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JOHN CASSIAN
THE SECOND PART OF THE CONFERENCES OF JOHN CASSIAN
XI. THE FIRST CONFERENCE OF ABBOT CHAEREMON
ON PERFECTION
CHAPTER I.
Description of the town of Thennesus.
WHEN We were living in a monastery in Syria after our first infancy in the
faith, and when after we had grown somewhat we had begun to long for some greater
grace of perfection, we determined straightway to seek Egypt and penetrating
even to the remotest desert of the Thebaid,(1) to visit very many of the saints,
whose glory and fame had spread abroad everywhere, with the wish if not to
emulate them at any rate to know them. And so we came by a very lengthy voyage
to a town of Egypt named Thennesus,(2) whose inhabitants are so surrounded
either by the sea or by salt lakes that they devote themselves to business
alone and get their wealth and substance by naval commerce as the land fails
them, so that indeed when they want to build houses, there is no soil sufficient
for this, unless it is brought by boat from a distance.
CHAPTER II.
Of Bishop Archebius.
AND when
we arrived there, God gratified our wishes, and had brought about the arrival
of that most
blessed
and excellent man Bishop Archebius,(3) who
had been carried off from the assembly of anchorites and given as Bishop to
the town of Panephysis,(4) and who kept all his life long to his purpose of
solitude with such strictness that he relaxed nothing of the character of his
former humility, nor flattered himself on the honour that had been added to
him (for he vowed that he had not been summoned to that office as fit for it,
but complained that he had been expelled from the monastic system as unworthy
of it because though he had spent thirty-seven years in it he had never been
able to arrive at the purity so high a profession demands); he then when he
had received us kindly and most graciously in the aforesaid Thennesus whither
the business of electing a Bishop there had brought him, as soon as he heard
of our wish and desire to inquire of the holy fathers even in still more remote
parts of Egypt: "Come," said he, "see in the meanwhile the old
men who live not far from our monastery, the length of whose service is shown
by their bent bodies, as their holiness shines forth in their appearance, so
that even the mere sight of them will give a great lesson to those who see
them: and from them you can learn not so much by their words as by the actual
example of their holy life, what I grieve that I have lost, and having lost
cannot give to you. But I think that my poverty will be somewhat lessened by
this zeal of mine, if when you are seeking that pearl of the Gospel which I
have not, I at least provide where you can conveniently procure it.'
CHAPTER III.
Description of the desert where Chaeremon, Nesteros, and Joseph lived.
AND so
he took his staff and scrip, as is there the custom for all monks starting
on a journey, and
himself led
us as guide of our road to his own city, i.e.,
Panephysis, the lands of which and indeed the greater part of the neighbouring
region (formerly an extremely rich one since from it, as report says, everything
was supplied for the royal table), had been covered by the sea which was disturbed
by a sudden earthquake and overflowed its banks, and so (almost all the villages
being in ruins) covered what were formerly rich lands with salt marshes, so
that you might think that what is spiritually sung in the psalm was a literal
prophecy of that region. "He hath turned rivers into a wilderness; and
the Springs of waters into a thirsty land: a fruitful land into saltness for
the wickedness of them that dwell therein."(1) In these districts then
many towns perched in this way on the higher hills were deserted by their inhabitants
and turned by the inundation into islands, and these afforded the desired solitude
to the holy anchorites, among whom three old men; viz., Chaeremon, Nesteros
and Joseph, stood out as anchorites of the longest standing.
CHAPTER IV.
Of Abbot Chaeremon and his excuse about the teaching which we asked for.
AND so the blessed Archebius thought it best to take us first to Chaeremon,(2)
because he was nearer to his monastery, and because he was more advanced than
the other two in age: for he had passed the hundredth year of his life, vigorous
only in spirit, but with his back bowed with age and constant prayer, so that,
as if he were once more in his childhood he crawled with his hands hanging
down and resting on the ground. Gazing then at one and the same time on this
man's wonderful face and on his walk (for though all his limbs had already
failed and were dead yet he had lost none of the severity of his previous strictness)
when we humbly asked for the word and doctrine, and declared that longing for
spiritual instruction was the only reason for our coming, he sighed deeply
and said: What doctrine can I teach you, I in whom the feebleness of age has
relaxed my former strictness, as it has also destroyed my confidence in speaking?
