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JOHN CASSIAN
CASSIAN'S CONFERENCES
VI. CONFERENCE OF ABBOT THEODORE
ON THE DEATH OF THE SAINTS.
CHAPTER I.
Description of the wilderness, and the question about the death of the saints.
IN the district of Palestine near the village of Tekoa which had the honour
of producing the prophet Amos, (2) there is a vast desert which stretches far
and wide as far as Arabia and the dead sea, into which the streams of Jordan
enter and are lost, and where are the ashes of Sodom. In this district there
lived for a long while monks of the most perfect life and holiness, who were
suddenly destroyed by an incursion of Saracen robbers: (3) whose bodies we
knew were seized upon with the greatest veneration (4) both by the Bishops
of the neighbourhood and by the whole populace of Arabia, and deposited among
the relics of the martyrs, so that swarms of people from two towns met, and
made terrible war upon each other, and in their struggle actually came to blows
for the possession of the holy spoil, while they strove among themselves with
pious zeal as to which of them had the better claim to bury them and keep their
relics -- the one party boasting of their vicinity to the place of their abode,
the other of the fact that they were near the place of their birth. But we
were upset by this and being disturbed either on our own account or on account
of some of the brethren who were in no small degree scandalized at it, inquired
why men of such illustrious merits and of so great virtues should be thus slain
by robbers, and why the Lord permitted such a crime to be committed against
his servants, so as to give up into the hands of wicked men those who were
the admiration of everybody: and so in our grief we came to the holy Theodore,
a man who excelled in practical common sense. For he was living in Cellae,
(1) a place that lies between Nitria and Scete, and is five miles distant i
from the monasteries of Nitria, and cut off by eighty intervening miles of
desert from the wilderness of Scete where we were living. And when we had made
our complaint to him about the death of the men mentioned above, and expressed
our surprise at the great patience of God, because He suffered men of such
worth to be killed in this way, so that those who ought to be able by the weight
of their sanctity to deliver others from trials of this kind, could not save
themselves from the hands of wicked men (and asked) why it was that God allowed
so great a crime to be committed against his servants, then the blessed Theodore
replied.
CHAPTER II.
Abbot Theodore's answer to the question proposed to him.
This question
often exercises the minds of those who have not much faith or knowledge,
and imagine that
the
prizes and rewards of the saints (which are
not given in this world, but laid up for the future) are bestowed in the short
space of this mortal life. But we whose hope in Christ is not only in this
life, for fear lest, as the Apostle says, we should be "of all men most
miserable" (2) (because as we receive none of the promises in this world
we should for our unbelief lose them also in that to come) ought not wrongly
to follow their ideas, lest through ignorance of the true real explanation,
we should hesitate and tremble and fail in temptation, if we find ourselves
given up to such men; and should ascribe to God injustice or carelessness about
the affairs of mankind -- a thing which it is almost a sin to mention -- because
He does not protect in their temptations men who are living an upright and
holy life, nor requite good men with good things and evil men with evil things
in this world; and so we should deserve to fall under the condemnation of those
whom the prophet Zephaniah rebukes, saying "who say in their hearts the
Lord will not do good, nor will He do evil:" (3) or at least be found
among those of whom we are told that they blaspheme God with such complaints
as this: "Every one that doeth evil is good in the sight of the Lord,
and such please Him: for surely where is the God of judgment?" (4) Adding
further that blasphemy which is described in the same way in what follows: "He
laboureth in vain that serveth God, and what profit is it that we have kept
His ordinances, and walked sorrowful before the Lord? Wherefore now we call
the proud happy, for they that work wickedness are enriched, and they have
tempted God, and are preserved." (5) Wherefore that we may avoid this
ignorance which is the root and cause of this most deadly error, we ought in
the first place to know what is really good, and what is bad, and so finally
if we grasp the true scriptural meaning of these words, and not the false popular
one, we shall escape being deceived by the errors of unbelievers.
CHAPTER III.
Of the three kinds of things there are in the world; viz., good bad, and indifferent.
ALTOGETHER
there are three kinds of things in the world; viz., good, bad, and indifferent.
