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LEO THE GREAT
SERMONS I TO XXVIII
SERMON I.
PREACHED ON HIS BIRTHDAY(1), OR DAY OF ORDINATION.
Having been elected in absence(2) he returns thanks for the kindness and earnestly
demands the prayers of his church.
"LET my mouth speak the praise or the Lord(3)," and my breath and
spirit, my flesh and tongue bless His holy Name. For it is a sign, not of a
modest, but an ungrateful mind, to keep silence on the kindnesses of GOD: and
it is very meet to begin our duty as consecrated pontiff with the sacrifices
of the LORD'S praise(4). Because "in our humility" the LORD "has
been mindful of us(5)" and has blessed us: because "He alone has
done great wonders for me(5)," so that your holy affection for me reckoned
me present, though my long journey had forced me to be absent. Therefore I
give and always shall give thanks to our GOD for all the things with which
He has recompensed me. Your favourable opinion also I acknowledge publicly,
paying you the thanks I owe, and thus showing that I understand how much respect,
love and fidelity your affectionate zeal could expend on me who long with a
shepherd's anxiety for the safety of your souls, who have passed so conscientious
a judgment on me, with absolutely no deserts of mine to guide you. I entreat
you, therefore, by the mercies of the LORD, aid with your prayers him whom
you have sought out by your solicitations that both the Spirit of grace may
abide in me and that your judgment may not change. May He who inspired you
with such unanimity of purpose, vouchsafe to us all in common the blessing
of peace: so that all the days of my life being ready for the service of Almighty
Can, and for my duties towards you, I may with confidence entreat the LORD: "Holy
Father, keep in Thy name those whom Thou hast given me(6):" and while
you ever go on unto salvation, may "my soul magnify the LORD(7)," and
in the retribution of the judgment to come may the account of my priesthood
so be rendered to the just Judge(8) that through your good deeds you may be
my joy and my crown, who by your good will have given an earnest testimony
to me in this present life.
SERMON II.
ON HIS BIRTHDAY, II.: DELIVERED ON THE ANNIVERSARY(9) OF HIS CONSECRATION.
I. The LORD raises up the weak and gives him grace according to his need.
The Divine
condescension has made this an honourable day for me, for it has shown by
raising(1) my
humbleness
to the highest rank, that He despised not
any of His own. And hence, although one must be diffident of merit, yet it
is one's bounden duty to rejoice over the gift, since He who is the Imposer
of the burden(2) is Himself(3) the Aider in its execution: and lest the weak
recipient should fall beneath the greatness of the grace, He who conferred
the dignity will also give the power. As the day therefore returns in due course
on which the LORD purposed that I should begin my episcopal office, there is
true cause for me to rejoice to the glory of GOD, Who that I might love Him
much, has forgiven me much, and that I might make His Grace wonderful, has
conferred His gifts upon me in whom He found no recommendations of merit. And
by this His work what does the LORD suggest and commend to our hearts but that
no one should presume upon his own righteousness nor distrust GOD's mercy which
shines out more pre-eminently then, when the sinner is made holy and the downcast
lifted up. For the measure of heavenly gifts does not rest upon the quality
of our deeds, nor in this world, in which "all life is temptation(4)," is
each one rewarded according to his deserving, for if the LORD were to take
count of a man's iniquities, no one could stand before His judgment.
II. The mighty assemblage of prelates testifies to men's loyal acceptance
of Peter in Peter's unworthy successor.
Therefore,
dearly-beloved, "magnify the LORD with me and let us exalt
His name together(5)," that the whole reason of to-day's concourse may
be referred to the praise of Him Who brought it to pass. For so far as my own
feelings are concerned, I confess that I rejoice most over the devotion of
you all; and when I look upon this splendid assemblage of my venerable brother-priests(6)
I feel that, where so many saints are gathered, the very angels are amongst
us. Nor do I doubt that we are to-day visited by a more abundant outpouring
of the Divine Presence, when so many fair tabernacles of GOD, so many excellent
members of the Body of Christ are in one place and shine with one light. Nor
yet I feel sure, is the fostering condescension and true love of the most blessed
Apostle Peter absent from this congregation: he has not deserted your devotion,
in whose honour you are met together. And so he too rejoices over your good
feeling and welcomes your respect for the LORD'S own institution as shown towards
the partners of His honour, commending the well ordered love of the whole Church,
which ever finds Peter in Peter's See, and from affection for so great a shepherd
grows not lukewarm even over so inferior a successor as myself. In order therefore,
dearly beloved, that this loyalty which you unanimously display towards my
humbleness may obtain the fruit of its zeal, on bended knee entreat the merciful
goodness of our GOD that in our days He will drive out those who assail us,
strengthen faith, increase love, increase peace and deign to render me His
poor slave, whom to show the riches of His grace He has willed to stand at
the helm of the Church, sufficient for so great a work and useful in building
you up, and to this end to lengthen our time for service that the years He
may grant us may be used to His glory through Christ our LORD. Amen.
SERMON III.
ON HIS BIRTHDAY, III: DELIVERED ON THE ANNIVERSARY OF HIS ELEVATION TO THE
PONTIFICATE.
I. The honour of being raised to the episcopate must be referred solely to
the Divine Head of the Church.
As often
as GOD's mercy deigns to bring round the day of His gifts to us, there is,
dearly-beloved,
just
and reasonable cause for rejoicing, if only
our appointment to the office be referred to the praise of Him who gave it.
For though this recognition of GOD may well be found in all His priests, yet
I take it to be peculiarly binding on me, who, regarding my own utter insignificance
and the greatness of the office undertaken, ought myself also to utter that
exclamation of the Prophet," LORD, I heard Thy speech and was afraid:
I considered Thy works and was dismayed(7)." For what is so unwonted and
so dismaying as labour to the frail, exaltation to the humble, dignity to the
undeserving? And yet we do not despair nor lose heart, because we put our trust
not in ourselves but in Him who works in us. And hence also we have sung with
harmonious voice the psalm of David, dearly beloved, not in our own praise,
but to the glory of Christ the LORD. For it is He of whom it is prophetically
written, "Thou art a priest for ever after the order of Melchizedeck(8)," that
is, not after the order of Aaron, whose priesthood descending along his own
line of offspring was a temporal ministry, and ceased with the law of the Old
Testament, but after the order of Melchizedeck, in whom was prefigured the
eternal High Priest. And no reference is made to his parentage because in him
it is understood that He was portrayed, whose generation cannot be declared.
And finally, now that the mystery of this Divine priesthood has descended to
human agency, it runs not by the line of birth, nor is that which flesh and
blood created, chosen, but without regard to the privilege of paternity and
succession by inheritance, those men are received by the Church as its rulers
whom the Holy Ghost prepares: so that in the people of GOD's adoption, the
whole body of which is priestly and royal, it is not the prerogative of earthly
origin which obtains the unction(9), but the condescension of Divine grace
which creates the bishop.
II. From Christ and through S. Peter the priesthood is handed on in perpetuity.
Although,
therefore, dearly beloved, we be found both weak and slothful in fulfilling
the duties of our
office,
because, whatever devoted and vigorous
action we desire to do, we are hindered by the frailty of our very condition;
yet having the unceasing propitiation of the Almighty and perpetual Priest,
who being like us and yet equal with the Father, brought down His Godhead even
to things human, and raised His Manhood even to things Divine, we worthily
and piously rejoice over His dispensation, whereby, though He has delegated
the care of His sheep to many shepherds, yet He has not Himself abandoned the
guardianship of His beloved flock. And from His overruling and eternal protection
we have received the support of the Apostles' aid also, which assuredly does
not cease from its operation: and the strength of the foundation, on which
the whole superstructure of the Church is reared, is not weakened(1) by the
weight of the temple that rests upon it. For the solidity of that faith which
was praised in the chief of the Apostles is perpetual: and as that remains
which Peter believed in Christ, so that remains which Christ instituted in
Peter. For when, as has been read in the Gospel lesson(2), the LORD had asked
the disciples whom they believed Him to be amid the various opinions that were
held, and the blessed Peter bad replied, saying, "Thou art the Christ,
the Son of the living GOD," the LORD says, "Blessed art thou, Simon
Bar-Jona, because flesh and flood hath not revealed it to thee, but My Father,
which is in heaven. And I say to thee, that thou art Peter, and upon this rock
will I build My church, and the gates of Hades shall not prevail against it.
And I will give unto thee the keys of the kingdom of heaven. And whatsoever
thou shall bind on earth, shall be bound in heaven; and whatsoever thou shall
loose on earth, shall be loosed also in heaven(3)."
III. S. Peter's work is still carried out by his successors.
The dispensation
of Truth therefore abides, and the blessed Peter persevering in the strength
of the
Rock, which
he has received, has not abandoned the helm
of the Church, which he undertook. For he was ordained before the rest in such
a way that from his being called the Rock, from his being pronounced the Foundation,
from his being constituted the Doorkeeper of the kingdom of heaven, from his
being set as the Umpire to bind and to loose, whose judgments shall retain
their validity in heaven, from all these mystical titles we might know the
nature of his association with Christ. And still to-day he more fully and effectually
performs what is entrusted to him, and carries out every part of his duty and
charge in Him and with Him, through Whom he has been glorified. And so if anything
is rightly done and rightly decreed by us, if anything is won from the mercy
of GOD by our daily supplications, it is of his work and merits whose power
lives and whose authority prevails in his See. For this, dearly-beloved, was
gained by that confession, which, inspired in the Apostle's heart by GOD the
Father, transcended all the uncertainty of human opinions, and was endued with
the firmness of a rock, which no assaults could shake. For throughout the Church
Peter daily says, "Thou an the Christ, the Son of the living GOD," and
every tongue which confesses the LORD, accepts the instruction his voice conveys.
This Faith conquers the devil, and breaks the bonds of his prisoners. It uproots
us from this earth and plants us in heaven, and the gates of Hades cannot prevail
against it. For with such solidity is it endued by GOD that the depravity of
heretics cannot mar it nor the unbelief of the heathen overcome it.
IV. This festival then is in S. Peter's honour, and the progress of his flock
redounds to his glory.