For how could I presume to teach what I do not do, or instruct another in what
I know I now practise but feebly and coldly? Wherefore I do not allow any of
the younger men to live with me now that I am of such an advanced age, lest
the other's strictness should be relaxed owing to my example. For the authority
of a teacher will never be strong unless he fixes it in the heart of his hearer
by the actual performance of his duty.
CHAPTER V.
Of our answer to his excuse.
AT this we were overwhelmed with no slight confusion and replied as follows:
Although both the difficulty of the place and the solitary life itself, which
even a robust youth could scarcely put up with, ought to be sufficient to teach
us everything (and indeed without your saying anything they do teach and impress
us a very great deal) yet still we ask you to lay aside your silence for a
little and in a more worthy manner implant in us those principles by which
we may be able to embrace, not so much by imitating it as by admiring it, that
goodness which we see in you. For even if our coldness is known to you, and
does not deserve to obtain what we are asking for, yet at least the trouble
of so long a journey ought to be repaid by it, as we made haste to come here
after our first beginning in the monastery of Bethlehem, owing to a longing
for your instruction, and a yearning for our own good.
CHAPTER VI.
Abbot Chaeremon's statement that faults can be overcome in three ways.
THEN the
blessed CHAEREMON: There are, said he, three things which enable men to control
their faults;
viz.,
either the fear of hell or of laws even
now imposed; or the hope and desire of the kingdom of heaven; or a liking for
goodness itself and the love of virtue. For then we read that the fear of evil
loathes contamination: "The fear of the Lord hateth evil."(3) Hope
also shuts out the assaults of all faults: for "all who hope in Him shall
not fail."(4) Love also fears no destruction from sins, for "love
never faileth;"(5) and again: "love covers a multitude of sins."(6)
And therefore the blessed Apostle confines the whole sum of salvation in the
attainment of those three virtues, saying "Now abideth faith, hope, love,
these three."(1) For faith is what makes us shun the stains of sin from
fear of future judgment and punishment; hope is what withdraws our mind from
present things, and despises all bodily pleasures from its expectation of heavenly
rewards; love is what inflames us with keenness of heart for the love of Christ
and the fruit of spiritual goodness, and makes us hate with a perfect hatred
whatever is opposed to these. And these three things although they all seem
to aim at one and the same end (for they incite us to abstain from things unlawful)
yet they differ from each other greatly in the degrees of their excellence.
For the two former belong properly to those men who in their aim at goodness
have not yet acquired the love of virtue, and the third belongs specially to
God and to those who have received into themselves the image and likeness of
God. For He alone does the things that are good, with no fear and no thanks
or reward to stir Him up, but simply from the love of goodness. For, as Solomon
says, "The Lord hath made all things for Himself."(2) For under cover
of His own goodness He bestows all the fulness of good things on the worthy
and the unworthy because He cannot be wearied by wrongs, nor be moved by passions
at the sins of men, as He ever remains perfect goodness and unchangeable in
His nature.
CHAPTER VII.
By what steps we can ascend to the heights of love and what permanence there
is in it.
