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JOHN CASSIAN
CASSIAN'S CONFERENCES
FIRST CONFERENCE OF ABBOT MOSES
CHAPTER I
Of our stay in Scete, and that which we proposed to Abbot Moses.
WHEN I was in the desert of Scete, where are the most excellent monastic fathers
and where all perfection flourishes, in company with the holy father Germanus
(who had since the earliest days and commencement of our spiritual service
been my closest companion both in the coenobium and in the desert, so that
to show the harmony of our friendship and aims, everybody would say that a
single heart and soul existed in our two bodies), I sought out Abbot Moses,(1)
who was eminent amid those splendid flowers, not only in practical but also
in contemplative excellence, in my anxiety to be grounded by his instruction:
and together we implored him to give us a discourse for our edification; not
without tears, for we knew full well his determination never to consent to
open the gate of perfection, except to those who desired it with all faithfulness,
and sought it with all sorrow of heart; for fear lest if he showed it at random
to those who cared nothing for it, or only desired it in a half-hearted way,
by opening what is necessary, and what ought only to be discovered to those
seeking perfection, to unworthy persons, and such as accepted it with scorn,
he might appear to lay himself open either to the charge of bragging, or to
the sin of betraying his trust; and at last being overcome by our prayers he
thus began.
CHAPTER II.
Of the question of Abbot Moses, who asked what was the goal and what the end
of the monk.
ALL the arts and sciences, said he, have some goal or mark; and end or aim
of their own, on which the diligent pursuer of each art has his eye, and so
endures all sorts of toils and dangers and losses, cheerfully and with equanimity,
e.g., the farmer, shunning neither at one time the scorching heat of the sun,
nor at another the frost and cold, cleaves the earth unweariedly, and again
and again subjects the clods of his field to his ploughshare, while he keeps
before him his goal; viz., by diligent labour to break it up small like fine
sand, and to clear it of all briers, and free it from all weeds, as he believes
that in no other way can he gain his ultimate end, which is to secure a good
harvest, and a large crop; on which he can either live himself free from care,
or can increase his possessions. Again, when his barn is well stocked he is
quite ready to empty it, and with incessant labour to commit the seed to the
crumbling furrow, thinking nothing of the present lessening of his stores in
view of the future harvest. Those men too who are engaged in mercantile pursuits,
have no dread of the uncertainties and chances of the ocean, and fear no risks,
while an eager hope urges them forward to their aim of gain. Moreover those
who are inflamed with the ambition of military life, while they look forward
to their aim of honours and power take no notice of danger and destruction
in their wanderings, and are not crushed by present losses and wars, while
they are eager to obtain the end of some honour held out to them. And our profession
too has its own goal and end, for which we undergo all sorts of toils not merely
without weariness but actually with delight; on account of which the want of
food in fasting is no trial to us, the weariness of our vigils becomes a delight;
reading and constant meditation on the Scriptures does not pall upon us; and
further incessant toil, and self-denial, and the privation of all things, and
the horrors also of this vast desert have no terrors for us. And doubtless
for this it was that you yourselves despised the love of kinsfolk, and scorned
your fatherland, and the delights of this world, and passed through so many
countries, in order that you might come to us, plain and simple folk as we
are, living in this wretched state in the desert. Wherefore, said he, answer
and tell me what is the goal and end, which incite you to endure all these
things so cheerfully.
CHAPTER III.
Of our reply.
AND when he insisted on eliciting an opinion from us on this question, we
replied that we endured all this for the sake of the kingdom of heaven.
CHAPTER IV.
Of Abbot Moses' question on the aforesaid statement.
TO which he replied: Good, you have spoken cleverly of the (ultimate) end.
But what should be our (immediate) goal or mark, by constantly sticking close
to which we can gain our end, you ought first to know. And when we frankly
confessed our ignorance, he proceeded: The first thing, as I said, in all the
arts and sciences is to have some goal, i.e., a mark for the mind, mad constant
mental purpose, for unless a man keeps this before him with all diligence and
persistence, he will never succeed in arriving at the ultimate aim and the
gain which he desires. For, as I said, the farmer who has for his aim to live
free from care and with plenty, while his crops are springing has this as his
immediate object and goal; viz., to keep his field clear from all brambles,
and weeds, and does not fancy that he can otherwise ensure wealth and a peaceful
end, unless he first secures by some plan of work and hope that which he is
anxious to obtain. The business man too does not lay aside the desire of procuring
wares, by means of which he may more profitably amass riches, because he would
desire gain to no purpose, unless he chose the road which leads to it: and
those men who are anxious to be decorated with the honours of this world, first
make up their minds to what duties and conditions they must devote themselves,
that in the regular course of hope they may succeed in gaining the honours
they desire. And so the end of our way of life is indeed the kingdom of God.
But what is the (immediate) goal you must earnestly ask, for if it is not in
the same way discovered by us, we shall strive and wear ourselves out to no
purpose, because a man who is travelling in a wrong direction, has all the
trouble and gets none of the good of his journey. And when we stood gaping
at this remark, the old man proceeded: The end of our profession indeed, as
I said, is the kingdom of God or the kingdom of heaven: but the immediate aim
or goal, is purity of heart, without which no one can gain that end: fixing
our gaze then steadily on this goal, as if on a definite mark, let us direct
our course as straight towards it as possible, and if our thoughts wander somewhat
from this, let us revert to our gaze upon it, and check them accurately as
by a sure standard, which will always bring back all our efforts to this one
mark, and will show at once if our mind has wandered ever so little from the
direction marked out for it.
CHAPTER V.
A comparison with a man who is trying to hit a mark.
