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LETTERS OF ATHANASIUS
WITH TWO ANCIENT CHRONICLES
OF HIS LIFE
HISTORIA ACEPHALA
FESTAL LETTERS VI, VII & X TO XIII
LETTER VI. For 334.
Easter-day, xii Pharmuthi, vii [Id. April: xvii Moon; AEra Dioclet. 50; Coss.
Optatus Patricius, Anicius Paulinus; Praefect, Philagrius(1), the Cappadocian;
vii Indict.
Now again, my beloved, has God brought us to the season of the feast, and
through His loving-kindness we have reached the period of assembly for it.
For that God who brought Israel out of Egypt, even He at this time calls us
to the feast, saying by Moses, 'Observe the month of new fruits(2), and keep
the Passover to the Lord thy God(3):' and by the prophet, Keep thy feasts,
O Judah; pay to the Lord thy vows(4).' If then God Himself loves the feast,
and calls us to it, it is not right, my brethren, that it should be delayed,
or observed carelessly; but with alacrity and zeal we should come to it, so
that having begun joyfully here, we may also receive an earnest of that heavenly
feast. For if we diligently celebrate the feast here, we shall doubtless receive
the perfect joy which is in heaven, as the Lord says; 'With desire I have desired
to eat this Passover with you before I suffer. For I say unto you, that I will
not eat it until it is fulfilled with you in the kingdom of God(5).' Now we
eat it if, understanding the reason of the feast, and acknowledging the Deliverer,
we conduct ourselves in accordance with His grace, as Paul saith; 'So that
we may keep the Feast, not with old leaven neither with the leaven of wickedness;
but with the unleavened bread of sincerity and truth(6).' For the Lord died
in those days, that we should no longer do the deeds of death. He gave His
life, that we might preserve our own from the snares of the devil. And, what
is most wonderful, the Word became flesh, that we should no longer live in
the flesh, but in spirit should worship God, who is Spirit. He who is not so
disposed, abuses the days, and does not keep the feast, but like an unthankful
person finds fault with the grace, and honours the days overmuch, while he
does not supplicate the Lord who in those days redeemed him. Let him by all
means hear, though fancying that he keeps the feast, the Apostolic voice reproving
him; 'Ye observe days, and months, and times, and years: I fear test I have
laboured among you in vain 7.'
2. For the feast is not on account of the days; but for the Lord's sake, who
then suffered for us, we celebrate it, for 'our Passover Christ, is sacrificed(8).'
Even as Moses, when teaching Israel not to consider the feast as pertaining
to the days, but to the Lord, said, 'It is the Lord's Passover(9).' To the
Jews when they thought they were keeping the Passover, because they persecuted
the Lord, the feast was useless; since it no longer bore the name of the Lord,
even according to their own testimony. It was not the Passover of the Lord,
but that of the Jews(10). The Passover was named after the Jews, my brethren,
because they denied the Lord of the Passover. On this account, the Lord, turning
away His face from such a doctrine of theirs, saith, 'Your new moons and your
sabbaths My soul hateth(11)',
3. So now, those who keep the Passover in like manner, the Lord again reproves,
as He did those lepers who were cleansed, when He loved the one as thankful,
but was angry with the others as ungrateful, because they did not acknowledge
their Deliverer, but thought more of the cure of the leprosy than of Him who
healed them. 'But one of them when he saw that he was healed, turned back,
and with a loud voice glorified God, and fell on his If ace at the feet of
Jesus giving Him thanks; and he was a Samaritan. And Jesus answering said,
Were there not ten cleansed? but those nine -- whence are there none found
who returned to give glory to God, but this stranger(12)? ' And there was more
given to him than to the rest; for being cleansed from his leprosy, he heard
from the Lord, 'Arise, go thy way, thy faith hath saved thee(13).' For he who
gives thanks, and he who glorifies, have kindred feelings, in that they bless
their Helper for the benefits they have received. So the Apostle exhorts all
men to this, saying, 'Glorify God with your body;' and the prophet commands,
saying, 'Give glory to God.' Although testimony was borne by Caiaphas(14) against
our Redeemer, and He was set at nought by the Jews, and was condemned by Pilate
in those days, yet exalted exceedingly and most mighty was the voice of the
Father which came to Him; 'I have glorified, and will glorify again(15).' For
those things which He suffered for our sake have passed away; but those which
belong to Him as the Saviour remain for ever.
4. But in our commemoration of these things, my brethren, let us not be occupied
with meats, but let us glorify the Lord, let us become fools for Him who died
for us, even as Paul said; 'For if we are foolish, it is to God; or if we are
sober-minded, it is to you; since because one died for all men, therefore all
were dead to Him; and He died for all, that we who live should not henceforth
live to ourselves, but to Him who died for us, and rose again(16).' No longer
then ought we to live to ourselves, but, as servants to the Lord. And not in
vain should we receive the grace, as the time is especially an acceptable one(17),
and the day of salvation hath dawned, even the death of our Redeemer(18). For
even for our sakes the Word came down, and being incorruptible, put on a corruptible
body for the salvation of all of us. Of which Paul was confident, saying, 'This
corruptible must put on incorruption(19).' The Lord too was sacrificed, that
by His blood He might abolish death. Full well did He once, in a certain place,
blame those who participated vainly in the shedding of His blood, while they
did not delight themselves in the flesh of the Word, saying, 'What profit is
there in my blood, that I go down to corruption(20)?' This does not mean that
the descent of the Lord was without profit, for it gained the whole world;
but rather that after He had thus suffered, sinners would prefer to suffer
loss than to profit by it. For He regarded our salvation as a delight and a
peculiar gain; while on the contrary He looked upon our destruction as loss.
5. Also in the Gospel, He praises those who increased the grace twofold, both
him who made ten talents of five, and him who made four talents of two, as
those who had profited, and turned them to good account; but him who hid the
talent He cast out as wanting, saying to him, 'Thou wicked servant! oughtest
thou not to have put My money to the exchangers? then at My coming I should
have received Mine own with interest. Take, therefore, from him the talent,
and give it to him that hath ten talents. For to every one that hath shall
be given, and he shall have more abundantly; but from him that hath not, shall
be taken away even that which he hath. And cast ye the unprofitable servant
into outer darkness; there shall be weeping and gnashing of teeth[21].' For
it is not His will that the grace we have received should be unprofitable;
but He requires us to take pains to render Him His own fruits, as the blessed
Paul saith; 'The fruit of the Spirit is love, joy, and, peace[1].' Having therefore
this right resolution, and owing no man anything, but rather giving everything
to every man, he was a teacher of the like rightness of principle, saying,
'Render to all their dues[2].' He was like those sent by the householder to
receive the fruits of the vineyard from the husbandmen[3]; for he exhorted
all men to render a return. But Israel despised and would not render, for their
will was not right, nay moreover they killed those that were sent, and not
even before the Lord of the vineyard were they ashamed, but even He was slain
by them. Verily, when He came and found no fruit in them, He cursed them through
the fig-tree, saying, 'Let there be henceforth no fruit from thee[4];' and
the fig-tree was dead and fruitless so that even the disciples wondered when
it withered away.
6. Then was fulfilled that which was spoken by the prophet; 'I will take away
from them the voice of joy and the voice of gladness, the voice of the bridegroom
and the voice of the bride, the scent of myrrh, and the light of a lamp, and
the whole land shall be destroyed[5].' For the whole service of the law has
been abolished from them, and henceforth and for ever they remain without a
feast. And they observe not the Passover; for how can they? They have no abiding
place, but they wander everywhere. And they eat unleavened bread contrary to
the law, since they are unable first to sacrifice the lamb, as they were commanded
to do when eating unleavened bread. But in every place they transgress the
law, and as the judgments of God require, they keep days of grief instead of
gladness. Now the cause of this to them was the slaying of the Lord, and that
they did not reverence the Only-Begotten. At this time the altogether wicked
heretics and ignorant schismatics are in the same case; the one in that they
slay the Word, the other in that they rend the coat. They too remain expelled
from the feast, because they live without godliness and knowledge, and emulate
the conduct shewn in the matter of Bar-Abbas the robber, whom the Jews desired
instead of the Saviour. Therefore the Lord cursed them under the figure of
the fig-tree. Yet even thus He spared them in His loving-kindness, not destroying
them root and all. For He did not curse the root, but [said], that no man should
eat fruit of it thenceforth. When He did this, He abolished the shadow, causing
it to wither; but preserved the root, so that we might [not][6] be grafted
upon it; 'they too, if they abide not in unbelief, may attain to be grafted
into their own olive tree[7].' Now when the Lord had cursed them because of
their negligence, He removed from them the new moons, the true lamb, and that
which is truly the Passover.
7. But to us it came: there came too the solemn day, in which we ought to
call to the feast with a trumpet[8], and separate ourselves to the Lord with
thanksgiving, considering it as our own festival[9]. For we are bound to celebrate
it, not to ourselves but to the Lord; and to rejoice, not in ourselves but
in the Lord, who bore our griefs and said, 'My soul is sorrowful unto death[10].'
For the heathen, and all those who are strangers to our faith, keep feasts
according to their own wills, and have no peace, since they commit evil against
God. But the saints, as they live to the Lord also keep the feast to Him, saying,
'I will rejoice in Thy salvation,' and, 'my soul shall be joyful in the Lord.'
The commandment is common to them, 'Rejoice, ye righteous, in the Lord[11]'--so
that they also may be gathered together, to sing that common and festal Psalm,
'Come, let us rejoice[12],' not in ourselves, but, 'in the Lord.'
8. For thus the patriarch Abraham rejoiced not to see his own day, but that
of the Lord ; and thus looking forward 'he saw it, and was glad[13].' And when
he was tried, by faith he offered up Isaac, and sacrificed his only-be-gotten
son--he who had received the promises. And, in offering his son, he worshipped
the Son of God. And, being restrained from sacrificing Isaac, he saw the Messiah
in the ram[14], which was offered up instead as a sacrifice to God. The patriarch
was tried, through Isaac, not however that he was sacrificed, but He who was
pointed out in Isaiah; 'He shall be led as a lamb to the slaughter, and as
a sheep before her shearers he shall be speechless[15];' but He took away the
sin of the world. And on this account [Abraham] was restrained from laying
his hand on the lad, lest the Jews, taking occasion from the sacrifice of Isaac,
should reject the prophetic declarations concerning our Saviour, even all of
them, but more especially those uttered by the Psalmist; 'Sacrifice and offering
Thou wouldest not; a body Thou hast prepared Me[16];' and should refer all
such things as these to the son of Abraham.
9. For the sacrifice was not properly the setting to rights[17] of Isaac,
but of Abraham who also offered, and by that was tried. Thus God accepted the
will of the offerer, but prevented that which was offered from being sacrificed.
For the death of Isaac did not procure freedom to the world, but that of our
Saviour alone, by whose stripes we all are healed[18]. For He raised up the
falling, healed the sick, satisfied those who were hungry, and filled the poor,
and, what is more wonderful raised us all from the dead; having abolished death,
He has brought us from affliction and sighing to the rest and gladness of this
feast, a joy which reacheth even to heaven. For not we alone are affected by
this, but because of it, even the heavens rejoice with us, and the whole church
of the firstborn, written in heaven[19], is made glad together, as the prophet
proclaims, saying, 'Rejoice, ye heavens, for the Lord hath had mercy upon Israel.