And so we
ought
to know what is properly good, and what is
bad, and what is indifferent, that our faith may be supported by true knowledge
and stand firm in all temptations. We must then believe that in things which
are merely human there is no real good except virtue of soul alone, which leads
us with unfeigned faith to things divine, and makes us constantly adhere to
that unchanging good. And on the other hand we ought not to call anything bad,
except sin alone, which separates us from the good God, and unites us to the
evil devil. But those things are indifferent which can be appropriated to either
side according to the fancy or wish of their owner, as for instance riches,
power, honour, bodily strength, good health, beauty, life itself, and death,
poverty, bodily infirmities, injuries, and other things of the same sort, which
can contribute either to good or to evil as the character and fancy of their
owner directs. For riches are often serviceable for our good, as the Apostle
says, who charges "the rich of this world to be ready to give, to distribute
to the needy, to lay up in store for themselves a good foundation against the
time to come, that" by this means "they may lay hold on the true
life." (1) And according to the gospel they are a good thing for those
who "make to themselves friends of the unrighteous mammon." (2) And
again, they can be drawn in the direction of what is bad when they are amassed
only for the sake of hoarding them or for a life of luxury, and are not employed
to meet the wants of the poor. And that power also and honour and bodily strength
and good health are indifferent and available for either (good or bad) can
easily be shown from the fact that many of the Old Testament saints enjoyed
all these things and were in positions of great wealth and the highest honour,
and blessed with bodily strength, and yet are known to have been most acceptable
to God. And on the contrary those who have wrongfully abused these things and
perverted them for their own purposes are not without good reason punished
or destroyed, as the Book of Kings shows us has often happened. And that even
life and death are in themselves indifferent the birth of S. John and of Judas
proves. For in the case of the one his life was so profitable to himself that
we are told that his birth brought joy to others also, as we read "And
many shall rejoice at his birth;" (3) but of the life of the other it
is said: "It were good for that man if he had never been born." (4)
Further it is said of the death of John and of all saints "Right dear
in the sight of the Lord is the death of His saints:" (5) but of that
of Judas and men like him "The death of the wicked is very evil." (6)
And how useful bodily sickness sometimes may be the blessing on Lazarus, the
beggar who was full of sores, shows us. For Scripture makes mention of no other
good qualities or deserts of his, but it was for this fact alone; viz., that
he endured want and bodily sickness with the utmost patience, that he was deemed
worthy of the blessed lot of a place in Abraham's bosom. (7) And with regard
to want and persecution and injuries which everybody thinks to be bad, how
useful and necessary they are is clearly proved by this fact; viz., that the
saints not only never tried to avoid them, but actually either sought them
with all their powers or bravely endured them, and thus became the friends
of God, and obtained the reward of eternal life, as the blessed Apostle chants: "For
which cause I delight myself in my infirmities, in reproaches, in necessities,
in persecutions, in distresses for Christ. For when I am weak, then I am strong,
for power is made perfect in infirmity." (8) And therefore those who are
exalted with the greatest riches and honours and powers of this world, should
not be deemed to have secured their chief good out of them (for this is shown
to consist only in virtue) but only something indifferent, because just as
to good men who use them well and properly they will be found to be useful
and convenient (for they afford them opportunities for good works and fruits
which shall endure to eternal life), so to those who wrongfully abuse their
wealth, they are useless and out of place, and furnish occasions of sin and
death.
CHAPTER IV.
How evil cannot be forced on any one by another against his will.
PRESERVING then these distinctions clear and fixed, and knowing that there
is nothing good except virtue alone, and nothing bad except sin alone and separation
from God, let us now carefully consider whether God ever allows evil to be
forced on his saints either by Himself or by some one else. And you will certainly
find that this never happens. For another can never possibly force the evil
of sin upon anyone, who does not consent and who resists, but only on one who
admits it into himself through sloth and the corrupt desire of his heart. Finally,
when the devil having exhausted all his wicked devices had tried to force upon
the blessed Job this evil of sin, and had not only stripped him of all his
worldly goods, but also after that terrible and utterly unlooked for calamity
of bereavement through the death of his seven children, had heaped upon him
dreadful wounds and intolerable tortures from the crown of his head to the
sole of his foot, he tried in vain to fasten on him the stain of sin, because
he remained steadfast through it all, never brought himself to consent to blasphemy.
CHAPTER V.
An objection, how God Himself can be said to create evil.
GERMANUS:
We often read in holy Scripture that God has created evil or brought it upon
men, as is
this passage: "There is none beside Me. I am the Lord,
and there is none else: I form the light and create darkness, I make peace,
and create evil." (1) And again: "Shall there be evil in a city which
the Lord hath not done?" (2)
CHAPTER VI.
The answer to the question proposed.
