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GREGORY NAZIANZEN
ORATIONS I AND II
ORATION I.
On Easter and His Reluctance.
I. It
is the Day of the Resurrection, and my Beginning has good auspices. Let us
then keep the Festival
with splendour,(<greek>a</greek>)
and let us embrace one another. Let us say Brethren, even to those who hate
us; much more to those who have done or suffered aught out of love for us.
Let us forgive all offences for the Resurrection's sake: let us give one another
pardon, I for the noble tyranny, which I have suffered (for I can now call
it noble); and you who exercised it, if you had cause to blame my tardiness;
for perhaps this tardiness may be more precious in God's sight than the haste
of others. For it is a good thing even to hold back from God for a little while,
as did the great Moses of old,(<greek>b</greek>) and Jeremiah(<greek>g</greek>)
later on; and then to run readily to Him when He calls, as did Aaron(<greek>d</greek>)
and Isaiah,(<greek>e</greek>) so only both be done in a dutiful
spirit;--the former because of his own want of strength; the latter because
of the Might of Him That calleth.
II. A
Mystery(<greek>z</greek>)
anointed me; I withdrew a little while at a Mystery, as much as was needful
to examine myself; now I come in
with a Mystery, bringing with me the Day as a good defender of my cowardice
and weakness; that He Who to-day rose again from the dead may renew me also
by His Spirit; and, clothing me with the new Man, may give me to His New Creation,
to those who are begotten after God, as a good modeller and teacher for Christ,
willingly both dying with Him and rising again with Him.
III. Yesterday
the Lamb was slain and the door-posts were anointed,(<greek>h</greek>)
and Egypt bewailed her Firstborn, and the Destroyer passed us over, and the
Seal was dreadful and reverend, and we were walled in with the Precious Blood.
To-day we have clean escaped from Egypt and from Pharaoh; and there is none
to hinder us from keeping a Feast to the Lord our God--the Feast of our Departure;
or from celebrating that Feast, not in the old leaven of malice and wickedness,
but in the unleavened bread of sincerity and truth,(<greek>a</greek>)
carrying with us nothing of ungodly and Egyptian leaven.
IV. Yesterday I was crucified with Him; today I am glorified with Him; yesterday
I died with Him; to-day I am quickened with Him; yesterday I was buried with
Him; to-day I rise with Him. But let us offer to Him Who suffered and rose
again for us--you will think perhaps that I am going to say gold, or silver,
or woven work or transparent and costly stones, the mere passing material of
earth, that remains here below, and is for the most part always possessed by
bad men, slaves of the world and of the Prince of the world. Let us offer ourselves,
the possession most precious to God, and most fitting; let us give back to
the Image what is made after the Image. Let us recognize our Dignity; let us
honour our Archetype; let us know the power of the Mystery, and for what Christ
died.
V. Let
us become like Christ, since Christ became like us. Let us become God's for
His sake, since
He for ours
became Man. He assumed the worse that He might
give us the better; He became poor that we through His poverty might be rich;(<greek>b</greek>)
He took upon Him the form of a servant that we might receive back our liberty;
He came down that we might be exalted; He was tempted that we might conquer;
He was dishonoured that He might glorify us; He died that He might save us;
He ascended that He might draw to Himself us, who were lying low in the Fall
of sin. Let us give all, offer all, to Him Who gave Himself a Ransom and a
Reconciliation for us. But one can give nothing like oneself, understanding
the Mystery, and becoming for His sake all that He became for ours.
VI. As
you see, He offers you a Shepherd; for this is what your Good Shepherd,(<greek>a</greek>)
who lays down his life for his sheep, is hoping and praying for, and he asks
from you his subjects; and he gives you himself double instead of single, and
makes the staff of his old age a staff for your spirit. And he adds to the
inanimate temple a living one; to that exceedingly beautiful and heavenly shrine,
this poor and small one,(<greek>b</greek>) yet to him of great
value, and built too with much sweat and many labours. Would that I could say
it is worthy of his labours. And he places at your disposal all that belongs
to him (O great generosity!--or it would be truer to say, O fatherly love!)
his hoar hairs, his youth, the temple, the high priest, the testator, the heir,
the discourses which you were longing for; and of these not such as are vain
and poured out into the air, and which reach no further than the outward ear;
but those which the Spirit writes and engraves on tables of stone, or of flesh,
not merely superficially graven, nor easily to be rubbed off, but marked very
deep, not with ink, but with grace.
VII. These
are the gifts given you by this august Abraham, this honourable and reverend
Head, this
Patriarch,
this Restingplace of all good, this Standard
of virtue, this Perfection of the Priesthood, who to-day is bringing to the
Lord his willing Sacrifice, his only Son,(<greek>g</greek>) him
of the promise. Do you on your side offer to God and to us obedience to your
Pastors, dwelling in a place of herbage, and being fed by water of refreshment;(<greek>d</greek>)
knowing your Shepherd well, and being known by him;(<greek>e</greek>)
and following when he calls you as a Shepherd frankly through the door; but
not following a stranger climbing up into the fold like a robber and a traitor;
nor listening to a strange voice when such would take you away by stealth and
scatter you from the truth on mountains,(<greek>z</greek>) and
in deserts, and pitfalls, and places which the Lord does not visit; and would
lead you away from the sound Faith in the Father, the Son, and the Holy Ghost,
the One Power and Godhead, Whose Voice my sheep always heard (and may they
always hear it), but with deceitful and corrupt words would tear them from
their true Shepherd. From which may we all be kept, Shepherd and flock, as
from a poisoned and deadly pasture; guiding and being guided far away from
it, that we may all be one in Christ Jesus our Lord, now and unto the heavenly
rest. To Whom be the glory and the might for ever and ever. Amen.
INTRODUCTION TO ORATION II.
It is generally agreed that this Oration was not intended for oral delivery.
Its object was to explain and defend S. Gregory's recent conduct, which had
been severely criticised by his friends at Nazianzus. He had been recalled
by his father probably during the year A.D. 361 from Pontus, where he had spent
several years in monastic seclusion with his friend S. Basil. His father, not
content with his son's presence at home as a support for his declining years,
and feeling assured of his fitness for the sacred office, had proceeded, with
the loudly expressed approval of the congregation, in spite of Gregory's reluctance,
to ordain him to the priesthood on Christmas Day A. D. 361. S. Gregory, even
after the lapse of many years, speaks of his ordination as an act of tyranny,
and at the time, stung almost to madness, as an ox by a gadfly, rushed away
again to Pontus, to bury in its congenial solitude, consoled by an intimate
friend's deep sympathy, his wounded feelings. Before long the sense of duty
reasserted itself, and he returned to his post at his father's side before
Easter A.D. 362. On Easter Day he delivered his first Oration before a congregation
whose scantiness marked the displeasure with which the people of Nazianzus
had viewed his conduct. Accordingly he set himself to supply them in this Oration
with a full explanation of the motives which had led to his retirement. At
the same time, as the secondary title of the Oration shows, he has supplied
an exposition of the obligations and dignity of the Priestly Office which has
been drawn upon by all later writers on the subject. S. Chrysostom in his well-known
treatise, S. Gregory the Great in his Pastoral Care, and Bossuet in his panegyric
on S. Paul, have done little more than summarise the material or develop the
considerations contained in this eloquent and elaborate dissertation.
ORATION II.
IN DEFENCE OF HIS FLIGHT TO PONTUS, AND HIS RETURN, AFTER HIS ORDINATION TO
THE PRIESTHOOD, WITH AN EXPOSITION OF THE CHARACTER OF THE PRIESTLY OFFICE.
1. I have
been defeated, and own my defeat. I subjected myself to the Lord, and prayed
unto Him.(<greek>a</greek>) Let the most blessed David
supply my exordium, or rather let Him Who spoke in David, and even now yet
speaks through him. For indeed the very best order of beginning every speech
and action, is to begin from God,(<greek>b</greek>) and to end
in God. As to the cause, either of my original revolt and cowardice, in which
I got me away far off, and remained(<greek>g</greek>) away from
you for a time, which perhaps seemed long to those who missed me; or of the
present gentleness and change of mind, in which I have given myself up again
to you, men may think and speak in different ways, according to the hatred
or love they bear me, on the one side refusing to acquit me of the charges
alleged, on the other giving me a hearty welcome. For nothing is so pleasant
to men as talking of other people's business, especially under the influence
of affection or hatred, which often almost entirely blinds us to the truth.
I will, however, myself, unabashed, set forth the truth, and arbitrate with
justice between the two parties, which accuse or gallantly defend us, by, on
the one side, accusing myself, on the other, undertaking my own defence.
2. Accordingly,
that my speech may proceed in due order, I apply myself to the question which
arose
first,
that of cowardice. For I cannot endure that
any of those who watch with interest the success, or the contrary, of my efforts,
should be put to confusion on my account, since it has pleased God that our
affairs should be of some consequence to Christians, so I will by my defence
relieve, if there be any such, those who have already suffered; for it is well,
as far us possible, and as reason allows, to shrink from causing, through our
sin or suspicion, any offence or stumbling-block to the community: inasmuch
as we know how inevitably even those who offend one of the little ones(<greek>d</greek>)
will incur the severest punishment at the hands of Him who cannot lie.
3. For
my present position is due, my good people, not to inexperience and ignorance,
nay indeed, that
I may
boast myself a little,(<greek>e</greek>)
neither is it due to contempt for the divine laws and ordinances. Now, just
as in the body there is(<greek>z</greek>) one member(<greek>h</greek>)
which rules and, so to say, presides, while another is ruled over and subject;
so too in the churches, God has ordained, according either to a law of equality,
which admits of an order of merit, or to one of providence, by which He has
knit all together, that those for whom such treatment is beneficial, should
be subject to pastoral care and rule, and be guided by word and deed in the
path of duty; while others should be pastors and teachers,(<greek>a</greek>)
for the perfecting of the church, those, I mean, who surpass the majority in
virtue and nearness to God, performing the functions of the soul in the body,
and of the intellect in the soul; in order that both may be so united and compacted
together, that, although one is lacking and another is pre-eminent, they may,
like the members of our bodies, be so combined and knit together by the harmony
of the Spirit, as to form one perfect body.(<greek>b</greek>) really
worthy of Christ Himself, our Head.(<greek>g</greek>)
4. I am
aware then that anarchy(<greek>d</greek>) and disorder
cannot be more advantageous than order and rule, either to other creatures
or to men; nay, this is true of men in the highest possible degree, because
the interests at stake in their case are greater; since it is a great thing(<greek>e</greek>)
for them, even if they fail of their highest purpose--to be free from sin--to
attain at least to that which is second best, restoration from sin. Since this
seems right and just, it is, I take it, equally wrong and disorderly that all
should wish to rule, and that no one should accept(<greek>z</greek>)
it. For if all men were to shirk this office, whether it must be called a ministry
or a leadership, the fair fulness(<greek>h</greek>) of the Church
would be halting in the highest degree, and in fact cease to be fair. And further,
where, and by whom would God be worshipped among us in those mystic and elevating
rites which are our greatest and most precious privilege, if there were neither
king, nor governor, nor priesthood, nor sacrifice,(<greek>q</greek>)
nor all those highest offices to the loss of which, for their great sins, men
were of old condemned in consequence of their disobedience?
