Subscribe
to CF
Be
first to know
Read our AAA review
from Catholic Culture
Our Mission
To
bring Jesus Christ; the Way, the Truth and the Life; to all who will follow,
according to scripture and tradition, per the Magisterium
of the Roman Catholic Church.
While you visit!
Listen
to
Radio
For the Sacred
Heart of Jesus and the Immaculate Heart of Mary. |
GREGORY NAZIANZEN
ORATIONS III, VII, VIII AND XII
ORATION III.
TO THOSE WHO HAD INVITED HIM, AND NOT COME TO RECEIVE HIM.
(About Easter A.D. 362.)
I. How
slow you are, my friends and brethren, to come to listen to my words, though
you were so swift
in
tyrannizing over me, and tearing me from my Citadel
Solitude, which I had embraced in preference to everything else, and as coadjutress
and mother of the divine ascent, and as deifying man,(<greek>a</greek>)
I had especially admired, and had set before me as the guide of my whole life.(<greek>b</greek>)
How is it that, now you have got it, you thus despise what you so greatly desired
to obtain, and seem to be better able to desire the absent than to enjoy the
present; as though you preferred to possess my teaching rather than to profit
by it? Yes, I may even say this to you: "I became a surfeit unto you before
you tasted of me, or gave me a trial"(<greek>g</greek>)--which
is most strange.
II. And neither did you entertain me as a guest, nor, if I may make a remark
of a more compassionate kind, did you allow yourselves to be entertained by
me, reverencing this command if nothing else; nor did you take me by the hand,
as beginning a new task; nor encourage me in my timidity, nor console me for
the violence I had suffered; but--I shrink from saying it, though say it I
must--you made my festival no festival, and received me with no happy introduction;
and you mingled the solemn festival with sorrow, because it lacked that which
most of all would have contributed to its happiness, the presence of you my
conquerors, for it would not be true to call you people who love me. So easily
is anything despised which is easily conquered, and the proud receives attention,
while he who is humble before God is slighted.
III. What will ye? Shall I be judged by you, or shall I be your judge? Shall
I pass a verdict, or receive one, for I hope to be acquitted if I be judged,
and if I give sentence, to give it against you justly? The charge against you
is that you do not answer my love with equal measure, nor do you repay my obedience
with honour, nor do you pledge the future to me by your present alacrity--though
even if you had, I could hardly have believed it. But each of you has something
which he prefers to both the old and the new Pastor, neither reverencing the
grey hairs of the one, nor calling out the youthful spirit of the other.
IV. There
is a Banquet in the Gospels,(<greek>d</greek>) and a
hospitable Host and friends; and the Banquet is most pleasant, for it is the
marriage of His Son. He calleth them, but they come not: He is angry, and--I
pass over the interval for fear of bad omen--but, to speak gently, He filleth
the Banquet with others. God forbid that this should be your case; but yet
you have treated me (how shall I put it gently?) with as much haughtiness or
boldness as they who after being called to a feast rise up against it, and
insult their host; for you, though you are not of the number of those who are
without, or are invited to the marriage, but are yourselves those who invited
me, and bound me to the Holy Table, and shewed me the glory of the Bridal Chamber,
then deserted me (this is the most splendid thing about you)--one to his field,
another to his newly bought yoke of oxen, another to his just-married wife,
another to some other trifling matter; you were all scattered and dispersed,
caring little for the Bridechamber and the Bridegroom.(<greek>a</greek>)
V. On this account I was filled with despondency and perplexity--for I will
not keep silence about what I have suffered--and I was very near withholding
the discourse which I was minded to bestow as a Marriage-gift, the most beautiful
and precious of all I had; and I very nearly let it loose upon you, whom, now
that the violence had once been done to me, I greatly longed for: for I thought
I could get from this a splendid theme, and because my love sharpened my tongue--love
which is very hot and ready for accusation when it is stirred to jealousy by
grief which it conceives from some unexpected neglect. If any of you has been
pierced with love's sting, and has felt himself neglected, he knows the feeling,
and will pardon one who so suffers, because he himself has been near the same
frenzy.
VI. But
it is not permitted to me at the present time to say to you anything upbraiding;
and God forbid
I ever should. And even now perhaps I have reproached
you more than in due measure, the Sacred Flock, the praise-worthy nurselings
of Christ, the Divine inheritance; by which, O God, Thou art rich, even wert
Thou poor in all other respects. To Thee, I think, are fitting those words, "The
lot is fallen unto Thee in a fair ground: yea Thou hast the goodliest heritage."(<greek>b</greek>)
Nor will I allow that the most populous cities or the broadest flocks have
any advantage over us, the little ones of the smallest of all the tribes of
Israel, of the least of the thousands of Judah,(<greek>g</greek>)
of the little Bethlehem among cities,(<greek>d</greek>) where Christ
was born and is from the beginning well-known and worshipped; amongst those
whom the Father is exalted, and the Son is held to be equal to Him, and the
Holy Ghost is glorified with Them: we who are of one soul, who mind the same
thing, who in nothing injure the Trinity, neither by preferring One Person
above another, nor by cutting off any: as those bad umpires and measurers of
the Godhead do, who by magnifying One Person more than is fit, diminish and
insult the whole.
VII. But
do ye also, if you bear me any good will--ye who are my husbandry, my vineyard,
my own bowels,
or
rather His Who is our common Father, for in
Christ he hath begotten you through the Gospels(<greek>a</greek>)--shew
to us also some respect. It is only fair, since we have honoured you above
all else: ye are my witnesses, ye, and they who have placed in our hands this--shall
I say Authority, or Service? And if to him that loveth most is due, how shall
I measure the love, for which I have made you my debtors by my own love? Rather,
shew respect for yourselves, and the Image committed to your care,(<greek>b</greek>)
and Him Who committed it, and the Sufferings of Christ, and your hopes therefrom,
holding fast the faith which ye have received, and in which ye were brought
up, by which also ye are being saved, and trust to save others (for not many,
be well assured, can boast of what you can), and reckoning piety to consist,
not in often speaking about God, but in silence for the most part, for the
tongue is a dangerous thing to men, if it be not governed by reason. Believe
that listening is always less dangerous than talking, just as learning about
God is more pleasant than teaching. Leave the more accurate search into these
questions to those who are the Stewards of the Word; and for yourselves, worship
a little in words, but more by your actions, and rather by keeping the Law
than by admiring the Lawgiver; shew your love for Him by fleeing from wickedness,
pursuing after virtue, living in the Spirit, walking in the Spirit, drawing
your knowledge from Him, building upon the foundation of the faith, not wood
or hay or stubble,(<greek>g</greek>) weak materials and easily
spent when the fire shall try our works or destroy them; but gold, silver,
precious stones, which remain and stand.
VIII.
So may ye act, and so may ye honour us, whether present or absent, whether
taking your part
in our
sermons, or preferring to do something else: and may
ye be the children of God, pure and unblamable, in the midst of a crooked and
perverse generation:(<greek>a</greek>) and may ye never be entangled
in the snares of the wicked that go round about, or bound with the chain of
your sins. May the Word in you never be smothered with cares of this life and
so ye become unfruitful: but may ye walk in the King's Highway, turning aside
neither to the right hand nor to the left,(<greek>b</greek>) but
led by the Spirit through the strait gate. Then all our affairs shall prosper,
both now and at the inquest There, in Christ Jesus our Lord, to Whom be the
glory for ever. Amen.
ORATION VII.
PANEGYRIC ON HIS BROTHER S. CAESARIUS.
The date of this Oration is probably the spring of A.D. 369. It is placed
by S. Jerome first among S. Gregory's Orations. Caesarius, the Saint's younger
brother, was born probably about A.D. 330. Educated in his early years at home,
he studied later in the schools of Alexandria, where he attained great proficiency
in mathematics, astronomy, and, especially, in medicine. On his return from
Alexandria, he was offered by the Emperor Constantius, in response to a public
petition, an honourable and lucrative post at Byzantium, but was prevailed
upon by Gregory to return with him to Nazianzus. After a while he went hack
to Byzantium, and, on the accession of Julian, was pressed to retain his appointment
at court, and did so, in spite of Gregory's reproaches, until Julian, who had
long been trying to win him from Christianity, at last invited him to a public
discussion. Caesarius, in spite of the specious arguments of the Emperor, gained
the day, but, having now distinctly declared himself a Christian, could no
longer remain at court. On the death of Julian, he was esteemed and promoted
by successive Emperors, until he received from Valens the office of treasurer
of Bithynia. The exact character of this office and its rank are still undecided
by historical writers, some of whom attribute to him other offices not mentioned
by S. Gregory, which most probably were filled by a namesake. On the 11th of
October A.D. 368 the city of Nicaea was almost entirely destroyed by an earthquake
and Caesarius miraculously escaped with his life. Impressed by his escape,
he received Holy Baptism, and formed plans for retiring from office and (as
it seems) devoting himself to a life of ascetic discipline, which were dissipated
by his early and sudden death.
1. It
may be, my friends, my brethren, my fathers (ye who are dear to me in reality
as well as in name)
that you
think that I, who am about to pay the
sad tribute of lamentation to him who has departed, am eager to undertake the
task, and shall, as most men delight to do, speak at great length and in eloquent
style. And so some of you, who have had like sorrows to bear, are prepared
to join in my mourning and lamentation, in order to bewail your own griefs
in mine, and learn to feel pain at the afflictions of a friend, while others
are looking to feast their ears in the enjoyment of my words. For they suppose
that I must needs make my misfortune an occasion for display--as was once my
wont, when possessed of a superabundance of earthly things, and ambitious,
above all, of oratorical renown--before I looked up to Him Who is the true
and highest Word, and gave all up to God, from Whom all things come, and took
God for all in all. Now pray do not think this of me, if you wish to think
of me aright. For I am neither going to lament for him who is gone more than
is good--as I should not approve of such conduct even in others--nor am I going
to praise him beyond due measure. Albeit that language is a dear and especially
proper tribute to one gifted with it, and eulogy to one who was exceedingly
fond of my words--aye, not only a tribute, but a debt, the most just of all
debts. But even in my tears and admiration I must respect the law which regards
such matters: nor is this alien to our philosophy; for he says The memory of
the just is accompanied with eulogies,(<greek>a</greek>) and also,
Let tears fall down over the dead, and begin to lament, as if thou hadst suffered
great harm thyself:(<greek>b</greek>) removing us equally from
insensibility and immoderation. I shall proceed then, not only to exhibit the
weakness of human nature, but also to put you in mind of the dignity of the
soul, and, giving such consolation as is due to those who are in sor-sow, transfer
our grief, from that which concerns the flesh and temporal things, to those
things which are spiritual and eternal.