And so,
dearly beloved, with reasonable obedience we celebrate to-day's festival
by such methods,
that in my humble
person he may be recognized and honoured,
in whom abides the care of all the shepherds, together with the charge of the
sheep commended to him, and whose dignity is not abated even in so unworthy
an heir. And hence the presence of my venerable brothers and fellow-priests,
so much desired and valued by me, will be the more sacred and precious, if
they will transfer the chief honour of this service in which they have deigned
to take part to him whom they know to be not only the patron of this see, but
also the primate of all bishops. When therefore we utter our exhortations in
your ears, holy brethren, believe that he is speaking whose representative
we are: because it is his warning that we give, nothing else but his teaching
that we preach, beseeching you to "gird up the loins of your mind(4)," and
lead a chaste and sober life in the fear of GOD, and not to let your mind forget
his supremacy and consent to the lusts of the flesh. Short and fleeting are
the joys of this world's pleasures which endeavour to turn aside from the path
of life those who are called to eternity. The faithful and religious spirit,
therefore, must desire the things which are heavenly, and being eager for the
Divine promises, lift itself to the love of the incorruptible Good and the
hope of the true Light. But be sure, dearly-beloved, that your labour, whereby
you resist vices and fight against carnal desires, is pleasing and precious
in GOD'S sight, and in GOD's mercy will profit not only yourselves but me also,
because the zealous pastor makes his boast of the progress of the LORD'S flock. "For
ye are my crown and joy(5)," as the Apostle says; if your faith, which
from the beginning of the Gospel has been preached in all the world has continued
in love and holiness. For though the whole Church, which is in all the world,
ought to abound in all virtues, yet you especially, above all people, it becomes
to excel in deeds of piety, because founded as you are on the very citadel
of the Apostolic Rock, not only has our LORD Jesus Christ redeemed you in common
with all men, but the blessed Apostle Peter has instructed you far beyond all
men. Through the same Christ our LORD.
SERMON IX.
UPON THE COLLECTIONS(6), IV.
I. The devil's wickedness in leading men astray is now counteracted by the
work of Redemption in restoring them to the Truth.
GOD's
mercy and justice, dearly-beloved, has in loving-kindness disclosed to us
through our LORD Jesus
Christ's teaching,
the manner of His retributions,
as they have been ordained from the foundation of the world, that accepting
the significance of facts we might take what we believe will happen, to have,
as it were, already come to pass. For our Redeemer and Saviour knew what great
errors the devil's deceit had dispersed throughout the world and by how many
superstitions he had subjected the chief part of mankind to himself. But that
the creature formed in GOD'S image might not any longer through ignorance of
the Truth be driven on to the precipice of perpetual death, He inserted in
the Gospel-pages the nature of His judgment that it might recover every man
from the snares of the crafty foe; for now all would know what rewards the
good might hope for and what punishments the evil must fear. For the instigator
and author of sin in order first to fall through pride and then to injure us
through envy, because "he stood not in the Truth(7)" put all his
strength in lying and produced every kind of deceit from this poisoned source
of his cunning, that he might cut off man's devout hopes from that happiness
which he had lost by his own uplifting, and drag them into partnership with
his condemnation, to whose reconciliation he himself could not attain. Whoever
therefore among men has wronged GOD by his wickednesses, has been led astray
by his guile, and depraved by his villainy. For he easily drives into all evil
doings those whom he has deceived in the matter of religion. But knowing that
GOD is denied not only by words but also by deeds, many whom he could not rob
of their faith, he has robbed of their love, and by choking the ground of their
heart with the weeds of avarice, has spoiled them of the fruit of good works,
when he could not spoil them of the confession of their lips.
II. GOD's just judgment against sin is denounced that we may avoid it by deeds
of mercy and love.
On account therefore, dearly-beloved, of these crafty designs of our ancient
foe, the unspeakable goodness of Christ has wished us to know, what was to
be decreed about all mankind in the day of retribution, that, while in this
life healing remedies are legitimately offered, while restoration is not denied
to the contrite, and those who have been long barren can at length be fruitful,
the verdict on which justice has determined may be fore-stalled and the picture
of GOD's coming to judge the world never depart from the mind's eye. For the
LORD will come in His glorious Majesty, as He Himself has foretold, and there
will be with Him an innumerable host of angel-legions radiant in their splendour.
Before the throne of His power will all the nations of the world be gathered;
and all the men that in all ages and on all the face of the earth have been
born, shall stand in the Judge's sight. Then shall be separated the just from
the unjust, the guiltless from the guilty; and when the sons of piety, their
works of mercy reviewed, have received the Kingdom prepared for them, the unjust
shall be upbraided for their utter barrenness, and those on the left having
naught in common with those on the right, shall by the condemnation of the
Almighty Judge be cast into the fire prepared for the torture of the devil
and his angels, with him to share the punishment, whose will they choose to
do. Who then would not tremble at this doom of eternal torment? Who would not
dread evils which are never to be ended? But since this severity is only denounced
in order that we may seek for mercy, we too in this present life must show
such open-handed mercy that after perilous neglect returning to works of piety
it may be possible for us to be set free from this doom. For this is the purpose
of the Judge's might and of the Saviour's graciousness, that the unrighteous
may forsake his ways and the sinner give up his wicket habits. Let those who
wish Christ to spare them, have mercy on the poor; let them give freely to
feed the wretched, who desire to attain to the society of the blessed. Let
no man consider his fellow vile, nor despise in any one that nature which the
Creator of the world made His own. For who that labours can deny that Christ
claims that labour as done unto Himself? Your fellow-slave is helped thereby,
but it is the LORD who will repay. The feeding of the needy is the purchase
money of the heavenly kingdom and the free dispenser of things temporal is
made the heir of things eternal. But how has such small expenditure deserved
to be valued so highly except because our works are weighed in the balance
of love, and when a man loves what GOD loves, he is deservedly raised into
His kingdom, whose attribute of love has in part become his?
III. We minister to Christ Himself in the person of His poor.
To this
pious duty of good works, therefore dearly beloved, the day of Apostolic
institution(8)
invites us,
on which the first collection of our holy offerings
has been prudently and profitably ordained by the Fathers; in order that, because
at this season formerly the Gentiles used superstitiously to serve demons,
we might celebrate the most holy offering of our alms in protest against the
unholy victims of the wicked. And because this has been most profitable to
the growth of the Church, it has been resolved to make it perpetual. We exhort
you, therefore, holy brethren throughout the churches of your several regions(9)
on Wednesday next(1) to contribute of your goods, according to your means and
willingness, to purposes of charity, that ye may be able to win that blessedness
in which he shall rejoice without end, who "considereth the needy and
poor(2)." And if we are to "consider" him, dearly beloved, we
must use loving care and watchfulness, in order that we may find him whom modesty
conceals and shamefastness keeps back. For there are those who blush openly
to ask for what they want and prefer to suffer privation without speaking rather
than to be put to shame by a public appeal. These are they whom we ought to "consider" and
relieve from their hidden straits in order that they may the more rejoice from
the very fact that their modesty as well as poverty has been consulted. And
rightly in the needy and poor do we recognize the person of Jesus Christ our
LORD Himself, "Who though He was rich," as says the blessed Apostle, "became
poor, that He might enrich us by His poverty(3)." And that His presence
might never seem to be wanting to us, He so effected the mystic union of His
humility and His glory that while we adore Him as King and LORD in the Majesty
of the Father, we might also feed Him in His poor, for which we shall be set
free in an evil day from perpetual damnation, and for our considerate care
of the poor shall be joined with the whole company of heaven.
IV. To complete their acceptance by GOD, they must not neglect to lay all
information against the Manichees who are in the city.
But in order that your devotion, dearly beloved, may in all things be pleasing
to GOD, we exhort you also to show due zeal in informing your presbyters of
Manichees whereever they be hidden(4). For it is naught but piety to disclose
the hiding-places of the wicked, and in them to overthrow the devil whom they
serve. For against them, dearly beloved, it becomes indeed the whole world
and the whole Church everywhere to put on the armour of Faith: but your devotion
ought to be foremost in this work, who in your progenitors learnt the Gospel
of the Cross of Christ from the very mouth of the most blessed Apostles Peter
and Paul. Men must not be allowed to lie hid who do not believe that the law
given through Moses, in which GOD is shown to be the Creator of the Universe,
ought to be received: who speak against the Prophets and the Holy Ghost, dare
in their damnable profanity to reject the Psalms of David which are sung through
the universal Church with all reverence, deny the birth of the LORD Christ,
according to the flesh, say that His Passion and Resurrection was fictitious,
not true, and deprive the baptism of regeneration of all its power as a means
of grace. Nothing with them is holy, nothing entire, nothing true. They are
to be shunned, lest they harm any one: they are to be given up, lest they should
settle in any part of our city. Yours, dearly. beloved, will be the gain before
the LORD'S judgment-seat of what we bid, of what we ask. For it is but right
that the triumph of this deed also should be joined to the oblation of our
alms, the LORD Jesus Christ in all things aiding us, Who lives and reigns for
ever and ever. Amen.
SERMON X.
ON THE COLLECTIONS, v.
I. Our goods are given us not as our own possessions but for use in GOD's
service.
Observing the institutions of the Apostles' tradition, dearly beloved, we
exhort you, as watchful shepherds, to celebrate with the devotion of religious
practice that day which they(5) purged from wicked superstitions and consecrated
to deeds of mercy, thus showing that the authority of the Fathers still lives
among us, and that we obediently abide by their teaching. Inasmuch as the sacred
usefulness of such a practice affects not only time past but also our own age,
so that what aided them in the destruction of vanities, might contribute with
us to the increase of virtues. And what so suitable to faith, what so much
in harmony with godliness as to assist the poverty of the needy, to undertake
the care of the weak, to succour the needs of the brethren, and to remember
one's own condition in the toils of others(6). In which work He only who knows
what He has given to each, discerns aright how much a man can and how much
he cannot do. For not only are spiritual riches and heavenly gifts received
from GOD, but earthly and material possessions also proceed from His bounty,
that He may be justified in requiring an account of those things which He has
not so much put in our possession as committed to our stewardship. GOD's gifts,
therefore, we must use properly and wisely, lest the material for good work
should become an occasion of sin. For wealth, after its kind and regarded as
a means, is good and is of the greatest advantage to human society, when it
is in the bands of the benevolent and open-handed, and when the luxurious man
does not squander nor the miser hoard it; for whether ill-stored or unwisely
spent it is equally lost.
