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HOMILIES OF
ST. JOHN CHRYSOSTOM
ON THE GOSPEL
ACCORDING TO ST. JOHN
HOMILIES XXII TO XXVIII (JOHN 2 & 3)
HOMILY XXII.
JOHN ii. 4.
"Woman,
what have I to do with thee? Mine hour is not yet come."
[1.] IN
preaching the word there is some toil, and this Paul declares when he says, "Let the elders that rule well be counted worthy of double honor,
especially they who labor in the word and doctrine." (1 Tim: v. 17.) Yet
it is in your power to make this labor light or heavy; for if you reject our
words, or if without actually rejecting them you do not show them forth in
your works, our toil will be heavy, because we labor uselessly and in vain:
while if ye heed them and give proof of it by your works, we shall not even
feel the toil, because the fruit produced by our labor will not suffer the
greatness of that labor to appear. So that if you would rouse our zeal, and
not quench or weaken it, show us, I beseech you, your fruit, that we may behold
the fields waving(1) with corn, and being supported by hopes of an abundant
crop, and reckoning up your(2) riches, may not be slothful(3) in carrying on
this good traffic.
It is
no slight question which is proposed to us also to-day. For first, when the
mother of Jesus
says, "They have no wine," Christ replies, "Woman,
what have I to do with thee? Mine, hour is not yet come." And then, having
thus spoken, He did as His mother had said; an action which needs enquiry no
less than the words. Let us then, after calling upon Him who wrought the miracle,
proceed to the explanation.
The words
are not used in this place only, but in others also; for the same Evangelist
says, "They could not lay hands on Him,(4) because His hour
was not yet come" (c. viii. 20); and again, "No man laid hands on
Him, because His hour was not yet come" (c. vii. 30); and again, "The
hour is come, glorify Thy Son." (c. xvii. 1.) What then do the words mean?
I have brought together more instances, that I may give one explanation of
all. And what is that explanation? Christ did not say, "Mine hour is not
yet come," as being subject to the necessity of seasons, or the observance
of an "hour"; how can He be so, who is Maker of seasons, and Creator
of the times and the ages? To what else then did He allude? He desires to show(5)
this; that He works all things at their convenient season, not doing all at
once; because a kind of confusion and disorder would have ensued, if, instead
of working all at their proper seasons, He had mixed all together, His Birth,
His Resurrection, and His coming to Judgment. Observe this; creation was to
be, yet not all at once; man and woman were to be created, yet not even these
together; mankind were to be condemned to death, and there was to be a resurrection,
yet the interval between the two was to be great; the law was to be given,
but not grace with it, each was to be dispensed at its proper time. Now Christ
was not subject to the necessity of seasons, but rather settled their order,
since He is their Creator; and therefore He saith in this place, "Mine
hour is not yet come." And His meaning is, that as yet He was not manifest(6)
to the many, nor had He even His whole company of disciples; Andrew followed
Him, and next to(7) him Philip, but no one else. And moreover, none of these,
not even His mother nor His brethren, knew Him as they ought; for after His
many miracles, the Evangelist says of His brethren, "For neither did His
brethren believe in Him." (c. vii. 5.) And those at the wedding did not
know Him either, for in their need they would certainly have come to and entreated
Him. Therefore He saith, "Mine hour is not yet come"; that is, "I
am not yet known to the company, nor are they even aware that the wine has
failed; let them first be sensible of this. I ought not to have been told it
from thee; thou art My mother, and renderest the miracle suspicious. They who
wanted the wine should have come and besought Me, not that I need this, but
that they might with an entire assent accept the miracle. For one who knows
that he is in need, is very grateful when he obtains assistance; but one who
has not a sense of his need, will never have a plain and clear sense of the
benefit."
Why then
after He had said, "Mine hour is not yet come," and given
her a denial, did He what His mother desired? Chiefly it was, that they who
opposed Him, and thought that He was subject to the "hour," might
have sufficient proof that He was subject to no hour; for had He been so, how
could He, before the proper "hour" was come, have done what He did?
And in the next place, He did it to honor His mother, that He might not seem
entirely to contradict and shame her that bare Him in the presence of so many;
and also, that He might not be thought to want power,(1) for she brought the
servants to Him.
Besides,
even while saying to the Canaanitish woman, "It is not meet
to take the children's bread, and to give(2) it unto dogs" (Matt. xv.
26), He still gave the bread, as considering her perseverance; and though after
his first reply, He said, "I am not sent save unto the lost sheep of the
house of lsrael," yet even after saying this, He healed the woman's daughter.
Hence we learn, that although we be unworthy, we often by perseverance make
ourselves worthy to receive. And for this reason His mother remained by, and
openly(3) brought to Him the servants, that the request might be made by a
greater number; and therefore she added,
Ver. 5. "Whatsoever
He saith unto you, do it."
For she knew that His refusal proceeded not from want of power, but from humility,
and that He might not seem without cause(4) to hurry to(5) the miracle; and
therefore she brought the servants.(6)
Ver. 6,
7. "And there
were set there six waterpots of stone, after the manner of the purifying
of the
Jews, containing two or three firkins apiece.
Jesus said unto them, Fill the waterpots with water; and they filled them up
to the brim."
It is
not without a reason that the Evangelist says, "After the manner
of the purifying of the Jews," but in order that none of the unbelievers
might suspect that lees having been left in the vessels, and water having been
poured upon and mixed with them, a very weak wine had been made. Therefore
he says, "after the manner of the purifying of the Jews," to show
that those vessels were never receptacles for wine. For because Palestine is
a country with but little water, and brooks and fountains were not everywhere
to be found, they always used to fill waterpots with water, so that they might
not have to hasten to the rivers if at any time they were filed, but might
have the means of purification at hand.
"And why was it, that He did not the miracle before they filled them,
which would have been more marvelous by far? for it is one thing to change
given matter to a different quality, and another to create matter out of nothing." The
latter would indeed have been more wonderful, but would not have seemed so
credible to the many. And therefore He often purposely lessens(7) the greatness
of His miracles, that it may be the more readily received.
"But why," says one, "did not He Himself produce the water
which He afterwards showed to be wine, instead of bidding the servants bring
it?" For the very same reason; and also, that He might have those who
drew it out to witness that what had been effected was no delusion since if
any had been inclined to be shameless, those who ministered might have said
to them, "We drew the water, we filled the vessels." And besides
what we have mentioned, He thus overthrows those doctrines which spring up
against the Church. For since there are some who say that the Creator of the
world is another, and that the things which are seen are not His works, but
those of a certain other opposing god, to curb these men's madness He doth
most of His miracles on matter found at hand.(8) Because, had the creator of
these been opposed to Him, He would not have used what was another's to set
forth His own power. But now to show that it is He who transmutes water in
the vine plants, and who converts the rain by its passage through the root
into wine, He effected that in a moment at the wedding which in the plant is
long in doing.When they had filled the waterpots, He said,
Ver. 8-10. "Draw
out now, and bear unto the governor of the feast; and they bare it. When
the ruler
of the feast had tasted the water that was made
wine, and knew not whence it was, (but the servants which drew the water knew,)
the governor of the feast called the bridegroom, and saith unto him, Every
man at the beginning doth set forth good wine, and when men have well drunk,
then that which is worst; but thou hast kept the good wine until now."
Here again
some mock,(9) saying, "this was an assembly of drunken men,
the sense of the judges was spoilt, and not able to taste(10) what was made,
or to decide on what was done, so that they did not know whether what was made
was water or wine: for that they were drunk," it is alleged, "the
ruler himself has shown by what he said." Now this is most ridiculous,
yet even this suspicion the Evangelist has removed. For he does not say that
the guests gave their opinion on the matter, but "the ruler of the feast," who
was sober, and had not as yet tasted anything. For of course you are aware,
that those who are entrusted with the management(1) of such banquets are the
most sober, as having this one business, to dispose all things in order and
regularity; and therefore the Lord called such a man's sober senses to testify
to what was done. For He did not say, "Pour forth to them that sit at
meat," but, "Bear unto the governor of the feast."
"And when the ruler of the feast had tasted the water that was made wine,
and knew not whence it was, (but the servants knew,) the governor of the feast
called the bridegroom." "And why did he not call the servants? for
so the miracle would have been revealed." Because Jesus had not Himself
revealed what had been done, but desired that the power of His miracles should
be known gently, little by little. And suppose that it had then been mentioned,(2)
the servants who related it would never have been believed, but would have
been thought mad to bear such testimony to one who at that time seemed to the
many a mere man; and although they knew the certainty of the thing by experience,
(for they were not likely to disbelieve their own hands,) yet they were not
sufficient to convince others. And so He did not reveal it to all, but to him
who was best able to understand what was done, reserving the clearer knowledge
of it for a future time; since after the manifestation of other miracles this
also would be credible. Thus when he was about to heal the nobleman's son,
the Evangelist has shown that it had already become more clearly known; for
it was chiefly because the nobleman had become acquainted with the miracle
that he called upon Him, as John incidentally shows when he says, "Jesus
came into Cana of Galilee, where He made the water wine." (c. iv. 46.)
And not wine simply, but the best.
[3.] For such are the miraculous works of Christ, they are far more perfect
and better than the operations of nature. This is seen also in other instances;
when He restored any infirm member of the body, He made(3) it better than the
sound.
That it was wine then, and the best of wine, that had been made, not the servants
only, but the bridegroom and the ruler of the feast would testify; and that
it was made by Christ, those who drew the water; so that although the miracle
were not then revealed, yet it could not in the end be passed in silence, so
many and constraining testimonies had He provided for the future. That He had
made the water wine, He had the servants for witnesses; that the wine was good
that had been made, the ruler of the feast and the bridegroom.
It might be expected that the bridegroom would reply to this, (the ruler's
speech,) and say something, but the Evangelist, hastening to more pressing
matters, has only touched upon this miracle, and passed on. For what we needed
to learn was, that Christ made the water wine, and that good wine; but what
the bridegroom said to the governor he did not think it necessary to add. And
many miracles, at first somewhat obscure, have in process of time become more
plain, when reported more exactly by those who knew them from the beginning.