THEODORE:
Sometimes holy Scripture is wont by an improper use of terms to use "evils "for "affliction;" not that these are properly
and in their nature evils, but because they are imagined to be evils by those
on whom they are brought for their good. For when divine judgment is reasoning
with men it must speak with the language and feelings of men. For when a doctor
for the sake of health with good reason either cuts or cauterizes those who
are suffering from the inflammation of ulcers, it is considered an evil by
those who have to bear it. Nor are the spur and the whip pleasant to a restive
horse. Moreover all chastisement seems at the moment to be a bitter thing to
those who are chastised, as the Apostle says: "Now all chastisement for
the present indeed seemeth not to bring with it joy but sorrow; but afterwards
it will yield to them that are exercised by it most peaceable fruits of righteousness," and "whom
the Lord loveth He chasteneth, and scourgeth every son whom He receiveth: for
what son is there whom the father doth not correct?" (3) And so evils
are sometimes wont to stand for afflictions, as where we read: "And God
repented of the evil which He had said that He would do to them and He did
it not." (4) And again: "For Thou, Lord, are gracious and merciful,
patient and very merciful and ready to repent of the evil," (5) i.e.,
of the sufferings and losses which Thou art forced to bring upon us as the
reward of our sins. And another prophet, knowing that these are profitable
to some men, and certainly not through any jealousy of their safety, but with
an eye to their good, prays thus: "Add evils to them, O Lord, add evils
to the haughty ones of the earth;" (6) and the Lord Himself says "Lo,
I will bring evils upon them," (7) i.e., sorrows, and losses, with which
they shall for the present be chastened for their soul's health, and so shall
be at length driven to return and hasten back to Me whom in their prosperity
they scorned. And so that these are originally evil we cannot possibly assert:
for to many they conduce to their good and offer the occasions of eternal bliss,
and therefore (to return to the question raised) all those things, which are
thought to be brought upon us as evils by our enemies or by any other people,
should not be counted as evils, but as things indifferent. For in the end they
will not be what he thinks, who brought them upon us in his rage and fury,
but what he makes them who endures them. And so when death has been brought
upon a saint, we ought not to think that an evil has happened to him but a
thing indifferent; which is an evil to a wicked man, while to the good it is
rest and freedom from evils. "For death is rest to a man whose way is
hidden." (8) And so a good man does not suffer any loss from it, because
he suffers nothing strange, but by the crime of an enemy he only receives (and
not without the reward of eternal life) that which would have happened to him
in the course of nature, and pays the debt of man's death, which must be paid
by an inevitable law, with the interest of a most fruitful passion, and the
recompense of a great reward.
CHAPTER VII.
A question whether the man who causes the death of a good man is guilty, if
the good man is the gainer by his death.
GERMANUS: Well then, if a good man does not only suffer no evil by being killed,
but actually gains a reward from his suffering, how can we accuse the man who
has done him no harm but good by killing him?
CHAPTER VIII.
The answer to the foregoing question.
THEODORE: We are talking about the actual qualities of things good and bad,
and what we call indifferent; and not about the characters of the men who do
these things. Nor ought any bad or wicked man to go unpunished because his
evil deed was not able to do harm to a good man. For the endurance and goodness
of a righteous man are of no profit to the man who is the cause of his death
or suffering, but only to him who patiently endures what is inflicted on him.
And so the one is justly punished for savage cruelty, because he meant to injure
him, while the other nevertheless suffers no evil, because in the goodness
of his heart he patiently endures his temptation and sufferings, and so causes
all those things, which were inflicted upon him with evil, intent, to turn
out to his advantage, and to conduce to the bliss of eternal life.
CHAPTER IX.
The case of Job who was tempted by the devil i and of the Lord who was betrayed
by Judas: and how prosperity as well as adversity is advantageous to a good
man.