2. The parents of Caesarius, to take first the point which best becomes me,
are known to you all. Their excellence you are eager to notice, and hear of
with admiration, and share in the task of setting it forth to any, if there
be such, who know it not: for no single man is able to do so entirely, and
the task is one beyond the powers of a single tongue, however laborious, however
zealous. Among the many and great points for which they are to be celebrated
(I trust I may not seem extravagant in praising my own family) the greatest
of all, which more than any other stamps their character, is piety. By their
hoar hairs they lay claim to reverence, but they are no less venerable for
their virtue than for their age; for while their bodies are bent beneath the
burden of their years, their souls renew their youth in God.
3. His
father(<greek>a</greek>) was well grafted out of the wild
olive tree into the good one, and so far partook of its fatness as to be entrusted
with the engrafting of others, and charged with the culture of souls, presiding
in a manner becoming his high office over this people, like a second Aaron
or Moses, bidden himself to draw near to God,(<greek>b</greek>)
and to convey the Divine Voice to the others who stand afar off;(<greek>g</greek>)
gentle, meek, calm in mien,(<greek>d</greek>) fervent in spirit,
a fine man in external appearance, but richer still in that which is out of
sight. But why should I describe him whom you know? For I could not even by
speaking at great length say as much as he deserves, or as much as each of
you knows and expects to be said of him. It is then better to leave your own
fancy to picture him, than mutilate by my words the object of your admiration.
4. His
mother(<greek>e</greek>) was consecrated to God by virtue
of her descent from a saintly family, and was possessed of piety as a necessary
inheritance, not only for herself, but also for her children--being indeed
a holy lump from a holy firstfruits.(<greek>z</greek>) And this
she so far increased and amplified that some,(bold though the statement be,
I will utter it,) have both believed and said that even her husband's perfection
has been the work of none other than herself; and, oh how wonderful! she herself,
as the reward of her piety, has received a greater and more perfect piety.
Lovers of their children and of Christ as they both were, what is most extraordinary,
they were far greater lovers of Christ than of their children: yea, even their
one enjoyment of their children was that they should be acknowledged and named
by Christ, and their one measure of their blessedness in their children was
their virtue and close association with the Chief Good.(<greek>a</greek>)
Compassionate, sympathetic, snatching many a treasure from moths and robbers,(<greek>b</greek>)
and from the prince of this world,(<greek>g</greek>) to transfer
it from their sojourn here to the [true] habitation, laying up in store(<greek>d</greek>)
for their children the heavenly splendour as their greatest inheritance. Thus
have they reached a fair old age, equally reverend both for virtue and for
years, and full of days, alike of those which abide and those which pass away;
each one failing to secure the first prize here below only so far as equalled
by the other; yea, they have fulfilled the measure of every happiness with
the exception of this last trial, or discipline, whichever anyone may think
we ought to call it; I mean their having to send before them the child who
was, owing to his age, in greater danger of falling, and so to close their
life in safety, and be translated with all their family to the realms above.
5. I have entered into these details, not from a desire to eulogize them,
for this, I know well, it would be difficult worthily to do, if I made their
praise the subject of my whole oration, but to set forth the excellence inherited
from his parents by Caesarius, and so prevent you from being surprised or incredulous,
that one sprung from such progenitors, should have deserved such praises himself;
nay, strange indeed would it have been, had he looked to others and disregarded
the examples of his kinsfolk at home. His early life was such as becomes those
really well born and destined for a good life. I say little of his qualities
evident to all, his beauty, his stature, his manifold gracefulness, and harmonious
disposition, as shown in the tones of his voice--for it is not my office to
laud qualities of this kind, however important they may seem to others--and
proceed with what I have to say of the points which, even if I wished, I could
with difficulty pass by.
6. Bred
and reared under such influences, we were fully trained in the education
afforded here,(<greek>e</greek>) in which none could say how far
he excelled most of us from the quickness and extent of his abilities--and
how can I recall those days without my tears showing that, contrary to my promises,
my feelings have overcome my philosophic restraint? The time came when it was
decided that we should leave home, and then for the first time we were separated,
for I studied rhetoric in the then flourishing schools of Palestine; he went
to Alexandria, esteemed both then and now the home of every branch of learning.
Which of his qualities shall I place first and foremost, or which can I omit
with least injury to my description? Who was more faithful to his teacher than
he? Who more kindly to his classmates? Who more carefully avoided the society
and companionship of the depraved? Who attached himself more closely to that
of the most excellent, and among others, of the most esteemed and illustrious
of his countrymen? For he knew that we are strongly influenced to virtue or
vice by our companions. And in consequence of all this, who was more honoured
by the authorities than he, and whom did the whole city (though(<greek>a</greek>)
all individuals are concealed in it, because of its size), esteem more highly
for his discretion, or deem more illustrious for his intelligence?
7. What
branch of learning did he not master, or rather, in what branch of study
did he not surpass
those
who had made it their sole study? Whom did he
allow even to approach him, not only of his own time and age, but even of his
elders, who had devoted many more years to study? All subjects he studied as
one, and each as thoroughly as if he knew no other. The brilliant in intellect,
he surpassed in industry, the devoted students in quickness of perception;
nay, rather he outstripped in rapidity those who were rapid, in application
those who were laborious, and in both respects those who were distinguished
in both. From geometry and astronomy, that science so dangerous(<greek>b</greek>)
to anyone else, he gathered all that was helpful (I mean that he was led by
the harmony and order of the heavenly bodies to reverence their Maker), and
avoided what is injurious; not attributing all things that are or happen to
the influence of the stars, like those who raise their own fellow-servant,
the creation, in rebellion against the Creator, but referring, as is reasonable,
the motion of these bodies, and all other things besides, to God. In arithmetic
and mathematics, and in the wonderful art of medicine, in so far as it treats
of physiology and temperament, and the causes of disease, in order to remove
the roots and so destroy their offspring with them, who is there so ignorant
or contentious as to think him inferior to himself, and not to be glad to be
reckoned next to him, and carry off the second prize? This indeed is no unsupported
assertion, but East and West(<greek>g</greek>) alike, and every
place which he afterward visited, are as pillars inscribed with the record
of his learning.
8. But
when, after gathering into his single soul every kind of excellence and knowledge,
as a mighty
merchantman
gathers every sort of ware, he was voyaging
to his own city, in order to communicate to others the fair cargo of his culture,
there befell a wondrous thing, which I must, as its mention is most cheering
to me and may delight you, briefly set forth. Our mother,(<greek>a</greek>)
in her motherly love for her children, had offered up a prayer that, as she
had sent us forth together, she might see us together return home. For we seemed,
to our mother at least, if not to others, to form a pair worthy of her prayers
and glances, if seen together, though now, alas, our connection has been severed.
And God, Who hears a righteous prayer, and honours the love of parents for
well-disposed children, so ordered that, without any design or agreement on
our part, the one from Alexandria, the other from Greece, the one by sea, the
other by land, we arrived at the same city at the same time. This city was
Byzantium, which now presides over Europe, in which Caesarius, after the lapse
of a short time, gained such a repute, that public honours, an alliance with
an illustrious family, and a seat in the council of state were offered him;
and a mission was despatched to the Emperor by public decision, to beg that
the first of cities be adorned and honoured by the first of scholars (if he
cared at all for its being indeed the first, and worthy of its name); and that
to all its other titles to distinction this further one be added, that it was
embellished by having Caesarius as its physician and its inhabitant, although
its brilliancy was already assured by its throngs of great men both in philosophy
and other branches of learning. But enough of this. At this time there happened
what seemed to others a chance without reason or cause, such as frequently
occurs of its own accord in our day, but was more than sufficiently manifest
to devout minds as the result of the prayers to god-fearing parents, which
were answered by the united arrival of their sons by land and sea.
9. Well, among the noble traits of Caesarius' character, we must not fail
to note one, which perhaps is in others' eyes slight and unworthy of mention,
but seemed to me, both at the time and since, of the highest import, if indeed
brotherly love be a praiseworthy quality; nor shall I ever cease to place it
in the first rank, in relating the story of his life. Although the metropolis
strove to retain him by the honours I have mentioned, and declared that it
would under no circumstances let him go, my influence, which he valued most
highly on all occasions, prevailed upon him to listen to the prayer of his
parents, to supply his country's need, and to grant me my own desire. And when
he thus returned home in my company, he preferred me not only to cities and
peoples, not only to honours and revenues, which had in part already flowed
to him in abundance from many sources and in part were within his reach, but
even to the Emperor himself and his imperial commands. From this time, then,
having shaken off all ambition, as a hard master and a painful disorder, I
resolved to practise philosophy and adapt myself to the higher life: or rather
the desire was earlier born, the life came later. But my brother, who had dedicated
to his country the firstfruits of his learning, and gained an admiration worthy
of his efforts, was afterwards led by the desire of fame, and, as he persuaded
me, of being the guardian of the city, to betake himself to court, not indeed
according to my own wishes or judgment; for I will confess to you that I think
it a better and grander thing to be in the lowest rank with God than to win
the first place with an earthly king. Nevertheless I cannot blame him, for
inasmuch as philosophy is the greatest, so is it the most difficult, of professions,
which can be taken in hand by but few, and only by those who have been called
forth by the Divine magnanimity, which gives its hand to those who are honoured
by its preference. Yet it is no small thing if one, who has chosen the lower
form of life, follows after goodness, and sets greater store on God and his
own salvation than on earthly lustre; using it as a stage, or a manifold ephemeral
mask while playing in the drama of this world, but himself living unto God
with that image which he knows that he has received from Him, and must render
to Him Who gave it. That this was certainly the purpose of Caesarius, we know
full well.