At that
time, then, Jesus made of water wine, and both then and now He ceases not
to change our weak
and
unstable(4) wills. For there are, yes, there are
men who in nothing differ from water, so cold, and weak, and unsettled. But
let us bring those of such disposition to the Lord, that He may change their
will to the quality of wine, so that they be no longer washy,(5) but have body,(6)
and be the cause of gladness in themselves and others. But who can these cold
ones be? They are those who give their minds to the fleeting things of this
present life, who despise not this world's luxury, who are lovers of glory
and dominion: for all these things are flowing waters, never stable, but ever
rushing violently down the steep. The rich to-day is poor tomorrow, he who
one day appears with herald, and girdle, and chariot, and numerous attendants,
is often on the next the inhabitant of a dungeon, having unwillingly quitted
all that show to make room for another. Again, the gluttonous and dissipated(7)
man, when he has filled himself to bursting,(8) cannot retain even for a single
day the supply(9) conveyed by his delicacies, but when that is dispersed, in
order to renew it he is obliged to put in more, differing in nothing from a
torrent. For as in the torrent when the first body of water is gone, others
in turn succeed; so in gluttony, when one repast is removed, we again require
another. And such is the nature and the lot of earthly things, never to be
stable, but to be always pouring and hurrying by; but in the case of luxury,
it is not merely the flowing and hastening by; but many other things that trouble
us. By the violence of its course it wears away(10) the strength of the body,
and strips the soul of its manliness, and the strongest currents of rivers
do not so easily eat away their banks and make them sink down, as do luxury
and wantonness sweep away all the bulwarks of our health; and if you enter
a physician's house and ask him, you will find that almost all the causes of
diseases arise from this. For frugality and a plain(1) table is the mother
of health, and therefore physicians(2) have thus named it; for they have called
the not being satisfied "health," (because not to be satisfied with
food is health,) and they have spoken of sparing diet as the "mother of
health." Now if the condition of wants is the mother of health, it is
clear that fullness is the mother of sickness and debility, and produces attacks
which are beyond the skill even of physicians. For gout in the feet, apoplexy,
dimness of sight, pains in the hands, tremors, paralytic attacks, jaundice,
lingering and inflammatory fevers, and other diseases many more than these,
(for we have not time to go over them all,) are the natural offspring, not
of abstinence and moderate(4) diet, but of gluttony and repletion. And if you
will look to the diseases of the soul that arise from them, you will see that
feelings of coveting, sloth, melancholy, dullness, impurity, and folly of all
kinds, have their origin here. For after such banquets the souls of the luxurious
become no better than asses, being torn to pieces by such wild beasts as these
(passions). Shall I say also how many pains and displeasures they have who
wait upon luxury? I could not enumerate them all, but by a single principal
point I will make the whole clear. At a table such as I speak of, that is,
a sumptuous one, men never eat with pleasure; for abstinence is the mother
of pleasure as well as health, while repletion is the source and root not only
of diseases, but of displeasure. For where there is satiety there desire cannot
be, and where there is no desire, how can there be pleasure? And therefore
we should find that the poor are not only of better understanding and healthier
than the rich, but also that they enjoy a greater degree of pleasure. Let us,
when we reflect on this, flee drunkenness and luxury, not that of the table
alone, but all other which is found in the things of this life, and let us
take in exchange for it the pleasure arising from spiritual things, and, as
the Prophet says, delight ourselves in the Lord; "Delight thyself in the
Lord, and He shall give thee the desires of thine heart" (Ps. xxxvii.
4); that so that we may enjoy the good things both here and hereafter, through
the grace and lovingkindness of our Lord Jesus Christ, by whom and with whom,
to the Father and the Holy Ghost, be glory, world without end. Amen.
HOMILY XXIII.
JOHN ii. 11.
"This
beginning of miracles did Jesus in Cana of Galilee."
[1.] FREQUENT and fierce is the devil in his attacks, on all sides besieging
our salvation; we therefore must watch and be sober, and everywhere fortify
ourselves against his assault, for if he but gain some slight vantage ground,(5)
he goes on to make for himself a broad passage, and by degrees introduces all
his forces. If then we have any care at all for our salvation, let us not allow
him to make his approaches even in trifles, that thus we may check him beforehand
in important matters; for it would be the extreme of folly, if, while he displays
such eagerness to destroy our souls, we should not bring even an equal amount
in defense of our own salvation.
I say not this without a cause, but because I fear lest that wolf be even
now standing unseen by us in the midst of the fold,(6) and some sheep become
a prey to him, being led astray from the flock and from hearkening by its own
carelessness and his craft. Were the wounds(7) sensible, or did the body receive
the blows, there would be no difficulty in discerning his plots; but since
the soul is invisible, and since that it is which receives the wounds, we need
great watchfulness that each may prove himself; for none knoweth the things
of a man as the spirit of a man that is in him. (1 Cor. ii. 11.) The word is
spoken indeed to all, and is offered as a general remedy to those who need
it, but it is the business of every individual hearer to take what is suited
to his complaint. I know not who are sick, I know not who are well. And therefore
I use every sort of argument, and introduce remedies suited to all maladies,(8)
at one time condemning covetousness, after that touching on luxury, and again
on impurity, then composing something in praise of and exhortation to charity,
and each of the other virtues in their turn. For I fear lest when my arguments
are employed on any one subject, I may without knowing it be treating you for
one disease while you are ill of others. So that if this congregation were
but one person, I should not have judged it so absolutely necessary to make
my discourse varied; but since in such a multitude there are probably also
many maladies, I not unreasonably diversify my teaching, since my discourse
will be sure to attain its object when it is made to embrace you all. For this
cause also Scripture is something multiform,(1) and speaks on ten thousand
matters, because it addresses itself to the nature of mankind in common, and
in such a multitude all the passions of the soul must needs be; though all
be not in each. Let us then cleanse ourselves of these, and so listen to the
divine oracles, and with contrite heart(2) hear what has been this day read
to us.
And what
is that? "This beginning of miracles did Jesus in Cana of Galilee." I
told you the other day, that there are some who say that this is not the beginning. "For
what," says one, "if 'Cana of Galilee' be added? This shows that
this was 'the beginning' He made 'in Cana.' "(3) But on these points I
would not venture to assert anything exactly. I before have shown that He began
His miracles after His Baptism, and wrought no miracle before it i but whether
of the miracles done after His Baptism, this or some other was the first, it
seems to me unnecessary to assert positively.
"And
manifested forth His glory."
"How?" asks one, "and in what way? For only the servants, the
ruler of the feast, and the bridegroom, not the greater number of those present,
gave heed to what was done." How then did he "manifest forth His
glory"? He manifested it at least for His own part, and if all present
hear not of the miracle at the time, they would hear of it afterwards, for
unto the present time it is celebrated, and has not been unnoticed. That all
did not know it on the same day is clear from what follows, for after having
said that He "manifested forth His glory," the Evangelist adds,
"And
His disciples believed on Him."
His disciples,
who even before this regarded Him with wonder.(4) Seest thou that it was
especially
necessary
to work the miracles at times when men were
present of honest minds, and who would carefully give heed to what was done?
for these would more readily believe, and attend more exactly to the circumstances. "And
how could He have become known without miracles?" Because His doctrine
and prophetic powers were sufficient to cause wonder in the souls of His hearers,
so that they took heed to what He did with a right disposition, their minds
being already well affected towards Him. And therefore in many other places
the Evangelists say, that He did no miracle on account of the perversity of
the men who dwelt there. (Matt. xii. 38; ch. xiii. 58, &c.)
Ver. 12. "After
this He went down to Capernaum, He, and His mother, and His brethren, and
His
disciples;
and they continued there not many days."
Wherefore
comes He with "His mother to Capernaum"? for He hath done
no miracle there, and the inhabitants of that city were not of those who were
rightminded towards Him, but of the utterly corrupt. And this Christ declared
when He said, "And thou, Capernaum, which are exalted to heaven, shall
be thrust down to hell." (Luke x. 15.) Wherefore then goes He? I think
it was, because He intended a little after to go up to Jerusalem, that He then
went to Capernaum, to avoid leading about(5) everywhere with Him, His mother
and His brethren. And so, having departed and tarried a little while to honor
His mother, He again commences His miracles after restoring to her home her
who had borne Him. Therefore the Evangelist says, After "not many days,"
Ver. 13. "He
went up to Jerusalem."
He received baptism then a few days before the passover. But on going up to
Jerusalem, what did He, a deed full of high authority; for He cast out of the
Temple those dealers and money changers, and those who sold doves, and oxen,
and sheep, and who passed their time there for this purpose.
[2.] Another
Evangelist writes, that as He cast them out, He said, Make not my Father's
house(6) "a den of thieves," but
this one,
Ver. 16.
(" Make
not My Father's house) an house of merchandise."
They do
not in this contradict each other, but show that he did this a second time,
and that both these
expressions were not used on the same occasion, but
that He acted thus once at the beginning of His ministry, and again when He
had come to the very time of His Passion. Therefore, (on the latter occasion,)
employing more strong expressions, He spoke of it as(7) (being made) "a
den of thieves," but here at the commencement of His miracles He does
not so, but uses a more gentle rebuke; from which it is probable that this
took place(1) a second time.
"And wherefore," says one, "did Christ do this same, and use
such severity against these men, a thing which He is nowhere else seen to do,
even when insulted and reviled, and called by them 'Samaritan' and 'demoniac'?
for He was not even satisfied with words only, but took a scourge, and so cast
them out." Yes, but it was when others were receiving benefit, that the
Jews accused and raged against Him; when it was probable that they would have
been made savage by His rebukes, they showed no such disposition towards Him,
for they neither accused nor reviled Him. What say they?
Ver. 18. "What
sign showest Thou unto us, seeing that Thou doest these things?"
Seest thou their excessive malice, and how the benefits done to others incensed
them more (than reproofs)?