IF then
any one is aiming at perfection, from that first Stage of fear which we rightly
termed servile
(of which it
is said: "When ye have done all
things say: we are unprofitable servants,"(3)) he should by advancing
a step mount to the higher path of hope--which is compared not to a slave but
to a hireling, because it looks for the payment of its recompense, and as if
it were free from care concerning absolution of its sins and fear of punishment,
and conscious of its own good works, though it seems to look for the promised
reward, yet it cannot attain to that love of a son who, trusting in his father's
kindness and liberality, has no doubt that all that the father has is his,
to which also that prodigal who together with his father's substance had lost
the very name of son, did not venture to aspire, when he said: "I am no
more worthy to be called thy son;" for after those husks which the swine
ate, satisfaction from which was denied to him, i.e., the disgusting food of
sin, as he "came to himself," and was overcome by a salutary fear,
he already began to loathe the uncleanness of the swine, and to dread the punishment
of gnawing hunger, and as if he had already been made a servant, desires the
condition of a hireling and thinks about the remuneration, and says: "How
many hired servants of my father have abundance of bread, and I perish here
with hunger. I will then return to my father and will say unto him, 'Father
I have sinned against heaven and before thee, and am no more worthy to be called
thy son: make me as one of thy hired servants.'"(4) But those words of
humble penitence his father who ran to meet him received with greater affection
than that with which they were spoken, and was not content to allow him lesser
things, but passing through the two stages without delay restored him to his
former dignity of sonship. We also ought forthwith to hasten on that by means
of the indissoluble grace of love we may mount to that third stage of sonship,
which believes that all that the father has is its own, and so we may be counted
worthy to receive the image and likeness of our heavenly Father, and be able
to say after the likeness of the true son: "All that the Father hath is
mine."(5) Which also the blessed Apostle declares of us, saying: "All
things are yours, whether Paul or Apollos or Cephas, or the world, or life,
or death, or things present, or things to come; all are yours."(6) And
to this likeness the commands of our Saviour also summon us: "Be ye," says
He, "perfect, even as your Father in heaven is perfect"(7) For in
these persons sometimes the love of goodness is found to be interrupted, when
the vigour of the soul is relaxed by some coldness or joy or delight, and so
loses either the fear of hell for the time, or the desire of future blessings.
And there is indeed in these a stage leading to some advance, which affects
us so that when from fear of punishment or from hope of reward we begin to
avoid sin we are enabled to pass on to the stage of love, for "fear," says
one, "is not in love, but perfect love casteth out fear: for fear hath
torment, but he who fears is not perfect in love. We therefore love because
God first loved us."(8) We can then only ascend to that true perfection
when, as He first loved us for the grace of nothing but our salvation, we also
have loved Him for the sake of nothing but His own love alone. Wherefore we
must do our best to mount with perfect ardour of mind from this fear to hope,
from hope to the love of God, and the love of the virtues themselves, that
as we steadily pass on to the love of goodness itself, we may, as far as it
is possible for human nature, keep firm hold of what is good.
CHAPTER VIII.
How greatly those excel who depart from sin through the feeling of love.
FOR there is a great difference between one who puts out the fire of sin within
him by fear of hell or hope of future reward, and one who from the feeling
of divine love has a horror of sin itself and of uncleanness, and keeps hold
of the virtue of purity simply from the love and longing for purity, and looks
for no reward from a promise for the future, but, delighted with the knowledge
of good things present, does everything not from regard to punishment but from
delight in virtue. For this condition can neither abuse an opportunity to sin
when all human witnesses are absent, nor be corrupted by the secret allurements
of thoughts, while, keeping in its very marrow the love of virtue itself, it
not only does not admit into the heart anything that is opposed to it, but
actually hates it with the utmost horror. For it is one thing for a man in
his delight at some present good to hate the stains of sins and of the flesh,
and another thing to check unlawful desires by contemplating the future reward;
and it is one thing to fear present loss and another to dread future punishment.
Lastly it is a much greater thing to be unwilling to forsake good for good's
own sake, than it is to withhold consent from evil for fear of evil. For in
the former case the good is voluntary, but in the latter it is constrained
and as it were violently forced out of a reluctant party either by fear of
punishment or by greed of reward. For one who abstains from the allurements
of sin owing to fear, will whenever the obstacle of fear is removed, once more
return to what he loves and thus will not continually acquire any stability
in good, nor will he ever rest free from attacks because he will not secure
the sure and lasting peace of chastity. For where there is the disturbance
of warfare there cannot help being the danger of wounds. For one who is in
the midst of the conflict, even though he is a warrior and by fighting bravely
inflicts frequent and deadly wounds on his foes, must still sometimes be pierced
by the point of the enemy's sword. But one who has defeated the attack of sins
and is now in the enjoyment of the security of peace, and has passed on to
the love of virtue itself, will keep this condition of good continually, as
he is entirely wrapped up in it, because he believes that nothing can be worse
than the loss of his inmost chastity. For he deems nothing dearer or more precious
than present purity, to whom a dangerous departure from virtue or a poisonous
stain of sin is a grievous punishment. To such an one, I say, neither will
regard for the presence of another add anything to his goodness nor will solitude
take anything away from it: but as always and everywhere he bears about with
him his conscience as a judge not only of his actions but also of his thoughts,
he will especially try to please it, as he knows that it cannot be cheated
nor deceived, and that he cannot escape it.