Shout, ye foundations of the earth. Cry out with joy, ye mountains, ye high
places, and all the trees which are in them, for the Lord hath redeemed Jacob,
and Israel hath been glorified[20].' And again; Rejoice, and be glad, ye heavens;
let the hills melt into gladness, for the Lord hath had mercy on His people,
and comforted the oppressed of the people[1].'
10. The whole creation keeps a feast, my brethren, and everything that hath
breath praises the Lord[2], as the Psalmist [says], on account of the destruction
of the enemies, and our salvation. And justly indeed; for if there is joy in
heaven over one sinner that repenteth[3], what should there not be over the
abolition of sin, and the resurrection of the dead? Oh what a feast and how
great the gladness in heaven! how must all its hosts joy and exult, as they
rejoice and watch in our assemblies, those that are held continually, and especially
those at Easter? For they look on sinners while they repent; on those who have
turned away their faces, when they become converted; on those Who formerly
persisted in lusts and excess, but who now humble themselves by fastings and
temperance; and, finally, on the enemy who lies weakened, lifeless, bound hand
and foot, so that we may mock at him; 'Where is thy victory, O Death? where
is thy sting, O Grave[4]?' Let us then sing unto the Lord a song of victory.
11. Who then will lead us to such a company of angels as this? Who, coming
with a desire for the heavenly feast, and the angelic holiday, will say like
the prophet, 'I will pass to the place of the wondrous tabernacle, unto the
house of God; with the voice of joy and praise, with the shouting of those
who keep festival[5]?' To this course the saints also encourage us, saying,
'Come, let us go up to the mountain of the Lord, and to the house of the God
of Jacob[6].' But not for the impure is this feast, nor is the ascent thereto
for sinners; but it is for the virtuous and diligent; and for those who live
according to the aim of the saints; for, 'Who shall ascend to the hill of the
Lord? or who shall stand in His holy place, but he that hath clean hands, and
a pure heart; who hath not devoted his soul to vanity, nor sworn deceitfully
to his neighbour. For he,' as the Psalmist adds, when he goes up, 'shall receive
a blessing from the Lord[7].' Now this clearly also refers to what the Lord
gives to them at the right hand, saying, 'Come, ye blessed, inherit the kingdom
prepared for you[8].' But the deceitful, and he that is not pure of heart,
and possesses nothing that is pure (as the Proverb saith, 'To a deceitful man
there is nothing good[9]'), shall assuredly, being a stranger, and of a different
race from the saints, be accounted unworthy to eat the Passover, for 'a foreigner
shall not eat of it[10].' Thus Judas, when he thought he kept the Passover,
because he plotted deceit against the Saviour, was estranged from the city
which is above, and from the apostolic company. For the law commanded the Pass-over
to be eaten with due observance; but he, while eating it, was sifted of the
devil[11], who had entered his soul.
12. Wherefore let us not celebrate the feast after an earthly manner, but
as keeping festival in heaven with the angels. Let us glorify the Lord, by
chastity, by righteousness, and other virtues. And let us rejoice, not in ourselves,
but in the Lord, that we may be inheritors with the saints. Let us keep the
feast then, as Moses. Let us watch like David who rose seven times, and in
the middle of the night gave thanks for the righteous judgments of God. Let
us be early, as be said, 'In the morning I will stand before Thee, and Thou
wilt look upon me: in the morning Thou wilt hear my voice[12].' Let us fast
like Daniel let us pray without ceasing, as Paul commanded; all of us recognising
the season of prayer, but especially those who are honourably married; so that
having borne witness to these things, and thus having kept the feast, we may
be able to enter into the joy of Christ in the kingdom of heaven[13]. But as
Israel, when going up to Jerusalem, was first purified in the wilderness, being
trained to forget the customs of Egypt, the Word by this typifying to us the
holy fast of forty days, let us first be purified and freed from defilement[14],
so that when we depart hence, having been careful of fasting, we may be able
to ascend to the upper chamber[15] with the Lord, to sup with Him; and may
be partakers of the joy which is in heaven. In no other manner is it possible
to go up to Jerusalem, and to eat the Passover, except by observing the fast
of forty days.
13. We begin the fast of forty days on the first day of the month Phamenoth
(Feb. 25); and having prolonged it till the fifth of Pharmuthi (Mar. 31), suspending
it upon the Sundays and the Saturdays[16] preceding them, we then begin again
on the holy days of Easter, on the sixth of Pharmuthi (Apr, 1), and cease on
the eleventh of the same month (Apr. 6), late in the evening [17] of the Saturday,
whence dawns on us the holy Sunday, on the twelfth of Pharmuthi (Apr. 7), which
extends its beams, with unobscured grace, to all the seven weeks of the holy
Pentecost. Resting on that day, let us ever keep Easter joy in Christ Jesus
our Lord, through Whom, to the Father, be glory and dominion for ever and ever.
Amen. All the brethren who are with me salute you. Salute one another with
a holy kiss.
Here endeth the sixth Festal Letter of the holy and God-clad Athanasius.
LETTER VII. For 335.
Easter-day iv Pharmuthi, iii Kal. April; xx Moon; 'r. Dioclet. 51; Coss. Julius
Constantius, the brother of Augustus, Rufinus Albinus; Praefect, the same Philagrius;
viii Indict.
THE blessed Paul[1] wrote tO the Corinthians[2] that he always bore in his
body the dying of Jesus, not as though he alone should make that boast, but
also they and we too, and in this let us be followers of him, my brethren.
And let this be the customary boast of all of us at all times. In this David
participated, saying in the Psalms, 'For thy sake we die all the day; we are
accounted as sheep for the slaughters[3].' Now this is becoming in us, especially
in the days of the feast, when a commemoration of the death of our Saviour
is held. For he who is made like Him in His death, is also diligent in virtuous
practices, having mortified his members which are upon the earth[4], and crucifying
the flesh with the affections and lusts, he lives in the Spirit, and is conformed
to the Spirits. He is always mindful of God, and forgets Him not, and never
does the deeds of death. Now, in order that we may bear in our body the dying
of Jesus, he immediately adds the way of such fellowship, saying, 'we having
the same spirit of faith, as it is written, I believed, and therefore have
I spoken; we also believe, and therefore speak[6].' He adds also, speaking
of the grace that arises from knowledge; 'For He that raised up Jesus, will
also raise us up with Jesus, and will present us before Him with you[7].'
2. When by such faith and knowledge the saints have embraced this true life,
they receive, doubtless, the joy which is in heaven; lot which the wicked not
caring, are deservedly deprived of the blessedness arising from it. For, 'let
the wicked be taken away, so that he shall not see the glory of the Lord[8].'
For although, when they shall hear the universal proclamation of the promise,
'Awake, thou that steepest, and arise from the dead[9],' they shall rise and
shall come even to heaven, knocking and saying, ' Open to us [10];' nevertheless
the Lord will reprove them, as those who put the knowledge of Himself far from
them, saying, 'I know you not.' But the holy Spirit cries against them, 'The
wicked shall be turned into hell, even all the nations that forget God.[11].'
Now we say that the wicked are dead, but not in an ascetic life opposed to
sin; nor do they, like the saints, bear about dying in their bodies. But it
is the soul which they bury in sins and follies, drawing near to the dead,
and satisfying it with dead nourishment; like young eagles which, from high
places, fly upon the carcases of the dead, and which the law prohibited, commanding
figurativey, 'Thou shalt not eat the eagle, nor any other bird that feedeth
on a dead carcase[12];' and it pronounced unclean whatsoever eateth the dead.
But these kill the soul with lusts, and say nothing but, 'let us eat and drink,
for to morrow we die[13].' And the kind of fruit those have who thus love pleasures,
he immediately describes, adding, 'And these things are revealed in the ears
of the Lord of Hosts, that this sin shall not be forgiven you until ye die[14].'
Yea, even while they live they shall be ashamed, because they consider their
belly their lord; and when dead, they shall be tormented, because they have
made a boast of such a death. To this effect also Paul bears witness, saying,
'Meats for the belly, and the belly for meats; but God shall destroy both it
and them[15].' And the divine word declared before concerning them; 'The death
of sinners is evil, and those who hate the righteous commit sin[16].' For bitter
is the worm, and grievous the darkness, which wicked men inherit.
3. But the saints, and they who truly practise virtue, 'mortify their members
which are upon the earth, fornication, uncleanness passions, evil concupiscence[17];'
and, as the result of this, are pure and without spot, confiding in the promise
of our Saviour, who said, 'Blessed are the pure in heart, for they shall see
God[18].' These, having become dead to the world, and renounced the merchandise
of the world, gain an honourable death; for, 'precious in the sight of the
Lord is the death of His saints[19].' They are also able, preserving the Apostolic
likeness, to say, 'I am crucified with Christ, nevertheless I live; yet not
I, but Christ liveth in me[20].' For that is the true life, which a man lives
in Christ; for although they are dead to the world, yet they dwell as it were
in heaven, minding those things which are above, as he who was a lover of such
a habitation said, 'While we walk on earth, our dwelling is in heaven[21].'
Now those who thus live, and are partakers in such virtue, are alone able to
give glory to God, and this it is which essentially constitutes a feast and
a holiday[1]. For the feast does not consist in pleasant intercourse at meals,
nor splendour[2] of clothing, nor days of leisure, but in the acknowledgment
of God, and the offering of thanksgiving and of praise to Him[3]. Now this
belongs to the saints alone, who live in Christ; for it is written, 'The dead
shall not praise Thee, O Lord, neither all those who go down into silence;
but we who live will bless the Lord, from henceforth even for ever[4].' So
was it with Hezekiah, who was delivered from death, and therefore praised God,
saying, 'Those who are in hades cannot praise Thee I the dead cannot bless
Thee; but the living shall bless Thee, as I also do[5].' For to praise and
bless God belongs to those only who live in Christ, and by means of this they
go up to the feast; for the Passover is not of the Gentiles, nor of those who
are yet Jews in the flesh; but of those who acknowledge the truth in Christ[6],
as he declares who was sent to proclaim such a feast; 'Our Passover, Christ,
is sacrificed 7.'
4. Therefore, although wicked men press forward to keep the feast, and as
at a feast praise God, and intrude into the Church of the saints, yet God expostulates,
saying to the sinner, 'Why dost thou talk of My ordinances?' And the gentle
Spirit rebukes them, saying, 'Praise is not comely in the mouth of a sinners[8].'
Neither hath sin any place in common with the praise of God; for the sinner
has a mouth speaking perverse things, as the Proverb saith, 'The mouth of the
wicked answereth evil things[9].' For how is it possible for us to praise God
with an impure mouth? since things which are contrary to each other cannot
coexist. For what communion has righteousness with iniquity? or, what fellowship
is there between light and darkness? So exclaims Paul, a minister of the Gospel[10].
