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SAINT GREGORY THE GREAT
ROMAN PONTIFF
THE BOOK OF PASTORAL RULE
TO JOHN
BISHOP OF THE CITY OF RAVENNA
PART I.
Gregory to his most reverend and most holy brother and fellow-bishop, John.
With kind and humble intent thou reprovest me, dearest brother, for having
wished by hiding myself to fly from the burdens of pastoral care; as to which,
lest to some they should appear light, I express with my pen in the book before
you all my own estimate of their heaviness, in order both that he who is free
from them may not unwarily seek them, and that he who has so sought them may
tremble for having got them. This book is divided into four separate heads
of argument, that it may approach the reader's mind by allegations arranged
in order--by certain steps, as it were. For, as the necessity of things requires,
we must especially consider after what manner every one should come to supreme
rule; and, duly arriving at it, after what manner he should live; and, living
well, after what manner he should teach; and, teaching aright, with how great
consideration every day he should become aware of his own infirmity; lest either
humility fly from the approach, or life be at variance with the arrival, or
teaching be wanting to the life, or presumption unduly exalt the teaching.
Wherefore, let fear temper the desire; but afterwards, authority being assumed
by one who sought it not, let his life commend it. But then it is necessary
that the good which is displayed in the life of the pastor should also be propagated
by his speech. And at last it remains that, whatever works are brought to perfection,
consideration of our own infirmity should depress us with regard to them, test
the swelling of elation extinguish even them before the eyes of hidden judgment.
But inasmuch as there are many, like me in unskilfulness, who, while they know
not how to measure themselves, are covetous of teaching what they have not
learned; who estimate lightly the burden of authority in proportion as they
are ignorant of the pressure of its greatness; let them be reproved from the
very beginning of this book; so that, while, unlearned and precipitate, they
desire to hold the citadel of teaching, they may be repelled at the very door
of our discourse from the ventures of their precipitancy.
CHAPTER I.
That the unskilful venture not to approach an office of authority.
No one presumes to teach an art till he has first, with intent meditation,
learnt it. What rashness is it, then, for the unskilful to assume pastoral
authority, since the government of souls is the art of arts! For who can be
ignorant that the sores of the thoughts of men are more occult than the sores
of the bowels? And yet how often do men who have no knowledge whatever of spiritual
precepts fearlessly profess themselves physicians of the heart, though those
who are ignorant of the effect of drugs blush to appear as physicians of the
flesh! But because, through the ordering of God, all the highest in rank of
this present age are inclined to reverence religion, there are some who, through
the outward show of rule within the holy Church, affect the glory of distinction.
They desire to appear as teachers, they covet superiority to others, and, as
the Truth attests, they seek the first salutations in the market-place, the
first rooms at feasts, the first seats in assemblies (Matth. xxiii. 6, 7),
being all the less able to administer worthily the office they have undertaken
of pastoral care, as they have reached the magisterial position of humility
out of elation only. For, indeed, in a magisterial position language itself
is confounded when one thing is learnt and another taught(1). Against such
the Lord complains by the prophet, saying, They have reigned, and not by Me
; they have been set up as prices, and I knew it not (Hos. viii. 4). For those
reign of themselves, and not by the Will of the Supreme Ruler, who, supported
by no virtues, and in no way divinely called, but inflamed by their own desire,
seize rather than attain supreme rule. But them the Judge within both advances,
and yet knows not; for whom by permission he tolerates them surely by the judgment
of reprobation he ignores. Whence to some who come to Him even after miracles
He says, Depart from Me, ye workers of iniquity, I know you not who ye are
(Luke xiii. 27). The unskilfulness of shepherds is rebuked by the voice of
the Truth, when it is said through the prophet, The shepherds themselves have
not known understanding (Isai. lvi. 11); whom again the Lord denounces, saying,
And they that handle the law knew Me not (Jer. ii. 8). And therefore the Truth
complains of not being known of them, and protests that He knows not the principality
of those who know not Him; because in truth these who know not the things of
the Lord are unknown of the Lord; as Paul attests, who says, But if any man
knoweth not, he shall not be known (1 Cor. xiv. 38). Yet this unskilfulness
of the shepherds doubtless suits often the deserts of those who are subject
to them, because, though it is their own fault that they have not the light
of knowledge, yet it is in the dealing of strict judgment that through their
ignorance those also who follow them should stumble. Hence it is that, in the
Gospel, the Truth in person says, If the blind lead the blind, both fall into
the ditch (Matth. xv. 14). Hence the Psalmist (not expressing his own desire,
but in his ministry as a prophet) denounces such, when he says, Let their eyes
be blinded that they see not, and ever bow thou down their back (Ps. lxviii.
24(2)). For, indeed, those persons are eyes who, placed in the very face of
the highest dignity, have undertaken the office of spying out the road; while
those who are attached to them and follow them are denominated backs. And so,
when the eyes are blinded, the back is bent, because, when those who go before
lose the light of knowledge, those who follow are bowed down to carry the burden
of their sins.
CHAPTER II.
That none should enter on a place of government who practise not in life what
they have learnt by study.
There are some also who investigate spiritual precepts with cunning care,
but what they penetrate with their understanding they trample on in their lives:
all at once they teach the things which not by practice but by study they have
learnt; and what in words they preach by their manners they impugn. Whence
it comes to pass that when the shepherd walks through steep places, the flock
follows to the precipice. Hence it is that the Lord through the prophet complains
of the contemptible knowledge of shepherds, saying, When ye yourselves had
drunk most pure water, ye fouled the residue with your feet ; and My sheep
fed on that which had been trodden by your feet, and drank that which your
feet had fouled (Ezek. xxxiv. 18, 19). For indeed the shepherds drink most
pure water, when with a right understanding they imbibe the streams of truth.
But to foul the same water with their feet is to corrupt the studies of holy
meditation by evil living. And verily the sheep drink the water fouled by their
feet, when any of those subject to them follow not the words which they hear,
but only imitate the bad examples which they see. Thirsting for the things
said, but perverted by the works observed, they take in mud with their draughts,
as from polluted fountains. Hence also it is written through the prophet, A
snare for the downfall of my people are evil priests (Hos. v. 1; ix. 8). Hence
again the Lord through the prophet says of the priests, They are made to be
for a stumbling-block of iniquity to the house of Israel. For certainly no
one does more harm in the Church than one who has the name and rank of sanctity,
while he acts perversely. For him, when he transgresses, no one presumes to
take to task; and the offence spreads forcibly for example, when out of reverence
to his rank the sinner is honoured. But all who are unworthy would fly from
the burden of so great guilt, if with the attentive ear of the heart they weighed
the sentence of the Truth, Whoso shall offend one of these little ones which
believe in me, it were better for him that a millstone were hanged about his
neck, and he were drowned in the depth of the sea (Matth. xviii. 6). By the
millstone is expressed the round and labour of worldly life, and by the depth
of the sea is denoted final damnation. Whosoever, then, having come to bear
the outward show of sanctity, either by word or example destroys others, it
had indeed been better for him that earthly deeds in open guise should press
him down to death than that sacred offices should point him out to others as
imitable in his wrong-doing; because, surely, if he fell alone, the pains of
hell would torment him in more tolerable degree.
CHAPTER III.
Of the weight of government; and that all man-her of adversity is to be despised,
and prosperity feared.
So much, then, have we briefly said, to shew how great is the weight of government,
lest whosoever is unequal to sacred offices of government should dare to profane
them, and through lust of pre-eminence undertake a leadership of perdition.
For hence it is that James affectionately deters us, saying, Be not made many
masters, my brethren (James iii. 1). Hence the Mediator between God and man
Himself--He who, transcending the knowledge and understanding even of supernal
spirits, reigns in heaven from eternity-on earth fled from receiving a kingdom.
For it is written, When Jesus therefore perceived that they would came and
take Him by force, to make Him a king,, He departed again into the mountain
Himself alone (Job. vi. 15). For who could so blamelessly have had principality
over men as He who would in fact have reigned over those whom He had Himself
created? But, because He had come in the flesh to this end, that He might not
only redeem us by His passion but also teach us by His conversation, offering
Himself as an example to His followers, He would not be made a king; but He
went of His own accord to the gibbet of the cross. He fled from the offered
glory of pre-eminence, but desired the pain of an ignominious death; that so
His members might learn to fly from the favours of the world, to be afraid
of no terrors, to love adversity for the truth's sake, and to shrink in fear
from prosperity; because this often defiles the heart through vain glory, while
that purges it through sorrow; in this the mind exalts itself, but in that,
even though it had once exalted itself, it brings itself low; in this man forgets
himself, but in that, even perforce and against his will, he is recalled to
memory of what he is; in this even good things done aforetime often come to
nothing, but in that faults even of long standing are wiped away. For commonly
in the school of adversity the heart is subdued under discipline, while, on
sudden attainment of supreme rule, it is forthwith changed and becomes elated
through familiarity with glory. Thus Saul, who had before fled in consideration
of his unworthiness, no sooner had assumed the government of the kingdom than
he was puffed up (1 Kings x. 22; xv. 17, 30); for, desirous of being honoured
before the people while unwilling to be publicly blamed, he cut off from himself
even him who had anointed him to the kingdom. Thus David, who in the judgment
of Him who chose him was well pleasing to Him in almost all his deeds, as soon
as the weight of pressure was removed, broke out into a swelling sore (2 Kings
xi. 3, seq.), and, having been as a laxly running one in his appetite for the
woman, became as a cruelly hard one in the slaughter of the man; and he who
had before known pitifully how to spare the bad learnt afterwards, without
impediment of hesitation, to pant even for the death of the good (Ibid. 15).
For, indeed, previously he had been unwilling to smite his captured persecutor;
and afterwards, with loss to his wearied army, he destroyed even his devoted
soldier. And in truth his crime would have snatched him farther away from the
number of the elect, had not scourges called him back to pardon.
CHAPTER IV.
That far the most part the occupation of government dissipates the solidity
of the mind.
Often the care of government, when undertaken, distracts the heart in divers
directions; and one is found unequal to dealing with particular things, while
with confused mind divided among many. Whence a certain wise man providently
dissuades, saying, My son, meddle not with many matters (Ecclus. xi. 10); because,
that is, the mind is by no means collected on the plan of any single work while
parted among divers. And, when it is drawn abroad by unwonted care, it is emptied
of the solidity of inward fear: it becomes anxious in the ordering of things
that are without, and, ignorant of itself alone, knows how to think of many
things, while itself it knows not. For, when it implicates itself more than
is needful in things that are without, it is as though it were so occupied
during a journey as to forget where it was going; so that, being estranged
from the business of self-examination, it does not even consider the losses
it is suffering, or know how great they are. For neither did Hezekiah believe
himself to be sinning (2 Kings xx. 13), when he shewed to the strangers who
came to him his storehouses of spices; but he fell under the anger of the judge,
to the condemnation of his future offspring, from what he supposed himself
to be doing lawfully (Isai. xxxix. 4). Often, when means are abundant, and
many things can be done for subordinates to admire, the mind exalts itself
in thought, and fully provokes to itself the anger of the judge, though not
breaking out in overt acts of iniquity. For he who judges is within; that which
is judged is within. When, then, in heart we transgress, what we are doing
within ourselves is hidden from men. but yet in the eyes of the judge we sin.
