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JOHN CASSIAN
THE SECOND PART OF THE CONFERENCES OF JOHN CASSIAN
XIV. THE FIRST CONFERENCE OF ABBOT NESTEROS
ON SPIRITUAL KNOWLEDGE
CHAPTER I.
The words of Abbot Nesteros on the knowledge of the religious.
THE order
of our promise and course demands that there should follow the instruction
of Abbot Nesteros,(2)
a
man of excellence in all points and of the greatest
knowledge: who when he had seen that we had committed some parts of Holy Scripture
to memory and desired to understand them, addressed us in these words. There
are indeed many different kinds of knowledge in this world, since there is
as art great a variety of them as there is of the arts and sciences. But, while
all are either utterly useless or only useful for the good of this present
life, there is yet none which has not its own system and method for learning
it, by which it can be grasped by those who seek it. If then those arts are
guided by certain special rules for their publication, how much more does the
system and expression of our religion, which tends to the contemplation of
the secrets of invisible mysteries, and seeks no present gain but the reward
of an eternal recompense, depend on a fixed order and scheme. And the knowledge
of this is twofold: first, <greek>praktikh</greek>, i.e., practical,
which is brought about by an improvement of morals and purification from faults:
secondly, <greek>qew</greek>,s232>,s212><greek>ti?h</greek>,
which consists in the contemplation of things Divine and the knowledge of most
sacred thoughts.
CHAPTER II.
On grasping the knowledge of spiritual things.
WHOEVER
then would arrive at this theoretical knowledge must first pursue practical
knowledge with
all his
might and main. For this practical knowledge
can be acquired without theoretical, but theoretical cannot possibly be gained
without practical. For there are certain stages, so distinct, and arranged
in such a way that man's humility may be able to mount on high; and if these
follow each other in turn in the order of which we have spoken, man can attain
to a height to which he could not fly, if the first step were wanting. In vain
then does one strive for the vision of God, who does not shun the stains of
sins: "For the spirit of God hates deception, and dwells not in a body
subject to sins."(8)
CHAPTER III.
How practical perfection depends on a double system.
BUT this
practical perfection depends on a double system; for its first method is
to know the nature of
all faults
and the manner of their cure. Its second,
to discover the order of the virtues, and form our mind by their perfection
so that it may be obedient to them, not as if it were forced and subject to
some fierce sway, but as if it delighted in its natural good, and throve upon
it, and mounted by that steep and narrow way with real pleasure. For in what
way will one, who has neither succeeded in understanding the nature of his
own faults, nor tried to eradicate them, be able to gain an understanding of
virtues, which is the second stage of practical training, or the mysteries
of spiritual and heavenly things, which exist in the higher stage of theoretical
knowledge? For it will necessarily be maintained that he cannot advance to
more lofty heights who has not surmounted the lower ones, and much less will
he be able to grasp those things that are without, who has not succeeded in
understanding what is within his comprehension. But you should know that we
must make an effort with a twofold purpose in our exertion; both for the expulsion
of vice, and for the attainment of virtue. And this we do not gather from our
own conjecture, but are taught by the words of Him who alone knows the strength
and method of His work: "Behold," He says: "I have set thee
this day over the nations and over kingdoms, to root up, and to pull down,
and to waste, and to destroy, and to build and to plant."(1) He points
out that for getting rid of noxious things four things are requisite; viz.,
to root up, to pull down, to waste, and to destroy: but for the performance
of what is good, and the acquisition of what pertains to righteousness only
to build and to plant. Whence it is perfectly evident that it is a harder thing
to tear up and eradicate the inveterate passions of body and soul than to introduce
and plant spiritual virtues.
CHAPTER IV.
How practical life is distributed among many different professions and interests.
THIS practical life then, which as has been said rests on a double system,
is distributed among many different professions and interests. For some make
it their whole purpose to aim at the secrecy of an anchorite and purity of
heart, as we know that in the past Elijah and Elisha, and in our own day the
blessed Antony and others who followed with the same object, were joined most
closely to God by the silence of solitude. Some have given all their efforts
and interests towards the system of the brethren and the watchful care of the
coenobium; as we remember that recently Abbot John, who presided over a big
monastery in the neighbourhood of the city Thmuis,(2) and some other men of
like merits were eminent with the signs of Apostles. Some are pleased with
the kindly service of the guest house and reception, by which in the past the
patriarch Abraham and Lot pleased the Lord, and recently the blessed Macarius,(3)
a man of singular courtesy and patience who presided over the guest house at
Alexandria in such a way as to be considered inferior to none of those who
aimed at the retirement of the desert. Some choose the care of the sick, others
devote themselves to intercession, which is offered up for the oppressed and
afflicted, or give themselves up to teaching, or give alms to the poor, and
flourish among men of excellence and renown, by reason of their love and goodness.
CHAPTER V.
On perseverance in the line that has been chosen.