At one
time then He said, that the Temple was made by them "a den of
thieves," showing that what they sold was gotten by theft, and rapine,
and covetousness, and that they were rich through other men's calamities; at
another, "a house of merchandise," pointing to their shameless traffickings. "But
wherefore did He this?" Since he was about to heal on the Sabbath day,
and to do many such things which were thought by them transgressions of the
Law in order that He might not seem to do this as though He had come to be
some rival God(2) and opponent of His Father, He takes occasion hence to correct
any such suspicion of theirs. For One who had exhibited so much zeal for the
House was not likely to oppose Him who was Lord of the House, and who was worshiped
in it. No doubt even the former years during which He lived according to the
Law, were sufficient to show His reverence for the Legislator, and that He
came not to give contrary laws; yet since it was likely that those years were
forgotten through lapse of time, as not having been known to all because He
was brought up in a poor and mean dwelling, He afterwards does this in the
presence of all, (for many were present because the feast was nigh at hand,)
and at great risk. For he did not merely "cast them out," but also "overturned
the tables," and "poured out the money," giving them by this
to understand, that He who threw Himself into danger for the good order of
the House could never despise his Master. Had He acted as He did from hypocrisy,
He should only have advised them; but to place Himself in danger was very daring.
For it was no light thing to offer Himself to the anger of so many market-folk,(3)
to excite against Himself a most brutal mob of petty dealers by His reproaches
and His blows, this was not the action of a pretender, but of one choosing
to suffer everything for the order of the House.
And therefore
not by His actions only, but by His words, He shows his agreement with the
Father;(4)
for He
saith not "the Holy House," but "My
Father's House." See, He even calls Him, "Father," and they
are not wroth; they thought He spoke in a general way:(5) but when He went
on and spoke more plainly, so as to set before them the idea of His Equality,
then they become angry.
And what
say they? "What sign showest Thou unto us, seeing that Thou
doest these things?" Alas for their utter madness! Was there need of a
sign before they could cease their evil doings, and free the house of God from
such dishonor? and was it not the greatest sign of His Excellence that He had
gotten such zeal for that House? In fact, the well-disposed(6) were distinguished
by this very thing, for "They," His disciples, it says,
Ver. 17. "Remembered
that it is written, The zeal of thine house hath eaten me up."
But the
Jews did not remember the Prophecy, and said, "What sign showest
Thou unto us?" (Ps. lxix. 9), both grieving that their shameful traffic
was cut off, and expecting by these means to stop Him, and also desiring to
challenge Him to a miracle, and to find fault with what He was doing. Wherefore
He will not give them a sign; and before, when they came and asked Him, He
made them the same answer, "A wicked and adulterous generation seeketh
after a sign; and there shall no sign be given unto it, but the sign of the
prophet Jonas." (Matt. xvi. 4.) Only then the answer was clear, now it
is more ambiguous. This He doth on account of their extreme insensibility;
for He who prevented(7) them without their asking, and gave them signs, would
never when they asked have turned away from them, had He not seen that their
minds were wicked and false, and their intention treacherous.(8) Think how
full of wickedness the question itself was at the outset. When they ought to
have applauded Him for His earnestness and zeal, when they ought to have been
astonished that He cared so greatly for the House, they reproach Him, saying,
that it was lawful to traffic, and unlawful for any to stop their traffic,
except he should show them a sign. What saith Christ?
Ver. 19. "Destroy
this Temple, and in three days I will raise it up."
Many such sayings He utters which were not intelligible to His immediate hearers,
but which were to be so to those that should come after. And wherefore doth
He this? In order that when the accomplishment of His prediction should have
come to pass, He might be seen to have foreknown from the beginning what was
to follow; which indeed was the case with this prophecy. For, saith the Evangelist,
Ver. 22. "When
He was risen from the dead, His disciples remembered that He had said this;
and they believed
the Scripture, and the word which Jesus
had said."
But at the time when this was spoken, the Jews were perplexed as to what it
might mean, and cast about to discover, saying,
Ver. 20. "Forty
and six years was this Temple in building, and wilt thou rear it up in three
days?"
"Forty and six years," they
said, referring to the latter building, for the former was finished in twenty
years' time. (Ezra vi. 15.)
[3.] Wherefore
then did He not resolve the difficulty and say, "I speak
not of that Temple, but of My flesh"? Why does the Evangelist, writing
the Gospel at a later period, interpret the saying, and Jesus keep silence
at the time? Why did He so keep silence? Because they would not have received
His word; for if not even the disciples were able to understand the saying,
much less were the multitudes. "When," saith the Evangelist, "He
was risen from the dead, then they remembered, and believed the Scripture and
His word." There were two things that hindered(1) them for the time, one
the fact of the Resurrection, the other, the greater question whether He was
God(2) that dwelt within; of both which things He spake darkly when He said, "Destroy
this Temple, and I will rear it up in three days." And this St. Paul declares
to be no small proof of His Godhead, when he writes, "Declared to be the
Son of God with power, according to the Spirit of holiness, by the Resurrection
from the dead." (Rom. i. 4.).
But why
doth He both there, and here, and everywhere, give this for a sign, at one
time saying,(8) "When ye have lifted up the Son of Man, then ye
shall know that I Am" (c. viii. 28); at another, "There shall no
sign be given you(4) but the sign of the prophet Jonas" (Matt. xii. 39);
and again in this place, "In three days I will raise it up"? Because
what especially showed that He was not a mere man, was His being able to set
up a trophy of victory over death, and so quickly to abolish His long enduring
tyranny, and conclude that difficult war. Wherefore He saith, "Then ye
shall know." "Then." When? When after My Resurrection I shall
draw (all) the world to Me, then ye shall know that I did these things as God,
and Very Son of God, avenging the insult offered to My Father.
"Why then, instead of saying, 'What need is there of "signs" to
check evil deeds?' did He promise that He would give them a sign?" Because
by so doing He would have the more exasperated them; but in this way He rather
astonished them. Still they made no answer to this, for He seemed to them to
say what was incredible, so that they did not stay even to question Him upon
it, but passed it by as impossible. Yet had they been wise, though it seemed
to them at the time incredible, still when He wrought His many miracles they
would then have come and questioned Him, would then have intreated that the
difficulty might be resolved to them; but because they were foolish, they gave
no heed at all to part of what was said, and part they heard with evil frame
of mind. And therefore Christ spoke to them in an enigmatical way.
The question
still remains, "How was it that the disciples did not know
that He must rise from the dead?" It was, because they had not been vouchsafed
the gift of the Spirit; and therefore, though they constantly heard His discourses
concerning the Resurrection, they understood them not, but reasoned with themselves
what this might be. For very strange and paradoxical was the assertion that
one could raise himself, and would raise himself in such wise. And so Peter
was rebuked, when, knowing nothing about the Resurrection, he said, "Be
it far from Thee." (Matt. xvi. 22.) And Christ did not reveal it clearly
to them before the event, that they might not be offended at the very outset,
being led to distrust His words on account of the great improbability of the
thing, and because they did not yet clearly know Him, who He was. For no one
could help believing what was proclaimed aloud by facts, while some would probably
disbelieve what was told to them in words. Therefore He at first allowed the
meaning of His words to be concealed; but when by their experience He had verified
His sayings, He after that gave them understanding of His words, and such gifts
of the Spirit that they received them all at once. "He," saith Jesus, "shall
bring all things to your remembrance." (c. xiv. 26.) For they who in a
single night cast off all respect for Him, and fled from and denied that they
even knew Him, would scarcely have remembered what He had done and said during
the whole time, unless they had enjoyed much grace of the Spirit.
"But," says one, "if they were to hear from the Spirit, why
needed they to accompany Christ when they would not retain His words?" Because
the Spirit taught them not, but called to their mind what Christ had said before;
and it contributes not a little to the glory of Christ, that they were referred
to the remembrance of the words He had spoken to them. At the first then it
was of the gift of God that the grace of the Spirit lighted upon them so largely
and abundantly; but after that, it was of their own virtue that they retained
the Gift. For they displayed a shining life, and much wisdom, and great labors,
and despised this present life, and thought nothing of earthly things, but
were above them all; and like a sort of light-winged eagle, soaring high by
their works; reached(1) to heaven itself, and by these possessed the unspeakable
grace of the Spirit.
Let us then imitate them, and not quench our lamps, but keep them bright by
alms-doing, for so is the light of this fire preserved. Let us collect the
oil into our vessels whilst we are here, for we cannot buy it when we have
departed to that other place, nor can we procure it elsewhere, save only at
the hands of the poor. Let us therefore collect it thence very abundantly,
if, at least, we desire to enter in with the Bridegroom. But if we do not this,
we must remain without the bridechamber, for it is impossible, it is impossible,
though we perform ten thousand other good deeds, to enter the portals of the
Kingdom without alms-doing. Let us then show forth this very abundantly, that
we may enjoy those ineffable blessings; which may it come to pass that we all
attain, by the grace and lovingkindness of our Lord Jesus Christ, with whom
to the Father and the Holy Ghost be glory, for ever and ever. Amen.
HOMILY XXIV.
JOHN ii. 23.
" Now
when He was in Jerusalem at the Passover, in the feast, many believed on
Him."
[1.] Of the men of that time some clung to their error, others laid hold on
the truth, while of these last, some having retained it for a little while
again fell off from it. Alluding to these, Christ compared them to seeds not
deeply sown, but having their roots upon the surface of the earth; and He said
that they should quickly perish. And these the Evangelist has here pointed
out to us, saying,
"When
He was in Jerusalem, at the Passover, in the feast, many believed on Him,(2)
when they saw the
miracles which He did."
Ver. 24. "But
Jesus did not commit Himself unto them."