For neither did the King of Babylon then first stand guilty of elation (Dan.
iv. 16, seq.) when he came to utter words of elation, inasmuch as even before,
when he had given no utterance to his elation, he heard the sentence of reprobation
from the prophet's mouth For he had already wiped off the fault of the pride
he had been guilty of, when he proclaimed to all the nations under him the
omnipotent God whom he found himself to have offended.
But after this, elevated by the success of his dominion, and rejoicing in
having done great things, he first preferred himself to all in thought, and
afterwards, still vain-glorious, said, Is not this great Babylon, that I have
built for the house of the kingdom, and in the might of my power, and for the
honour of my majesty? (Dan. iv. 30.) Which utterance of his, as we see, fell
openly under the vengeance of the wrath which his hidden elation kindled. For
the strict judge first sees invisibly what he afterwards reproves by publicly
smiting it. Hence him He turned even into an irrational animal, separated him
from human society, changed his mind and joined him to the beasts of the field,
that in obviously strict and just judgment he who had esteemed himself great
beyond men should lose even his being as a man. Now in adducing these things
we are not finding fault with dominion, but guarding the infirmity of the heart
from coveting it, lest any that are imperfect should venture to snatch at supreme
rule, or those who stumble on plain ground set foot on a precipice.
CHAPTER V.
Of those who are able to profit others by virtuous example in supreme rule,
but fly from it in pursuit of their own ease.
For there are some who are eminently endowed with virtues, and for the training
of others are exalted by great gifts, who are pure in zeal for chastity, strong
in the might of abstinence, filled with the feasts of doctrine, humble in the
long-suffering of patience, erect in the fortitude of authority, tender in
the grace of loving-kindness, strict in the severity of justice. Truly such
as these, if when called they refuse to undertake offices of supreme rule,
for the most part deprive themselves of the very gifts which they received
not for themselves alone, but for others also; and, while they meditate their
own and not another's gain, they forfeit the very benefits which they desire
to keep to themselves. For hence it was that the Truth said to His disciples,
A city that is set on an hill cannot be hid: neither do they light a candle
and put it under a bushel, but on a candlestick, that it may give light to
all that are in the house (Matth. v. 15). Hence He says to Peter, Simon, Son
of Jonas, lovest thou Me? (Joh. xv. 16, 17); and he, when he had at once answered
that he loved, was told, If thou lovest Me, fled My sheep. If, then, the care
of feeding is the proof of loving, whosoever abounds in virtues, and yet refuses
to feed the flock of God, is convicted of not loving the chief Shepherd. Hence
Paul says, If Christ died/or all, then all died. And if He died for all, it
remaineth that they which live should now no longer live unto themselves, but
unto Him which died for them and rose again (2 Cor. v. 15). Hence Moses says
(Deut. xxv. 5) that a surviving brother shall take to him the wife of a brother
who has died without children, and beget children to the name of his brother;
and that, if he haply refuse to take her, the woman shall spit in his face,
and her kinsman shall loose the shoe from off one Of his feet, and call his
habitation the house of him that hath his shoe loosed. Now the deceased brother
is He who, after the glory of the resurrection, said, Go tell My brethren (Matth.
xxviii. 10). For He died as it were without children, in that He had not yet
filled up the number of His elect. Then, it is ordered that the surviving brother
shall have the wife assigned to him, because it is surely fit that the care
of holy Church be imposed on him who is best able to rule it well. But, should
he be unwilling, the woman spits in his face, because whosoever cares not to
benefit others out of the gifts which he has received, the holy Church exprobrates
even what he has of good, and, as it were, casts spittle on his face; and from
one foot the shoe is taken away, inasmuch as it is written, Your feet shod
in preparation of the Gospel of Peace (Ephes. vi. 15). If, then, we have the
care of our neighbour as well as of ourselves upon us, we have each foot protected
by a shoe. But he who, meditating his own advantage, neglects that of his neighbours,
loses with disgrace one foot's shoe. And so there are some, as we have said,
enriched with great gifts, who, while they are ardent for the studies of contemplation
only, shrink from serving to their neighbour's benefit by preaching; they love
a secret place of quiet, they long for a retreat for speculation. With respect
to which conduct, they are, if strictly judged, undoubtedly guilty in proportion
to the greatness of the gifts whereby they might have been publicly useful.
For with what disposition of mind does one who might be conspicuous in profiting
his neighbours prefer his own privacy to the advantage of others, when the
Only-begotten of the supreme Father Himself came forth from the bosom of the
Father into the midst of us all, that He might profit many?
CHAPTER VI.
That those who fly from the burden of rule through humility are then truly
humble when they resist not the Divine decrees.
There are some also who fly by reason only of their humility, lest they should
be preferred to others to whom they esteem themselves unequal. And theirs,
indeed, if it be surrounded by other virtues, is then true humility before
the eyes of God, when it is not pertinacious in rejecting what it is enjoined
to undertake with profit. For neither is he truly humble, who understands how
the good pleasure of the Supernal Will ought to bear sway, and yet contemns
its sway. But, submitting himself to the divine disposals, and averse from
the vice of obstinacy, it be be already prevented with gifts whereby he may
profit others also, he ought, when enjoined to undertake supreme rule, in his
heart to flee from it, but against his will to obey.
CHAPTER VII.
That sometimes same laudably desire the office of preaching, while others,
as laudably, are drawn to it by compulsion.
Although sometimes some laudably desire the office of preaching, yet others
are as laudably drawn to it by compulsion; as we plainly perceive, if we consider
the conduct of two prophets, one of whom offered himself of his own accord
to be sent to preach, yet the other in fear refused to go. For Isaiah, when
the Lord asked whom He should send, offered himself of his own accord, saying,
Here I am; send me (Isai. vi. 8). But Jeremiah is sent, yet humbly pleads that
he should not be sent, saying, Ah, Lord God! behold I cannot speak: for I am
a child (Jer. i. 6). Lo, from these two men different voices proceeded outwardly,
but they t flowed from the same fountain of love. For there are two precepts
of charity; the love of God and of our neighbour. Wherefore Isaiah, eager to
profit his neighbours through an active life, desires the office of preaching;
but Jeremiah, longing to cleave sedulously to the love of his Creator through
a contemplative life, remonstrates against being sent to preach. Thus what
the one laudably desired the other laudably shrunk from; the latter, lest by
speaking he should lose the gains of silent contemplation; the former, lest
by keeping silence he should suffer loss for lack of diligent work. But this
in both cases is to be nicely observed, that he who refused did not persist
in his refusal, and he who wished to be sent saw himself previously cleansed
by a coal of the altar; lest any one who has not been purged should dare to
approach sacred ministries, or any whom supernal grace has chosen should proudly
gainsay it under a show of humility. Wherefore, since it is very difficult
for any one to be sure that he has been cleansed, it is safer to decline the
office of preaching, though (as we have said) it should not be declined pertinaciously
when the Supernal Will that it should be undertaken is recognized. Both requirements
Moses marvellously fulfilled, who was unwilling to be set over so great a multitude,
and yet obeyed. For peradventure he were proud, were he to undertake without
trepidation the leadership of that innumerable people; and, again, proud he
would plainly be were he to refuse to obey his Lord's command. Thus in both
ways humble, in both ways submissive, he was unwilling, as measuring himself,
to be set over the people; and yet, as presuming on the might of Him who commanded
him, he consented. Hence, then, hence let all rash ones infer how great guilt
is theirs, if they fear not to be preferred to others by their own seeking,
when holy men, even when God commanded, feared to undertake the leadership
of peoples. Moses trembles though God persuades him; and yet every weak one
pants to assume the burden of dignity; and one who can hardly bear his own
load without falling, gladly puts his shoulders under the pressure of others
not his own: his own deeds are too heavy for him to carry, and he augments
his burden.
CHAPTER VIII.
Of those who covet pre-eminence, and seize on the language of the Apostle
to serve the purpose of their own cupidity.
But for the most part those who covet pre-eminence seize on the language of
the Apostle to serve the purpose of their own cupidity, where he says, If a
man desire the office of a bishop, he desireth a good work (1 Tim. iii. 1).
But, while praising the desire, he forthwith turns what he has praised to fear
when at once he adds, but a bishop must be blameless (1 Tim. iii. 2). And,
when he subsequently enumerates the necessary virtues, he makes manifest what
this blamelessness consists in. And so, with regard to their desire, he approves
them, but by his precept he alarms them; as if saying plainly, I praise what
ye seek; but first learn what it is ye seek; lest, while ye neglect to measure
yourselves, your blamefulness appear all the fouler for its haste to be seen
by all in the highest place of honour. For the great master in the art of ruling
impels by approval and checks by alarms; so that, by describing the height
of blamelessness, he may restrain his hearers from pride, and, by praising
the office which is sought, dispose them to the life required. Nevertheless
it is to be noted that this was said at a time when whosoever was set over
people was usually the first to be led to the torments of martyrdom. At that
time, therefore, it was laudable to seek the office of a bishop, since through
it there was no doubt that a man would come in the end to heavier pains. Hence
even the office of a bishop itself is defined as a good work, when it is said,
If a man desire the office of a bishop, he desireth a good work (1 Tim. iii.
1). Wherefore he that seeks, not this ministry of a good work, but the glory
of distinction, is himself a witness against himself that he does not desire
the office of a bishop; inasmuch as that man not only does not love at all
the sacred office, but even knows not what it is, who, panting after supreme
rule, is fed by the subjection of others in the hidden meditation of his thought,
rejoices in his own praises, lifts up his heart to honour, exults in abundant
affluence. Thus worldly gain is sought under colour of that honour by which
worldly gains should have beth destroyed; and, when the mind thinks to seize
on the highest post of humility for its own elation, it inwardly changes what
it outwardly desires.
CHAPTER IX.
That the mind of than who wish for pre-eminence far the most part flatters
itself with a feigned promise of good works.