FOR the
patience of Job did not bring any gain to the devil, through making him a
better man by his
temptations,
but only to lob himself who endured them
bravely; nor was Judas granted freedom from eternal punishment, because his
act of betrayal contributed to the salvation of mankind. For we must not regard
the result of the deed, but the purpose of the doer. Wherefore we should always
cling to this assertion; viz., that evil cannot be brought upon a man by another,
unless a man has admitted it by his sloth or feebleness of heart: as the blessed
Apostle confirms this opinion of ours in a verse of Scripture: "But we
know that all things work together for good to them that love God."(1)
But by saying "All things work together for good," he includes everything
alike, not only things fortunate, but also those which seem to be misfortunes:
through which the Apostle tells us in another place that he himself has passed,
when he says: "By the amour of righteousness on the right hand and on
the left," i.e.," Through honour and dishonour, through evil report
and good report, as deceivers and yet true, as sorrowful but always rejoicing,
as needy and yet enriching many:"(2) All those things then which are considered
fortunate, and are called those "on the right hand," which the holy
Apostle designates by the terms honour and good report; and those too which
are counted misfortunes, which he clearly means by dishonour and evil report,
and which he describes as "on the left hand," become to the perfect
man "the armour of righteousness," if when they are brought upon
him, he bears them bravely: because, as he fights with these, and uses those
very weapons with which he seems to be attacked, and is protected by them as
by bow and sword and stout shield against those who bring these things upon
him, he secures the advantage of his patience and goodness, and obtains a grand
triumph of steadfastness by means of those very weapons of his enemies which
are hurled against him to kill him; and if only he is not elated by success
or cast down by failure, but ever marches straightforward on the king's highway,
and does not swerve from that state of tranquillity as it were to the right
hand, when joy overcomes him, nor let himself be driven so to speak to the
left hand, when misfortunes overwhelm him, and sorrow holds sway. For "Much
peace have they that love Thy law, and to them there is no stumbling block."(3)
But of those who shift about according to the character and changes of the
several chances which happen to them, we read: "But a fool will change
like the moon."(4) For just as it is said of men who are perfect and wise: "To
them that love God all things work together for good,"(5) so of those
who are weak and foolish it is declared that "everything is against a
foolish man,"(6) for he gets no profit out of prosperity, nor does adversity
make him any better. For it requires as much goodness to bear sorrows bravely,
as to be moderate in prosperity: and it is quite certain that one who fails
in one of these, will not bear up under the other. But a man can be more easily
overcome by prosperity than by misfortunes: for these sometimes restrain men
against their will and make them humble and through most salutary sorrow cause
them to sin less, and make them better: while prosperity puffs up the mind
with soothing but most pernicious flatteries and when men are secure in the
prospect of their happiness dashes them to the ground with a still greater
destruction.
CHAPTER X.
Of the excellence of the perfect man who is figuratively spoken of as ambidextrous.
THOSE
are they then who are figurately spoken of in holy Scripture as <greek>amgoterodexion</greek>,
i.e., ambidextrous, as Ehud is described in the book of Judges "who used
either hand as the right(1) hand." And this power we also can spiritually
acquire, if by making a right and proper use of those things which are fortunate,
and which seem to be "on the right hand," as well as of those which
are unfortunate and as we call it "on the left hand," we make them
both belong to the right side, so that whatever turns up proves in our case,
to use the words of the Apostle, "the armour of righteousness." For
we see that the inner man consists of two parts, and if I may be allowed the
expression, two hands, nor can any of the saints do without that which we call
the left hand: but by means of it the perfection of virtue is shown, where
a man by skilful use can turn both hands into right hands. And in order to
make our meaning clearer, the saint has for his right hand his spiritual achievements,
in which he is found when with fervent spirit he gets the better of his desires
and passions, when he is free from all attacks of the devil, and without any
effort or difficulty rejects and cuts off all carnal sins, when he is exalted
above the earth and regards all things present and earthly as light smoke or
vain shadows, and scorns them as what is about to vanish away, when with an
overflowing heart he not only longs most intensely for the future but actually
sees it the more clearly, when he is more effectually fed on spiritual contemplations,
when he sees heavenly mysteries more brightly laid open to him, when he pours
forth his prayers to God with greater purity and readiness, when he is so inflamed
with fervent of spirit as to pass with the utmost readiness of soul to things
invisible and eternal, so as scarcely to believe that he any longer remains
in the flesh. He has also a left hand, when he is entangled in the toils of
temptation, when he is inflamed with the heat of desire for carnal lusts, when
he is set on fire by emotion towards rage and anger, when he is overcome by
being puffed up with pride or vainglory, when he is oppressed by a sorrow that
worketh death, when l he is shaken to pieces by the contrivances and attacks
of accidie, and when he has lost all spiritual warmth, and grows indifferent
with a sort of lukewarmness and unreasonable grief so that not only is he forsaken
by good and kindling thoughts, but actually Psalms, prayer, reading, and retirement
in his cell all pall upon him, and all virtuous exercises seem by an intolerable
and horrible loathing to have lost their saviour. And when a monk is troubled
in this way, then he knows that he is attacked "on the left hand." Anyone
therefore who is not at all puffed up through the aid of vainglory by any of
those things on the right hand which we have mentioned, and who struggles manfully
against those on the left hand, and does not yield to despair and give in,
but rather on the other hand seizes the armour of patience to practise himself
in virtue--this man can use both hands as fight hands, and in each action he
proves triumphant and carries off the prize of victory from that condition
on the left hand as well as that on the fight. Such, we read, was the reward
which the blessed Job obtained who was certainly crawned (for a victory) on
the right hand, when he was the father of seven sons and walked as a rich and
wealthy man, and yet offered daily sacrifices to the Lord for their purification,
in his anxiety that they might prove acceptable and dear to God rather than
to himself, when his gates stood open to every stranger, when he was "feet
to lame and eyes to blind,"(2) when the shoulders of the suffering were
kept warm by the wool of his sheep, when he was a father to orphans and a husband
to widows, when he did not even in his heart rejoice at the fall of his enemy.