WHEREFORE
it is good and profitable for each one to endeavour with all his might and
main to attain
perfection
in the work that has been begun, according
to the line which he has chosen as the grace which he has received; and while
he praises and admires the virtues of others, not to swerve from his own line
which he has once for all chosen, as he knows that, as the Apostle says, the
body of the Church indeed is one, but the members many, and that it has "gifts
differing according to the grace which is given us, whether prophecy, according
to the proportion of the faith, whether ministry, in ministering, or he that
teacheth, in doctrine, or he that exhorteth in exhortation, he that giveth,
in simplicity, he that ruleth, with carefulness, he that showeth mercy, with
cheerfulness."(4) For no members can claim the offices of other members,
because the eyes cannot perform the duties of the hands, nor the nostrils of
the ears. And so not all are Apostles, not all prophets, not all doctors, not
all have the gifts of healing, not all speak with tongues, not all interpret.(5)
CHAPTER VI.
How the weak are easily moved.
For those who are not yet settled in the line which they have taken up are
often, when they hear some praised for different interests and virtues, so
excited by the praise of them that they try forthwith to imitate their method:
and in this human weakness is sure to expend its efforts to no purpose. For
it is an impossibility for one and the same man to excel at once in all those
good deeds which I enumerated above. And if anyone is anxious equally to affect
them all, he is quite sure to come to this; viz., that while he pursues them
all, he will not thoroughly succeed in any one, and will lose more than he
will gain from this changing and shifting about. For in many ways men advance
towards God, and so each man should complete that one which he has once fixed
upon, never changing the course of his purpose, so that he may be perfect in
whatever line of life his may be.
CHAPTER VII.
An instance of chastity which teaches us that all men should not be emulous
of all things.
FOR apart from that loss, which we have said that a monk incurs who wants
in light-mindedness to pass from one pursuit to another, there is a risk of
death that is hence incurred,because at times things which are rightly done
by some are wrongly taken by others as an example, and things which turned
out well for some, are found to be injurious to others. For, to give an instance,
it is as if one wished to imitate the good deed of that man, which Abbot John
is wont to bring forward, not for the sake of imitating him but simply out
of admiration for him; for one came to the aforesaid old man in a secular dress
and when he had brought him some of the first fruits of his crops, he found
some one there possessed by a most fierce devil. And this one though he scorned
the adjurations and commands of Abbot John, and vowed that he would never at
his bidding leave the body which he had occupied, yet was terrified at the
coming of this other, and departed with a most humble utterance of his name.
And the old man marvelled not a little at his so evident grace and was the
more astonished at him because he saw that he had on a secular dress; and so
began carefully to ask of him the manner of his life and pursuit. And when
he said that he was living in the world and bound by the ties of marriage,
the blessed John, considering in his mind the greatness of his virtue and grace,
searched out still more carefully what his manner of life might be. He declared
that he was a countryman, and that he sought his food by the daily toil of
his hands, and was not conscious of anything good about him except that he
never went forth to his work in the fields in the morning nor came home in
the evening without having returned thanks in Church for the food of his daily
life, to God Who gave it; and that he had never used any of his crops without
having first offered to God their first fruits and tithes; and that he had
never driven his oxen over the bounds of another's harvest without having first
muzzled them that his neighbour might not sustain the slightest loss through
his carelessness. And when these things did not seem to Abbot John sufficient
to procure such grace as that with which he saw that he was endowed, and he
inquired of him and investigated what it was which could be connected with
the merits of such grace, he was induced by respect for such anxious inquiries
to confess that, when he wanted to be professed as a monk, he had been compelled
by force and his parents' command, twelve years before to take a wife, who,
without any body to that day being aware of it, was kept by him as a virgin
in the place of a sister. And when the old man heard this, he was so overcome
with admiration that he announced publicly in his presence that it was not
without good reason that the devil who had scorned him himself, could not endure
the presence of this man, whose virtue he himself, not only in the ardour of
youth, but even now, would not dare to aim at without risk of his chastity.
And though Abbot John would tell this story with the utmost admiration, yet
he never advised any monk to try this plan as he knew that many things which
are rightly done by some involved others who imitate them in great danger,
and that that cannot be tried by all, which the Lord bestowed upon a few by
a special gift.
CHAPTER VIII.
Of spiritual knowledge.