Thus it is that sinners, and all those who are aliens from the Catholic Church,
heretics, and schismatics, since they are excluded from glorifying (God)with
the saints, cannot properly even continue observers of the feast. But the righteous
man, although he appears dying to the world, uses boldness of speech, saying,
'I shall not die, but live, and narrate all Thy marvellous deeds[11].' For
even God is not ashamed to be called the God[12] of those who truly mortify
their members which are upon the earth[13], but live in Christ; for He is the
God of the living, not of the dead. And He by His living Word quickeneth all
men, and gives Him to be food and life to the saints; as the Lord declares,
'I am the bread of life[14].' The Jews, because they were weak in perception,
and had not exercised the senses of the soul in virtue, and did not comprehend
this discourse about bread, murmured against Him, because He said, 'I am the
bread which came down from heaven, and giveth life unto men[15].'
5. For sin has her own special bread, of her death, and calling to those who
are lovers of pleasure and lack understanding, she saith, 'Touch with delight
secret bread, and sweet waters which are stolen[16];' for he who merely touches
them knows not that that which is born from the earth perishes with her. For
even when the sinner thinks to find pleasure, the end of that food is not pleasant,
as the Wisdom of God saith again, 'Bread of deceit is pleasant to a man; but
afterwards his mouth shall be filled with gravel[17].' And, 'Honey droppeth
from the lips of a whorish woman, which for a time is sweet to thy palate;
but at the last thou shalt find it more bitter than gall, and sharper than
a two-edged sword[18].' Thus then he eats and rejoices for a little time; afterwards
he spurneth it when he hath removed his soul afar. For the fool knoweth not
that those who depart far from God shall perish. And besides, there is the
restraint of the prophetic admonition which says, 'What hast thou to do in
the way of Egypt, to drink the waters of Gihon? And what hast thou to do in
the way of Asshur, to drink the waters of the rivers[19]?' And the Wisdom of
God which loves mankind forbids these things, crying, 'But depart quickly,
tarry not in the place, neither fix thine eye upon it; for thus thou shalt
pass over strange waters, and depart quickly from the strange river[20].' She
also calls them to herself, 'For wisdom hath builded her house, and supported
it on seven pillars; she hath killed her sacrifices, and mingled her wine in
the goblets, and prepared her table; she hath sent forth her servants, inviting
to the goblet with a loud proclamation, and saying, Whoso is foolish, let him
turn in to me; and to them that lack understanding she saith, Come, eat of
my bread, and drink of the wine I have mingled for you[1].' And what hope is
there instead of these things? 'Forsake folly that ye may live, and seek understanding
that ye may abide[2].' For the bread of Wisdom is living fruit, as the Lord
said; 'I am the living bread which came down from heaven: if any man eat of
this bread, he shall live for ever[3].' For when Israel ate of the manna, which
was indeed pleasant and wonderful, yet he died, and he who ate it did not in
consequence live for ever, but all that multitude died in the wilderness. The
Lord teaches, saying, I am the bread of life: your fathers did eat manna in
the wilderness, and are dead. This is the bread which came down from heaven,
that a man should eat thereof, and not die[4].'
6. Now wicked men hunger for bread like this, for effeminate souls will hunger;
but the righteous alone, being prepared, shall be satisfied, saying, 'I shall
behold Thy face in righteousness; I shall be satisfied when Thy glory is seen
by me[5].' For he who partakes of divine bread always hungers with desire;
and he who thus hungers has a never-failing gift, as Wisdom promises, saying,
'The Lord will not slay the righteous soul with famine.' He promises too in
the Psalms, 'I will abundantly bless her provision; I will satisfy her poor
with bread.' We may also hear our Saviour saying,
Blessed are they who hunger and thirst after righteousness, for they shall
be filled[6].' Well then do the saints and those who love the life which is
in Christ raise themselves to a longing after this food. And one earnestly
implores, saying, 'As the hart panteth after the fountains of waters, so panteth
my soul after Thee, O God! My soul thirsteth for the living God, when shall
I come and see the face of God?' And another; 'My God, my God, I seek Thee
early; my soul thirsteth for Thee; often does my flesh, in a dry and pathless
land, and without water. So did I appear before Thee in holiness to see Thy
power and Thy glory[7].'
7. Since these things are so, my brethren, let us mortify our members which
are on the earth[8], and be nourished with living bread, by faith and love
to God, knowing that without faith it is impossible to be partakers of such
bread as this. For our Saviour, when He called all men to him, and said, 'If
any man thirst, let him[come] to Me and drink[9],' immediately spoke of the
faith without which a man cannot receive such food; 'He that believeth on Me,
as the Scripture saith, out of his belly shall flow rivers of living water[10].'
To this end He continually nourished His believing disciples with His words,
and gave them life by the nearness of His divinity, but to the Canaanitish
woman, because she was not yet a believer, He deigned not even a reply, although
she stood greatly in need of food from Him. He did this not from scorn, far
from it (for the Lord is loving to men and good, and on that account He went
into the coasts of Tyre and Sidon); but because of her unbelief, and because
she was of those who had not the word. And He did it righteously, my brethren;
for there would have been nothing gained by her offering her supplication before
believing, but by her faith she would support her petition; 'For He that cometh
to God, must first believe that He is, and that He is a rewarder of them that
seek Him;' and that 'without faith it is impossible for a man to please Him[11].'
This Paul teaches. Now that she was hitherto an unbeliever, one of the profane,
He shews, saying, 'It is not meet to take the children's bread, and to cast
it to dogs[12].' She then, being convinced by the power of the word, and having
changed her ways, also gained faith; for the Lord no longer spoke to her as
a dog, but conversed with her as a human being, saying, 'O woman, great is
thy faith[13]!' As therefore she believed, He forthwith granted to her the
fruit of faith, and said, 'Be it to thee as thou desirest. And her daughter
was healed in the self-same hour.'
8. For the righteous man, being nurtured in faith and knowledge, and the observance
of divine precepts, has his soul always in health. Wherefore it is commanded
to 'receive to ourselves him who is weak in the faith[14],' and to nourish
him, even if he is not yet able to eat bread, but herbs, 'for he that is weak
eateth herbs.' For even the Corinthians were not able to partake of such bread,
being yet babes, and like babes they drank milk. 'For every one that partaketh
of milk is unskilful in the word of righteousness[15],' according to the words
of that divine man. The Apostle exhorts his beloved son Timothy, in his first
Epistle, 'to be nourished with the word of faith, and the good doctrine whereto
he had attained.' And in the second, 'Preserve thou the form of sound words
which thou hast heard of me, in faith and love which are in Christ Jesus 16.'
And not only here, my brethren, is this bread the food of the righteous, neither
are the saints on earth alone nourished by such bread and such blood; but we
also eat them in heaven, for the Lord is the food even of the exalted spirits,
and the angels, and He is the joy of all the heavenly host[17]. And to all
He is everything, and He has pity upon all according to His loving-kindness.
Already hath the Lord given us angels' food[18], and He promises to those who
continue with Him in His trials, saying, 'And I promise to you a kingdom, as
My Father hath promised to Me; that ye shall eat and drink at My table in My
kingdom, and sit on twelve thrones, judging the twelve tribes of Israel[1].'
O what a banquet is this, my brethren, and how great is the harmony and gladness
of those who eat at this heavenly table! For they delight themselves not with
that food which is cast out, but with that which produces life everlasting.
Who then shall be deemed worthy of that assembly? Who is so blessed as to be
called, and accounted worthy of that divine feast? Truly, 'blessed is he who
shall eat bread in Thy kingdom[2].'
9. Now he who has been counted worthy of the heavenly calling, and by this
calling has been sanctified, if he grow negligent in it, although washed becomes
defiled: 'counting the blood of the covenant by which he was sanctified a profane
thing, and despising the Spirit of grace,' he hears the words, 'Friend, bow
camest thou in hither, not having wedding garments?' For the banquet of the
saints is spotless and pure; 'for many are called, but few chosen[3].' Judas
to wit, though he came to the supper, because he despised it went out from
the presence of the Lord, and having abandoned his Life[4], hanged himself.
But the disciples who continued with the Redeemer shared in the happiness of
the feast. And that young man who went into a far country, and there wasted
his substance, living in dissipation, if he receive a desire for this divine
feast, and, coming to himself, shall say, 'How many hired servants of my father
have bread to spare, while I perish here with hunger!' and shall next arise
and come to his father, and confess to him, saying, 'I have sinned against
heaven and before thee, and am not worthy to be called thy son; make me as
one of thy hired servants[5];'--when he shall thus confess, then he shall be
counted worthy of more than he prayed for. For the father does not receive
him as a hired servant, neither does he look upon him as a stranger, but he
kisses him as a son, he brings him back to life as from the dead, and counts
him worthy of the divine feast, and gives him his former and precious robe.
So that, on this account, there is singing and gladness in the paternal home.
10. For this is the work of the Father's loving-kindness and goodness, that
not only should He make him alive from the dead, but that He should render
His grace illustrious through the Spirit. Therefore, instead of corruption,
He clothes him with an incorruptible garment; instead of hunger, He kills the
fatted calf; instead of far journeys, [the Father] watched for his return,
providing shoes for his feet; and, what is most wonderful, placed a divine
signet-ring upon his hand; whilst by all these things He begot him afresh in
the image of the glory of Christ. These are the gracious gifts of the Father,
by which the Lord honours and nourishes those who abide with Him, and also
those who return to Him and repent. For He promises, saying, 'I am the bread
of life; he that cometh unto Me shall not hunger, and he that believeth on
Me shall never thirst(6).' We too shall be counted worthy of these things,
if at all times we cleave to our Saviour, and if we are pure, not only in these
six days of Easter(7), but consider the whole course of our life as a feast(8),
and continue near and do not go far off, saying to Him, 'Thou hast the words
of eternal life, and whither shall we go(9)?' Let those of us who are far off
return, confessing our iniquities, and having nothing against any man, but
by the spirit mortifying the deeds of the body(10). For thus, having first
nourished the soul here, we shall partake with angels at that heavenly and
spiritual table; not knocking and being repulsed like those five foolish virgins(11),
but entering with the Lord, like those who were wise and loved the bridegroom;
and shewing the dying of Jesus in our bodies(12), we shall receive life and
the kingdom from Him.
11. We begin the fast of forty days on the twenty-third of Mechir (Feb. 17),
and the holy fast of the blessed feast on the twenty-eighth of Phamenoth (Mar.
24); and having joined to these six days after them, in fastings and watchings,
as each one is able, let us rest on the third of the month Pharmuthi (Mar.
29), on the evening of the seventh day. Also that day which is holy and blessed
in everything, which possesses the name of Christ, namely the Lord's day(13),
having risen upon us on the fourth of Pharmuthi (Mar. 30), let us afterwards
keep the holy feast of Pentecost. Let us at all times worship the Father in
Christ, through Whom to Him and with Him be glory and dominion by the Holy
Ghost for ever and ever. Amen. All the brethren who are with me salute you:
salute one another with a holy kiss.
There is no eighth or ninth, for he did not send them, for the reason before
mentioned(1).
