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JOHN CASSIAN
THE TWELVE BOOKS
ON THE INSTITUTES OF THE COENOBIA
AND THE REMEDIES
FOR THE EIGHT PRINCIPAL FAULTS
BOOKS VI TO VIII
BOOK VI
ON THE SPIRIT OF FORNICATION.
WE have thought best to omit altogether the translation of this book.
BOOK VII
OF THE SPIRIT OF COVETOUSNESS.
CHAPTER I.
How our warfare with covetousness is a foreign one, and how this fault is
not a natural one in man, as the other faults are.
OUR third conflict is against covetousness which we can describe as the love
of money; a foreign warfare, and one outside of our nature, and in the case
of a monk originating only from the state of a corrupt and sluggish mind, and
often from the beginning of his renunciation being unsatisfactory, and his
love towards God being lukewarm at its foundation. For the rest of the incitements
to sin planted in human nature seem to have their commencement as it were congenital
with us, and somehow being deeply rooted in our flesh, and almost coeval with
our birth, anticipate our powers of discerning good and evil, and although
in very early days they attack a man, yet they are overcome with a long struggle.
CHAPTER II.
How dangerous is the disease of covetousness.
But this
disease coming upon us at a later period, and approaching the soul from without,
as it can
be the
more easily guarded against and resisted, so;
if it is disregarded and once allowed to gain an entrance into the heart, is
the more dangerous to every one, and with the greater difficulty expelled.
For it becomes "a root of all evils,"(1) and gives rise to a multiplicity
of incitements to sin.
CHAPTER III.
What is the usefulness of those vices which are natural to the flesh.
For example,
do not we see those natural impulses of the flesh not only in boys in whom
innocence
still anticipates
the discernment of good and evil,
but even in little children and infants, who although they have not even the
slightest approach to lust within them, yet show that the impulses of the flesh
exist in them and are naturally excited? Do not we also see that the deadly
pricks of anger already exist in full vigour likewise in little children? and
before they have learnt the virtue of patience, we see that they are disturbed
by wrongs, and feel affronts offered to them even by way of a joke; and sometimes,
although strength is lacking to them, the desire to avenge themselves is not
wanting, when anger excites them. Nor do I say this to lay the blame on their
natural state, but to point out that of these impulses which proceed from us,
some are implanted in us for a useful purpose, while some are introduced from
without, through the fault of carelessness and the desire of an evil will.
For these carnal impulses, of which we spoke above, were with a useful purpose
implanted in our bodies by the providence of the Creator, viz.: for perpetuating
the race, and raising up children for posterity: and not for committing adulteries
and debaucheries, which the authority of the law also condemns. The pricks
of anger too, do we not see that they have been most wisely given to us, that
being enraged at our sins and mistakes, we may apply ourselves the rather to
virtues and spiritual exercises, showing forth all love towards God, and patience
towards our brethren? We know too how great is the use of sorrow, which is
reckoned among the other vices, when it is turned to an opposite use. For on
the one hand, when it is in accordance with the fear of God it is most needful,
and on the other, when it is in accordance with the world, most pernicious;
as the Apostle teaches us when he says that "the sorrow which is according
to God worketh repentance that is steadfast unto salvation, but the sorrow
of the world worketh death."
CHAPTER IV.
That we can say that there exist in us some natural faults, without wronging
the Creator.
IF then we say that these impulses were implanted in us by the Creator, He
will not on that account seem blameworthy, if we choose wrongly to abuse them,
and to pervert them to harmful purposes, and are ready to be made sorry by
means of the useless Cains of this world, and not by means of showing penitence
and the correction of our faults: or at least if we are angry not with ourselves
(which would be profitable) but with our brethren in defiance of God's command.
For in the case of iron, which is given us for good and useful purposes, if
any one should pervert it for murdering the innocent, one would not therefore
blame the maker of the metal because man had used to injure others that which
he had provided for good and useful purposes of living happily.
CHAPTER V.
Of the faults which are contracted through our own fault, without natural
impulses.
BUT we affirm that some faults grow up without any natural occasion giving
birth to them, but simply from the free choice of a corrupt and evil will,
as envy and this very sin of covetousness; which are caught (so to speak) from
without, having no origination in us from natural instincts. But these, in
proportion as they are easily guarded against and readily avoided, just so
do they make wretched the mind that they have got hold of and seized, and hardly
do they suffer it to get at the remedies which would cure it: either because
these who are wounded by persons whom they might either have ignored, or avoided,
or easily overcome, do not deserve to be healed by a speedy cure, or else because,
having laid the foundations badly, they are unworthy to raise an edifice of
virtue and reach the summit of perfection.
CHAPTER VI.
How difficult the evil of covetousness is to drive away when once it has been
admitted.
WHEREFORE
let not this evil seem of no account or unimportant to anybody: for as it
can easily be
avoided,
so if it has once got hold of any one, it
scarcely suffers him to get at the remedies for curing it. For it is a regular
nest of sins, and a "root of all kinds of evil," and becomes a hopeless
incitement to wickedness, as the Apostle says, "Covetousness," i.e.
the love of money, "is a root of all kinds of evil."(1)
CHAPTER VII.
Of the source from which covetousness springs, and of the evils of which it
is itself the mother.
When then
this vice has got hold of the slack and lukewarm soul of some monk, it begins
by tempting
him in
regard of a small sum of money, giving him excellent
and almost reasonable excuses why he ought to retain some money for himself.
For he complains that what is provided in the monastery is not sufficient,
and can scarcely be endured by a sound and sturdy body. What is he to do if
ill health comes on, and he has no special store of his own to support him
in his weakness? He says that the allowance of the monastery is but meagre,
and that there is the greatest carelessness about the sick: and if he has not
something of his own so that he can look after the wants of his body, he will
perish miserably. The dress which is allowed him is insufficient, unless he
has provided something with which to procure another. Lastly, he says that
he cannot possibly remain for long in the same place and monastery, and that
unless he has secured the money for his journey, and the cost of his removal
over the sea, he cannot move when he wants to, and, detained by the compulsion
of want, will henceforth drag out a wretched and wearisome existence without
making the slightest advance: that he cannot without indignity be supported
by another's substance, as a pauper and one in want. And so when he has bamboozled
himself with such thoughts as these, he racks his brains to think how he can
acquire at least one penny. Then he anxiously searches for some special work
which he can do without the Abbot knowing anything about it. And selling it
secretly, and so securing the coveted coin, he torments himself worse and worse
in thinking how he can double it: puzzled as to where to deposit it, or to
whom to intrust it. Then he is oppressed with a still weightier care as to
what to buy with it, or by what transaction he can double it. And when this
has turned out as he wished, a still more greedy craving for gold springs up,
and is more and more keenly excited, as his store of money grows larger and
larger. For with the increase of wealth the mania of covetousness increases.