BUT to
return to the explanation of the knowledge from which our discourse took
its rise. Thus, as we said
above, practical knowledge is distributed among
many subjects and interests, but theoretical is divided into two parts, i.e.,
the historical interpretation and the spiritual sense. Whence also Solomon
when he had summed up the manifold grace of the Church, added: "for all
who are with her are clothed with double garments."(1) But of spiritual
knowledge there are three kinds, tropological, allegorical, anagogical,(2)
of which we read as follows in Proverbs: "But do you describe these things
to yourself in three ways according to the largeness of your heart."(1)
And so the history embraces the knowledge of things past and visible, as it
is repeated in this way by the Apostle: "For it is written that Abraham
had two sons, the one by a bondwoman, the other by a free: but he who was of
the bondwoman was born after the flesh, but he who was of the free was by promise." But
to the allegory belongs what follows, for what actually happened is said to
have prefigured the form of some mystery "For these," says he, "are
the two covenants the one from Mount Sinai, which gendereth into bondage, which
is Agar. For Sinai is a mountain in Arabia, which is compared to Jerusalem
which now is, and is in bondage with her children." But the anagogical
sense rises from spiritual mysteries even to still more sublime and sacred
secrets of heaven, and is subjoined by the Apostle in these words: "But
Jerusalem which is above is free, which is the mother of us. For it is written,
Rejoice, thou barren that bearest not, break forth and cry, thou that travailest
not, for many are the children of the desolate more than of her that hath an
husband."(2) The tropological sense is the moral explanation which has
to do with improvement of life and practical teaching, as if we were to understand
by these two covenants practical and theoretical instruction, or at any rate
as if we were to want to take Jerusalem or Sion as the soul of man, according
to this: "Praise the Lord, O Jerusalem: praise thy God, O Sion."(3)
And so these four previously mentioned figures coalesce, if we desire, in one
subject, so that one and the same Jerusalem can be taken in four senses: historically
as the city of the Jews; allegorically as Church of Christ, anagogically as
the heavenly city of God "which is the mother of us all," tropologically,
as the soul of man, which is frequently subject to praise or blame from the
Lord under this title. Of these four kinds of interpretation the blessed Apostle
speaks as follows: "But now, brethren, if I come to you speaking with
tongues what shall I profit you unless I speak to you either by revelation
or by knowledge or by prophecy or by doctrine?"(4) For "revelation" belongs
to allegory whereby what is concealed under the historical narrative is revealed
in its spiritual sense and interpretation, as for instance if we tried to expound
how "all our fathers were under the cloud and were all baptized unto Moses
in the cloud and in the sea," and how they "all ate the same spiritual
meat and drank the same spiritual drink from the rock that followed them. But
the rock was Christ."(5) And this explanation where there is a comparison
of the figure of the body and blood of Christ which we receive daily, contains
the allegorical sense. But the knowledge, which is in the same way mentioned
by the Apostle, is tropological, as by it we can by a careful study see of
all things that have to do with practical discernment whether they are useful
and good, as in this case, when we are told to judge of our own selves "whether
it is fitting for a woman to pray to God with her head uncovered."(6)
And this system, as has been said, contains the moral meaning. So "prophecy" which
the Apostle puts in the third place, alludes to the anagogical sense by which
the words are applied to things future and invisible, as here: "But we
would not have you ignorant, brethren, concerning those that sleep: that ye
be not sorry as others also who have no hope. For if we believe that Christ
died and rose again, even so them also which sleep in Jesus will God bring
with Him. For this we say to you by the word of God, that we which are alive
at the coming of the Lord shall not prevent those that sleep in Christ, for
the Lord Himself shall descend from heaven with a shout, with the voice of
the archangel and with the trump of God; and the dead in Christ shall rise
first."(7) In which kind of exhortation the figure of anagoge is brought
forward. But "doctrine" unfolds the simple course of historical exposition,
under which is contained no more secret sense, but what is declared by the
very words: as in this passage: "For I delivered unto you first of all
what I also received, how that Christ died for our sins according to the Scriptures,
and that He was buried, and that He rose again on the third day, and that he
was seen of Cephas;"(8) and: "God sent His Son, made of a woman,
made under the law, to redeem them that were under the law;"(9) or this: "Hear,
O Israel, the Lord the God is one Lord."(10)
CHAPTER IX.
How from practical knowledge we must proceed to spiritual.