CHAPTER IX.
That love not only makes sons out of servants, but also bestows the image
and likeness of God.
AND if
to anyone relying on the help of God and not on his own efforts, it has been
vouch-safed to
acquire
this state, from the condition of a Servant,
wherein is fear, and from a mercenary greed of hope, whereby there is sought
not so much the good of the donor as the recompense of reward, he will begin
to pass on to the adoption of sons, where there is no longer fear, nor greed,
but that love which never faileth continually endures. Of which fear and love
the Lord in chiding some shows what is befitting for each one: "A son
knoweth his own father, and a servant feareth his lord: And if I be a Father,
where is My honour: and if I be a Lord, where is my fear?"(1) For one
who is a servant must needs fear because "if knowing his lord's will he
has done things worthy of stripes, he shall be beaten with many stripes."(2)
Whoever then by this love has attained the image and likeness of God, will
now delight in goodness for the pleasure of goodness itself, and having somehow
a like feeling of patience and gentleness will henceforth be angered by no
faults of sinners, but in his compassion and sympathy will rather ask for pardon
for their infirmities, and, remembering that for so long he himself was tried
by the stings of similar passions till by the Lord's mercy he was saved, will
feel that, as he was saved from carnal attacks not by the teaching of his own
exertions but by God's protection, not anger but pity ought to be shown to
those who go astray; and with full peace of mind will he sing to God the following
verse: "Thou hast broken my chains. I will offer to Thee the sacrifice
of praise;" and: "except the Lord had helped me, my soul had almost
dwelt in hell."(1) And while he continues in this humility of mind he
will be able even to fulfil this Evangelic command of perfection: "Love
your enemies, do good to them that hate you, and pray for them that persecute
you and slander you."(2) And so it will be vouchsafed to us to attain
that reward which is subjoined, whereby we shall not only bear the image and
likeness of God, but shall even be called sons: "that ye may be," says
He "sons of your Father which is in heaven, Who maketh His sun to rise
on the good and evil, and sends rain on the just and on the unjust:"(3)
and this feeling the blessed John knew that he had attained when he said: "that
we may have confidence in the day of judgment, because as He is so are we also
in this world."(4) For in what can a weak and fragile human nature be
like Him, except in always showing a calm love in its heart towards the good
and evil, the just and the unjust, in imitation of God, and by doing good for
the love of goodness itself, arriving at that true adoption of the sons of
God, of which also the blessed Apostle speaks as follows: "Every one that
is born of God doeth not sin, for His seed is in him, and he cannot sin, because
he is born of God;" and again: "We know that every one who is born
of God sinneth not, but his birth of God preserves him, and the wicked one
toucheth him not?"(5) And this must be understood not of all kinds of
sins, but only of mortal sins: and if any one will not extricate and cleanse
himself from these, for him the aforesaid Apostle tells us in another place
that we ought not even to pray, saying: "If a man knows his brother to
be sinning a sin not unto death, let him ask, and He will give him life for
them that sin not unto death. There is a sin unto death: I do not say that
he should ask for it."(6) But of those which he says are not unto death,
from which even those who serve Christ faithfully cannot, with whatever care
they keep themselves, be free, of these he says: "If we say that we have
no sin we deceive ourselves and the truth is not in us;" and again: "If
we say that we have not sinned, we make Him a liar, and His word is not in
us." 7 For it is an impossibility for any one of the saints not to fall
into those trivial faults which are committed by word, and thought, and ignorance,
and forgetfulness, and necessity, and will, and surprise: which though quite
different from that sin which is said to be unto death, still cannot be free
from fault and blame.