Then next he has forebodings of a long life, and an enfeebled old age, and
infirmities of all sorts, and long drawn out, which will be insupportable in
old age, unless a large store of money has been laid by in youth. And so the
wretched soul is agitated, and held fast, as it were, in a serpent's toils,
while it endeavours to add to that heap which it has unlawfully secured, by
still more unlawful care, and itself gives birth to plagues which inflame it
more sorely, and being entirely absorbed in the quest of gain, pays attention
to nothing but how to get money with which to fly(2) as quickly as possible
from the discipline of the monastery, never keeping faith where there is a
gleam of hope of money to be got. For this it shrinks not from the crime of
lying, perjury, and theft, of breaking a promise, of giving way to injurious
bursts of passion. If the man has dropped away at all from the hope of gain,
he has no scruples about transgressing the bounds of humility, and through
it all gold and the love of gain become to him his god, as the belly does to
others. Wherefore the blessed Apostle, looking out on the deadly poison of
this pest, not only says that it is a root of all kinds of evil, but also calls
it the worship of idols, saying "And covetousness (which in Greek is called <greek>filarguria</greek>)
which is the worship of idols."(3) You see then to what a downfall this
madness step by step leads, so that by the voice of the Apostle it is actually
declared to be the worship of idols and false gods, because passing over the
image and likeness of God (which one who serves God with devotion ought to
preserve undefiled in himself), it chooses to love and care for images stamped
on gold instead of God.
CHAPTER VIII.
How covetousness is a hindrance to all virtues.
With such strides then in a downward direction he goes from bad to worse,
and at last cares not to retain I will not say the virtue but even the shadow
of humility, charity, and obedience; and is displeased with everything, and
murmurs and groans over every work; and now i having cast off all reverence,
like a bad-tempered horse, dashes off headlong and unbridled: and discontented
with his daily food and usual clothing, announces that he wall not put up with
it any longer. He declares that God is not only there, and that his salvation
is not confined to that place, where, if he does not take himself off pretty
quickly from it, he deeply laments that he will soon die.
CHAPTER IX.
How a monk who has money cannot stay in the monastery.
And so having money to provide for his wanderings, with the assistance of
which he has fitted himself as it were with wings, and now being quite ready
for his move, he answers impertinently to all commands, and behaves himself
like a stranger and a visitor, and whatever he sees needing improvement, he
despises and treats with contempt. And though he has a supply of money secretly
hidden, yet he complains that he has neither shoes nor clothes, and is indignant
that they are given out to him so slowly. And if it happens that through the
management of the superior some of these are given first to one who is known
to have nothing whatever, he is still more inflamed with burning rage, and
thinks that he is despised as a stranger; nor is he contented to turn his hand
to any work, but finds fault with everything which the needs of the monastery
require to be done. Then of set purpose he looks out for opportunities of being
offended and angry, lest he might seem to have gone forth from the discipline
of the monastery for a trivial reason. And not content to take his departure
by himself alone, lest it should be thought that he has left as it were from
his own fault, he never stops corrupting as many as he can by clandestine conferences.
But if the severity of the weather interferes with his journey and travels,
he remains all the time in suspense and anxiety of heart, and never stops sowing
and exciting discontent; as he thinks that he will only find consolation for
his departure and an excuse for his fickleness in the bad character and defects
of the monastery.
CHAPTER X.
Of the toils which a deserter from a monastery must undergo through covetousness,
though he used formerly to murmur at the very slightest tasks.
AND SO he is driven about, and more and more inflamed with the love of his
money, which when it is acquired, never allows a monk either to remain in a
monastery or to live under the discipline of a rule. And when separating him
like some wild beast from the rest of the herd, it has made him through want
of companions an animal fit for prey, and caused him to be easily eaten up,
as he is deprived of fellow lodgers, it forces him, who once thought it beneath
him to perform the slight duties of the monastery, to labour without stopping
night and day, through hope of gain; it suffers him to keep no services of
prayer, no system of fasting, no rule of vigils; it does not allow him to fulfil
the duties of seemly intercession, If only he can satisfy the madness of avarice,
and supply his daily wants; inflaming the more the fire of covetousness, while
believing that it will be extinguished by getting.
CHAPTER XI.
That under pretence of keeping the purse women have to be sought to dwell
with them.
HENCE
many are led on over an abrupt precipice, and by an irrevocable fall, to
death, and not content
to possess
by themselves that money which they either
never had before, or which by a bad beginning they kept back, they seek for
women to dwell with them, to preserve what they have unjustifiably amassed
.or retained. And they implicate themselves in so many harmful and dangerous
occupations, that they are cast down even to the depths of hell, while they
refuse to acquiesce in that saying of the Apostle, that "having food and
clothing they should be content" with that which the thrift of the monastery
supplied, but "wishing to become rich they fall into temptation and the
snare of the devil, and many unprofitable and hurtful desires, which drown
men in destruction and perdition. For the love of money," i.e. covetousness, "is
a root of all kinds of evil, which some coveting have erred from the faith,
and have entangled themselves in many sorrows."(1)
CHAPTER XII.
An instance of a lukewarm monk caught in the snares of covetousness.
I know
of one, who thinks himself a monk, and what is worse flatters himself on
his perfection, who
had been
received into a monastery, and when charged
by his Abbot not to turn his thoughts back to those things which he had given
up and renounced, but to free himself from covetousness, the root of all kinds
of evil, and from earthly snares; and when told that if he wished to be cleansed
from his former passions, by which he saw that he was from time to time grievously
oppressed, he should cease from caring about those things which even formerly
were not his own, entangled in the chains of which he certainly could not make
progress towards purifying himself of his faults: with an angry expression
he did not hesitate to answer, "If you have that with which you can support
others, why do you forbid me to have it as well?"(1)
CHAPTER XIII.
What the eiders relate to the juniors in the matter of stripping off sins.
But let not this seem superfluous or objectionable to any one. For unless
the different kinds of sins are first explained, and the origin and causes
of diseases traced out, the proper healing remedies cannot be applied to the
sick, nor can the preservation of perfect health be secured by the strong.
For both these matters and many others besides these are generally put forward
for the instruction of the younger brethren by the elders in their conferences,
as they have had experience of numberless falls and the ruin of all sorts of
people. And often recognizing in ourselves many of these things, when the elders
explained and showed them, as men who were themselves disquieted(2) by the
same passions, we were cured without any shame or confusion on our part, since
without saying anything we learnt both the remedies and the causes of the sins
which beset us, which we have passed over and said nothing about, not from
fear of the brethren, but lest our book should chance to fall into the hands
of some who have had no instruction in this way of life, and might disclose
to inexperienced persons what ought to be known only to those who are toiling
and striving to reach the heights of perfection.
CHAPTER XIV.
Instances to show that the disease of covetousness is threefold.