II. The liberal use of riches is worse than vain, if it be for selfish ends
alone.
And, however praiseworthy it be to flee from intemperance, and to avoid the
waste of base pleasures, and though many in their magnificence disdain to conceal
their wealth, and in the abundance of their goods think scorn of mean and sordid
parsimony, yet such men's liberality is not happy, nor their thriftiness to
be commended, if their riches are of benefit to themselves alone; if no poor
folks are helped by their goods, no sick persons nourished; if out of the abundance
of their great possessions the captive gets not ransom, nor the stranger comfort,
nor the exile relief. Rich men of this kind are needier than all the needy.
For they lose those returns which they might have for ever, and while they
gloat over the brief and not always free enjoyment of what they possess, they
are not fed upon the bread of justice nor the sweets of mercy: outwardly splendid,
they have no light within: of things temporal they have abundance, but utter
lack of things eternal: for they inflict starvation on their own souls, and
bring them to shame and nakedness by spending upon heavenly treasures none
of these things which they put into their earthly storehouses.
III. The duty of mercy outweighs all other virtues.
But, perhaps
there are some rich people, who, although they are not wont to help the Church's
poor
by bounteous
gifts, yet keep other commands of GOD,
and among their many meritorious acts of faith and uprightness think they will
be pardoned for the lack of this one virtue. But this is so important that,
though the rest exist without it, they can be of no avail. For although a man
be full of faith, and chaste, and sober, and adorned with other still greater
decorations, yet if he is not merciful, he cannot deserve mercy: for the LORD
says, "blessed are the merciful, for GOD shall have mercy upon them (7)." And
when the Son of Man comes in His Majesty and is seated on His glorious throne,
and all nations being gathered together, division is made between the good
and the bad, for what shall they be praised who stand upon the fight except
for works of benevolence and deeds of love which Jesus Christ shall reckon
as done to Himself? For He who has made man's nature His own, has separated
Himself in nothing from man's humility. And what objection shall be made to
those on the left except for their neglect of love, their inhuman harshness,
their refusal of mercy to the poor? as if those on the right had no other virtues
those on the left no other faults. But at the great and final day of judgment
large-hearted liberality and ungodly meanness will be counted of such importance
as to outweigh all other virtues and all other shortcomings, so that for the
one men shall gain entrance into the Kingdom, for the other they shall be sent
into eternal fire.
IV. And its efficacy, as Scripture proves, is incalculable.
Let no
one therefore, dearly beloved, flatter himself on any merits of a good life,
if works of
charity be wanting
in him, and let him not trust in the purity
of his body, if he be not cleansed by the purification of almsgiving. For "almsgiving
wipes out sin (8)," kills death, and extinguishes the punishment of perpetual
fire. But he who has not been fruitful therein, shall have no indulgence from
the great Re-compenser, as Solomon says, "He that closeth his ears lest
he should hear the weak, shall himself call upon the LORD, and there shall
be none to hear him (9)." And hence Tobias also, while instructing his
son in the precepts of godliness, says, "Give alms of thy substance, and
turn not thy face from any poor man: so shall it come to pass that the face
of GOD shall not be turned from thee (1)." This virtue makes all virtues
profitable; for by its presence it gives life to that very faith, by which "the
just lives (2)," and which is said to be "dead without works (3):" because
as the reason for works consists in faith, so the strength of faith consists
in works. "While we have time therefore," as the Apostle says, "let
us do that which is good to all men, and especially to them that are of the
household of faith (4)." "But let us not be weary in doing good;
for in His own time we shall reap. And so the present life is the time for
sowing, and the day of retribution is the time of harvest, when every one shall
reap the fruit of his seed according to the amount of his sowing. And no one
shall be disappointed in the produce of that harvesting, because it is the
heart's intentions rather than the sums expended that will be reckoned up.
And little sums from little means shall produce as much as great sums from
great means. And therefore, dearly beloved, let us carry out this Apostolic
institution. And as the first collection will be next Sunday, let all prepare
themselves to give willingly, that every one according to his ability may join
in this most sacred offering. Your very alms and those who shall be aided by
your gifts shall intercede for you, that you may be always ready for every
good work in Christ Jesus our LORD, Who lives and reigns for ages without end.
Amen.
SERMON XII.
ON THE FAST OF THE, TENTH MONTH, I. (5)
I. Restoration to the Divine image in which we were made is only possible
by our imitation of GOD's will.
If, dearly
beloved, we comprehend faithfully and wisely the beginning of our creation,
we shall
find that man
was made in GOD's image, to the end that he
might imitate his Creator, and that our race attains its highest natural dignity,
by the form of the Divine goodness being reflected in us, as in a mirror. And
assuredly to this form the Saviour's grace is daily restoring us, so long as
that which, in the first Adam fell, is raised up again in the second. And the
cause of our restoration is naught else but the mercy of GOD, Whom we should
not have loved, unless He had first loved us, and dispelled the darkness of
our ignorance by the light of His truth. And the LORD foretelling this by the
holy Isaiah says, "I will bring the blind into a way that they knew not,
and will make them walk in paths which they were ignorant of. I will turn darkness
into light for them, and the crooked into the straight. These words will I
do for them, and not forsake them (6)." And again he says, "I was
found by them that sought Me not, and openly appeared to them that asked not
for Me (6). And the Apostle John teaches us how this has been fulfilled, when
he says. "We know that the Son of GOD is come, and has given us an understanding,
that we may know Him that is true, and may be in Him that is true, even His
Son (7)," and again, "let us therefore love GOD, because He first
loved us (7)." Thus it is that GOD, by loving us, restores us to His image,
and, in order that He may find in us the form of His goodness, He gives us
that whereby we ourselves too may do the work that He does, kindling that is
the lamps of our minds, and inflaming us with the fire of His love, that we
may love not only Himself, but also whatever He loves. For if between men that
is the lasting friendship which is based upon similarity of character notwithstanding
that such identity of wills is often directed to wicked ends, how ought we
to yearn and strive to differ in nothing from what is pleasing to GOD. Of which
the prophet speaks, "for wrath is in His indignation, and life in His
pleasure (8)," because we shall not otherwise attain the dignity of the
Divine Majesty, unless we imitate His will.
II. We
must love both God and our neighbour, and "our neighbour" must
be interpreted in its widest sense.
And so,
when the LORD says, "Thou shalt love the LORD thy GOD, from all
thy heart and from all thy mind: and thou shalt love thy neighbour as thyself
(9)," let the faithful soul put on the unfading love of its Author and
Ruler, and subject itself also entirely to His will in Whose works and judgments
true justice and tender-hearted compassion never fail. For although a man be
wearied out with labours and many misfortunes, there is good reason for him
to endure all in the knowledge that adversity will either prove him good or
make him better. But this godly love cannot be perfect unless a man love his
neighbour also. Under which name must be included not only those who are connected
with us by friendship or neighbourhood, but absolutely all men, with whom we
have a common nature, whether they be foes or allies, slaves or free. For the
One Maker fashioned us, the One Creator breathed life into us; we all enjoy
the same sky and air, the same days and nights, and, though some be good, others
bad, some righteous, others unrighteous, yet GOD is bountiful to all, kind
to all, as Paul and Barnabas said to the Lycaonians concerning GOD'S Providence, "who
in generations gone by suffered all the nations to walk in their own ways.
And yet He left Himself not without witness, doing them good, giving rain from
heaven and fruitful seasons, and filling our hearts with food and gladness
(1)." But the wide extent of Christian grace has given us yet greater
reasons for loving our neighbour, which, reaching to all parts of the whole
world, looks down on (2) no one, and teaches that no one is to be neglected.
And full rightly does He command us to love our enemies, and to pray to Him
for our persecutors, who, daily grafting shoots of the wild olive from among
all nations upon the holy branches of His own olive, makes men reconciled instead
of enemies, adopted sons instead of strangers, just instead of ungodly, "that
every knee may bow of things in heaven, of things on earth, and of things under
the earth, and every tongue confess that the LORD Jesus Christ is in the glory
of GOD the Father (3)."
III. We must be thankful, and show, our thankfulness for what we have received,
whether much or little.
Accordingly,
as GOD wishes us to be good, because He is good, none of His judgments ought
to displease
us.
For not to give Him thanks in all things,
what else is it but to blame Him in some degree. Man's folly too often dares
to murmur against his Creator, not only in time of want, but also in time of
plenty, so that, when something is not supplied, he complains, and when certain
things are in abundance he is ungrateful. The lord of rich harvests thought
scorn of his well-filled garners, and groaned over his abundant grape-gathering:
he did not give thanks for the size of the crop, but complained of its poorness
(3a). And if the ground has been less prolific than its wont in the seed it
has reared, and the vines and the olives have failed in their supply of fruit,
the year is accused, the elements blamed, neither the air nor the sky is spared,
whereas nothing better befits and reassures the faithful and godly disciples
of Truth than the persistent and unwearied lifting of praise to GOD, as says
the Apostle, "Rejoice alway, pray without ceasing: in all things give
thanks. For this is the will of GOD in Christ Jesus in all things for you (4)." But
how shall we be partakers of this devotion, unless vicissitudes of fortune
train our minds in constancy, so that the love directed towards GOD may not
be puffed up in prosperity nor faint in adversity. Let that which pleases GOD,
please us too. Let us rejoice in whatever measure of gifts He gives. Let him
who has used great possessions well, use small ones also well. Plenty and scarcity
may be equally for our good, and even in spiritual progress we shall not be
east down at the smallness of the results, if our minds become not dry and
barren. Let that spring from the soil of our heart, which the earth gave not.
To him that fails not in good will, means to give are ever supplied. Therefore,
dearly beloved, in all works of godliness let us use what each year gives us,
and let not seasons of difficulty hinder our Christian benevolence. The LORD
knows how to replenish the widow's vessels, which her pious deed of hospitality
has emptied: He knows how to turn water into wine: He knows how to satisfy
5,000 hungry persons with a few loaves. And He who is fed in His poor, can
multiply when He takes what He increased when He gave.