CHAPTER X.
How it is the perfection of love to pray for one's enemies and by what signs
we may recognize a mind that is not yet purified.
WHEN then
any one has acquired this love of goodness of which we have been speaking,
and the imitation
of
God, then he will be endowed with the Lord's
heart of compassion, and will pray also for his persecutors, saying in like
manner: "Father, forgive them, for they know not what they do."(8)
But it is a clear sign of a soul that is not yet thoroughly purged from the
dregs of sin, not to sorrow with a feeling of pity at the offences of others,
but to keep to the rigid censure of the judge: for how will he be able to obtain
perfection of heart, who is without that by which, as the Apostle has pointed
out, the full requirements of the law can be fulfilled, saying: "Bear
one another's burdens and so fulfil the law of Christ,"(9) and who has
not that virtue of love, which "is not grieved, is not puffed up, thinketh
no evil," which "endureth all things, beareth all things."(10)
For "a righteous man pitieth the life of his beasts: but the heart of
the ungodly is without pity."(11) And so a monk is quite certain to fall
into the same sins which he condemns in another with merciless and inhuman
severity, for "a stern king will fall into misfortunes," and "one
who stops his ears so as not to hear the weak, shall himself cry, and there
shall be none to hear him."(12)
CHAPTER XI.
A question why he has called the feeling of fear and hope imperfect.
GERMANUS:
You have indeed spoken powerfully and grandly of the perfect love of God.
But still this
fact disturbs
us; viz., that while you were exalting
it with such praise, you said that the fear of God and the hope of eternal
reward were imperfect, though the prophet seems to have thought quite differently
about them, where he said: "Fear the Lord, all ye His saints, for they
that fear Him lack nothing."(13) And again in the matter of observing
God's righteous acts he admits that he has done them from consideration of
the reward, saying: "I have inclined my heart to do thy righteous acts
forever, for the reward."(14) And the Apostle says: "By faith Moses
when he was grown up, denied himself to be the son of Pharaoh's daughter; choosing
rather to be afflicted with the people of God than to have the pleasure of
sin for a season, esteeming the reproach of Christ greater riches than the
treasure of the Egyptians; for he looked unto the reward."(1) How then
can we think that they are imperfect, if the blessed David boasted that he
did the righteous acts of God in hope of a recompense, and the giver of the
Law is said to have looked for a future reward and so to have despised the
adoption to royal dignity, and to have preferred the most terrible affliction
to the treasures of the Egyptians?
CHAPTER XII.
The answer on the different kinds of perfection.
CHAEREMON:
In accordance with the condition and measure of every mind Holy Scripture
summons our free
wills
to different grades of perfection. For no
uniform crown of perfection can be offered to all men, because all have not
the same virtue, or purpose, or fervour, and so the Divine Word has in some
way appointed different ranks and different measures of perfection itself.
And that this is so the variety of beatitudes in the gospel clearly shows.