For they
were the more perfect(3) among His disciples, who came to Him not only because
of His miracles,
but
through His teaching also. The grosser sort
the miracles attracted, but the better reasoners His prophecies and doctrines;
and so they who were taken by His teaching were more steadfast than those attracted
by His miracles. And Christ also called them "blessed," saying, "Blessed
are they that have not seen, and yet have believed." (c. xx. 29.) But
that these here mentioned were not real disciples, the following passage shows,
for it saith, "Jesus did not commit Himself unto them." Wherefore?
"Because He knew all things,"(4)
Ver. 25. "And
needed not that any should testify of man, for He knew what was in man."
The meaning
is of this kind. "He who dwells in men's hearts, and enters
into their thoughts, took no heed of outward words; and knowing well that their
warmth was but for a season, He placed not confidence in them as in perfect
disciples, nor committed all His doctrines to them as though they had already
become firm believers." Now, to know what is in the heart of men belongs
to God alone, "who hath fashioned hearts one by one" (Ps. xxxiii.
15, LXX.), for, saith Solomon, "Thou, even Thou only, knowest the hearts" (1
Kings viii. 39); He therefore needed not witnesses to learn the thoughts of
His own creatures, and so He felt no confidence in them because of their mere,
temporary belief. Men, who know neither the present nor the future, often tell
and entrust all without any reserve to persons who approach them deceitfully
and who shortly will fall off from them; but Christ did not so, for well He
knew all their secret thoughts.
And many
such now there are, who have indeed the name of faith, but are unstable,(5)
and easily led
away;
wherefore neither now doth Christ commit Himself to them,
but concealeth from them many things; and just as we do not place confidence
in mere acquaintances but in real friends, so also doth Christ. Hear what He
saith to His disciples, "Henceforth I call you not servants, ye are My
friends." (c. xv. 14, 15.) Whence is this and why? "Because all things
that I have heard of My Father I have made known unto you." And therefore
He gave no signs to the Jews who asked for them, because they asked tempting
Him. Indeed the asking for signs is a practice of tempters both then and now;
for even now there are some that seek them and say, "Why do not miracles
take place also at this present time?" If thou art faithful, as thou oughtest
to be, and lovest Christ as thou oughtest to love Him, thou hast no need of
signs, they are given to the unbelievers. "How then," asks one, "were
they not given to the Jews?" Given they certainly were; and if there were
times when though they asked they did not receive them, it was because they
asked them not that they might be delivered from their unbelief, but in order
the more to confirm their wickedness.
Chap.
iii. 1, 2. "And
there was a man of the Pharisees, named Nicodemus. The same came to Jesus
by night."
This man
appears also in the middle of the Gospel, making defense for Christ; for
he saith, "Our law judgeth no man(1) before it hear him" (c.
vii. 51); and the Jews in anger replied to him, "Search and look, for
out of Galilee ariseth no prophet." Again after the crucifixion he bestowed
great care upon the burial of the Lord's body: "There came also," saith
the Evangelist, "Nicodemus, which came to the Lord(2) by night, and brought
a mixture of myrrh and aloes, about an hundred pound weight." (c. xix.
39.) And even now he was disposed towards Christ,(3) but not as he ought, nor
with proper sentiments respecting Him, for he was as yet entangled in Jewish
infirmity. Wherefore he came by night, because he feared to do so by day. Yet
not for this did the merciful God reject or rebuke him, or deprive him of His
instruction, but even with much kindness conversed with him and disclosed to
him very exalted doctrines enigmatically indeed, but nevertheless He disclosed
them. For far more deserving of pardon was he than those who acted thus through
wickedness. They are entirely without excuse; but he, though he was liable
to condemnation, yet was not so to an equal degree. "How then does the
Evangelist say nothing of the kind concerning him?" He has said in another
place, that "of the rulers also many believed on Him, but because of the
Jews(4) they did not confess (Him), lest they should be put out of the synagogue" (c.
xii. 42); but here he has implied the whole by mentioning his coming "by
night." What then saith Nicodemus?
"Rabbi,
we know that Thou art a Teacher come from God: for no man can do the miracles
that Thou
doest,
except God be with him."
[2.] Nicodemus
yet lingers(5) below, has yet human thoughts concerning Him, and speaks of
Him as of a Prophet,
imagining nothing great from His miracles. "We
know," he says, "that Thou art a Teacher come from God." "Why
then comest thou by night and secretly, to Him that speaketh the things of
God, to Him who cometh from God? Why conversest thou not with Him openly?" But
Jesus said nothing like this to him, nor did He rebuke him; for, saith the
Prophet, "A bruised reed shall He not break, and smoking flax shall he
not quench; He shall not strive nor cry" (Isa. xlii. 2, 3; as quoted Matt.
xii. 19, 20): and again He saith Himself, "I came not to condemn the world,
but to save the world." (c. xii. 47.)
"No
man can do these miracles, except God be with him."
Still
here Nicodemus speaks like the heretics, in saying, that He hath a power
working within Him,(6)
and
hath need of the aid of others to do as He did.
What then saith Christ? Observe His exceeding condescension. He refrained for
a while from saying, "I need not the help of others, but do all things
with power, for I am the Very Son of God, and have the same power as My Father," because
this would have been too hard for His hearer; for I say now what I am always
saying, that what Christ desired was, not so much for a while to reveal His
own Dignity, as to persuade men that He did nothing contrary to His Father.
And therefore in many places he appears in words confined by limits,(7) but
in His actions He doth not so. For when He worketh a miracle, He doth all with
power, saying, "I will, be thou clean." (Matt. viii. 3.) "Talitha,
arise." (Mark v. 41; not verbally quoted.) "Stretch forth thy hand." (Mark
iii. 5.) "Thy sins be forgiven thee." (Matt. ix. 2.) "Peace,
be still." (Mark iv. 39.) "Take up thy bed, and go unto thine house." (Matt.
ix. 6.) "Thou foul spirit, I say unto thee, come out of him." (Mark
ix. 25; not verbally quoted.) "Be it unto thee even as thou wilt." (Matt.
xv. 28.) "If any one say (aught) unto you, ye shall say, The Lord hath
need of him." (Mark xi. 3.) "This day shall thou be with Me in Paradise." (Luke
xxiii. 43.) "Ye have heard that it was said by them of old time, Thou
shall not kill; but I say unto you, that whosoever is angry with his brother
without a cause, shall be in danger of the judgment." (Matt. v. 21, 22.) "Come
ye after Me, and I will make you fishers of men." (Mark i. 17.) And everywhere
we observe that His authority is great; for in His actions no one could find
fault with what was done. How was it possible? Had His words not come to pass,
nor been accomplished as He commanded, any one might have said that they were
the commands of a madman; but since they did come to pass, the reality of their
accomplishment stopped men's mouths even against their will. But with regard
to His discourses, they might often in their insolence charge Him with madness.
Wherefore now in the case of Nicodemus, He utters nothing openly, but by dark
sayings leads him up from his low thoughts, teaching him, that He has sufficient
power in Himself to show forth miracles; for that His Father begat Him Perfect
and All-sufficient, and without any imperfection.
But let
us see how He effects this. Nicodemus saith, "Rabbi, we know
that Thou art a Teacher come from God, for no man can do the miracles that
Thou doest, except God be with him." He thought he had said something
great when he had spoken thus of Christ. What then saith Christ? To show that
he had not yet set foot even on the threshold of right knowledge, nor stood
in the porch, but was yet wandering somewhere without the palace, both he and
whoever else should say the like, and that he had not so much as glanced towards
true knowledge when he held such an opinion of the Only-Begotten, what saith
He?
Ver. 3. "Verily,
verily, I say unto thee, Except a man be born again, he cannot see the Kingdom
of God."
That is, "Unless thou art born again and receivest the right doctrines,
thou art wandering somewhere without, and art far from the Kingdom of heaven." But
He does not speak so plainly as this. In order to make the saying less hard
to bear, He does not plainly direct it at him, but speaks indefinitely, "Except
a man be born again": all but saying, "both thou and any other, who
may have such opinions concerning Me, art somewhere without the Kingdom." Had
He not spoken from a desire to establish this, His answer would have been suitable
to what had been said. Now the Jews, if these words had been addressed to them,
would have derided Him and departed; but Nicodemus shows here also his desire
of instruction.(1) And this is why in many places Christ speaks obscurely,
because He wishes to rouse His hearers to ask questions, and to render them
more attentive. For that which is said plainly often escapes the hearer, but
what is obscure renders him more active and zealous. Now what He saith, is
something like this: "If thou art not born again, if thou partakest not
of the Spirit which is by the washing(2) of Regeneration, thou canst not have
a right opinion of Me, for the opinion which thou hast is not spiritual, but
carnal."(3) (Tit. iii. 5.) But He did not speak thus, as refusing to confound(4)
one who had brought such as he had, and who had spoken to the best of his ability;
and He leads him unsuspectedly up to greater knowledge, saying, "Except
a man be born again." The word "again,"(5) in this place, some
understand to mean "from heaven," others, "from the beginning." "It
is impossible," saith Christ, "for one not so born to see the Kingdom
of God"; in this pointing to Himself, and declaring that there is another
beside the natural sight, and that we have need of other eyes to behold Christ.
Having heard this,
Ver. 4. "Nicodemus
saith, How can a man be born when he is old?"
Callest
thou Him "Master," sayest thou that He is "come from
God," and yet receivest thou not His words, but usest to thy Teacher a
manner of speaking which expresses(6) much perplexity? For the "How," is
the doubting question of those who have no strong belief, but who are yet of
the earth. Therefore Sarah laughed when she had said, "How?" And
many others having asked this question, have fallen from the faith.
[3.] And
thus heretics continue in their heresy, because they frequently make this
enquiry, saying,
some
of them, "How was He begotten?" others, "How
was He made flesh?" and subjecting that Infinite Essence to the weakness
of their own reasonings.(7) Knowing which, we ought to avoid this unseasonable
curiosity, for they who search into these matters shall, without learning the "How," fall
away from the right faith. On this account Nicodemus, being in doubt, enquires
the manner in which this can be, (for he understood that the words spoken referred
to himself,) is confused, and dizzy,(8) and in perplexity, having come as to
a man, and hearing more than man's words, and such as no one ever yet had heard;
and for a while he rouses himself at the sublimity of the sayings, but yet
is in darkness, and unstable, borne about in every direction, and continually
falling away from the faith. And therefore he perseveres in proving the impossibility,
so as to provoke Him to clearer teaching.