But for the most part those who covet pastoral authority mentally propose
to themselves some good works besides, and, though desiring it with a motive
of pride, still muse how they will effect great things: and so it comes to
pass that the motive suppressed in the depths of the heart is one thing, another
what the surface of thought presents to the muser's mind. For the mind itself
lies to itself about itself, and feigns with respect to good work to love what
it does not love, and with respect to the world's glory not to love what it
does love. Eager for domination, it becomes timid with regard to it while in
pursuit, audacious after attainment. For, while advancing towards it, it is
in trepidation lest it should not attain it; but all at once, on having attained,
thinks what it has attained to be its just due. And, when it has once begun
to enjoy the office of its acquired dominion in a worldly way, it willingly
forgets what it has cogitated in a religious way. Hence it is necessary that,
when such cogitation is extended beyond wont, the mind's eye should be recalled
to works already accomplished, and that every one should consider what he has
done as a subordinate; and so may he at once discover whether as a prelate
he will be able to do the good things he has proposed to do. For one can by
no means learn humility in a high place who has not ceased to be proud while
occupying a low one: one knows not how to fly from praise when it abounds,
who has learnt to pant for it when it was wanting: one can by no means overcome
avarice, when advanced to the sustentation of many, whom his own means could
not suffice for himself alone. Wherefore from his past life let every one discover
what he is, lest in his craving for eminence the phantom of his cogitation
illude him. Nevertheless it is generally the case that the very practice of
good deeds which was maintained in tranquillity is lost in the occupation of
government; since even an unskilful person guides a ship along a straight course
in a cain, sea; but in one disturbed by the waves of tempest even the skilled
sailor is confounded. For what is eminent dominion but a tempest of the mind,
in which the ship of the heart is ever shaken by hurricanes of thought, is
incessantly driven hither and thither, so as to be shattered by sudden excesses
of word and deed, as if by opposing rocks? In the midst of all these dangers,
then, what course is to be followed, what is to be held to, except that one
who abounds in virtues should accede to government under compulsion, and that
one who is void of virtues should not, even under compulsion, approach it?
As to the former, let him beware lest, if he refuses altogether, he be as one
who binds up in a napkin the money which he has received, and be judged for
hiding it (Matth. xxv. 18). For, indeed, to bind up in a napkin is to hide
gifts received under the listlessness of sluggish torpor. But, on the other
hand, let the latter, when he craves government, take care lest, by his example
of evil deeds, he become an obstacle to such as are journeying to the entrance
of the kingdom, after the manner of the Pharisees, who, according to the Master's
voice (Matth. xxiii. 13), neither go in themselves nor stiffer others to go
in. And he should also consider how, when an elected prelate undertakes the
cause of the people, he goes, as it were, as a physician to one that is sick.
If, then, ailments still live in his body, what presumption is his, to make
haste to heal the smitten, while in his own face carrying a sore!
CHAPTER X.
What manner of man ought to come to rule.
That man, therefore, ought by all means to be drawn with cords to be an example
of good living who already lives spiritually, dying to all passions of the
flesh; who disregards worldly prosperity; who is afraid of no adversity; who
desires only inward wealth; whose intention the body, in good accord with it,
thwarts not at all by its frailness, nor the spirit greatly by its disdain:
one who is not led to covet the things of others, but gives freely of his own;
who through the bowels of compassion is quickly moved to pardon, yet is never
bent down from the fortress of rectitude by pardoning more than is meet; who
perpetrates no unlawful deeds, yet deplores those perpetrated by others as
though they were his own; who out of affection of heart sympathizes with another's
infirmity, and so rejoices in the good of his neighbour as though it were his
own advantage; who so insinuates himself as an example to others in all he
does that among them he has nothing, at any rate of his own past deeds, to
blush for; who studies so to live that he may be able to water even dry hearts
with the streams of doctrine; who has already learnt by the use and trial of
prayer that he can obtain what he has requested from the Lord, having had already
said to him, as it were, through the voice of experience, While thou art yet
speaking, I will say, Here am I (Isai. lvi ii. 9). For if perchance any one
should come to us asking us to intercede for him with some great man, who was
incensed against him, but to us unknown, we should at once reply, We cannot
go to intercede for you, since we have no familiar acquaintance with that man.
If, then, a man blushes to become an intercessor with another man on whom he
has no claim, with what idea can any one grasp the post of intercession with
God for the people, who does not know himself to be in favour with Him through
the merit of his own life? And how can he ask of Him pardon for others while
ignorant whether towards himself He is appeased? And in this matter there is
yet another thing to be more anxiously feared; namely, lest one who is supposed
to be competent to appease wrath should himself provoke it on account of guilt
of his own. For we all know well that, when one who is in disfavour is sent
to intercede with an incensed person, the mind of the latter is provoked to
greater severity. Wherefore let one who is still tied and bound with earthly
desires beware lest by more grievously incensing the strict judge, while he
delights himself in his place of honour, he become the cause of ruin to his
subordinates.
CHAPTER XI.
What manner of man ought not to come to rule.
Wherefore
let every one measure himself wisely, lest he venture to assume a place of
rule, while
in himself
vice still reigns unto condemnation; lest
one whom his own guilt depraves desire to become an intercessor for the faults
of others. For on this account it is said to Moses by the supernal voice, Steak
unto Aaron; Whosoever he be of thy seed throughout their generations that hath
a blemish, he shall not offer loaves of bread to the Lord his God(Leo. xxi.
17). And it is also immediately subjoined; If he be blind, if he be lame, if
he have either a small or a large and crooked nose, if he be brokenfooted or
brokenhanded, if he be hunchbacked, if he be bleareyed (lippus), if he have
a where speck (albuginem) in his eye, if chronic stables, if impetigo in his
body, or if he be ruptured (ponderosus) (bid. 18(2)). For that man is indeed
blind who is unacquainted with the light of supernal contemplation, who, whelmed
in the darkness of the present life, while he beholds not at all by loving
it the light to come, knows not whither he is' advancing the steps of his conduct.
Hence by Hannah prophesying it is said, He will keep the feet of his saints,
and the wicked shall be silent in darkness (1 Kings ii. 9). But that man is
lame who does indeed see in what direction he ought to go, but, through infirmity
of purpose, is unable to keep perfectly the way of life which he sees, because,
while unstable habit rises not to a settled state of virtue, the steps of conduct
do not follow with effect the aim of desire. Hence it is that Paul says, Lift
up the hands which hang down, and the feeble knees, and make straight paths
for your feet, lest that which is lame be turned out of the way; but let it
rather be healed (Heb. xii. 12, 13). But one with a small nose is he who is
not adapted for keeping the measure of discernment. For with the nose we discern
sweet odours and stenches: and so by the nose is properly expressed discernment,
through which we choose virtues and eschew sins. Whence also it is said in
praise of the bride, Thy nose is as the tower which is in Lebanon (Cant. vii.
4); because, to wit, Holy Church, by discernment, espies assaults issuing from
this or that quarter, and detects from an eminence the coming wars of vices.
But there are some who, not liking to be thought dull, busy themselves often
more than needs in various investigations, and by reason of too great subtilty
are deceived. Wherefore this also is added, Or have a large and crooked nose.
For a large and crooked nose is excessive subtility of discernment, which,
having become unduly excrescent, itself confuses the correctness of its own
operation. But one with broken foot or hand is he who cannot walk in the way
of God at all, and is utterly without part or lot in good deeds, to such degree
that he does not, like the lame man, maintain them however weakly, but remains
altogether apart from them. But the hunchbacked is he whom the weight of earthly
care bows down, so that he never looks up to the things that are above, but
is intent only on what is trodden on among the lowest. And he, should he ever
hear anything of the good things of the heavenly country, is so pressed down
by the weight of perverse custom, that he lifts not the face of his heart to
it, being unable to erect the posture of his thought, which the habit of earthly
care keeps downward bent. Of this kind of men the Psalmist says, I am bent
down and am brought low continually (Ps. xxxviii 8). The fault of such as these
the Truth in person reprobates, saying, But the seed which fell among thorns
are they which, when they have heard the word, go forth, and are choked with
cares and riches and pleasures of life, and bear no fruit (Luke viii. 14).
But the blear eyed is he whose native wit flashes out for cognition of the
truth, and yet carnal works obscure it. For in the blear-eyed the pupils are
sound; but the eyelids, weakened by defluxion of humours, become gross; and
even the brightness of the pupils is impaired, because they are worn continually
by the flux upon them. The blear-eyed, then, is one whose sense nature has
made keen, but whom a depraved habit of life confuses. To him it is well said
through the angel, Anoint thine eyes with eyesalve that thou mayest see (Apoc.
iii. 18). For we may be said to anoint our eyes with eyesalve that we may see,
when we aid the eye of our understanding for perceiving the clearness of the
true light with the medicament of good conduct. But that man has a white speck
in his eye who is not permitted to see the light of truth, in that he is blinded
by the arrogant assumption of wisdom or of righteousness. For the pupil of
the eye, when black, sees; but, when it bears a white speck, sees nothing;
by which we may understand that the perceiving sense of human thought, if a
man understands himself to be a fool and a sinner, becomes cognizant of the
clearness of inmost light; but, if it attributes to itself the whiteness of
righteousness or wisdom, it excludes itself from the light of knowledge from
above, and by so much the more fails entirely to penetrate the clearness of
the true light, as it exalts itself within itself through arrogance; as of
some it is said, Professing themselves to be wise, they became fools (Rom.
i. 22). But that man has chronic scabies whom the wantonness of the flesh without
cease overmasters. For in stables the violent heat of the bowels is drawn to
the skin; whereby lechery is rightly designated, since, if the heart's temptation
shoots forth into action, it may be truly said that violent internal heat breaks
out into stables of the skin: and it now wounds the body outwardly, because,
while sensuality is not repressed in thought, it gains the mastery also in
action. For Paul had a care to cleanse away this itch of the skin, when he
said, Let no temptation take you but such as is human (1 Cor. x. 13); as if
to say plainly, It is human to suffer temptation in the heart; but it is devilish,
in the struggle of temptation, to be also overcome in action. He also has impetigo
in his body whosoever is ravaged in the mind by avarice; which, if not restrained
in small things, does indeed dilate itself without measure.