IV. Prayer, fasting and almsgiving are the three comprehensive duties of a
Christian.
But there are three things which most belong to religious actions, namely
prayer, fasting, and almsgiving, in the exercising of which while every time
is accepted, yet that ought to be more zealously observed, which we have received
as hallowed by tradition from the apostles: even as this tenth month brings
round again to us the opportunity when according to the ancient practice we
may give more diligent heed to those three things of which I have spoken. For
by prayer we seek to propitiate GOD, by fasting we extinguish the lusts of
the flesh, by alms we redeem our sins: and at the same time GOD's image is
throughout renewed in us, if we are always ready to praise Him, unfailingly
intent on our purification and unceasingly active in cherishing our neighhour.
This threefold round of duty, dearly beloved, brings all other virtues into
action: it attains to GOD's image and likeness and unites us inseparably with
the Holy Spirit. Because in prayer faith remains stedfast, in fastings life
remains innocent, in almsgiving the mind remains kind. On Wednesday and Friday
therefore let us fast: and on Saturday let us keep vigil with the most blessed
Apostle Peter, who will deign to aid our supplications and fast and alms with
his own prayers through our LORD Jesus Christ, who with the Father and the
Holy Ghost lives and reigns for ever and ever. Amen.
SERMON XVI.
ON THE FAST OF THE TENTH MONTH.
I. The prosperous must show forth their thankfulness to GOD, by liberality
to the floor and needy.
The transcendant power of GOD's grace, dearly beloved, is indeed daily effecting
in Christian hearts the transference of our every n desire from earthly to
heavenly things. But this present life also is passed through the Creator's
aid and sustained by His providence, because He who promises things eternal
is also the the Supplier of things temporal. As therefore we ought to give
GOD thanks for the hope of future happiness towards which we run by faith,
because He raises us up to a perception of the happiness in store for us, so
for those things also which we receive in the course of every year, GOD should
be honoured and praised, who having from the beginning given fertility to the
earth and laid down laws of bearing fruit for every germ and seed, will never
forsake his own decrees but will as Creator ever continue His kind administration
of the things that He has made. Whatever therefore the cornfields, the vineyards
and the olive groves have borne for man's purposes, all this God in His bounteous
goodness has produced: for under the varying condition of the elements He has
mercifully aided the uncertain toils of the husbandmen so that wind, and rain,
cold and heat, day and night might serve our needs. For men's methods would
not have sufficed to give effect to their works, had not GOD given the increase
to their wonted plantings and waterings. And hence it is but godly and just
that we too should help others with that which the Heavenly Father has mercifully
bestowed on us. For there are full many, who have no fields, no vineyards,
no olive-groves, whose wants we must provide out of the store which GOD has
given, that they too with us may bless GOD for the richness of the earth and
rejoice at its possessors having received things which they have shared also
with the poor and the stranger. That garner is blessed and most worthy that
all fruits should increase manifold in it, from which the hunger of the needy
and the weak is satisfied from which the wants of the stranger are relieved,
from which the desire of the sick is gratified. For these men GOD has in His
justice permitted to be afflicted with divers troubles, that He might both
crown the wretched for their patience and the merciful for their loving-kindness.
II. Almsgiving and fasting are the most essential aids to prayer.
And while
all seasons are opportune for this duty, beloved, yet this present season
is specially
suitable and
appropriate, at which our holy fathers, being
Divinely inspired, sanctioned the Fast of the tenth month, that when all the
ingathering of the crops was complete, we might dedicate to GOD our reasonable
service of abstinence, and each might remember so to use his abundance as to
be more abstinent in himself and more open-handed towards the poor. For forgiveness
of sins is most efficaciously prayed for with almsgiving and fasting, and supplications
that are winged by such aids mount swiftly to GOD's ears: since as it is written, "the
merciful man doeth good to his own soul (5)," and nothing is so much a
man's own as that which he spends on his neighbour. For that part of his material
possessions with which he ministers to the needy, is transformed into eternal
riches, and such wealth is begotten of this bountifulness as can never be diminished
or in any way destroyed, for "blessed are the merciful, for GOD shall
have mercy on them 6," and He Himself shall be their chief Reward, who
is the Model of His own command.
III. Christians' pious activity has so enraged Satan that he has multiplied
heresies to wreak them harm.
But at
all these acts of godliness, dearly-beloved, which commend us more and more
to GOD, there
is no doubt
that our enemy, who is so eager and so skilled
in harming us, is aroused with keener stings of hatred, that under a false
profession of the Christian name he may corrupt those whom he is not allowed
to attack with open and bloody persecutions, and for this work he has heretics
in his service whom he has led astray from the catholic Faith, subjected to
himself, and forced under divers errors to serve in his camp. And as for the
deception of primitive man he used the services of a serpent, so to mislead
the minds of the upright he has armed these men's tongues with the poison of
his falsehoods. But these treacherous designs, dearly beloved, with a shepherd's
care, and so far as the LORD vouchsafes His aid, we will defeat. And taking
heed lest any of the holy flock should perish, we admonish you with fatherly
warnings to keep aloof from the "lying lips" and the "deceitful
tongue" from which the prophet asks that his soul should be delivered
(7); because "their words," as says the blessed Apostle, "do
creep as doth a gangrene (8)." They creep in humbly, they arrest softly,
they bind gently, they slay secretly. For they "come," as the Saviour
foretold, "in sheeps' clothing, but inwardly they are ravening wolves
(9);" because they could not deceive the true and simple sheep, unless
they covered their bestial rage with the name of Christ. But in them all he
is at work who, though he is really the enemy of enlightenment, "transforms
himself into an angel of light (1)." His is the craft which inspires Basilides;
his the ingenuity which worked in Marcion; he is the leader under whom Sabellius
acted; he the author of Photinus' headlong fall, his the authority and his
the spirit which Arius and Eunomius served: in fine under his command and authority
the whole herd of such wild beasts has separated from the unity of the Church
and severed connexion with the Truth.
IV. Of all heresies Manicheism is the worst and foullest.
But while he retains this ever-varying supremacy over all the heresies, yet
he has built his citadel upon the madness of the Manichees, and found in them
the most spacious court in which to strut and boast himself: for there he possesses
not one form of misbelief only, but a general compound of all errors and ungodlinesses.
For all that is idolatrous in the heathen, all that is blind in carnal Jews,
all that is unlawful in the secrets of the magic art, all finally that is profane
and blasphemous in all the heresies is gathered together with all manner of
filth in these men as if in a cesspool (2). And hence it is too long a matter
to describe all their ungodlinesses: for the number of the charges against
them exceeds my supply of words. It will be sufficient to indicate a few instances,
that you may, from what you hear, conjecture what from modesty we omit. In
the matter of their rites, however, which are as indecent morally as they are
religiously, we cannot keep silence about that which the LORD has been pleased
to reveal to our inquiries, lest any one should think we have trusted in this
thing to vague rumours and uncertain opinions. And so with bishops and presbyters
sitting beside me, and Christian nobles assembled in the same place, we ordered
their elect men and women to be brought before us. And when they had made many
disclosures concerning their perverse tenets and their mode of conducting festivals,
they revealed this story of utter depravity also, which I blush to describe
but which has been so carefully investigated that no grounds for doubt are
left for the incredulous or for cavillers. For there were present all the persons
by which the unutterable crime had been perpetrated, to wit a girl at most
ten years old, and two women who had nursed her and prepared her for this outrage.
There was also present the stripling who had outraged her, and the bishop,
who had arranged their horrible crime. All these made one and the same confession,
and a tale of such foul orgies s was disclosed as our ears could scarcely bear.
And lest by plainer speaking we offend chaste ears, the account Of the proceedings
shall suffice, in which it is most fully shown that in that sect no modesty,
no sense of honour, no chastity whatever is found: for their law is falsehood,
their religion the devil, their sacrifice immorality.
V. Every one should abjure such men, and give all the information they possess
about them to the authorities.
And so, dearly beloved, renounce all friendship with these men who are utterly
abominable and pestilential, and whom disturbances in other districts have
brought in great numbers to the city (4): and you women especially refrain
from acquaintance and intercourse with such men, lest while your ears are charmed
unawares by their fabulous stories, you fall into the devil's noose, who, knowing
that he seduced the first man by the woman's mouth, and drove all men from
the bliss of paradise through feminine credulity, still lies in watch for your
sex with more confident craft that he may rob both of their faith and of their
modesty those whom he has been able to ensnare by the servants of his falseness.
This, too, dearly beloved, I entreat and admonish you loyally to inform us
(5), if any of you know where they dwell, where they teach, whose houses they
frequent, and in whose company they take rest: because it is of little avail
to any one that through the Holy Ghost's protection he is not caught by them
himself, if he takes no action when he knows that others are being caught.
Against common enemies for the common safety all alike should exercise the
same vigilance lest from one member's wound other members also be injured,
and they that think such men should not be given up, in Christ's judgment be
found guilty for their silence even though they are not contaminated by their
approval.
VI. Zeal in rooting out heresy will make other pious duties more acceptable.
Display then a holy zeal of religious vigilance, and let all the faithful
rise in one body against these savage enemies of their souls. For the merciful
GOD has delivered a certain portion of our noxious foes into our hands in order
that by revelation of the danger the utmost caution might be aroused. Let not
what has been done suffice, but let us persevere in searching them out: and
by GOD'S aid the result will be not only the continuance in safety of those
who still stand, but also the recovery from error of many who have been deceived
by the devil's seduction. And the prayers, and alms, and fasts that you offer
to the merciful GOD shall be the holier for this very devotion, when this deed
of faith also is added to all your other godly duties. On Wednesday and Friday,
therefore, let us fast, and on Saturday let us keep vigil in the presence of
the most blessed Apostle Peter; who, as we experience and know, watches unceasingly
like a shepherd over the sheep entrusted to him by the LORD, and who will prevail
in his entreaties that the Church of GOD, which was rounded by his preaching,
may be free from all error, through Christ our LORD. Amen.
SERMON XVII.
ON THE FAST OF THE TENTH MONTH, VI.