5. Nor
indeed is it strange or inconsistent for the majority of those who are devoted
to the study of
divine
things, to ascend to rule from being ruled,
nor does it overstep the limits laid down by philosophy,(<greek>i</greek>)
or involve disgrace; any more than for an excellent sailor to become a lookout-man,
and for a lookout-man, who has successfully kept watch over the winds, to be
entrusted with the helm; or, if you will, for a brave soldier to be made a
captain, and a good captain to become a general, and have committed to him
the conduct of the whole campaign. Nor again, as perhaps some of those absurd
and tiresome people may suppose, who judge of others' feelings by their own,
was I ashamed of the rank of this grade from my desire for a higher. I was
not so ignorant either of its divine greatness or human low estate, as to think
it no great thing for a created nature, to approach in however slight degree
to God, Who alone is most glorious and illustrious, and surpasses in purity
every nature, material and immaterial alike.
6. What
then were my feelings, and what was the reason of my disobedience? For to
most men I did not at
the time seem consistent with myself, or to be
such as they had known me, but to have undergone some deterioration, and to
exhibit greater resistance and self-will than was right. And the causes of
this you have long been desirous to hear. First, and most important, I was
astounded at the unexpectedness of what had occurred, as people are terrified
by sudden noises; and, losing the control of my reasoning faculties, my self-respect,
which had hitherto controlled me, gave way. In the next place, there came over
me an eager longing(<greek>a</greek>) for the blessings of calm
and retirement, of which I had from the first been enamoured to a higher degree,
I imagine, than any other student of letters, and which amidst the greatest
and most threatening dangers I had promised to God, and of which I had also
had so much experience, that I was then upon its threshold, my longing having
in consequence been greatly kindled, so that I could not submit to be thrust
into the midst of a life of turmoil by an arbitrary act of oppression, and
to be torn away by force from the holy sanctuary of such a life as this.
7. For
nothing seemed to me so desirable as to close the doors of my senses, and,
escaping from
the flesh
and the world, collected within myself, having
no further connection than was absolutely necessary with human affairs, and
speaking to myself and to God(<greek>b</greek>) to live superior
to visible things, ever preserving in myself the divine impressions pure and
unmixed with the erring tokens of this lower world, and both being, and constantly
growing more and more to be, a real unspotted mirror of God and divine things,
as light is added to light, and what was still dark grew clearer, enjoying
already by hope the blessings of the world to come, roaming about with the
angels, even now being above the earth by having forsaken it, and stationed
on high by the Spirit. If any of you has been possessed by this longing, he
knows what I mean and will sympathise with my feelings at that time. For, perhaps,
I ought not to expect to persuade most people by what I say, since they are
unhappily disposed to laugh at such things, either from their own thoughtlessness,
or from the influence of men unworthy of the promise, who have bestowed upon
that which is good an evil name, calling philosophy nonsense, aided by envy
and the evil tendencies of the mob, who are ever inclined to grow worse: so
that they are constantly occupied with one of two sins, either the commission
of evil, or the discrediting of good.
8. I was
influenced besides by another feeling, whether base or noble I do not know,
but I will speak
out
to you all my secrets. I was ashamed of all
those others, who, without being better than ordinary people, nay, it is a
great thing if they be not worse, with unwashen hands,(<greek>a</greek>)
as the saying rims, and uninitiated souls, intrude into the most sacred offices;
and, before becoming worthy to approach the temples, they lay claim to the
sanctuary,(<greek>b</greek>) and they push and thrust around the
holy table, as if they thought this order to be a means of livelihood, instead
of a pattern of virtue, or an absolute authority, instead of a ministry of
which we must give account. In fact they are almost more in number than those
whom they govern; pitiable as regards piety,(<greek>g</greek>)
and unfortunate in their dignity; so that, it seems to me, they will not, as
time and this evil alike progress, have any one left to rule, when all are
teachers, instead of, as the promise says, taught of God,(<greek>d</greek>)
and all prophesy,(<greek>e</greek>) so that even "Saul is
among the prophets,"(<greek>z</greek>) according to the ancient
history and proverb. For at no time, either now or in former days, amid the
rise and fall of various developments, has there ever been such an abundance,
as now exists among Christians, of disgrace and abuses of this kind. And, if
to stay this current is beyond our powers, at any rate it is not the least
important duty of religion to testify the hatred and shame we feel for it.
9. Lastly,
there is a matter more serious than any which I have mentioned, for I am
now coming
to the finale(<greek>a</greek>)
of the question: and I will not deceive you; for that would not be lawful
in regard to topics
of such moment. I did not, nor do I now, think myself qualified to rule a flock
or herd, or to have authority over the souls of men. For in their case it is
sufficient to render the herd or flock as stout and fat as possible; and with
this object the neatherd and shepherd will look for well watered and rich pastures,
and will drive his charge from pasture to pasture, and allow them to rest,
or arouse, or recall them, sometimes with his staff, most often with his pipe;
and with the exception of occasional struggles with wolves, or attention to
the sickly, most of his time will be devoted to the oak and the shade and his
pipes, while he reclines on the beautiful grass, and beside the cool water,
and shakes down his couch in a breezy spot, and ever and anon sings a love
ditty, with his cup by his side, and talks to his bullocks or his flock, the
fattest of which supply his banquets or his pay. But no one ever has thought
of the virtue of flocks or herds; for indeed of what virtue are they capable?
Or who has regarded their advantage as more important than his own pleasure?
10. But
in the case of man, hard as it is for him to learn how to submit to rule,
it seems far harder
to know
how to rule over men, and hardest of all,
with this rifle of ours, which leads them by the divine law, and to God, for
its risk is, in the eyes of a thoughtful man, proportionate to its height and
dignity. For, first of all, he must, like silver or gold, though in general
circulation in all kinds of seasons and affairs, never ring false or alloyed,
or give token of any inferior matter, needing further refinement in the fire;(<greek>b</greek>)
or else, the wider his rule, the greater evil he will be. Since the injury
which extends to many is greater than that which is confined to a single individual.
11. For
it is not so easy to dye deeply a piece of cloth, or to impregnate with odours,
foul or the
reverse,
whatever comes near to them; nor is it so
easy for the fatal vapour, which is rightly called a pestilence, to infect
the air, and through the air to gain access to living being, as it is for the
vice of a superior to take most speedy possession of his subjects, and that
with far greater facility than virtue its opposite. For it is in this that
wickedness especially has the advantage over goodness, and most distressing
it is to me to perceive it, that vice is something attractive and ready at
hand, and that nothing is so easy as to become evil, even without any one to
lead us on to it; while the attainment of virtue is rare and difficult, even
where there is much to attract and encourage us. And it is this, I think, which
the most blessed Haggai had before his eyes, in his wonderful and most true
figure:(<greek>a</greek>)--"Ask the priests concerning the
law, saying: If holy flesh borne in a garment touch meat or drink or vessel,
will it sanctify what is in contact with it? And when they said No; ask again
if any of these things touch what is unclean, does it not at once partake of
the pollution? For they will surely tell you that it does partake of it, and
does not continue clean in spite of the contact."
12. What
does he mean by this? As I take it, that goodness can with difficulty gain
a hold upon
human nature,
like fire upon green wood; while most men are
ready and disposed to join in evil, like stubble,(<greek>b</greek>)
I mean, ready for a spark and a wind, which is easily kindled and consumed
from its dryness. For more quickly would any one take part in evil with slight
inducement to its full extent, than in good which is fully set before him to
a slight degree. For indeed a little wormwood most quickly imparts its bitterness
to honey; while not even double the quantity of honey can impart its sweetness
to wormwood: and the withdrawal of a small pebble would draw headlong a whole
river, though it would be difficult for the strongest dam to restrain or stay
its course.
13. This
then is the first point in what we have said, which it is right for us to
guard against, viz.:
being
found to be bad painters(<greek>g</greek>)
of the charms of virtue, and still more, if not, perhaps, models for poor painters,
poor models for the people, or barely escaping the proverb, that we undertake
to heal others(<greek>d</greek>) while ourselves are full of sores.