For, as impetigo invades the body without pain, and, spreading with no annoyance
to him whom it invades, disfigures the comeliness of the members, so avarice,
too, exulcerates, while it pleases, the mind of one who is captive to it. As
it offers to the thought one thing after another to be gained, it kindles the
fire of enmities, and gives no pain with the wounds it causes, because it promises
to the fevered mind abundance out of sin. But the comeliness of the members
is destroyed, because the beauty of other virtues is also hereby marred: and
it exulcerates as it were the whole body, in that it corrupts the mind with
vices of all kinds; as Paul attests, saying, The love of money is the root
of all evils (1 Tim. vi. 10). But the ruptured one is he who does not carry
turpitude into action, but yet is immoderately weighed down by it in mind through
continual cogitation; one who is indeed by no means carried away to the extent
of nefarious conduct; but his mind still delights itself without prick of repugnance
in the pleasure of lechery. For the disease of rupture is when humor viscerum
ad virilia labitur, quae propeta cum malestin dedecatis intumescunt. He, then,
may be said to be ruptured who, letting all his thoughts flow down to lasciviousness,
bears in his heart a weight of turpitude; and, though not actually doing deeds
of shame, nevertheless in mind is not withdrawn from them. Nor has he power
to rise to the practice of good living before the eyes of men, because, hidden
within him, the shameful weight presses him down. Whosoever, therefore, is
subjected to any one of these diseases is forbidden to offer loaves of bread
to the Lord, lest in sooth he should be of no avail for expiating the sins
of others, being one who is still ravaged by his own.
And now, having briefly shewn after what manner one who is worthy should come
to pastoral authority, and after what manner one who is unworthy should be
greatly afraid, let us now demonstrate after what manner one who has attained
to it worthily should live in it.
PART II.
OF THE LIFE OF THE PASTOR.
CHAPTER I.
How one who has in due order arrived at a place of rule ought to demean himself
in it.
The conduct of a prelate ought so far to transcend the conduct of the people
as the life of a shepherd is wont to exalt him above the flock. For one whose
estimation is such that the people are called his flock is bound anxiously
to consider what great necessity is laid upon him to maintain rectitude. It
is necessary, then, that in thought he should be pure, in action chief; discreet
in keeping silence, profitable in speech; a near neighbour to every one in
sympathy, exalted above all in contemplation; a familiar friend of good livers
through humility, unbending against the vices of evil-doers through zeal for
righteousness; not relaxing in his care for what is inward from being occupied
in outward things, nor neglecting to provide for outward things in his solicitude
for what is inward. But the things which we have thus briefly touched on let
us now unfold and discuss more at length.
CHAPTER II.
That the ruler should be pure in thought.
The ruler should always be pure in thought, inasmuch as no impurity ought
to pollute him who has undertaken the office of wiping away the stains of pollution
in the hearts of others also; for the hand that would cleanse from dirt must
needs be clean, test, being itself sordid with clinging mire, it soil whatever
it touches all the more. For on this account it is said through the prophet,
Be ye clean that bear the vessels of the Lord (Isai. ]ii 11). For they bear
the vessels of the Lord who undertake, on the surety of their own conversation,
to conduct the souls of their neighbours to the eternal sanctuary. Let them
therefore perceive within themselves how purified they ought to be who carry
in the bosom of their own personal responsibility living vessels to the temple
of eternity. Hence by the divine voice it is enjoined (Exod. xxviii. 15), that
on the breast of Aaron the breastplate(1) of judgment should be closely pressed
by binding fillets; seeing that lax cogitations should by no means possess
the priestly heart, but reason alone constrain it; nor should he cogitate anything
indiscreet or unprofitable, who, constituted as he is for example to others,
ought to shew in the gravity of his life what store of reason he carries in
his breast. And on this breastplate it is further carefully prescribed that
the names of the twelve patriarchs should be engraved. For to carry always
the fathers registered on the breast is to think without intermission on the
lives of the ancients. For the priest then walks blamelessly when he pores
continually on the examples of the fathers that went before him, when he considers
without cease the footsteps of the Saints, and keeps down unlawful thoughts,
lest he advance the foot of his conduct beyond the limit of order. And it is
also well called the breastplate of judgment, because the ruler ought ever
with subtle scrutiny to discern between good and evil, and studiously consider
what things are suitable for what, and when and how; nor should he seek anything
for himself, but esteem his neighbours' good as his own advantage. Hence in
the same place it is written, But thou shall put in the breast? late of Aaron
doctrine and truth(2), which shall be upon Aaron's breast, when he goeth in
before the Lord, and he shall bear the judgment of the children of Israel upon
his breast in the sight of the Lord continually (Ibid. 30). For the priest's
bearing the judgment of the children of lsrael on his breast before the face
of the' Lord means his examining the causes of his subjects with regard only
to the mind of the judge within, so that no admixture of humanity cleave to
him in what he dispenses as standing in God's stead, lest private vexation
should exasperate the keenness of his censure. And while he shews himself zealous
against the vices of others, let him get rid of his own lest either latent
grudge vitiate the calmness of his judgment, or headlong anger disturb it.
But when the terror of Him who presides over all things is considered (that
is to say of the judge within), not without great fear may subjects be governed.
And such fear indeed purges, while it humiliates, the mind of the ruler, guarding
it against being either lifted up by presumption of spirit, or defiled by delight
of the flesh, or obscured by importunity of dusty thought through lust for
earthly things. These things, however, cannot but knock at the ruler's mind:
but it is necessary to make haste to overcome them by resistance, lest the
vice which tempts by suggestion should subdue by the softness of delight, and,
this being tardily expelled from the mind, should slay with the sword of consent.
CHAPTER III.
That the ruler should be always chief in action.
The ruler
should always be chief in action, that by his living he may point out the
way of life to
those that
are put under him, and that the flock, which
follows the voice and manners of the shepherd, may learn how to walk better
through example than through words For he who is required by the necessity
of his position to speak the highest things is compelled by the same necessity
to exhibit the highest things. For that voice more readily penetrates the hearer's
heart, which the speaker's life commends, since what he commands by speaking
he helps the doing of by shewing. Hence it is said through the prophet, Get
thee up into the high mountain, thou that bringest good tidings to Sion (Isai.
xl. 9): which means that he who is engaged in heavenly preaching should already
have forsaken the low level of earthly works, and appear as standing on the
summit of things, and by so much the more easily should draw those who are
under him to better things as by the merit of his life he cries aloud from
heights above. Hence under the divine law the priest receives the shoulder
for sacrifice, and this the right one and separate (Exod. xxix. 22); to signify
that his action should be not only profitable, but even singular; and that
he should not merely do what is right among bad men, but transcend even the
well-doers among those that are under him in the virtue of his conduct, as
he surpasses them in the dignity of his order. The breast also together with
the shoulder is assigned to him for eating, that he may learn to immolate to
the Giver of all that of himself which he is enjoined to take of the Sacrifice;
that he may not only in his breast entertain right thoughts, but with the shoulder
of work invite those who behold him to things on high; that he may covet no
prosperity of the present life, and fear no adversity; that, having regard
to the fear within him, he may despise the charm of the world, but considering
the charm of inward sweetness, may despise its terrors. Wherefore by command
of the supernal voice Exod. xxix. 5) the priest is braced on each shoulder
with the robe of the ephod, that he may be always guarded against prosperity
and adversity by the ornament of virtues; so that walking, as S. Paul says
(2 Cor. vi 7), in the armour of righteousness an the right hand and an the
left, while he strives only after those things which are before, he may decline
on neither side to low delight. Him let neither prosperity elate nor adversity
perturb; let neither smooth things coax him to the surrender of his will, nor
rough things press him down to despair; so that, while he humbles the bent
of his mind to no passions, he may shew with how great beauty of the ephod
he is covered on each shoulder. Which ephod is also rightly ordered to be made
of gold, blue, purple, twice dyed scarlet, and flue twined linen (Exod. xxviii.
8), that it may be shewn by how great diversity of virtues the priest ought
to be distinguished. Thus in the priest's robe before all things gold glitters,
to shew that he should shine forth principally in the understanding of wisdom.
And with it blue, which is resplendent with aerial colour, is conjoined, to
shew that through all that he penetrates with his understanding he should rise
above earthly favours to the love of celestial things; test, while caught unawares
by his own praises, he be emptied of his very understanding of the truth. With
gold and blue, purple also is mingled: which means, that the priest's heart,
while hoping for the high things which he preaches, should repress in itself
even the suggestions of vice, and as it were in virtue of a royal power, rebut
them, in that he has regard ever to the nobility of inward regeneration, and
by his manners guards his right to the robe of the heavenly kingdom. For it
is of this nobility of the spirit that it is said through Peter, Ye are a chosen
generation, a royal priesthood (1 Pet. ii. 9) With respect also to this power,
whereby we subdue vices, we are fortified by the voice of John, who says, As
many as received Him, to them gave He power to become the sons of God (John
i. 12). This dignity of fortitude the Psalmist has in view when he says, But
with me greatly honoured have been Thy friends, O God; greatly strengthened
has been their principality (Ps. cxxxviii. 17). For truly the mind of saints
is exalted to princely eminence while outwardly they are seen to suffer abasement.
But with gold, blue, and purple, twice died scarlet is conjoined, to show that
all excellences of virtue should be adorned with charity in the eyes of the
judge within; and that whatever glitters before men may be lighted up in sight
of the hidden arbiter with the flame of inward love. And, further, this charity,
since it consists in love at once of God and of our neighbour, has, as it were,
the lustre era double dye. He then who so pants after the beauty of his Maker
as to neglect the care of his neighbours, or so attends to the care of his
neighbours as to grow languid in divine love, whichever of these two things
it may be that he neglects, knows not what it is to have twice dyed scarlet
in the adornment of his ephod. But, while the mind is intent on the precepts
of charity, it undoubtedly remains that the flesh be macerated through abstinence.
Hence with twice dyed scarlet fine twined linen is conjoined. For fine linen
(byssus) springs from the earth with glittering show: and what is designated
by fine linen but bodily chastity shining white in the comeliness of purity?
And it is also twisted for being interwoven into the beauty of the ephod, since
the habit of chastity, then attains to the perfect whiteness of purity when
the flesh is worn by abstinence. And, since the merit of affliction of the
flesh profits among the other virtues, fine twined linen shews white, as it
were, in the diverse beauty of the ephod.
CHAPTER IV.
That the ruler should be discreet in keeping silence, profitable in speech.
The ruler
should be discreet in keeping silence, profitable in speech; lest he either
utter what ought
to
be suppressed or suppress what he ought to utter.
For, as incautious speaking leads into error, so indiscreet silence leaves
in error those who might have been instructed. For often improvident rulers,
fearing to lose human favour, shrink timidly from speaking freely the things
that are right; and, according to the voice of the Truth (Job. x. 12), serve
unto the custody of the flock by no means with the zeal of shepherds, but in
the way of hirelings; since they fly when the wolf cometh if they hide themselves
under silence. For hence it is that the Lord through the prophet upbraids them,
saying, Dumb dogs, that cannot bark (Isai. lvi. 10). Hence again He complains,
saying, Ye have not gone up against the enemy, neither opposed a wall for the
house of Israel, to stand in the battle in the day of the Lord (Ezek. xiii.
