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LEO THE GREAT
SERMONS XXXI TO LI
SERMON XXXI.
ON THE FEAST OF THE EPIPHANY, I.
I. The Epiphany a necessary sequel to the Nativity.
After celebrating but lately the day on which immaculate virginity brought
forth the Saviour of mankind, the venerable feast of the Epiphany, dearly beloved,
gives us continuance of joy, that the force of our exultation and the fervour
of our faith may not grow cool, in the midst of neighbouring and kindred mysteries(8).
For it concerns all men's salvation, that the infancy of the Mediator between
GOD and men was already manifested to the whole world, while He was still detained
in the tiny town. For although He had chosen the Israelitish nation, and one
family out of that nation, from whom to assume the nature of all mankind, yet
He was unwilling that the early days of His birth should be concealed within
the narrow limits of His mother's home: but desired to be soon recognized by
all, seeing that He deigned to be born for all. To three(9) wise men, therefore,
appeared a star of new splendour in the region of the East, which, being brighter
and fairer than the other stars, might easily attract the eyes and minds of
those that looked on it, so that at once that might be observed not to be meaningless,
which had so unusual an appearance. He therefore who gave the sign, gave to
the beholders understanding of it, and caused inquiry to be made about that,
of which He had thus caused understanding, and after inquiry made, offered
Himself to be found.
II. Herod's evil designs were fruitless. The Wise men's gifts were consciously
symbolical.
These three men follow the leading of the light above, and with stedfast gaze
obeying the indications of the guiding splendour, are led to the recognition
of the Truth by the brilliance of Grace, for they supposed that a king's birth
was notified in a human sense(1), and that it must be sought in a royal city.
Yet He who had taken a slave's form, and had come not to judge, but to be judged,
chose Bethlehem for His nativity, Jerusalem for His passion. But Herod, hearing
that a prince of the Jews was born, suspected a successor, and was in great
terror: and to compass the death of the Author of Salvation, pledged himself
to a false homage. How happy had he been, if he had imitated the wise men's
faith, and turned to a pious use what he designed for deceit. What blind wickedness
of foolish jealousy, to think thou canst overthrow the Divine plan by thy frenzy.
The LORD of the works, who offers an eternal Kingdom, seeks not a temporal.
Why dost thou attempt to change the unchangeable order of things ordained,
and to forestall others in their crime? The death of Christ belongs not to
thy time. The Gospel must be first set on foot, the Kingdom of GOD first preached,
healings first given to the sick, wondrous acts first performed. Why dost thou
wish thyself to have the blame of what will belong to another's work, and why
without being able to effect thy wicked design, dost thou bring on thyself
alone the charge of wishing the evil? Thou gainest nothing and cattiest out
nothing by this intriguing. He that was born voluntarily shall die of His own
free will. The Wise men, therefore, fulfil their desire, and come to the child,
the LORD Jesus Christ, the same star going before them. They adore the Word
in flesh, the Wisdom in infancy, the Power in weakness, the LORD of majesty
in the reality of man: and by their gifts make open acknowledgment of what
they believe in their hearts, that they may show forth the mystery of their
faith and understanding[2]. The incense they offer to God, the myrrh to Man,
the gold to the King, consciously paying honour to the Divine and human Nature
in union: because while each substance had its own properties, there was no
difference in the power[3] of either.
III. The massacre of the Innocents is in harmony with the Virgin's conception,
which again teaches us purity of life.
And when
the wise men had returned to their own land, and Jesus had been carried into
Egypt at
the Divine suggestion,
Herod's madness blazes out into fruitless
schemes. He orders all the little ones in Bethlehem to be slain, and since
he knows not which infant to fear, extends a general sentence against the age
he suspects. But that which the wicked king removes from the world, Christ
admits to heaven: and on those for whom He had not yet spent His redeeming
blood, He already bestows the dignity of martyrdom. Lift your faithful hearts
then, dearly-beloved, to the gracious blaze of eternal light, and in adoration
of the mysteries dispensed for man's salvation[4] give your diligent heed to
the things which have been wrought on your behalf. Love the purity of a chaste
life, because Christ is the Son of a virgin. "Abstain from fleshly lusts
which war against the soul[5]," as the blessed Apostle, present in his
words as we read, exhorts us, "In malice be ye children[6]," because
the Lord of glory conformed Himself to the infancy of mortals. Follow after
humility which the Son of God deigned to teach His disciples. Put on the power
of patience, in which ye may be able to gain[7] your souls; seeing that He
who is the Redemption of all, is also the Strength of all. "Set your minds
on the things which are above, not on the things which are on the earth[8]." Walk
firmly along the path of truth and life: let not earthly things hinder you
for whom are prepared heavenly things through our LORD Jesus Christ, who with
the Father and the Holy Ghost liveth and reigneth for ever and ever. Amen.