"Can a man," he saith, "enter
into his mother's womb, and be born?"
Seest
thou how when one commits spiritual things to his own reasonings, he speaks
ridiculously, seems
to
be trifling, or to be drunken, when he pries
into what has been said beyond what seems good to God, and admits not the submission
of faith? Nicodemus heard of the spiritual Birth, yet perceived it not as spiritual,
but dragged down the words to the lowness of the flesh, and i made a doctrine
so great and high depend upon physical consequence. And so he invents frivolities,
and ridiculous difficulties. Wherefore Paul said, "The natural(1) man
receiveth not the things of the Spirit." (1 Cor. ii. 14.) Yet even in
this he preserved his reverence for Christ, for he did not mock at what had
been said, but, deeming it impossible, held his peace. There were two difficulties;
a Birth of this kind, and the Kingdom; for neither had the name of the Kingdom
ever been heard among the Jews, nor of a Birth like this. But he stops for
a while at the first, which most astonished(2) his mind.
Let us
then, knowing this, not enquire into things relating to God by reasoning,
nor bring heavenly
matters
under the rule of earthly consequences, nor subject
them to the necessity of nature; but let us think of all reverently, believing
as the Scriptures have said; for the busy and curious person gains nothing,
and besides not finding what he seeks, shall suffer extreme punishment. Thou
hast heard, that (the Father) begat (the Son): believe what thou hast heard;
but do ask not, "How," and so take away the Generation; to do so
would be extreme folly. For if this man, because, on hearing of a Generation,
not that ineffable GENERATION, but this which is by grace, he conceived nothing
great concerning it, but human and earthly thoughts, was therefore darkened
and in doubt, what punishment must they deserve, who are busy and curious about
that most awful GENERATION, which transcends all reason and intellect? For
nothing causes such dizziness(3) as human reasoning, all whose words are of
earth, and which cannot endure to be enlightened from above. Earthly reasonings
are full of mud, and therefore need we streams from heaven, that when the mud
has settled, the clearer portion may rise and mingle with the heavenly lessons;
and this comes to pass, when we present an honest soul and an upright life.
For certainly it is possible for the intellect to be darkened, not only by
unseasonable curiosity, but also by corrupt manners; wherefore Paul hath said
to the Corinthians, "I have fed you with milk, and not with meat; for
hitherto ye were not able to bear it, neither yet now are ye able, for ye are
yet carnal; for whereas there is among you envying, and strife, and divisions,
are ye not carnal?" (1 Cor. iii. 2.) And also in the Epistle to the Hebrews,
and in many places, one may see Paul asserting that this is the cause of evil
doctrines; for that the soul possessed by passions(4) cannot behold anything
great or noble, but as if darkened by a sort of film(5) suffers most grievous
dimsightedness.
Let us then cleanse ourselves, let us kindle the light of knowledge, let us
not sow among thorns. What the thorns are, ye know, though we tell you not;
for often ye have heard Christ call the cares of this present life, and the
deceitfulness of riches, by this name. (Matt. xiii. 22.) And with reason. For
as thorns are unfruitful, so are these things; as thorns tear those that handle
them, so do these passions; as thorns are readily caught by the fire, and hateful
by the husbandman, so too are the things of the world; as in thorns, wild beasts,
and snakes, and scorpions hide themselves, so do they in the deceitfulness
of riches. But let us kindle the fire of the Spirit, that we may consume the
thorns, and drive away the beasts, and make the field clear for the husbandman;
and after cleansing it, let us water it with the streams of the Spirit, let
us plant the fruitful olive, that most kindly of trees, the evergreen, the
light-giving, the nutritious, the wholesome. All these qualities hath almsgiving,
which is, as it were, a seal on(6) those that possess it. This plant not even
death when it comes causes to wither, but ever it stands enlightening the mind,
feeding the sinews(7) of the soul, and rendering its strength mightier. And
if we constantly possess it, we shall be able with confidence to behold the
Bridegroom, and to enter into the bridal chamber; to which may we all attain,
through the grace and lovingkindness of our Lord Jesus Christ, with whom to
the Father and the Holy Ghost be glory, for ever and ever. Amen.
HOMILY XXV.
JOHN iii. 5.
"Verily
I say unto thee, Except a man be born of water and of the Spirit, he cannot
enter into
the Kingdom
of God."
[1.] LITTLE children who go daily to their teachers receive their lessons,
and repeat(1) them, and never cease from this kind of acquisition, but sometimes
employ nights as well as days, and this they are compelled(2) to do for perishable
and transient things. Now we do not ask of you who are come to age such toil
as you require of your children; for not every day, but two days only in the
week do we exhort you to hearken to our words, and only for a short portion
of the day, that your task may be an easy one. For the same reason also we
divide(3) to you in small portions what is written in Scripture, that you may
be able easily to receive and lay them up in the storehouses of your minds,
and take such pains to remember them all, as to be able exactly to repeat them
to others yourselves, unless any one be sleepy, and dull, and more idle than
a little child.
Let us
now attend to the sequel of what has been before said. When Nicodemus fell
into error and wrested
the words of Christ to the earthly birth, and said
that it was not possible for an old man to be born again, observe how Christ
in answer more clearly reveals the manner of the Birth, which even thus had
difficulty for the carnal enquirer, yet still was able to raise the hearer
from his low opinion of it. What saith He? "Verily I say unto thee, Except
a man be born of water and of the Spirit, he cannot enter into the Kingdom
of God." What He declares is this: "Thou sayest that it is impossible,
I say that it is so absolutely possible as to be necessary, and that it is
not even possible otherwise to be saved." For necessary things God hath
made exceedingly easy also. The earthly birth which is according to the flesh,
is of the dust, and therefore heaven(4) is walled against it, for what hath
earth in common with heaven? But that other, which is of the Spirit, easily
unfolds to us the arches(5) above. Hear, ye as many as are unilluminated,(6)
shudder, groan, fearful is the threat, fearful the sentence.(7) "It is
not (possible)," He saith, "for one not born of water and the Spirit,
to enter into the Kingdom of heaven"; because he wears the raiment of
death, of cursing, of perdition, he hath not yet received his Lord's token,(8)
he is a stranger and an alien, he hath not the royal watchword. "Except," He
saith, "a man be born of water and of the Spirit, he cannot enter into
the Kingdom of heaven."
Yet even
thus Nicodemus did not understand. Nothing is worse than to commit spiritual
things to argument;
it was this that would not suffer him to suppose
anything sublime and great. This is why we are called faithful, that having
left the weakness of human reasonings below,(3) we may ascend to the height
of faith, and commit most of our blessings to her(10) teaching;(11) and if
Nicodemus had done this, the thing would not have been thought by him impossible.
What then doth Christ? To lead him away from his groveling imagination, and
to show that He speaks not of the earthly birth, He saith, "Except a man
be born of water and of the Spirit: he cannot enter into the Kingdom of heaven." This
He spoke, willing to draw him to the faith by the terror of the threat, and
to persuade him not to deem the thing impossible, and taking pains to move
him from his imagination as to the carnal birth. "I mean," saith
He, "another Birth, O Nicodemus. Why drawest thou down the saying to earth?
Why subjectest thou the matter to the necessity of nature? This Birth is too
high for such pangs as these; it hath nothing in common with you; it is indeed
called 'birth,' but in name only has it aught in common, in reality it is different.
Remove thyself from that which is common and familiar; a different kind of
childbirth bring I into the world; in another manner will I have men to be
generated: I have come to bring a new manner of Creation. I formed (man) of
earth and water; but that which was formed was unprofitable, the vessel was
wrenched awry;(12) I will no more form them of earth and water, but 'of water'
and 'of the Spirit.' "
And if
any one asks, "How of water?" I
also will ask, How of earth? How was the clay separated into different parts?
How was the material uniform,
(it was earth only,) and the things made from it, various and of every kind?
Whence are the bones, and sinews, and arteries, and veins? Whence the membranes,
and vessels of the organs, the cartilages, the tissues, the liver, spleen,
and heart? whence the skin, and blood, and mucus, and bile? whence so great
powers, whence such varied colors? These belong not to earth or clay. How does
the earth, when it receives the seeds, cause them to shoot, while the flesh
receiving them wastes them? How does the earth nourish what is put into it,
while the flesh is nourished by these things, and does not nourish them? The
earth, for instance, receives water, and makes it wine; the flesh often receives
wine, and changes it into water. Whence then is it clear that these things
are formed of earth, when the nature of the earth is, according to what has
been said;(1) contrary to that of the body? I cannot discover by reasoning,
I accept it by faith only. If then things which take place daily, and which
we handle, require faith, much more do those which are more mysterious and
more spiritual than these. For as the earth, which is soulless and motionless,
was empowered by the will of God, and such wonders were worked in it; much
more when the Spirit is present with the water, do all those things so strange
and transcending reason, easily take place.
[2.] Do not then disbelieve these things, because thou seest them not; thou
dost not see thy soul, and yet thou believest that thou hast a soul, and that
it is a something different besides(2) the body.