AS those,
whose business it is to use weapons of war, whenever they want to show their
skill in their
art
before a king of this world, try to shoot their
arrows or darts into certain small targets which have the prizes painted on
them; for they know that they cannot in any other way than by the line of their
aim secure the end and the prize they hope for, which they will only then enjoy
when they have been able to hit the mark set before them; but if it happens
to be withdrawn from their sight, however much in their want of skill their
aim may vainly deviate from the straight path, yet they cannot perceive that
they have strayed from the direction of the intended straight line because
they have no distinct mark to prove the skilfulness of their aim, or to show
up its badness: and therefore while they shoot their missiles idly into space,
they cannot see how they have gone wrong or how utterly at fault they are,
since no mark is their accuser, showing how far they have gone astray from
the right direction; nor can an unsteady, look help them to correct and restore
the straight line enjoined on them. So then the end indeed which we have set
before us is, as the Apostle says, eternal life, as he declares, "having
indeed your fruit unto holiness, and the end eternal life;"(1) but the
immediate goal is purity of heart, which he not unfairly terms "sanctification," without
which the afore-mentioned end cannot be gained; as if he had said in other
words, having your immediate goal in purity of heart, but the end life eternal.
Of which goal the same blessed Apostle teaches us, and significantly uses the
very term, i.e., <greek>okopos</greek>, saying as follows, "Forgetting
those things which are behind and reaching forward to those that are before,
I press toward the mark, lot the prize of the high calling of the Lord:"(1)
which is more clearly put in Greek <greek>kata</greek> <greek>skopon</greek> <greek>diwkw</greek>,
i.e., "I press toward the mark, as if he said, "With this aim, with
which I forget those things that are behind, i.e., the faults of earlier life,
I strive to reach as the end the heavenly prize." Whatever then can help
to guide us to this object; viz., purity of heart, we must follow with all
our might, but whatever hinders us from it, we must shun as a dangerous and
hurtful thing. For, for this we do and endure all things, for this we make
light of our kinsfolk, our country, honours, riches, the delights of this world,
and all kinds of pleasures, namely in order that we may retain a lasting purity
of heart. And so when this object is set before us, we shall always direct
our actions and thoughts straight towards the attainment of it; for if it be
not constantly: fixed before our eyes, it will not only make all our toils
vain and useless, and force them: to be endured to no purpose and without any
reward, but it will also excite all kinds of thoughts opposed to one another.
For the mind, which has no fixed point to which it may return, and on which
it may chiefly fasten, is sure to rove about from hour to hour and minute to
minute in all sorts of wandering: thoughts, and from those things which come
to it from outside, to be constantly changed into that state which first offers
itself to it.
CHAPTER VI.
Of those who in renouncing the world, aim at perfection without love.
FOR hence
it arises that in the case of some who have despised the greatest possessions
of this world,
and
not only large sums of gold and silver, but
also large properties, we have seen them afterwards disturbed and excited over
a knife, or pencil, or pin, or pen. Whereas if they kept their gaze steadily
fixed out of a pure heart they would certainly never allow such a thing to
happen for trifles, while in order that they might not suffer it in the case
of great and precious riches they chose rather to renounce them altogether.
For often too some guard their books so jealously that they will not allow
them to be even slightly moved or touched by any one else, and from this fact
they meet with occasions of impatience and death, which give them warning of
the need of acquiring the requisite patience and love; and when they have given
up all their wealth for the love of Christ, yet as they preserve their former
disposition in the matter of trifles, and are sometimes quickly upset about
them, they become in all points barren and unfruitful, as those who are without
the charity of which the Apostle speaks: and this the blessed Apostle foresaw
in spirit, and "though," says he, "I give all my goods to feed
the poor, and give my body to be burned, but have not charity, it profiteth
me nothing."(2) And from this it clearly follows that perfection is not
arrived at simply by self-denial, and the giving up of all our goods, and the
casting away of honours, unless there is that charity, the details of which
the Apostle describes, which consists in purity of heart alone. For "not
to be envious," "not to be puffed up, not to be angry, not to do
any wrong, not to seek one's own, not to rejoice in iniquity, not to think
evil" etc. what is all this except ever to offer to God a perfect and
clean heart, and to keep it free from all disturbances?
CHAPTER VII.
How peace of mind should be sought.
EVERYTHING should be done and sought after by us for the sake of this. For
this we must seek for solitude, for this we know that we ought to submit to
fastings, vigils, toils, bodily [nakedness, reading, and all other virtues
that through them we may be enabled to prepare our heart and to keep it unharmed
by all evil passions, and resting on these steps to mount to the perfection
of charity, and with regard to these observances, if by accident we have been
employed in some good and useful occupation and have been unable to carry out
our customary discipline, we should not be overcome by vexation or anger, or
passion, with the object of overcoming which, we were going to do that which
we have omitted. For the gain from fasting will not balance the loss from anger,
nor is the profit from reading so great as the harm which results from despising
a brother. Those things which are of secondary importance, such as fastings,
vigils, withdrawal from the world, meditation on Scripture, we ought to practise
with a view to our main object, i.e., purity of heart, which is charity, and
we ought not on their account to drive away this main virtue, for as long as
it is still found in us intact and unharmed, we shall not be hurt if any of
the things which are of secondary importance are necessarily omitted; since
it will not be of the slightest use to have done everything, if this main reason
of which we have spoken be removed, for the sake of which everything is to
be done. For on this account one is anxious to secure and provide for one's
self the implements for any branch of work, not simply to possess them to no
purpose, nor as if one made the profit and advantage, which is looked for from
them, to consist in the bare fact of possession but that by using them, one
may effectually secure practical knowledge and the end of that particular art
of which they are auxiliaries. Therefore fastings, vigils, meditation on the
Scriptures, self-denial, and the abnegation of all possesions are not perfection,
but aids to perfection: because the end of that science does not lie in these,
but by means of these we arrive at the end. He then will practise these exercises
to no purpose, who is contented with these as if they were the highest good,
and has fixed the purpose of his heart simply on them, and does not extend
his efforts towards reaching the end, on account of which these should be sought:
for he possesses indeed the implements of his art, but is ignorant of the end,
in which all that is valuable resides. Whatever then can disturb that purity
and peace of mind--even though it may seem useful and valuable--should be shunned
as really hurtful, for by this rule we shall succeed in escaping harm from
mistakes and vagaries, and make straight for the desired end and reach it.