10. Among
physicians he gained the foremost place with no great trouble, by merely
exhibiting his
capacity,
or rather some slight specimen of his capacity,
and was forthwith numbered among the friends of the Emperor, and enjoyed the
highest honours. But he placed the humane functions of his art at the disposal
of the authorities free of cost, knowing that nothing leads to further advancement
than virtue and renown for honourable deeds; so that he far surpassed in fame
those to whom he was inferior in rank. By his modesty he so won the love of
all that they entrusted their precious charges to his care, without requiring
him to be sworn by Hippocrates, since the simplicity of Crates was nothing
to his own: winning in general a respect beyond his rank; for besides the present
repute he was ever thought to have justly won, a still greater one was anticipated
for him, both by the Emperors(<greek>a</greek>) themselves and
by all who occupied the nearest positions to them. But, most important, neither
by his fame, nor by the luxury which surrounded him, was his nobility of soul
corrupted; for amidst his many claims to honour, he himself cared most for
being, and being known to be, a Christian, and, compared with this, all other
things were to him but trifling toys. For they belong to the part we play before
others on a stage which is very quickly set up and taken down again--perhaps
indeed more quickly destroyed than put together, as we may see from the manifold
changes of life, and fluctuations of prosperity; while the only real and securely
abiding good thing is godliness.
11. Such
was the philosophy of Caesarius, even at court: these were the ideas amidst
which he lived and
died, discovering and presenting to God, in the hidden
man, a still deeper godliness than was publicly visible. And if I must pass
by all else, his protection of his kinsmen in distress, his contempt for arrogance,
his freedom from assumption towards friends, his boldness towards men in power,
the numerous contests and arguments in which he engaged with many on behalf
of the truth, not merely for the sake of argument, but with deep piety and
fervour, I must speak of one point at least as especially worthy of note. The
Emperor(<greek>b</greek>) of unhappy memory was raging against
us, whose madness in rejecting Christ, after making himself its first victim,
had now rendered him intolerable to others; though he did not, like other fighters
against Christ, grandly enlist himself on the side of impiety, but veiled his
persecution under the form of equity; and, ruled by the crooked serpent which
possessed his soul, dragged down into his own pit his wretched victims by manifold
devices. His first artifice and contrivance was, to deprive us of the honour
of our conflicts (for, noble man as he was, he grudged this to Christians),
by causing us, who suffered for being Christians, to be punished as evil doers:
the second was, to call this process persuasion, and not tyranny, so that the
disgrace of those who chose to side with impiety might be greater than their
danger. Some he won over by money, some by dignities, some by promises, some
by various honours, which he bestowed, not royally but in right servile style,
in the sight of all, while everyone was influenced by the witchery of his words,
and his own example. At last he assailed Caesarius. How utter was the derangement
and folly which could hope to take for his prey a man like Caesarius, my brother,
the son of parents like ours!
12. However,
that I may dwell awhile upon this point, and luxuriate in my story as men
do who are
eyewitnesses
in some marvellous event,(<greek>a</greek>)
that noble man, fortified with the sign of Christ, and defending himself with
His Mighty Word, entered the lists against an adversary experienced in arms
and strong in his skill in argument. In no wise abashed at the sight, nor shrinking
at all from his high purpose through flattery, he was an athlete ready, both
in word and deed, to meet a rival of equal power. Such then was the arena,
and so equipped the champion of godliness. The judge on one side was Christ,
arming the athlete with His own sufferings: and on the other a dreadful tyrant,(<greek>b</greek>)
persuasive by his skill in argument, and overawing him by the weight of his
authority; and as spectators, on either hand, both those who were still left
on the side of godliness and those who had been snatched away by him, watching
whether victory inclined to their own side or to the other, and more anxious
as to which would gain the day than the combatants themselves.
13. Didst
thou not fear for Caesarius, lest aught unworthy of his zeal should befall
him? Nay, be
ye of good courage.
For the victory is with Christ, Who
overcame the world.(<greek>g</greek>) Now for my part, be well
assured, I should be highly interested in setting forth the details of the
arguments and allegations used on that occasion, for indeed the discussion
contains certain feats and elegances, which I dwell on with no slight pleasure;
but this would be quite foreign to an occasion and discourse like the present.
And when, after having torn to shreds all his opponent's sophistries, and thrust
aside as mere child's play every assault, veiled or open, Caesarius in a loud
clear voice declared that he was and remained a Christian--not even thus was
he finally dismissed. For indeed, the Emperor was possessed by an eager desire
to enjoy and be distinguished by his culture, and then uttered in the hearing
of all his famous saying--O happy father, O unhappy sons! thus deigning to
honour me, whose culture and godliness(<greek>a</greek>) he had
known at Athens, with a share in the dishonour of Caesarius, who was remanded
for a further trial.(<greek>b</greek>) (since Justice was fitly
arming the Emperor against the Persians),(<greek>g</greek>) and
welcomed by us after his happy escape and bloodless victory, as more illustrious
for his dishonour than for his celebrity.
14. This
victory I esteem far more sublime and honourable than the Emperor's mighty
power and splendid
purple
and costly diadem. I am more elated in describing
it than if he had won from him the half of his Empire. During the evil days
he lived in retirement, obedient herein to our Christian law,(<greek>d</greek>)
which bids us, when occasion offers, to make ventures on behalf of the truth,
and not be traitors to our religion from cowardice; yet refrain, as long as
may be, from rushing into danger, either in fear for our own souls, or to spare
those who bring the danger upon us. But when the gloom had been dispersed,
and the righteous sentence had been pronounced in a foreign land, and the glittering
sword had struck down the ungodly, and power had returned to the hands of Christians,
what boots it to say with what glory and honour, with how many and great testimonies,
as if bestowing rather than receiving a favour, he was welcomed again at the
Court; his new honour succeeding to that of former days; while tithe changed
its Emperors, the repute and commanding influence of Caesarius with them was
undisturbed, nay, they vied with each other in striving to attach him most
closely to themselves, and be known as his special friends and acquaintances.
Such was the godliness of Caesarius, such its results. Let all men, young and
old, give ear, and press on through the same virtue to the same distinction,
for glorious is the fruit of good labours,(<greek>e</greek>) if
they suppose this to be worth striving after, and a part of true happiness.
15. Again
another wonder concerning him is a strong argument for his parents' piety
and his own. He
was living
in Bithynia, holding an office of no small
importance from the Emperor, viz., the stewardship of his revenue, and care
of the exchequer: for this had been assigned to him by the Emperor as a prelude
to the highest offices. And when, a short time ago, the earthquake(<greek>a</greek>)
in Nicaea occurred, which is said to have been the most serious within the
memory of man, overwhelming in a common destruction almost all the inhabitants
and the beauty of the city, he alone, or with very few of the men of rank,
survived the danger, being shielded by the very falling ruins in his incredible
escape, and bearing slight traces of the peril; yet he allowed fear to lead
him to a more important salvation, for he dedicated himself entirely to the
Supreme Providence; he renounced the service of transitory things, and attached
himself to another court. This he both purposed himself, and made the object
of the united earnest prayers to which he invited me by letter, when I seized
this opportunity to give him warning,(<greek>b</greek>) as I never
ceased to do when pained that his great nature should be occupied in affairs
beneath it, and that a soul so fitted for philosophy should, like the sun behind
a cloud, be obscured amid the whirl of public life. Unscathed though he had
been by the earthquake, he was not proof against disease, since he was but
human. His escape was peculiar to himself; his death common to all mankind;
the one the token of his piety, the other the result of his nature. The former,
for our consolation, preceded his fate, so that, though shaken by his death,
we might exult in the extraordinary character of his preservation. And now
our illustrious Caesarius has been restored to us, when his honoured dust and
celebrated coarse, after being escorted home amidst a succession of hymns and
public orations, has been honoured by the holy hands of his parents; while
his mother, substituting the festal garments of religion for the trappings
of woe, has overcome her tears by her philosophy, and lulled to sleep lamentations
by psalmody, as her son enjoys honours worthy of his newly regenerate soul,
which has been, through water, transformed by the Spirit.
16. This, Caesarius, is my funeral offering to thee, this the firstfruits
of my words, which thou hast often blamed me for withholding, yet wouldst have
stripped off, had they been bestowed on thee; with this ornament I adorn thee,
an ornament, I know well, far dearer to thee than all others, though it be
not of the soft flowing tissues of silk, in which while living, with virtue
for thy sole adorning, thou didst not, like the many, rejoice; nor texture
of transparent linen, nor outpouring of costly unguents, which thou hadst long
resigned to the boudoirs of the fair, with their sweet savours lasting but
a single day; nor any other small thing valued by small minds, which would
have all been hidden to-day with thy fair form by this bitter stone. Far hence
be games and stories of the Greeks, the honours of ill-fated youths, with their
petty prizes for petty contests; and all the libations and firstfruits or garlands
and newly plucked flowers, wherewith men honour the departed, in obedience
to ancient custom and unreasoning grief, rather than reason. My gift is an
oration, which perhaps succeeding time will receive at my hand and ever keep
in motion, that it may not suffer him who has left us to be utterly lost to
earth, but may ever keep him whom we honour in men's ears and minds, as it
sets before them, more clearly than a portrait, the image of him for whom we
mourn.