14. In
the second place, although a man has kept himself pure from sin, even in
a very high degree;
I do not
know that even this is sufficient for one who
is to instruct others in virtue. For he who has received this charge, not only
needs to be free from evil, for evil is, in the eyes of most of those under
his care, most disgraceful, but also to be eminent in good, according to the
command, "Depart from evil and do good."(<greek>a</greek>)
And he must not only wipe out the traces of vice from his soul, but also inscribe
better ones, so as to outstrip men further in virtue than he is superior to
them in dignity. He should know no limits in goodness or spiritual progress,
and should dwell upon the loss of what is still beyond him, rather than the
gain of what he has attained, and consider that which is beneath his feet a
step to that which comes next: and not think it a great gain to excel ordinary
people, but a loss to fall short of what we ought to be: and to measure his
success by the commandment and not by his neighbours, whether they be evil,
or to some extent proficient in virtue: and to weigh virtue in no small scales,
inasmuch as it is due to the Most High, "from Whom are all things, and
to Whom are all things."(<greek>b</greek>)
15. Nor
must he suppose that the same things are suitable to all, just as all have
not the same stature,
nor
are the features of the face, nor the nature
of animals, nor the qualities of soil, nor the beauty and size of the stars,
in all cases the same: but he must consider base conduct a fault in a private
individual, and deserving of chastisement under the hard rule of the law; while
in the case of a ruler or leader it is a fault not to attain to the highest
possible excellence, and always make progress in goodness, if indeed he is,
by his high degree of virtue, to draw his people to an ordinary degree, not
by the force of authority, but by the influence of persuasion. For what is
involuntary apart from its being the result of oppression, is neither meritorious
nor durable. For what is forced, like a plant(<greek>g</greek>)
violently drawn aside by our hands, when set free, returns to what it was before,
but that which is the result of choice is both most legitimate and enduring,
for it is preserved by the bond of good will. And so our law and our lawgiver
enjoin upon us most strictly that we should "tend the flock not by constraint
but willingly."(<greek>d</greek>)
16. But
granted that a man is free from vice, and has reached the greatest heights
of virtue: I
do not see what
knowledge or power would justify him in
venturing upon this office. For the guiding of man, the most variable and manifold
of creatures, seems to me in very deed to be the art of arts(<greek>e</greek>)
and science of sciences. Any one may recognize this, by comparing the work
of the physician of souls with the treatment of the body; and noticing that,
laborious as the latter is, ours is more laborious, and of more consequence,
from the nature of its subject matter, the power of its science, and the object
of its exercise. The one labours about bodies, and perishable failing matter,
which absolutely must be dissolved and undergo its fate,(<greek>a</greek>)
even if upon this occasion by the aid of art it can surmount the disturbance
within itself, being dissolved by disease or time in submission to the law
of nature, since it cannot rise above its own limitations.
17. The
other is concerned with the soul, which comes from God and is divine, and
partakes of the heavenly
nobility, and presses on to it, even if it be
bound to an inferior nature. Perhaps indeed there are other reasons also for
this, which only God, Who bound them together, and those who are instructed
by God in such mysteries, can know, but as far as I, and men like myself can
perceive, there are two: one, that it may inherit the glory above by means
of a struggle and wrestling(<greek>b</greek>) with things below,
being tried as gold in the fire(<greek>g</greek>) by things here,
and gain the objects of our hope as a prize of virtue, and not merely as the
gift of God. This, indeed, was the will of Supreme Goodness, to make the good
even our own, not only because sown in our nature, but because cultivated by
our own choice, and by the motions of our will,(<greek>d</greek>)
free to act in either direction. The second reason is, that it may draw to
itself and raise to heaven the lower nature, by gradually freeing it from its
grossness, in order that the soul may be to the body what God is to the soul,
itself leading on the matter which ministers to it, and uniting it, as its
fellow-servant, to God.
18. Place and time and age and season and the like are the subjects of a physician's
scrutiny; he will prescribe medicines and diet, and guard against things injurious,
that the desires of the sick may not be a hindrance to his art. Sometimes,
and in certain cases, he will make use of the cautery or the knife or the severer
remedies; but none of these, laborious and hard as they may seem, is so difficult
as the diagnosis and cure of our habits, passions, lives, wills, and whatever
else is within us, by banishing from our compound nature everything brutal
and fierce, and introducing and establishing in their stead what is gentle
and dear to God, and arbitrating fairly between soul and body; not allowing
the superior to be overpowered by the inferior, which would be the greatest
injustice; but subjecting to the ruling and leading power that which naturally
takes the second place: as indeed the divine law enjoins, which is most excellently
imposed on His whole creation, whether visible or beyond our ken.
19. This
further point does not escape me, that the nature of all these objects of
the watch-fulness
of the
physician remains the same, and does not evolve
out of itself any crafty opposition, or contrivance hostile to the appliances
of his art, nay, it is rather the treatment which modifies its subject matter,(<greek>a</greek>)
except where some slight insubordination occurs on the part of the patient,
which it is not difficult to prevent or restrain. But in our case, human prudence
and selfishness, and the want of training and inclination to yield ready submission
are a very great obstacle to advance in virtue, amounting almost to an armed
resistance to those who are wishful to help us. And the very eagerness with
which we should lay bare our sickness to oar spiritual physicians, we employ
in avoiding this treatment,(<greek>b</greek>) and shew our bravery
by struggling against what is for our own interest, our skill in shunning what
is for our health.
20. For
we either hide away our sin, cloaking it over in the depth of our soul, like
some festering
and malignant
disease, as if by escaping the notice
of men we could escape the mighty eye of God and justice. Or else we allege
excuses in our sins,(<greek>g</greek>) by devising pleas in defence
of our falls, or tightly closing our ears, like the deaf adder that stoppeth
her ears, we are obstinate in refusing to hear the voice of the charmer, and
be treated with the medicines of wisdom? by which spiritual sickness is healed.
Or, lastly, those of us who are most daring and self-willed shamelessly brazen
out our sin before those who would heal it, marching with bared head, as the
saying is, into all kinds of transgression. O what madness, if there be no
term more fitting for this state of mind! Those whom we ought to love as our
benefactors we keep off, as if they were our enemies, hating those who reprove
in the gates, and abhorring the righteous word;(<greek>d</greek>)
and we think that we shall succeed in the war that we are waging against those
who are well disposed to us by doing ourselves all the harm we can, like men
who imagine they are consuming the flesh of others when they are really fastening
upon their own.
21. For
these reasons I allege that our office as physicians far exceeds in toilsomeness,
and consequently
in worth, that which is confined to the body;
and further, because the latter is mainly concerned with the surface, and only
in a slight degree investigates the causes which are deeply hidden. But the
whole of our treatment and exertion is concerned with the hidden man of the
heart,(<greek>a</greek>) and our warfare is directed against that
adversary and foe within us, who uses ourselves as his weapons against ourselves,
and, most fearful of all, hands us over to the death of sin. In opposition
then, to these foes we are in need of great and perfect faith, and of still
greater co-operation on the part of God, and, as I am persuaded, of no slight
countermanoeuvring on our own part, which mast manifest itself both in word
and deed, if ourselves, the most precious possession we have, are to be duly
tended and cleansed and made as deserving as possible.
22. To
turn however to the ends in view in each of these forms of healing, for this
point is still
left to
be considered, the one preserves, if it already
exists, the health and good habit of the flesh, or if absent, recalls it; though
it is not yet clear whether or not these will be for the advantage of those
who possess them, since their opposites very often confer a greater benefit
on those who have them, just as poverty and wealth, renown or disgrace, a low
or brilliant position, and all other circumstances, which are naturally indifferent,
and do not incline in one direction more than in another, produce a good or
bad effect according to the will of, and the manner in which they are used
by the persons who experience them. But the scope of our art is to provide
the soul with wings, to rescue it from the world and give it to God, and to
watch over that which is in His image,(<greek>b</greek>) if it
abides, to take it by the hand, if it is in danger, or restore it, if ruined,
to make Christ to dwell in the heart(<greek>g</greek>) by the Spirit:
and, in short, to deify, and bestow heavenly bliss upon, one who belongs to
the heavenly host.
23. This
is the wish of our schoolmaster(<greek>d</greek>) the
law, of the prophets who intervened between Christ and the law, of Christ who
is the fulfiller and end(<greek>e</greek>) of the spiritual law;
of the emptied Godhead,(<greek>z</greek>) of the assumed flesh,(<greek>h</greek>)
of the novel union between God and man, one consisting(<greek>q</greek>)
of two, and both in one. This is why God was united(<greek>a</greek>)
to the flesh by means of the soul,(<greek>b</greek>) and natures
so separate were knit together by the affinity to each of the element which
mediated between them: so all became one for the sake of all, and for the sake
of one, our progenitor, the soul because of the soul which was disobedient,
the flesh because of the flesh which co-operated with it and shared in its
condemnation, Christ, Who was superior to, and beyond the reach of, sin, because
of Adam, who became subject to sin.
24. This
is why the new was substituted for the old,(<greek>g</greek>)
why He Who suffered was for suffering recalled to life, why each property of
His, Who was above us, was interchanged with each of ours, why the new mystery
took place of the dispensation, due to loving kindness which deals with him
who fell through disobedience. This is the reason for the generation and the
virgin, for the manger and Bethlehem; the generation on behalf of the creation,(<greek>d</greek>)
the virgin on behalf of the woman,(<greek>e</greek>) Bethlehem(<greek>z</greek>)
because of Eden, the manger because of the garden, small and visible things
on behalf of great and hidden things. This is why the angels(<greek>h</greek>)
glorified first the heavenly, then the earthly,(<greek>q</greek>)
why the shepherds saw the glory over the Lamb and the Shepherd, why the star
led the Magi to worship and offer gifts,(<greek>i</greek>) in order
that idolatry might be destroyed. This is why Jesus was baptized,(<greek>k</greek>)
and received testimony from above, and fasted,(<greek>l</greek>)
and was tempted, and overcame him who had overcome. This is why devils were
cast out,(<greek>m</greek>) and diseases healed, and the mighty
preaching was entrusted to, and successfully proclaimed by men of low estate.
25. This
is why the heathen rage and the peoples imagine vain things;(<greek>n</greek>)
why tree(<greek>x</greek>) is set over against tree,(<greek>o</greek>)
hands against hand, the one stretched out in self indulgence,(<greek>p</greek>)
the others in generosity; the one unrestrained, the others fixed by nails,(<greek>r</greek>)
the one expelling Adam, the other reconciling the ends of the earth. This is
the reason of the lifting up to atone for the fall, and of the gall for the
tasting, and of the thorny crown for the dominion of evil, and of death for
death, and of darkness for the sake of light, and of burial for the return
to the ground, and of resurrection for the sake of resurrection.(<greek>a</greek>)
All these are a training from God for us, and a healing for our weakness, restoring
the old Adam to the place whence he fell, and conducting us to the tree of
life,(<greek>b</greek>) from which the tree of knowledge estranged
us, when partaken of unseasonably, and improperly.
26. Of
this healing we, who are set over others, are the ministers and fellow-labourers;(<greek>g</greek>)
for whom it is a great thing to recognise and heal their own passions and sicknesses:
or rather, not really a great thing, only the viciousness of most of those
who belong to this order has made me say so: but a much greater thing is the
power to heal and skilfully cleanse those of others, to the advantage both
of those who are in want of healing and of those whose charge it is to heal.