5). Now to go up against the enemy is to go with free voice against the powers
of this world for defence of the flock; and to stand in the battle in the day
of the Lord is out of love of justice to resist bad men when they contend against
us. For, for a shepherd to have feared to say what is right, what else is it
but to have turned his back in keeping silence? But surely, if he puts himself
in front for the flock, he opposes a wall against the enemy for the house of
Israel. Hence again to the sinful people it is said, Thy prophets have seen
false and foolish things for thee: neither did they discover thine iniquity,
to provoke thee to repentance (Lam. ii. 14). For in sacred language teachers
are sometimes called prophets, in that, by pointing out how fleeting are present
things, they make manifest the things that are to come. And such the divine
discourse convinces of seeing false things, because, while fearing to reprove
faults, they vainly flatter evil doers by promising security: neither do they
at all discover the iniquity of sinners, since they refrain their voice from
chiding. For the language of reproof is the key of discovery, because by chiding
it discloses the fault of which even he who has committed it is often himself
unaware. Hence Paul says, That he may be able by sound doctrine even to convince
the gainsayers (Tit. i. 9). Hence through Moloch; it is said. The priest's
lips keep knowledge, and they shall seek the law at his mouth (Malac. ii. 7).
Hence through Isaiah the Lord admonishes, saying, Cry aloud, spare not, lift
up thy voice like a trumpet (Isai. lviii. 1). For it is true that whosoever
enters on the priesthood undertakes the office of a herald, so as to walk,
himself crying aloud, before the coming of the judge who follows terribly.
Wherefore, if the priest knows not how to preach, what voice of a loud cry
shall the mute herald utter? For hence it is that the Holy Spirit sat upon
the first pastors under the appearance of tongues (Acts ii. 3); because whomsoever
He has filled, He himself at once makes eloquent. Hence it is enjoined on Moses
that when the priest goes into the tabernacle he shall be encompassed with
bells (Exod. xxviii. 33); that is, that be shall have about him the sounds
of preaching, lest he provoke by his silence the judgment of Him Who beholds
him from above. For it is written, That his sound may be heard when he goeth
in unto the holy place before the Lord and when he cometh out, that he die
not (Exod. xxviii. 35). For the priest, when he goeth in or cometh out, dies
if a sound is not heard from him, because he provokes the wrath of the hidden
judge, if he goes without the sound of preaching. Aptly also are the bells
described as inserted in his vestments. For what else ought we to take the
vestments of the priest to be but righteous works; as the prophet attests when
he says, Let Thy priests be clothed with righteousness (Ps. cxxxi. 9)? The
bells, therefore, are inherent in his vestments to signify that the very works
of the priest should also proclaim the way of life together with the sound
of his tongue. But, when the ruler prepares himself for speaking, let him bear
in mind with what studious caution he ought to speak, lest, if he be hurried
inordinately into speaking, the hearts of hearers be smitten with the wound
of error and, while he perchance desires to seem wise he unwisely sever the
bond of unity. For on this account the Truth says, Have salt in yourselves,
and have peace one with another (Mark ix. 49). Now by salt is denoted the word
of wisdom. Let him, therefore, who strives to speak wisely fear greatly, lest
by his eloquence the unity of his hearers be disturbed. Hence Paul says, Not
to be more wise than behaveth to be wise, but to be wise unto sobriety (Rom.
xii. 3). Hence in the priest's vestment, according to Divine precept, to bells
are added pomegranates (Exod. xxviii. 34). For what is signified by pomegranates
but the unity of the faith? For, as within a pomegranate many seeds are protected
by one outer rind, so the unity of the faith comprehends the innumerable peoples
of holy Church, whom a diversity of merits retains within her. Lest then a
ruler should be unadvisedly hurried into speaking, the Truth in person proclaims
to His disciples this which we have already cited, Have salt in yourselves,
and have peace one with another (Mark ix. 49). It is as though He should say
in a figure through the dress of the priest: Join ye pomegranates to bells,
that in all ye say ye may with cautious watchfulness keep the unity of the
faith. Rulers ought also to guard with anxious thought not only against saying
in any way what is wrong, but against uttering even what is right overmuch
and inordinately; since the good effect of things spoken is often lost, when
enfeebled to the hearts of hearers by the incautious importunity of loquacity;
and this same loquacity, which knows not how to serve for the profit of the
hearers, also defiles the speaker. Hence it is well said through Moses, The
man that hath a flux of seed shall be unclean (Levit. xv. 2). For the quality
of the speech that is heard is the seed of the thought which follows, since,
while speech is conceived through the ear, thought is engendered in the mind.
Whence also by the wise of this world the excellent preacher was called a sower
of words (seminiverbius) (Acts xvii. 18). Wherefore, he that suffers from a
flux of seed is pronounced unclean, because, being addicted to much speaking,
he defiles himself by that which, had it been orderly issued, might have produced
the offspring of right thought in the hearts of hearers; and, while he incautiously
spends himself in loquacity, he sheds his seed not so as to serve for generation,
but unto uncleanness. Hence Paul also, in admonishing his disciple to be instant
in preaching, when he says, I charge thee before God? and Christ Jesus, Who
shall judge the quick and the dead by His appearing and His kingdom, preach
the word, be instant opportunely, importunely(3) ((2) Tim. iv. 1), being about
to say importunely, premises opportunely, because in truth importunity mars
itself to the mind of the hearer by its own very cheapness, if it knows not
how to observe opportunity.
CHAPTER V.
That the ruler should be a near neighbour to every one in compassion, and
exalted above all in contemplation.
The ruler
should be a near neighbour to every one in sympathy, and exalted above all
in contemplation,
so that
through the bowels of loving-kindness he
may transfer the infirmities of others to himself, and by loftiness of speculation
transcend even himself in his aspiration after the invisible; lest either in
seeking high things he despise the weak things of his neighbours, or in suiting
himself to the weak things of his neighbours he relinquish his aspiration after
high things. For hence it is that Paul is caught up into Paradise (2 Car. xii.
3) and explores the secrets of the third heaven, and, yet, though borne aloft
in that contemplation of things invisible, recalls the vision of his mind to
the bed of the carnal, and directs how they should have intercourse with each
other in their hidden privacy, saying, But on account of fornication let every
man have his own wife, and let every woman have her own husband. Let the husband
render unto the wife her due, and likewise the wife unto the husband (1 Car.
vii. 2). And a little after (Ibid. v. 5), Defraud ye not one the other, except
it be with consent for a time, that ye may give yourselves to prayer, and come
together again, that Satan tempt you not. Lo, he is already initiated into
heavenly secrets, and yet through the bowels of condescension he searches into
the bed of the carnal; and the same eye of the heart which in his elevation
he lifts to the invisible, he bends in his compassion upon the secrets of those
who are subject to infirmity. In contemplation he transcends heaven, and yet
in his anxious care deserts not the couch of the carnal; because, being joined
at once to the highest and to the lowest by the bond of charity, though in
himself mightily caught up in the power of the spirit into the heights above,
yet among others, in his loving-kindness, he is content to become weak. Hence,
therefore, he says, Who is weak, and I am not weak? Who is offended, and I
burn not? (2 Cor. xi. 29). Hence again he says, Unto the Jews I became as a
Jew (1 Car. ix. 20). Now he exhibited this behaviour not by losing hold of
his faith, but by extending his loving-kindness; so as, by transferring in
a figure the person of unbelievers to himself, to learn from himself how they
ought to have compassion shewn them; to the end that he might bestow on them
what he would have rightly wished to have had bestowed upon himself, had he
been as they. Hence again he says, Whether we be beside ourselves, it is to
God: or whether we be sober, it is for you (2 Car. v. 13). For he had known
how both to transcend himself in contemplation, and to accommodate himself
to his hearers in condescension. Hence Jacob, the Lord looking down from above,
and oil being poured down on the stone, saw angels ascending and descending
(Gen. xxviii. 12); to signify, that true preachers not only aspire in contemplation
to the holy head of the Church, that is to the Lord, above, but also descend
in commiseration downward to His members. Hence Moses goes frequently in and
out of the tabernacle, and he who is wrapped into contemplation within is busied
outside with the affairs of those who are subject to infirmity. Within he considers
the secret things of God; without he carries the burdens of the carnal. And
also concerning doubtful matters he always recurs to the tabernacle, to consult
the Lord before the ark of the covenant; affording without doubt an example
to rulers; that, when in the outside world they are uncertain how to order
things, they should return to their own soul as though to the tabernacle, and,
as before the ark of the covenant, consult the Lord, if so, they may search
within themselves the pages of sacred utterance concerning that whereof they
doubt. Hence the Truth itself, manifested to us through susception of our humanity,
continues in prayer on the mountain, but works miracles in the cities (Luke
vi. 12), thus laying down the way to be followed by good rulers; that, though
already in contemplation aspiring to the highest things, they should mingle
in sympathy with the necessities of the infirm; since charity then rises wonderfully
to high things when it is compassionately drawn to the low things of neighbours;
and the more kindly it descends to the weak things of this world, the more
vigorously it recurs to the things on high. But those who are over others should
shew themselves to be such that their subjects may not blush to disclose even
their secrets to them; that the little ones, vexed with the waves of temptation,
may have recourse to their pastors heart as to a mother's breast, and wash
away the defilement they foresee to themselves from the filth of the sin that
buffets them in the solace of his exhortation and in the tears of prayer. Hence
also it is that before the doors of the temple the brazen sea for washing the
hands of those who enter, that is the lover, is supported by twelve oxen (1
Kings vii. 23, seq.), whose faces indeed stand out to view, but whose hinder
parts are hidden. For what is signified by the twelve oxen but the whole order
at pastors, of whom the law says, as explained by Paul, Than shall not muzzle
the mouth of the ox that treadeth out the corn (1 Car. ix. 9; ex Deut. xxv.
4)? Their open works indeed we see; but what remains to them behind in the
hidden retribution of the strict judge we know not. Yet, when they prepare
the patience of their condescension for cleansing the sins of their neighbours
in confession, they support, as it were, the laver before the doors of the
temple; that whosoever is striving to enter the gate of eternity may shew his
temptations to his pastor's heart, and, as it were, wash the hands of his thought
and of his deed in the layer of the oxen. And for the most part it comes to
pass that, while the ruler's mind becomes aware, through condescension, of
the trials of others, it is itself also attacked by the temptations whereof
it hears; since the same water of the layer in which a multitude of people
is cleansed is undoubtedly itself defiled. For, in receiving the pollutions
of those who wash, it loses, as it were, the calmness of its own purity. But
of this the pastor ought by no means to be afraid, since, under God, who nicely
balances all things, he is the more easily rescued from his own temptations
as he is more compassionately distressed by those of others.