AND SO this disease and unhealthy state is threefold, and is condemned with
equal abhorrence by all the fathers. One feature is this, of which we described
the taint above, which by deceiving wretched folk persuades them to hoard though
they never had anything of their own when they lived in the world. Another,
which forces men afterwards to resume and once more desire those things which
in the early days of their renunciation of the world they gave up. A third,
which springing from a faulty and hurtful beginning and making a bad start,
does not suffer those whom it has once infected with this lukewarmness of mind
to strip themselves of all their worldly goods, through fear of poverty and
want of faith; and those who keep back money and property which they certainly
ought to have renounced and forsaken, it never allows to arrive at the perfection
of the gospel. And we find in Holy Scripture instances of these three catastrophes
which were visited with no light punishment. For when Gehazi wished to acquire
what he had never had before, not only did he fail to obtain the gift of prophecy
which it would have been his to receive from his master by hereditary succession,
but on the contrary he was covered by the curse of the holy Elisha with a perpetual
leprosy: while Judas, wanting to resume the possession of the wealth which
he had formerly cast away when he followed Christ, not only fell into betraying
the Lord, and lost his apostolic rank, but also was not allowed to close his
life with the common lot of all but ended it by a violent death. But Ananias
and Sapphira, keeping back a part of that which was formerly their own, were
at the Apostle's word punished with death.
CHAPTER XV.
Of the difference between one who renounces the world badly and one who does
not renounce it at all.
OF those
then who say that they have renounced this world, and afterwards being overcome
by want
of faith
are afraid of losing their worldly goods, a
charge is given mystically in Deuteronomy. "If any man is afraid and of
a fearful heart let him not go forth to war: let him go back and return home,
lest he make the hearts of his brethren to fear as he himself is timid and
frightened."(3) What can one want plainer than this testimony? Does not
Scripture clearly prefer that they should not take on them even the earliest
stages of this profession and its name, rather than by their persuasion and
bad example turn others back from the perfection of the gospel, and weaken
them by their faithless terror. And so they are bidden to withdraw from the
battle and return to their homes, because a man cannot fight the Lord's battle
with a double heart. For "a double-minded man is unstable in all his ways."(4)
And thinking, according to that Parable in the Gospel,(1) that he who goes
forth with ten thousand men against a king who comes with twenty thousand,
cannot possibly fight, they should, while he is yet a great way off, ask for
peace; that is, it is better for them not even to take the first step towards
renunciation, rather than afterwards following it up coldly, to involve themselves
in still greater dangers. For "it is better not to vow, than to vow and
not pay."(2) But finely is the one described as coming with ten thousand
and the other with twenty. For the number of sins which attack us is far larger
than that of the virtues which fight for us. But "no man can serve God
and Mammon."(3) And "no man putting his hand to the plough and looking
back is fit for the kingdom of God."(4)
CHAPTER XVI.
Of the authority under which those shelter themselves who object to stripping
themselves of their goods.
THESE
then try to make out a case for their original avarice, by some authority
from Holy Scripture,
which
they interpret with base ingenuity, in their desire
to wrest and pervert to their own purposes a saying of the Apostle or rather
of the Lord Himself: and, not adapting their own life or understanding to the
meaning of the Scripture, but making the meaning of Scripture bend to the desires
of their own lust, they try to make it to correspond to their own views, and
say that it is written, "It is more blessed to give than to receive."(5)
And by an entirely wrong interpretation of this they think that they can weaken
the force of that saying of the Lord in which he says: "If thou wilt be
perfect, go sell all that thou hast and give to the poor, and thou shalt have
treasure in heaven; and come, follow me."(6) And they think that under
colour of this they need not deprive themselves of their riches: declaring
indeed that they are more blessed if, supported by that which originally belonged
to them, they give to others also out of their superabundance. And while they
are shy of embracing with the Apostle that glorious state of abnegation for
Christ's sake, they will not be content either with manual labour or the sparing
diet of the monastery. And the only thing is that these must either know that
they are deceiving themselves, and have not really renounced the world while
they are clinging to their former riches; or, if they really and truly want
to make trial of the monastic life, they must give up and forsake all these
things and keep back nothing of that which they have renounced, and, with the
Apostle, glory "in hunger and thirst, in cold and nakedness."(7)
CHAPTER XVII.
Of the renunciation of the apostles and the primitive church.
As if
he (who, by his assertion that he was endowed with the privileges of a Roman
citizen from
his birth,
testifies that he was no mean person according
to this world's rank) might not likewise have been supported by the property
which formerly belonged to him! And as if those men who were possessors of
lands and houses in Jerusalem and sold everything and kept back nothing whatever
for themselves, and brought the price of them and laid it at the feet of the
apostles, might not have supplied their bodily necessities from their own property,
had this been considered the best plan by the apostles, or had they themselves
deemed it preferable! But they gave up all their property at once, and preferred
to be supported by their own labour, and by the contributions of the Gentiles,
of whose collection the holy Apostle speaks in writing to the Romans, and declaring
his own office in this matter to them, and urging them on likewise to make
this collection: "But now I go to Jerusalem to minister to the saints.
For it has pleased them of Macedonia and Achaia to make a certain contribution
for the poor saints who are at Jerusalem: it has pleased them indeed, and their
debtors they are. For if the Gentiles are made partakers of their spiritual
things, they ought also to minister to them in carnal things."(8) To the
Corinthians also he shows the same anxiety about this, and urges them the more
diligently to prepare before his arrival a collection, which he was intending
to send for their needs. "But concerning the collection for the saints,
as I appointed to the churches of Galatia, so also do ye. Let each one of you
on the first day of the week put apart with himself, laying up what it shall
well please him, that when I come the collections be not then to be made. But
when I come whomsoever you shall approve by your letters, them I will send
to carry your grace to Jerusalem." And that he may stimulate them to make
a larger collection, he adds, "But if it be meet that I also go, they
shall go with me:"(9) meaning if your offering is of such a character
as to deserve to be taken there by my ministration. To the Galatians too, he
testifies that when he was settling the division of the ministry of preaching
with the apostles, he had arranged this with James, Peter, and John: that he
should undertake the preaching to the Gentiles, but should never repudiate
care and anxious thought for the poor who were at Jerusalem, who for Christ's
sake gave up all their goods, and submitted to voluntary poverty. "And
when they saw," said he, "the grace of God which was given to me,
James and Cephas and John, who seemed to be pillars, gave to me and to Barnabas
the right hand: of fellowship, that we should preach to the: Gentiles, but
they to those of the circumcision: only they would that we should be mindful
of the poor." A matter which he testifies that he attended to most carefully,
saying, "which also I was anxious of myself to do.Who then are the more
blessed, those who but lately were gathered out of the number of the heathen,
and being unable to climb to the heights of the perfection of the gospel, clung
to their own property, in whose case it was considered a great thing by the
Apostle if at least they were restrained from the worship of idols, and from
fornication, and from things strangled, and from blood,(2) and had embraced
the faith of Christ, with their goods and all: or those who live up to the
demands of the gospel, and carry the Lord's cross daily, and want nothing out
of their property to remain for their own use? And if the blessed Apostle himself,
bound with chains and fetters, or hampered by the difficulties of travelling,
and for these reasons not being able to provide with his hands, as he generally
did, for the supply of his food, declares that he received that which supplied
his wants from the brethren who came from Macedonia; "For that which was
lacking to me," he says, "the brethren who came from Macedonia supplied:"(3)
and to the Philippians he says: "For ye Philippians know also that in
the beginning of the gospel, when I came from Macedonia, no church communicated
with me in the matter of giving and receiving, except you only; because even
in Thessalonica once and again you sent to supply my needs:"(4) (if this
was so) then, according to the notion of these men, which they have formed
in the coldness of their heart, will those men really be more blessed than
the Apostle, because it is found that they have ministered to him of their
substance? But this no one will venture to assert, however big a fool he may
be.