27. Again,
the healers of our bodies will have their labours and vigils and cares, of
which we are
aware; and
will reap a harvest of pain for themselves
from the distresses of others, as one of their wise men(<greek>d</greek>)
said; and will provide for the use of those who need them, both the results
of their own labours and investigations, and what they have been able to borrow
from others: and they consider none, even of the minutest details, which they
discover, or which elude their search, as having other than an important influence
upon health or danger. And what is the object of all this? That a man may live
some days longer on the earth, though he is possibly not a good man, but one
of the most depraved, for whom it had perhaps been better, because of his badness,
to have died long ago, in order to be set free from vice, the most serious
of sicknesses. But, suppose he is a good man, how long will he be able to live?
Forever? Or what will he gain from life here, from which it is the greatest
of blessings, if a man be sane and sensible, to seek to be set free?
28. But we, upon whose efforts is staked the salvation of a soul, a being
blessed and immortal, and destined for undying chastisement or praise, for
its vice or virtue,--what a struggle ought ours to be, and how great skill
do we require to treat, or get men treated properly, and to change their life,
and give up the clay to the spirit. For men and women, young and old, rich
and poor, the sanguine and despondent, the sick and whole, rulers and ruled,
the wise and ignorant, the cowardly and courageous, the wrathful and meek,
the successful and failing, do not require the same instruction and encouragement.
29. And
if you examine more closely, how great is the distinction between the married
and the unmarried,
and among
the latter between hermits and those
who(<greek>a</greek>) live together in community, between those
who are proficient and advanced in contemplation and those who barely hold
on the straight course, between townsfolk again and rustics, between the simple
and the designing, between men of business and men of leisure, between those
who have met with reverses and those who are prosperous and ignorant of misfortune.
For these classes differ sometimes more widely from each other in their desires
and passion than in their physical characteristics; or, if you will, in the
mixtures and blendings of the elements of which we are composed, and, therefore,
to regulate them is no easy task.
30. As then the same medicine and the same food are not in every case administered
to men's bodies, but a difference is made according to their degree of health
or infirmity; so also are souls treated with varying instruction and guidance.
To this treatment witness is borne by those who have had experience of it.
Some are led by doctrine, others trained by example; some need the spur, others
the curb; some are sluggish and hard to rouse to the good, and must be stirred
up by being smitten with the word; others are immoderately fervent in spirit,
with impulses difficult to restrain, like thoroughbred colts, who run wide
of the turning post, and to improve them the word must have a restraining and
checking influence.
31. Some are benefited by praise, others by blame, both being applied in season;
while if out of season, or unreasonable, they are injurious; some are set right
by encouragement, others by rebuke; some, when taken to task in public, others,
when privately corrected. For some are wont to despise private admonitions,
but are recalled to their senses by the condemnation of a number of people,
while others, who would grow reckless under reproof openly given, accept rebuke
because it is in secret, and yield obedience in return for sympathy.
32. Upon
some it is needful to keep a close watch, even in the minutest details, because
if they think
they
are unperceived (as they would contrive to be),
they are puffed up with the idea of their own wisdom: Of others it is better
to take no notice, but seeing not to see, and hearing not to hear them, according
to the proverb, that we may not drive them to despair, under the depressing
influence of repeated reproofs, and at last to utter recklessness, when they
have lost the sense of self-respect, the source of persuasiveness.(<greek>a</greek>)
In some cases we must even be angry, without feeling angry, or treat them with
a disdain we do not feel, or manifest despair, though we do not really despair
of them, according to the needs of their nature. Others again we must treat
with condescension(<greek>b</greek>) and lowliness, aiding them
readily to conceive a hope of better things. Some it is often more advantageous
to conquer--by others to be overcome, and to praise or deprecate, in one case
wealth and power, in another poverty and failure.
33. For
our treatment does not correspond with virtue and vice, one of which is most
excellent
and beneficial
at all times and in all cases, and the other
most evil and harmful; and, instead of one and the same of our medicines invariably
proving either most wholesome or most dangerous in the same cases--be it severity
or gentleness, or any of the others which we have enumerated--in some cases
it proves good and useful, in others again it has the contrary effect, according,
I suppose, as time and circumstance and the disposition of the patient admit.
Now to set before you the distinction between all these things, and give you
a perfectly exact view of them, so that you may in brief comprehend the medical
art, is quite impossible, even for one in the highest degree qualified by care
and skill: but actual experience and practice are requisite to form(<greek>g</greek>)
a medical system and a medical man.
34. This,
however, I take to be generally admitted--that just as it is not safe for
those who walk
on a lofty
tight rope to lean to either side, for even
though the inclination seems slight, it has no slight consequences, but their
safety depends upon their perfect balance: so in be case of one of us, if he
leans to either side, whether from vice or ignorance, no slight danger of a
fail into sin is incurred, both for himself and those who are led by him. But
we must really walk in the King's highway,(<greek>a</greek>) and
take care not to turn aside from it either to the right hand or to the left,(<greek>b</greek>)
as the Proverbs say. For such is the case with our passions, and such in this
matter is the task of the good shepherd, if he is to know properly the souls
of his flock, and to guide them according to the methods of a pastoral care
which is fight and just, and worthy of our true Shepherd.
35. In
regard to the distribution of the word, to mention last the first of our
duties, of that divine and
exalted word, which everyone now is ready to
discourse upon; if anyone else boldly undertakes it and supposes it within
the power of every man's intellect, I am amazed at his intelligence, not to
say his folly. To me indeed it seems no slight task, and one requiring no little
spiritual power, to give in due season(<greek>g</greek>) to each
his portion of the word, and to regulate with judgment the truth of our opinions,
which are concerned with such subjects as the world or worlds,(<greek>d</greek>)
matter, soul, mind, intelligent natures, better or worse, providence which
holds together and guides the universe, and seems in our experience of it to
be governed according to some principle, but one which is at variance with
those of earth and of men.
36. Again,
they are concerned with our original constitution, and final restoration,
the types of the truth,
the covenants, the first and second coming of Christ,
His incarnation, sufferings and dissolution,(<greek>e</greek>)
with the resurrection, the last day, the judgment and recompense, whether sad
or glorious; I, to crown all, with what we are to think of the original(<greek>z</greek>)
and blessed Trinity. Now this involves a very great risk to those who are charged
with the illumination(<greek>h</greek>) of others, if they are
to avoid contracting(<greek>q</greek>) their doctrine to a single
Person, from fear of polytheism, and so leave us empty terms, if we suppose
the Father and the Son and the Holy Spirit to be one and the same Person only:
or, on the other hand, severing It into three, either foreign and diverse,
or disordered and unprincipled, and, so to say, opposed divinities, thus falling
from the opposite side into an equally dangerous error: like some distorted
plant if bent far back in the opposite direction.
37. For,
amid the three infirmities in regard to theology, atheism, Judaism, and polytheism,
one
of which is
patronised by Sabellius the Libyan, another
by Arius of Alexandria, and the third by some of the ultra-orthodox among us,
what is my position, can I avoid whatever in these three is noxious, and remain
within the limits of piety; neither being led astray by the new analysis and
synthesis into the atheism(<greek>a</greek>) of Sabellius, to assert
not so much that all are one as that each is nothing, for things which are
transferred and pass into each other cease to be that which each one of them
is, of that we have an unnaturally compound deity, like those mythical creatures,
the subject of a picturesque imagination: nor again, by alleging a plurality
of severed natures, according to the well named madness(<greek>b</greek>)
of Arius, becoming involved in a Jewish poverty, and introducing envy into
the divine nature, by limiting the Godhead to the Unbegotten One alone, as
if afraid that our God would perish, if He were the Father of a real God of
equal nature: nor again, by arraying three principles in opposition to, or
in alliance with, each other, introducing the Gentile plurality of principles
from which we have escaped?
38. It is necessary neither to be so devoted to the Father, as to rob Him
of His Fatherhood, for whose Father would He be, if the Son were separated
and estranged from Him, by being ranked with the creation, (for an alien being,
or one which is combined and confounded with his father, and, for the sense
is the same, throws him into confusion, is not a son); nor to be so devoted
to Christ, as to neglect to preserve both His Sonship, (for whose son would
He be, if His origin were not referred to the Father?) and the rank of the
Father as origin, inasmuch as He is the Father and Generator; for He would
be the origin of petty and Unworthy beings, or rather the term would be used
in a petty and unworthy sense, if He were not the origin of Godhead and goodness,
which are contemplated in the Son and the Spirit: the former being the Son
and the Word, the latter the proceeding and indissoluble Spirit. For both the
Unity of the Godhead must be preserved, and the Trinity of Persons confessed,
each with His own property.
39. A
suitable and worthy comprehension and exposition of this subject demands
a discussion of greater
length than
the present occasion, or even our life,
as I suppose, allows, and, what is more, both now and at all times, the aid
of the Spirit, by Whom alone we are able to perceive, to expound, or to embrace,
the truth in regard to God. For the pure alone can grasp. Him Who is pure and
of the same disposition as himself; and I have now briefly dwelt upon the subject,
to show how difficult it is to discuss such important questions, especially
before a large audience, composed of every age and condition, and needing like
an instrument of many strings, to be played upon in various ways; or to find
any form of words able to edify them all, and illuminate them with the light
of knowledge. For it is not only that there are three sources from which danger
springs, understanding, speech, and hearing, so that failure in one, if not
in all, is infallibly certain; for either the mind is not illuminated, or the
language is feeble, or the hearing, not having been cleansed, fails to comprehend,
and accordingly, in one or all respects, the truth must be maimed: but further,
what makes the instruction of those who profess to teach any other subject
so easy and acceptable--viz. the piety(<greek>a</greek>) of the
audience--on this subject involves difficulty and danger.
40. For
having undertaken to contend on behalf of God, the Supreme Being, and of
salvation, and of
the primary
hope(<greek>b</greek>) of
us all, the more fervent they are in the faith, the more hostile are they to
what is said, supposing that a submissive spirit indicates, not piety, but
treason to the truth, and therefore they would sacrifice anything rather than
their private convictions, and the accustomed doctrines in which they have
been educated. I am now referring to those who are moderate and not utterly
depraved in disposition, who, if they have erred in regard to the truth, have
erred from piety, who have zeal, though not according to knowledge,(<greek>g</greek>)
who will possibly be of the number of those not excessively condemned, and
not beaten with many stripes,(<greek>a</greek>) because it is not
through vice or depravity that they have failed to do the will of their Lord;
and these perchance would be persuaded and forsake the pious opinion which
is the cause of their hostility, if some reason either from their own minds,
or from others, were to take hold of them, and at a critical moment, like iron
from flint, strike fire from a mind which is pregnant and worthy of the light,
for thus a little spark would quickly kindle the torch of truth within it.