Here endeth the seventh Festal Letter of holy Athanasius the Patriarch.
LETTER X. For 338.
Coss.
Ursus and Polemius; Pr'f. the same Theodorus, of Heliopolis, and of the Catholics(2).
After him,
for
the second year, Philagrius; Indict. xi; Easter-day,
vii Kal. Ap.(3) xxx Phamenoth; Moon 18½; .(3) xxx Phamenoth; Moon 18
1/2, 'ra Dioclet. 54.
ALTHOUGH I have travelled all this distance from you, my brethren, I have
not forgotten the custom which obtains among you, which has been delivered
to us by the fathers(5), so as to be silent without notifying to you the time
of the annual holy feast, and the day for its celebration. For although I have
been hindered by those afflictions of which you have doubtless heard, and severe
trials have been laid upon me, and a great distance has separated us; while
the enemies of the truth have followed our tracks, laying snares to discover
a letter from us, so that by their accusations, they might add to the pain
of our wounds; yet the Lord, strengthening and comforting us in our afflictions,
we have not feared, even when held fast in the midst of such machinations and
conspiracies, to indicate and make known to you our saving Easter-feast, even
from the ends of the earth. Also when I wrote to the presbyters of Alexandria,
I urged that these letters might be sent to you through their instrumentality,
although I knew the fear imposed on them by the adversaries. Still, I exhorted
them to be mindful of the apostolic boldness of speech, and to say, 'Nothing
separates us from the love of Christ; neither affliction, nor distress nor
persecution, nor famine, nor nakedness nor peril, nor sword(6).' Thus, keeping
the feast myself, I was desirous that you also, my beloved, should keep it;
and being conscious that an announcement like this is due from me, I have not
delayed to discharge this duty, fearing to be condemned by the Apostolic counsel;
'Render to every man his due(7).'
2. While I then committed all my affairs to God, I was anxious to celebrate
the feast with you, not taking into account the distance between us. For although
place separate us, yet the Lord the Giver of the feast, and Who is Himself
our feast(8), Who is also the Bestower of the Spirit(9), brings us together
in mind, in harmony, and in the bond of peace(10). For when we mind and think
the same things, and offer up the same prayers on behalf of each other, no
place can separate us, but the Lord gathers and unites us together. For if
He promises, that 'when two or three are gathered together in His name, He
is in the midst of them(11),' it is plain that being in the midst of those
who in every place are gathered together, He unites them, and receives the
prayers of all of them, as if they were near, and listens to all of them, as
they cry out the same Amen(12). I have(13) borne affliction like this, and
all those trials which I mentioned, my brethren, when I wrote to you.
3. And that we may not distress you at all, I would now (only) briefly remind
you of these things, because it is not becoming in a man to forget, when more
at ease, the pains he experienced in tribulation; lest, like an unthankful
and forgetful person, he should be excluded from the divine assembly. For at
no time should a man freely praise God, more than when he has passed through
afflictions; nor, again, should he at any time give thanks more than when he
finds rest from toil and temptations. As Hezekiah, when the Assyrians perished,
praised the Lord, and, gave thanks, saying, 'The Lord is my salvation(14);
and I will not cease to bless Thee with harp all the days of my life, before
the house of the Lord(15).' And those valiant and blessed three who were tried
in Babylon, Hananiah, Mishael, and Azariah, when they were in safety and the
fire became to them as dew, gave thanks, praising and saying words of glory
to God(16).' I too like them have written, my brethren, having these things
in mind; for even in our time, God hath made possible those things which are
impossible to men. And those things which could not be accomplished by man,
the Lord has shewn to be easy of accomplishment, by bringing us to you. For
He does not give us as a prey to those who seek to swallow us up. For it is
not so much us, as the Church, and the faith and godliness which they planned
to overwhelm with wickedness.
4. But
God, who is good, multiplied His loving-kindness towards us, not only when
He granted the common
salvation
of us all through His Word, but now also,
when enemies have persecuted us, and have sought to seize upon us. As the blessed
Paul saith in a certain place, when describing the incomprehensible riches
of Christ: 'But God, being rich in mercy, for the great love wherewith He loved
us, even when we were dead in follies and sins, quickened us with Christ(17).'
For the might of man and of all creatures, is weak and poor; but the Might
which is above man, and uncreated, is rich and incomprehensible, and has no
beginning, but is eternal. He does not then possess one method only of healing,
but being rich, He works in divers manners for our salvation by means of His
Word, Who is not restricted or hindered in His dealings towards us; but since
He is rich and manifold, He varies Himself according to the individual capacity
of each soul. For He is the Word and the Power and the Wisdom of God, as Solomon
testifies concerning Wisdom, that 'being one, it can do all things, and remaining
in itself, it maketh all things new; and passing upon holy souls, fashioneth
the friends of God and the prophets(18).' To those then who have not yet attained
to the perfect way He becomes like a sheep giving milk, and this was administered
by Paul: 'I have fed you with milk, not with meat(19).' To those who have advanced
beyond the full stature of childhood, but still are weak as regards perfection,
He is their food, according to their capacity, being again administered by
Paul(20),' Let him that is weak eat herbs.' But as soon as ever a man begins
to walk in the perfect way, he is no longer fed with the things before mentioned,
but he has the Word for bread, and flesh for food, for it is written, 'Strong
meat is for those who are of full age, for those who, by reason of their capacity,
have their senses exercised(1).' And further, when the word is sown it does
not yield a uniform produce of fruit in this human life, but one various and
rich; for it bringeth forth, some an hundred, and some sixty, and some thirty(2),
as the Saviour teaches--that Sower of grace, and Bestower of the Spirit(3).
And this is no doubtful matter, nor one that admits no confirmation; but it
is in our power to behold the field which is sown by Him; for in the Church
the word is manifold and the produce(4) rich. Not with virgins alone is such
a field adorned; nor with monks alone but also with honourable matrimony and
the chastity of each one. For in sowing, He did not compel the will beyond
the power. Nor is mercy confined to the perfect, but it is sent down also among
those who occupy the middle and the third ranks, so that He might rescue all
men generally to salvation. To this intent He hath prepared many mansions(5)
with the Father, so that although the dwelling-place is various in proportion
to the advance in moral attainment, yet all of us are within the wall, and
all of us enter within the same fence, the adversary being cast out, and all
his host expelled thence. For apart from light there is darkness, and apart
from blessing there is a curse, the devil also is apart from the saints, and
sin far from virtue. Therefore the Gospel rebukes Satan, saying, 'Get thee
behind Me, Satan(6).' But us it calls to itself, saying, 'Enter ye in at the
strait gate.' And again, 'Come, blessed of My Father, inherit the kingdom which
is prepared for you(7).' So also the Spirit cried aforetime in the Psalms,
saying, 'Enter into His gates with psalms(8).' For through virtue a man enters
in unto God, as Moses did into the thick cloud where God was. But through vice
a man goes out from the presence of the Lord; as Cain(9) when he had slain
his brother, went out, as far as his will was concerned, from before the face
of God; and the Psalmist enters, saying, 'And I will go in to the altar of
God, even to the God that delighteth my youth(10).' But of the devil the Scripture
beareth witness, that the devil went out from before God, and smote Job(11)
with sore boils. For this is the characteristic of those who go out from before
God--to smite and to injure the men of God. And this is the characteristic
of those who fall away from the faith--to injure and persecute the faithful.
The saints on the other hand, take such to themselves and look upon them as
friends; as also the blessed David, using openness of speech, says, 'Mine eyes
are on the faithful of the earth, that they may dwell with me.' But those that
are weak in the faith(12), Paul urges that we should especially take to ourselves.
For virtue is philanthropic(13), just as in men of an opposite character, sin
is misanthropic. So Saul, being a sinner, persecuted David, whereas David,
though he had a good opportunity, did not kill Saul. Esau too persecuted Jacob,
while Jacob overcame his wickedness by meekness. And those eleven sold Joseph,
but Joseph, in his loving-kindness, had pity on them.
5. But what need we many words? Our Lord and Saviour, when He was persecuted
by the Pharisees, wept for their destruction. He was injured, but He threatened(14)
not; not when He was afflicted, not even when He was killed. But He grieved
for those who dared to do such things. He, the Saviour, suffered for man, but
they despised and cast from them life, and light, and grace. All these were
theirs through that Saviour Who suffered in our stead. And verily for their
darkness and blindness, He wept. For if they had understood the things which
are written in the Psalms, they would not have been so vainly daring against
the Saviour, the Spirit having said, 'Why do the heathen rage, and the people
imagine a vain thing?' And if they had considered the prophecy of Moses, they
would not have hanged Him Who was their Life(15). And if they had examined
with their understanding the things which were written, they would not have
carefully fulfilled the prophecies which were against themselves, so as for
their city to be now desolate, grace taken from them, and they themselves without
the law, being no longer called children, but strangers. For thus in the Psalms
was it before declared, saying, 'The strange children have acted falsely by
Me.' And by Isaiah the prophet; 'I have begotten and brought up children, and
they have rejected Me'? And they are no longer named the people of God, and
a holy nation, but rulers of Sodom, and people of Gomorrah; having exceeded
in this even the iniquity of the Sodomites, as the prophet also saith, 'Sodom
is justified before thee(17).' For the Sodomites raved against angels, but
these against the Lord and God and King of all, and these dared to slay the
Lord of angels, not knowing that Christ, who was slain by them, liveth. But
those Jews who had conspired against the Lord died, having rejoiced a very
little in these temporal things, and having fallen away from those which are
eternal. They were ignorant of this--that the immortal promise has not respect
to temporal enjoyment, but to the hope of those things which are everlasting.
For through many tribulations, and labours, and sorrows, the saint enters into
the kingdom of heaven; but when he arrives where sorrow, and distress, and
sighing, shall flee away, he shall thenceforward enjoy rest; as Job, who, when
tried here, was afterwards the familiar friend of the Lord. But the lover of
pleasures, rejoicing for a little while, afterwards passes a sorrowful life;
like Esau, who had temporal food, but afterwards was condemned thereby.
6. We may take as a type of this distinction, the departure of the children
of Israel and the Egyptians from Egypt. For the Egyptians, rejoicing a little
while in their injustice against Israel, when they went forth, were all drowned
in the deep; but the people of God, being for a time smitten and injured, by
the conduct of the taskmasters, when they came out of Egypt, passed through
the sea unharmed, and walked in the wilderness as an inhabited place. For although
the place was unfrequented by man and desolate, yet, through the gracious gift
of the law, and through converse with angels, it was no longer desert, but
far more than an inhabited country. As also Elisha(1), when he thought he was
alone in the wilderness, was with companies of angels; so in this case, though
the people were at first afflicted and in the wilderness, yet those who remained
faithful afterwards entered the land of promise. In like manner those who suffer
temporal afflictions here, finally having endured, attain comfort, while those
who here persecute are trodden under foot, and have no good end. For even the
rich man(2), as the Gospel affirms, having indulged in pleasure here for a
little while, suffered hunger there, and having drunk largely here, he there
thirsted exceedingly. But Lazarus, after being afflicted in worldly things,
found rest in heaven, and having hungered for bread ground from corn, he was
there satisfied with that which is better than manna, even the Lord who came
down and said, 'I am the bread which came down from heaven, and giveth life
to mankind(3).'