CHAPTER XVIII.
That if we want to imitate the apostles we ought not to live according to
our own prescriptions, but to follow their example.
WHEREFORE if we want to obey the gospel precept, and to show ourselves the
followers of the Apostle and the whole primitive church, or of the fathers
who in our own days succeeded to their virtues and perfection, we should not
acquiesce in our own prescriptions, promising ourselves perfection from this
wretched and lukewarm condition of ours: but following their footsteps, we
should by no means aim at looking after our own interests, but should seek
out the discipline and system of a monastery, that we may in very truth renounce
this world; preserving nothing of those things which we have despised through
the temptation of want of faith; and should look for our daily food, not from
any store of money of our own, but from our own labours.
CHAPTER XIX.
A saying of S. Basil, the Bishop, directed against Syncletius.(5)
THERE
is current a saying of S. Basil, Bishop of Caesarea, directed against a certain
Syncletius, who
was
growing indifferent with the sort of lukewarmness
of which we have spoken; who, though he professed to have renounced this world,
had yet kept back for himself some of his property, not liking to be supported
by the labour of his own hands, and to acquire true humility by stripping himself
and by grinding toil, and the subjection of the monastery: "You have," said
he, "spoilt Syncletius, and not made a monk."
CHAPTER XX.
How contemptible it is to be overcome by covetousness.
AND so if we want to strive lawfully in our spiritual combat, let us expel
this dangerous enemy also from our hearts. For to overcome him does not so
much show great virtue, as to be beaten by him is shameful and disgraceful.
For when you are overpowered by a strong man, though there is grief in being
overthrown, and distress at the loss of victory, yet some consolation may be
derived by the vanquished from the strength of their opponent. But if the enemy
is a poor creature, and the struggle a feeble one, besides the grief for defeat
there is confusion of a more disgraceful character, and a shame which is worse
than loss.
CHAPTER XXI.
How covetousness can be conquered.
AND in this case it will be the greatest victory and a lasting triumph, if,
as is said, the conscience of the monk is not defiled by the possession of
the smallest coin. For it is an impossibility for him who, overcome in the
matter of a small possession, has once admitted into his heart a root of evil
desire, not to be inflamed presently with the heat of a still greater desire.
For the soldier of Christ will be victorious and in safety, and free from all
the attacks of desire, so long as this most evil spirit does not implant in
his heart a seed of this desire. Wherefore, though in the matter of all kinds
of sins we ought ordinarily to watch the serpent's head,(1) yet in this above
all we should be more keenly on our guard. For if it has been admitted it will
grow by feeding on itself, and will kindle for itself a worse fire. And so
we must not only guard against the possession of money, but also must expel
from our souls the desire for it. For we should not so much avoid the results
of covetousness, as cut off by the roots all disposition towards it. For it
will do no good not to possess money, if there exists in us the desire for
getting it.
CHAPTER XXII.
That one who actually has no money may still be deemed covetous.
FOR it is possible even for one who has no money to be by no means free from
the malady of covetousness, and for the blessing of penury to do him no good,
because he has not been able to root out the sin of cupidity: delighting in
the advantages of poverty, not in the merit of the virtue, and satisfied with
the burden of necessity, not without coldness of heart. For just as the word
of the gospel declares of those who are not defiled in body, that they are
adulterers in heart;(2) so it is possible that those who are in no way pressed
down with the weight of money may be condemned with the covetous in disposition
and intent. For it was the opportunity of possessing which was wanting in their
case, and not the will for it: which latter is always crowned by God, rather
than compulsion. And so we must use all diligence lest the fruits of our labours
should be destroyed to no purpose. For it is a wretched thing to have endured
the effects of poverty and want, but to have lost their fruits, through the
fault of a shattered will.
CHAPTER XXIII.
An example drawn from the case of Judas.
WOULD you like to know how dangerously and harmfully that incitement, unless
it has been carefully eradicated, will shoot up for the destruction of its
owner, and put forth all sorts of branches of different sins? Look at Judas,
reckoned among the number of the apostles, and see how because he would not
bruise the deadly head of this serpent it destroyed him with its poison, and
how when he was caught in the snares of concupiscence, it drove him into sin
and a headlong downfall, so that he was persuaded to sell the Redeemer of the
world and the author of man's salvation for thirty pieces of silver. And he
could never have been impelled to this heinous sin of the betrayal if he had
not been contaminated by the sin of covetousness: nor would he have made himself
wickedly guilty of betraying(3) the Lord, unless he had first accustomed himself
to rob the bag intrusted to him.
CHAPTER XXIV.
That covetousness cannot be overcome except by stripping one's self of everything.
THIS is a sufficiently dreadful and clear instance of this tyranny, which,
when once the mind is taken prisoner by it, allows it to keep to no rules of
honesty, nor to be satisfied with any additions to its gains. For we must seek
to put an end to this madness, not by riches, but by stripping ourselves of
them. Lastly, when he (viz. Judas) had received the bag set apart for the distribution
to the poor, and intrusted to his care for this purpose, that he might at least
satisfy himself with plenty of money, and set a limit to his avarice, yet his
plentiful supply only broke out into a still greedier incitement of desire,
so that he was ready no longer secretly to rob the bag, but actually to sell
the Lord Himself. For the madness of this avarice is not satisfied with any
amount of riches.
CHAPTER XXV.
Of the deaths of Ananias and Sapphira, and Judas, which they underwent through
the impulse of covetousness.
LASTLY, the chief of the apostles, taught by these instances, and knowing
that one who has any avarice cannot bridle it, and that it cannot be put an
end to by a large or small sum of money, but only by the virtue of renunciation
of everything, punished with death Ananias and Sapphira, who were mentioned
before, because they had kept back something out of their property, that that
death which Judas had voluntarily met with for the sin of betraying the Lord,
they might also undergo for their lying avarice.(1) How closely do the sin
and punishment correspond in each case! In the one case treachery, in the other
falsehood, was the result of covetousness. In the one case the truth is betrayed,
in the other the sin of lying is committed. For though the issues of their
deeds may appear different, yet they coincide in having one and the same aim.