CHAPTER VIII.
Of the main effort towards the contemplation of things and an illustration
from the case of Martha and Mary.
THIS then
should be our main effort: and this steadfast purpose of heart we should
constantly aspire
after; viz.,
that the soul may ever cleave to God
and to heavenly things. Whatever is alien to this, however great it may be,
should be given the second place, or even treated as of no consequence, or
perhaps as hurtful. We have an excellent illustration of this state of mind
and condition in the gospel in the case of Martha and Mary: for when Martha
was performing a service that was certainly a sacred one, since she was ministering
to the Lord and His disciples, and Mary being intent only on spiritual instruction
was clinging close to the feet of Jesus which she kissed and anointed with
the ointment of a good confession, she is shown by the Lord to have chosen
the better part, and one which should not be taken away from her: for when
Martha was toiling with pious care, and was cumbered about her service, seeing
that of herself alone she was insufficient for such service she asks for the
help of her sister from the Lord, saying: "Carest Thou not that my sister
has left me to serve alone: bid her therefore that she help me"--certainly
it was to no unworthy work, but to a praiseworthy service that she summoned
her: and yet what does she hear from the Lord? "Martha, Martha, thou art
anxious and troubled about many things: but few things are needful, or only
one. Mary hath chosen the good part, which shall not be taken away from her."(1)
You see then that the Lord makes the chief good consist in meditation; i.e.,
in divine contemplation: whence we see that all other virtues should be put
in the second place, even though we admit that they are necessary, and useful,
and excellent, because they are all performed for the sake of this one thing.
For when the Lord says: "Thou art careful and troubled about many things,
but few things are needful or only one," He makes the chief good consist
not in practical work however praiseworthy and rich in fruits it may be, but
in contemplation of Him, which indeed is simple and "but one"; declaring
that "few things" are needful for perfect bliss, i.e., that contemplation
which is first secured by reflecting on a few saints: from the contemplation
of whom, he who has made some progress rises and attains by God's help to that
which is termed "one thing," i.e., the consideration of God alone,
so as to get beyond those actions and services of Saints, and feed on the beauty
and knowledge of God alone. "Mary" therefore "chose the good,
part, which shall not be taken away from her. And this must be more carefully
considered. For when He says that Mary chose the good part, although He says
nothing of Martha, and certainly does not appear to blame her, yet in praising
the one, He implies that the other is inferior. Again when He says "which
shall not be taken away from her" He shows that from the other her portion
can be taken away (for a bodily ministry cannot last forever with a man), but
teaches that this one's desire can never have an end.
CHAPTER IX.
A question how it is that the practice of virtue with a man.
To which
we, being deeply moved, replied what then? will the effort of fasting, diligence
in reading,
works
of mercy, justice, piety, and kindness, be taken
away from us, and not continue with the doers of them, especially since the
Lord Himself promises the reward of the kingdom of heaven to these works, when
He says: "Come, ye blessed of My Father, inherit the kingdom prepared
for you from the beginning of the world. For I was an hungred, and ye gave
Me to eat; I was thirsty and ye gave Me to drink:" etc.(1) How then shall
these works be taken away, which admit the doers of them into the kingdom of
heaven?
CHAPTER X.
The answer that not the reward, but the doing of them will come to an end.
MOSES.
I did not say that the reward for a good work would be taken away, as the
Lord Himself says: "Whosoever shall give to one of the least of
these, a cup of cold water only in the name of a disciple, verily I say unto
you, he shall not lose his reward:"(2) but I maintain that the doing of
a thing, which either bodily necessity, or the onslaught of the flesh, or the
inequalities of this world, compel to be done, will be taken away. For diligence
in reading, and self-denial in fasting, are usefully practised for purifying
the heart and chastening the flesh in this life only, as long as "the
flesh lusteth against the spirit,"(8) and sometimes we see that even in
this life they are taken away from those men who are worn out with excessive
toil, or bodily infirmity or old age, and cannot be practised by them. How
much more then will they come to an end hereafter, when "this corruptible
shall have put on incorruption,"(4) and the body which is now "a
natural body" shall have risen "a spiritual body"(5) and the
flesh shall have begun to be such that it no longer lusts against the spirit?
And of this the blessed Apostle also clearly speaks, when he says that "bodily
exercise is profitable for a little: but godliness (by which he certainly means
love) "is profitable for all things, having the promise of the life that
now is and of that which is to come."(6) This clearly shows that what
is said to be useful for a little, is not to be practised for all time, and
cannot possibly by itself alone confer the highest state of perfection on the
man who slaves at it. For the term "for a little" may mean either
of the two things, i.e., it may refer to the shortness of the time, because
bodily exercise cannot possibly last on with man both in this life and in the
world to come: or it may refer to the smallness of the profit which results
from exercising the flesh, because bodily austerities produce some sort of
beginnings of progress, but not the actual perfection of love, which has the
promise of the life that now is and of that which is to come: and therefore
we deem that the practice of the aforesaid works is needful, because without
them we cannot climb the heights of love. For what you call works of religion
and mercy are needful in this life while these inequalities and differences
of conditions still prevail; but even here we should not look for them to be
performed, unless such a large proportion of poor, needy, and sick folk abounded,
which is brought about by the wickedness of men; viz., of those who have grasped
and kept for their own use (without however using them) those things which
were granted to all by the Creator of all alike. As long then as this inequality
lasts in this world, this sort of work will be needful and useful to the man
that practises it, as it brings to a good purpose and pious will the reward
of an eternal inheritance: but it will come to an end in the life to come,
where equality will reign, when there will be no longer inequality, on account
of which these things must be done, but all men will pass from these manifold
practical works to the love of God, and contemplation of heavenly things in
continual purity of heart: to which those men who are urgent in devoting themselves
to knowledge and purifying the heart, have chosen to give themselves up with
all their might and main, betaking themselves, while they are still in the
flesh, to that duty, in which they are to continue, when they have laid aside
corruption, and when they come to that promise of the Lord the Saviour, which
says "Blessed are the pure in heart for they shall see God."(7)
CHAPTER XI.