CHAPTER VI.
That the ruler should be, through humility, a companion of good livers, but,
through the zeal of righteousness, rigid against the vices of evildoers.
The ruler should be, through humility, a companion of good livers, and, through
the zeal of righteousness, rigid against the vices of evil-doers; so that in
nothing he prefer himself to the good, and yet, when the fault of the bad requires
it, he be at once conscious of the power of his priority; to the end that,
while among his subordinates who live well he waives his rank and accounts
them as his equals, he may not fear to execute the laws of rectitude towards
the perverse. For, as I remember to have said in my book on morals (Lib. xxi.,
Moral, cap. 10, nunc. n.) it is clear that nature produced all men equal; but,
through variation in the order of their merits, guilt puts some below others.
But the very diversity which has accrued from vice is ordered by divine judgment,
so that, since all men cannot stand on an equal footing, one should be ruled
by another. Hence all who are over others ought to consider in themselves not
the authority of their rank, but the equality of their condition and rejoice
not to be over men, but to do them good. For indeed our ancient fathers are
said to have been not kings of men, but shepherds of flocks. And, when the
Lord said to Noe and his children, Increase and multiply, and replenish the
earth (Gen. ix. 1), He at once added, And let the fear of you and the dread
of you be upon all the beasts of the earth. Thus it appears that, whereas it
is ordered that the fear and the dread should be upon the beasts of the earth,
it is forbidden that it should be upon men. For man is by nature preferred
to the brute beasts, but not to other men; and therefore it is said to him
that he should be feared by the beasts, but not by men; since to wish to be
feared by one's equal is to be proud against nature. And yet it is necessary
that rulers should be feared by their subjects, when they find that God is
not feared by them; so that those who have no dread of divine judgments may
at any rate, through human dread, be afraid to sin. For superiors by no means
shew themselves proud in seeking to inspire this fear, in which they seek not
their own glory, but the righteousness of their subordinates. For in exacting
fear of themselves from such as live perversely, they lord it, as it were,
not over men, but over beasts, inasmuch as, so far as their subordinates are
bestial, they ought also to lie subdued to dread.
But commonly a ruler, from the very fact of his being pre-eminent over others,
is puffed up with elation of thought; and, while all things serve his need,
while his commands are quickly executed after his desire, while all his subjects
extol with praises what he has done well, but have no authority to speak against
what he has done amiss, and while they commonly praise even what they ought
to have reproved, his mind, seduced by what is offered in abundance from below,
is lifted up above itself; and, while outwardly surrounded by unbounded favour,
he loses his inward sense of truth; and, forgetful of himself, he scatters
himself on the voices of other men, and believes himself to be such as outwardly
he hears himself called rather than such as he ought inwardly to have judged
himself to be. He looks down on those who are under him, nor does he acknowledge
them as in the order of nature his equals; and those whom he has surpassed
in the accident of power he believes himself to have transcended also in the
merits of his life; he esteems himself wiser than all whom he sees himself
to excel in power. For indeed he establishes himself in his own mind on a certain
lofty eminence, and, though bound together in the same condition of nature
with others, he disdains to regard others from the same level; and so he comes
to be even like him of whom it is written, He beholdeth all high things; he
is a king over all the children of pride (Job xli. 25). Nay, aspiring to a
singular eminence, and despising the social life of the angels, he says, I
will place my seat in the north, and I will be like unto the Most High (Isai.
xiv. 13). Wherefore through a marvellous judgment he finds a pit of downfall
within himself, while outwardly he exalts himself on the summit of power. For
he is indeed made like unto the apostate angel, when, being a man, he disdains
to be like unto men. Thus Saul, after merit of humility, became swollen with
pride, when in the height of power: for his humility he was preferred, for
his pride rejected; as the Lord attests, Who says, When thou wast little in
thine own sight, did I not make thee the head of the tribes of Israd (1 Sam.
xv. 17)? He had before seen himself little in his own eyes, but, when propped
up by temporal power, he no longer saw himself little. For, preferring himself
in comparison with others because he had more power than all, he esteemed himself
great above all. Yet in a wonderful way, when he was little with himself, he
was great with God; but, when he appeared great with himself, he was little
with God. Thus commonly, while the mind is inflated from an affluence of subordinates,
it becomes corrupted to a flux of pride, the very summit of power being pander
to desire. And in truth he orders this power well who knows how both to maintain
it and to combat it. He orders it well who knows how through it to tower above
delinquencies, and knows how with it to match himself with others in equality.
For the human mind commonly is exalted even when supported by no authority:
how much more does it lift itself on high when authority lends itself to its
support! Nevertheless he dispenses this authority aright, who knows how, with
anxious care, both to take of it what is helpful, and also to reject what tempts,
and with it to perceive himself to to be on a par with others, and yet to put
himself above those that sin in his avenging zeal.
But we shall more fully understand this distinction, if we look at the examples
given by the first pastor. For Peter, who had received from God the principality
of Holy Church, from Cornelius, acting well and prostrating himself humbly
before him, refused to accept immoderate veneration, saying, Stand up; do it
not; I myself also am a man (Acts x. 26). But, when he discovers the guilt
of Ananias and Sapphira, he soon shews with how great power he had been made
eminent above all others. For by his word he smote their life, which he detected
by the penetration of his spirit; and he recollected himself as chief within
the Church against sins, though he did not acknowledge this, when honour was
eagerly paid him, before his brethren who acted well. In one case holiness
of conduct merited the communion of equality; in the other avenging zeal brought
out to view the just claims of authority. Paul, too, knew not himself as preferred
above his brethren who acted well, when he said, Not for that we have dominion
over your faith, but are helpers of your joy (2 Cor. i. 23). And he straightway
added, For by faith ye stand; as if to explain his declaration by saying, For
this cause we have not dominion over your faith, because by faith ye stand;
for we are your equals in that wherein we know you to stand. He knew not himself
as preferred above his brethren, when he said, We became babes in the midst
of you (1 Thess. ii. 7); and again, But ourselves your servants through Christ
(2 Cor. iv. 5). But, when he found a fault that required to be corrected, straightway
he recollected himself as a master, saying, What will ye? Shall I came unto
you with a rod (1 Cor. iv. 21)?
Supreme
rule, then, is ordered well, when he who presides lords it over vices, rather
than over
his brethren.
But, when superiors correct their delinquent
subordinates, it remains for them anxiously to take heed how far, while in
right of their authority they smite faults with due discipline, they still,
through custody of humility, acknowledge themselves to be on a par with the
very brethren who are corrected; although for the most part it is becoming
that in our silent thought we even prefer the brethren whom we correct to ourselves.
For their vices are through us smitten with the vigour of discipline; but in
those which we ourselves commit we are lacerated by not even a word of upbraiding.
Wherefore we are by so much the more bounden before the Lord as among men we
sin unpunished: but our discipline renders our subordinates by so much the
freer from divine judgment, as it leaves not their faults without retribution
here. Therefore, in the heart humility should be maintained, and in action
discipline. And all the time there is need of sagacious insight, lest, through
excessive custody of the virtue of humility, the just claims of government
be relaxed, and lest, while any superior lowers himself more than is fit, he
be unable to restrain the lives of his subordinates under the bond of discipline.
Let rulers, then, maintain outwardly what they undertake for the benefit of
others: let them retain inwardly what makes them fearful in their estimate
of themselves. But still let even their subjects perceive, by certain signs
coming out becomingly, that in themselves they are humble; so as both to see
something to be afraid of in their authority, and to acknowledge something
to imitate with respect to humility. Therefore let those who preside study
without intermission that in proportion as their power is seen to be great
externally it be kept down within themselves internally; that it vanquish not
their thought; that the heart be not carried away to delight in it; lest the
mind become unable to control that which in lust of domination it submits itself
to. For, lest the heart of a ruler should be betrayed into elation by delight
in personal power, it is rightly said by a certain wise man They have made
thee a leader: lift not up thyself, but be among them as one of them (Ecclus.
xxxii. 1). Hence also Peter says, Not as being lords over God's heritage, but
being made ensamples to the flock (1 Pet. v. 3). Hence the Truth in person,
provoking us to higher virtuous desert, says, Ye know that the princes of the
Gentiles exercise dominion over them, and they that are greater exercise authority
upon them. It shall not be so among you, but whosoever will be greater among
you, let him be your minister; and whosoever will be chief among you, let him
be your servant; even as the San of Man came not to be ministered to, but to
minister (Matth. xx. 25). Hence also He indicates what punishments are in store
for the servant who has been elated by his assumption of government, saying,
But and if that evil servant shall say in his heart, My lord delayeth his coming,
and shall begin to smite his fellow-servants, and to eat and drink with the
drunken, the lord of that servant shall come in a day when he looketh not for
him, and in an hour that he is not aware of, and shall cut him asunder, and
appoint him his portion with the hypocrites (Match. xxiv. 48, seq.). For he
is rightly numbered among the hypocrites, who under pretence of discipline
turns the ministry of government to the purpose of domination. And yet sometimes
there is more grievous delinquency, if among perverse persons equality is kept
up more than discipline. For Eli, because, overcome by false affection, he
would not punish his delinquent sons, smote himself along with his sons before
the strict judge with a cruel doom (1 Sam. iv. 17, 18). For on this account
it is said to him by the divine voice, Thou hast honoured thy sons more than
Me (Ibid. ii. 29). Hence, too, He upbraids the shepherds through the prophet,
saying, That which was broken ye have not bound up, and that which was cast
away ye have not brought back (Ezek. xxxiv. 4). For one who had been east away
is brought back, when any one who has fallen into sin is recalled to a state
of righteousness by the vigour of pastoral solicitude. For ligature binds a
fracture when discipline subdues a sin, lest the wound should bleed mortally
for want of being compressed by the severity of constraint. But often a fracture
is made worse, when it is bound together unwarily, so that the cut is more
severely felt from being immoderately constrained by ligaments. Hence it is
needful that when a wound of sin in subordinates is repressed by correction,
even constraint should moderate itself with great carefulness, to the end that
it may so exercise the rights of discipline against delinquents as to retain
the bowels of loving-kindness. For care should be taken that a ruder shew himself
to his subjects as a mother in loving-kindness, and as a father in discipline.