7. Oh! my dearly beloved, if we shall gain comfort from afflictions, if rest
from labours, if health after sickness, if from death immortality, it is not
right to be distressed by the temporal ills that lay hold on mankind. It does
not become us to be agitated because of the trials which befall us. It is not
right to fear if the gang that contended with Christ, should conspire against
godliness; but we should the more please God through these things, and should
consider such matters as the probation and exercise of a virtuous life. For
how shall patience be looked for, if there be not previously labours and sorrows?
Or how can fortitude be tested with no assault from enemies? Or how shall magnanimity
be exhibited, unless after contumely and injustice? Or how can long-suffering
be proved, unless there has first been the calumny of Antichrist(4)? And, finally,
how can a man behold virtue with his eyes, unless the iniquity of the very
wicked has previously appeared? Thus even our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ
comes before us, when He would shew men how to suffer, Who when He was smitten
bore it patiently, being reviled He reviled not again, when He suffered He
threatened not, but He gave His back to the smiters, and His cheeks to buffetings,
and turned not His face from spitting(5); and at last, was willingly led to
death, that we might behold in Him the image of all that is virtuous and immortal,
and that we, conducting ourselves after these examples, might truly tread on
serpents and scorpions, and on all the power of the enemy(6).
8. Thus too Paul, while he conducted himself after the example of the Lord,
exhorted us, saying, 'Be ye followers of me, as I also am of Christ(7).' In
this way he prevailed against all the divisions of the devil, writing, 'I am
persuaded that neither death, nor life, nor angels, nor principalities, nor
things present, nor things to come, nor powers, nor height, nor depth, nor
any other creature, shall be able to separate us from the love of God which
is in Jesus Christ(8).' For the enemy draws near to us in afflictions, and
trials, and labours, using every endeavour to ruin us. But the man who is in
Christ, combating those things that are contrary, and opposing wrath by long-suffering,
contumely by meekness, and vice by virtue, obtains the victory, and exclaims,
'I can do all things through Christ Who strengtheneth me;' and, 'In all these
things we are conquerors through Christ Who loved us(9).' This is the grace
of the Lord, and these are the Lord's means of restoration for the children
of men. For He suffered to prepare freedom from suffering for those who suffer
in Him, He descended that He might raise us up, He took on Him the trial of
being born, that we might love Him Who is unbegotten, He went down to corruption,
that corruption might put on immortality, He became weak for us, that we might
rise with power, He descended to death, that He might bestow on us immortality,
and give life to the dead. Finally, He became man, that we who die as men might
live again, and that death should no more reign over us; for the Apostolic
word proclaims, 'Death shall not have the dominion over us(10).'
9. Now because they did not thus consider these matters, the Ario-maniacs(11),
being opponents of Christ, and heretics, smite Him who is their Helper with
their tongue, and blaspheme Him who set [them] free, and hold all manner of
different opinions against the Saviour. Because of His coming down, which was
on behalf of man, they have denied His essential Godhead; and seeing that He
came forth from the Virgin, they doubt His being truly the Son of God, and
considering Him as become incarnate in time, they deny His eternity; and, looking
upon Him as having suffered for us, they do not believe in Him as the incorruptible
Son from the incorruptible Father. And finally, because He endured for our
sakes, they deny the things which concern His essential eternity; allowing
the deed of the unthankful, these despise the Saviour, and offer Him insult
instead of acknowledging His grace. To them may these words justly be addressed:
Oh! unthankful opponent of Christ, altogether wicked, and the slayer of his
Lord, mentally blind, and a Jew in his mind, hadst thou understood the Scriptures,
and listened to the saints, who said, 'Cause Thy face to shine, and we shall
be saved;' or again, 'Send out Thy light and Thy truth(12);'--then wouldest
thou have known that the Lord did not descend for His own sake, but for ours;
and for this reason, thou wouldest the more have admired His lovingkindness.
And hadst thou considered what the Father is, and what the Son, thou wouldest
not have blasphemer the Son, as of a mutable nature(13). And hadst thou understood
His work of loving-kindness towards us, thou wouldest not have alienated the
Son from the Father, nor have looked upon Him as a stranger(14), Who reconciled
us to His Father. I know these [words] are grievous, not only to those who
dispute with Christ(15), but also to the schismatics; for they are united together,
as men of kindred feelings. For they have learned to rend the seamless coat(16)
of God: they think it not strange to divide the indivisible Son from the Father
10. I know indeed, that when these things are spoken, they will gnash their
teeth upon us, with the devil who stirs them up, since they are troubled by
the declaration of the true glory concerning the Redeemer. But the Lord, Who
always has scoffed at the devil, does the same even now, saying, 'I am in the
Father, and the Father in Me(18).' This is the Lord, Who is manifested in the
Father, and in Whom also the Father is manifested; Who, being truly the Son
of the Father, at last became incarnate for our sakes, that He might offer
Himself to the Father in our stead, and redeem us through His oblation and
sacrifice. This is He Who once brought the people of old time out of Egypt;
but Who afterwards redeemed all of us, or rather the whole race of men, from
death, and brought them up from the grave. This is He Who in old time was sacrificed
as a lamb, He being signified in the lamb; but Who afterwards was slain for
us, for 'Christ our Passover is sacrificed(19).' This is He Who delivered us
from the snare of the hunters, from the opponents of Christ, I say, and froth
the schismatics, and again rescued us His Church. And because we were then
victims of deceit, He has now delivered us by His own self.
11. What then is our duty, my brethren, for the sake of these things, but
to praise and give thanks to God, the King of all? And let us first exclaim
in the words of the Psalms, 'Blessed be the Lord, Who hath not given us over
as a prey to their teeth(20).' Let us keep the feast in that way which He hath
dedicated for us unto salvation--the holy day Easter--so that we may celebrate
the which is in heaven with the angels. Thus anciently, the people of the Jews,
when they came out of affliction into a state of ease, kept the feast, staging
a song of praise for their victory. So also the people in the time of Esther,
because they were delivered from the edict of death, kept a feast to the Lord(21),
reckoning it a feast, returning thanks to the Lord, and praising Him for having
changed their condition. Therefore let us, performing our vows to the Lord,
and confessing our sins, keep the feast to the Lord, in conversation, moral
conduct, and manner of life; praising our Lord, Who hath chastened us a little,
but hath not utterly failed nor forsaken us, nor altogether kept silence from
us. For if, having brought us out of the deceitful and famous Egypt of the
opponents of Christ, He hath caused us to pass through many trials and afflictions,
as it were in the wilderness, to His holy Church, so that from hence, according
to custom, we can send to you, as well as receive letters from you; on this
account especially I both give thanks to God myself, and exhort you to thank
Him with me and on my behalf, this being the Apostolic custom, which these
opponents of Christ, and the schismatics, wished to put an end to, and to break
off. The Lord did not permit it, but both renewed and preserved that which
was ordained by Him through the Apostle, so that we may keep the feast together,
and together keep holy-day, according to the tradition and commandment of the
fathers.
12. We begin the fast of forty days on the nineteenth of the month Mechir
(Feb. 13); and the holy Easter-fast on the twenty-fourth of the month Phamenoth
(Mar. 20). We cease from the fast on the twenty-ninth of the month Phamenoth
(Mar. 25), late in the evening of the seventh day. And we thus keep the feast
on the first day of the week which dawns on the thirtieth of the month Phamenoth
(Mar. 26); from which, to Pentecost, we keep holy-day, through seven weeks,
one after the other. For when we have first meditated properly on these things,
we shall attain to be counted worthy of those which are eternal, through Christ
Jesus our Lord, through Whom to the Father be glory and dominion for ever and
ever. Amen. Greet one another with a holy kiss, remembering us in your holy
prayers. All the brethren who are with me salute you, at all times remembering
you. And I pray that ye may have health in the Lord, my beloved brethren, whom
we love above all.
Here endeth the tenth Letter of holy Athanasius.
LETTER XI. For 339.
Cost. Constantius Augustus II, Constans I: Pr'efect, Philagrius the Cappadocian,
for the second time; Indict. xii; Easter-day xvii Kal. Mai, xx Pharmuthi; 'ra
Dioclet. 55.
THE blessed Paul, being girt about with every virtue(1), and called faithful
of the Lord--for he was conscious of nothing in himself but what was a virtue
and a praise(2), or what was in harmony with love and godliness--clave to these
things more and more, and was carried up even to heavenly places, and was borne
to Paradise(3); to the end that, as he surpassed the conversation of men, he
should be exalted above men. And when he descended, he preached to every man;
'We know in part, and we prophesy in part; here I know in part; but then shall
I know even as also I am known(4).' For, in truth, he was known to those saints
who are in heaven, as their fellow-citizen(5). And in relation to all that
is future and perfect, the things known by him here were in part; but with
respect to those things which were committed and entrusted to him by the Lord,
he was perfect; as he said, 'We who are perfect, should be thus minded(6).'
For as the Gospel of Christ is the fulfilment and accomplishment of the ministration
which was supplied by the law of Israel, so future things will be the accomplishment
of such as now exist, the Gospel being then fulfilled, and the faithful receiving
those things which, not seeing now, they yet hope for, as Paul saith; 'For
what a man seeth, why doth he also hope for? But if we hope for those things
we see [not], we then by patience wait for them(7).' Since then that blessed
man was of such a character, and apostolic grace was committed to him, he wrote,
wishing 'that all men should be as he was(8).' For virtue is philanthropic(9),
and great is the company of the kingdom of heaven, for thousands of thousands
and myriads of myriads there serve the Lord. And though a man enters it through
a strait and narrow way, yet having entered, he beholds immeasurable space,
and a place greater than any other, as they declare, who were eye-witnesses
and heirs of these things. 'Thou didst place afflictions before us.' But afterwards,
having related their afflictions, they say, 'Thou broughtest us forth into
a wide place;' and again, 'In affliction Thou hast enlarged us(10).' For truly,
my brethren, the course of the saints here is straitened; since they either
toil painfully through longing for those things which are to come, as he who
said, 'Woe is me that my pilgrimage is prolonged(11);' or they are distressed
and spent for the salvation of other men, as Paul wrote to the Corinthians,
saying, 'Lest, when I come to you, God should humble me, and I should bewail
many of those who have sinned already, and not repented for the uncleanness
and fornication and lasciviousness which they have committed[12].' As Samuel
bewailed the destruction of Saul, and Jeremiah wept for the captivity of the
people. But after this affliction, and sorrow, and sighing, when they depart
from this world, a certain divine gladness, and pleasure, and exultation receives
them, from which misery and sorrow, and sighing, flee away.
2. Since we are thus circumstanced, my brethren, let us never loiter in the
path of virtue; for hereto he counsels us, saying, 'Be ye followers of me,
as I also am of Christ[13].' For he gave this advice not to the Corinthians
only, since he was not their Apostle only, but being 'a teacher of the Gentiles
in faith and verity[14],' he admonished us all through them; and in short,
the things he wrote to each particular person are commandments common to all
men[15]. On this account in writing to different people, some he exhorted as,
for instance, in the Epistles to the Romans, and the Ephesians, and Philemon.