On the abiding character of love.
AND why
do you wonder that those duties enumerated above will cease, when the holy
Apostle tells
us that even
the higher gifts of the Holy Spirit will
pass away: and points out that charity alone will abide without end, saying "whether
there be prophecies, they shall fail; whether there be tongues, they shall
cease: whether there be knowledge, it will Come to an end," but of this
he says "Charity never faileth." For all gifts are given for a time
as use and need require, but when the dispensation is ended they will without
doubt presently pass away: but love will never be destroyed. For not only does
it work usefully in us in this world; but also in that to come, when the burden
of bodily needs is cast off, it will continue in far greater vigour and excellence,
and will never be weakened by any defect, but by means of its perpetual incorruption
will cling to God more intently and earnestly.(1)
CHAPTER XII.
A question on perseverance in spiritual contemplation.
GERMANUS. Who then, while he is burdened with our frail flesh, can be always
so intent on this contemplation, as never to think about the arrival of a brother,
or visiting the sick, or manual labour, or at least about showing kindness
to strangers and visitors? And lastly, who is not interrupted by providing
for the body, and looking after it? Or how and in what way can the mind cling
to the invisible and incomprehensible God, this we should like to learn.
CHAPTER XIII.
The answer concerning the direction of the heart towards and concerning the
kingdom of God and the kingdom of the devil.
MOSES.
To cling to God continually, and as you say inseparably to hold fast to meditation
on Him,
is impossible
for a man while still in this weak flesh
of ours. But we ought to be aware on what we should have the purpose of our
mind fixed, and to what goal we should ever recall the gaze of our soul: and
when the mind can secure this it may rejoice; and grieve and sigh when it is
withdrawn from this, and as often as it discovers itself to have fallen away
from gazing on Him, it should admit that it has lapsed from the highest good,
considering that even a momentary departure from gazing on Christ is fornication.
And when our gaze has wandered ever so little from Him, let us turn the eyes
of the soul back to Him, and recall our mental gaze as in a perfectly straight
direction. For everything depends on the inward frame of mind, and when the
devil has been expelled. from this, and sins no longer reign in it, it follows
that the kingdom of God as founded in us, as the Evangelist says "The
kingdom of God cometh not with observation, nor shall men say Lo here, or lo
there: for verily I say unto you that the kingdom of God is within you."(2)
But nothing else can be "within you," but knowledge or ignorance
of truth, and delight either in vice or in virtue, through which we prepare
a kingdom for the devil or for Christ in our heart: and of this kingdom the
Apostle describes the character, when he says "For the kingdom of God
is not meat and drink, but righteousness and peace and joy in the Holy Ghost."(3)
And so if the kingdom of God is within us, and the actual kingdom of God is
righteousness and peace and joy, then the man who abides in these is most certainly
in the kingdom of God, and on the contrary those who live in unrighteousness,
and discord, and the sorrow that worketh death, have their place in the kingdom
of the devil, and in hell and death. For by these tokens the kingdom of God
and the kingdom of the devil are distinguished: and in truth if lifting up
our mental gaze on high we would consider that state in which the heavenly
powers live on high, who are truly in the kingdom of God, what should we imagine
it to be except perpetual and lasting joy? For what is so specially peculiar
and appropriate to true blessedness as constant calm and eternal joy? And that
you may be quite sure that this, which we say, is really so, not on my own
authority but on that of the Lord, hear how very clearly He describes the character
and condition of that world: "Behold," says He, "I create new
beavers and a new earth: and the former things shall not be remembered nor
come into mind. But ye shall be glad and rejoice forever in that which I create."(4)
And again "joy and gladness shall be found therein: thanksgiving and the
voice of praise, and there shall be month after month, and Sabbath after Sabbath."(5)
And again: "they shall obtain joy and gladness; and sorrow and sighing
shall flee away."(6) And if you want to know more definitely about that
life and the city of the saints, hear what the voice of the Lord proclaims
to the heavenly Jerusalem herself: "I will make," says He, "thine
officers peace and thine overseers righteousness. Violence shall no more be
heard in thy land, desolation nor destruction within thy borders. And salvation
shall take possession of thy walls, and praise of thy gates. The sun shall
be no more thy light by day, neither shall the brightness of the moon give
light to thee: but the Lord shall be thine everlasting light, and thy God thy
glory. Thy sun shall no more go down, neither shall thy moon withdraw itself:
but the Lord shall be thine everlasting light, and the days of thy mourning
shall be ended:"(1) and therefore the holy Apostle does not say generally
or without qualification that every joy is the kingdom of God, but markedly
and emphatically that joy alone which is "in the Holy Ghost."(2)
For he was perfectly aware of another detestable joy, of which we hear "the
world shall rejoice,"(3) and "woe unto you that laugh, for ye shall
mourn."(4) In fact the kingdom of heaven must be taken in a threefold
sense, either that the heavens shall reign, i.e., the saints over other things
subdued, according to this text, "Be thou over five cities, and thou over
ten;"(5) and this which is said to the disciples: "Ye shall sit upon
twelve thrones judging the twelve tribes of Israel:"(6) or that the heavens
themselves shall begin to be reigned over by Christ, when "all things
are subdued unto Him," and God begins to be "all in all:"(7)
or else that the saints shall reign in heaven with the Lord.
CHAPTER XIV.
Of the continuance of the soul.