For the one, in order to escape poverty, desired to take back what he had forsaken;
the others, for fear lest they might become poor, tried to keep back something
out of their property, which they should have either offered to the Apostle
in good faith, or have given entirely to the brethren. And so in each case
there follows the judgment of death; because each sin sprang from the root
of covetousness. And so if against those who did not covet other persons' goods,
but tried to be sparing of their own, and had no desire to acquire, but only
the wish to retain, there went forth so severe a sentence, what should we think
of those who desire to amass wealth, without ever having had any of their own,
and, making a show of poverty before men, are before God convicted of being
rich, through the passion of avarice?
CHAPTER XXVI.
That covetousness brings upon the soul a spiritual leprosy.
AND such are seen to be lepers in spirit and heart, after the likeness of
Gehazi, who, desiring the uncertain riches of this world, was covered with
the taint of foul leprosy, through which he left us a clear example that every
soul which is defiled with the stain of cupidity is covered with the spiritual
leprosy of sin, and is counted as unclean before God with a perpetual curse.
CHAPTER XXVII.
Scripture proofs by which one who is aiming at perfection is taught not to
take back again what he has given up and renounced.
IF then
through the desire of perfection you have forsaken all things and followed
Christ who says to
thee, "Go sell all that thou hast, and give
to the poor, and thou shalt have treasure in heaven: and come follow me,"(2)
why, having put your hand to the plough, do you look back, so that you will
be declared by the voice of the same Lord not to be fit for the kingdom of
heaven?(3) When secure on the top of the gospel roof, why do you descend to
carry away something from the house, from those things, namely, which beforetime
you despised? When you are out in the field and working at the virtues, why
do you run back and try to clothe yourself again with what belongs to this
world, which you stripped off when you renounced it?(4) But if you were hindered
by poverty from having anything to give up, still less ought you to amass what
you never had before. For by the grace of the Lord you were for this purpose
made ready that you might hasten to him the more readily, being hampered by
no snares of wealth. But let no one who is wanting in this be disappointed;
for there is no one who has not something to give up. He has renounced all
the possessions of this world, whoever has thoroughly eradicated the desire
to possess them.
CHAPTER XXVIII.
That the victory over covetousness can only be gained by stripping one's self
bare of everything.
THIS then is the perfect victory over covetousness: not to allow a gleam from
the very smallest scrap of it to remain in our heart, as we know that we shall
have no further power of quenching it, if we cherish even the tiniest bit of
a spark of it in us.
CHAPTER XXIX.
How a monk can retain his poverty.
AND we can only preserve this virtue unimpaired if we remain in a monastery,
and as the Apostle says, having food and clothing, are therewith content.(5)
CHAPTER XXX.
The remedies against the disease of covetousness.
KEEPING
then in mind the judgment of Ananias and Sapphira let us dread keeping back
any of those things
which
we gave up and vowed utterly to forsake. Let
us also fear the example of Gehazi, who for the sin of covetousness was chastised
with the punishment of perpetual leprosy. From this let us beware of acquiring
that wealth which we never formerly possessed. Moreover also dreading both
the fault and the death of Judas, let us with all the power that we have avoid
taking back any of that wealth which once we east away from us. Above all,
considering the state of our weak and shifty nature, let us beware lest the
day of the Lord come upon us as a thief in the night,(1) and find our conscience
defiled even by a single penny; for this would make void all the fruits of
our renunciation of the world, and cause that which was said to the rich man
in the gospel to be directed towards us also by the voice of the Lord: "Thou
fool, this night thy soul shall be required of thee: then whose shall those
things be which thou hast prepared?"(4) And taking no thought for the
morrow, let us never allow ourselves to be enticed away from the rule of the
Coenobium.
CHAPTER XXXI
That no one can get the better of covetousness unless he stays in the Coenobium:
and how one can remain there.
BUT we shall certainly not be suffered to do this, nor even to remain under
the rule of a system, unless the virtue of patience, which can only spring
from humility as its source, is first securely fixed and established in us.
For the one teaches us not to trouble any one else; the other, to endure with
magnanimity wrongs offered to us.
BOOK VIII.
OF THE SPIRIT OF ANGER.
CHAPTER I.
How our fourth conflict is against the sin of anger, and how many evils. this
passion produces.
IN our
fourth combat the deadly poison of anger has to be utterly rooted out from
the inmost comers
of our
soul. For as long as this remains in our hearts,
and blinds with its hurtful darkness the eye of the soul, we can neither acquire
right judgment and discretion, nor gain the insight which springs from an honest
gaze, or ripeness of counsel, nor can we be partakers of life, or retentive
of righteousness, or even have the capacity for spiritual and true light: "for," says
one, mine eye is disturbed by reason of anger."(2) Nor can we become partakers
of wisdom, even though we are considered wise by universal consent, for "anger
rests in the bosom of fools."(3) Nor can we even attain immortal life,
although we are accounted prudent in the opinion of everybody, for "anger
destroys even the prudent."(5) Nor shall we be able with clear judgment
of heart to secure the controlling power of righteousness, even though we are
reckoned perfect and holy in the estimation of all men, for "the wrath
of man worketh not the righteousness of God."(6) Nor can we by any possibility
acquire that esteem and honour which is so frequently seen even in worldlings,
even though we are thought noble and honourable through the privileges of birth,
because "an angry man is dishonoured."(7) Nor again can we secure
any ripeness of counsel, even though we appear to be weighty, and endowed with
the utmost knowledge; because "an angry man acts without counsel."(8)
Nor can we be free from dangerous disturbances, nor be without sin, even though
no sort of disturbances be brought upon us by others; because "a passionate
man engenders quarrels, but an angry man digs up sins."(1)
CHAPTER II.
Of those who say that anger is not injurious, if we are angry with those who
do wrong, since God Himself is said to be angry.
Wig have
heard some people trying to excuse this most pernicious disease of the soul,
in such a way
as to endeavour
to extenuate it by a rather shocking
way of interpreting Scripture: as they say that it is not injurious if we are
angry with the brethren who do wrong, since, say they, God Himself is said
to rage and to be angry with those who either will not know Him, or, knowing
Him, spurn Him, as here "And the anger of the Lord was kindled against
His people;"(2) or where the prophet prays and says, "O Lord, rebuke
me not in thine anger, neither chasten me in thy displeasure;"(3) not
understanding that, while they want to open to men an excuse for a most pestilent
sin, they are ascribing to the Divine Infinity and Fountain of all purity a
taint of human passion.
CHAPTER III.
Of those things which are spoken of God anthropomorphically.
FOR if
when these things are said of God they are to be understood literally in
a material gross signification,
then also He sleeps, as it is said, "Arise,
wherefore sleepest thou, O Lord?"(4) though it is elsewhere said of Him: "Behold
he that keepeth Israel shall neither slumber nor sleep."(5) And He stands
and sits, since He says, "Heaven is my seat, and earth the footstool for
my feet:"(6) though He "measure out the heaven with his hand, and
holdeth the earth in his fist."(7) And He is "drunken with wine" as
it is said, "The Lord awoke like a sleeper, a mighty man, drunken with
wine;"(8) He "who only hath immortality and dwelleth in the light
which no man can approach unto:"(9) not to say anything of the "ignorance" and "forgetfulness," of
which we often find mention in Holy Scripture: nor lastly of the outline of
His limbs, which are spoken of as arranged and ordered like a man's; e.g.,
the hair, head, nostrils, eyes, face, hands, arms, fingers, belly, and feet:
if we are willing to take all of which according to the bare literal sense,
we must think of God as in fashion with the outline of limbs, and a bodily
form; which indeed is shocking even to speak of, and must be far from our thoughts.