Some he reproved, and was indignant with them, as in the case of the Corinthians
and Galatians. To some he gave advice, as to the Colossians and Thessalonians.
The Philippians he approved of, and rejoiced in them. The Hebrews he taught
that the law was a shadow to them[16]. But to his elect sons, Timothy and Titus,
when they were near, he gave instruction; when far away, he put them in remembrance.
For he was all things to all men; and being himself a perfect man, he adapted
his teaching to thee need of every one, so that by all means he might rescue
some of them. Therefore his word was not without fruit; but in every place
it is planted and productive even to this day.
3. And wherefore, my beloved? For it is right that we should search into the
apostolic mind. Not only in the beginning of the Epistles, but towards their
close, and in the middle of them, he used persuasions and admonitions. I hope
therefore that, by your prayers, I shall in no respect falsely represent the
plan of that holy man. As he was well skilled in these divine matters, and
knew the power of the divine teaching, he deemed it necessary, in the first
place, to make known the word concerning Christ, and the mystery regarding
Him; and then afterwards to point to the correction of habits, so that when
they had learned to know the Lord, they might earnestly desire to do those
things which He commanded. For when the Guide to the laws is unknown, one does
not readily pass on to the observance of them. Faithful Moses, the minister
of God, adopted this method; for when he promulgated the words of the divine
dispensation of laws, he first proclaimed the matters relating to the knowledge
of God: 'Hear, O Israel, the Lord thy God is one Lord[17].' Afterwards, having
shadowed Him forth to the people, and taught of Him in Whom they ought to believe,
and informed their minds of Him Who is truly God, he proceeds to lay down the
law relating to those things whereby a man may be well-pleasing to Him, saying,
'Thou shall not commit adultery; thou shall not steal;' together with the other
commandments. For also, according to the Apostolic teaching, 'He that draweth
near to God must believe that He is, and that He is a rewarder of them that
seek Him[18].' Now He is sought by means of virtuous deeds, as the prophet
saith; 'Seek ye the Lord, and when 'ye have found Him, call upon Him; when
He is near to you, let the wicked forsake his ways, and the lawless man his
thoughts[19].'
4. It
will also be well if a man is not offended at the testimony of the Shepherd,
saying in the
beginning
of his book, 'Before all things believe that there
is one God, Who created and established all these things, and from non-existence
called them into beings[1].' And, further, the blessed Evangelists--who recorded
the words of the Lord--in the beginning of the Gospels, wrote the things concerning
our Saviour; so that, having first made known the Lord, the Creator, they might
be believed when narrating the events that took place. For how could they have
been believed, when writing respecting him who [was blind] from his mother's
womb, and those other blind men who recovered their sight, and those who rose
from the dead, and the changing of water into wine, and those lepers who were
cleansed; if they bad not taught of Him as the Creator, writing, 'In the beginning
was the Word[2]?' Or, according to Matthew, that He Who was born of the seed
of David, was Emmanuel, and the Son of the living God? He from Whom the Jews,
with the Arians, turn away their faces, but Whom we acknowledge and worship.
The Apostle therefore, as was meet, sent to different people, but his own son
he especially reminded, 'that he should not despise the things in which he
had been instructed by him,' and enjoined on him, 'Remember Jesus Christ, who
rose from the dead, of the seed of David, according to my Gospel[3].' And speaking
of these things being delivered to him, to be always had in remembrance, he
immediately writes to him. saying, 'Meditate on these things: be engaged in
them C For constant meditation, and the remembrance of divine words, strengthen
s piety towards God, and produces a love to Him inseparable and not merely
formal[5]; as he, being of this mind, speaks about himself and others like-minded,
saying boldly, 'Who shall separate us from the love of God 6?' For[7] such
men, being confirmed in the Lord, and possessing an unshaken disposition towards
Him, and being one in spirit (for[8] 'he who is joined to the Spirit is one
spirit'), are sure 'as the mount Sion;' and although ten thousand trials may
rage against them, they are founded upon a rock, which is Christ[9]. In Him
the careless take no delight; and having no continuous purpose of good, they
are sullied by temporal attacks, and esteem nothing more highly than present
things, being unstable and deserving reproof as regards the faith. For 'either
the care of this world, or the deceitfulness of riches, chokes them[10];' or,
as Jesus said in that parable which had reference to them, since they have
not established the faith that has been preached to them, but continue only
for a time, immediately, in time of persecution, or when affliction ariseth
through the word, they are offended. Now those who meditate evil we say, [think]
not truth, but falsehood and not righteousness, but iniquity, for their tongue
learns to speak lies. They have done evil, and have not ceased that they might
repent. For, persevering with delight in wicked actions, they hasten thereto
without turning back, even treading under foot the commandment with regard
to neighbours, and, instead of loving them, devise evil against them, as the
saint testifies, saying, 'And those who seek me evil have spoken vanity, and
imagined deceit all the day[11].' But that the cause of such meditation is
none other than the want of instruction, the divine proverb has already declared;
'The son that forsaketh the commandment of his father meditateth evil words[12].'
But such meditation, because it is evil, the Holy Spirit blames in these words,
and reproves too in other terms, saying, 'Your hands are polluted with blood,
your fingers with sins; your lips have spoken lawlessness, and your tongue
imagineth iniquity: no man speaketh right things, nor is there true judgment[13].'
But what the end is of such perverse imagining, He immediately declares, saying,
'They trust in vanities and speak falsehood; for they conceive mischief, and
bring forth lawlessness. They have hatched the eggs of an asp, and woven a
spider's web; and he who is prepared to eat of their eggs, when he breaks them
finds gall, and a basilisk therein[14].' Again, what the hope of such is, He
has already announced. 'Because righteousness does not overtake them, when
they waited for light, they had darkness; when they waited for brightness,
they walked in a thick cloud. They shall grope for the wall like the blind,
and as those who have no eyes shall they grope; they shall fall at noon-day
as at midnight; when dead, they shall groan. They shall roar together as a
bear, or as a dove[15].'
This is the fruit of wickedness, these rewards are given to its familiars,
for perverseness does not deliver its own. But in truth, against them it sets
itself, and it tears them first, and on them especially it summons ruin. Woe
to them against whom these are brought; for 'it is sharper than a two-edged
sword[16],' slaying beforehand and very swiftly those who will lay hold of
it. For their tongue, according to the testimony of the Psalmist, is a 'sharp
sword, and their teeth spears and arrows[17].' But the wonderful part is that
while often he against whom men imagine [harm] suffers nothing, they are pierced
by their own spears: for they possess, even in themselves, before they reach
others, anger, wrath, malice, guile, hatred, bitterness. Although they may
not be able to bring these upon others, they forthwith return upon and against
themselves, as he prays, saying, 'Let their sword enter into their own heart.'
There is also such a proverb as this: 'The wicked is held fast by the chain
of his sins[18].'
5. The Jews in their imaginings, and in their agreeing to act unjustly against
the Lord, forgot that they were bringing wrath upon themselves. Therefore does
the Word lament for them, saying, 'Why do the people exalt themselves, and
the nations imagine vain things[19]?' For vain indeed was the imagination of
the Jews, meditating death against the Life[1], and devising unreasonable things
against the Word of the Father[2].' For who that looks upon their dispersion,
and the desolation of their city, may not aptly say, 'Woe unto them, for they
have imagined an evil imagination, saying against their own soul, let us bind
the righteous man, because he is not pleasing to us[3].' And full well is it
so, my brethren; for when they erred concerning the Scriptures, they knew not
that 'he who diggeth a pit for his neighbour falleth therein; and he who destroyeth
a hedge, a serpent shall bite him[4].' And if they had not turned their faces
from the Lord, they would have feared what was written before in the divine
Psalms: 'The heathen are caught in the pit which they made; in the snare which
they hid is their own foot taken. The Lord is known when executing judgments:
by the works of his hands is the sinner taken[5].' Let them observe this, and
how that 'the snare they know not shall come upon them, and the net they hid
take them[6].' But they understood not these things, for had they done so,
'they would not have crucified the Lord of glory 7.'
6. Therefore the righteous and faithful servants of the Lord, who 'are made
disciples for the kingdom of heaven, and bring forth from it things new and
old;' and who 'meditate on the words of the Lord, when sitting in the house,
when lying down or rising up, and when walking by the way[8];'--since they
are of good hope because of the promise of the Spirit which said, 'Blessed
is the man that hath not walked in the counsel of the ungodly, nor stood in
the way of sinners, nor sat in the seat of corrupters; but his delight is in
the law of the Lord, and in His law doth he meditate day and night[9];'--being
grounded in, faith, rejoicing in hope, fervent in spirit, they have boldness
to say, 'My mouth shall speak wisdom, and the meditation of my heart shall
be of understanding.' And again, 'I have meditated on all Thy works, and on
the work of Thy hands has been my meditation.' And, 'If I have remembered Thee
on my bed, and in the morning have meditated on Thee[10].' Afterwards, advancing
in boldness, they say, 'The meditation of my heart is before Thee at all times[11].'
And what is the end of such an one? He cites immediately; 'The Lord is my Helper
and my Redeemer[12].' For to those who thus examine themselves, and conform
their hearts to the Lord, nothing adverse shall happen; for indeed, their heart
is strengthened by confidence in the Lord, as it is written, 'They who trust
in the Lord are as mount Sion: he who dwelleth in Jerusalem shall not be moved
for ever[13].' For if at any time, the crafty one shall be presumptuously bold
against them, chiefly that he may break the rank of the saints, and cause a
division among brethren; even in this the Lord is with them, not only as an
avenger on their behalf, but also when they have already been beaten, as a
deliverer for them. For this is the divine promise; 'The Lord shall fight for
you[14].' Henceforth, although afflictions and trials from without overtake
them, yet, being fashioned after the apostolic words, and 'being stedfast in
tribulations, and persevering in prayers[15]' and in meditation on the law,
they stand against those things which befall them, are well-pleasing to God,
and give utterance to the words which are written, 'Afflictions and distresses
are come upon me; but Thy commandments are my meditation[16].'
7. And whereas, not only in action, but also in the thoughts of the mind,
men are moved to deeds of virtue, he afterwards adds, saying, 'Mine eyes prevent
the dawn, that I might meditate on Thy words[17].' For it is meet that the
spiritual meditations of those who are whole should precede their bodily actions.
And does not our Saviour, when intending to teach this very thing begin with
the thoughts of the mind? saying, 'Whosoever looketh on a woman to lust after
her, hath already committed adultery:' and, 'Whosoever shall be angry with
his brother, is guilty of murder[18].' For where there is no wrath, murder
is prevented; and where lust is first removed, there can be no accusation of
adultery. Hence meditation on the law is necessary, my beloved, and uninterrupted
converse with virtue, 'that the saint may lack nothing, but be perfect to every
good works[19].' For by these things is the promise of eternal life, as Paul
wrote to Timothy, calling constant meditation exercise, and saying, 'Exercise
thyself unto godliness; for bodily exercise profiteth little; but godliness
is profitable for all things, since it has the promise of the present life,
and of that which is eternal[20].'