And again it was the same man who with still greater virtue triumphed over
adversity on the left hand, when deprived in one moment of his seven sons he
was not as a father overcome with bitter grief but as a true servant of God
rejoiced in the will of his Creator. When instead of being a wealthy man he
became poor, naked instead of rich, pining away instead of strong, despised
and contemptible instead of famous and honourable, and yet preserved his fortitude
of mind unshaken, when, lastly, bereft of all his wealth and substance he took
up his abode on the dunghill, and like some stern executioner of his own body
scraped with a potsherd the matter that broke out, and plunging his fingers
deep into his wounds dragged out on every side masses of worms from his limbs.
And in all this he never fell into despair and blasphemy, nor murmured at all
against his Creator. Moreover also so little was he overcome by such a weight
of bitter temptations that the cloak which out of all his former property remained
to cover his body, and which alone could be saved from destruction by the devil
because he was clothed with it, he rent and cast off, and covered with it his
nakedness which he voluntarily endured, which the terrible robber had brought
upon him. The hair of his head too, which was the only thing left untouched
out of all the remains of his former glory, he shaved and cast to his tormentor,
and cutting off even that which his savage foe had left to him he exulted over
him and mocked him with that celestial cry of his: "If we have received
good at the hand of the Lord, should we not also receive evil? Naked came I
out of my mother's womb, and naked shall I return thither. The Lord gave and
the Lord hath taken away; as it hath pleased the Lord, so is it done; blessed
be the name of the Lord."(1) I should also with good reason call Joseph
ambidextrous, as in prosperity he was very dear to his father, affectionate
to his brethren, acceptable to God; and in adversity was chaste, and faithful
to the Lord, in prison most kind to the prisoners, forgetful of wrongs, generous
to his enemies; and to his brethren who were envious of him and as far as lay
in their powers, his murderers, he proved not only affectionate but actually
munificent. These men then and those who are like them are rightly termed <greek>ampoterodexion</greek>,
i.e., ambidextrous. For they can use either hand as the right hand, and passing
through those things which the Apostle enumerates can fairly say: "Through
the armour of righteousness on the right hand and on the left, through honour
and dishonour, through evil report and good report etc." And of this right
and left hand Solomon speaks as follows in the Song of songs, in the person
of the bride: "His left hand is under my head, and his right hand shall
embrace me."(2) And while this passage shows that both are useful, yet
it puts one under the head, because misfortunes ought to be subject to the
control of the heart, since they are only useful for this; viz., to train us
for a time and discipline us for our salvation and make us perfect in the matter
of patience. But the right hand she hopes will ever cling to her to cherish
her and hold her fast in the blessed embrace of the Bridegroom, and unite her
to him indissolubly. We shall then be ambidextrous, when neither abundance
nor want affects us, and when the former does not entice us to the luxury of
a dangerous carelessness, while the latter does not draw us to despair, and
complaining; but when, giving thanks to God in either case alike, we gain one
and the same advantage out of good and bad fortune. And such that truly ambidextrous
man, the teacher of the Gentiles, testifies that he himself was, when he says: "For
I have learnt in whatsoever state I am, to be content therewith. I know both
how to be brought low and I know how to abound: everywhere and in all things
I am instructed both to be full and to De hungry, both to abound and to suffer
need. I can do all things in Him which strengtheneth me."(3)
CHAPTER XI.
Of the two kinds of trials, which come upon us in a three-fold way.
WELL then,
though we say that trial is twofold, i.e., in prosperity and in adversity,
yet you must
know that
all men are tried in three different ways.