For though they are called blessed, whose is the kingdom of heaven, and blessed
are they who shall possess the earth, and blessed are they who shall receive
their consolation, and blessed are they who shall be filled, yet we believe
that there is a great difference between the habitations of the kingdom of
heaven, and the possession of the earth, whatever it be, and also between the
reception of consolation and the fulness and satisfaction of righteousness;
and that there is a great distinction between those who shall obtain mercy,
and those who shall be deemed worthy to enjoy the most glorious vision of God. "For
there is one glory of the sun, and another glory of the moon, and another glory
of the stars: for star differeth from star in glory, so also is the resurrection
of the dead."(2) While therefore in accordance with this rule holy Scripture
praises those who fear God, and says "Blessed are all they that fear the
Lord,"(3) and promises them for this a full measure of bliss, yet it says
again: "There is no fear in love, but perfect love casteth out fear: for
fear hath torment. But he that feareth is not yet perfect in love."(4)
And again, though it is a grand thing to serve God, and it is said: "Serve
the Lord in fear;" and: "It is a great thing for thee to be called
My servant;" and: "Blessed is that servant whom his Lord, when He
cometh, shall find so doing,"(5) yet it is said to the Apostles: "I
no longer call you servants, for the servant knoweth not what his Lord doeth:
but I call you friends, for all things whatsoever I have heard from my Father,
I have made known unto you."(6) And once more: "Ye are My friends,
if ye do whatever I command you."(7) You see then that there are different
stages of perfection, and that we are called by the Lord from high things to
still higher in such a way that he who has become blessed and perfect m the
fear of God; going as it is written "from strength to strength,"(8)
and from one perfection to another, i.e., mounting with keenness of soul from
fear to hope, is summoned in the end to that still more blessed stage, which,
is love, and he who has been "a faithful and wise servant"(9) will
pass to the companionship of friendship and to the adoption of sons. So then
our saying also must be understood according to this meaning: not that we say
that the consideration of that enduring punishment or of that blessed recompense
which is promised to the saints is of no value, but because, though they are
useful and introduce those who pursue them to the first beginning of blessedness,
yet again love, wherein is already fuller confidence, and a lasting joy, will
remove them from servile fear and mercenary hope to the love of God, and carry
them on to the adoption of sons, and somehow make them from being perfect still
more perfect. For the Saviour says that in His Father's house are "many
mansions,"(10) and although all the stars seem to be in the sky, yet there
is a mighty difference between the brightness of the sun and of the moon, and
between that of the morning star and the rest of the stars. And therefore the
blessed Apostle prefers it not only above fear and hope but also above all
gifts which are counted great and wonderful, and shows the way of love still
more excellent than all. For when after finishing his list of spiritual gifts
of virtues he wanted to describe its members, he began as follows: "And
yet I show unto you a still more excellent way. Though I speak with the tongues
of men and angels, and though I have the gift of prophecy and know all mysteries
and all knowledge, and though I have all faith so that I can remove mountains,
and though I bestow all my goods to feed the poor, and give my body to be burned,
but have not love, it profiteth me nothing." You see then that nothing
more precious, nothing more perfect, nothing more sublime, and, if I may say
so, nothing more enduring can be found than love. For "whether there be
prophecies, they shall fail, whether there be tongues, they shall cease, whether
there be knowledge, it shall be destroyed," but "love never faileth,"(1)
and without it not only those most excellent kinds of gifts, but even the glory
of martyrdom itself will fail.
CHAPTER XIII.
Of the fear which is the outcome of the greatest love.
WHOEVER
then has been established in this perfect love is sure to mount by a higher
stage to that
still more
sublime fear belonging to love, which is
the outcome of no dread of punishment or greed of reward, but of the greatest
love; whereby a son fears with earnest affection a most indulgent father, or
a brother fears his brother, a friend his friend, or a wife her husband, while
there is no dread of his blows or reproaches, but only of a slight injury to
his love, and while in every word as well as act there is ever care taken by
anxious affection lest the warmth of his love should cool in the very slightest
degree towards the object of it. And one of the prophets has finely described
the grandeur of this fear, saying: "Wisdom and knowledge are the riches
of salvation: the fear of the Lord is his treasure."(2) He could not describe
with greater clearness the worth and value of that fear than by saying that
the riches of our salvation, which consist in true wisdom and knowledge of
God, can only be preserved by the fear of the Lord. To this fear then not sinners
but saints are invited by the prophetic word where the Psalmist says: "O
fear the Lord, all ye His Saints: for they that fear Him lack nothing."(3)
For where a man fears the Lord with this fear it is certain that nothing is
lacking to his perfection. For it was clearly of that other penal fear that
the Apostle John said that "He who feareth is not made perfect in love,
for fear hath punishment."(4) There is then a great difference between
this fear, to which nothing is lacking, which is the treasure of wisdom and
knowledge, and that imperfect fear which is called "the beginning of wisdom,"(5)
and which has in it punishment and so is expelled from the hearts of those
who are perfect by the incoming of the fulness of love. For "there is
no fear in love, but perfect love casteth out fear."(6) And in truth if
the beginning of wisdom consists in fear, what will its perfection be except
in the love Of Christ which, as it contains in it the fear which belongs to
perfect love, is called not the beginning but the treasure of wisdom and knowledge?