WHEREFORE
every one while still existing in this body should already be aware that
he must be committed
to
that state and office, of which he made himself
a sharer and an adherent while in this life, nor should he doubt that in that
eternal world he will be partner of him, whose servant and minister he chose
to make himself here: according to that saying of our Lord which says "If
any man serve Me, let him follow Me, and where I am, there shall My servant
also be."(8) For as the kingdom of the devil is gained by consenting to
sin, so the kingdom of God is attained by the practice of virtue in purity
of heart and spiritual knowledge. But where the kingdom of God is, there most
certainly eternal life is enjoyed, and where the kingdom of the devil is, there
without doubt is death and the grave. And the man who is in this condition,
cannot praise the Lord, according to the saying of the prophet which tells
us: "The dead cannot praise Thee, O Lord; neither all they that go down
into the grave (doubtless of sin). But we," says he, "who live(not
forsooth to sin nor I to this world but to God) will bless the Lord, from this
time forth for evermore: for in death no man remembereth God: but in the grave
(of sin) who will confess to the Lord?"(9) i.e., no one will. For no man
even though he were to call himself a Christian a thousand times over, or a
monk, confesses God when he is sinning: no man who allows those things which
the Lord hates, remembereth God, nor calls himself with any truth the servant
of Him, whose commands he scorns with obstinate rashness: in which death the
blessed Apostle declares that the widow is involved, who gives herself to pleasure,
saying "a widow who giveth herself to pleasure is dead while she liveth."(10)
There are then many who while still living in this body are dead, and lying
in the grave cannot praise God; and on the contrary there are many who though
they are dead in the body yet bless God in the spirit, and praise Him, according
to this: "O ye spirits and souls of the righteous, bless ye the Lord:"(11)
and "every spirit shall praise the Lord."(12) And in the Apocalypse
the souls of them that are slain are not only said to praise God but to address
Him also.(13) In the gospel too the Lord says with still greater clearness
to the Sadducees: "Have ye not read that which was spoken by God, when
He said to you: I am the God of Abraham, and the God of Isaac and the God of
Jacob. He is not the God of the dead but of the living: for all do live unto
Him."(14) Of whom also the Apostle says: "wherefore God is not ashamed
to be called their God: for He hath prepared for them a city."(15) For
that they are not idle after the separation from this body, and are not incapable
of feeling, the parable in the gospel shows, which tells us of the beggar Lazarus
and Dives clothed in purple, one of whom obtained a position of bliss, i.e.,
Abraham's bosom, the other is consumed with the dreadful heat of eternal fire.(16)
But if you care too to understand the words spoken to the thief "To-day
thou shalt be with Me in Paradise,"(17) what do they clearly show but
that not only does their former intelligence continue with the souls, but also
that in their changed condition they partake of some state which corresponds
to their actions and deserts? For the Lord would certainly never have promised
him this, if He had known that his soul after being separated from the flesh
would either have been deprived of perception or have been resolved into nothing.
For it was not his flesh but his soul which was to enter Paradise with Christ.
At least we must avoid, and shun with the utmost horror, that wicked punctuation
of the heretics, who, as they do not believe that Christ could be found in
Paradise on the same day on which He descended into hell, thus punctuate "Verily,
I say unto you to-day," and making a stop apply "thou shall be with.
Me in Paradise, in such a way that they imagine that this promise was not fulfilled
at once after he departed from this life, but that it will be fulfilled after
the resurrection,(1) as they do not understand what before the time of His
resurrection He declared to the Jews, who fancied that He was hampered by human
difficulties and weakness of the flesh as they were: "No man hath ascended
into heaven, but He who came down from heaven, even the Son of man who is in
heaven:"(2) by which He clearly shows that the souls of the departed are
not only not deprived of their reason, but that they are not even without such
feelings as hope and sorrow, joy and fear, and that they already are beginning
to taste beforehand something of what is reserved for them at the last judgment,
and that they are not as some unbelievers hold resolved into nothing after
their departure from this life:(3) but that they live a more real life, and
are still more earnest in waiting on the praises of God. And indeed to put
aside for a little Scripture proofs, and to discuss, as far as our ability
permits us, a little about the nature of the soul itself, is it not beyond
the bounds of I will not say the folly, but the madness of all stupidity, even
to have the slightest suspicion that the nobler part of man, in which as the
blessed Apostle shows, the image and likeness of God consists,(4) will, when
the burden of the body with which it is oppressed in this world is laid aside,
become insensible, when, as it contains in itself all the power of reason,
it makes the dumb and senseless material flesh sensible, by participation with
it: especially when it follows, and the order of reason itself demands that
when the mind has put off the grossness of the flesh with which it is now weighed
down, it will restore its intellectual powers better than ever, and receive
them in a purer and finer condition than it lost them. But so far did the blessed
Apostle recognize that what we say is true, that he actually wished to depart
from this flesh; that by separation from it, he might be able to be joined
more earnestly to the Lord; saying: "I desire to be dissolved and to be
with Christ, which is far better, for while we are in the body we are absent
from the Lord:" and therefore "we are bold and have our desire always
to be absent from the body, and present with the Lord. Wherefore also we strive,
whether absent or present, to be pleasing to Him;"(5) and he declares
indeed that the continuance of the soul which is in the flesh is distance from
the Lord, and absence from Christ, and trusts with entire faith that its separation
and departure from this flesh involves presence with Christ. And again still
more clearly the same Apostle speaks of this state of the souls as one that
is very full of life: "But ye are come to Mount Sion, and the city of
the living God, the heavenly Jerusalem, and to an innumerable company of angels,
and the church of the first born, who are written in heaven, and the spirits
of just men made perfect."(6) Of which spirits he speaks in another passage, "Furthermore
we have had instructors of our flesh, and we reverenced them: shall we not
much more be subject to the Father of spirits and live?"(7)
CHAPTER XV.
How we must meditate on God.