I. The duty of fasting is based on both the Old and New Testaments, and is
closely connected with the duties of prayer and almsgiving.
The teaching
of the Law, dearly beloved, imparts great authority to the precepts of the
Gospel, seeing
that
certain things are transferred from the old ordinances
to the new, and by the very devotions of the Church it is shown that the LORD
Jesus Christ "came not to destroy but to fulfil the Law (6)." For
since the cessation of the signs by which our Saviour's coming was announced,
and the abolition of the types in the presence of the Very Truth, those things
which our religion instituted, whether for the regulation of customs or for
the simple worship of GOD, continue with us in the same form in which they
were at the beginning, and what was in harmony with both Testaments has been
modified by no change. Among these is also the solemn fast of the tenth month,
which is now to be kept by us according to yearly custom, because it is altogether
just and godly to give thanks to the Divine bounty for the crops which the
earth has produced for the use of men under the guiding hand of supreme Providence.
And to show that we do this with ready mind, we must exercise not only the
self-restraint of fasting, but also diligence in almsgiving, that from the
ground of our heart also may spring the germ of righteousness and the fruit
of love, and that we may deserve GOD'S mercy by showing mercy to His poor.
For the supplication, which is supported by works of piety, is most efficacious
in prevailing with GOD, since he who turns not his heart away from the poor
soon turns himself to hear the LORD, as the LORD says: "be ye merciful
as your Father also is merciful .... release and ye shall be released (7)." What
is kinder than this justice? what more merciful than this retribution, where
the judge's sentence rests in the power of him that is to be judged? "Give," he
says, "and it shall be given to you (7)." How soon do the misgivings
of distrust and the puttings off of avarice fall to the ground, when humanity
s may fearlessly spend what the Truth pledges Himself to repay.
II. He that lends to the LORD makes a better bargain than he that lends to
man.
Be stedfast,
Christian giver: give what you may receive, sow what you may reap, scatter
what you
may gather.
Fear not to spend, sigh not over the doubtfulness
of the gain. Your substance grows when it is wisely dispensed. Set your heart
on the profits due to mercy, and traffic in eternal gains. Your Recompenser
wishes you to be munificent, and He who gives that you may have, commands you
to spend, saying, "Give, and it shall be given to you." You must
thankfully embrace the conditions of this promise. For although you have nothing
that you did not receive, yet you cannot fail to have what you give. He therefore
that loves money, and wishes to multiply his wealth by immoderate profits,
should rather practise this holy usury and grow rich by such money-lending,
in order not to catch men hampered with difficulties, and by treacherous assistance
entangle them in debts which they can never pay, but to be His creditor and
His money-lender, who says, "Give, and it shall be given to you," and "with
what measure ye measure, it shall be measured again to you (9)." But he
is unfaithful and unfair even to himself, who does not wish to have for ever
what he esteems desirable. Let him amass what he may, let him hoard and store
what he may, he will leave this world empty and needy, as David the prophet
says, "for when he dieth he shall take nothing away, nor shall his glory
descend with him (1)." Whereas if he were considerate of his own soul,
he would trust his good to Him, who is both the proper Surety (2) for the poor
and the generous Repayer of loans. But unrighteous and shameless avarice, which
promises to do some kind act but eludes it, trusts not GOD, whose promises
never fail, and trusts man, who makes such hasty bargains; and while he reckons
the present more certain than the future, often deservedly finds that his greed
for unjust gain is the cause of by no means unjust loss.
III. Money-lending at high interest is in all respects iniquitous.
And hence,
whatever result follow, the money-lender's trade is always bad, for it is
sin either to lessen
or
increase the sum, in that if he lose what
he lent he is wretched, and if he takes more than he lent he is more wretched
still. The iniquity of money-lending must absolutely be abjured, and the gain
which lacks all humanity must be shunned. A man's possessions are indeed multiplied
by these unrighteous and sorry means, but the mind's wealth decays because
usury of money is the death of the soul (3). For what GOD thinks of such men
the most holy Prophet David makes clear, for when he asks, "LORD, who
shall dwell in thy tabernacle, or who shall rest upon thy holy hill (4)?" he
receives the Divine utterance in reply, from which he learns that that man
attains to eternal rest who among other rules of holy living "hath not
given his money upon usury (4):" and thus he who gets deceitful gain from
lending his money on usury is shown to be both an alien from GOD's tabernacle
and an exile from His holy hill, and in seeking to enrich himself by other's
losses, he deserves to be punished with eternal neediness.
IV. Let us avoid avarice, and share GOD's benefits with others.
And so, dearly beloved, do ye who with the whole heart have put your trust
in the LORD's promises, flee from this unclean leprosy of avarice, and use
GOD's gift piously and wisely. And since you rejoice in His bounty, take heed
that you have those who may share in your joys. For many lack what you have
in plenty, and some men's needs afford you opportunity for imitating the Divine
goodness, so that through you the Divine benefits may be transferred to others
also, and that by being wise stewards of your temporal goods, you may acquire
eternal riches. On Wednesday and Friday next, therefore, let us fast, and on
Saturday keep vigil with the most blessed Apostle Peter, by whose prayers we
may in all things obtain the Divine protection through Christ our LORD. Amen.
SERMON XIX.
ON THE FAST OF THE TENTH MONTH, VIII.
I. Self-restraint leads to higher enjoyments.
When the
Saviour would instruct His disciples about the Advent of GOD's Kingdom and
the end of the
world's
times, and teach His whole Church, in the person
of the Apostles, He said, "Take heed lest haply your hearts be overcharged
with surfeiting and drunkenness, and care of this life(5)." And assuredly,
dearly beloved, we acknowledge that this precept applies more especially to
us, to whom undoubtedly the day denounced is near, even though hidden. For
the advent of which it behoves every man to prepare himself, lest it find him
given over to gluttony, or entangled in cares of this life. For by daily experience,
beloved, it is proved that the mind's edge is blunted by over-indulgence of
the flesh, and the heart's vigour is dulled by excess of food, so that the
delights of eating are even opposed to the health of the body, unless reasonable
moderation withstand the temptation and the consideration of future discomfort
keep from the pleasure. For although the flesh desires nothing without the
soul, and receives its sensations from the same source as it receives its motions
also, yet it is the function of the same soul to deny certain things to the
body which is subject to it, and by its inner judgment to restrain the outer
parts from things unseasonable, in order that it may be the oftener free from
bodily lusts, and have leisure for Divine wisdom in the palace of the mind,
where, away from all the noise of earthly cares, it may in silence enjoy holy
meditations and eternal delights. And, although this is difficult to maintain
in this life, yet the attempt can frequently be renewed, in order that we may
the oftener and longer be occupied with spiritual rather than fleshly cares;
and by our spending ever greater portions of our time on higher cares, even
our temporal actions may end in gaining the incorruptible riches.
II. The teaching of the four yearly fasts is that spiritual self-restraint
is as necessary as corporeal.
This profitable
observance, dearly beloved, is especially laid down for the fasts of the
Church, which,
in accordance
with the Holy Spirit's teaching,
are so distributed over the whole year that the law of abstinence may be kept
before us at all times. Accordingly we keep the spring fast in Lent, the summer
fast at Whitsuntide, the autumn fast in the seventh month, and the winter fast
in this which is the tenth month, knowing that there is nothing unconnected
with the Divine commands, and that all the elements serve the Word of GOD to
our instruction, so that from the very hinges on which the world turns, as
if by four gospels we learn unceasingly what to preach and what to do. For,
when the prophet says, "The heavens declare the glory of GOD, and the
firmament showeth His handiwork: day unto day uttereth speech, and night showeth
knowledge(6)," what is there by which the Truth does not speak to us?
By day and by night His voices are heard, and the beauty of the things made
by the workmanship of the One GOD ceases not to instil the teachings of Reason
into our hearts' ears, so that "the invisible things of GOD may be perceived
and seen through the things which are made," and men may serve the Creator
of all, not His creatures(7). Since therefore all vices are destroyed by self-restraint,
and whatever avarice thirsts for, pride strives for, luxury lusts after, is
overcome by the solid force of this virtue, who can fail to understand the
aid which is given us by fastings? for therein we are bidden to restrain ourselves,
not only in food, but also in all carnal desires. Otherwise it is lost labour
to endure hunger and yet not put away wrong wishes; to afflict oneself by curtailing
food, and yet not to flee from sinful thoughts. That is a carnal, not a spiritual
fast, where the body only is stinted, and those things persisted in, which
are more harmful than all delights. What profit is it to the soul to act outwardly
as mistress and inwardly to be a captive and a slave, to issue orders to the
limbs and to lose the right to her own liberty? That soul for the most part
(and deservedly) meets with rebellion in her servant, which does not pay to
GOD the service that is due. When the body therefore fasts from food, let the
mind fast from vices, and pass judgment upon all earthly cares and desires
according to the law of its King.
III. Thus fasting in mind as well as body, and giving alms freely, we shall
win GOD's highest favour.
Let us
remember that we owe love first to GOD, secondly to our neighbour, and that
all our affections
must
be so regulated as not to draw us away from
the worship of GOD, or the benefiting our fellow slave. But how shall we worship
GOD unless that which is pleasing to Him is also pleasing to us? For, if our
will is His will, our weakness will receive strength from Him, from Whom the
very will came; "for it is GOD," as the Apostle says, "who worketh
in us both to will and to do for (His) good pleasure(8)." And so a man
will not be puffed up with pride, nor crushed with despair, if he uses the
gifts which GOD gave to His glory, and withholds his inclinations from those
things, which he knows will harm him. For in abstaining from malicious envy,
from luxurious and dissolute living, from the perturbations of anger, from
the lust after vengeance, he will be made pure and holy by true fasting, and
will be fed upon the pleasures of incorruptible delights, and so he will know
how, by the spiritual use of his earthly riches, to transform them into heavenly
treasures, not by hoarding up for himself what he has received, but by gaining
a hundred-fold on what he gives. And hence we warn you, beloved, in fatherly
affection, to make this winter fast fruitful to yourselves by bounteous alms,
rejoicing that by you the LORD feeds and clothes His poor, to whom assuredly
He could have given the possessions which He has bestowed on you, had He not
in His unspeakable mercy wished to justify them for their patient labour, and
you for your works of love. Let us therefore fast on Wednesday and Friday,
and on Saturday keep vigil with the most blessed Apostle Peter, and he will
deign to assist with his own prayers our supplications and fastings and alms
which our LORD Jesus Christ presents, Who with the Father and the Holy Ghost
lives and reigns for ever and ever. Amen.