And therefore there is a twofold stage of fear. The one for beginners, i.e.,
for those who are still subject to the yoke and to servile terror; of which
we read: "And the servant shall fear his Lord;"(7) and in the gospel: "I
no longer call you servants, for the servant knoweth not what his Lord doeth;" and
therefore "the servant," He tells us, "abideth not in the house
for ever, but the Son abideth for ever."(8) For He is instructing us to
pass on from that penal fear to the fullest freedom of love, and the confidence
of the friends and sons of God. Finally the blessed Apostle, who had by the
power of the Lord's love already passed through the servile stage of fear,
scorns lower things and declares that he has been enriched with good things
by the Lord, "for God hath not given us" he says "a spirit of
fear but of power and of love and of a sound mind."(9) Those also who
are inflamed with a perfect love of their heavenly Father, and whom the Divine
adoption has already made sons instead of servants, he addresses in these words: "For
ye have not received the spirit of bondage again to fear, but ye received the
spirit of adoption, whereby we cry, Abba, Father."(10) It is of this fear
too, that the prophet spoke when he would describe that sevenfold spirit, which
according to the mystery of the Incarnation, full surely descended on the God
man:(11) "And there shall rest upon Him the Spirit of the Lord: the Spirit
of wisdom and of understanding, the Spirit of counsel and of might, the Spirit
of knowledge and of true godliness," and in the last place he adds as
something special these words: "And the Spirit of the fear of the Lord
shall fill Him."(12) Where we must in the first place notice carefully
that he does not say "and there shall rest upon Him the Spirit of fear," as
he said in the earlier cases, but he says "there shall fill Him the Spirit
of the fear of the Lord." For such is the greatness of its richness that
when once it has seized on a man by its power, it takes possession not of a
portion but of his whole mind. And not without good reason. For as it is closely
joined to that love which "never faileth," it not only fills the
man, but takes a lasting and inseparable and continual possession of him in
whom it has begun, and is not lessened by any allurements of temporal joy or
delights, as is sometimes the case with that fear which is cast out. This then
is the fear belonging to perfection, with which we are told that the God-man,(1)
who came not only to redeem mankind, but also to give us a pattern of perfection
and example of goodness, was filled. For the true Son of God "who did
no sin neither was guile found in His mouth,"(2) could not feel that servile
fear of punishment.
CHAPTER XIV.
A question about complete chastity.
GERMANUS: Now that you have finished your discourse on perfect chastity, we
want also to ask somewhat more freely about the end of chastity. For we do
not doubt that those lofty heights of love, by which, as you have hitherto
explained, we mount to the image and likeness of God, cannot possibly exist
without perfect purity. But we should like to know whether a lasting grant
of it can be secured so that no incitement to lust may ever disturb the serenity
of our heart, and that thus we may be enabled to pass the time of our sojourneying
in the flesh free from this carnal passion, so as never to be inflamed by the
fire of excitement.
CHAPTER XV.
The postponement of the explanation which is asked for.
CHAEREMON:
It is indeed a sign of the utmost blessedness and of singular goodness both
continually
to learn
and to teach that love by which we cling to the Lord,
so that meditation on Him may, as the Psalmist says, occupy all the days and
nights of our life,(3) and may support our soul, which insatiably hungers and
thirsts after righteousness, by continually chewing the cud of this heavenly
food. But we must also, in accordance with the kindly forethought of our Saviour,
make some provision for the food of the body, that we faint not by the way,(4)
for "the spirit indeed is willing, but the flesh is weak."(5) And
this we must now secure by taking a little food, so that after supper, the
mind may be rendered more attentive for the careful tracing out of what you
want.
XII. THE SECOND CONFERENCE OF ABBOT CHAEREMON.
ON CHASTITY. Not translated.
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