41. But
what is to be said of those who, from vain glory or arrogance, speak unrighteousness
against
the most
High,(<greek>b</greek>) arming
themselves with the insolence of Jannes and Jambres,(<greek>g</greek>)
not against Moses, but against the truth, and rising in opposition to sound
doctrine? Or of the third class, who through ignorance and, its consequence,
temerity, rush headlong against every form of doctrine in swinish fashion,
and trample under foot the fair pearls(<greek>d</greek>) of the
truth?
42. What
again of those who come with no private idea, or form of words, better or
worse, in regard
to God,
but listen to all kinds of doctrines and teachers,
with the intention of selecting from all what is best and safest, in reliance
upon no better judges of the truth than themselves? They are, in consequence,
borne and turned about hither and thither by one plausible idea after another,
and, after being deluged and trodden down by all kinds of doctrine,(<greek>e</greek>)
and having rung the changes on a long succession of teachers and formul, which
they throw to the winds as readily as dust, their ears and minds at last are
wearied out, and, O what folly! they become equally disgusted with all forms
of doctrine, and assume the wretched character of deriding and despising our
faith as unstable and unsound; passing in their ignorance from the teachers
to the doctrine: as if anyone whose eyes were diseased, or whose ears had been
injured, were to complain of the sun for being dim and not shining, or of sounds
for being inharmonious and feeble.
43. Accordingly,
to impress the truth upon a soul when it is still fresh, like wax not yet
subjected
to the
seal, is an easier task than inscribing pious
doctrine on the top of inscriptions--I mean wrong doctrines and dogmas(<greek>z</greek>)--with
the result that the former are confused and thrown into disorder by the latter.
It is better indeed to tread a road which is smooth and well trodden than one
which is untrodden and rough, or to plough land which has often been cleft
and broken up by the plough: but a soul to be written upon should be free from
the inscription of harmful doctrines, or the deeply cut marks of vice: otherwise
the pious inscriber would have a twofold task, the erasure of the former impressions
and the substitution of others which are more excellent, and more worthy to
abide. So numerous are they whose wickedness is shown, not only by yielding
to their passions, but even by their utterances, and so numerous the forms
and characters of wickedness, and so considerable the task of one who has been
intrusted with this office of educating and taking charge of souls. Indeed
I have omitted the majority of the details, lest my speech should be unnecessarily
burdensome.
44. If anyone were to undertake to tame and train an animal of many forms
and shapes, compounded of many animals of various sizes and degrees of tameness
and wildness, his principal task, involving a considerable struggle, would
be the government of so extraordinary and heterogeneous a nature, since each
of the animals of which it is compounded would, according to its nature or
habit, be differently affected with joy, pleasure or dislike, by the same words,
or food, or stroking with the hand, or whistling, or other modes of treatment.
And what must the master of such an animal do, but show himself manifold and
various in his knowledge, and apply to each a treatment suitable for it, so
as successfully to lead and preserve the beast? And since the common body of
the church is composed of many different characters and minds, like a single
animal compounded of discordant parts, it is absolutely necessary that its
ruler should be at once simple in his uprightness in all respects, and as far
as possible manifold and varied in his treatment of individuals, and in dealing
with all in an appropriate and suitable manner.
45. For
some need to be fed with the milk(<greek>a</greek>) of
the most simple and elementary doctrines, viz., those who are in habit babes
and, so to say, new-made, and unable to bear the manly food of the word: nay,
if it were presented to them beyond their strength, they would probably be
overwhelmed and oppressed, owing to the inability of their mind, as is the
case with our material bodies,(<greek>b</greek>) to digest and
appropriate what is offered to it, and so would lose even their original power.
Others require the wisdom which is spoken among the perfect,(<greek>a</greek>)
and the higher and more solid food, since their senses have been sufficiently
exercised to discern(<greek>b</greek>) truth and falsehood, and
if they were made to drink milk, and fed on the vegetable diet of invalids,(<greek>g</greek>)
they would be annoyed. And with good reason, for they would not be strengthened(<greek>d</greek>)
according to Christ, nor make that laudable increase, which the Word produces
in one who is rightly feel, by making him a perfect man, and bringing him to
the measure of spiritual stature.(<greek>e</greek>)
46. And
who is sufficient for these things? For we are not as the many, able to corrupt(<greek>z</greek>) the word of truth, and mix the wine,(<greek>h</greek>)
which maketh glad the heart of man,(<greek>q</greek>) with water,
mix, that is, our doctrine with what is common and cheap, and debased, and
stale, and tasteless, in order to turn the adulteration to our profit, and
accommodate ourselves to those who meet us, and curry favor with everyone,
becoming ventriloquists(<greek>i</greek>) and chatterers, who serve
their own pleasures by words uttered from the earth, and sinking into the earth,
and, to gain the special good will of the multitude, injuring in the highest
degree, nay, ruining ourselves, and shedding the innocent blood of simpler
souls, which will be required at our hands.(<greek>k</greek>)
47. Besides,
we are aware that it is better to offer our own reins to others more skilful
than ourselves,
than, while inexperienced, to guide the course
of others, and rather to give a kindly hearing than stir an untrained tongue;
and after a discussion of these points with advisers who are, I fancy, of no
mean worth, and, at any rate, wish us well, we preferred to learn those canons
of speech and action which we did not know, rather than undertake to teach
them in our ignorance. For it is delightful to have the reasoning(<greek>l</greek>)
of the aged come to one even until the depth of old age, able, as it is, to
aid a soul new to piety. Accordingly, to undertake the training of others before
being sufficiently trained oneself, and to learn, as men say, the potter's
art on a wine-jar, that is, to practise ourselves in piety at the expense of
others' souls seems to me to be excessive folly or excessive rashness--folly,
if we are not even aware of our own ignorance; rashness, if in spite of this
knowledge we venture on the task.
48. Nay,
the wiser of the Hebrews tell us that there was of old among the Hebrews
a most excellent
and praiseworthy
law,(<greek>m</greek>)
that every age was not entrusted with the whole of Scripture, inasmuch as this
would not be the more profitable course, since the whole of it is not at once
intelligible to everyone, and its more recondite parts would, by their apparent
meaning, do a very great injury to most people. Some portions therefore, whose
exterior(<greek>a</greek>) is unexceptionable, are from the first
permitted and common to all; while others are only en-trusted to those who
have attained their twenty-fifth year, viz., such as hide their mystical beauty
under a mean-looking cloak, to be the reward of diligence and an illustrious
life; flashing forth and presenting itself only to those whose mind has been
purified, on the ground that this age alone(<greek>b</greek>) can
be superior to the body, and properly rise from the letter to the spirit.
49. Among
us, however, there is no boundary line between giving and receiving instruction,
like
the stones
of old between the tribes within and beyond the
Jordan: nor is a certain part entrusted to some, another to others; nor any
rule for degrees(<greek>g</greek>) of experience; but the matter
has been so disturbed and thrown into confusion, that most of us, not to say
all, almost before we have lost our childish curls and lisp, before we have
entered the house of God, before we know even the names of the Sacred Books,
before we have learnt the character and authors of the Old and New Testaments:
(for my present point is not our want of cleansing from the mire and marks
of spiritual shame which our viciousness has contracted) if, I say, we have
furnished ourselves with two or three expressions of pious authors, and that
by hearsay, not by study; if we have had a brief experience of David, or clad
ourselves properly in a cloak-let, or are wearing at least a philosopher's
girdle, or have girt about us some form and appearance of piety--phew! how
we take the chair and show our spirit! Samuel was holy even in his swaddling-clothes:(<greek>d</greek>)
we are at once wise teachers, of high estimation in Divine things, the first
of scribes and lawyers; we ordain ourselves men of heaven and seek to be called
Rabbi by men;(<greek>e</greek>) the letter is nowhere, everything
is to be understood spiritually, and our dreams are utter drivel, and we should
be annoyed if we were not lauded to excess. This is the case with the better
and more simple of us: what of those who are more spiritual and noble?(<greek>a</greek>)
After frequently condemning us, as men of no account, they have forsaken us,
and abhor fellowship with impious people such as we are.
50. Now,
if we were to speak gently to one of them, advancing, as follows, step by
step in argument: "Tell me, my good sir, do you call dancing anything,
and flute-playing?" "Certainly," they would say. "What
then of wisdom and being wise, which we venture to define as a knowledge of
things divine and human?" This also they will admit. "Are then these
accomplishments better than and superior to wisdom, or wisdom by far better
than these?" "Better even than all things," I know well that
they will say. Up to this point they are judicious. "Well, dancing and
flute-playing require to be taught and learnt, a process which takes time,
and much toil in the sweat of the brow, and sometimes the payment of fees,
and entreaties for initiation, and long absence from home, and all else which
must be done and borne for the acquisition of experience: but as for wisdom,
which is chief of all things, and holds in her embrace everything which is
good, so that even God himself prefers this title to all the names which He
is called; are we to suppose that it is a matter of such slight consequence,
and so accessible, that we need but wish, and we would be wise?" "It
would be utter folly to do so." If we, or any learned and prudent man,
were to say this to them, and try by degrees to cleanse them from their error,
it would be sowing upon rocks,(<greek>b</greek>) and speaking to
ears of men who will not hear:(<greek>g</greek>) so far are they
from being even wise enough to perceive their own ignorance. And we may rightly,
in my opinion, apply to them the saying of Solomon: There is an evil which
I have seen under the sun,(<greek>d</greek>) a man wise in his
own conceit;(<greek>e</greek>) and a still greater evil is to charge
with the instruction of others a man who is not even aware of his own ignorance.
51. This
is a state of mind which demands, in special degree, our tears and groans,
and has often
stirred my
pity, from the conviction that imagination
robs us in great measure of reality, and that vain glory is a great hindrance
to men's attainment of virtue. To heal and stay this disease needs a Peter
or Paul, those great disciples of Christ, who in addition to guidance in word
and deed, received their grace,(<greek>z</greek>) and became all
things to all men, that they might gain all.(<greek>a</greek>)
But for other men like ourselves, it is a great thing to be rightly guided
and led by those who have been charged with the correction and setting right
of things such as these.