17. Such
is my offering; if it be slight and inferior to his merit, God loveth that
which is according
to
our power.(<greek>a</greek>) Part of
our gift is now complete, the remainder we will now pay by offering (those
of us who still survive) every year our honours and memorials. And now for
thee, sacred and holy soul, we pray for an entrance into heaven; mayest thou
enjoy such repose as the bosom of Abraham affords, mayest thou behold the choir
of Angels, and the glories and splendours of sainted men; aye, mayest thou
be united to that choir and share in their joy, looking down from on high on
all things here, on what men call wealth, and despicable dignities, and deceitful
honours, and the errors of our senses, and the tangle of this life, and its
confusion and ignorance, as if we were fighting in the dark; whilst thou art
in attendance upon the Great King and filled with the light which streams forth
from Him: and may it be ours hereafter, receiving therefrom no such slender
rivulet, as is the object of our fancy in this day of mirrors and enigmas,
to attain to the fount of good itself, gazing with pure mind upon the truth
in its purity, and finding a reward for our eager toil here below on behalf
of the good, in our more perfect possession and vision of the good on high:
the end to which our sacred books and teachers foretell that our course of
divine mysteries shall lead us.
18. What; now remains? To bring the healing of the Word to those in sorrow.
And a powerful remedy for mourners is sympathy, for sufferers are best consoled
by those who have to bear a like suffering. To such, then, I specially address
myself, of whom I should be ashamed, if, with all other virtues, they do not
show the elements of patience. For even if they surpass all others in love
of their children, let them equally surpass them in love of wisdom and love
of Christ, and in the special practice of meditation on our departure hence,
impressing it likewise on their children, making even their whole life a preparation
for death. But if your misfortune still clouds your reason and, like the moisture
which dims our eyes, hides from you the clear view of your duty, come, ye elders,
receive the consolation of a young man, ye fathers, that of a child, who ought
to be admonished by men as old as you, who have admonished many and gathered
experience from your many years. Yet wonder not, if in my youth I admonish
the aged; and if in aught I can see better than the hoary, I offer it to you.
How much longer have we to live, ye men of honoured held, so near to God? How
long are we to suffer here? Not even man's whole life is long, compared with
the Eternity of the Divine Nature, still less the remains of life, and what
I may call the parting of our human breath, the close of our frail existence.
How much has Caesarius outstripped us? How long shall we be left to mourn his
departure? Are we not hastening to the same abode? Shall we not soon be covered
by the same stone? Shall we not shortly be reduced to the same dust? And what
in these short days will be our gain, save that after it has been ours to see,
or suffer, or perchance even to do, more ill, we must discharge the common
and inexorable tribute to the law of nature, by following some, preceding others,
to the tomb, mourning these, being lamented by those, and receiving from some
that meed of tears which we ourselves had paid to others?
19. Such,
my brethren, is our existence, who live this transient life, such our pastime
upon earth:
we come into existence
out of non-existence, and after
existing are dissolved. We are unsubstantial dreams, impalpable visions,(<greek>a</greek>)
like the flight of a passing bird, like a ship leaving no track upon the sea,(<greek>b</greek>)
a speck of dust, a vapour, an early dew, a flower that quickly blooms, and
quickly fades. As for man his days are as grass, as a flower of the field,
so he flourisheth.(<greek>g</greek>) Well hath inspired David discoursed
of our frailty, and again in these words, "Let me know the shortness of
my days;" and he defines the days of man as "of a span long."(<greek>a</greek>)
And what wouldst thou say to Jeremiah, who complains of his mother in sorrow
for his birth,(<greek>b</greek>) and that on account of others'
faults? I have seen all things,(<greek>g</greek>) says the preacher,
I have reviewed in thought all human things, wealth, pleasure, power, unstable
glory, wisdom which evades us rather than is won; then pleasure again, wisdom
again, often revolving the same objects, the pleasures of appetite, orchards,
numbers of slaves, store of wealth, serving men and serving maids, singing
men and singing women, arms, spearmen, subject nations, collected tributes,
the pride of kings, all the necessaries and superfluities of life, in which
I surpassed all the kings that were before me. And what does he say after all
these things? Vanity of vanities,(<greek>d</greek>) all is vanity
and vexation of spirit, possibly meaning some unreasoning longing of the soul,
and distraction of man condemned to this from the original fall: but hear,
he says, the conclusion of the whole matter, Fear God.(<greek>e</greek>)
This is his stay in his perplexity, and this is thy only gain from life here
below, to be guided through the disorder of the things which are seen(<greek>z</greek>)
and shaken, to the things which stand firm and are not moved. (<greek>h</greek>)
20. Let
us not then mourn Caesarius but ourselves, knowing what evils he has escaped
to which we are
left behind,
and what treasure we shall lay up, unless,
earnestly cleaving unto God and outstripping transitory things, we press towards
the life above, deserting the earth while we are still upon the earth, and
earnestly following the spirit which bears us upward. Painful as this is to
the faint-hearted, it is as nothing to men of brave mind. And let us consider
it thus. Caesarius will not reign, but rather will he be reigned over by others.
He will strike terror into no one, but he will be free from fear of any harsh
master, often himself unworthy even of a subject's position. He will not amass
wealth, but neither will he be liable to envy, or be pained at lack of success,
or be ever seeking to add to his gains as much again. For such is the disease
of wealth, which knows no limit to its desire of more, and continues to make
drinking the medicine for thirst. He will make no display of his power of speaking,
yet for his speaking will he be admired. He will not discourse upon the dicta
of Hippocrates and Galen, and their adversaries, but neither will he be troubled
by diseases, and suffer pain at the misfortunes of others. He will not set
forth the principles of Eucleides, Ptolemaeus, and Heron, but neither will
he be pained by the tumid vaunts of uncultured men. He will make no display
of the doctrines of Plato, and Aristotle, and Pyrrho, and the names of any
Democritus, and Heracleitus, Anaxagoras, Cleanthes and Epicurus, and all the
members of the venerable Porch and Academy: but neither will he trouble himself
with the solution of their cunning syllogisms. What need of further details?
Yet here are some which all men honour or desire. Nor wife nor child will he
have beside him, but he will escape mourning for, or being mourned by them,
or leaving them to others, or being left behind himself as a memorial of misfortune.
He will inherit no property: but he will have such heirs(<greek>a</greek>)
as are of the greatest service, such as he himself wished, so that he departed
hence a rich man, bearing with him all that was his. What an ambition! What
a new consolation! What magnanimity in his executors! A proclamation has been
heard, worthy of the ears of all, and a mother's grief has been made void by
a fair and holy promise, to give entirely to her son his wealth as a funeral
offering on his behalf, leaving nothing to those who expected it.
21. Is
this inadequate for our consolation? I will add a more potent remedy. I believe
the words
of the
wise, that every fair and God-be-loved soul, when,
set free from the bonds of the body, it departs hence, at once enjoys a sense
and perception of the blessings which await it, inasmuch as that which darkened
it has been purged away, or laid aside--I know not how else to term it--and
feels a wondrous pleasure and exultation, and goes rejoicing to meet its Lord,
having escaped as it were from the grievous poison of life here, and shaken
off the fetters which bound it and held down the wings of the mind, and so
enters on the enjoyment of the bliss laid up for it, of which it has even now
some conception. Then, a little later, it receives its kindred flesh, which
once shared in its pursuits of things above, from the earth which both gave
and had been entrusted with it, and in some way known to God, who knit them
together and dissolved them, enters with it upon the inheritance of the glory
there. And, as it shared, through their close union, in its hardships, so also
it bestows upon it a portion of its joys, gathering it up entirely into itself,
and becoming with it one in spirit and in mind and in God, the mortal and mutable
being swallowed up of life. Hear at least how the inspired Ezekiel discourses
of the knitting together of bones and sinews,(<greek>a</greek>)
how after him Saint Paul speaks of the earthly tabernacle, and the house not
made with hands, the one to be dissolved, the other laid up in heaven, alleging
absence from the body to be presence with the Lord,(<greek>b</greek>)
and bewailing his life in it as an exile, and therefore longing for and hastening
to his release. Why am I faint-hearted in my hopes? Why behave like a mere
creature of a day? I await the voice of the Archangel,(<greek>g</greek>)
the last trumpet,(<greek>d</greek>) the transformation of the heavens,
the transfiguration of the earth, the liberation of the elements, the renovation
of the universe.(<greek>e</greek>) Then shall I see Caesarius himself,
no longer in exile, no longer laid upon a bier, no longer the object of mourning
and pity, but brilliant, glorious, heavenly, such as in my dreams I have often
beheld thee, dearest and most loving of brothers, pictured thus by my desire,
if not by the very truth.
22. But
now, laying aside lamentation, I will look at myself, and examine my feelings,
that I may not
unconsciously
have in myself anything to be lamented.
O ye sons of men, for the words apply to you, how long will ye be hard-hearted
and gross in mind? Why do ye love vanity and seek after leasing,(<greek>z</greek>)
supposing life here to be a great thing and these few days many, and shrinking
from this separation, welcome and pleasant as it is, as if it were really grievous
and awful? Are we not to know ourselves? Are we not to cast away visible things?
Are we not to look to the things unseen? Are we not, even if we are somewhat
grieved, to be on the contrary distressed at our lengthened sojourn,(<greek>h</greek>)
like holy David, who calls things here the tents of darkness, and the place
of affliction, and the deep mire,(<greek>q</greek>) and the shadow
of death;(<greek>i</greek>) because we linger in the tombs we bear
about with us, because, though we are gods, we die like men(<greek>k</greek>)
the death of sin? This is my fear, this day and night accompanies me, and will
not let me breathe, on one side the glory, on the other the place of correction:
the former I long for till I can say, "My soul fainteth for Thy salvation;"(<greek>l</greek>)
from the latter I shrink back shuddering; yet I am not afraid that this body
of mine should utterly perish in dissolution and corruption; but that the glorious
creature of God (for glorious it is if upright, just as it is dishonourable
if sinful) in which is reason, morality, and hope, should be condemned to the
same dishonour as the brutes, and be no better after death; a fate to be desired
for the wicked, who are worthy of the fire yonder.