BUT the
contemplation of God is gained in a variety of ways. For we not only discover
God by admiring
His
incomprehensible essence, a thing which still
lies hid in the hope of the promise, but we see Him through the greatness of
His creation, and the consideration of His justice, and the aid of His daily
providence: when with pure minds we contemplate what He has done with His saints
in every generation, when with trembling heart we admire His power with which
He governs, directs, and rules all things, or the vastness of His knowledge,
and that eye of His from which no secrets of the heart can lie hid, when we
consider the sand of the sea, and the number of the waves measured by Him and
known to Him, when in our wonder we think that the drops of rain, the days
and hours of the ages, and all things past and future are present to His knowledge;
when we gaze in unbounded admiration on that ineffable mercy of His, which
with unwearied patience endures countless sins which are every moment being
committed under His very eyes, or the call with which from no antecedent merits
of ours, but by the free grace of His pity He receives us; or again the numberless
opportunities of salvation which He grants to those whom He is going to adopt--that
He made us be born in such a way as that from our very cradles His grace and
the knowledge of His law might be given to us, that He Himself, overcoming
our enemy in us simply for the pleasure of His good will, rewards us with eternal
bliss and everlasting rewards, when lastly He undertook the dispensation of
His Incarnation for our salvation, and extended the marvels of His sacraments(1)
to all nations. But there are numberless other considerations of this sort,
which arise in our minds according to the character of our life and the purity
of our heart, by which God is either seen by pure eyes or embraced: which considerations
certainly no one will preserve lastingly, if anything of carnal affections
still survives in him, because "thou canst not," saith the Lord, "see
My face: for no man shall see Me and live;"(2) viz., to this world and
to earthly affections.
CHAPTER XVI.
A question on the changing character of the thoughts.
GERMANUS. How is it then, that even against our will, aye and without our
knowledge idle thoughts steal upon us so subtilely and secretly that it is
fearfully hard not merely to drive them away, but even to grasp and seize them?
Can then a mind sometimes be found free from them, and never attacked by illusions
of this kind?
CHAPTER XVII.
The answer what the mind can and what it cannot do with regard to the state
of its thoughts.
MOSES. It is impossible for the mind not to be approached by thoughts, but
it is in the power of every earnest man either to admit them or to reject them.
As then their rising up does not entirely depend on ourselves, so the rejection
or admission of them lies in our own power. But because we said that it is
impossible for the mind not to be approached by thoughts, you must not lay
everything to the charge of the assault, or to those spirits who strive to
instil them into us, else there would not remain any free will in man, nor
would efforts for our improvement be in our power: but it is, I say, to a great
extent in our power to improve the character of our thoughts and to let either
holy and spiritual thoughts or earthly ones grow up m our hearts. For for this
purpose frequent reading and continual meditation on the Scriptures is employed
that from thence an opportunity for spiritual recollection may be given to
us, therefore the frequent singing of Psalms is used, that thence constant
feelings of compunction may be provided, and earnest vigils and fasts and prayers,
that the mind may be brought low and not mind earthly things, but contemplate
things celestial, for if these things are dropped and carelessness creeps on
us, the mind being hardened with the foulness of sin is sure to incline in
a carnal direction and fall away.
CHAPTER XVIII.
Comparison of a soul and a millstone.
AND this movement of the heart is not unsuitably illustrated by the comparison
of a mill wheel, which the headlong rush of water whirls round, with revolving
impetus, and which can never stop its work so long as it is driven round by
the action of the water: but it is in the power of the man who directs it,
to decide whether he will have wheat or barley or darnel ground by it. That
certainly must be crushed by it which is put into it by the man who has charge
of that business. So then the mind also through the trials of the present life
is driven about by the torrents of temptations pouring in upon it from all
sides, and cannot be free from the flow of thoughts: but the character of the
thoughts which it should either throw off or admit for itself, it will provide
by the efforts of its own earnestness and diligence: for if, as we said, we
constantly recur to meditation on the Holy Scriptures and raise our memory
towards the recollection of spiritual things and the desire of perfection and
the hope of future bliss, spiritual thoughts are sure to rise from this, and
cause the mind to dwell on those things on which we have been meditating. But
if we are overcome by sloth or carelessness and spend our time in idle gossip,
or are entangled in the cares of this world and unnecessary anxieties, the
result will be that a sort of species of tares will spring up, and afford an
injurious occupation for our hearts, and as our Lord and Saviour says, wherever
the treasure of our works or purpose may be, there also our heart is sure to
continue.(1)
CHAPTER XIX.
Of the three origins of our thoughts.
ABOVE
all we ought at least to know that there are three origins of our thoughts,
i.e., from God,
from the
devil, and from ourselves. They come from God when
He vouchsafes to visit us with the illumination of the Holy Ghost, lifting
us up to a higher state of progress, and where we have made but little progress,
or through acting slothfully have been overcome, He chastens us with most salutary
compunction, or when He discloses to us heavenly mysteries, or turns our purpose
and will to better actions, as in the case where the king Ahasuerus, being
chastened by the Lord, was prompted to ask for the books of the annals, by
which he was reminded of the good deeds of Mordecai, and promoted him to a
position of the highest honour and at once recalled his most cruel sentence
concerning the slaughter of the Jews.(2) Or when the prophet says: " will
hearken what the Lord God will say in me."(3) Another too tells us "And
an angel spoke, and said in me,"(4) or when the Son of God promised that
He would come with His Father, and make His abode in us,(5) and "It is
not ye that speak, but the Spirit of your Father which speaketh in you."(6)
And the chosen vessel: Ye seek a proof of Christ that speaketh in me."(7)
But a whole range of thoughts springs from the devil, when he endeavours to
destroy us either by the pleasures of sin or by secret attacks, in his crafty
wiles deceitfully showing us evil as good, and transforming himself into an
angel of light to us:(8) as when the evangelist tells us: "And when supper
was ended, when the devil had already put it into the heart of Judas Iscariot,
Simon's son, to betray"(9) the Lord: and again also "after the sop," he
says, "Satan entered into him."(10) Peter also says to Ananias: "Why
hath Satan tempted thine heart, to lie to the Holy Ghost?"(11) And that
which we read in the gospel much earlier as predicted by Ecclesiastes: "If
the spirit of the ruler rise up against thee, leave not thy place."(12)
That too which is said to God against Ahab in the third book of Kings, in the
character of an unclean spirit: "I will go forth and will be a lying spirit
in the mouth of all his prophets."(13) But they arise from ourselves,
when in the course of nature we recollect what we are doing or have done or
have heard. Of which the blessed David speaks: "I thought upon the ancient
days, and had in mind the years from of old, and I meditated, by night I exercised
myself with my heart, and searched out my spirit."(14) And again: "the
Lord knoweth the thoughts of man, that they are vain:"(15) and "the
thoughts of the righteous are judgments."(16) In the gospel too the Lord
says to the Pharisees: "why do ye think evil in your hearts?"(17)
CHAPTER XX.