WHEREFORE
if you are anxious to attain to the light of spiritual knowledge, not wrongly
for an idle boast
but for the sake of being made better men, you
are first inflamed with the longing for that blessedness, of which we read: "blessed
are the pure in heart for they shall see God,"(11) that you may also attain
to that of which the angel said to Daniel: "But they that are learned
shall shine as the splendor of the firmament: and they that turn many to righteousness
as the stars for ever and ever;" and in another prophet: "Enlighten
yourselves with the light of knowledge while there is time." And so keeping
up that diligence in reading, which I see that you have, endeavour with all
eagerness to gain in the first place a thorough grasp of practical, i.e., ethical
knowledge. For without this that theoretical purity of which we have spoken
cannot be obtained, which those only,-who are perfected not by the words of
others who teach them, but by the excellence of their own actions, can after
much expenditure of effort and toil attain as a reward for it. For as they
gain their knowledge not from meditation on the law but from the fruit of their
labour, they sing with the Psalmist: "From Thy commandments I have understanding;" and
having overcome all their passions, they say with confidence: "I will
sing, and I will understand in the undefiled way."(2) For he who is striving
in an undefiled way in the course of a pure heart, as he sings the Psalm, understands
the words which are chanted. And therefore if you would prepare in your heart
a holy tabernacle of spiritual knowledge, purge yourselves from the stain of
all sins, and rid yourselves of the cares of this world. For it is an impossibility
for the soul which is taken up even to a small extent with worldly troubles,
to gain the gift of knowledge or to become an author of spiritual interpretation,
and diligent in reading holy things. Be careful therefore in the first place,
and especially you, John, as your more youthful age requires you the rather
to be careful about what I am going to say--that you may enjoin absolute silence
on your lips, in order that your zeal for reading and the efforts of your purpose
may not be destroyed by vain pride. For this is the first practical step towards
learning, to receive the regulations and opinions of all the Elders with an
earnest heart, and with lips that are dumb; and diligently to lay them up in
your heart, and endeavour rather to perform than to teach them. For from teaching,
the dangerous arrogance of vainglory, but from performing, the fruit of spiritual
knowledge will flourish. And so you should never venture to say anything in
the conference of the Elders unless some ignorance that might be injurious,
or a matter which it is important to know leads you to ask a question; as some
who are puffed up with vainglory, pretend that they ask, in order really to
show off the knowledge which they perfectly possess. For it is an impossibility
for one, who takes to the pursuit of reading with the purpose of gaining the
praise of men, to be rewarded with the gift of true knowledge. For one who
is bound by the chain of this passion, is sure to be also in bondage to other
faults, and especially to that of pride: and so if he is baffled by his enCounter
with practical and ethical knowledge, he will certainly not attain that spiritual
knowledge which springs from it. Be then in all things "swift to hear,
but slow to speak,"(3) lest there come upon you that which is noted by
Solomon: "If thou seest a man who is quick to speak, know that there is
more hope of a fool than of him;(4) and do not presume to teach any one in
words what you have not already performed in deed. For our Lord taught us by
His own example that we ought to keep to this order, as of Him it is said: "what
Jesus began to do and to teach."(4) Take care then that you do not rush
into teaching before doing, and so be reckoned among the number of those of
whom the Lord speaks in the gospel to the disciples: "What they say unto
you, that observe and do, but not after their words: for they say and do not.
But they bind heavy burdens and grievous to be borne, and lay them on men's
shoulders; but they themselves will not move them with one of their fingers."(6)
For if he who shall "break one of these commands, and shall teach men
so, shall be called least in the kingdom of heaven,"(7) it follows that
one who has dared to despise many and greater commands and to teach men so,
shall certainly be considered not least in the kingdom of heaven, but greatest
in the punishment of hell. And therefore you must be careful not to be led
on to teach by the example of those who have attained some skill in discussion
and readiness in speech and because they can discourse on what they please
elegantly and fully, are imagined to possess spiritual knowledge, by those
who do not know how to distinguish its real force and character. For it is
one thing to have a ready tongue and elegant language, and quite another to
penetrate into the very heart and marrow of heavenly utterances and to gaze
with pure eye of the soul on profound and hidden mysteries; for this can be
gained by no learning of man's, nor condition of this world, only by purity
of soul, by means of the illumination of the Holy Ghost.
CHAPTER X.
How to embrace the system of true knowledge.
YOU must
then, if you want to get at the true knowledge of the Scriptures, endeavour
first to secure
steadfast
humility of heart, to carry you on by the
perfection of love not to the knowledge which puffeth up, but to that which
enlightens. For it is an impossibility for an impure mind to gain the gift
of spiritual knowledge. And therefore with every possible care avoid this,
lest through your zeal for reading there arise in you not the light of knowledge
nor the lasting glory which is promised through the light that comes from learning
but only the instruments of your destruction from vain arrogance. Next you
must by all means strive to get rid of all anxiety and worldly thoughts, and
give yourself over assiduously or rather continuously, to sacred reading, until
continual meditation fills your heart, and fashions you so to speak after its
own likeness, making of it, in a way, an ark of the testimony,(1) which has
within it two tables of stone, i.e., the constant assurance of the two testaments;(2)
and a golden pot, i.e., a pure and undefiled memory which preserves by a constant
tenacity the manna stored up in it, i.e., the enduring and heavenly sweetness
of the spiritual sense and the bread of angels; moreover also the rod of Aaron,
i.e., the saving standard of Jesus Christ our true High Priest, that ever buds
with the freshness of immortal memory. For this is the rod which after it had
been cut from the root of Jesse, died and flourished again with a more vigorous
life. But all these are guarded by two Cherubim, i.e., the fulness of historical
and spiritual knowledge. For the Cherubim mean a multitude of knowledge: and
these continually protect the mercy seat of God, i.e., the peace of your heart,
and overshadow it from all the assaults of spiritual wickedness. And so your
soul will be carried forward not only to the ark of the Divine Covenant, but
also to the priestly kingdom, and owing to its unbroken love of purity being
as it were engrossed in spiritual studies, will fulfil the command given to
the priests, enjoined as follows by the giver of the Law: "And he shall
not go forth from the sanctuary, lest he pollute the Sanctuary of God,"(3)
i.e., his heart, in which the Lord promised that he would ever dwell, saying: "I
will dwell in them and will walk among them."(4) Wherefore the whole series
of the Holy Scriptures should be diligently committed to memory and ceaselessly
repeated. For this continual meditation will bring us a twofold fruit: first,
that while the attention of the mind is taken up in reading and preparing the
lessons it cannot possibly be taken captive in any snares of bad thoughts:
next that those things which were conned over and frequently repeated and which
while we were trying to commit them to memory we could not understand as the
mind was at that time taken up, we can afterward see more clearly, when we
are free from the distraction of all acts and visions, and especially when
we reflect on them in silence in our meditation by night. So that when we are
at rest, and as it were plunged in the stupor of sleep, there is revealed to
us the understanding of the most secret meanings, of which in our waking hours
we had not the remotest conception.