SERMON XXI.
ON THE FEAST OF THE NATIVITY, I.
I. All share in the joy of Christmas.
Our Saviour,
dearly-beloved, was born today: let us be glad. For there is no proper place
for sadness,
when
we keep the birthday of the Life, which destroys
the fear of mortality and brings to us the joy of promised eternity. No one
is kept from sharing in this happiness. There is for all one common measure
of joy, because as our LORD the destroyer of sin and death finds none free
from charge, so is He come to free us all. Let the saint exult in that he draws
near to victory. Let the sinner be glad in that he is invited to pardon. Let
the gentile take courage in that he is called to life. For the Son of GOD in
the fulness of time which the inscrutable depth of the Divine counsel has determined,
has taken on him the nature of man, thereby to reconcile it to its Author:
in order that the inventor of death, the devil, might be conquered through
that (nature) which he had conquered. And in this conflict undertaken for us,
the fight was fought on great and wondrous principles of fairness; for the
Almighty LORD enters the lists with His savage foe not in His own majesty but
in our humility, opposing him with the same form and the same nature, which
shares indeed our mortality, though it is free from all sin. Truly foreign
to this nativity is that which we read of all others, "no one is clean
from stain, not even the infant who has lived but one day upon earth(9)." Nothing
therefore of the lust of the flesh has passed into that peerless nativity,
nothing of the law of sin has entered. A royal Virgin of the stem of David
is chosen, to be impregnated with the sacred seed and to conceive the Divinely-human
offspring in mind first and then in body. And lest in ignorance of the heavenly
counsel she should tremble at so strange a result(10), she learns from converse
with the angel that what is to be wrought in her is of the Holy Ghost. Nor
does she believe it loss of honour that she is soon to be the Mother of God(1).
For why should she be in despair over the novelty of such conception, to whom
the power of the most High has promised to effect it. Her implicit faith is
confirmed also by the attestation of a precursory miracle, and Elizabeth receives
unexpected fertility: in order that there might be no doubt that He who had
given conception to the barren, would give it even to a virgin.
II. The mystery of the Incarnation is a fitting theme for joy both to angels
and to men.
Therefore
the Word of GOD, Himself GOD, the Son of GOD who "in the beginning
was with GOD," through whom "all things were made" and "without" whom "was
nothing made(2)," with the purpose of delivering man from eternal death,
became man: so bending Himself to take on Him our humility without decrease
in His own majesty, that remaining what He was and assuming what He was not,
He might unite the true form of a slave to that form in which He is equal to
GOD the Father, and join both natures together by such a compact that the lower
should not be swallowed up in its exaltation nor the higher impaired by its
new associate.(3) Without detriment therefore to the properties of either substance
which then came together in one person, majesty took on humility, strength
weakness, eternity mortality: and for the paying off of the debt, belonging
to our condition, inviolable nature was united with possible nature, and true
GOD and true man were combined to form one LORD, SO that, as suited the needs
of our case, one and the same Mediator between GOD and men, the Man Christ
Jesus, could both die with the one and rise again with the other(3).
Rightly
therefore did the birth of our Salvation impart no corruption to the Virgin's
purity, because
the
bearing of the Truth was the keeping of honour.
Such then beloved was the nativity which became the Power of GOD and the Wisdom
of GOD even Christ, whereby He might be one with us in manhood and surpass
us in Godhead. For unless He were true GOD, He would not bring us a remedy,
unless He were true Man, He would not give us an example. Therefore the exulting
angel's song when the LORD was born is this, "Glory to GOD in the Highest," and
their message, "peace on earth to men of good will(4)." For they
see that the heavenly Jerusalem is being built up out of all the nations of
the world: and over that indescribable work of the Divine love how ought the
humbleness of men to rejoice, when the joy of the lofty angels is so great?
III. Christians then must live worthily of Christ their Head.
Let us
then, dearly beloved, give thanks to GOD the Father, through His Son, in
the Holy Spirit(5), Who "for His great mercy, wherewith He has loved
us," has had pity on us: and "when we were dead in sins, has quickened
us together in Christ(6)," that we might be in Him a new creation and
a new production. Let us put off then the old man with his deeds: and having
obtained a share in the birth of Christ let us renounce the works of the flesh.
Christian, acknowledge thy dignity, and becoming a partner in the Divine nature,
refuse to return to the old baseness by degenerate conduct. Remember the Head
and the Body of which thou art a member. Recollect that thou wert rescued from
the power of darkness and brought out into GOD's light and kingdom. By the
mystery of Baptism thou weft made the temple of the Holy Ghost: do not put
such a denizen to flight from thee by base acts, and subject thyself once more
to the devil's thraldom: because thy purchase money is the blood of Christ,
because He shall judge thee in truth Who ransomed thee in mercy, who with the
Father and the Holy Spirit reigns for ever and ever. Amen.
SERMON XXII.
ON THE FEAST OF THE NATIVITY, II.
I. The mystery of the Incarnation demands our joy.
Let us
be glad in the LORD, dearly-beloved, and rejoice with spiritual joy that
there has dawned
for us the day of ever-new
redemption. of ancient preparation(7),
of eternal bliss. For as the year rolls round, there recurs for us the commemoration(8)
of our salvation, which promised from the beginning, accomplished in the fulness
of time will endure for ever; on which we are bound with hearts up-lifted(9)
to adore the divine mystery: so that what is the effect of GOD's great gift
may be celebrated by the Church's great rejoicings. For GOD the almighty and
merciful, Whose nature as goodness, Whose will is power, Whose work is mercy:
as soon as the devil's malignity killed us by the poison of his hatred, foretold
at the very beginning of the world the remedy His piety had prepared for the
restoration of us mortals: proclaiming to the serpent that the seed of the
woman should come to crush the lifting of his baneful head by its power, signifying
no doubt that Christ would come in the flesh, GOD and man, Who born of a Virgin
should by His uncorrupt birth condemn the despoiler of the human stock.(1)
Thus in the whole and perfect nature of true man was true GOD born, complete
in what was His own, complete in what was ours. And "ours" we call
what the Creator formed in us from the beginning and what He undertook to repair.
For what, the deceiver brought in and the deceived admitted had no trace in
the Saviour Nor because He partook of man's weaknesses, did He therefore share
our faults. He took the form of a slave without stain of sin, increasing the
human and not diminishing the Divine: because that "emptying of Himself" whereby
the Invisible made Himself visible and Creator and LORD Of all things as He
was, wished to be mortal, was the condescension of Pity not the failing of
Power(1).
II. The new character of the birth of Christ explained.
Therefore,
when the time came, dearly beloved, which had been fore-ordained for men's
redemption(2),
there
enters these lower parts of the world, the Son
of GOD, descending from His heavenly throne and yet not quitting His Father's
glory, begotten in a new order, by a new nativity. In a new order, because
being invisible in His own nature He became visible in ours, and He whom nothing
could contain, was content to be contained: abiding before all time He began
to be in time: the LORD of all things, He obscured His immeasurable majesty
and took on Him the form of a servant: being GOD, that cannot suffer, He did
not disdain to be man that can, and immortal as He is, to subject Himself to
the laws of death(2). And by a new nativity He was begotten, conceived by a
Virgin, born of a Virgin, without paternal desire, without injury to the mother's
chastity: because such a birth as knew no taint of human flesh, became One
who was to be the Saviour of men, while it possessed in itself the nature of
human substance. For when GOD was born in the flesh, GOD Himself was the Father,
as the archangel witnessed to the Blessed Virgin Mary: "because the Holy
Spirit shall come upon thee, and the power of the most High shall overshadow
thee: and therefore, that which shall be born of thee shall be called holy,
the Son of God(3)." The origin is different but the nature like: not by
intercourse with man but by the power of GoD was it brought about: for a Virgin
conceived, a Virgin bare, and a Virgin she remained. Consider here not the
condition of her that bare but the will of Him that was born; for He was born
Man as He willed and was able. If you inquire into the truth of His nature,
you must acknowledge the matter to be human: if you search for the mode of
His birth, you must confess the power to be of GOD. For the LORD Jesus Christ
came to do away with not to endure our pollutions: not to succumb to our faults
but to heal them(4). He came that He might cure every weakness of oar corruptness
and all the sores of our defiled souls: for which reason it behoved Him to
be born by a new order, who brought to men's bodies the new gift of unsullied
purity. For the uncorrupt nature of Him that was born had to guard the primal
virginity of the Mother, and the infused power of the Divine Spirit had to
preserve in spotlessness and holiness that sanctuary which He had chosen for
Himself: that Spirit (I say) who had determined to raise the fallen, to restore
the broken, and by overcoming the allurements of the flesh to bestow on us
in abundant measure the power of chastity: in order that the virginity which
in others cannot be retained in child-bearing, might be attained by them at
their second birth.
III. Justice required that Satan should be vanquished by GOD made man.
And, dearly beloved, this very fact that Christ chose to be born of a Virgin
does it not appear to be part of the deepest design? I mean, that the devil
should not be aware that Salvation had been born for the human race, and through
the obscurity of that spiritual conception, when he saw Him no different to
others, should believe Him born in no different way to others. For when he
observed that His nature was like that of all others, he thought that He had
the same origin as all had: and did not understand that He was free from the
bonds of transgression because he did not find Him a stranger to the weakness
of mortality. For though the true s mercy of GoD had infinitely many schemes
to hand for the restoration of mankind, it chose that particular design which
put in force for destroying the devil's work, not the efficacy of might but
the dictates of justice. For the pride of the ancient foe not undeservedly
made good its despotic rights over all men, and with no unwarrantable supremacy
tyrannized over those who had been of their own accord lured away from GOD's
commands to be the slaves of his will. And so there would be no justice in
his losing the immemorial slavery of the human race, were he not conquered
by that which he had subjugated. And to this end, without male seed Christ
was conceived of a Virgin, who was fecundated not by human intercourse but
by the Holy Spirit. And whereas in all mothers conception does not take place
without stain of sin, this one received purification from the Source of her
conception. For no taint of sin penetrated, where no intercourse occurred.