Often for their probation, sometimes for their improvement, and m some cases
because their sins deserve it. For their probation indeed, as we read that
the blessed Abraham and Job and many of the saints endured countless tribulations;
or this which is said to the people in Deuteronomy by Moses: "And thou
shalt remember all the way through which the Lord thy God hath brought thee
for forty years through the desert, to afflict thee and to prove thee, and
that the things that were in thy heart might be made known, whether thou wouldst
keep His Commandments or no:"(4) and this which we find in the Psalms: "I
proved thee at the waters of strife."(5) To Job also: "Thinkest thou
that I have spoken for any other cause than that thou mightest be seen to be
righteous?"(6) But for improvement, when God chastens his righteous ones
for some small and venial sins, or to raise them to a higher state of purity,
and delivers them over to various trials, that He may purge away all their
unclean thoughts, and, to use the prophet's word, the "dross," which
he sees to have collected in their secret parts, and may thus transmit them
like pure gold, to the judgment to come, as He allows nothing to remain in
them for the fire of judgment to discover when hereafter it searches them with
penal torments according to this saying: "Many are the tribulations of
the righteous."(7) And: "My son, neglect not the discipline of the
Lord, neither be thou wearied whilst thou art rebuked by Him. For whom the
Lord loveth He chastiseth, and scourgeth every son whom He receiveth. For what
son is there whom the father doth not correct? But if ye are without chastisement,
whereof all are partakers, then are ye bastards, and not sons."(1) And
in the Apocalypse: "Those whom I love, I reprove and chasten."(2)
To whom under the figure of Jerusalem the following words are spoken by Jeremiah,
in the person of God: "For I will utterly consume all the nations among
which I scattered thee: but I will not utterly consume thee: but I will chastise
thee in judgment, that thou mayest not seem to thyself innocent."(3) And
for this life-giving cleansing David prays when he says: "Prove me, O
Lord, and try me; turn my reins and my heart."(4) Isaiah also, well knowing
the value of this trial, says "O Lord, correct us but with judgment: not
in Thine anger."(5) And again: "I will give thanks to thee, O Lord,
for thou wast angry with me: Thy wrath is turned away, and Thou hast comforted
me."(6) But as a punishment for sins, the blows of trial are inflicted,
as where the Lord threatens that He will send plagues upon the people of Israel: "I
will send the teeth of beasts upon them, with the fury of creatures that trail
upon the ground:"(7) and "In vain have I struck your children: they
have not received correction."(8) In the Psalms also: "Many are the
scourges of the sinners:"(9) and in the gospel: "Behold thou art
made whole: now sin no more, lest a worse thing happen unto thee."(10)
We find, it is true, a fourth way also in which we know on the authority of
Scripture that some sufferings are brought upon us simply for the manifestation
of the glory of God and His works, according to these words of the gospel: "Neither
did this man sin nor his parents, but that the works of God might be manifested
in him:"(11) and again: "This sickness is not unto death, but for
the glory of God that the Son of God may be glorified by it."(12) There
are also other sorts of vengeance, with which some who have overpassed the
bounds of wickedness are smitten in this life, as we read that Dathan and Abiram
or Korah were punished, or above all, those of whom the Apostle speaks: "Wherefore
God gave them up to vile passions and a reprobate mind:"(13) and this
must be counted worse than all other punishments. For of these the Psalmist
says: "They are not in the labours of men; neither shall they be scourged
like other men."(14) For they are not worthy of being healed by the visitation
of the Lord which gives life, and by plagues in this world, as "in despair
they have given themselves over to lasciviousness, unto the working of all
error unto uncleanness,"(15) and as by hardening their hearts, and by
growing accustomed and used to sin they have got beyond cleansing in this brief
life and punishment in the present world: men, who are thus reproved by the
holy word of the prophet: "I destroyed some of you, as God destroyed Sodom
and Gomorrah, and you were as a firebrand plucked out of the burning: yet you
returned not to Me, saith the Lord,"(16) and Jeremiah: "I have killed
and destroyed thy people, and yet they are not returned from their ways."(17)
And again: "Thou hast smitten them and they have not grieved: Thou hast
bruised them and they refused to receive correction: they have made their faces
harder than the rock, they have refused to return."(18) And the prophet
seeing that all the remedies of this life will have been applied in vain for
their healing, and already as it were despairing of their life, declares: "The
bellows have failed in the fire, the founder hath melted in vain: for their
wicked deeds are not consumed. Call them reprobate silver, for the Lord hath
rejected them."(19) And the Lord thus laments that to no purpose has He
applied this salutary cleansing by fire to those who are hardened in their
sins, in the person of Jerusalem crusted all over with the rust of her sins,
when He says: "set it empty upon burning coals, that it may be hot, and
the brass thereof may be melted; and let the filth of it be melted in the midst
thereof. Great pains have been taken, and the great rust thereof is not gone
out, no not even by fire. Thy uncleanness is execrable: because I desired to
cleanse thee, and thou art not cleansed from thy filthiness."(20) Wherefore
like a skilful physician, who has tried all saving cures, and sees there is
no remedy left which can be applied to their disease, the Lord is in a manner
overcome by their iniquities and is obliged to desist from that kindly chastisement
of His, and so denounces them saying: "I will no longer be angry with
thee, and thy jealousy has departed from thee."(21) But of others, whose
heart has not grown hard by continuance in sin, and who do not stand in need
of that most severe and (if I may so call it) caustic remedy, but for whose
salvation the instruction of the life-giving word is sufficient--of them it
is said: "I will improve them by hearing of their suffering."(1)