CHAPTER IV.
In what sense we should understand the passions and human arts which are ascribed
to the unchanging and incorporeal God.
AND so
as without horrible profanity these things cannot be understood literally
of Him who is declared
by the
authority of Holy Scripture to be invisible,
ineffable, incomprehensible, inestimable, simple, and uncompounded, so neither
can the passion of anger and wrath be attributed to that unchangeable nature
without fearful blasphemy. For we ought to see that the limbs signify the divine
powers and boundless operations of God, which can only be represented to us
by the familiar expression of limbs: by the mouth we should understand that
His utterances are meant, which are of His mercy continually poured into the
secret senses of the soul, or which He spoke among our fathers and the prophets:
by the eyes we can understand the boundless character of His sight with which
He sees and looks through all things, and so nothing is hidden from Him of
what is done or can be done by us, or even thought. By the expression "hands," we
understand His providence and work, by which He is the creator and author of
all things; the arms are the emblems of His might and government, with which
He upholds, rules and controls all things. And not to speak of other things,
what else does the hoary hair of His head signify but the eternity and perpetuity
of Deity, through which He is without any beginning, and before all times,
and excels all creatures? So then also when we read of the anger or fury of
the Lord, we should take it not <greek>anqrwpopaqws</greek>; i.e.,
according to an unworthy meaning of human passion,(10) but in a sense worthy
of God, who is free from all passion; so that by this we should understand
that He is the judge and avenger of all the unjust things which are done in
this world; and by reason of these terms and their meaning we should dread
Him as the terrible rewarder of our deeds, and fear to do anything against
His will. For human nature is wont to fear those whom it knows to be indignant,
and is afraid of offending: as in the case of some most just judges, avenging
wrath is usually feared by those who are tormented by some accusation of their
conscience; not indeed that this passion exists in the minds of those who are
going to judge with perfect equity, but that, while they so fear, the disposition
of the judge towards them is that which is the precursor of a just and impartial
execution of the law. And this, with whatever kindness and gentleness it may
be conducted, is deemed by those who are justly to be punished to be the most
savage wrath and vehement anger. It would be tedious and outside the scope
of the present work were we to explain all the things which are spoken metaphorically
of God in Holy Scripture, with human figures. Let it be enough for our present
purpose, which is aimed against the sin of wrath, to have said this that no
one may through ignorance draw down upon himself a cause of this evil and of
eternal death, out of those Scriptures in which he should seek for saintliness
and immortality as the remedies to bring life and salvation.
CHAPTER V.
How calm a monk ought to be.
And so
a monk aiming at perfection, and desiring to strive lawfully in his spiritual
combat, should
be free from
all sin of anger and wrath, and should
listen to the charge which the "chosen vessel" gives him. "Let
all anger," says he, and wrath, and clamour, and evil speaking, be taken
away from among you, with all malice."(1) When he says, "Let all
anger be taken away from you," he excepts none whatever as necessary or
useful for us. And if need be, he should at once treat an erring brother in
such a way that, while he manages to apply a remedy to one afflicted with perhaps
a slight fever, he may not by his wrath involve himself in a more dangerous
malady of blindness. For he who wants to heal another's wound ought to be in
good health and free from every affection of weakness himself, lest that saying
of the gospel should be used to him, "Physician, first heal thyself;"(2)
and lest, seeing a mote in his brother's eye, he see not the beam in his own
eye, for how will he see to cast out the mote from his brother's eye, who has
the beam of anger in his own eye?(3)
CHAPTER VI.
Of the righteous and unrighteous passion of wrath.
FROM almost every cause the emotion of wrath boils over, and blinds the eyes
of the soul, and, bringing the deadly beam of a worse disease over the keenness
of our sight, prevents us from seeing the sun of righteousness. It makes no
difference whether gold plates, or lead, or what metal you please, are placed
over our eyelids, the value of the metal makes no difference in our blindness.
CHAPTER VII.
Of the only case in which anger is useful to us.
We have, it must be admitted, a use for anger excellently implanted in us
for which alone it is useful and profitable for us to admit it, viz., when
we are indignant and rage against the lustful emotions of our heart, and are
vexed that the things which we are ashamed to do or say before men have risen
up in the lurking places of our heart, as we tremble at the presence of the
angels, and of God Himself, who pervades all things everywhere, and fear with
the utmost dread the eye of Him from whom the secrets of our hearts cannot
possibly be hid.
CHAPTER VIII.
Instances from the life of the blessed David in which anger was rightly felt.
AND at
any rate (this is the case), when we are agitated against this very anger,
because it has
stolen on us
against our brother, and when in wrath we
expel its deadly incitements, nor suffer it to have a dangerous lurking place
in the recesses of our heart. To be angry in this fashion even that prophet
teaches us who had so completely expelled it from his own feelings that he
would not retaliate even on his enemies and those delivered by God into his
hands: when he says "Be ye angry and sin not."(4) For he, when he
had longed for water from the well of Bethlehem, and had been given it by his
mighty men, who had brought it through the midst of the hosts of the enemy,
at once poured it out on the ground: and thus in his anger extinguished the
delicious feeling of his desire, and poured it out to the Lord, without satisfying
the longing that he had expressed, saying: "That be far from me that I
should do this! Shall I drink the blood of those men who went forth on the
danger of their souls?"(1) And when Shimei threw stones at King David
and cursed him, in his hearing, before everybody, and Abishai, the son of Zeruiah,
the captain of the host, wished to cut off his head and avenge the insult to
the king, the blessed David moved with pious wrath against this dreadful suggestion
of his, and keeping the due measure of humility and a strict patience, said
with imperturbable gentleness, "What have I to do with you, ye sons of
Zeruiah? Let him alone that he may curse. For the Lord hath commanded him to
curse David. And who is he who shall dare to say, Why hast thou done this?
Behold my son, who came forth from my loins, seeks my life, and how much more
this son of Benjamin? Let him alone, that he may curse, according to the command
of the Lord. It may be the Lord will look upon my affliction, and return to
me good for this cursing to-day."(2)
CHAPTER IX.
Of the anger which should be directed against ourselves.