About discerning the thoughts, with an illustration from a good money-changer.
WE ought
then carefully to notice this threefold order, and with a wise discretion
to analyse the
thoughts
which arise in our hearts, tracking out their origin
and cause and author in the first instance, that we may be able to consider
how we ought to yield ourselves to them in accordance with the of those who
suggest them so that we may, desert as the Lord's command bids us, become good
money-changers,(18) whose highest skill and whose training is to test what
is perfectly pure gold and what is commonly termed tested,(19) or what is not
sufficiently purified in the fire; and also with unerring skill not to be taken
in by a common brass denarius, if by being coloured with bright gold it is
made like some coin of great value; and not only shrewdly to recognize coins
stamped with the heads of usurpers, but with a still shrewder skill to detect
those which have the image of the right king, but are not properly made, and
lastly to be careful by the test of the balance to see that they are not under
proper weight. All of which things the gospel saying, which uses this figure,
shows us that we ought also to observe spiritually; first that whatever has
found an entrance into our hearts, and whatever doctrine has been received
by us, should be most carefully examined to see whether it has been purified
by the divine and heavenly fire of the Holy Ghost, or whether it belongs to
Jewish superstition, or whether it comes from the pride of a worldly philosophy
and only externally makes a show of religion. And this we can do, if we carry
out the Apostle's advice, "Believe not every spirit, but prove the spirits
whether they are of God."(1) But by this kind those men also are deceived,
who after having been professed as monks are enticed by the grace of style,
and certain doctrines of philosophers, which at the first blush, owing to some
pious meanings not out of harmony with religion, deceive as with the glitter
of gold their hearers, whom they have superficially attracted, but render them
poor and miserable for ever, like men deceived by false money made of copper:
either bringing them back to the bustle of this world, or enticing them into
the errors of heretics, and bombastic conceits: a thing which we read of as
happening to Achan in the book of Joshua the son of Nun,(2) when he coveted
a golden weight from the camp of the Philistines, and stole it, and was smitten
with a curse and condemned to eternal death. In the second place we should
be careful to see that no wrong interpretation fixed on to the pure gold of
Scripture deceives us as to the value of the metal: by which means the devil
in his craft tried to impose upon our Lord and Saviour as if He was a mere
man, when by his malevolent interpretation he perverted what ought to be understood
generally of all good men, and tried to fasten it specially on to Him, who
had no need of the care of the angels: saying, "For He shall give His
angels charge concerning Thee, to keep Thee in all Thy ways: and in their hands
they shall bear Thee up, lest at any time Thou dash Thy foot against a stone,"(3)
by a skilful assumption on his part giving a turn to the precious sayings of
Scripture and twisting them into a dangerous sense, the very opposite of their
true meaning, so as to offer to us the image and face of an usurper under cover
of the gold colour which may deceive us. Or whether he tries to cheat us with
counterfeits, for instance by urging that some work of piety should be taken
up which as it does come from the true minds of the fathers, leads under the
form of virtue to vice; and, deceiving us either by immoderate or impossible
fasts, or by too long vigils, or inordinate prayers, or unsuitable reading,
brings us to a bad end. Or, when he persuades us to give ourselves up to mixing
in the affairs of others, and to pious visits, by which he may drive us away
from the spiritual cloisters of the monastery, and the secrecy of its friendly
peacefulness, and suggests that we take on our shoulders the anxieties and
cares of religious women who are in want, that when a monk is inextricably
entangled in snares of this sort he may distract him with most injurious occupations
and cares. Or else when he incites a man to desire the holy office of the clergy
under the pretext of edifying many people, and the love of spiritual gain,
by which to draw us away from the humility and strictness of our life. All
of which things, although they are opposed to our salvation and to our profession,
yet when covered with a sort of veil of compassion and religion, easily deceive
those who are lacking in skill and care. For they imitate the coins of the
true king, because they seem at first full of piety, but are not stamped by
those who have the right to coin, i.e., the approved Catholic fathers, nor
do they proceed from the head public office for receiving them, but are made
by stealth and by the fraud of the devil, and palmed off upon the unskilful
and ignorant not without serious harm. And even although they seem to be useful
and needful at first, yet if afterwards they begin to interfere with the soundness
of our profession, and as it were to weaken in some sense the whole body of
our purpose, it is well that they should be cut off and cast away from us like
a member which may be necessary, but yet offends us and which seems to perform
the office of the right hand or foot. For it is better, without one member
of a command, i.e., its working or result, to continue safe and sound in other
parts, and to enter as weak into the kingdom of heaven rather than with the
whole mass of commands to fall into some error which by an evil custom separates
us from our strict rule and the system purposed and entered upon, and leads
to such loss, that it will never outweigh the harm that will follow, but will
cause all our past fruits and the whole body of our work to be burnt in hell
fire.(4) Of which kind of illusions it is well said in the Proverbs: "There
are ways which seem to be right to a man, but their latter end will come into
the depths of hell,"(5) and again "An evil man is harmful when he
attaches himself to a good man," (6) i.e., the devil deceives when he
is covered with an appearance of sanctity: "but he hates the sound of
the watchman,"(1) i.e., the power of discretion which comes from the words
and warnings of the fathers.
CHAPTER XXI.
Of the illusion of Abbot John.