23. Would
that I might mortify my members that are upon the earth,(<greek>a</greek>)
would that I might spend my all upon the spirit, walking in the way that is
narrow and trodden by few, not that which is broad and easy.(<greek>b</greek>)
For glorious and great are its consequences, and our hope is greater than our
desert. What is man, that Thou art mindful of him?(<greek>g</greek>)
What is this new mystery which concerns me? I am small and great, lowly and
exalted, mortal and immortal, earthly and heavenly. I share one condition with
the lower world, the other with God; one with the flesh, the other with the
spirit. I must be buried with Christ, arise with Christ, be joint heir with
Christ, become the son of God, yea, God Himself. See whither our argument has
carried us in its progress. I almost own myself indebted to the disaster which
has inspired me with such thoughts, and made me more enamoured of my departure
hence. This is the purpose of the great mystery for us. This is the purpose
for us of God, Who for us was made man and became poor,(<greek>d</greek>)
to raise our flest,(<greek>e</greek>) and recover His image,(<greek>z</greek>)
and remodel man,(<greek>h</greek>) that we might all be made one
in Christ,(<greek>q</greek>) who was perfectly made in all of us
all that He Himself is,(<greek>i</greek>) that we might no longer
be male and female, barbarian, Scythian, bond or free(<greek>k</greek>)
(which are badges of the flesh), but might bear in ourselves only the stamp
of God, by Whom and for Whom we were made,(<greek>l</greek>) and
have so far received our form and model from Him, that we are recognized by
it alone.
24. Yea,
would that what we hope for might be, according to the great kindness of
our bountiful God,
Who asks
for little and bestows great things, both in
the present and in the future, upon those who truly love Him;(<greek>m</greek>)
bearing all things, enduring all things(<greek>n</greek>) for their
love and hope of Him, giving thanks for all things(<greek>x</greek>)
favourable and unfavourable alike: I mean pleasant and painful, for reason
knows that even these are often instruments of salvation; commending to Him
our own souls(<greek>o</greek>) and the souls of those fellow wayfarers
who, being more ready, have gained their rest before us. And, now that we have
done this, let us cease from our discourse, and yon too from your tears, hastening,
as yon now are, to your tomb, which as a sad abiding gift you have given to
Caesarius, seasonably prepared as it was for his parents in their old age,
and now unexpectedly bestowed on their son in his youth, though not without
reason in His eyes Who disposes our affairs. O Lord and Maker of all things,
and specially of this our frame! O God and Father and Pilot of men who are
Thine! O Lord of life and death! O Judge and Benefactor of our souls! O Maker
and Transformer in due time of all things(<greek>a</greek>) by
Thy designing Word,(<greek>b</greek>) according to the knowledge
of the depth of Thy wisdom and providence! do Thou now receive Caesarius, the
firstfruits of our pilgrimage; and if he who was last is first, we bow before
Thy Word, by which the universe is ruled; yet do Thou receive us also afterwards,
in a time when Thou mayest be found,(<greek>g</greek>) having ordered
us in the flesh as long as is for our profit; yea, receive us, prepared and
not troubled(<greek>d</greek>) by Thy fear, not departing from
Thee in our last day, nor violently borne away from things here, like souls
fond of the world and the flesh, but filled with eagerness for that blessed
and enduring life which is in Christ Jesus, our Lord, to whom be glory, world
without end. Amen.
ORATION VIII.
ON HIS SISTER GORGONIA.
The exact date of this Oration is uncertain. It is certainly ( 23) later than
the death of Caesarius, A.D. 369, and previous to the death of their father,
A.D. 374. So much we gather from the Oration itself, and the references made
by some authors to a poem of S. Gregory do not add anything certain to our
knowledge (Poem. Hist. I. 1. v.v. 108, 227). The place in which it was delivered
is, almost without doubt, the city in which her married life had been spent.
The public details of that life are familiar to the audience. Gorgonia's parents,
and the speaker himself, although known to them, are not spoken of in terms
implying intimacy such as we find in Orations known to have been delivered
at Nazianzus. The spiritual father and confidant of Gorgonia is present, certainly
in a position of authority, probably seated in the Episcopal throne. The husband
of Gorgonia (Epitaph. 24) was named Alypius. His home, as Clemencet and Benoit
agree, on the authority of Elias, was at Iconium, of which city, at the time,
Faustinus was bishop. The names of Gorgonia's two sons are unknown. Elias states
that they both became bishops. S. Gregory mentions her three daughters, Alypiana,
Eugenia, and Nonna, in his will. The oration is marked by an eloquence, piety,
and tender feeling which make it a worthy companion of that on Caesarius.
FUNERAL ORATION ON HIS SISTER GORGONIA.
1. In praising my sister, I shall pay honour to one of my own family; yet
my praise will not be false, because it is given to a relation, but, because
it is true, will be worthy of commendation, and its truth is based not only
upon its justice, but upon well-known facts. For, even if I wished, I should
not be permitted to be partial; since everyone who hears me stands, like a
skilful critic, between my oration and the truth, to discountenance exaggeration,
yet, if he be a man of justice, demanding what is really due. So that my fear
is not of outrunning the truth, but, on the contrary, of falling short of it,
and lessening her just repute by the extreme inadequacy of my panegyric; for
it is a hard task to match her excellences with suitable action and words.
Let us not then be so unjust as to praise every characteristic of other folk,
and disparage really valuable qualities because they are our own, so as to
make some men gain by their absence of kindred with us, while others suffer
for their relationship. For justice would be violated alike by the praise of
the one and the neglect of the other, whereas if we make the truth our standard
and rule, and look to her alone, disregarding all the objects of the vulgar
and the mean, we shall praise or pass over everything according to its merits.
2. Yet it would be most unreasonable of all, if, while we refuse to regard
it as a righteous thing to defraud, insult, accuse, or treat unjustly in any
way, great or small, those who are our kindred, and consider wrong done to
those nearest to us the worst of all; we were yet to imagine that it would
be an act of justice to deprive them of such an oration as is due most of all
to the good, and spend more words upon those who are evil, and beg for indulgent
treatment, than on those who are excellent and merely claim their due. For
if we are not prevented, as would be far more just, from praising men who have
lived outside our own circle, because we do not know and cannot personally
testify to their merits, shall we be prevented from praising those whom we
do know, because of our friendship, or the envy of the multitude, and especially
those who have departed hence, whom it is too late to ingratiate ourselves
with, since they have escaped, amongst all other things, from the reach of
praise or blame.
3. Having now made a sufficient defence on these points, and shown how necessary
it is for me to be the speaker, come, let me proceed with my eulogy, rejecting
all daintiness and elegance of style (for she whom we are praising was unadorned
and the absence of ornament was to her, beauty), and yet performing, as a most
indispensable debt, all those funeral rites which are her due, and further
instructing everyone in a zealous imitation of the same virtue, since it is
my object in every word and action to promote the perfection of those committed
to my charge. The task of praising the country and family of our departed one
I leave to another, more scrupulous in adhering to the rules of eulogy; nor
will he lack many fair topics, if he wish to deck her with external ornaments,
as men deck a splendid and beautiful form with gold and precious stones, and
the artistic devices of the craftsman; which, while they accentuate ugliness
by their contrast, can add no attractiveness to the beauty which surpasses
them. For my part, I will only conform to such rules so far as to allude to
our common parents, for it would not be reverent to pass unnoticed the great
blessing of having such parents and teachers, and then speedily direct my attention
to herself, without further taxing the patience of those who are eager to learn
what manner of woman she was.
4. Who
is there who knows not the Abraham and Sarah of these our latter days, Gregory
and Nonna his
wife? For
it is not well to omit the incitement to virtue
of mentioning their names. He has been justified by faith, she has dwelt with
him who is faithful; he beyond all hope has been the father of many nations,(<greek>a</greek>)
she has spiritually travailed in their birth; he escaped from the bondage of
his father's gods,(<greek>b</greek>) she is the daughter as well
as the mother of the free; he went out from kindred and home for the sake of
the land of promise,(<greek>a</greek>) she was the occasion of
his exile; for on this head alone I venture to claim for her an honour higher
than that of Sarah; he set forth on so noble a pilgrimage, she readily shared
with him in its toils; he gave himself to the Lord, she both called her husband
lord and regarded him as such, and in part was thereby justified; whose was
the promise, from whom, as far as in them lay, was born Isaac, and whose was
the gift.
5. This good shepherd was the result of his wife's prayers and guidance, and
it was from her that he learned his ideal of a good shepherd's life. He generously
fled from his idols, and afterwards even put demons to flight; he never consented
to eat salt with idolators: united together with a bond of one honour, of one
mind, of one soul, concerned as much with virtue and fellowship with God as
with the flesh; equal in length of life and hoary hairs, equal in prudence
and brilliancy, rivals of each other, soaring beyond all the rest, possessed
in few respects by the flesh, and translated in spirit, even before dissolution:
possessing not the world, and yet possessing it, by at once despising and rightly
valuing it: forsaking riches and yet being rich through their noble pursuits;
rejecting things here, and purchasing instead the things yonder: possessed
of a scanty remnant of this life, left over from their piety, but of an abundant
and long life for which they have laboured. I will say but one word more about
them: they have been rightly and fairly assigned, each to either sex; he is
the ornament of men, she of women, and not only the ornament but the pattern
of virtue.