AND some
are commanded to "be angry" after a wholesome fashion,
but with our own selves, and with evil thoughts that arise, and "not to
sin," viz., by bringing them to a bad issue. Finally, the next verse explains
this to be the meaning more clearly: "The things you say in your hearts,
be sorry for them on your beds:"(8) i.e., whatever you think of in your
hearts when sudden and nervous excitements rush in on you, correct and amend
with wholesome sorrow, lying as it were on a bed of rest, and removing by the
moderating influence of counsel all noise and disturbance of wrath. Lastly,
the blessed Apostle, when he made use of the testimony of this verse, and said, "Be
ye angry and sin not," added, "Let not the sun go down upon your
wrath, neither give place to the devil."(4) If it is dangerous for the
sun of righteousness to go down upon our wrath, and if when we are angry we
straightway give place to the devil in our hearts, how is it that above he
charges us to be angry, saying, "Be ye angry, and sin not"? Does
he not evidently mean this: be ye angry with your faults and your tempers,
lest, if you acquiesce in them, Christ, the sun of righteousness, may on account
of your anger begin to go down on your darkened minds, and when He departs
you may furnish a place for the devil in your hearts?
CHAPTER X.
Of the sun, of which it is said that it should not go down upon your wrath.
AND of
this sun God clearly makes mention by the prophet, when He says, "But
to those that fear my name the sun of righteousness shall arise with healing
in His wings."(5) And this again is said to "go down" at midday
on sinners and false prophets, and those who are angry, when the prophet says, "Their
sun is gone down at noon."(6) And at any rate "tropically"(7)
the mind, that is the <greek>nous</greek> or reason, which is fairly
called the sun because it looks over all the thoughts and discernings of the
heart, should not be put out by the sin of anger: lest when it "goes down" the
shadows of disturbance, together with the devil their author, fill all the
feelings of our hearts, and, overwhelmed by the shadows of wrath, as in a murky
night, we know not what we ought to do. In this sense it is that we have brought
forward this passage of the Apostle, handed down to us by the teaching of the
elders, because it was needful, even at the risk of a somewhat lengthy discourse,
to show how they felt with regard to anger, for they do not permit it even
for a moment to effect an entrance into our heart: observing with the utmost
care that saying of the gospel: "Whosoever is angry with his brother is
in danger of the judgment."(8) But if it be lawful to be angry up till
sunset, the surfeit of our wrath and the vengeance of our anger will be able
to give full play to passion and dangerous excitement before that sun inclines
towards its setting.(9)
CHAPTER XI.
Of those to whose wrath even the going down of the sun sets no limit.
BUT what am I to say of those (and I cannot say it without shame on my own
part) to whose implacability even the going down of the sun sets no bound:
but prolonging it for several days, and nourishing rancorous feelings against
those against whom they have been excited, they say in words that they are
not angry, but in fact and deed they show that they are extremely disturbed?
For they do not speak to them pleasantly, nor address them with ordinary civility,
and they think that they are not doing wrong m this, because they do not seek
to avenge themselves for their upset. But since they either do not dare, or
at any rate are not able to show their anger openly, and give place to it,
they drive in, to their own detriment, the poison of anger, and secretly cherish
it in their hearts, and silently feed on it in themselves; without shaking
off by an effort of mind their sulky disposition, but digesting it as the days
go by, and somewhat mitigating it after a while.
CHAPTER XII.
How this is the end of temper and anger when a man carries it into act as
far as he can.
BUT it looks as if even this was not the end of vengeance to every one, but
some can only completely satisfy their wrath or sulkiness if they carry out
the impulse of anger as far as they are able; and this we know to be the case
with those who restrain their feelings, not from desire of calming them, but
simply from want of opportunity of revenge. For they can do nothing more to
those with whom they are angry, except speak to them without ordinary civility:
or it looks as if anger was to be moderated only in action, and not to be altogether
rooted out from its hiding place in our bosom: so that, overwhelmed by its
shadows, we are unable not only to admit the light of wholesome counsel and
of knowledge, but also to be a temple of the Holy Spirit, so long as the spirit
of anger dwells in us. For wrath that is nursed in the heart, although it may
not injure men who stand by, yet excludes the splendour of the radiance of
the Holy Ghost, equally with wrath that is openly manifested.
CHAPTER XIII.
That we should not retain our anger even for an instant.
OR how
can we think that the Lord would have it retained even for an instant, since
He does not permit
us to
offer the spiritual sacrifices of our prayers,
if we are aware that another has any bitterness against us: saying, "If
then thou bringest thy gift to the altar and there rememberest that thy brother
hath aught against thee, leave there thy gift at the altar and go thy way;
first be reconciled to thy brother, and then come and offer thy gift."(1)
How then may we retain displeasure against our brother, I will not say for
several days, but even till the going down of the sun, if we are not allowed
to offer our prayers to God while he has anything against us? And yet we are
commanded by the Apostle: "Pray without ceasing;"(2) and "in
every place lifting up holy hands without wrath and disputing."(3) It
remains then either that we never pray at all, retaining this poison m our
hearts, and become guilty in regard of this apostolic or evangelic charge,
in which we are bidden to pray everywhere and without ceasing; or else if,
deceiving ourselves, we venture to pour forth our prayers, contrary to His
command, we must know that we are offering to God no prayer, but an obstinate
temper with a rebellious spirit.
CHAPTER XIV.
Of reconciliation with our brother.
AND because we often spurn the brethren who are injured and saddened, and
despise them, and say that they were not hurt by any fault of ours, the Healer
of souls, who knows all secrets, wishing utterly to eradicate all opportunities
of anger from our hearts, not only commands us to forgive if we have been wronged,
and to be reconciled with our brothers, and keep no recollection of wrong or
injuries against them, but He also gives a similar charge, that in case we
are aware that they have anything against us, whether justly or unjustly, we
should leave our gift, that is, postpone our prayers, and hasten first to offer
satisfaction to them; and so when our brother's cure is first effected, we
may bring the offering of our prayers without blemish. For the common Lord
of all does not care so much for our homage as to lose in one what He gains
in another, through displeasure being allowed to reign in us. For in any one's
loss He suffers some loss, who desires and looks for the salvation of all His
servants in one and the same way. And therefore our prayer will lose its effect,
if our brother has anything against us, just as much as if we were cherishing
feelings of bitterness against him in a swelling and wrathful spirit.
CHAPTER XV.
How the Old Law would root out anger not only from the actions but from the
thoughts.
BUT why
should we spend any more time over evangelic and apostolic precepts, when
even the old law,
which
is thought to be somewhat slack, guards against
the same thing, when it says, "Thou shall not hate thy brother in thine
heart;" and again, "Be not mindful of the injury of thy citizens;"(1)
and again, "The ways of those who preserve the recollection of wrongs
are towards death"?(2) You see there too that wickedness is restrained
not only in action, but also in the secret thoughts, since it is commanded
that hatred be utterly rooted out from the heart, and not merely retaliation
for, but the very recollection of, a wrong done.
CHAPTER XVI.
How useless is the retirement of those who do not give up their bad manners.
SOMETIMES when we have been overcome by pride or impatience, and we want to
improve our rough and bearish manners, we complain that we require solitude,
as if we should find the virtue of patience there where nobody provokes us:
and we apologize for our carelessness, and say that the reason of our disturbance
does not spring from our own impatience, but from the fault of our brethren.