We are well aware that there are other reasons also of the punishment and vengeance
which is inflicted on those who have sinned grievously--not to expiate their
crimes, nor wipe out the deserts of their sins, but that the living may be
put in fear and amend their lives. And these we plainly see were inflicted
on Jeroboam the son of Nebat, and Baasha the son of Ahiah, and Ahab and Jezebel,
when the Divine reproof thus declares: "Behold, I will bring evil upon
thee, and will cut down thy posterity, and will kill of Ahab every male, and
him that is shut up and the last in Israel. And I will make thy house like
the house of Jeroboam the son of Nebat and like the house of Baasha the son
of Ahiah: for that which thou hast done to provoke Me to anger, and for making
Israel to sin. The dogs also shall eat Jezebel in the field of Jezreel. If
Ahab die in the city, the dogs shall eat him: but if he die in the field the
birds of the air shall eat him,"(2) and this which is threatened as the
greatest threat of all: "Thy dead body shall not be brought to the sepulchre
of thy fathers."(3) It was not that this short and momentary punishment
would suffice to purge away the blasphemous inventions of him who first made
the golden calves and led to the lasting sin of the people, and their wicked
separation from the Lord,--or the countless and disgraceful profanities of
those others, but it was that by their example the fear of those punishments
which they dreaded might fall on others also, who, as they thought little of
the future or even disbelieved in it altogether, would only be moved by consideration
of things present; and that owing to this proof of His severity they might
acknowledge that there is no lack of care for the affairs of men, and for their
daily doings, in the majesty of God on high, and so through that which they
greatly feared might the more clearly See in God the rewarder of all their
deeds. We find, it is true, that even for lighter faults some men have received
the same sentence of death in this world, as that with which those men were
punished who, as we said before, were the authors of a blasphemous falling
away: as happened in the case of the man who gathered sticks on the Sabbath,(4)
and in that of Ananias and Sapphira, who through the sin of unbelief kept back
some portion of their goods: not that the guilt of their sins was equal, but
because they were the first found out in a new kind of transgression, and so
it was right that as they had given to others an example of sin, so also they
should give them an example of punishment and of fear, that anyone, who should
attempt to copy them, might know that (even if his punishment were postponed
in this life) he would be punished in the same way that they were at the trial
of the judgment hereafter. And, since in our desire to run through the different
kinds of trials and punishments we seem to have wandered somewhat from our
subject, on which we were saying that the perfect man will always remain steadfast
in either kind of trial, now let us return to it once more.
CHAPTER XII.
How the upright man ought to be like a stamp not of wax but of hard steel.
AND so the mind of the upright man ought not to be like wax or any other soft
material which always yields to the shape of what presses on it, and is stamped
with its form and impress and keeps it until it takes another shape by having
another seal stamped upon it; and so it results that it never retains its own
form but is turned and twisted about to correspond to whatever is pressed upon
it. But he should rather be like some stamp of hard steel, that the mind may
always keep its proper form and shape inviolate, and may stamp and imprint
on everything which occurs to it the marks of its own condition, while upon
it itself nothing that happens can leave any mark.
CHAPTER XIII.
A question whether the mind can constantly continue in one and the same condition.
GERMANUS: But can our mind constantly preserve its condition unaltered, and
always continue in the same state?
CHAPTER XIV.
The answer to the point raised by the questioner.
THEODORE:
It is needful that one must either, as the Apostle says, "be
renewed in the spirit of the mind,"(5) and daily advance by "pressing
forward to those things which are before,"(6) or, if one neglects to do
this, the sure result will be to go back, and become worse and worse. And therefore
the mind cannot possibly remain in one and the same state. Just as when a man,
by pulling hard, is trying to force a boat against the stream of a strong current
he must either stem the rush of the torrent by the force of his arms, and so
mount to what is higher up, or letting his hands slacken be whirled headlong
down stream. Wherefore it will be a clear proof of our failure if we find that
we have gained nothing more, nor should we doubt but that we have altogether
gone back, whenever we find that we have not advanced upwards, because, as
I said, the mind of man cannot possibly continue in the same condition, nor
so long as he is in the flesh will any of the saints ever reach the height
of all virtues, so that they continue unalterable. For something must either
be added to them or taken away from them, and in no creature can there be such
perfection, as not to be subject to the feeling of change; as we read in the
book of Job: "What is man that he should be without spot, and he that
is born of a woman that he should appear just? Behold among His saints none
is unchangeable, and the heavens are not pure in His sight."(1) For we
confess that God only is unchangeable, who alone is thus addressed by the prayer
of the holy prophet "But Thou art the same,"(2) and who says of Himself "I
am God, and I change not,"(3) because He alone is by nature always good,
always full and perfect, and one to whom nothing can ever be added, or from
whom nothing can be taken away. And so we ought always with incessant care
and anxiety to give ourselves up to the acquirement of virtue, and constantly
to occupy ourselves with the practice of it, lest, if we cease to go forward,
the result should immediately be a going back. For, as we said, the mind cannot
continue in one and the same condition, I mean without receiving addition to
or diminution of its good qualities. For to fail to gain new ones, is to lose
them, because when the desire of making progress ceases, there the danger of
going back is present.