And all the time it should be seen to with anxious circumspection, that neither
discipline be rigid nor loving-kindness lax. For, as we have before now said
in our book on Morals (Lib. xx., Moral n. 14, c. 8, et ep. 25, lib. 1), there
is much wanting both to discipline and to compassion, if one be had without
the other. But there ought to be in rulers towards their subjects both compassion
justly considerate, and discipline affectionately severe. For hence it is that,
as the Truth teaches (Luke x. 34), the man is brought by the care of the Samaritan
half dead into the inn, and both wine and oil are applied to his wounds; the
wine to make them smart, the oil to soothe them. For whosoever superintends
the healing of wounds must needs administer in wine the smart of pain, and
in oil the softness of loving-kindness, to the end that through wine what is
festering may be purged, and through oil what is curable may be soothed. Gentleness,
then, is to be mingled with severity; a sort of compound is to be made of both;
so that subjects be neither exulcerated by too much asperity, nor relaxed by
too great kindness. Which thing, according to the words of Paul (Heb. ix. 4),
is well signified by that ark of the tabernacle, in which, together with the
tables, there as a rod and manna; because, if with knowledge of sacred Scripture
in the good rulers breast there is the rod of constraint, there should be also
the manna of sweetness. Hence David says, Thy rod and thy staff, they have
comforted me (Ps. xxiii. 4). For with a rod we are smitten, with a staff we
are supported. If, then, there is the constraint of the rod for striking, there
should be also the comfort of the staff for supporting. Wherefore let there
be love, but not enervating; let there be vigour, but not exasperating; let
there be zeal, but not immoderately burning; let there be pity; but not sparing
more than is expedient; that, while justice and mercy, blend themselves together
in supreme rule, he who is at the head may both soothe the hearts of his subjects
in making them afraid, and yet in soothing them constrain them to reverential
awe.
CHAPTER VII.
That the ruler relax not his care for the things that are within in his occupation
among the things that are without, nor neglect to provide for the things that
are without in his solicitude for the things that are within.
The ruler should not relax his care for the things that are within in his
occupation among the things that are without, nor neglect to provide for the
things that are without in his solicitude for the things that are within; lest
either, given up to the things that are without, he fall away from his inmost
concerns, or, occupied only with the things that are within bestow not on his
neighbours outside himself what he owes them. For it is often the case that
some, as if forgetting that they have been put over their brethren for their
souls' sake, devote themselves with the whole effort of their heart to secular
concerns; these, when they are at hand, they exult in transacting, and, even
when there is a lack of them, pant after them night and day with seethings
of turbid thought; and when, haply for lack of opportunity, they have quiet
from them, by their very quiet they are wearied all the more. For they count
it pleasure to be tired by action: they esteem it labour not to labour in earthly
businesses. And so it comes to pass that, while they delight in being hustled
by worldly tumults, they are ignorant of the things that are within, which
they ought to have taught to others. And from this cause undoubtedly, the life
also of their subjects is benumbed; because, while desirous of advancing spiritually,
it meets a stumbling-block on the way in the example of him who is set over
it. For when the head languishes, the members fail to thrive; and it is in
vain for an army to follow swiftly in pursuit of enemies if the very leader
of the march goes wrong. No exhortation sustains the minds of the subjects,
and no reproof chastises their faults, because, while the office of an earthly
judge is executed by the guardian of souls, the attention of the shepherd is
diverted from custody of the flock; and the subjects are unable to apprehend
the light of truth, because, while earthly pursuits occupy the pastor's mind,
dust, driven by the wind of temptation, blinds the Church's eyes. To guard
against this, the Redeemer of the human race, when He would restrain us from
gluttony, saying, Take heed to yourselves that your hearts be not overcharged
with surfeiting and drunkenness (Luke xxi. 34), forthwith added, Or with cares
of this life: and in the same place also, with design to add fearfulness to
the warning, He straightway said, Lest perchance Pleat day come upon you unawares
(lbid.): and He even declares the manner of that coming, saying, For as a snare
shall it came on all them that dwell an the face of the whole earth (Ibid.
35). Hence He says again, No man can serve two masters (Luke xvi. 13). Hence
Paul withdraws the minds of the religious from consort with the world by summoning,
nay rather enlisting them, when he says, No man that warreth for God entangleth
himself with the affairs of this life, that he may please him to whom he has
approved himself (2 Tim. ii. 4). Hence to the rulers of the Church he both
commends the studies of leisure and points out the remedies of counsel, saying,
If then ye should have secular judgments, set them to judge who are contemptible
in the church (1 Cor. vi. 4); that is, that those very persons whom no spiritual
gifts adorn should devote themselves to earthly charges. It is as if he had
said more plainly, Since they are incapable of penetrating the inmost things,
let them at any rate employ themselves externally in necessary things. Hence
Moses, who speaks with God (Exod. xviii. 17, 18), is judged by the reproof
of Jethro, who was of alien race, because with ill-advised labour he devotes
himself to the people's earthly affairs: and counsel too is presently given
him, that he should appoint others in his stead for settling earthly strifes,
and he himself should be more free to learn spiritual secrets for the instruction
of the people.
By the
subjects, then, inferior matters are to be transacted, by the rulers the
highest thought
of; so that
no annoyance of dust may darken the eye which
is placed aloft for looking forward to the onward steps. For all who preside
are the head of their subjects; and, that the feet may be able to take a straight
course, the head ought undoubtedly to look forward to it from above, lest the
feet linger on their onward journey, the body being bent from its uprightness
and the head bowed down to the earth. But with what conscience can the overseer
of souls avail himself among other men of his pastoral dignity, while engaged
himself in the earthly cares which it was his duty to reprehend in others?
And this indeed is what the Lord, in the wrath of just retribution, menaced
through the prophet, saying. And there shall be like people, like priest (Hos.
iv. 9). For the priest is as the people, when one who bears a spiritual office
acts as do others who are still under judgment with regard to their carnal
pursuits. And this indeed the prophet Jeremiah, in the great sorrow of his
charity, deplores under the image of the destruction of the temple, saying,
How is the gold become dim! The most excellent colour is changed; the stones
of the sanctuary are poured out in the top of all the streets (Lam. iv. 1).
For what is expressed by gold, which surpasses all other metals, but the excellency
of holiness? What by the most excellent colour but the reverence that is about
religion, to all men lovely? What are signified by the stones of the sanctuary
but persons in sacred orders? What is figured under the name of streets but
the latitude of this present life? For, because in Greek speech the word for
latitude is <greek>platos</greek>, streets (platece) have been
so called from their breadth, or latitude. But the Truth in person says, Broad
and spacious is the way that leadeth to destruction (Matth. vii. 13). Gold,
therefore, becomes dim when a life of holiness is polluted by earthly doings;
the most excellent colour is changed, when the previous reputation of persons
who were believed to be living religiously is diminished. For, when any one
after a habit of holiness mixes himself up with earthly doings, it is as though
his colour were changed, and the reverence that surrounded him grew pale and
disregarded before the eyes of men. The stones of the sanctuary also are poured
out into the streets, when those who, for the ornament of the Church, should
have been free to penetrate internal mysteries as it were in the secret places
of the tabernacle seek out the broadways of secular causes outside. For indeed
to this end they were made stones of the sanctuary, that they might appear
in the vestment of the high-priest within the holy of holies. But when ministers
of religion exact not the Redeemer's honour from those that are under them
by the merit of their life, they are not stones of the sanctuary in the ornament
of the pontiff. And truly these stones of the sanctuary lie scattered through
the streets, when persons in sacred orders, given up to the latitude of their
own pleasures, cleave to earthly businesses. And it is to be observed that
they are said to be scattered, not in the streets, but in the top of the streets;
because, even when they are engaged in earthly matters, they desire to appear
topmost; so as to occupy the broad ways in their enjoyment of delight, and
yet to be at the top of the streets in the dignity of holiness.
Further,
there is nothing to hinder us from taking the stones of the sanctuary to
be those of which
the sanctuary
was itself constructed; which lie scattered
in the top of the streets when men in sacred orders, in whose office the glory
of holiness had previously seemed to stand, devote themselves out of preference
to earthly doings. Secular employments, therefore, though they may sometimes
be endured out of compassion, should never be sought after out of affection
for the things themselves; lest, while they weigh down the mind of him who
loves them, they sink it, overcome by its own burden, from heavenly places
to the lowest. But, on the other hand, there are some who undertake the care
of the flock, hut desire to be so at leisure for their own spiritual concerns
as to be in no wise occupied with external things. Such persons, in neglecting
all care for what pertains to the body, by no means meet the needs of those
who are put under them. And certainly their preaching is for the most part
despised; because, while they find fault with the deeds of sinners, but nevertheless
afford them not the necessaries of the present life, they are not at all willingly
listened to. For the word of doctrine penetrates not the mind of one that is
in need, if the hand of compassion commends it not to his heart. But the seed
of the word readily germinates, when the loving-kindness of the preacher waters
it in the hearer's breast. Whence, for a ruler to be able to infuse what may
profit inwardly, it is necessary for him, with blameless consideration, to
provide also for outward things. Let pastors, then, so glow with ardour in
regard to the inward affections of those they have the charge of as not to
relinquish provision also for their outward life. For, as we have said, the
heart of the flock is, even as it were of right, set against preaching, if
the care of external succour be neglected by the pastor. Whence also the first
pastor anxiously admonishes, saying, The elders which are among you I beseech,
who am also an elder, and a witness of the sufferings of Christ, and also a
partaker of the glory that shall be revealed, feed the flock of God which is
among you (1 Pet. v. 1): in which place he shewed whether it was the feeding
of the heart or of the body that he was commending, when he forthwith added,
Providing for it, not by constraint, but willingly, according to God, not for
filthy lucre, but of a ready mind. In these words, indeed, pastors are kindly
forewarned, lest, while they satisfy the want of those who are under them,
they slay themselves with the sword of ambition; lest, while through them their
neighbours are refreshed with succours of the flesh, they themselves remain
fasting from the bread of righteousness. This solicitude of pastors Paul stirs
up when he says, If any provide not for his own, and especially for those of
his own house, he hath denied the faith, and is worse than an infidel (1 Tim.
v. 8). In the midst of all this, then, they should fear, and watchfully take
heed, lest, while occupied with outward care, they be whelmed away from inward
intentness. For usually, as we have already said, the hearts of rulers, while
unwarily devoting themselves to temporal solicitude, cool in inmost love; and,
being carried hither and thither abroad, fear not to forget that they have
undertaken the government of souls. It is necessary, then, that the solicitude
expended on those who are put under us should be kept within a certain measure.