Her unsullied virginity knew no lust when it ministered the substance. The
LORD took from His mother our nature, not our fault(6). The slave's form is,
created without the slave's estate, because the New Man is so commingled with
the old, as both to assume the reality of our race and to remove its ancient
flaw.
IV. The Incarnation deceived the Devil and caused him to break the bond under
which he held men.
When, therefore, the merciful and almighty Saviour so arranged the commencement
of His human course as to hide the power of His Godhead which was inseparable
from His manhood under the veil of our weakness, the crafty foe was taken off
his guard and he thought that the nativity of the Child, Who was born for the
salvation of mankind, was as much subject to himself as all others are at their
birth. For he saw Him crying and weeping, he saw Him wrapped in swaddling clothes,
subjected to circumcision, offering the sacrifice which the law required. And
then he perceived in Him the usual growth of boyhood, and could have had no
doubt of His reaching man's estate by natural steps. Meanwhile, he inflicted
insults, multiplied injuries, made use of curses, affronts, blasphemies, abuse,
in a word, poured upon Him all the force of his fury and exhausted all the
varieties of trial: and knowing how he had poisoned man's nature, had no conception
that He had no share in the first transgression Whose mortality he had ascertained
by so many proofs. The unscrupulous thief and greedy robber persisted in assaulting
Him Who had nothing of His own, and in carrying out the general sentence on
original sin, went beyond the bond on which he rested(7), and required the
punishment of iniquity from Him in Whom he found no fault. And thus the malevolent
terms of the deadly compact are annulled, and through the injustice of an overcharge
the whole debt is cancelled. The strong one is bound by his own chains, and
every device of the evil one recoils on his own head. When the prince of the
world is bound, all that he held in captivity is released(8). Our nature cleansed
from its old contagion regains its honourable estate, death is destroyed by
death, nativity is restored by nativity: since at one and the same time redemption
does away with slavery, regeneration changes our origin, and faith justifies
the sinner.
V. The Christian is exhorted to share in the blessings of the Incarnation.
Whoever then thou art that devoutly and faithfully boastest of the Christian
name, estimate this atonement at its right worth. For to thee who wast a castaway,
banished from the realms of paradise, dying of thy weary exile, reduced to
dust and ashes, without further hope of living, by the Incarnation of the Word
was given the power to return from afar to thy Maker, to recognize thy parentage,
to become free after slavery, to be promoted from being an outcast to sonship:
so that, thou who wast born of corruptible flesh, mayest be reborn by the Spirit
of GOD, and obtain through grace what thou hadst not by nature, and, if thou
acknowledge thyself the son of GOD by the spirit of adoption, dare to call
GOD Father. Freed from the accusings of a bad conscience, aspire to the kingdom
of heaven, do GOD's will supported by the Divine help, imitate the angels upon
earth, feed on the strength of immortal sustenance, fight fearlessly on the
side of piety against hostile temptations, and if thou keep thy allegiance(8a)
in the heavenly warfare, doubt not that thou wilt be crowned for thy victory
in the triumphant camp of the Eternal King, when the resurrection that is prepared
for the faithful has raised thee to participate in the heavenly Kingdom.
VI. The festival has nothing to do with Sun-worship, as some maintain.
Having therefore so confident a hope, dearly beloved, abide firm in the Faith
in which you are built: lest that same tempter whose tyranny over you Christ
has already destroyed, win you back again with any of his wiles, and mar even
the joys of the present festival by his deceitful art, misleading simpler souls
with the pestilential notion of some to whom this our solemn feast day seems
to derive its honour, not so much from the nativity of Christ as, according
to them, from the rising of the new sun(9). Such men's hearts are wrapped in
total darkness, and have no growing perception of the true Light: for they
are still drawn away by the foolish errors of heathendom, and because they
cannot lift the eyes of their mind above that which their carnal sight beholds,
they pay divine honour to the luminaries that minister to the world. Let not
Christian souls entertain any such wicked superstition and portentous lie.
Beyond all measure are things temporal removed from the Eternal, things corporeal
from the Incorporeal, things governed from the Governor. For though they possess
a wondrous beauty, yet they have no Godhead to be worshipped. That power then,
that wisdom, that majesty is to be adored which created the universe out of
nothing, and framed by His almighty methods the substance of the earth and
sky into what forms and dimensions He willed. Sun, moon, and stars may be most
useful to us, most fair to look upon; but only if we render thanks to their
Maker for them and worship GOD who made them, not the creation which does Him
service. Then praise GOD, dearly beloved, in all His works and judgments. Cherish
an undoubting belief in the Virgin's pure conception. Honour the sacred and
Divine mystery of man's restoration with holy and sincere service. Embrace
Christ born in our flesh, that you may deserve to see Him also as the GOD of
glory reigning in His majesty, who with the Father and the Holy Spirit remains
in the unity of the Godhead for ever and ever. Amen.
SERMON XXIII.
ON THE FEAST OF THE NATIVITY, III.
I. The truths of the Incarnation never suffer from being repeated.
The things
which are connected with the mystery, of to-day's solemn feast are well known
to you, dearly-beloved,
and have frequently been heard: but
as yonder visible light affords pleasure to eyes that are unimpaired, so to
sound hearts does the Saviour's nativity give eternal joy; and we must not
keep silent about it, though we cannot treat of it as we ought. For we believe
that what Isaiah says, "who shall declare his generation(2)?" applies
not only to that mystery, whereby the Son of GOD is co-eternal with the Father,
but also to this birth whereby "the Word became flesh." And SO GOD,
the Son of GOD, equal and of the same nature from the Father and with the Father,
Creator and LORD of the Universe, Who is completely present everywhere, and
completely exceeds all things, in the due course of time, which runs by His
own disposal, chose for Himself this day on which to be born of the blessed
virgin Mary for the salvation of the world, without loss of the mother's honour.
For her virginity was violated neither at the conception nor at the birth: "that
it might be fulfilled," as the Evangelist says, "which was spoken
by the LORD through Isaiah the prophet, saying, behold the virgin shall conceive
in the womb, and shall bear a son, and they shall call his name Emmanuel, which
is interpreted, GOD with us(3)." For this wondrous child-bearing of the
holy Virgin produced in her offspring one person which was truly human and
truly Divine(4), because neither substance so retained their properties that
there could be any division of persons in them; nor was the creature taken
into partnership with its Creator in such a way that the One was the in-dweller,
and the other the dwelling; but so that the one nature was blended s with the
other. And although the nature which is taken is one, and that which takes
is another, yet these two diverse natures come together into such close union
that it is one and the same Son who says both that, as true Man, "He is
less than the Father," and that, as true GOD, "He is equal with the
Father."
II.The Arians could not comprehend the union of GOD and man.
This union,
dearly beloved, whereby the Creator is joined to the creature, Arian blindness
could not
see with
the eyes of intelligence, but, not believing
that the Only-begotten of GOD was of the same glory and substance with the
Father, spoke of the Son's Godhead as inferior, drawing its arguments front
those words which are to be referred to the "form of a slave," in
respect of which, in order to show that it belongs to no other or different
person in Himself, the same Son of GOD with the same form, says, "The
Father is greater than I(6)," just as He says with the same form, "I
and my Father are one(7)." For in "the form of a slave," which
He took at the end of the ages for our restoration, He is inferior to the Father:
but in the form of GOD, in which He was before the ages, He is equal to the
Father. In His human humiliation He was "made of a woman, made under the
Law(8):" in His Divine majesty He abides the Word of GOD, "through
whom all things were made(9)." (1)Accordingly, He Who in the form of GOD
made man, in the form of a slave was made man. For both natures retain their
own proper character without loss: and as the form of GOD did not do away with
the form of a slave, so the form of a slave did not impair the form of GOD(1).
And so the mystery of power united to weakness, in respect of the same human
nature, allows the Son to be called inferior to the Father: but the Godhead,
which is One in the Trinity of the Father, Son, and Holy Ghost, excludes all
notion of inequality. For the eternity of the Trinity has nothing temporal,
nothing dissimilar in nature: Its will is one, Its substance identical, Its
power equal, and yet there are not three GODS, but one GOD(2); because it is
a true and inseparable unity, where there can be no diversity(3). Thus in the
whole and perfect nature of true man was true GOD born, complete in what was
His own, complete in what was ours. And by "ours" we mean what the
Creator formed in us from the beginning, and what He undertook to repair. For
what the deceiver brought in, and man deceived committed, had no trace in the
Saviour; nor because He partook of man's weaknesses, did He therefore share
our faults. He took the form of a slave without stain of sin, increasing the
human and not diminishing the divine: for that "emptying of Himself," whereby
the Invisible made Himself visible, was the bending down of pity, not the failing
of power.
III. The Incarnation was necessary to the taking away of sin.
In order therefore that we might be called to eternal bliss from our original
bond and from earthly errors, He came down Himself to us to Whom we could not
ascend, because, although there was in many the love of truth, yet the variety
of our shifting opinions was deceived by the craft of misleading demons, and
man's ignorance was dragged into diverse and conflicting notions by a falsely-called
science. But to remove this mockery, whereby men's minds were taken captive
to serve the arrogant devil, the teaching of the Law was not sufficient, nor
could our nature be restored merely by the Prophets' exhortations; but the
reality of redemption had to be added to moral injunctions, and our fundamentally
corrupt origin had to be re-born afresh. A Victim had to be offered for our
atonement Who should be both a partner of our race and free from our contamination,
so that this design of GOD whereby it pleased Him to take away the sin of the
world in the Nativity and Passion of Jesus Christ, might reach to all generations(4):
and that we should not be disturbed but rather strengthened by these mysteries,
which vary with the character of the times, since the Faith, whereby we live,
has at no time suffered variation.
IV.The blessings of the Incarnation stretch backwards as well as reach forward.