CHAPTER XV.
How one loses by going away from one's cell.
AND so we ought always to remain shut up in our cell. For whenever a man has
strayed from it and returns fresh to it and begins again to live there he will
be upset and disturbed. For if he has let it go he cannot without difficulty
and pains recover that fixed purpose of mind, which he had gained when he remained
in his cell; and as through this he has gone back, he will not think anything
of the advance which he has missed, and which he would have secured if he had
not allowed himself to leave his cell, but he will rather congratulate himself
if he finds that he has regained that condition from which he fell away. For
just as time once lost and gone cannot any more be recovered, so neither can
those advantages which have been missed be restored: for whatever earnest purpose
of the mind there may be afterwards, it will be the profit of the day then
present, and the gain that belongs to the time that then is, and will not make
up for the gain that has been once for all lost.
CHAPTER XVI.
How even celestial powers above are capable of change.
BUT that
even the powers above are, as we said, subject to change is shown by those
who fell from
their
ranks through the fault of a corrupt will. Wherefore
we ought not to think that the nature of those is unchangeable, who remain
in the blessed condition in which they were created, simply because they were
not in like manner led astray to choose the worse part. For it is one thing
to have a nature incapable of change, and another thing for a man through the
efforts of his virtue, and by guarding what is good through the grace of the
unchangeable God, to be kept from change. For everything that is secured or
preserved by care, can also be lost by carelessness. And so we read: "Call
no man blessed before his death,"(4) because so long as a man is still
engaged in the struggle, and if I may use the expression, still wrest-ling--even
though he generally conquers and carries off many prizes of victory,--yet he
can never be free from fear, and from the suspicion of an uncertain issue.
And therefore God alone is called unchangeable and good, as His goodness is
not the result of effort, but a natural possession, and so He cannot be anything
but good. No virtue then can be acquired by man without the possibility of
change, but in order that when it once exists it may be continually preserved,
it must be watched over with the same care and diligence with which it was
acquired.
CHAPTER XVII.
That no one is dashed to the ground by a sudden fall.
But we
must not imagine that anyone slips and comes to grief by a sudden fall, but
that he falls
by a hopeless
collapse either from being deceived by beginning
his training badly, or from the good qualities of his soul failing through
a long course of carelessness of mind, and so his faults gaining ground upon
him little by little. For "loss goeth before destruction, and an evil
thought before a fall,"(1) just as no house ever fails to the ground by
a sudden collapse, but only when there is some flaw of long standing in the
foundation, or when by long continued neglect of its inmates, what was at first
only a little drip finds its way through, and so the protecting wails are by
degrees ruined, and in consequence of long standing neglect the gap becomes
larger, and break away, and in time the drenching storm and rain pours in like
a river: for "by slothfulness a building is cast down, and through the
weakness of hands the house shall drop through,"(2) And that the same
thing happens spiritually to the soul the same Solomon thus tells us in other
words, when he says: "water dripping drives a man out of the house. on
a stormy day."(4) Elegantly then does he compare carelessness of mind
to a roof, and to tiles that have not been looked after, through which in the
first instance only very slight drippings (so to speak) of the passions make
their way to the soul: but if these are not heeded, as being but small and
trifling, then the beams of virtues will decay and be carried away by a great
tempest of sins, through which "on a stormy day," i.e., in the time
of temptation, the devil's attack will assail us, and the soul will be driven
forth from the abode of virtue, in which, as long as it preserved all watchful
diligence, it had remained as in a house that belonged to it.
And so when we had heard this, we were so immensely delighted with our spiritual
repast, that the mental pleasure with which we were filled by this conference
outweighed the sorrow which we had experienced before from the death of the
saints. For not only were we instructed in things about which we had been puzzled,
but we also learnt from the raising of that question some things, which our
understanding had been too small for us to ask about.
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