6. From
them Gorgonia derived both her existence and her reputation; they sowed in
her the seeds
of piety, they
were the source of her fair life, and
of her happy departure with better hopes. Fair privileges these, and such as
are not easily attained by many of those who plume themselves highly upon their
noble birth, and are proud of their ancestry. But, if I must treat of her case
in a more philosophic and lofty strain, Gorgonia's native land was Jerusalem
above,(<greek>b</greek>) the object, not of sight but of contemplation,
wherein is our commonwealth, and whereto we are pressing on: whose citizen
Christ is, and whose fellow-citizens are the assembly and church of the first
born who are written in heaven, and feast around its great Founder in contemplation
of His glory, and take part in the endless festival; her nobility consisted
in the preservation of the Image, and the perfect likeness to the Archetype,
which is produced by reason and virtue and pure desire, ever more and more
conforming, in things pertaining to God, to those truly initiated into the
heavenly mysteries; and in knowing whence, and of what character, and for what
end we came into being.
7. This
is what I know upon these points: and therefore it is that I both am aware
and assert that
her soul
was more noble than those of the East,(<greek>a</greek>)
according to a better than the ordinary rule of noble or ignoble birth, whose
distinctions depend not on blood but on character; nor does it classify those
whom it praises or blames according to their families, but as individuals.
But speaking as I do of her excellences among those who know her, let each
one join in contributing some particular and aid me in my speech: for it is
impossible for one man to take in every point, however gifted with observation
and intelligence.
8. In modesty she so greatly excelled, and so far surpassed, those of her
own day, to say nothing of those of old time who have been illustrious for
modesty, that, in regard to the two divisions of the life of all, that is,
the married and the unmarried state, the latter being higher and more divine,
though more difficult and dangerous, while the former is more humble and more
safe, she was able to avoid the disadvantages of each, and to select and combine
all that is best in both, namely, the elevation of the one and the security
of the other, thus becoming modest without pride, blending the excellence of
the married with that of the unmarried state, and proving that neither of them
absolutely binds us to, or separates us from, God or the world (so that the
one from its own nature must be uttely avoided, and the other altogether praised):
but that it is mind which nobly presides over wedlock and maidenhood, and arranges
and works upon them as the raw material of virtue under the master-hand of
reason. For though she had entered upon a carnal union, she was not therefore
separated from the spirit, nor, because her husband was her head, did she ignore
her first Head: but, performing those few ministrations due to the world and
nature, according to the will of the law of the flesh, or rather of Him who
gave to the flesh these laws, she consecrated herself entirely to God. But
what is most excellent and honourable, she also won over her husband to her
side, and made of him a good fellow-servant, instead of an unreasonable master.
And not only so, but she further made the fruit of her body, her children and
her children's children, to be the fruit of her spirit, dedicating to God not
her single soul, but the whole family and household, and making wedlock illustrious
through her own acceptability in wedlock, and the fair harvest she had reaped
thereby; presenting herself, as long as she lived, as an example to her offspring
of all that was good, and when summoned hence, leaving her will behind her,
as a silent exhortation to her house.
9. The
divine Solomon, in his instructive wisdom, I mean his Proverbs, praises the
woman(<greek>a</greek>)
who looks to her household and loves her husband, contrasting her with one
who roams abroad, and is uncontrolled
and dishonourable, and hunts for precious souls with wanton words and ways,
while she manages well at home and bravely sets about her woman's duties, as
her hands hold the distaff, and she prepares two coats for her husband, buying
a field in due season, and makes good provision for the food of her servants,
and welcomes her friends at a liberal table; with all the other details in
which he sings the praises of the modest and industrious woman. Now, to praise
my sister in these points would be to praise a statue for its shadow, or a
lion for its claws, without allusion to its greatest perfections. Who was more
deserving of renown, and yet who avoided it so much and made herself inaccessible
to the eyes of man? Who knew better the due proportions of sobriety and cheerfulness,
so that her sobriety should not seem inhuman, nor her tenderness immodest,
but prudent in one, gentle in the other, her discretion was marked by a combination
of sympathy and dignity? Listen, ye women addicted to ease and display, who
despise the veil of shamefastness. Who ever so kept her eyes under control?
Who so derided laughter, that the ripple of a smile seemed a great thing to
her? Who more steadfastly closed her ears? And who opened them more to the
Divine words, or rather, who installed the mind as ruler of the tongue in uttering
the judgments of God? Who, as she, regulated her lips?
10. Here, if you will, is another point of her excellence: one of which neither
she nor any truly modest and decorous woman thinks anything: but which we have
been made to think much of, by those who are too fond of ornament and display,
and refuse to listen to instruction on such matters. She was never adorned
with gold wrought into artistic forms of surpassing beauty, nor flaxen tresses,
fully or partially displayed, nor spiral curls, nor dishonouring designs of
men who construct erections on the honourable head, nor costly folds of flowing
and transparent robes, nor graces of brilliant stones, which color the neighbouring
air, and cast a glow upon the form; nor the arts and witcheries of the painter,
nor that cheap beauty of the infernal creator who works against the Divine,
hiding with his treacherous pigments the creation of God, and putting it to
shame with his honour, and setting before eager eyes the imitation of an harlot
instead of the form of God, so that this bastard beauty may steal away that
image which should be kept for God and for the world to come. But though she
was aware of the many and various external ornaments of women, yet none of
them was more precious to her than her own character, and the brilliancy stored
up within. One red tint was dear to her, the blush of modesty; one white one,
the sign of temperance: but pigments and pencillings, and living pictures,
and flowing lines of beauty, she left to women of the stage and of the streets,
and to all who think it a shame and a reproach to be ashamed.
11. Enough of such topics. Of her prudence and piety no adequate account can
be given, nor many examples found besides those of her natural and spiritual
parents, who were her only models, and of whose virtue she in no wise fell
short, with this single exception most readily admitted, that they, as she
both knew and acknowledged, were the source of her goodness, and the root of
her own illumination. What could be keener than the intellect of her who was
recognized as a common adviser not only by those of her family, those of the
same people and of the one fold, but even by all men round about, who treated
her counsels and advice as a law not to be broken? What more sagacious than
her words? What more prudent than her silence? Having mentioned silence, I
will proceed to that which was most characteristic of her, most becoming to
women, and most serviceable to these times. Who had a fuller knowledge of the
things of God, both from the Divine oracles, and from her own understanding?
But who was less ready to speak, confining herself within the due limits of
women? Moreover, as was the bounden duty of a woman who has learned true piety,
and that which is the only honourable object of insatiate desire, who, as she,
adorned temples with offerings, both others and this one, which will hardly,
now she is gone, be so adorned again? Or rather, who so presented herself to
God as a living temple? Who again paid such honor to Priests, especially to
him who was her fellow soldier and teacher of piety, whose are the good seeds,
and the pair of children consecrated to God.
12. Who
opened her house to those who live according to God with a more graceful
and bountiful welcome?
And,
which is greater than this, who bade them welcome
with such modesty and godly greetings? Further, who showed a mind more unmoved
in sufferings? Whose soul was more sympathetic to those in trouble? Whose hand
more liberal to those in want? I should not hesitate to honour her with the
words of Job: Her door was opened to all comers; the stranger did not lodge
in the street. She was eyes to the blind, feet to the lame, a mother to the
orphan.(<greek>a</greek>) Why should I say more of her compassion
to widows, than that its fruit which she obtained was, never to be called a
widow herself? Her house was a common abode to all the needy of her family;
and her goods no less common to all in need than their own belonged to each.
She hath dispersed abroad and given to the poor,(<greek>b</greek>)
and according to the infallible truth of the Gospel, she laid up much store
in the wine-presses above, and oftentimes entertained Christ in the person
of those whose benefactress she was. And, best of all, there was in her no
unreal profession, but in secret she cultivated piety before Him who seeth
secret things. Everything she rescued from the ruler of this world, everything
she transferred to the safe garners. Nothing did she leave behind to earth,
save her body. She bartered everything for the hopes above: the sole wealth
she left to her children was the imitation of her example, and emulation of
her merits.
13. But
amid these tokens of incredible magnanimity, she did not surrender her body
to luxury, and
unrestrained pleasures
of the appetite, that raging
and tearing dog, as though presuming upon her acts of benevolence, as most
men do, who redeem their luxury by compassion to the poor, and instead of healing
evil with good, receive evil as a recompense for their good deeds. Nor did
she, while subduing her dust(<greek>a</greek>) by fasting, leave
to another the medicine of hard lying; nor, while she found this of spiritual
service, was she less restrained in sleep than anyone else; nor, while regulating
her life on this point as if freed from the body, did she lie upon the ground,
when others were passing the night erect, as the most mortified men struggle
to do. Nay in this respect she was seen to surpass not only women, but the
most devoted of men, by her intelligent chanting of the psalter, her converse
with, and unfolding and apposite recollection of, the Divine oracles, her bending
of her knees which had grown hard and almost taken root in the ground, her
tears to cleanse her stains with contrite heart and spirit of lowliness, her
prayer rising heavenward, her mind freed from wandering in rapture; in all
these, or in any one of them, is there man or woman who can boast of having
surpassed her? Besides, it is a great thing to say, but it is true, that while
she was zealous in her endeavour after some points of excellence, of others
she was the paragon: of some she was the discoverer, in others she excelled.
And if in some single particular she was rivalled, her superiority consists
in her complete grasp of all. Such was her success in all points, as none else
attained even in a moderate degree in one: to such perfection did she attain
in each particular, that any one might of itself have supplied the place of
all.
14. O
untended body, and squalid garments, whose only flower is virtue! O soul,
clinging to the body,
when
reduced almost to an immaterial state through
lack of food; or rather, when the body had been mortified by force, even before
dissolution, that the soul might attain to freedom, and escape the entanglements
of the senses! O nights of vigil, and psalmody, and standing which lasts from
one day to another! O David, whose strains never seem tedious to faithful souls!
O tender limbs, flung upon the earth and, contrary to nature, growing hard!
O fountains of tears, sowing in affliction that they might reap in joy.(<greek>b</greek>)
O cry in the night, piercing the clouds and reaching unto Him that dwelleth
in the heavens! O fervour of spirit, waxing bold in prayerful longings against
the dogs of night, and frosts and rain, and thunders, and hail, and darkness!