8. Worthy of admiration is the virtue of that man, my brethren! for through
Timothy he enjoins upon all[1], that they should have regard to nothing more
than to godliness, but above everything to adjudge the chief place to faith
in God. For what grace has the unrighteous man, though he may feign to keep
the commandments? Nay rather, the unrighteous man is unable even to keep a
portion of the law, for as is his mind, such of necessity must be his actions;
as the Spirit says, reproving such; 'The fool hath said in his heart, there
is no God.' After this the Word, shewing that actions correspond with thoughts,
says, 'They are corrupt; they are profane in their machinations[2].' The unrighteous
man then, in every respect corrupts his body; stealing, committing adultery,
cursing, being drunken, and doing such like things. Even as Jeremiah, the prophet,
convicts Israel of these things, crying out and saying, 'Oh, that I had a lodge
far off in the wilderness! then would I leave my people and depart from them:
for they are all adulterers, an assembly of oppressors, who draw out their
tongue as a bow; lying and not truth has prevailed upon the earth, and they
proceed from iniquities to iniquities; but Me they have not known[3].' Thus,
for wickedness and falsehood, and for deeds, in which they [proceed] from iniquity
to iniquity, he reproves their practices; but, because they knew not the Lord,
and were faithless, he charges them with unrighteousness.
9. For faith and godliness are allied to each other, and sisters; and he who
believes in Him is godly, and he also who is godly, believes the more[4]. He
therefore who is in a state of wickedness, undoubtedly also wanders from the
faith; and he who fails from godliness, falls from the true faith. Paul, for
instance, bearing testimony to the same point, advises his disciple, saying,
'Avoid profane conversations; for they increase unto more ungodliness, and
their word takes hold as doth a canker, of whom are Hymenaeus and Philetus[5].'
In what their wickedness consisted he declares, saying, 'Who have erred from
the faith, saying that the resurrection is already past[6].' But again, desirous
of shewing that faith is yoked with godliness, the Apostle says, 'And all those
who will live godly in Jesus Christ shall suffer persecution[7].' Afterwards,
that no man should renounce godliness through persecution, he counsels them
to preserve the faith, adding, 'Thou, therefore, continue in the things thou
hast learned, and hast been assured of[8].' And as when brother is helped by
brother, they become as a wall to each other; so faith and godliness, being
of like growth, hang together, and he who is practised in the one, of necessity
is strengthened by the other. Therefore, wishing the disciple to be exercised
in godliness unto the end, and to contend for the faith, he counsels them,
saying, 'Fight the good fight of faith, and lay hold on eternal life[9].' For
if a man first put away the wickedness of idols, and rightly confesses Him
Who is truly God, he next fights by faith with those who war against Him.
10. For of these two things we speak faith and godliness--the hope is the
same, even everlasting life; for he saith, 'Fight the good fight of faith;
lay hold on eternal life.' And, 'exercise thyself unto godliness, for hath
the promise of the life that now is, and of that which is to come[10].' For
this cause, the Ario-maniacs, who now have gone out from the Church, being
opponents of Christ, have digged a pit of unbelief, into which they themselves
have been thrust; and, since they have advanced in ungodliness, they 'overthrow
the faith of the simple[11];' blaspheming the Son of God, and saying that He
is a creature, and has His being from things which are not. But as then against
the adherents of Philetus and Hymenaeus, so now the Apostle forewarns all men
against ungodliness like theirs, saying, 'The foundation of God standeth sure,
having this seal, The Lord knoweth them that are His; and, Let every one that
nameth the name of the Lord depart from iniquity[12].' For it is well that
a man should depart from wickedness and deeds of iniquity, that he may be able
properly to celebrate the feast; for he who is defiled with the pollutions
of the wicked is not able to sacrifice the Passover to the Lord our God. Hence,
the people who were then in Egypt said, 'We cannot sacrifice the Passover in
Egypt to the Lord our God[13].' For God, Who is over all, willed that they
should go far away from the servants of Pharaoh, and from the furnace of iron;
so that being set free from wickedness, and having carefully put away from
them all strange notions, they might receive the knowledge of God and of virtuous
actions. For He saith,
Go far from them: depart from the midst of them, and touch not the unclean
things[14].' For a man will not otherwise depart from sin, and lay hold on
virtuous deeds, than by meditation on his acts; and when he has been practised
by exercise in godliness, he will lay hold on the confession of faith[15],
which also Paul, after he had fought the fight, possessed, namely, the crown
of righteousness which was laid up; which the righteous Judge will give, not
to him alone, but to all who are like him.
11. For such meditation and exercise in godliness, being at all times the
habit of the saints, is urgent on us at the present time, when the divine word
desires us to keep the feast with them if we are in this disposition. For what
else is the feast, but the constant worship of God, and the recognition of
godliness, and unceasing prayers from the whole heart with agreement? So Paul
wishing us to be ever in this disposition, commands, saying, 'Rejoice evermore;
pray without ceasing; in everything give thanks,6.' Not therefore separately,
but unitedly and collectively, let us all keep the feast together, as the prophet
exhorts, saying, 'O come, let us rejoice in the Lord; let us make a joyful
noise unto God our Saviour[17].' Who then is so negligent, or who so disobedient
to the divine voice, as not to leave everything, and run to the general and
common assembly of the feast? which is not in one place only, for not one place
alone keeps the feast; but 'into all the earth their song has gone forth, and
to the ends of the world their words.' And the sacrifice is not offered in
one place, but 'in every nation, incense and a pure sacrifice is offered unto
God[1].' So when in like manner from all in every place, praise and prayer
shall ascend to the gracious and good Father, when the whole Catholic Church
which is in every place, with gladness and rejoicing, celebrates together the
same worship to God, when all men in common send up a song of praise and say,
Amen[2]; how blessed will it not be, my brethren! who will not, at that time,
be engaged, praying rightly? For the walls of every adverse power, yea even
of Jericho especially, failing down, and the gift[3] of the Holy Spirit being
then richly poured upon all men, every man perceiving the coming of the Spirit
shall say, 'We are all filled in the morning with Thy favour, and we rejoice
and are made glad in our days[4].'
12. Since this is so, let us make a joyful noise with the saints, and let
no one of us fail of his duty in these things; counting as nothing the affliction
or the trials. which, especially at this time, have been enviously directed
against us by the party of Eusebius. Even now they wish to injure us, and by
their accusations to compass our death, because of that godliness, whose helper
is the Lord. But, as faithful servants of God, knowing that He is our salvation
in the time of trouble:--for our Lord promised beforehand, saying, 'Blessed
are ye when men revile you and persecute you, and say all manner of evil against
you falsely, for My sake. Rejoice, and be exceeding glad, for your reward is
great in heavens[5].' Again, it is the Redeemer's own word, that affliction
shall not befall every man in this world, but only those who have a holy fear
of Him:--on this account, the more the enemies hem us in, the more let us be
at liberty; although they revile us, let us come together; and the more they
would turn us aside from godliness, let us the more boldly preach it saying,
'All these things are come upon us, yet have we not forgotten Thee[6],' and
we have not done evil with the Ario-maniacs, who say that Thou hast existence
from those things that exist not. The Word which is eternally with the Father,
is also from Him.
13. Let us therefore keep the feast, my brethren, celebrating it not at all
as an occasion of distress and mourning, neither let us mingle with heretics
through temporal trials brought upon us by godliness. But if anything that
would promote joy and gladness should offer, let us attend to it; so that our
heart may not be sad, like that of Cain; but that, like faithful and good servants
of the Lord, we may hear the words, 'Enter into the joy of thy Lord[7].' For
we do not institute days of mourning and sorrow, as some may consider these
of Easter to be, but we keep the feast, being filled with joy and gladness.
We keep it then, not regarding it after the deceitful error of the Jews, nor
according to the teaching of the Arians, which takes away the Son from the
Godhead, and numbers Him among creatures; but we look to the correct doctrine
we derive from the Lord. For the guile of the Jews, and the unbounded impiety
of the Arians, cause nothing but sad reflections, for the former at the beginning
slew the Lord; but these latter take away His position of having conquered
that death to which the Jews brought Him, in that they say He is not the Creator,
but a creature. For if He were a creature, He would have been holden by death;
but if He was not holden by death, according to the Scriptures, He is not a
creature, but the Lord of the creatures, and the subject[8] of this immortal
feast.
14. For
the Lord of death would abolish death, and being Lord, what He would was
accomplished; for
we have
all passed from death unto life. But the imagination
of the Jews, and of those who are like them, was vain, since the result was
not such as they contemplated, but turned out adverse to themselves; and 'at
both of them He that sitteth in the heaven shall laugh: the Lord shall have
them in derision 9.' Hence, when our Saviour was led to death, He restrained
the women who followed Him weeping, saying, 'Weep not for Me[10];' meaning
to shew that the Lord's death is an event, not of sorrow but of joy, and that
He Who dies for us is alive. For He does not derive His being from those things
which are not, but from the Father. It is truly a subject of joy, that we can
see the signs of victory against death, even our own incorruptibility, through
the body of the Lord. For since He rose gloriously, it is clear that the resurrection
of all of us will take place; and since His body remained without corruption,
there can be no doubt regarding our incorruption ". For as by one man[12],
as saith Paul (and it is the truth), sin passed upon all men, so by the resurrection
of our Lord Jesus Christ, we shall all rise. 'For,' he says, 'this corruptible
must put on incorruption, and this mortal must put on immortality 13.' Now
this came to pass in the time of the Passion, in which our Lord died for us,
for 'our Passover, Christ, is sacrificed 14.' Therefore, because He was sacrificed,
let each of us feed upon Him, and with alacrity and diligence partake of His
sustenance; since He is given to all without grudging, and is in every one
'a well of water flowing to everlasting life[15].'
15. We begin the fast of forty days on the ninth of the month Phamenoth (Mar.
5); and having, in these days, served the Lord with abstinence, and first purified
ourselves[16], we commence also the holy Easter on the fourteenth of the month
Pharmuthi (April 9). Afterwards, extending the fast to the seventh day, on
the seventeenth 17 of the month, let us rest late in the evening. And the light
of the Lord having first dawned upon us, and the holy Sunday on which our Lord
rose shining upon us, we should rejoice and be glad with the joy which arises
from good works, during the seven weeks which remain--to Pentecost--giving
glory to the Father, and saying, 'This is the day which the Lord hath made:
we will rejoice and be glad in it[18'], through our Lord and Saviour Jesus
Christ, through Whom to the same, and to His Father, be glory and dominion
for ever and ever. Amen. Salute one another with a holy kiss. All the brethren
who are with me salute you. That ye may have health in the Lord, I pray, brethren
beloved.
Here endeth the eleventh Letter of holy Athanasius.
LETTER XII. (Probably for 340 A.D.)
To the Beloved Brother, and our fellow Minister Serapion[1].