SERMON XXXIII.
ON THE FEAST OF THE EPIPHANY, III.
I. When we were yet sinners, Christ came to save.
Although I know, dearly-beloved, that you are fully aware of the purpose of
to-day's festival, and that the words of the Gospel[9] have according to use
unfolded it to you, yet that nothing may be omitted on our part, I shall venture
to say on the subject what the LORD has put in my mouth: so that in our common
joy the devotion of our hearts may be so much the more sincere as the reason
of our keeping the feast is better understood. The providential Mercy of God,
having determined to succour the perishing world in these latter times, fore-ordained
the salvation of all nations in the Person of Christ; in order that, because
all nations had long been turned aside from the worship of the true God by
wicked error, and even God's peculiar people Israel had well-nigh entirely
fallen away from the enactments of the Law, now that all were shut up under
sin[1], He might have mercy upon all.
For as justice was everywhere failing and the whole world was given over to
vanity and wickedness, if the Divine Power had not deferred its judgment, the
whole of mankind would have received the sentence of damnation. But wrath was
changed to forgiveness, and, that the greatness of the Grace to be displayed
might be the more conspicuous, it pleased God, to apply the mystery of remission
to the abolishing of men's sins at a time when. no one could boast of his own
merits.
II. The wise men from the East are typical fulfilments of God's promise to
Abraham.
Now the
manifestation of this unspeakable mercy, dearly-beloved, came to pass when
Herod held the
royal power in Judea,
where the legitimate succession of
Kings having failed and the power of the High-priests having been overthrown,
an alien-born had gained the sovereignty: that the rising of the true King
might be attested by the voice of prophecy, which had said: "a prince
shall not fail from Juda, nor a leader from his loins, until He come for whom
it is reserved[2], and He shall be the expectation of the nations." Concerning
which an innumerable succession was once promised to the most blessed patriarch
Abraham to be begotten not by fleshly seed but by fertile faith; and therefore
it was compared to the stars in multitude that as father of all the nations
he might hope not for an earthly but for a heavenly progeny. And therefore,
for the creating of the promised posterity, the heirs designated under the
figure of the stars are awakened by the rising of a new star, that the ministrations
of the heaven might do service in that wherein the witness of the heaven had
been adduced. A star more brilliant than the other stars arouses wise men that
dwell in the far East, and from the brightness of the wondrous light these
men, not unskilled in observing such things, appreciate the importance of the
sign: this doubtless being brought about in their hearts by Divine inspiration,
in order that the mystery of so great a sight might not be hid from them, and,
what was an unusual appearance to their eyes, might not be obscure to their
minds. In a word they scrupulously set about their duty and provide themselves
with such gifts that in worshipping the One they may at the same time show
their belief in His threefold function: with gold they honour the Person of
a King, with myrrh that of Man, with incense that of God[3].
III. The chosen race is no longer the Jews, but believers of every nation.
And so
they enter the chief city of the Kingdom of Judaea, and in the royal city
ask that He should
be shown
them Whom they had learnt was begotten to
be King. Herod is perturbed: he fears for his safety, he trembles for his power,
he asks of the priests and teachers of the Law what the Scripture has predicted
about the birth of Christ, he ascertains what had been prophesied: truth enlightens
the wise men, unbelief blinds the experts: carnal Israel understands not what
it reads, sees not what it points out; refers to the pages, whose utterances
it does not believe. Where is thy boasting, O Jew? where thy noble birth drawn
from the stem of Abraham? is not thy circumcision become uncircumcision[4]?
Behold thou, the greater servest the less[5], and by the reading of that covenant[6]
which thou keepest in the letter only, thou becomest the slave of strangers
born, who enter into the lot of thy heritage. Let the fulness of the nations
enter into the family of the patriarchs, yea let it enter, and let the sons
of promise receive in Abraham's seed the blessing which his sons, according
to the flesh, renounce their claim to. In the three Magi[7] let all people
worship the Author of the universe: and let God be known not in Judaea alone,
but in all the world, so that everywhere "His name" may be "great
in Israel[8]." For while the dignity of the chosen race is proved to be
degenerate by unbelief in its descend ants, it is made common to all alike
by our belief.
IV. The massacre of the Innocents through the consequent flight of Christ,
brings the truth into Egypt.