Accordingly let those men cease their complaints who with disloyal murmurs
speak against the dispensations of GOD, and babble about the lateness of the
LORD'S Nativity as if that, which was fulfilled in the last age of the world,
had no bearing upon the times that are past. For the Incarnation of the Word
did but contribute to the doing of that which was done(5): and the mystery
of man's salvation was never in the remotest age at a standstill. What the
apostles foretold, that the prophets announced: nor was that fulfilled too
late which has always been believed. But the Wisdom and Goodness of GOD made
us more receptive of His call by thus delaying the work which brought salvation:
so that what through so many ages had been foretold by many signs, many utterances,
and many mysteries, might not be doubtful in these days of the Gospel: and
that the Saviour's nativity, which was to exceed all wonders and all the measure
of human knowledge, might engender in us a Faith so much the firmer, as the
foretelling of it had been ancient and oft-repeated. And so it was no new counsel,
no tardy pity whereby GOD took thought for men: but from the constitution of
the world He ordained one and the same Cause of Salvation for all. For the
grace of GOD, by which the whole body of the saints is ever justified, was
augmented, not begun, when Christ was born: and this mystery of GOD's great
love, wherewith the whole world is now filled, was so effectively presignified
that those who believed that promise obtained no less than they, who were the
actual recipients.
V. The coming of Christ in our flesh corresponds with our becoming members
of His body.
Wherefore
since the loving-kindness is manifest, dearly beloved, wherewith all the
riches of Divine goodness
are showered on us, whose call to eternal
life has been assisted not only by the profitable examples of those who went
before, but also by the visible and bodily appearing of the Truth Itself, we
are bound to keep the day of the LORD's Nativity with no slothful nor carnal
joy. And we shall each keep it worthily and thoroughly, if we remember of what
Body we are members, and to what a Head we are joined, lest any one as an ill-fitting
joint cohere not with the rest of the sacred building. Consider, dearly beloved
and by the illumination of the Holy Spirit thoughtfully bear in mind Who it
was that received us into Himself, and that we have received in us: since,
as the LORD Jesus became our flesh by being born, so we also became His body
by being re-born. Therefore are we both members of Christ, and the temple of
the Holy Ghost: and for this reason the blessed Apostle says, "Glorify
and carry GOD in your body(6):" for while suggesting to us the standard
of His own gentleness and humility, He fills us with that power whereby He
redeemed us, as the LORD Himself promises: "come unto Me all ye who labour
and are heavy-laden, and I will refresh you. Take My yoke upon you and learn
of Me, for I am meek and lowly of heart, and ye shall find rest to your souls[7]" Let
us then take the yoke, that is not heavy nor irksome, of the Truth that rules
us, and let us imitate His humility, to Whose glory we wish to be conformed:
He Himself helping us and leading us to His promises, Who, according to His
great mercy, is powerful to blot out our sins, and to perfect His gifts in
us, Jesus Christ our LORD, Who lives and reigns for ever and ever. Amen.
SERMON XXIV.
ON THE FEAST OF THE NATIVITY, IV.
I. The Incarnation fulfils all its types and promises.
The Divine
goodness, dearly beloved, has indeed always taken thought for mankind in
divers manners, and
in many
portions, and of His mercy has imparted many
gifts of His providence to the ages of old; but in these last times has exceeded
all the abundance of His usual kindness, when in Christ the very Mercy has
descended to sinners, the very Truth to those that are astray, the very Life
to those that are dead: so that Word, which is co-eternal and co-equal with
the Father, might take our humble nature into union with His Godhead, and,
being born GOD of GOD, might also be bern Man of man. Tiffs was indeed promised
from the foundation of the world, and had always been prophesied by many intimations
of facts and words(8): but how small a portion of mankind would these types
and fore-shadowed mysteries have saved, had not the coming of Christ fulfilled
those long and secret promises: and had not that which then benefited but a
few believers in the prospect, now benefited myriads of the faithful in its
accomplishment. Now no longer then are we led to believe by signs and types,
but being confirmed by the gospel story we worship that which we believe to
have been done; the prophetic lore(9) assisting our knowledge, so that we have
no manner of doubt about that which we know to have been predicted by such
sure oracles. For hence it is that the LORD says to Abraham: "In thy seed
shall all nations be blessed(1) :" hence David, in the spirit of prophecy,
sings, saying: "The LORD swore truth to David, and He shall not frustrate
it: of the fruit of thy loins will I set upon thy seat(2);" hence the
LORD again says through Isaiah: "behold a virgin shall conceive in her
womb, and shall bear a Son, and His Name shall be called Emmanuel, which is
interpreted, GOD with us(3)," and again, "a rod shall come forth
from the root of Jesse, and a flower shall arise froth his root(4)." In
which rod, no doubt the blessed Virgin Mary is predicted, who sprung from the
stock of Jesse and David and fecundated by the Holy Ghost, brought forth a
new flower of human flesh, becoming a virgin-mother.
II. The Incarnation was the only effective remedy to the Fall.
Let the
righteous then rejoice in the LORD, and let the hearts of believers turn
to GOD'S praise,
and the
sons of men confess His wondrous acts; since
in this work of GOD especially our humble estate realizes how highly its Maker
values it: in that, after His great gift to mankind in making us after His
image, He contributed far more largely to our restoration when the Land Himself
took on Him "the form of a slave." For though all that the Creator
expends upon His creature is part of one and the same Fatherly love, yet it
is less wonderful than man should advance to divine things than that GOD should
descend to humanity. But unless the Almighty GOD did deign to do this, no kind
of righteousness, no form of wisdom could rescue any one from the devil's bondage
and from the depths of eternal death. For the condemnation that passes with
sin from one upon all would remain, and our nature, corroded by its deadly
wound, would discover no remedy, because it could not alter its state in its
own strength. For the first man received the substance of flesh from the earth,
and was quickened with a rational spirit by the in-breathing of his Creator(5),
so that living after the image and likeness of his Maker, he might preserve
the form of GOD's goodness and righteousness as in a bright mirror. And, if
he had perseveringly maintained this high dignity of his nature by observing
the Law that was given him, his uncorrupt mind would have raised the character
even Of his earthly body to heavenly glory. But because in unhappy rashness
he trusted the envious deceiver, and agreeing to his presumptuous counsels,
preferred to forestall rather than to win the increase of honour that was in
store for him, not only did that one man, but in him all that came after him
also hear the verdict: "earth thou art, and unto earth shalt thou go(6);" "as
in the earthy," therefore, "such are they also that are earthy(7)," and
no one is immortal, because no one is heavenly.
III. We all became partakers in the Birth of Christ, by the re-birth of baptism.
And so
to undo this chain of sin and death, the Almighty Son of GOD, that fills
all things and contains,all
things, altogether equal to the Father and
co-eternal in one essence from Him and with Him, took on Him man's nature,
and the Creator and Land of all things deigned to be a mortal: choosing for
His mother one whom He had made, one who, without loss of her maiden honour,
supplied so much of bodily substance, that without the pollution of human seed
the New Man might be possessed of purity and truth. In Christ, therefore, born
of the Virgin's womb, the nature does not differ from ours, because His nativity
is wonderful. For He Who is true GOD, is also true man: and there is no lie
in either nature. "The Word became flesh" by exaltation of the flesh,
not by failure of the Godhead: which so tempered its power and goodness as
to exalt our nature by taking it, and not to lose His own by imparting it.
In this nativity of Christ, according to the prophecy of David, "truth
sprang out of the earth, and righteousness looked down from heaven(8)." In
this nativity also, Isaiah's saying is fulfilled, "let the earth produce
and bring forth salvation, and let righteousness spring up together(9)." For
the earth of human flesh, which in the first transgressor, was cursed, in this
Offspring of the Blessed Virgin only produced a seed that was blessed and free
from the fault of its stock. And each one is a partaker of this spiritual origin
in regeneration; and to every one when he is re-born, the water of baptism
is like the Virgin's womb; for the same Holy Spirit fills the font, Who filled
the Virgin, that the sin, which that sacred conception overthrew, may be taken
away by this mystical washing.
IV. The Manichaeans, by rejecting the Incarnation, have fallen into terrible
iniquities.
In this mystery, dear beloved, the mad error of the Manichaeans has no part,
nor have they any partnership in the regeneration of Christ, who say that He
was corporeally born of the Virgin Mary: so that, as they do not believe in
His real nativity, they do not accept His real passion either; and, not acknowledging
Him really buried, they reject His genuine resurrection. For, having entered
on the perilous path of their abominable dogma, where all is dark and slippery,
they rush into the abyss of death over the precipice of falsehood, and find
no sure ground on which to rest; because, besides all their other diabolical
enormities, on the very chief feast of Christ's worship, as their latest confession
has made manifest(1), they revel in bodily as well as mental pollution, losing
their own modesty as well as the purity of their Faith; so that they are found
to be as filthy in their rites as they are blasphemers in their doctrines.
V. Other heresies contain some portion of truth, but the Manichoeans contain
none whatever.
Other heresies, dearly beloved, although they are all rightly to be condemned
in their variety, yet have each in some part of them that which is true. Arius,
in laying down that the Son of GOD is less than the Father and a creature,
and in thinking that the Holy Spirit was like all else made by the same (Father),
has lost himself in great blasphemy; but he has not denied the eternal and
unchangeable Godhead in the essence of the Father, though he could not see
it in the Unity of the Trinity. Macedonius was devoid of the light of the Truth
when he did not receive the Godhead of the Holy Spirit, but he did acknowledge
one power and the same nature in the Father and the Son. Sabellius was plunged
into inextricable error by holding the unity of substance to be inseparable
in the Father, Son and Holy Spirit, but granted to a singleness of nature what
he should have attributed to an equality of nature(2), and because he could
not understand a true Trinity, he believed in one and the same person under
a threefold appellation. Photinus, misled by his mental blindness, acknowledged
in Christ true man of our substance, but did not believe Him born GOD of GOD
before all ages, and so losing the entirety of the Faith, believed the Son
of GOD to have taken on Him the true nature of human flesh in such a way as
to assert that there was no soul in it, because the Godhead Itself took its
place(3). Thus, if all the errors which the catholic Faith has anathematized
are recanted, something is found in one after another which can be separated
from its damnable setting. But in the detestable dogma of the Manicheans there
is absolutely nothing which can be adjudged tolerable in an