CHAPTER XI.
Of the manifold meaning of the Holy Scriptures.
BUT as
the renewal of our soul grows by means of this study, Scripture also will
begin to put on
a new face,
and the beauty of the holier meanings will
somehow grow with our growth. For their form is adapted to the capacity of
man's understanding, and will appear earthly to carnal people, and divine to
spiritual ones, so that those to whom it formerly appeared to be involved in
thick clouds, cannot apprehend its subtleties nor endure its light. But to
make this which we are aiming at somewhat clearer by an instance, it will be
enough to produce a single passage of the law, by which we can prove that all
the heavenly commands as well are applied to men in accordance with the measure
of our state. For it is written in the law: "Thou shalt not commit adultery."(5)
This is rightly observed according to the simple meaning of the letter, by
a man who is still in bondage to foul passions. But by one who has already
forsaken these dirty acts and impure affections, it must be observed in the
spirit, so that he may forsake not only the worship of idols but also all heathen
superstitions and the observance of auguries and omens and all signs and days
and times, or at any rate that he be not entangled in the conjectures of words
and names which destroy the simplicity of our faith. For by fornication of
this kind we read that Jerusalem was defiled, as she committed adultery "on
every high hill and under every green tree,"(6) whom also the Lord rebuked
by the prophet, saying: "Let now the astrologers stand and save thee,
they that gazed at the stars and counted the months, that from them they might
tell the things that shall come to thee,"(7) of which fornication elsewhere
also the Lord says in rebuking them: "The spirit of fornication deceived
them, and they went a whoring from their God."(1) But one who has forsaken
both these kinds of fornication, will have a third kind to avoid, which is
contained in the superstitions of the law and of Judaism; of which the Apostle
says: "Ye observe days and months and times and years;" and again:
Touch not, taste not, handle not."(2) And there is no doubt that this
is said of the superstitions of the law, into which one who has fallen has
certainly gone a whoring from Christ, and is not worthy to hear this from the
Apostle: "For I have espoused you to one husband, to exhibit you as a
chaste virgin to Christ."(8) But this that follows will be directed to
him by the words of the same Apostle: "But I am afraid lest as the serpent
by his cunning deceived Eve, so your minds should be corrupted and fall from
the simplicity which is in Christ Jesus."(4) But if one has escaped the
uncleanness even of this fornication there will still be a fourth, which is
committed by adulterous intercourse with heretical teaching. Of which too the
blessed Apostle speaks: "I know that after my departure grievous wolves
shall enter in among you, not sparing the flock, and of yourselves also shall
arise men speaking perverse things so as to lead astray the disciples after
them."(5) But if a man has succeeded in avoiding even this, let him beware
lest he fall by a more subtle sin into the guilt of fornication. I mean that
which consists in wandering thoughts, because every thought which is not only
shameful but even idle, and departing in however small a degree from God is
regarded by the perfect man as the foulest fornication.
CHAPTER XII.
A question how we can attain to forgetfulness of the cares of this world.
UPON this I was at first moved by a secret emotion, and then groaned deeply
and said, All these things which you have set forth so fully have affected
me with still greater despair than that which I had previously endured: as
besides those general captivities of the soul whereby I doubt not that weak
people are smitten from without, a special hindrance to salvation is added
by that knowledge of literature which I seem already to have in some slight
measure attained, in which the efforts of my tutor, or my attention to continual
reading have so weakened me that now my mind is filled with those songs of
the poets so that even at the hour of prayer it is thinking about those trifling
fables, and the stories of battles with which from its earliest infancy it
was stored by its childish lessons: and when singing Psalms or asking forgiveness
of sins either some wanton recollection of the poems intrudes itself or the
images of heroes fighting presents itself before the eyes, and an imagination
of such phantoms is always tricking me and does not suffer my soul to aspire
to an insight into things above, so that this cannot be got rid of by my daily
lamentations.
CHAPTER XIII.
Of the method by which we can remove the dross from our memory.