O nature of woman overcoming that of man in the common struggle for salvation,
and demonstrating that the distinction between male and female is one of body
not of soul! O Baptismal purity, O soul, in the pure chamber of thy body, the
bride of Christ! O bitter eating! O Eve mother of our race and of our sin!
O subtle serpent, and death, overcome by her self-discipline! O self-emptying
of Christ, and form of a servant, and sufferings, honoured by her mortification!
15. Oh!
how am I to count up all her traits, or pass over most of them without injury
to those who
know them
not? Here however it is right to subjoin the
rewards of her piety, for indeed I take it that you, who knew her life well,
have long been eager and desirous to find in my speech not only things present,
or her joys yonder, beyond the conception and hearing and sight of man, but
also those which the righteous Rewarder bestowed upon her here: a matter which
often tends to the edification of unbelievers, who from small things attain
to faith in those which are great, and from things which are seen to those
which are not seen. I will mention then some facts which are generally notorious,
others which have been from most men kept secret; and that because her Christian
principle made a point of not making a display of her [Divine] favours. You
know how her maddened mules ran away with her carriage, and unfortunately overturned
it, how horribly she Was dragged along, and seriously injured, to the scandal
of unbelievers at the permission of such accidents to the righteous, and how
quickly their unbelief was corrected: for, all crushed and bruised as she was,
in bones and limbs, alike in those exposed and in those out of sight, she would
have none of any physician, except Him Who had permitted it; both because she
shrunk from the inspection and the hands of men, preserving, even in suffering,
her modesty, and also awaiting her justification from Him Who allowed this
to happen, so that she owed her preservation to none other than to Him: with
the result that men were no less struck by her unhoped-for recovery than by
her misfortune, and concluded that the tragedy had happened for her glorification
through sufferings, the suffering being human, the recovery superhuman, and
giving a lesson to those who come after, exhibiting in a high degree faith
in the midst of suffering, and patience under calamity, but in a still higher
degree the kindness of God to them that are such as she. For to the beautiful
promise to the righteous "though he fall, he shall not be utterly broken,"(<greek>a</greek>)
has been added one more recent, "though he be utterly broken, he shall
speedily be raised up and glorified."(<greek>b</greek>) For
if her misfortune was unreasonable, her recovery was extraordinary, so that
health soon stole away the injury, and the cure became more celebrated than
the blow.
16. O
remarkable and wonderful disaster! O injury more noble than security! O prophecy, "He hath smitten, and He will bind us up, and revive us, and
after three days He will raise us up,"(<greek>a</greek>) portending
indeed, as it did, a greater and more sublime event, yet no less applicable
to Gorgonia's sufferings! This then, notorious to all, even to those afar off,
for the wonder spread to all, and the lesson was stored up in the tongues and
ears of all, with the other wonderful works and powers of God. But the following
incident, hitherto unknown and concealed from moot men by the Christian principle
I spoke of, and her pious shrinking from vanity and display, dost thou bid
me tell, O best(<greek>b</greek>) and most perfect of shepherds,
pastor of this holy sheep, and dost thou further give thy assent to it, since
to us alone has this secret been entrusted, and we were mutual witnesses of
the marvel, or are we still to keep our faith to her who is gone? Yet I do
think, that as that was the time to be silent, this is the time to manifest
it, not only for the glory of God, but also for the consolation of those in
affliction.
17. She was sick in body, and dangerously ill of an extraordinary and malignant
disease, her whole frame was incessantly fevered, her blood at one time agitated
and boiling, then curdling with coma, incredible pallor, and paralysis of mind
and limbs: and this not at long intervals, but sometimes very frequently. Its
virulence seemed beyond human aid; the skill of physicians, who carefully examined
the case, both singly and in consultation, was of no avail; nor the tears of
her parents, which often have great power, nor public supplications and intercessions,
in which all the people joined as earnestly as if for their own preservation:
for her safety was the safety of all, as, on the contrary, her suffering and
sickness was a common misfortune.
18. What
then did this great soul, worthy offspring of the greatest, and what was
the medicine for
her disorder,
for we have now come to the great secret?
Despairing of all other aid, she betook herself to the Physician of all, and
awaiting the silent hours of night, during a slight intermission of the disease,
she approached the altar with faith, and, calling upon Him Who is honoured
thereon, with a mighty cry, and every kind of invocation, calling to mind all
His former works of power, and well she knew those both of ancient and of later
days, at last she ventured on an act of pious and splendid effrontery: she
imitated the woman whose fountain of blood was dried up by the hem of Christ's
garment.(<greek>a</greek>) What did she do? Resting her head with
another cry upon the altar, and with a wealth of tears, as she who once bedewed
the feet of Christ,(<greek>b</greek>) and declaring that she would
not loose her hold until she was made whole, she then applied her medicine
to her whole body, viz., such a portion of the antitypes(<greek>g</greek>)
of the Precious Body and Blood as she treasured in her hand, mingling therewith
her tears, and, O the wonder, she went away feeling at once that she was saved,
and with the lightness of health in body, soul, and mind, having received,
as the reward of her hope, that which she hoped for, and having gained bodily
by means of spiritual strength. Great though these things be, they are not
untrue. Believe them all of you, whether sick or sound, that ye may either
keep or regain your health. And that my story is no mere boastfulness is plain
from the silence in which she kept, while alive, what I have revealed. Nor
should I now have published it, be well assured, had I not feared that so great
a marvel would have been utterly hidden from the faithful and unbelieving of
these and later days.
19. Such
was her life. Most of its details I have left untold, lest my speech should
grow to undue
proportions,
and lest I should seem to be too greedy for
her fair fame: but perhaps we should be wronging her holy and illustrious death,
did we not mention some of its excellences; especially as she so longed for
and desired it. I will do so therefore, as concisely as I can. She longed for
her dissolution, for indeed she had great boldness towards Him who called her,
and preferred to be with Christ, beyond all things on earth.(<greek>d</greek>)
And there is none of the most amorous and unrestrained, who has such love for
his body, as she had to fling away these fetters, and escape from the mire
in which we spend our lives, and to associate in purity with Him Who is Fair,
and entirely to hold her Beloved, Who is I will even say it, her Lover, by
Whose rays, feeble though they now are, we are enlightened, and Whom, though
separated from Him, we are able to know. Nor did she fail even of this desire,
divine and sublime though it was, and, what is still greater, she had a foretaste
of His Beauty through her forecast and constant watching. Her only sleep transferred
her to exceeding joys, and her one vision embraced her departure at the foreappointed
time, having been made aware of this day, so that according to the decision
of God she might be prepared and yet not disturbed.
20. She
had recently obtained the blessing of cleansing and perfection, which we
have all received from
God
as a common gift and foundation of our new(<greek>a</greek>)
life. Or rather all her life was a cleansing and perfecting: and while she
received regeneration from the Holy Spirit, its security was hers by virtue
of her former life. And in her case almost alone, I will venture to say, the
mystery was a seal rather than a gift of grace. And when her husband's perfection
was her one remaining desire (and if you wish me briefly to describe the man,
I do not know what more to say of him than that he was her husband) in order
that she might be consecrated to God in her whole body, and not depart half-perfected,
or leave behind her imperfect anything that was hers; she did not even fail
of this petition, from Him Who fulfils the desire of them that fear Him,(<greek>b</greek>)
and accomplishes their requests.
21. And now when she had all things to her mind, and nothing was lacking of
her desires, and the appointed time drew nigh, being thus prepared for death
and departure, she fulfilled the law which prevails in such matters, and took
to her bed. After many injunctions to her husband, her children, and her friends,
as was to be expected from one who was full of conjugal, maternal, and brotherly
love, and after making her last day a day of solemn festival with brilliant
discourse upon the things above, she fell asleep, full not of the days of man,
for which she had no desire, knowing them to be evil for her, and mainly occupied
with our dust and wanderings, but more exceedingly full of the days of God,
than I imagine any one even of those who have departed in a wealth of hoary
hairs, and have numbered many terms of years. Thus she was set free, or, it
is better to say, taken to God, or flew away, or changed her abode, or anticipated
by a little the departure of her body.
22. Yet
what was I on the point of omitting? But perhaps thou, who art her spiritual
father, wouldst
not
have allowed me, and hast carefully concealed
the wonder, and made it known to me. It is a great point for her distinction,
and in our memory of her virtue, and regret for her departure. But trembling
and tears have seized upon me, at the recollection of the wonder. She was just
passing away, and at her last breath, surrounded by a group of relatives and
friends performing the last offices of kindness, while her aged mother bent
over her, with her soul convulsed with envy of her departure, anguish and affection
being blended in the minds of all. Some longed to hear some burning word to
be branded in their recollection; others were eager to speak, yet no one dared;
for tears were mute and the pangs of grief unconsoled, since it seemed sacrilegious,
to think that mourning could be an honour to one who was thus passing away.
So there was solemn silence, as if her death had been a religious ceremony.
There she lay, to all appearance, breathless, motionless, speechless; the stillness
of her body seemed paralysis, as though the organs of speech were dead, after
that which could move them was gone. But as her pastor, who in this wonderful
scene, was carefully watching her, perceived that her lips were gently moving,
and placed his ear to them, which his disposition and sympathy emboldened him
to do,--but do you expound the meaning of this mysterious calm, for no one
can disbelieve it on your word! Under her breath she was repeating a psalm--the
last words of a psalm--to say the truth, a testimony to the boldness with which
she was departing, and blessed is he who can fall asleep with these words, "I
will lay me down in peace, and take my rest."(<greek>a</greek>)
Thus wert thou singing, fairest of women, and thus it fell out unto thee; and
the song became a reality, and attended on thy departure as a memorial of thee,
who hast entered upon sweet peace after suffering, and received (over and above
the rest which comes to all), that sleep which is due to the beloved,(<greek>b</greek>)
as befitted one who lived and died amid the words of piety.