Hence it is well said to Ezekiel, The priests shall not shave their heads,
nor suffer their locks to grow, long, but polling let them poll their brads
(Ezek. xliv. 20). For they are rightly called priests who are set over the
faithful for affording them sacred guidance. But the hairs outside the head
are thoughts in the mind; which, as they spring up insensibly above the brain,
denote the cares of the present life, which, owing to negligent perception,
since they sometimes come forth unseasonably, advance, as it Were, without
our feeling them. Since, then, all who are over others ought indeed to have
external anxieties, and yet should not be vehemently bent upon them, the priests
are rightly forbidden either to shave their heads or to let their hair grow
long; that so they may neither cut off from themselves entirely thoughts of
the flesh for the life of those who are under them, nor again allow them to
grow too much. Thus in this passage it is well said, Polling let them pall
their heads; to wit, that the cares of temporal anxiety should both extend
themselves as far as need requires, and yet be cut short soon. lest they grow
to an immoderate extent. When, therefore, through provident care for bodies
applied externally life is protected [or, through provident care applied externally
the life of bodies is protected], and again, through moderate intentness of
heart, is not impeded(1), the hairs on the priest's head are both preserved
to cover the skin, and cut short so as not to veil the eyes.
CHAPTER VIII.
That the ruler should not set his heart on pleasing men, and yet should give
heed to what ought to phase them.
Meanwhile
it is also necessary for the ruler to keep wary watch, lest the lust of pleasing
men assail him;
lest, when he studiously penetrates the things
that are within, and providently supplies the things that are without, he seek
to be beloved of those that are under him more than truth; lest, while, supported
by his good deeds, he seems not to belong to the world, self-love estrange
him from his Maker. For he is the Redeemer's enemy who through the good works
which he does covets being loved by the Church instead of Him; since a servant
whom the bridegroom has sent with gifts to the bride is guilty of treacherous
thought if he desires to please the eyes of the bride. And in truth this self-love,
when it has got possession of a ruler's mind, sometimes carries it away inordinately
to softness, but sometimes to roughness. For from love of himself the ruler's
mind is inclined to softness, because, when he observes those that are under
him sinning, he does not presume to reprove them, lest their affection for
himself should grow dull; nay sometimes he smooths down with flatteries the
offence of his subordinates which he ought to have rebuked. Hence it is well
said through the prophet, Woe unto them that sew cushions under every elbow,
and make pillows under the head of every stature to catch sows (Ezek. xiii.
18); inasmuch as to put cushions under every elbow is to cherish with bland
flatteries souls that are falling from their uprightness and reclining themselves
in this world's enjoyment. For it is as though the elbow of a recumbent person
rested on a cushion and his head on pillows, when the hardness of reproof is
withdrawn from one who sins, and when the softness of favour is offered to
him, that he may lie softly in error, while no roughness of contradiction troubles
him. But so rulers who love themselves undoubtedly shew themselves to those
by whom they fear they may be injured in their pursuit of temporal glory. Such
indeed as they see to have no power against them they ever keep down with roughness
of rigid censure, never admonish them gently, but, forgetful of pastoral kindness,
terrify them with the rights of domination. Such the divine voice rightly upbraids
through the prophet, saying, But with austerity and power did ye rule them
(Ezek. xxiv. 4). For, loving themselves more than their Maker, they lift up
themselves haughtily towards those that are under them, considering not what
they ought to do, but what they can do; they have no fear of future judgment
they glory insolently in temporal power; it pleases them to be free to do even
unlawful things, and that no one among their subordinates should contradict
them. He, then, who sets his mind on doing wrong things, and yet wishes all
other men to hold their peace about them, is himself a witness to himself that
he desires to be loved himself more than the truth, which he is unwilling should
be defended against him. There is indeed no one who so lives as not to some
extent to fail in duty. He, then, desires the truth to be loved more fully
than himself, who wishes to be spared by no one against the truth. For hence
Peter willingly accepted Paul's rebuke (Galat. ii. 11); hence David humbly
listened to the reproof of his subject (2 Sam. xii. 7); because good rulers,
being themselves unconscious of loving with partial affection, believe the
word of free sincerity from subjects to be the homage of humility. But meanwhile
it is necessary that the care of government be tempered with so great skill
of management that the mind of subjects, when it has become able to feel rightly
on some subjects, should so advance to liberty of speech that liberty still
break not out into pride; lest, while liberty of the tongue is perchance conceded
to them overmuch, the humility of their life be lost. It is to be borne in
mind also, that it is fight for good rulers to desire to please men; but this
in order to draw their neighbours by the sweetness of their own character to
affection for the truth; not that they should long to be themselves loved,
but should make affection for themselves as a sort of road by which to lead
the hearts of their hearers to the love of the Creator. For it is indeed difficult
for a preacher who is not loved, however well he may preach, to be willingly
listened to. He, then, who is over others ought to study to be loved to the
end that he may be listened to, and still not seek love its own sake, lest
he be found in the hidden usurpation of his thought to rebel against Him whom
in his office he appears to serve. Which thing Paul insinuates well, when,
manifesting the secret of his affection for us, he says, seven as I please
all men in all things (1 Cor. x. 33). And yet he says again, If I yet pleased
men, I should not be the servant of Christ (Gal. i. 10). Thus Paul pleases,
and pleases not; because in that he desires to please he seeks that not he
himself should; please men, but truth through him.
CHAPTER IX.
That the ruler ought to be careful to understand how commonly vices pass themselves
off as virtues.
The ruler also ought to understand how commonly vices pass themselves off
as virtues. For often niggardliness palliates itself under the name of frugality,
and on the other hand prodigality hides itself under the appellation of liberality.
Often inordinate laxity is believed to be loving-kindness, and unbridled wrath
is accounted the virtue of spiritual zeal. Often precipitate action is taken
for the efficacy of promptness, and tardiness for the deliberation of seriousness.
Whence it is necessary for the ruler of souls to distinguish with vigilant
care between virtues and vices, lest either niggardliness get possession of
his heart while he exults in seeming frugal in expenditure; or, while anything
is prodigally wasted, he glory in being as it were compassionately liberal;
or in remitting what he ought to have smitten he draw on those that are under
him to eternal punishment; or in mercilessly smiting an offence he himself
offend more grievously; or by immaturely anticipating mar what might have been
done properly and gravely; or by putting off the merit of a good action change
it to something worse.
CHAPTER X.
What the ruler's discrimination should be between correction and connivance,
between fervour and gentleness.
It should be known too that the vices of subjects ought sometimes to be prudently
connived at, but indicated in that they are connived at; that things, even
though openly known, ought sometimes to be seasonably tolerated, but sometimes,
though hidden, be closely investigated; that they ought sometimes to be gently
reproved, but sometimes vehemently censured. For, indeed, some things, as we
have said, ought to be prudently connived at, but indicated in that they are
connived at, so that, when the delinquent is aware that he is discovered and
borne with, he may blush to augment those faults which he considers in himself
are tolerated in silence, and may punish himself in his own judgment as being
one whom the patience of his ruler in his own mind mercifully excuses. By such
connivance the Lord well reproves Judah, when He says through the prophet,
Thou hast lied, and hast not remembered Me, nor laid it to thy heart, because
I have held My peace and been as one that saw not (Isai. lvii. 11). Thus He
both connived at faults and made them known, since He both held His peace against
the sinner, and nevertheless declared this very thing, that He had held His
peace. But some things, even, though openly known, ought to be seasonably tolerated;
that is, when circumstances afford no suitable opportunity for openly correcting
them. For sores by being unseasonably cut are the worse enflamed and, if medicaments
suit not the time, it is undoubtedly evident that they lose their medicinal
function. But, while a fitting time for the correction of subordinates is being
sought, the patience of the prelate is exercised under the very weight of their
offences. Whence it is well said by the Psalmist, Sinners have built upon my
back (Ps. cxxviii. 3). For on the back we support burdens; and therefore he
complains that sinners had built upon his back, as if to say plainly, Those
whom I am unable to correct I carry as a burden laid upon me.
Some hidden things, however, ought to be closely investigated, that, by the
breaking out of certain symptoms, the ruler may discover all that lies closely
hidden in the minds of his subordinates, and, by reproof intervening at the
nick of time, from very small things become aware of greater ones. Whence it
is rightly said to Ezekiel, Son of man, dig in the wall (Ezek. viii. 8); where
the said prophet presently adds, And when l had digged in the wall, there appeared
one door. And he said unto me, Go in, and see the wicked abominations that
they do here. So I went in and saw; and behold every similitude of creeping
things, and abomination of beasts, and all the idols of the house of Israel,
were pourtrayed upon the wall (Ibid. 9, 10). Now by Ezekiel are personified
men in authority; by the wall is signified the hardness of their subordinates.
And what is digging in a wall but opening the hardness of the heart by sharp
inquisitions? Which wall when he had dug into, there appeared a door, because
when hardness of heart is pierced either by careful questionings or by seasonable
reproofs, there is shewn as it were a kind of door, through which may appear
the interior of the thoughts in him who is reproved. Whence also it follows
well in that place, Go in and see the wicked abominations that they do here
(Ibid.). He goes in, as it were, to see the abominations, who, by examination
of certain symptoms outwardly appearing, so penetrates the hearts of his subordinates
as to become cognizant of all their illicit thoughts. Whence also he added,
And I went in and saw; and behold every similitude of creeping things, and
abomination of beasts (Ibid.). By creeping things thoughts altogether earthly
are signified; but by beasts such as are indeed a little lifted above the earth,
but still crave the rewards of earthly recompense. For creeping things cleave
to the earth with the whole body; but beasts are in a large part of the body
lifted above the earth. yet are ever inclined to the earth by gulosity. Therefore
there are creeping things within the wall, when thoughts are revolved in the
mind which never rise above earthly cravings. There are also beasts within
the wall, when, though some just and some honourable thoughts are entertained,
they are still subservient to appetite for temporal gains and honour, anti,
though in themselves indeed lifted, as one may say, above the earth, still
through desire to curry favour, as through the throat's craving, demean themselves
to what is lowest. Whence also it is well added, And all the idols of the house
of Israd were pourtrayed upon the wall (Ezek. viii.10), inasmuch as it is written,
And covetousness, which is idolatry (Colos. iii. 5). Rightly therefore after
beasts idols are spoken of, because some, though lifting themselves as it were
above the earth by honourable action, still lower themselves to the earth by
dishonourable ambition. And it is well said. Were pourtrayed; since, when the
shows of external things are drawn into one's inner self, whatever is meditated
on under imagined images is, as it were, pourtrayed on the heart. It is to
be observed, therefore, that first a hole in the wall, and afterwards a door,
is perceived, and that then at length the hidden abomination is made apparent;
because, in fact, of every single sin signs are first seen outwardly, and afterwards
a door is pointed out for opening the iniquity to view; and then at length
every evil that lies hidden within is disclosed.
Some things, however, ought to be gently repro