52. Since, however, I have mentioned Paul, and men like him, I will, with
your permission, pass by all others who have been foremost as lawgivers, prophets,
or leaders, or in any similar office--for instance, Moses, Aaron, Joshua, Elijah,
Elisha, the Judges, Samuel, David, the company of Prophets, John, the Twelve
Apostles, and their successors, who with many toils and labors exercised their
authority, each in his own time; all these I pass by, to set forth Paul as
the witness to my assertions, and for us to consider by his example how important
a matter is the care of souls, and whether it requires slight attention and
little judgment. But that we may recognize and perceive this, let us hear what
Paul himself says of Paul.
53. I
say nothing of his labours, his watchings, his sufferings in hunger and thirst,
in cold and
nakedness,
his assailants from without, his adversaries
within.(<greek>b</greek>) I pass over the persecutions, councils,
prisons, bonds, accusers, tribunals, the daily and hourly deaths, the basket,
the stonings, beatings with rods, the travelling about, the perils by land
and sea, the deep, the shipwrecks, the perils of rivers, perils of robbers,
perils from his countrymen, perils among false brethren, the living by his
own hands, the gospel without charge,(<greek>g</greek>) the being
a spectacle to both angels and men,(<greek>d</greek>) set in the
midst between God and men to champion His cause,(<greek>e</greek>)
and to unite them to Him, and make them His own peculiar people,(<greek>z</greek>)
beside those things that are without.(<greek>h</greek>) For who
could worthily detail these matters, the daily pressure,(<s>) the individual
solicitude, the care of all the churches, the universal sympathy, and brotherly
love? Did anyone stumble, Paul also was weak; did another suffer scandal, it
was Paul who was on fire.
54. What
of the laboriousness of his teaching? The manifold character of his ministry?
His loving kindness?
And on the other hand his strictness? And the
combination and blending of the two; in such wise that his gentleness should
not enervate, nor his severity exasperate? He gives laws for slaves and masters,(<greek>i</greek>)
rulers and ruled,(<greek>k</greek>) husbands and wives,(<greek>l</greek>)
parents and children,(<greek>a</greek>) marriage and celibacy,(<greek>b</greek>)
self-discipline and indulgence,(<greek>g</greek>) wisdom and ignorance,(<greek>d</greek>)
circumcision and uncircumcision,(<greek>e</greek>) Christ and the
world, the flesh and the spirit.(<greek>z</greek>) On behalf of
some he gives thanks, others he upbraids. Some he names his joy and crown,(<greek>h</greek>)
others he charges with folly.(<greek>q</greek>) Some who hold a
straight course he accompanies, sharing in their zeal; others he checks, who
are going wrong. At one time he excommunicates,(<greek>i</greek>)
at another he confirms his love;(<greek>k</greek>) at one time
he grieves, at another rejoices; at one time he feeds with milk, at another
he handles mysteries;(<greek>l</greek>) at one time he condescends,
at another he raises to his own level; at one time he threatens a rod,(<greek>m</greek>)
at another he offers the spirit of meekness; at one time he is haughty toward
the lofty, at another lowly toward the lowly. Now he is least of the apostles,(<greek>n</greek>)
now he offers a proof of Christ speaking in him;(<greek>x</greek>)
now he longs for departure and is being poured forth as a libation,(<greek>o</greek>)
now he thinks it more necessary for their sakes to abide in the flesh. For
he seeks not his own interests, but those of his children,(<greek>p</greek>)
whom he has begotten in Christ by the gospel.(<greek>r</greek>)
This is the aim of all his spiritual authority, in everything to neglect his
own in comparison with the advantage of others.
55. He
glories in his infirmities and distresses. He takes pleasure in the dying
of Jesus,(<greek>s</greek>) as if it were a kind of ornament.
He is lofty in carnal things,(<greek>t</greek>) he rejoices in
things spiritual; he is not rude in knowledge,(<greek>u</greek>)
and claims to see in a mirror, darkly.(<greek>F</greek>) He is
bold in spirit, and buffets his body,(<greek>c</greek>) throwing
it as an antagonist. What is the lesson and instruction he would thus impress
upon us? Not to be proud of earthly things, or puffed up by knowledge, or excite
the flesh against the spirit. He fights for all, prays for all, is jealous
for all, is kindled on behalf of all, whether without law, or under the law;
a preacher of the Gentiles,(<greek>y</greek>) a patron of the Jews.
He even was exceedingly bold on behalf of his brethren according to the flesh,(<greek>w</greek>)
if I may myself be bold enough to say so, in his loving prayer that they might
in his stead be brought to Christ. What magnanimity! what fervor of spirit!
He imitates Christ, who became a curse for us,(<greek>aa</greek>)
who took our infirmities and bore our sicknesses;(<greek>bb</greek>)
or, to use more measured terms, he is ready, next to Christ, to suffer anything,
even as one of the ungodly, for them, if only they be saved.
56. Why
should I enter into detail? He lived not to himself, but to Christ and his
preaching. He
crucified the
world to himself,(<greek>a</greek>)
and being crucified to the world and the things which are seen, he thought
all things little,(<greek>b</greek>) and too small to be desired;
even though from Jerusalem and round about unto Illyricum(<greek>g</greek>)
he had fully preached the Gospel, even though he had been prematurely caught
up to the third heaven, and had a vision of Paradise, and had heard unspeakable
words.(<greek>d</greek>) Such was Paul, and everyone of like spirit
with him. But we fear that, in comparison with them, we may be foolish princes
of Zoan,(<greek>e</greek>) or extortioners, who exact the fruits
of the ground, or falsely bless the people:(<greek>z</greek>) and
further make themselves happy, and confuse the way of your feet,(<greek>h</greek>)
or mockers ruling over you, or children in authority,(<greek>q</greek>)
immature in mind, not even having bread and clothing enough to be rulers over
any;(<greek>i</greek>) or prophets teaching lies,(<greek>k</greek>)
or rebellious princes,(<greek>l</greek>) deserving to share the
reproach of their elders for the straitness of the famine,(<greek>m</greek>)
or priests very far from speaking comfortably(<greek>n</greek>)
to Jerusalem, according to the reproaches and protests urged by Isaiah, who
was purged by the Seraphim with a live coal.(<greek>x</greek>)
57. Is
the undertaking then so serious and laborious to a sensitive and sad heart--a
very rottenness
to
the bones o of a sensible man: while the danger
is slight, and a fall not worth consideration? Nay the blessed Hosea inspires
me with serious alarm, where he says that to us priests and rulers pertaineth
the judgment,(<greek>o</greek>) because we have been a snare to
the watchtower; and as a net spread upon Tabor, which has been firmly fixed
by the hunters of men's souls, and he threatens to cut off the wicked prophets,(<greek>p</greek>)
and devour their judges with fire, and to cease for a while from anointing
a king and princes,(<greek>r</greek>) because they ruled for themselves,
and not by Him.(<greek>s</greek>)
58. Hence
again the divine Micah, unable to brook the building of Zion with blood,
however you interpret
the
phrase, and of Jerusalem with iniquity, while
the heads thereof judge for reward, and the priests teach for hire, and the
prophets divine for money--what does he say will be the result of this? Zion
shall be plowed as a field, and Jerusalem be as a lodge in a garden, and the
mountain of the house be reckoned as a glade in a thicket.(<greek>a</greek>)
He bewails also the scarcity of the upright, there being scarcely a stalk or
a gleaning grape left, since both the prince asketh, and the judge curries
favour,(<greek>b</greek>) so that his language is almost the same
as the mighty David's: Save me, O Lord, for the godly man ceaseth:(<greek>g</greek>)
and says that therefore their blessings shall fail them, as if wasted by the
moth.
59. Joel
again summons us to wailing, and will have the ministers of the altar lament
under the
presence of famine:
so far is he from allowing us to revel
in the misfortunes of others: and, after sanctifying a fast, calling a solemn
assembly, and gathering the old men, the children, and those of tender age,(<greek>d</greek>)
we ourselves must further haunt the temple in sackcloth and ashes,(<greek>e</greek>)
prostrated right humbly on the ground, because the field is wasted, and the
meat-offering and the drink-offering is cut off from the house of the Lord,
till we draw down mercy by our humiliation.
60. What
of Habakkuk? He utters more heated words, and is impatient with God Himself,
and cries
down, as
it were our good Lord, because of the injustice
of the judges. O Lord, how long shall I cry and Thou wilt not hear? Shall I
cry out unto Thee of violence, and Thou wilt not save? Why dost Thou show me
toil and labour, causing me to look upon perverseness and impiety? Judgment
has been given against me, and the judge is a spoiler. Therefore the law is
slacked, and judgment doth never go forth. Then comes the denunciation, and
what follows upon it. Behold, ye despisers, and regard, and wonder marvellously,
and vanish away, for I work a work.(<greek>z</greek>) But why need
I quote the whole of the denunciation? A little further on, however, for I
think it best to add this to what has been said, after upbraiding and lamenting
many of those who are in some respect unjust or depraved, he upbraids the leaders
and teachers of wickedness, stigmatising vice as a foul disorder, and an intoxication
and aberration of mind; charging them with giving their neighbours drink in
order to look upon the darkness of their soul,(<greek>h</greek>)
and the dens of creeping things and wild beasts, viz.: the dwelling places
of wicked thoughts. Such indeed they are, and such teachings do they discuss
with us.
61. How
can it be right to pass by Malachi, who at one time brings bitter charges
against the priests,
and
reproaches them with despising the name of
the Lord,(<greek>a</greek>) and explains wherein they did this,
by offering polluted bread upon the altar, and meat which is not firstfruits,
which they would not have offered to one of their governors, or, if they had
offered it, they would have been dishonoured; yet offering these in fulfilment
of a vow to the King of the universe, to wit, the lame and the sick, and the
deformed, which are utterly profane and loathsome.(<greek>b</greek>)
Again he reminds them of the covenant of God, a covenant of life and peace,
with the sons of Levi, and that they should serve Him in fear, and stand in
awe of the manifestation of His Name. The law of truth, he says, was in his
mouth, and unrighteousness was not found in his lips; he walked with me uprightly
in peace, and turned away many from iniquity: for the priest's lips shall keep
knowledge, and they shall seek the law at his mouth. And how honourable and
at the same time how fearful is the cause! for he is the messenger of the Lord
Almighty.(<greek>g</greek>) Although I pass over the following
imprecations, as strongly worded,(<greek>d</greek>) yet I am afraid
of their truth. This however may be cited without offence, to our profit. Is
it right, he says, to regard your sacrifice, and receive it with good will
at your hands,(<greek>e</greek>) as if he were most highly incensed,
and rejecting their ministrations owing to their wickedness.