23. Better,
I know well, and far more precious than eye can see, is thy present lot,
the song of them
that
keep holy-day,(<greek>g</greek>) the
throng of angels, the heavenly host, the vision of glory, and that splendour,
pure and perfect beyond all other, of the Trinity Most High, no longer beyond
the ken of the captive mind, dissipated by the senses, but entirely contemplated
and possessed by the undivided mind, and flashing upon our souls with the whole
light of Godhead: Mayest thou enjoy to the full all those things whose crumbs
thou didst, while still upon earth, possess through the reality of thine inclination
towards them. And if thou takest any account of our affairs, and holy souls
receive from God this privilege, do thou accept these words of mine, in place
of, and in preference to many panegyrics, which I have bestowed upon Caesarius
before thee, and upon thee after him--since I have been preserved to pronounce
panegyrics upon my brethren. If any one will, after you, pay me the like honour,
I cannot say. Yet may my only honour be that which is in God, and may my pilgrimage
and my home be in Christ Jesus our Lord, to Whom, with the Father and the Holy
Ghost, be glory for ever. Amen.
ORATION XII.
TO HIS FATHER, WHEN HE HAD ENTRUSTED TO HIM THE CARE OF THE CHURCH OF NAZIANZUS.
THIS Oration
was delivered A.D. 372. Two years earlier Valens had divided Cappadocia into
two provinces.
Anthimus, Bishop of Tyana, asserting that the
ecclesiastical provinces were regulated by those of the empire, claimed metropolitical
rights over the churches of Cappadocia Secunda, in opposition to S. Basil,
who had hitherto been metropolitan of the undivided province. S. Basil, with
the intention of vindicating the permanence of his former rights, created a
new see at Sasima, on the borders of the two provinces, and with great difficulty
prevailed upon S. Gregory to receive consecration as its first Bishop. S. Gregory,
who had "bent his neck, but not his will,"(<greek>a</greek>)
was for a long time reluctant to enter upon his Episcopal duties, and at last
was prevailed upon by S. Gregory of Nyssa, S. Basil's brother, to make an attempt
to do so. When, however, he found that Anthimus was prepared to bar his entrance
by force of arms, he returned home, definitely resigned his see, and once more
betook himself to the life of solitude which he so dearly loved. Recalled hence,
he consented,(<greek>b</greek>) at his father's earnest entreaty,
to undertake provisionally the duties of Bishop-coadjutor of Nazianzus: and
pronounced this short discourse on the occasion of his installation.
1. I opened
my mouth, and drew in the Spirit,(<greek>g</greek>)
and I give myself and my all to the Spirit, my action and speech, my inaction
and silence, only let Him hold me and guide me, and move both hand and mind
and tongue whither it is right, and He wills: and restrain them as it is right
and expedient. I am an instrument of God, a rational instrument, an instrument
tuned and struck by that skilful artist, the Spirit. Yesterday His work in
me was silence. I mused on abstinence from speech. Does He strike upon my mind
today? My speech shall be heard, and I will muse on utterance. I am neither
so talkative, as to desire to speak, when He is bent on silence; nor so reserved
and ignorant as to set a watch before my lips(<greek>a</greek>)
when it is the time to speak: but I open and close my door at the will of that
Mind and Word and Spirit, Who is One kindred Deity.
2. I will
speak then, since I am so bidden. And I will speak both to the good shepherd
here, and
to you, his
holy flock, as I think is best both for me to
speak, and for you to hear to-day. Why is it that you have begged for one to
share your shepherd's toil? For my speech shall begin with you, O dear and
honoured head, worthy of that of Aaron, down which runs that spiritual and
priestly ointment upon his beard and clothing.(<greek>b</greek>)
Why is it that, while yet able to stablish and guide many, and actually guiding
them in the power of the Spirit, you support yourself with a staff and prop
in your spiritual works? Is it because you have heard and know that even with
the illustrious Aaron were anointed Eleazar and Ithamar, the sons of Aaron?(<greek>g</greek>)
For I pass over Nadab and Abihu,(<greek>d</greek>) test the allusion
be ill-omened: and Moses during his lifetime appoints Joshua in his stead,
as lawgiver and general over those who were pressing on to the land of promise?
The office of Aaron and Hur, supporting the hands of Moses on the mount where
Amalek was warred down(<greek>e</greek>) by the Cross,(<greek>z</greek>)
prefigured and typified long before, I feel willing to pass by, as not very
suitable or applicable to us: for Moses did not choose them to share his work
as lawgiver, but as helpers in his prayer and supports for the weariness of
his hands.
3. What
is it then that ails you? What is your weakness? Is it physical? I am ready
to sustain you,
yea I have
sustained, and been sustained, like Jacob
of old, by your fatherly blessings.(<greek>h</greek>) Is it spiritual?
Who is stronger, and more fervent, especially now, when the powers of the flesh
are ebbing and fading, like so many barriers which interfere with, and dim
the brilliancy of a light? For these powers are wont, for the most part, to
wage war upon and oppose one another, while the body's health is purchased
by the sickness of the soul, and the soul flourishes and looks upward when
pleasures are stilled and fade away along with the body. But, wonderful as
your simplicity and nobility have seemed to me before, how is it that you have
no fear, especially in times like these, that your spirit will be considered
a pretext, and that most men will suppose, in spite of our spiritual professions,
that we are undertaking this from carnal motives. For most men have made(<greek>a</greek>)
the office to be looked upon as great and princely, and accompanied with considerable
enjoyment, even though a man have the charge and rule over a more slender flock
than this, and one which affords more troubles than pleasures. Thus far of
your simplicity, or parental preference, if it be so, which makes you neither
admit yourself, nor readily suspect in others anything disgraceful; for a mind
hardly roused to evil, is slow to suspect evil. My second duty is briefly to
address this people of yours, or now even of mine.
4. I have
been overpowered, my friends and brethren, for I will now, though I did not
at the time, ask
for
your aid. I have been overpowered by the old
age of my father, and, to use moderate terms, the kindliness of my friend.
So, help me, each of you who can, and stretch out a hand to me who am pressed
down and torn asunder by regret and enthusiasm. The one suggests flights, mountains
and deserts, and calm of soul and body, and that the mind should retire into
itself, and recall its powers from sensible things, in order to hold pure communion
with God, and be clearly illumined by the flashing rays of the Spirit, with
no admixture or disturbance of the divine light by anything earthly or clouded,
Until we come to the source of the effulgence which we enjoy here, and regret
and desire are alike stayed, when our mirrors(<greek>b</greek>)
pass away in the light of truth. The other wills that I should come forward,
and bear fruit for the common good, and be helped by helping others; and publish
the Divine light, and bring to God a people for His own possession, a holy
nation, a royal priesthood,(<greek>g</greek>) and His image cleansed
in many souls. And this, because, as a park is better than and preferable to
a tree, the whole heaven with its ornaments to a single star, and the body
to a limb, so also, in the sight of God, is the reformation of a whole church
preferable to the progress of a single soul: and therefore, I ought not to
look only on my own interest, but also on that of others.(<greek>a</greek>)
For Christ also likewise, when it was possible for him to abide in His own
honour and deity, not only so far emptied Himself as to take the form of a
slave,(<greek>b</greek>) but also endured the cross, despising
the shame,(<greek>g</greek>) that he might by His own sufferings
destroy sin, and by death slay death.(<greek>d</greek>) The former
are the imaginings of desire, the latter the teachings of the Spirit. And I,
standing midway between the desire and the Spirit, and not knowing to which
of the two I should rather yield, will impart to you what seems to me the best
and safest course, that you may test it with me and take part in my design.
5. It
seemed to me to be best and least dangerous to take a middle course between
desire and fear,
and to yield
in part to desire, in part to the Spirit:
and that this would be the case, if I neither altogether evaded the office,
and so refused the grace, which would be dangerous, nor yet assumed a burden
beyond my powers, for it is a heavy one. The former indeed is suited to the
person of another, the latter to another's power, or rather to undertake both
would be madness. But piety and safety would alike advise me to proportion
the office to my power, and as is the case with food, to accept that which
is within my power and refuse what is beyond it for health is gained for the
body, and tranquillity for the soul, by such a course of moderation. Therefore
I now consent to share in the cares of my excellent father, like an eaglet,
not quite vainly flying close to a mighty and high soaring eagle. But hereafter
I will offer my wing to the Spirit to be borne whither, and as, He wills: no
one shall force or drag me in any direction, contrary to His counsel. For sweet
it is to inherit a father's toils, and this flock is more familiar than a strange
and foreign one; I would even add, more precious in the sight of God, unless
the spell of affection deceives me, and the force of habit robs me of perception:
nor is there any more useful or safer course than that willing rulers should
rule willing subjects: since it is our practice not to lead by force, or by
compulsion, but by good will. For this would not hold together even another
form of government, since that which is held in by force is wont, when opportunity
offers, to strike for freedom: but freedom of will more than anything else
it is, which holds together our--I will not call it rule, but--tutorship. For
the mystery of godliness(<greek>a</greek>) belongs to those who
are willing, not to those who are overpowered.
6. This
is my speech to you, my good men, uttered in simplicity and with all good
will, and this
is the secret
of my mind. And may the victory rest with
that which will be for the profit of both you and me, under the Spirit's guidance
of our affairs, (for our discourse comes back again to the same point,)(<greek>b</greek>)
to Whom we have given ourselves, and the head anointed with the oil of perfection,
in the Almighty Father, and the Only-begotten Son, and the Holy Spirit, Who
is God. For how long shall we hide(<greek>g</greek>) the lamp under
the bushel,(<greek>d</greek>) and withhold from others the full
knowledge of the Godhead, when it ought to be now put upon the lampstand and
give light to all churches and souls and to the whole fulness of the world,
no longer by means of metaphors, or intellectual sketches, but by distinct
declaration? And this indeed is a most perfect setting forth of Theology to
those Who have been deemed worthy of this grace in Christ Jesus Himself, our
Lord, to Whom be glory, honour, and power for ever. Amen.
Return to Volume 30 Index