But Christ
led him not in by this example, but by another; the instance of the soul,
though it is
incorporeal,
He did not adduce for that reason, because
His hearer's disposition was as yet too dull. He sets before him another, which
has no connection with the density of solid bodies, yet does not reach so high
as to the incorporeal natures; that is, the movement of wind. He begins at
first with water, which is lighter than earth, but denser than air. And as
in the beginning earth was the subject material,(3) but the whole(4) was of
Him who molded it; so also now water is the subject material, and the whole(5)
is of the grace of the Spirit: then, "man became a living soul," (Gen.
ii. 7); now he becomes "a quickening Spirit." But great is the difference
between the two. Soul affords not life to any other than him in whom it is;
Spirit not only lives, but affords life to others also. Thus, for instance,
the Apostles even raised the dead. Then, man was formed last, when the creation
had been accomplished; now, on the contrary, the new man is formed before the
new creation; he is born first, and then the world is fashioned anew. (1 Cor.
xv. 45.) And as in the beginning He formed him entire, so He creates him entire
now. Then He said, "Let us make for him a help" (Gen. ii. 18, LXX.),
but here He said nothing of the kind. What other help shall he need, who has
received the gift of the Spirit? What further need of assistance has he, who
belongs to(6) the Body of Christ? Then He made man in the image of God, now
He hath united 7 him with God Himself; then He bade him rule over the fishes
and beasts, now He hath exalted our first-fruits above the heavens; then He
gave him a garden for his abode,(8) now He hath opened heaven to us; then man
was formed on the sixth day, when the world(9) was almost finished; but now
on the first, at the very beginning, at the time when light was made before.
From all which it is plain, that the things accomplished belonged to(10) another
and a better life, and to a condition(11) having no end.
The first
creation then, that of Adam, was from earth; the next, that of the woman,
from his rib;
the next,
that of Abel, from seed; yet we cannot arrive
at the comprehension of(12) any one of these, nor prove the circumstances by
argument, though they are of a most earthly nature;(13) how then shall we be
able to give account of the unseen(14) generation(15) by Baptism, which is
far more exalted than these, or to require arguments(16) for that strange and
marvelous Birth?(17) Since even Angels stand by while that Generation takes
place, but they could not tell the manner of that marvelous working, they stand
by only, not performing anything, but beholding what takes place. The Father,
the Son, and the Holy Ghost, worketh all. Let us then believe the declaration
of God; that is more trustworthy than actual seeing. The sight often is in
error, it is impossible that God's Word should fail; let us then believe it;
that which called the things that were not into existence may well be trusted
when it speaks of their nature. What then says it? That what is effected is
A GENERATION. If any ask, "How," stop his mouth with the decclaration
of God,(18) which is the strongest and a plain proof. If any enquire, "Why
is water included?" let us also in return ask, "Wherefore was earth
employed at the beginning in the creation of man?" for that it was possible
for God to make man without earth, is quite plain to every one. Be not then
over-curious.
That the
need of water is absolute and indispensable,(1) you may learn in this way.
On one occasion,
when the
Spirit had flown down before the water
was applied, the Apostle did not stay at this point, but, as though the water
were necessary and not superfluous, observe what he says; "Can any man
forbid water, that these should not be baptized, which have received the Holy
Ghost as well as we?" (Acts x. 47.)
What then
is the use of the water? This too I will tell you hereafter, when I reveal
to you the hidden
mystery.(2)
There are also other points of mystical
teaching connected with the matter, but for the present I will mention to you
one out of many. What is this one? In Baptism are fulfilled the pledges of
our covenant with God;(3) burial and death, resurrection and life; and these
take place all at once. For when we immerse our heads in the water, the old
man is buried as in a tomb below, and wholly sunk forever;(4) then as we raise
them again, the new man rises in its stead.(5) As it is easy for us to dip
and to lift our heads again, so it is easy for God to bury the old man, and
to show forth the new. And this is done thrice, that you may learn that the
power of the Father, the Son, and the Holy Ghost fulfilleth all this. To show
that what we say is no conjecture, hear Paul saying, "We are buried with
Him by Baptism into death": and again, "Our old man is crucified
with Him": and again, "We have been planted together in the likeness
of His death." (Rom. vi. 4, 5, 6.) And not only is Baptism called a "cross," but
the "cross" is called "Baptism." "With the Baptism," saith
Christ, "that I am baptized withal shall ye be baptized" (Mark x.
39): and, "I have a Baptism to be baptized with" (Luke xii. 50) (which
ye know not); for as we easily dip and lift our heads again, so He also easily
died and rose again when He willed or rather much more easily, though He tarried
the three days for the dispensation of a certain mystery.
[3.] Let
us then who have been deemed worthy of such mysteries show forth a life worthy
of the Gift,
that
is, a most excellent conversation;(6) and do
ye who have not yet been deemed worthy, do all things that you may be so, that
we may be one body, that we may be brethren. For as long as we are divided
in this respect, though a man be father, or son, or brother, or aught else,
he is no true kinsman, as being cut off from that relationship which is from
above. What advantageth it to be bound by the ties of earthly family, if we
are not joined by those of the spiritual? what profits nearness of kin on earth,
if we are to be strangers in heaven? For the Catechumen is a stranger to the
Faithful. He hath not the same Head, he hath not the same Father, he hath not
the same City, nor Food, nor Raiment, nor Table, nor House, but all are different;
all are on earth to the former, to the latter all are in heaven. One has Christ
for his King; the other, sin and the devil; the food(7) of one is Christ, of
the other, that meat which decays and perishes; one has worms' work for his
raiment, the other the Lord of angels; heaven is the city of one, earth of
the other. Since then we have nothing in common, in what, tell me, shall we
hold communion? Did we remove the same pangs,(8) did we come forth from the
same womb? This has nothing to do with that most perfect relationship. Let
us then give diligence that we may become citizens of the city which is above.
How long do we tarry over the border,(9) when we ought to reclaim our ancient
country? We risk no common danger; for if it should come to pass, (which God
forbid!) that through the sudden arrival of death we depart hence uninitiated,(10)
though we have ten thousand virtues, our portion will be no other than hell,
and the venomous worm, and fire unquenchable, and bonds indissoluble. But God
grant that none of those who hear these words experience that punishment! And
this will be, if having been deemed worthy of the sacred mysteries, we build
upon that foundation gold, and silver, and precious stones; for so after our
departure hence we shall be able to appear in that place rich, when we leave
not our riches here, but transport them to inviolable treasuries by the hands
of the poor, when we lend to Christ. Many are our debts there, not of money,
but of sins; let us then lend Him our riches, that we may receive pardon for
our sins; for He it is that judgeth. Let us not neglect Him here when He hungereth,
that He may ever feed us there. Here let us clothe Him, that He leave us not
bare of the safety which is from Him. If here we give Him drink, we shall not
with the rich man say, "Send Lazarus, that with the tip of his finger
he may drop water on my broiling(11) tongue." If here we receive Him into
our house, there He will prepare many mansions for us; if we go to Him in prison,
He too will free us from our bonds; if we take Him in when He is a stranger,
He will not suffer us to be strangers to the Kingdom of heaven, but will give
us a portion in the City which is above; if we visit Him when He is sick, He
also will quickly deliver us from our infirmities.
Let us then, as receiving great things though we give but little, still give
the little that we may gain the great. While it is yet time, let us sow, that
we may reap. When the winter overtakes us, when the sea is no longer navigable,
we are no longer masters of this traffic. But when shall the winter be? When
that great and manifest Day is at hand. Then we shall cease to sail this great
and broad sea, for such the present life resembles. Now is the time of sowing,
then of harvest and of gain. If a man puts not in his seed at seed time and
sows in harvest, besides that he effects nothing, he will be ridiculous. But
if the present is seed time, it follows that it is a time not for gathering
together, but for scattering; let us then scatter, that we may gather in, and
not seek to gather in now, lest we lose our harvest; for, as I said, this season
summons us to sow, and spend, and lay out, not to collect and lay by. Let us
not then give up the opportunity, but let us put in abundant seed, and spare
none of our stores, that we may receive. them again with abundant recompense,
through the grace and lovingkindness of our Lord Jesus Christ, with whom to
the Father and the Holy Ghost be glory, world without end. Amen.
HOMILY XXVI.
JOHN iii. 6.
"That
which is born of the flesh is flesh: and that which is born of the Spirit
is spirit."
[1.] GREAT
mysteries are they, of which the Only-begotten Son of God has counted us
worthy; great,
and such
as we were not worthy of, but such as it was meet
for Him to give. For if one reckon our desert, we were not only unworthy of
the gift, but also liable to punishment and vengeance; but He, because He looked
not to this, not only delivered us from punishment, but freely gave us a life
much more bright(1) than the first, introduced us into another world, made
us another creature; "If any man be in Christ," saith Paul, "he
is a new creature." (2 Cor. v. 17.) What kind of "new creature"?
Hear Christ Himself declare; "Except a man be born of water and of the
Spirit, he cannot enter into the Kingdom of God." Paradise was entrusted
to us, and we were shown unworthy to dwell even there, yet He hath exalted
us to heaven. In the first things we were found unfaithful, and He hath committed
to us greater; we could not refrain from a single tree, and He hath provided
for us the delights(2) above; we kept not our place in Paradise, and He hath
opened to us the doors of heaven. Well said Paul, "O the depth of the
riches, both of the wisdom and knowledge of God!" (Rom. xi. 33.) There
is no longer a mother, or pangs, or sleep, or coming together, and embracings
of bodies; henceforth all the fabric(3) of our nature is framed above, of the
Holy Ghost and water. The water is employed, being made the Birth to him who
is born; what the womb is to the embryo, the water is to the believer; for
in the water he is fashioned and formed. At first it was said, "Let the
waters bring forth the creeping things that have life" (Gen. i. 20, LXX.);
but from the time that the Lord entered the streams of Jordan, the water no
longer gives forth the "creeping thing that hath life," but reasonable
and Spirit-bearing souls; and what has been said of the sun, that he is "as
a bridegroom coming out of his chamber" (Ps. xviii. 6), we may now rather
say of the faithful, for they send forth rays far brighter than he. That which
is fashioned in the womb requires time, not so that in water, but all is done
in a single moment. Here our life is perishable, and takes its origin from
the decay of other bodies; that which is to be born comes slowly, (for such
is the nature of bodies, they acquire perfection by time,) but it is not so
with spiritual things. And why? Because the things made are formed perfect
from the beginning.