And while we lay the blame of our fault on others, we shall never be able to
reach the goal of patience and perfection.
CHAPTER XVII.
That the peace of our heart does not depend on another's will, but lies in
our own control.
THE chief part then of our improvement and peace of mind must not be made
to depend on another's will, which cannot possibly be subject to our authority,
but it lies rather in our own control. And so the fact that we are not angry
ought not to result from another's perfection, but from our own virtue, which
is acquired, not by somebody else's patience, but by our own long-suffering.
CHAPTER XVIII.
Of the zeal with which we should seek the desert, and of the things in which
we make progress there.
FURTHER, it is those who are perfect and purified from all faults who ought
to seek the desert, and when they have thoroughly exterminated all their faults
amid the assembly of the brethren, they should enter it not by way of cowardly
flight, but for the purpose of divine contemplation, and with the desire of
deeper insight into heavenly things, which can only be gained in solitude by
those who are perfect. For whatever faults we bring with us uncured into the
desert, we shall find to remain concealed in us and not to be got rid of. For
just as when the character has been improved, solitude can lay open to it the
purest contemplation, and reveal the knowledge of spiritual mysteries to its
clear gaze, so it generally not only preserves but intensifies the faults of
those who have undergone no correction. For a man appears to himself to be
patient and humble, just as long as he comes across nobody in intercourse;
but he will presently revert to his former nature, whenever the chance of any
sort of passion occurs: I mean that those faults will at once appear on the
surface which were lying hid, and, like unbridled horses diligently fed up
during too long a time of idleness, dash forth from the barriers the more eagerly
and fiercely, to the destruction of their charioteer. For when the opportunity
for practising them among men is removed, our faults will more and more increase
in us, unless we have first been purified from them. And the mere shadow of
patience, which, when we mixed with our brethren, we seemed fancifully to possess,
at least out of respect for them and publicity, we lose altogether through
sloth and carelessness.
CHAPTER XIX.
An illustration to help in forming an opinion on those who are only patient
when they are not tried by any one.
BUT it is like all poisonous kinds of serpents or of wild beasts, which, while
they remain in solitude and their own lairs, are still not harmless;(3) for
they cannot really be said to be harmless, because they are not actually hurting
anybody. For this results in their case, not from any feeling of goodness,
but from the exigencies of solitude, and when they have secured an opportunity
of hurting some one, at once they produce the poison stored up in them, and
show the ferocity of their nature. And so in the case of men who are aiming
at perfection, it is not enough not to be angry with men. For we recollect
that when we were living in solitude a feeling of irritation would creep over
us against our pen because it was too large or too small; against our penknife
when it cut badly and with a blunt edge what we wanted cut; and against a flint
if by chance when we were rather late and hurrying to the reading, a spark
of fire flashed out, so that we could not remove and get rid of our perturbation
of mind except by cursing the senseless matter, or at least the devil. Wherefore
for a method of perfection it will not be of any use for there to be a dearth
of men against whom our anger might be roused: since, if patience has not already
been acquired, the feelings of passion which still dwell in our hearts can
equally well spend themselves on dumb things and paltry objects, and not allow
us to gain a continuous state of peacefulness, or to be free from our remaining
faults: unless perhaps we think that some advantage and a sort of cure may
be gained for our passion from the fact that inanimate and speechless things
cannot possibly reply to our curses and rage, nor provoke our ungovernable
temper to break out into a worse madness of passion.
CHAPTER XX.
Of the way in which auger should be banished according to the gospel.
WHEREFORE
if we wish to gain the substance of that divine reward of which it is said, "Blessed are the pure in heart, for they shall see God,"(1)
we ought not only to banish it from our actions, but entirely to root it out
from our inmost soul. For it will not be of any good to have checked anger
in words, and not to have shown it in deeds, if God, from whom the secrets
of the heart are not hid, sees that it remains in the secret recesses of our
bosom. For the word of the gospel bids us destroy the roots of our faults rather
than the fruits; for these, when the incitements are all removed, will certainly
not put forth shoots any more; and so the mind will be able to continue in
all patience and holiness, when this anger has been removed, not from the surface
of acts and deeds, but from the very innermost thoughts. And, therefore to
avoid the commission of murder, anger and hatred are cut off, without which
the crime of murder cannot possibly be committed. For "whosoever is angry
with his brother, is in danger of the judgment;"(2) and "whosoever
hateth his
brother
is a murderer;"(3) viz., because in his heart he desires to kill
him, whose blood we know that he has certainly not shed among men with his
own hand or with a weapon; yet, owing to his burst of anger, he is declared
to be a murderer by God, who renders to each man, not merely for the result
of his actions, but for his purpose and desires and wishes, either a reward
or a punishment; according to that which He Himself says through the prophet: "But
I come that I may gather them together with all nations and tongues;"(4)
and again:(5) "Their thoughts between themselves accusing or also defending
one another, in the day when God shall judge the secrets of men."(6)
CHAPTER XXI.
Whether
we ought to admit the addition of "without a cause," in
that which is written in the Gospel, "whosoever is angry with his brother," etc.
BUT you
should know that in this, which is found in many copies, "Whosoever
is angry with his brother without a cause, is in danger of the judgment,"(7)
the words "without a cause" are superfluous, and were added by those
who did not think that anger for just causes was to be banished: since certainly
nobody, however unreasonably he is disturbed, would say that he was angry without
a cause. Wherefore it appears to have been added by those who did not understand
the drift of Scripture, which intended altogether to banish the incentive to
anger, and to reserve no occasion whatever for indignation; lest while we were
commanded to be angry with a cause, an opportunity for being angry without
a cause might occur to us. For the end and aim of patience consists, not in
being angry with a good reason, but in not being angry at all. Although I know
that by some this very expression, "without a cause," is taken to
mean that he is angry without a cause who when he is angered is not allowed
to seek for vengeance. But it is better so to take it as we find it written
in many modern copies and all the ancient ones.
CHAPTER XXII.
The remedies by which we can root out anger from our hearts.
WHEREFORE the athlete of Christ who strives lawfully ought thoroughly to root
out the feeling of wrath. And it will be a sure remedy for this disease, if
in the first place we make up our mind that we ought never to be angry at all,
whether for good or bad reasons: as we know that we shall at once lose the
light of discernment, and the security of good counsel, and our very uprightness,
and the temperate character of righteousness, if the main light of our heart
has been darkened by its shadows: next, that the purity of our soul will presently
be clouded, and that it cannot possibly be made a temple for the Holy Ghost
while the spirit of anger resides in us; lastly, that we should consider that
we ought never to pray, nor pour out our prayer to God, while we are angry.
And above all, having before our eyes the uncertain condition of mankind, we
should realize daily that we are soon to depart from the body, and that our
continence and chastity, our renunciation of all our possessions, our contempt
of wealth, our efforts in fastings and vigils will not help us at all, if solely
on account of anger and hatred eternal punishments are awarded to us by the
judge of the world.
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