Now when the wise men had worshipped the Lord and finished all their devotions,
according to the warning of a dream, they return not by the same route by which
they had come. For it behoved them now that they believed in Christ not to
walk in the paths of their old line of life, but having entered on a new way
to keep away from the errors they had left: and it was also to baffle Herod's
design, who, under the cloke of homage, was planning a wicked plot against
the Infant Jesus. Hence when his crafty hopes were overthrown, the king's wrath
rose to a greater fury. For reckoning up the time which the wise men had indicated,
he poured out his cruel rage on all the men-children of Bethlehem, and in a
general massacre of the whole of that city[9] slew the infants, who thus passed
to their eternal glory, thinking that, if every single babe was slain there,
Christ too would be slain. But He Who was postponing the shedding of His blood
for the world's redemption till another time, was carried and brought into
Egypt by his parents' aid, and thus sought the ancient cradle of the Hebrew
race, and in the power of a greater providence dispensing the princely office
of the true Joseph, in that He, the Bread of Life and the Food of reason that
came down from heaven, removed that worse than all famines under which the
Egyptians' minds were labouring, the lack of truth[1], nor without that sojourn
would the symbolism of that One Victim have been complete ; for there first
by the slaying of the lamb was fore-shadowed the health-bringing sign of the
Cross and the Lord's Passover.
V. We must keep this festival as thankful sons of light.
Taught
then, dearly-beloved, by these mysteries of Divine grace, let us with reasonable
joy celebrate
the
day of our first-fruits and the commencement of
the nations' calling: "giving thanks to" the merciful God "who
made us worthy," as the Apostle says, "to be partakers of the lot
of the saints in light: who delivered us from the power of darkness and translated
us into the kingdom of the Son of His love[2] :" since as Isaiah prophesied, "the
people of the nations that sat in darkness, have seen a great light, and they
that dwelt in the land of the shadow of death, upon them hath the light shined[3]." Of
whom he also said to the Lord, "nations which knew not thee, shall call
on thee: and peoples which were ignorant of thee, shall run together unto thee[4]." This
day "Abraham saw and was glad[5]," when he understood that the sons
of his faith would be blessed in his seed that is in Christ, and foresaw that
by believing he should be the father of all nations, "giving glory to
God and being fully assured that What He had promised, He was able also to
perform[6]." This day David sang of in the psalms saying: "all nations
that thou hast made shall come and worship before Thee, O Lord: and they shall
glorify Thy name[7];" and again: "The Lord hath made known His salvation:
His righteousness hath He openly showed in the sight of the nations[8]." This
in good truth we know to have taken place ever since the three wise men aroused
in their far-off land were led by a star to recognize and worship the King
of heaven and earth,[which to those who gaze aright ceases not daily to appear.
And if it could make Christ known when concealed in infancy, how much more
able was it to reveal Him when reigning in majesty][9]. And surely their worship
of Him exhorts us to imitation; that, as far as we can, we should serve our
gracious God who invites us all to Christ. For whosoever lives religiously
and chastely in the Church and "sets his mind on the, things which are
above, not on the things that are upon the earth[1]," is in some measure
like the heavenly light: and whilst he himself keeps the brightness of a holy
life, he points out to many the way to the Lord like a star. In which regard,
dearly-beloved, ye ought all to help one another in turn, that in the kingdom
of God, which is reached by right faith and good works, ye may shine as the
sons of light: through our Lord Jesus Christ, Who with God the Father and the
Holy Spirit lives and reigns for ever and ever. Amen.
SERMON XXXIV.
ON THE FEAST OF THE EPIPHANY, IV.
I. The yearly observance of the Epiphany is profitable to Christians.
It is
the right and reasonable duty of true piety, dearly-beloved, on the days
which bear witness to the
works of Divine mercy, to rejoice with the whole
heart and to celebrate with all honour the things which have been wrought for
our salvation: for the very law of recurring seasons calls us to such devout
observance, and has now brought before us the feast of the Epiphany, consecrated
by the Lord's appearance soon after the clay on which the Son of God co-eternal
with the Father was born of a Virgin. And herein the providence. of God has
established a great safeguard to our faith, so that, whilst the worship of
the Saviour's earliest infancy is repeated year by year, the production of
true man's nature in Him might be proved by the original verifications themselves.
For this it is that justifies the ungodly, this it is that makes sinners saints,
to wit the belief in the true Godhead and the true Manhood of the one Jesus
Christ, our Lord: the Godhead, whereby being before all ages "in the form
of God" He is equal with the Father: the Manhood whereby in the last days
He is united to Man in the "form of a slave." For the confirmation
therefore of this Faith which was to be fore-armed against all errors, it was
a wondrous loving provision of the Divine plan that a nation which dwelt in
the far-off country of the East and was cunning in the art of reading the stars,
should receive the sign of the infant's birth who was to reign over all Israel.