When Nicodemus
still hearing these things was troubled, see how Christ partly opens to him
the secret
of this
mystery, and makes that clear which was for
a while obscure to him. "That which is born," saith He, "of
the flesh is flesh; and that which is born of the Spirit is spirit." He
leads him away from all the things of sense. i and suffers him not vainly to
pry into the mysteries revealed with his fleshly eyes; "We speak not," saith
He, "of flesh, but of Spirit, O Nicodemus," (by this word He directs
him heavenward for a while,) "seek then nothing relating to things of
sense; never can the Spirit appear to those eyes, think not that the Spirit
bringeth forth the flesh." "How then," perhaps one may ask, "was
the Flesh of the Lord brought forth?" Not of the Spirit only, but of flesh;
as Paul declares, when he says, "Made of a woman, made under the Law" (Gal
iv. 4); for the Spirit fashioned Him not indeed out of nothing, (for what need
was there then of a womb?) but from the flesh of a Virgin. How, I cannot explain
unto you; yet it was done, that no one might suppose that what was born is
alien to our nature. For if even when this has taken place there are some who
disbelieve in such a birth, into what impiety would they not have fallen had
He not partaken of the Virgin's flesh.
"That which is born(1) of the Spirit is spirit." Seest thou the
dignity of the Spirit? It appears performing the work of God; for above he
said of some, that, "they were begotten of God," (c. i. 13,) here
He saith, that the Spirit begetteth them.
"That which is born of the Spirit is spirit." His meaning is of
this kind; "He that is born(2) of the Spirit is spiritual." For the
Birth which He speaks of here is not that according to essence,(3) but according
to honor and grace. Now if the Son is so born also, in what shall He be superior
to men so born? And how is He Only-begotten? For I too am born of God though
not of His Essence, and if He also is not of His Essence, how in this respect
does He differ from us? Nay, He will then be found to be inferior to the Spirit;
for birth of this kind is by the grace of the Spirit. Needs He then the help
of the Spirit that He may continue a Son? And in what do these differ from
Jewish doctrines?
Christ
then having said, "He that is born of the Spirit is spirit," when
He saw him again confused, leads His discourse to an example from sense, saying,
Ver. 7,
8. "Marvel
not that I said unto thee, Ye must be born again.(4) The wind bloweth where
it listeth."
For by
saying, "Marvel not," He indicates the confusion of his soul,
and leads him to something lighter than body. He had already led him away from
fleshly things, by saying, "That which is born of the Spirit is spirit";
but when Nicodemus knew not what "that which is born of the Spirit is
spirit" meant, He next carries him to another figure, not bringing him
to the density of bodies, nor yet speaking of things purely incorporeal, (for
had he heard he could not have received this,) but having found a something
between what is and what is not body, namely, the motion of the wind, He brings
him to that next. And He saith of it,
"Thou
hearest the sound thereof, but canst not tell whence it cometh, and whither
it goeth."
Though
He saith, "it bloweth where it listeth," He saith it not
as if the wind had any power of choice, but declaring that its natural motion
cannot be hindered, and is with power. For Scripture knoweth how to speak thus
of things without life, as when it saith, "The creature was made subject
to vanity, not willingly." (Rom. viii. 20.) The expression therefore, "bloweth
where it listeth," is that of one who would show that it cannot be restrained,
that it is spread abroad everywhere, and that none can hinder its passing hither
and thither, but that it goes abroad with great might, and none is able to
turn aside its violence.
[2.] "And thou hearest its voice,"(5) (that is, its rustle, its
noise,) "but canst not tell whence it cometh, and whither it goeth; so
is every one that is born of the Spirit."
Here is
the conclusion of the whole matter. "If," saith He, "thou
knowest not how to explain the motion nor the path of this wind(6) which thou
perceivest by hearing and touch, why art thou over-anxious about the working
of the Divine Spirit, when thou understandest not that of the wind, though
thou hearest its voice?" The expression, "bloweth where it listeth," is.
also used to establish the power of the Comforter; for if none can hold the
wind, but it moveth where it listeth, much less will the laws of nature, or
limits of bodily generation, or anything of the like kind, be able to restrain
the operations of the Spirit.
That the
expression, "thou hearest its voice," is used respecting
the wind, is clear from this circumstance; He would not, when conversing: with
an unbeliever and one unacquainted with the operation of the Spirit, have said, "Thou
hearest its voice." As then the wind is not visible, although it utters
a sound, so neither is the birth of that which is spiritual visible to our
bodily eyes; yet the wind is a body, although a very subtle one; for whatever
is the object of sense is body. If then you do not complain because you cannot
see this body, and do not on this account disbelieve, why do you, when you
hear of "the Spirit," hesitate and demand such exact accounts, although
you act not so in the case of a body? What then doth Nicodemus? still he continues
in his low Jewish opinion, and that too when so clear an example has been mentioned
to him. Wherefore when he again says doubtingly,
Ver. 9,
10. "How can these things be?" Christ now speaks to him
more chidingly; "Art thou a master in Israel, and knowest not these things?"
Observe
how He nowhere accuses the man of wickedness, but only of weakness and simplicity. "And what," one may ask, "has this birth in
common with Jewish matters?" Tell me rather what has it that is not in
common with them? For the first-created man, and the woman formed from his
side, and the barren women, and the things accomplished by water, I mean what
relates to the fountain on which Elisha made the iron tool to swim, to the
Red Sea which the Jews passed over, to the pool which the Angel troubled, to
Naaman the Syrian who was cleansed in Jordan, all these proclaimed beforehand,
as by a figure, the Birth and the purification which were to be. And the words
of the Prophet allude to the manner of this Birth, as, "It shall be announced
unto the Lord a generation which cometh, and they shall announce His righteousness
unto a people that shall be born, whom the Lord hath made" (Ps. xxii.
30; xxx. 31, LXX.); and, "Thy youth shall be renewed as an eagle's" (Ps.
ciii. 5, LXX.); and, "Shine, O Jerusalem; behold, Thy King cometh!" (Isa.
lx. 1; Zech. ix. 9); and, "Blessed are they whose iniquities are forgiven." (Ps.
xxxii. I, LXX.) Isaac also was a type of this Birth. For tell me, Nicodemus,
how was he born? was it according to the law of nature? By no means; the mode
of his generation was midway between this of which we speak and the natural;
the natural, because he was begotten by cohabitation; the other, because he
was begotten not of blood,(1) (but by the will of God.) I shall show that these
figures(2) proclaimed beforehand not only this birth, but also that from the
Virgin. For, because no one would easily have believed that a virgin could
bear a child, barren women first did so, then such as were not only barren,
but aged also. That a woman should be made from a rib was indeed far more wonderful
than that the barren should conceive; but because that was of early and old
time, another figure, new and fresh, was given, that of the barren women; to
prepare the way for belief in the Virgin's travail. To remind him then of these
things, Jesus said, "Art thou a master in Israel, and knowest not these
things?"
Ver. 11. "We
speak that We do know, and testify that We have seen, and none receiveth(3)
Our
witness."
This He added, making His words credible by another argument, and condescending
in His speech to the other's infirmity.
[3.] And
what is this that He saith, "We speak that We do know, and testify
that We have seen"? Because with us the sight is the most trustworthy
of the senses, and if we desire to gain a person's belief, we speak thus, that
we saw it with our eyes, not that we know it by hearsay; Christ therefore speaks
to him rather after the manner of men, gaining belief for His words by this
means also. And that this is so, and that He desires to establish nothing else,
and refers not to sensual vision, is clear from this; after saying, "That
which is born of the flesh is flesh; and that which is born of the Spirit is
spirit," He adds, "We speak that we do know, and testify that we
have seen." Now this (of the Spirit) was not yet born(4); how then saith
He, "what we have seen"? Is it not plain that He speaks of a knowledge
not otherwise than exact?
"And none receiveth our witness." The expression "we know," He
uses then either concerning Himself and His Father, or concerning Himself alone;
and "no man receiveth," is the expression not of one displeased,
but of one who declares a fact: for He said not, "What can be more senseless
than you who receive not what is so exactly declared by us?" but displaying
all gentleness, both by His works and His words, He uttered nothing like this;
mildly and kindly He foretold what should come to pass, so guiding us too to
all gentleness, and teaching us when we converse with any and do not persuade
them, not to be annoyed or made savage; for it is impossible for one out of
temper to accomplish his purpose, he must make him to whom he speaks still
more incredulous. Wherefore we must abstain from anger, and make our words
in every way credible by avoiding not only wrath, but also loud speaking(5)
for loud speaking is the fuel of passion.
Let us
then bind(6) the horse, that we may subdue the rider; let us clip the wings
of our wrath,
so the
evil shall no more rise to a height. A keen passion
is anger, keen, and skillful to steal our souls; therefore we must on all sides
guard against its entrance. It were strange that we should be able to tame
wild beasts, and yet should neglect our own savage minds. Wrath is a fierce
fire, it devours all things; it harms the body, it destroys the soul, it makes
a man deformed(7) and ugly to look upon; and if it were possible for an angry
person to be visible to himself at the time of his anger, he would need no
other admonition, for nothing is more displeasing than an angry countenance.
Anger is a kind of drunkenness, or rather it is more grievous than drunkenness,
and more pitiable than (possession of) a daemon. But if we be careful not to
be Bud in speech,(8) we shall find this the best path to sobriety of conduct.(9)
And therefore Paul would take away clamor as well as anger, when he says, "Let
all anger and clamor be put away from you." (Eph. iv. 31.) Let us then
obey this teacher of all wisdom, and when we are wroth with our servants, let
us consider our own trespasses, and be ashamed at their forbearance. For when
thou art insolent, and thy servant bears thy insults in silence, when thou
actest unseemly, he like a wise man, take this instead of any other warning.
Though he is thy servant, he is still a man, has an immortal soul, and has
been honored with the same gifts as thee by your common Lord. And if he who
is our equal in more important and more spiritual things, on account of some
poor and trifling human superiority so meekly bears our injuries, what pardon
can we deserve, what excuse can we make, who cannot, or rather will not, be
as wise through fear of God, as he is through fear of us? Considering then
all these things, and calling to mind Our own transgressions, and the common
nature of man, let us be careful at all times to speak gently, that being humble
in hear we may find rest for our souls, both that which now is, and that which
is to come; which may we all attain, by the grace and lovingkindness of our
Lord Jesus Christ, with whom to the Father and the Holy Ghost be glory, for
ever and ever Amen.