NESTEROS:
From this very fact, from which there springs up for you the utmost despair
of your purification,
a speedy and effectual remedy may arise if only
you will transfer to the reading of and meditation upon the writings of the
Spirit, the same diligence and earnestness which you say that you showed in
those secular studies of yours. For your mind is sure to be taken up with those
poems until it is gaining with the same zeal and assiduity other matters for
it to reflect upon, and is in labour with spiritual and divine things instead
of unprofitable earthly ones. But when these are thoroughly and entirely conceived
and it has been nourished upon them, then by degrees the former thoughts can
be expelled and utterly got rid of. For the mind of man cannot be emptied of
all thoughts, and so as long as it is not taken up with spiritual interests,
is sure to be occupied with what it learnt long since. For as long as it has
nothing to recur to and exercise itself upon unweariedly, it is sure to fall
back upon what it learnt in childhood, and ever to think about what it took
in by long use and meditation. In order then that this spiritual knowledge
may be strengthened in you with a lasting steadfastness, and that you may not
enjoy it only for a time like those who just touch it not by their own exertions
but at the recital of another, and if I may use the expression, perceive its
scent in the air; but that it may be laid up in your heart, and deeply noted
in it, and thoroughly seen and handled, it is well for you to use the utmost
care in securing that, even if perhaps you hear things that you know very well
produced in the Conference, you do not regard them in a scornful and disdainful
way because you already know them, but that you lay them to your heart with
the same eagerness, with which the words of salvation which we are longing
for ought to be constantly poured into our ears or should ever proceed from
our lips. For although the narration of holy things be often repeated, yet
in a mind that feels a thirst for true knowledge the satiety will never create
disgust, but as it receives it every day as if it were something new and what
it wanted however often it may have taken it in, it will so much the more eagerly
either hear or speak, and from the repetition of these things will gain confirmation
of the knowledge it already possesses, rather than weariness of any sort from
the frequent Conference. For it is a sure sign of a mind that is cold and proud,
if it receives with disdain and carelessness the medicine of the words of salvation,
although it be offered with the zeal of excessive persistence. For "a
soul that is full jeers at honeycomb: but to a soul that is in want even little
things appear sweet."(1) And so if these things have been carefully taken
in and stored up in the recesses of the soul and stamped with the seal of silence,
afterwards like some sweet scented wine that maketh glad the heart of man,
they will, when mellowed by the antiquity of the thoughts and by long-standing
patience, be brought forth from the jar of your heart with great fragrance,
and like some perennial fountain will flow abundantly from the veins of experience
and irrigating channels of virtue and will pour forth copious streams as if
from some deep well in your heart. For that will happen in your case, which
is spoken in Proverbs to one who has achieved this in his work: "Drink
waters from your own cisterns and from the fount of your own wells. Let waters
from your own fountain flow in abundance for you, but let your waters pass
through into your streets."(2) And according to the prophet Isaiah: "Thou
shalt be like a watered garden, and like a fountain of water whose waters shall
not fail. And the places that have been desolate for ages shall be built in
thee; thou shalt raise up the foundations of generation and generation; and
thou shalt be called the repairer of the fences, turning the paths into rest."(8)
And that blessedness shall come upon thee which the same prophet promises: "And
the Lord will not cause thy teacher to flee away from thee any more, and thine
eyes shall see thy teacher. And thine ears shall hear the word of one admonishing
thee behind thy back: This is the way, walk ye in it, and go not aside either
to the right hand or to the left.'(4) And so it will come to pass that not
only every purpose and thought of your heart, but also all the wanderings and
rovings of your imagination will become to you a holy and unceasing pondering
of the Divine law.
CHAPTER XIV.
How an unclean soul can neither give nor receive spiritual knowledge.
BUT it
is, as we have already said, impossible for a novice either to understand
or to teach this.
For if one
is incapable of receiving it how can he be fit
to pass it on to another? But if he has had the audacity to teach anything
on these matters, most certainly his words will be idle and useless and only
reach the ears of his hearers, without being able to touch their hearts, uttered
as they were in sheer idleness and unfruitful vanity, for they do not proceed
from the treasure of a good conscience, but from the empty impertinence of
boastfulness. For it is impossible for an impure soul (however earnestly it
may devote itself to reading) to obtain spiritual knowledge. For no one pours
any rich ointment or fine honey or any precious liquid into a dirty and stinking
vessel. For a jar that has once been filled with foul odours spoils the sweetest
myrrh more readily than it receives any sweetness or grace from it, for what
is pure is corrupted much more quickly than what is corrupt is purified. And
so the vessel of our bosom unless it has first been purified from all the foul
stains of sin will not be worthy to receive that blessed ointment of which
it is said by the prophet: "Like the ointment upon the head, which ran
down upon the beard of Aaron, which ran down upon the edge of his garment,"(5)
nor will it keep undefiled that spiritual knowledge and the words of Scripture
which are "sweeter than honey and the honeycomb."(8) "For what
share hath righteousness with iniquity? or what agreement hath light with darkness?
or what concord has Christ with Belial?"(7)
CHAPTER XV.
An objection owing to the fact that many impure persons have knowledge while
saints have not.
