were not firm. For otherwise,
they would not have been overthrown at the first attack, as Adam(1) was firm
before the commandment. For those who are fixed not only are not harmed through
deceivers, but are even admired.
And he
calls it "sure," and a "foundation"; so ought we
to adhere to the faith; "having this seal, The Lord knoweth them that
are His." What is this? He has taken it from Deuteronomy;" that is,
Firm souls stand fixed and immovable. But whence are they manifest? From having
these characters inscribed upon their actions, from their being known by God,
and not perishing with the world, and from their departing from iniquity.
"Let every one," he says, "that
nameth the name of the Lord depart from iniquity."
These
are the distinguishing marks of the foundation. As a(3) foundation is shown
to be firm, and as letters
are inscribed upon a stone that the letters
may be significant. But these letters are shown by works, "Having," he
says, "this seal" fixed thereon, "Let every one that nameth
the name of the Lord depart from iniquity." Thus if any one is unrighteous,
he is not of the foundation. So that this too is of the seal, not to do iniquity.
MORAL. Let us not therefore put off from us the royal seal and token, that
we may not be of those who are not sealed, that we may not be unsound, that
we may be firmly grounded, that we may be of the foundation, and not carried
to and fro. This marks them that are of God, that they depart from iniquity.
For how can any one be of God Who is just, if he does iniquity, if by his works
he opposes Him, if he insults Him by his misdeeds? Again we are speaking against
injustice, and again we have many that are hostile to us. For this affection,
like a tyrant, has seized upon the souls of all, and, what is worse, not by
necessity nor violence, but by persuasion and gentle insinuation, and they
are grateful for their slavery. And this is indeed the misery; for if they
were held by constraint and not by love, they would soon depart. And whence
is it, that a thing which is most bitter, appears to be sweet? whence is it
that righteousness, which is a most sweet thing, becomes bitter? It is the
fault of our senses. Thus some have thought honey bitter, and have taken with
pleasure other things that were noxious. And the cause is not in the nature
of things, but in the perverseness of the sufferers. The judging faculty of
the soul(4) is disordered? Just as a balance, if its beam be unsteady,(6) moves
round, and does not show accurately the weight of things placed in it; so the
soul, if it has not the beam of its own thoughts fixed, and firmly riveted
to the law of God, being carried round and drawn down, will not be able to
judge a right of actions.
For if any one will examine carefully, he will perceive the great bitterness
of injustice, not to those who suffer it, but to those who practice it, and
to these more than to the others. And let us riot speak of things future, but
for the present of things here. Hath it not battles, judgments, condemnation,
ill will, abuse? what is more bitter than these? Hath it not enmities, and
wars, and accusations? what is more bitter than these? Hath it not conscience
continually scourging and gnawing us? If it were possible, I could wish to
draw out from the body the soul of the unrighteous man, and you would see it
pale and trembling, ashamed, hiding its head, anxiously fearful, and self-condemned.
For should we sink down into the very depths of wickedness, the judging faculty
of the mind(7) is not destroyed, but remains unbribed. And no one pursues injustice
thinking it to be good, but he invents excuses, and has recourse to every artifice
of words to shift off the accusation. But he cannot get it off his conscience.
Here indeed the speciousness of words, the corruption of rulers, and multitudes
of flatterers, is often able to throw justice into the shade, but within, the
conscience(8) has nothing of this sort, there are no flatterers there, no wealth
to corrupt the judge. For the faculty of judging is naturally implanted in
us by God, and what comes from God cannot be so corrupted. But uneasy slumbers,
thick-coming fancies, and the fre