THANKS be to Divine Providence for those things which, at all times, it vouchsafes
to us; for it has vouchsafed to us now to come to the season of the festival.
Having, therefore, according to custom, written the Letter respecting the festival,
I have sent it to you, my beloved; that through you all the brethren may be
able to know the day of rejoicing. But because some Meletians, being come from
Syria, have boasted that they had received what does not belong to them, I
mean, that they also were reckoned in the Catholic Church; on this account,
I have sent to you a copy of one letter of our fellow-ministers who are of
Palestine, that when it reaches you, you may know the fraud of the pretenders
in this matter. For because they boasted, as I have said before, it was necessary
for me to write to the Bishops who are in Syria, and immediately those of Palestine
sent us a reply, having agreed in[2] the judgment against them, as you may
learn from this example. That you may not have to consider the letters of all
the Bishops one after the other, I have sent you one, which is of like character
with the rest, in order that from it you may know the purport of all of them.
I know also that when they are convicted in this matter, they will incur perfect
odium at the hands of all men. And thus far concerning the pretenders. But
I have further deemed it highly necessary and very urgent, to make known to
your modesty--for i have written this to each one--that you should proclaim
the fast of forty days to the brethren, and persuade them to fast, lest, while
all the world is fasting, we who are in Egypt should be derided, as the only
people who do not fast, but take our pleasure in these days. For if, on account
of the Letter [not] being yet read, we do not fast, we should take away this
pretext, and it should be read before the fast of forty days, so that they
may not make this an excuse for neglect or fasting. Also, when it is read,
they may be able to learn about the fast. But O, my beloved, whether in this
way or any other, persuade and teach them to fast the forty days. For it is
a disgrace that when all the world does this, those alone who are in Egypt,
instead of fasting, should find their pleasure. For even I being grieved because
men deride us for this, have been constrained to write to you. When therefore
you receive the letters, and have read them and given the exhortation, write
to me in return, my beloved, that I also may rejoice upon learning it.
2. But I have also thought it necessary to inform a you of the fact, that
Bishops have succeeded those who have fallen asleep. In Tanis in the stead
of Elias[4], is Theodorus. In Arsenoitis, Silvanus[5] instead of Calosiris.
In Paralus, Nemesion is instead of Nonnus[6]. In Bucolia[7] is Heraclius. In
Tentyra, Andronicus is instead of Saprion[8], his father. In Thebes, Philon
instead of Philon. In Maximianopolis, Herminus instead of Atras. In the lower
Apollon is Sarapion instead of Plution. In Aphroditon, Serenus is in the place
of Theodorus. In Rhinocoruron, Salomon. In Stathma, Arabion, and in Marmarica.
In the eastern Garyathis, Andragathius[9] in the place of Hierax. In the southern
Garyathis, Quintus[9] instead of Nicon[10]. So that to these you may write,
and from these receive the canonical Letters.
Salute one another with a holy kiss.All the brethren who are with me salute
you.
He wrote this from Rome. There is no twelfth Letter.
LETTER XIII. (For 341.)
Coss. Marcellinus, Probinus; Proef. Longinus; Indict. xiv; Easter-day, xiii
Kal. Maii, xxiv Pharmuthi; AEra Dioclet. 57.
AGAIN, my beloved brethren, I am ready to notify to you the saving feast[1],
which will take place according to annual custom. For although the opponents
of Christ[2] have oppressed you together with us with afflictions and sorrows;
yet, God having comforted us by our mutual faith[3], behold, I write to you
even from Rome. Keeping the feast here with the brethren, still I keep it with
you also in will and in spirit, for we send up prayers in common to God, 'Who
hath granted us not only to believe in Him, but also now to suffer for His
sake[4].' For troubled as we are, because we are so far from you, He moves
us to write, that by a letter we might comfort ourselves, and provoke one another
to good[4a]. For, indeed, numerous afflictions and bitter persecutions directed
against the Church have been against us. For heretics, corrupt in their mind,
untried in the faith, rising against the truth, violently persecute the Church,
and of the brethren, some are scourged and others torn with stripes, and hardest
of all, their insults reach even to the Bishops. Nevertheless, it is not becoming,
on this account, that we should neglect the feast. But we should especially
remember it, and not at all forget its commemoration from time to time. Now
the unbelievers do not consider that there is a season for feasts, because
they spend all their lives in revelling and follies; and the feasts which they
keep are an occasion of grief rather than of joy. But to us in this present
life they are above all an uninterrupted passage [to heaven]--it is indeed
our season. For such things as these serve for exercise and trial, so that,
having approved ourselves zealous and chosen servants of Christ, we may be
fellow-heirs with the saints[5]. For thus Job: 'The whole world is a place
of trial to men upon the earth[5a].' Nevertheless, they are proved in this
world by afflictions, labours, and sorrows, to the end that each one may receive
of God such reward as is meet for him, as He saith by the prophet, 'I am the
Lord, Who trieth the hearts, and searcheth the reins, to give to every one
according to his ways[6].'
2. Not that He first knows the things of a man on his being proved (for He
knows them all before they come to pass), but because He is good and philanthropic,
He distributes to each a due reward according to his actions, so that every
man may exclaim, Righteous is the judgment of God! As the prophet says again,
The Lord trieth the just, and discerneth the reins[7].' Again, for this cause
He tries each one of us, either that to those who know it not, virtue may be
manifested by means of those who are proved, as was said respecting Job; 'Thinkest
thou that I was revealed to thee for any other cause, than that thou shouldest
be seen righteous[8]?' or that, when men come to a sense of their deeds, they
may be able to know of what manner they are, and so may either repent of their
wickedness, or abide confirmed in the faith. Now the blessed Paul, when troubled
by afflictions, and persecutions, and hunger and thirst, 'in everything was
a conqueror, through Jesus Christ, Who loved us[9].' Through suffering he was
weak indeed in body, yet, believing and hoping, he was made strong in spirit,
and his strength was made perfect in weakness[9a].
3. The other saints also, who had a like confidence in God, accepted a like
probation with gladness, as Job said, 'Blessed be the name of the Lord[10].'
But the Psalmist, 'Search me, O Lord, and try me: prove my reins and my heart[11].'
For since, when the strength is proved, it convinceth the foolish, they perceiving
the cleansing and the advantage resulting from the divine fire, were not discouraged
in trials like these, but they rather delighted in them, suffering no injury
at all from the things which happened, but being seen to shine more brightly,
like gold from the fire[12], as he said, who was tried in such a school of
discipline as this; 'Thou hast tried my heart, Thou hast visited me in the
night-season; Thou hast proved me, and hast not found iniquity in me, so that
my mouth shall not speak of the works of men[13].' But those whose actions
are not restrained by law, who know of nothing beyond eating and drinking and
dying, account trials as danger. They soon stumble at them, so that, being
untried in the faith, they are given over to a reprobate mind, and do those
things which are not seemly[13a]. Therefore the blessed Paul, when urging us
to such exercises as these, and having before measured himself by them, says,
'Therefore I take pleasure in afflictions, in infirmities.' And again, 'Exercise
thyself unto godliness[14].' For since he knew the persecutions that befel
those who chose to live in godliness, he wished his disciples to meditate beforehand
on the difficulties connected with godliness; that when trials should come,
and affliction arise, they might be able to bear them easily, as having been
exercised in these things. For in those things wherewith a man has been conversant
in mind, he ordinarily experiences a hidden joy. In this way, the blessed martyrs,
becoming at first conversant with difficulties, were quickly perfected in Christ,
regarding as nought the injury of the body, while they contemplated the expected
rest.
4. But all those who 'call their lands by their own names[15],' and have wood,
and hay, and stubble[16] in their thoughts; such as these, since they are strangers
to difficulties, become aliens from the kingdom of heaven. Had they however
known that 'tribulation perfecteth patience, and patience experience, anti
experience hope, and hope maketh not ashamed,' they would have exercised themselves,
after the example of Paul, who said, 'I keep under my body and bring it into
subjection, test when I have preached to others, I myself should be a castaway[1].'
They would easily have borne the afflictions which were brought upon them to
prove them from time to time, if the prophetic admonition[2] had been listened
to by them; 'It is good for a man to take up Thy yoke in his youth; he shall
sit alone and shall be silent, because he hath taken Thy yoke upon him. He
will give his cheek to him who smiteth him; he will be filled with reproaches.
Because the Lord does not cast away for ever; for when He abases, He is gracious,
according to the multitude of His tender mercies[3].' For though all these
things should proceed from the enemies, stripes, insults, reproaches, yet shall
they avail nothing against the multitude of God's tender mercies; for we shall
quickly recover from them since they are merely temporal, but God is always
gracious, pouring out His tender mercies on those who please [Him]. Therefore,
my beloved brethren, we should not look at these temporal things, but fix our
attention on those which are eternal. Though affliction may come, it will have
an end, though insult and persecution, yet are they nothing to the hope which
is set [before us]. For all present matters are trifling compared with those
which are future; the sufferings of this present time not being worthy to be
compared with the hope that is to come[4]. For what can be compared with the
kingdom? or what is there in comparison with life eternal? Or what is all we
could give here, to that which we shall inherit yonder? For we are 'heirs of
God, and joint-heirs with Christ[5].' Therefore it is not right, my beloved,
to consider afflictions and persecutions, but the hopes which are laid up for
us because of persecutions.
5. Now to this the example of Issachar, the patriarch, may persuade, as the
Scripture[6] saith, 'Issachar desires that which is good, resting between the
heritages; and when he saw that the rest was good, and the land fertile[7],
he bowed his shoulder to labour, and became a husbandman.' Being consumed by
divine love, like the spouse in the Canticles, he gathered abundance from the
holy Scriptures, for his mind was captivated not by the old alone, but by both
the heritages. And hence as it were, spreading his wings, he beheld afar off
'the rest' which is in heaven, and,--since this 'land' consists of such beautiful
works,--how much more truly the heavenly [country] must also [consist] of such[8];
for the other is ever new, and grows not old. For this 'land' passes away,
as the Lord said; but that which is ready to receive the saints is immortal.
Now when Issachar, the patriarch, saw these things, he joyfully made his boast
of afflictions and toils, bowing his shoulders that he might labour. And he
did not contend with those who smote him, neither was he disturbed by insults;
but like a strong man triumphing the more by these things, and the more earnestly
tilling his land, he received profit from it. The Word scattered the seed,
but he watchfully cultivated it, so that it brought forth fruit, even a hundred-fold.
6. Now what does this mean, my beloved, but that we also, when the enemies
are arrayed against us, should glory in afflictions[8a], and that when we are
persecuted, we should not be discouraged, but should the rather press after
the crown of the high calling[9] in Christ Jesus our Lord? and that being insulted,
we should not be disturbed, but should give our cheek to the smiter, and bow
the shoulder? For the lovers of pleasure and the lovers of enmity are tried,
as saith the blessed Apostle James, 'when they are drawn away by their own
lusts and enticed[10].' But let us, knowing that we suffer for the truth, and
that those who deny the Lord smite and persecute us, 'count it all joy, my
brethren,' according to the words of James, 'when we fall into tr