IN this
manner we have heard that Abbot John who lived at Lycon,(2) was recently
deceived. For when
his body
was exhausted and failing as he had put off taking
food during a fast of two days, on the third day while he was on his way to
take some refreshment the devil came in the shape of a filthy Ethiopian, and
falling at his feet, cried "Pardon me because I appointed this labour
for you." And so that great man, who was so perfect in the matter of discretion,
understood that under pretence of an abstinence! practised unsuitably, he was
deceived by the craft of the devil, and engaged in a fast of such a character
as to affect his worn out body with a weariness that was unnecessary, indeed
that was harmful to the spirit; as he was deceived by a counterfeit coin, and,
while he paid respect to the image of the true king upon it, was not sufficiently
alive to the question whether it was rightly cut and stamped. But the last
duty of this "good money-changer," which, as we mentioned before,
concerns the examination of the weight, will be fulfilled, if whenever our
thoughts suggest that anything is to be done, we scrupulously think it over,
and, laying it in the scales of our breast, weigh it with the most exact balance,
whether it be full of good for all, or heavy with the fear of God: or entire
and sound in meaning; or whether it be light with human display or some conceit
of novelty, or whether the pride of foolish vain glory has not diminished or
lessened the weight of its merit. And so straightway weighing them in the public
balance, i.e., testing them by the acts and proofs of the Apostles and Prophets
let us hold them as it were entire and perfect and of full weight, or else
with all care and diligence reject them as imperfect and counterfeit, and of
insufficient weight.
CHAPTER XXII.
Of the fourfold method of discrimination.
THIS power
of discriminating will then be necessary for us in the fourfold manner of
which we have spoken;
viz., first that the material does not escape
our notice whether it be of true or of painted gold: secondly, that those thoughts
which falsely promise works of religion should be rejected by us as forged
and counterfeit coins, as they are those which are not rightly stamped, and
which bear an untrue image of the king; and that we may be able in the same
way to detect those which in the case of the precious gold of Scripture, by
means of a false and heretical meaning, show the image not of the true king
but of an usurper; and that we refuse those whose weight and value the rust
of vanity has depreciated and not allowed to pass in the scales of the fathers,
as coins that are too light, and are false and weigh too little; so that we
may not incur that which we are warned by the Lord's command to avoid with
all our power, and lose the value and reward of all our labour. "Lay not
up for yourselves treasures on the earth, where rust and moth corrupt and where
thieves break through and steal."(3) For whenever we do anything with
a view to human glory we know that we are, as the Lord says, laying up for
ourselves treasure on earth, and that consequently being as it were hidden
in the ground and buried in the earth it must be destroyed by sundry demons
or consumed by the biting rust of vain glory, or devoured by the moths of pride
so as to contribute nothing to the use and profits of the man who has hidden
it. We should then constantly search all the inner chambers of our hearts,
and trace out the footsteps of whatever enters into them with the closest investigation
lest haply some beast, if I may say so, relating to the understanding, either
lion or dragon, passing through has furtively left the dangerous marks of his
track, which will show to others the way of access into the secret recesses
of the heart, owing to a carelessness about our thoughts. And so daily and
hourly turning up the ground of our heart with the gospel plough, i.e., the
constant recollection of the Lord's cross, we shall manage to stamp out or
extirpate from our hearts the lairs of noxious beasts and the lurking places
of poisonous serpents.
CHAPTER XXIII.
Of the discourse of the teacher.
AT this the old man seeing that we were astonished, and inflamed at the words
of his discourse with an insatiable desire, stopped his speech for a little
in consequence of our admiration and earnestness, and presently added: Since
your zeal, my sons, has led to so long a discussion, and a sort of fire supplies
keener zest to our conference in proportion to your earnestness, as from this
very thing I can clearly see that you are truly thirsting after teaching about
perfection, I want still to say something to you on the excellence of discrimination
and grace which rules and holds the field among all virtues, and not merely
to prove its value and usefulness by daily instances of it, but also from former
deliberations and opinions of the fathers. For I remember that frequently when
men were asking me with sighs and tears for a discourse of this kind, and I
myself was anxious to give them some teaching I could not possibly manage it,
and not merely my thoughts but even my very power of speech failed me so that
I could not find how to send them away with even some slight consolation. And
by these signs we clearly see that the grace of the Lord inspires the speakers
with words according to the deserts and zeal of the hearers. And because the
very short night which is before us does not allow me to finish the discourse,
let us the rather give it up to bodily rest, in which the whole of it will
have to be spent, if a reasonable portion is refused, and let us reserve the
complete scheme of the discourse for unbroken consideration on a future day
or night. For it is right for the best counsellors on discretion to show the
diligence of their minds in the first place in this, and to prove whether they
are or can be possessors of it by this evidence and patience, so that in treating
of that virtue which is the mother of moderation they may by no means fall
into the vice which is opposite to it; viz., that of undue length, by their
actions and deeds destroying the force of the system and nature which they
recommend in word. In regard then to this most excellent discretion, on which
we still propose to inquire, so far as the Lord gives us power, it may in the
first instance be a good thing, when we are disputing about its excellence
and the moderation which we knew exists in it as the first of virtues, not
to allow ourselves to exceed the due limit of the discussion and of our time.
And so with this the blessed Moses put a stop to our talk, and urged us, eager
though we were and hanging on his lips, to go off to bed for a little, advising
us to lie down on the same mats on which we were sitting, and to put our bundles(1)
under our heads instead of pillows, as these being tied evenly to thicker leaves
of papyrus collected in long and slender bundles, six feet apart, at one time
provide the brethren when sitting at service with a very low seat instead of
a footstool, at another time being put under their necks when they go to bed
furnish a support for their heads, that is not too hard, but comfortable and
just right. For which uses of the monks these things are considered especially
fit and suitable not only because they are somewhat soft, and prepared at little
cost of money and labour, as the papyrus grows everywhere along the banks of
the Nile, but also because they are of a convenient stuff and light enough
to be removed or fetched as need may require. And so at last at the bidding
of the old man we settled ourselves down to sleep in deep stillness, both excited
with delight at the conference we had held, and also buoyed up with hope of
the promised discussion.
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