GERMANUS: This assertion does not seem to us rounded on truth, or based on
solid reasoning. For if it is clear that all who either never receive the faith
of Christ at all or who corrupt it by the wicked sin of heresy, are of unclean
hearts, how is it that many Jews and heretics, and Catholics also who are entangled
in various sins, have acquired perfect knowledge of the Scriptures and boast
of the greatness of their spiritual learning, and on the other hand countless
swarms of saintly men, whose heart has been purified from all stain of sin,
are content with the piety of simple faith and know nothing of the mysteries
of a deeper knowledge? How then will that opinion stand, which attributes spiritual
knowledge solely to purity of heart?
CHAPTER XVI.
The answer to the effect that bad men cannot possess true knowledge.
NESTEROS:
One who does not carefully weigh every word of the opinions uttered cannot
rightly discover
the value
of the assertion. For we said to begin with
that men of this sort only possess skill in disputation and ornaments of speech;
but cannot penetrate to the very heart of Scripture and the mysteries of its
spiritual meanings. For true knowledge is only acquired by true worshippers
of God; and certainly this people does not possess it to whom it is said: "Hear,
O, foolish people, thou who bast no heart: ye who having eyes see not, and
having ears, hear not." And again: "Because thou hast rejected knowledge,
I also will reject thee from acting as My priest."(1) For as it is said
that in Christ "all the treasures of wisdom and knowledge are hid,"(2)
how can we hold that he who has scorned to find Christ, or, when He is found
blasphemes Him with impious lips, or at least defiles the Catholic faith by
his impure deeds, has acquired spiritual knowledge? "For the Spirit of
God will avoid deception, and dwelleth not in a body that is subject to sin."(8)
There is then no way of arriving at spiritual knowledge but this which one
of the prophets has finely described: "Sow to yourselves for righteousness:
reap the hope of life. Enlighten yourselves with the light of knowledge."(4)
First then we must sow for righteousness, i.e., by works of righteousness we
must extend practical perfection; next we must reap the hope of life, i.e.,
by the expulsion of carnal sins must gather the fruits of spiritual virtues:
and so we shall succeed in enlightening ourselves with the light of knowledge.
And the Psalmist also sees that this system ought to be followed, when he says: "Blessed
are they that are undefiled in the way: who walk in the law of the Lord. Blessed
are they that seek His testimonies."(5) For he does not say in the first
place: "Blessed are they that seek His testimonies, and afterwards add:
Blessed are they that are undefiled in the way;" but he begins by saying: "Blessed
are they that are undefiled in the way;" and by this clearly shows that
no one can properly come to seek God's testimonies unless he first walks undefiled
in the way of Christ by his practical life. Those therefore whom you mentioned
do not possess that knowledge which the impure cannot attain, but <greek>yeudwnumon</greek> ,
i.e., what is falsely so called, of which the blessed Apostle speaks: "O
Timothy, keep that which is committed to thee, avoiding profane novelties of
words, and oppositions of the knowledge that is falsely so called;"(6)
which is in the Greek <greek>tas</greek> <greek>antiqeseis</greek> <greek>yeudwnumou</greek> <greek>gnwsews</greek>.
Of those then who seem to acquire some show of knowledge or of those who while
they devote themselves diligently to reading the sacred volume and to committing
the Scriptures to memory, yet forsake not carnal sins, it is well said in Proverbs: "Like
as a golden ring in a swine's snout so is the beauty of an evil-disposed woman."(7)
For what does it profit a man to gain the ornaments of heavenly eloquence and
the most precious beauty of the Scriptures if by clinging to filthy deeds and
thoughts he destroys it by burying it in the foulest ground, or defiles it
by the dirty wallowing of his own lusts? For the result will be that which
is an ornament to those who rightly use it, is not only unable to adorn them,
but actually becomes dirty by the increased filth and mud. For "from the
mouth of a sinner praise is not comely;"(8) as to him it is said by the
prophet: "Wherefore dost thou declare My righteous acts, and takest My
covenant in thy lips?"(9) of souls like this, who never possess in any
lasting fashion the fear of the Lord of which it is said: "the fear of
the Lord is instruction and wisdom,"(10) and yet try to get at the meaning
of Scripture by continual meditation on them, it is appropriately asked in
Proverbs: "What use are riches to a fool? For a senseless man cannot possess
wisdom."(11) But so far is this true and spiritual knowledge removed from
that worldly erudition, which is defiled by the stains of carnal sins, that
we know that it has sometimes flourished most grandly in some who were without
eloquence and almost illiterate. And this is very clearly shown by the case
of the Apostles and many holy men, who did not spread themselves out with an
empty show of leaves, but were bowed down by the weight of the true fruits
of spiritual knowledge: of whom it is written in the Acts of the Apostles: "But
when they saw the boldness of Peter and John, and perceived that they were
ignorant and unlearned men, they were astonished."(1) And therefore if
you are anxious to attain to that never-failing fragrance, you must first strive
with all your might to obtain from the Lord the purity of chastity. For no
one, in whom the love of carnal passions and especially of fornication still
holds sway, can acquire spiritual knowledge. For "in a good heart wisdom
will rest;" and: "He that feareth the Lord shall find knowledge with
righteousness."(2) But that we must attain to spiritual knowledge in the
order of which we have already spoken, we are taught also by the blessed Apostle.