HOMILY XXVII.
JOHN iii. 12, 13.
"If
I have told you earthly things, and ye believe not how shall ye believe,
if I tell you of
heavenly
things? And no man hath ascended up to heaver, but
He that came down from heaven, even the Son of Man which is in heaven."
[1.] What
I have often said I shall now repeat, and shall not cease to say. What is
that? It is
that Jesus, when
about to touch on sublime doctrines, often
contains Himself by reason of the infirmity of His hearers, and dwells not
for a continuance on subjects worthy of His greatness, but rather on those
which partake of condescension. For the sublime and great, being but once uttered,
is sufficient to establish that character, as far as we are able to hear it;
but unless more lowly sayings, and such as are nigh to(1) the comprehension
of the hearers, were continually uttered, the more sublime would not readily
take hold on a groveling listener. And therefore of the sayings of Christ more
are lowly than sublime. But yet that this again may not work another mischief,
by detaining the disciple here below, He does not merely set before men His
inferior sayings without first telling them why He utters them; as, in fact,
He has done in this place. For when He had said what He did concerning Baptism,
and the Generation by grace which takes place on earth, being desirous to admit(2)
them to that His own mysterious and incomprehensible Generation, He holds it
in suspense for a while, and admits them not, and then tells them His reason
for not admitting them. What is that? It is, the dullness and infirmity of
His hearers. And referring to this He added the words, "If I have told
you earthly things, and ye believe not, how shall ye believe if I tell you
of heavenly things?" so that wherever He saith anything ordinary and humble,
we must attribute this to the infirmity of His audience.
The expression "earthly things," some say is here used of the wind;
that is, "If I have given you an example from earthly things, and ye did
not even so believe, how shall ye be able to learn sublimer things?" And
wonder not if He here call Baptism an "earthly" thing, for He calls
it so, either from its being performed on earth, or so naming it in comparison
with that His own most awful Generation. For though this Generation of ours
is heavenly, yet compared with that true GENERATION which is from the Substance
of the Father, it is earthly.
He does
not say, "Ye have not understood," but, "Ye have not
believed"; for when a man is ill disposed towards those things which it
is possible to apprehend by the intellect, and will not readily receive them,
he may justly be charged with want of understanding; but when he receives not
things which cannot be apprehended by reasoning, but only by faith, the charge
against him is no longer want of understanding, but unbelief. Leading him therefore
away from enquiring by reasonings into what had been said, He touches him more
severely by charging him with want of faith. If now we must receive our own
Generation(3) by faith, what do they deserve who are busy with their reasonings
about that of the Only-Begotten?
But perhaps
some may ask, "And if the hearers were not to believe these
sayings, wherefore were they uttered?" Because though "they" believed
not, those who came after would believe and profit by them. Touching him therefore
very severely, Christ goes on to show that He knoweth not these things only,
but others also, far more and greater than these. And this He declared by what
follows, when He said, "And no man hath ascended up to heaven, but He
that came down from heaven, even the Son of Man which is in heaven."
"And what manner of sequel is this?"(1) asks one. The very closest,
and entirely in unison with what has gone before. For since Nicodemus had said, "We
know that Thou art a teacher come from God," on this very point He sets
him right, all but saying, "Think Me not a teacher in such manner as were
the many of the prophets who were of earth, for I have come from heaven (but)
now. None of the prophets hath ascended up thither, but I dwell there." Seest
thou how even that which appears very exalted is utterly unworthy of his greatness?
For not in heaven only is He, but everywhere, and He fills all things; but
yet He speaks according to the infirmity of His hearer, desiring to lead him
up little by little. And in this place He called not the flesh "Son of
Man," but He now named, so to speak, His entire Self from the inferior
substance; indeed this is His wont, to call His whole Person(2) often from
His Divinity, and often from His humanity.
Ver. 14. "And
as Moses lifted up the serpent in the wilderness, even so must the Son of
Man
be lifted up."
This again
seems to depend upon what has gone before, and this too has a very close
connection with
it. For
after having spoken of the very great benefaction
that had come to man by Baptism, He proceeds to mention another benefaction,
which was the cause of this, and not inferior to it; namely, that by the Cross.
As also Paul arguing with the Corinthians sets down these benefits together,
when he says, "Was Paul crucified for you? or were ye baptized into the
name of Paul?" for these two things most of all declare His unspeakable
love, that He both suffered for His enemies, and that having died for His enemies,
He freely gave to them by Baptism entire remission of their sins.
[2.] But
wherefore did He not say plainly, "I am about to be crucified," instead
of referring His hearers to the ancient type? First, that you may learn that
old things are akin to new, and that the one are not alien to the other; next,
that you may know that He came not unwillingly to His Passion; and again, besides
these reasons, that you may learn that no harm arises to Him from the Fact,(3)
and that to many there springs from it salvation. For, that none may say, "And
how is it possible that they who believe on one crucified should be saved,
when he himself is holden of death?" He leads us to the ancient story.
Now if the Jews, by looking to the brazen image of a serpent, escaped death,
much rather will they who believe on the Crucified, with good reason enjoy
a far greater benefit. For this(4) takes place, not through the weakness of
the Crucified, or because the Jews are stronger than He, but because "God
loved the world," therefore is His living Temple fastened to the Cross.
Ver. 15. "That
whosoever believeth in Him should not perish, but have eternal life."
Seest
thou the cause of the Crucifixion, and the salvation which is by it? Seest
thou the relationship
of the type
to the reality? there the Jews escaped
death, but the temporal, here believers the eternal; there the hanging serpent
healed the bites of serpents, here the Crucified Jesus cured the wounds inflicted
by the spiritual(5) dragon; there he who looked with his bodily eyes was healed,
here he who beholds with the eyes of his understanding put off all his sins;
there that which hung was brass fashioned into the likeness of a serpent, here
it was the Lord's Body, builded by the Spirit; there a serpent bit and a serpent
healed, here death destroyed and a Death saved. But the snake which destroyed
had venom, that which saved was free from venom; and so again was it here,
for the death which slew us had sin with it, as the serpent had venom; but
the Lord's Death was free from all sin, as the brazen serpent from venom. For,
saith Peter, "He did no sin, neither was guile found in His mouth." (1
Pet. ii. 22.) And this is what Paul also declares, "And having spoiled
principalities and powers, He made a show of them openly, triumphing over them
in it." (Col. ii. 16.) For as some noble champion by lifting on high and
dashing down his antagonist, renders his victory more glorious, so Christ,
in the sight of all the world, cast down the adverse powers, and having healed
those who were smitten in the wilderness, delivered them from all venomous
beasts(6) that vexed them, by being hung upon the Cross. Yet He did not say, "must
hang," but, "must be lifted up" (Acts xxviii. 4); for He used
this which seemed the milder term, on account of His hearer, and because it
was proper to the type.(7)
Ver. 16. "God," He saith, "so
loved the world that He gave His Only-begotten Son, that whosoever believeth
in Him should not perish, but
have everlasting life."
What He
saith, is of this kind: Marvel not that I am to be lifted up that ye may
be saved, for this
seemeth
good to the Father, and He hath so loved
you as to give His Son for slaves, and ungrateful slaves. Yet a man would not
do this even for a friend, nor readily even for a righteous man; as Paul has
declared when he said, "Scarcely for a righteous man will one die." (Rom.
v. 7.) Now he spoke at greater length, as speaking to believers, but here Christ
speaks concisely, because His discourse was directed to Nicodemus, but still
in a more significant manner, for each word had much significance. For by the
expression, "so loved," and that other, "God the world," He
shows the great strength of His love. Large and infinite was the interval between
the two. He, the immortal, who is without beginning, the Infinite Majesty,
they but dust and ashes, full of ten thousand sins, who, ungrateful, have at
all times offended Him; and these He "loved." Again, the words which
He added after these are alike significant, when He saith, that "He gave
His Only-begotten Son," not a servant, not an Angel, not an Archangel.
And yet no one would show such anxiety for his own child, as God did for His
ungrateful servants.
His Passion
then He sets before him not very openly, but rather darkly; but the advantage
of the Passion
He adds in a clearer manner,(1) saying, "That
every one that believeth in Him. should not perish, but have everlasting life." For
when He had said, "must be lifted up," and alluded to death, test
the hearer should be made downcast by these words, forming some mere human
opinions concerning Him, and supposing that His death was a ceasing to be,(2)
observe how He sets this right, by saying, that He that was given was "The
Son of God," and the cause of life, of everlasting life. He who procured
life for others by death, would not Himself be continually in death; for if
they who believed on the Crucified perish not, much less doth He perish who
is crucified. He who taketh away the destitution of others much more is He
free from it; He who giveth life to others, much more to Himself doth He well
forth life. Seest thou that everywhere there is need of faith? For He calls
the Cross the fountain of life; which reason cannot easily allow, as the heathens
now by their mocking testify. But faith which goes beyond the weakness of reasoning,
may easily receive and retain it. And whence did God "so love the world"?
From no other source but on]y from his goodness.
[3.] Let us now be abashed at His love, let us be ashamed at the excess of
His lovingkindness, since He for our sakes spared not His Only-begotten Son,
yet we spare our wealth to our own injury; He for us gave His Own Son, but
we for Him do not so much as despise money, nor even for ourselves. And how
can these things deserve pardon? If we see a man submitting to sufferings and
death for us, we set him before all others, count him among our chief friends,
place in his hands all that is ours, and deem it rather his than ours, and
even so do not think that we give him the return that he deserves. But towards
Christ we do not preserve even this degree of right feeling. He laid down His
life for us, and poured forth His precious Blood for our sakes, who were neither
well-disposed nor good, while we do not pour out even our money for our own
sakes, and ne