62. Whenever
I remember Zechariah, I shudder at the reaping-hook,(<greek>z</greek>)
and likewise at his testimony against the priests, his hints in reference to
the celebrated Joshua, the high priest, whom he represents as stripped of filthy
and unbecoming garments and then clothed in rich priestly apparel.(<greek>h</greek>)
As for the words and charges to Joshua which he puts into the angel's mouth,
let them be treated with silent respect, as referring perhaps to a greater(<greek>q</greek>)
and higher object than those who are many priests:(<greek>i</greek>)
but even at his right hand stood the devil, to resist him. A fact, in my eyes,
of no slight significance, and demanding no slight fear and watchfulness.
63. Who
is so bold and adamantine of soul as not to tremble and be abashed at the
charges and reproaches
deliberately
urged against the rest of the shepherds.
A voice, he says, of the howling of the shepherds, for their glory is spoiled.
A voice of the roaring of lions,(<greek>k</greek>) for this hath
befallen them. Does he not all but hear the wailing as if close at hand, and
himself wail with the afflicted. A little further is a more striking and impassioned
strain. Feed, he says, the flock of slaughter, whose possessors slay them without
repentance, and they that sell them say, "Blessed be the Lord, for we
are rich:" and their own shepherds are without feeling for them. Therefore,
I will no more pity the inhabitants of the land, saith the Lord Almighty.(<greek>a</greek>)
And again: Awake, O sword, against the shepherds, and smite the shepherds,
and scatter the sheep, and I will turn My Hand upon the shepherds;(<greek>b</greek>)
and, Mine anger is kindled against the shepherds, and I will visit the lambs:(<greek>g</greek>)
adding to the threat those who rule over the people. So industriously does
he apply himself to his task that he cannot easily free himself from denunciations,
and I am afraid that, did I refer to the whole series, I should exhaust your
patience. This must then suffice for Zechariah.
64. Passing
by the elders in the book of Daniel;(<greek>d</greek>)
for it is better to pass them by, together with the Lord's righteous sentence
and declaration concerning them, that wickedness came from Babylon from ancient
judges, who seemed to govern the people; how are we affected by Ezekiel, the
beholder and expositor of the mighty mysteries and visions? By his injunction
to the watchmen(<greek>e</greek>) not to keep silence concerning
vice and the sword impending over it, a course which would profit neither themselves
nor the sinners; but rather to keep watch and forewarn, and thus benefit, at
any rate those who gave warning, if not both those who spoke and those who
heard?
65. What
of his further invective against the shepherds, Woe shall come upon woe,
and rumour upon
rumour, then
shall they seek a vision of the prophet,
but the law shall perish from the priest, and counsel from the ancients,(<greek>z</greek>)
and again, in these terms, Son of man, say unto her, thou art a land that is
not watered, nor hath rain come upon thee in the day of indignation: whose
princes in the midst of her are like roaring lions, ravening the prey, devouring
souls in their might.(<greek>h</greek>) And a little further on:
Her priests have violated My laws and profaned My holy things, they have put
no difference between the holy and profane, but all things were alike to them,
and they hid their eyes from My Sabbaths, and I was profaned among them.(<greek>q</greek>)
He threatens that He will consume both the wall and them that daubed it,(<greek>i</greek>)
that is, those who sin and those who throw a cloak over them; as the evil rulers
and priests have done, who caused the house of Israel to err according to their
own hearts which are estranged in their lusts.(<greek>a</greek>)
66. I
also refrain from entering into his discussion of those who feed themselves,
devour the milk,
clothe
themselves with the wool, kill them that are fat, but
feed not the flock, strengthen not the diseased, nor bind up that which is
broken, nor bring again that which is driven away, nor seek that which is lost,
nor keep watch over that which is strong, but oppress them with rigour, and
destroy them with their pressure;(<greek>b</greek>) so that, because
there was no shepherd, the sheep were scattered over every plain and mountain,
and became meat for all the fowls and beasts,(<greek>g</greek>)
because there was no one to seek for them and bring them back. What is the
consequence? As I live, saith the Lord, because these things are so, and My
flock became a prey,(<greek>d</greek>) behold I am against the
shepherds, and I will require My flock at their hands, and will gather them
and make them My own: but the shepherds shall suffer such and such things,
as bad shepherds ought.
67. However,
to avoid unreasonably prolonging my discourse, by an enumeration of all the
prophets,
and of the
words of them all, I will mention but one more,
who was known before he was formed, and sanctified from the womb,(<greek>e</greek>)
Jeremiah: and will pass over the rest. He longs for water over his head, and
a fountain of tears for his eyes, that he may adequately weep for Israel;(<greek>z</greek>)
and no less does he bewail the depravity of its rulers.
68. God
speaks to him in reproof of the priests: The priests said not, Where is the
Lord, and they
that handled
the law knew Me not; the pastors also transgressed
against Me.(<greek>h</greek>) Again He says to him: The pastors
are become brutish, and have not sought the Lord, and therefore all their flock
did not understand, and was scattered.(<greek>q</greek>) Again,
Many pastors have destroyed My vineyard, and have polluted My pleasant portion,
till it was reduced to a track less wilderness.(<greek>i</greek>)
He further inveighs against the pastors again: Woe be to the pastors that destroy
and scatter the sheep of My pasture! Therefore thus saith the Lord against
them that feed My people: Ye have scattered My flock, and driven them away,
and have not visited them: behold I will visit upon you the evil of your doings.(<greek>k</greek>)
Moreover he bids the shepherds to howl, and the rams of the flock to lament,
because the days of their slaughter are accomplished.(<greek>l</greek>)
69. Why
need I speak of the things of ancient days? Who can test himself by the rules
and standards
which Paul
laid down for bishops and presbyters, that
they are to be temperate, soberminded, not given to wine, no strikers, apt
to teach, blameless in all things, and beyond the reach of the wicked,(<greek>a</greek>)
without finding considerable deflection from the straight line of the rules?
What of the regulations of Jesus for his disciples, when He sends them to preach?(<greek>b</greek>)
The main object of these is--not to enter into particulars--that they should
be of such virtue, so simple and modest, and in a word, so heavenly, that the
gospel should make its way, no less by their character than by their preaching.
70. I
am alarmed by the reproaches of the Pharisees, the conviction of the Scribes.
For it is disgraceful
for
us, who ought greatly surpass them, as we
are bidden, if we desire the kingdom of heaven, to be found more deeply sunk
in vice: so that we deserve to be called serpents, a generation of vipers,
and blind guides, who strain out a gnat and swallow a camel, or sepulchres
foul within, in spite of our external comeliness, or platters outwardly clean,
and everything else, which they are, or which is laid to their charge.(<greek>g</greek>)
71. With these thoughts I am occupied night and day: they waste my marrow,
and feed upon my flesh, and will not allow me to be confident or to look up.
They depress my soul, and abase my mind, and fetter my tongue, and make me
consider, not the position of a prelate, or the guidance and direction of others,
which is far beyond my powers; but how I myself am to escape the wrath to come,
and to scrape off from myself somewhat of the rust of vice. A man must himself
be cleansed, before cleansing others: himself become wise, that he may make
others wise; become light, and then give light: draw near to God, and so bring
others near; be hallowed, then hallow them; be possessed of hands to lead others
by the hand, of wisdom to give advice.
72. When
will this be, say they who are swift but not sure in every thing, readily
building up,
readily throwing
down. When will the lamp be upon its
stand,(<greek>d</greek>) and where is the talent?(<greek>e</greek>)
For so they call the grace.(<greek>z</greek>) Those who speak thus
are more fervent in friendship than in reverence. You ask me, you men of exceeding
courage, when these things shall be, and what account I give of them? Not even
extreme old age would be too long a limit to assign. For hoary hairs combined
with pruence are better than inexperienced youth, well-reasoned hesitation
than inconsiderate haste, and a brief reign than a long tyranny: just as a
small portion honourably won is better than considerable possessions which
are dishonourable and uncertain, a little gold than a great weight of lead,
a little light than much darkness.
73. But
this speed, in its untrustworthiness and excessive haste, is in danger of
being like the
seeds which fell upon
the rock,(<greek>a</greek>)
and, because they had no depth of earth,(<greek>b</greek>) sprang
up at once, but could not bear even the first heat of the sun; or like the
foundation laid upon the sand,(<greek>g</greek>) which could not
even make a slight resistance to the rain and the winds. Woe to thee, O city,
whose king is a child,(<greek>d</greek>) says Solomon. Be not hasty
of speech,(<greek>e</greek>) says Solomon again, asserting that
hastiness of speech is less serious than heated action. And who, in spite of
all this, demands haste rather than security and utility? Who can mould, as
clay-figures are modelled in a single day, the defender of the truth, who is
to take his stand with Angels, and give glory with Archangels, and cause the
sacrifice to ascend to the altar on high, and share the priesthood of Christ,
and renew the creature, and set forth the image, and create inhabitants for
the world above, aye and, greatest of all, be God, and make others to be God?
74. I
know Whose ministers we are, and where we are placed, and whither we are
guides. I know the height
of
God, and the weakness of man, and, on the
contrary, his power. Heaven is high, and the earth deep;(<greek>z</greek>)
and who of those who have been cast down by sin shall ascend?(<greek>h</greek>)
Who that is as yet surrounded by the gloom here below, and by the grossness
of the flesh can purely gaze with his whole mind upon that whole mind, and
amid unstable and visible things hold intercourse with the stable and invisible?
For hardly may one of those who have been most specially purged, behold here
even an image of the Good, as men see the sun in the water. Who hath measured
the water with his hand, and the heaven with a span, and the whole earth in
a measure? Who hath weighed the mountains in scales, and the hills in a balance?(<greek>q</greek>)
What is the place of his rest?(<greek>i</greek>) and to whom shall
he be likened?(<greek>k</greek>)
75. Who
is it, Who made all things by His Word,(<greek>l</greek>)
and formed man by His Wisdom, and gathered into one things scattered abroad,
and mingled dust with spirit, and compounded an animal visible and invisible,
temporal and immortal, earthly and heavenly, able to attain to God but not
to comprehend Him, drawing near and yet afar off. I said, I will be wise, says
Solomon, but she (i.e. Wisdom) was far from me beyond what is:(<greek>a</greek>)
and, Verily, he that increaseth knowledge increaseth sorrow.(<greek>b</greek>)
For the joy of what we have discovered is no greater than the pain of what
escapes us; a pain, I imagine, like that felt by those who are dragged, while
yet thirsty, from the water, or are unable to retain what they think they hold,
or are suddenly left in the dark by a flash of lightning.