For when he wanted not merely to draw up a list of all his own virtues, but
rather to describe their order, that he might explain which follows what, and
which gives birth to what, after some others he proceeds as follows: "In
watchings, in fastings, in chastity, in knowledge, in long suffering, in gentleness,
in the Holy Ghost, in love unfeigned."(3) And by this enumeration of virtues
he evidently meant to teach us that we must come from watchings and fastings
to chastity, from chastity to knowledge, from knowledge to long sufering, from
long suffering to gentleness, from gentleness to the Holy Ghost, from the Holy
Ghost to the rewards of love unfeigned. When then by this system and in this
order you too have come to spiritual knowledge, you will certainly have, as
we said, not barren or idle learning but what is vigorous and fruitful; and
the seed of the word of salvation which has been committed by you to the hearts
of your hearers, will be watered by the plentiful showers of the Holy Ghost
that will follow; and, according to this that the prophet promised, "the
rain will be given to your seed, wherever you shall sow in the land, and the
bread of the corn of the land shall be most plentiful and fat."(4)
CHAPTER XVII.
To whom the method of perfection should be laid open.
TAKE care
too, when your riper age leads you to teach, lest you be led astray by the
love of vainglory,
and teach at random to the most impure persons these
things which you have learnt not so much by reading as by the effects of experience,
and so incur what Solomon, that wisest of men, denounced: "Attach not
a wicked man to the pastures of the just, and be not led astray by the fulness
of the belly," for "delicacies are not good for a fool, nor is there
room for wisdom where sense is wanting: for folly is the more led on, because
a stubborn servant is not improved by words, for even though he understands,
he will not obey." And "Do not say anything in the ears of an imprudent
man, lest haply he mock at thy wise speeches."(5) And "give not that
which is holy to dogs, neither east ye your pearls before swine, lest haply
they trample them under foot and turn again and rend you."(6) It is right
then to hide the mysteries of spiritual meanings from men of this sort, that
you may effectually sing: "Thy words have I hid within my heart: that
I should not sin against Thee."(7) But you will perhaps say: And to whom
are the mysteries of Holy Scripture to be dispensed? Solomon, the wisest of
men, shall teach you: "Give, says he, strong drink to those who are in
sorrow, and give wine to drink, to those who are in pain, that they may forget
their poverty, and remember their pain no more,"(8) i.e., to those who
in consequence of the punishment of their past actions are oppressed with grief
and sorrow, supply richly the joys of spiritual knowledge like "wine that
maketh glad the heart of man,"(9) and restore them with the strong drink
of the word of salvation, lest haply they be plunged in continual sorrow and
a despair that brings death, and so those who are of this sort be "swallowed
up in overmuch sorrow."(10) But of those who remain in coldness and carelessness,
and are smitten by no sorrow of heart we read as follows: "For one who
is kindly and without sorrow, shall be in want."(11) With all possible
care therefore avoid being puffed up with the love of vainglory, and so failing
to become a partaker with him whom the prophet praises, "who hath not
given his money upon usury."(12) For every one who, from love of the praise
of men dispenses the words of God, of which it is said "the words of the
Lord are pure words, as silver tried by the fire, purged from the earth, refined
seven times,"(13) puts out his money upon usury, and will deserve for
this not merely no reward, but rather punishment. For this reason he chose
to use up his Lord's money that he might be the garner from a temporal profit,
and not that the Lord, as it is written, might "when He comes, receive
His own with usury."(14)
CHAPTER XVIII.
Of the reasons for which spiritual learning is unfruitful.
BUT it
is certain that for two reasons the teaching of spiritual things is ineffectual.
For either
the teacher
is commending what he has no experience
of, and is trying with empty-sounding words to instruct his hearer, or else
the hearer is a bad man and full of faults and cannot receive in his hard heart
the holy and saving doctrine of the spiritual man; and of these it is said
by the prophet: "For the cart of this people is blinded, and their ears
are dull of hearing and their eyes have they closed: lest at any time they
should see with their eyes and hear with their ears, and understand with their
heart and be converted and I should heal them." (1)
CHAPTER XIX.
How often even those who are not worthy can receive the grace of the saving
word.
BUT sometimes
in the lavish generosity of God in His Providence, "Who
willeth all men to be saved and to come to the knowledge of the truth," (8)
it is granted that one who has not shown himself by an irreproachable life
to be worthy of the preaching of the gospel attains the grace of spiritual
teaching for the good of many. But by what means the gifts of healing are granted
by the Lord for the expulsion of devils it follows that we must in a similar
discussion explain, which as we are going to rise for supper we will keep for
the evening, because that is always more effectually grasped by the heart which
is taken in by degrees and without excessive bodily efforts.
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