76. This
depressed and kept me humble, and persuaded me that it was better to hear
the voice of
praise(<greek>g</greek>) than to be an expounder
of truths beyond my power; the majesty, and the height, and the dignity, and
the pure natures scarce able to contain the brightness of God, Whom the deep
covers, Whose secret place is darkness,(<greek>d</greek>) since
He is the purest light,(<greek>e</greek>) which most men cannot
approach unto; Who is in all this universe, and again is beyond the universe;
Who is all goodness,(<greek>z</greek>) and beyond all goodness;
Who enlightens the mind, and escapes the quickness and height of the mind,
ever retiring as much as He is apprehended, and by His flight and stealing
away when grasped, withdrawing to the things above one who is enamoured of
Him.
77. Such
and so great is the object of our longing zeal, and such a man should he
be, who prepares
and conducts
souls to their espousals. For myself, I feared
to be cast, bound hand and foot,(<greek>h</greek>) from the bride-chamber,
for not having on a wedding-garment, and for having rashly intruded among those
who there sit at meat. And yet I had been invited from my youth, if I may speak
of what most men know not, and had been cast upon Him from the womb,(<greek>q</greek>)
and presented by the promise of my mother, afterwards confirmed in the hour
of danger: and my longing grew up with it, and my reason agreed to it, and
I gave as an offering my all to Him Who had won me and saved me, my property,
my fame, my health, my very words, from which I only gained the advantage of
being able to despise them, and of having something in comparison of which
I preferred Christ. And the words of God were made sweet as honeycombs(<greek>i</greek>)
to me, and I cried after knowledge and lifted up my voice for wisdom.(<greek>k</greek>)
There was moreover the moderation of anger, the curbing of the tongue, the
restraint of the eyes, the discipline of the belly, and the trampling under
foot of the glory which clings to the earth. I speak foolishly,(<greek>a</greek>)
but it shall be said, in these pursuits I was perhaps not inferior to many.
78. One
branch of philosophy is, however, too high for me, the commission to guide
and govern souls--and
before
I have rightly learned to submit to a
shepherd, or have had my soul duly cleansed, the charge of caring for a flock:
especially in times like these, when a man, seeing everyone else rushing hither
and thither in confusion, is content to flee from the m@l&e and escape,
in sheltered retirement, from the storm and gloom of the wicked one: when the
members are at war with one another, and the slight remains of love, which
once existed, have departed, and priest is a mere empty name, since, as it
is said, contempt(<greek>b</greek>) has been poured upon princes.(<greek>g</greek>)
79. Would
that it were merely empty! And now may their blasphemy fall upon the head
of the ungodly!
All fear has
been banished from souls, shamelessness
has taken its place, and knowledge(<greek>d</greek>) and the deep
things of the Spirit(<greek>e</greek>) are at the disposal of anyone
who will; and we all become pious by simply condemning the impiety of others;
and we claim the services of ungodly judges,(<greek>z</greek>)
and fling that which is holy to the dogs, and cast pearls before swine,(<greek>h</greek>)
by publishing divine things in the hearing of profane souls, and, wretches
that we are, carefully fulfil the prayers of our enemies, and are not ashamed
to go a whoring with our own inventions.(<greek>q</greek>) Moabites
and Ammonites, who were not permitted even to enter the Church of the Lord,(<greek>i</greek>)
frequent our most holy rites. We have opened to all not the gates of righteousness,(<greek>k</greek>)
but, doors of railing and partizan arrogance; and the first place among us
is given, not to one who in the fear of God refrains from even an idle word,
but to him who can revile his neighbour most fluently, whether explicitly,
or by covert allusion; who rolls beneath his tongue mischief and iniquity,
or to speak more accurately, the poison of asps.(<greek>l</greek>)
80. We observe each other's sins, not to bewail them, but to make them subjects
of reproach, not to heal them, but to aggravate them, and excuse our own evil
deeds by the wounds of our neighbours. Bad and good men are distinguished not
according to personal character, but by their disagreement or friendship with
ourselves. We praise one day what we revile the next, denunciation at the hands
of others is a passport to our admiration; so magnanimous are we in our viciousness,
that everything is frankly forgiven to impiety.
81. Everything
has reverted to the original state of things(<greek>a</greek>)
before the world, with its present fair order and form, came into being. The
general confusion and irregularity cry for some organising hand and power.
Or, if you will, it is like a battle at night by the faint light of the moon,
when none can discern the faces of friends or foes; or like a sea fight on
the surge, with the driving winds, and boiling foam, and dashing waves, and
crashing vessels, with the thrusts of poles, the pipes of boatswains, the groans
of the fallen, while we make our voices heard above the din, and not knowing
what to do, and having, alas! no opportunity for showing our valour, assail
one another, and fall by one another's hands.
82. Nor
indeed is there any distinction between the state of the people and that
of the priesthood:
but it seems
to me to be a simple fulfilment of the
ancient curse, "As with the people so with the priest."(<greek>b</greek>)
Nor again are the great and eminent men affected otherwise than the majority;
nay, they are openly at war with the priests, and their piety is an aid to
their powers of persuasion. And indeed, provided that it be on behalf of the
faith, and of the highest and most important questions, let them be thus disposed,
and I blame them not; nay, to say the truth, I go so far as to praise and congratulate
them. Yea! would that I were one of those who contend and incur hatred for
the truth's sake: or rather, I can boast of being one of them. For better is
a laudable war than a peace which severs a man from God: and therefore it is
that the Spirit arms the gentle warrior, as one who is able to wage war in
a good cause.
83. But at the present time there are some who go to war even about small
matters and to no purpose, and, with great ignorance and audacity, accept,
as an associate in their ill-doing, anyone whoever he may be. Then everyone
makes the faith his pretext, and this venerable name is dragged into their
private quarrels. Consequently, as was probable, we are hated, even among the
Gentiles, and, what is harder still, we cannot say that this is without just
cause. Nay, even the best of our own people are scandalized, while this result
is not surprising in the case of the multitude, who are ill-disposed to accept
anything that is good.
84. Sinners
are planning upon our backs;(<greek>a</greek>) and
what we devise against each other, they turn against us all: and we have become
a new spectacle, not to angels and men,(<greek>b</greek>) as says
Paul, that bravest of athletes, in his contest with principalities and powers,(<greek>g</greek>)
but to almost all wicked men, and at every time and place, in the public squares,
at carousals, at festivities, and times of sorrow. Nay, we have already--I
can scarcely speak of it without tears--been represented on the stage, amid
the laughter of the most licentious, and the most popular of all dialogues
and scenes is the caricature of a Christian.
85. These are the results of our intestine warfare, and our extreme readiness
to strive about goodness and gentleness, and our inexpedient excess of love
for God. Wrestling, or any other athletic contest, is only permitted according
to fixed laws, and the man will be shouted down and disgraced, and lose the
victory, who breaks the laws of wrestling, or acts unfairly in any other contest,
contrary to the rules laid down for the contest, however able and skilful he
may be; and shall anyone contend for Christ in an unchristlike manner, and
yet be pleasing to peace for having fought unlawfully in her name.
86. Yea,
even now, when Christ is invoked, the devils tremble,(<greek>d</greek>)
and not even by our ill-doing has the power of this Name been extinguished,
while we are not ashamed to insult a cause and name so venerable; shouting
it, and having it shouted in return, almost in public, and every day; for My
Name is blasphemed among the Gentiles because of you.(<greek>e</greek>)
87. Of
external warfare I am not afraid, nor of that wild beast, and fulness of
evil, who has now
arisen against
the churches, though he may threaten fire,
sword, wild beasts, precipices, chasms; though he may show himself more inhuman
than all previous madmen, and discover fresh tortures of greater severity.
I have one remedy for them all, one road to victory; I will glory in Christ(<greek>z</greek>)
namely, death for Christ's sake.
88. For
my own warfare, however, I am at a loss what course to pursue, what alliance,
what word of
wisdom,
what grace to devise, with what panoply to arm
myself, against the wiles of the wicked one.(<greek>h</greek>)
What Moses is to conquer him by stretching out his hands upon the mount,(<greek>q</greek>)
in order that the cross, thus typified and prefigured, may prevail? What Joshua,
as his successor, arrayed alongside the Captain of the Lord's hosts?(<greek>a</greek>)
What David, either by harping, or fighting with his sling,(<greek>b</greek>)
and girded by God with strength unto the battle,(<greek>g</greek>)
and with his fingers trained to war?(<greek>d</greek>) What Samuel,
praying(<greek>e</greek>) and sacrificing for the people, and anointing
as king one who can gain the victory? What Jeremiah, by writing lamentations
for Israel, is fitly to lament these things?
89. Who
will cry aloud, Spare Thy People, O Lord, and give not Thine heritage to
reproach, that the
nations
should rule over them?(<greek>z</greek>)
What Noah, and Job,(<greek>h</greek>) and Daniel, who are reckoned
together as men of prayer, will pray for us, that we may have a slight respite
from warfare, and recover ourselves, and recognize one another for a while,
and no longer, instead of united Israel, be Judah(<greek>q</greek>)
and Israel, Rehoboam and Jeroboam, Jerusalem and Samaria, in turn delivered
up because of our sins, and in turn lamented.
90. For
I own that I am too weak for this warfare, and therefore turned my back,
hiding my face in
the rout,
and sat solitary,(<greek>i</greek>)
because I was filled with bitterness(<greek>k</greek>) and sought
to be silent, understanding that it is an evil time,(<greek>l</greek>)
that the beloved had kicked,(<greek>m</greek>) that we were become
backsliding children,(<greek>n</greek>) who are the luxuriant vine,(<greek>x</greek>)
the true vine, all fruitful, all beautiful,(<greek>o</greek>) springing
up splendidly with showers from on high.(<greek>p</greek>) For
the diadem of beauty,(<greek>r</greek>) the signet of glory,(<gr