For the unwonted splendour of a bright new star appeared to the wise men and
filled their mind with such wonder, as they gazed upon its brilliance, that
they could not think they ought to neglect what was announced to them with
such distinctness. And, as the event showed, the grace of God was the disposing
cause of this wondrous thing: who when the whole of Bethlehem itself was still
unaware of Christ's birth, brought it to the knowledge of the nations who would
believe, and declared that which human words could not yet explain, through
the preaching of the heavens.
II. Both Herod and the wise men originally had an earthly conception of the
kingdom signified; but the latter learnt the truth, the former did not.
But although
it was the office of the Divine condescension to make the Saviour's Nativity
recognizable
to
the nations, yet for the under standing of the wondrous
sign the wise men could have had intimation even from the ancient prophecies
of Balaam, knowing that it was predicted of old and by constant repetition
spread abroad: "A star shall rise out of Jacob, and a man shall rise out
of Israel, and shall rule the nations[2]." And so the three men aroused
by God through the shining of a strange star, follow the guidance of its twinkling
light, thinking they will find the babe designated at Jerusalem in the royal
city. But finding themselves mistaken in this opinion, through the scribes
and teachers of the Jews they learnt what the Holy Scripture had foretold of
the birth of Christ; so that confirmed by a twofold witness, they sought with
still more eager faith Him whom both the brightness of the star and the sure
word of prophecy revealed. And when the Divine oracle was proclaimed through
the chief priests' answers and the Spirit's voice declared, which says: "And
thou, Bethlehem, the land of Judah, art not least among the princes of Judah;
for out of thee shall come a leader to rule My people Israel[3]," how
easy and how natural it was that the leading men among the Hebrews should believe
what they taught ! But it appears that they held material notions with Herod,
and reckoned Christ's kingdom as on the same level as the powers of this world:
so that they hoped for a temporal leader while he dreaded an earthly rival.
The fear that racks thee, Herod, is wasted; in vain dost thou try to vent thy
rage on the infant thou suspectest. Thy realm cannot hold Christ; the Lord
of the world is not satisfied with the narrow limits of thy sway. He, whom
thou dost not wish to reign in Judaea, reigns everywhere: and thou wouldst
rule more happily thyself, if thou wert to submit to His command. Why dost
thou not do with sincerity what in treacherous falseness thou dost promise?
Come with the wise men, and in suppliant adoration worship the true King. But
thou, from too great fondness for Jewish blindness, wilt not imitate the nations'
faith, and directest thy stubborn heart to cruel wiles, though thou art doomed
neither to stay Him whom thou fearest nor to harm them whom thou slayest.
III. The perseverance of the Magi has led to the most important results.
Led then,
dearly beloved, into Bethlehem by obeying the guidance of the star, the wise
men "rejoiced with very great joy," as the evangelist has
told us: "and entering the house, found the child with Mary, His mother;
and falling down they worshipped Him; and opening their treasures they presented
to Him gifts, gold, frankincense and myrrh[4]." What wondrous faith of
perfect knowledge, which was taught them not by earthly wisdom, but by the
instruction of the Holy Spirit! Whence came it that these men, who had quitted
their country without having seen Jesus, and had not noticed anything in His
looks to enforce such systematic adoration, observed this method in offering
their gifts? unless it were that besides the appearance of the star, which
attracted their bodily eyes, the more refulgent rays of truth taught their
hearts that before they started on their toilsome road, they must understand
that He was signified to Whom was owed in gold royal honour, in incense Divine
adoration, in myrrh the acknowledgment of mortality. Such a belief and understanding
no doubt, as far as the enlightenment of their faith went, might have been
sufficient in themselves and have prevented their using their bodily eyes in
inquiring into that which they had beheld with their mind's fullest gaze. But
their sagacious diligence, persevering till they found the child, did good
service for future peoples and for the men of our own time: so that, as it
profited us all that the apostle Thomas, after the Lord's resurrection, handled
the traces of the wounds in His flesh, so it was of advantage to us that His
infancy should be attested by the visit of the wise men. And so the wise men
saw and adored the Child of the tribe of Judah, "of the seed of David
according to the flesh[5]," " made from a woman, made under the law[6]," which
He had come "not to destroy but to fulfil[7]." They saw and adored
the Child, small in size, powerless to help others[8], incapable of speech,
and in nought different to the generality of human children. Because, as the
testimonies were trustworthy which asserted in Him the majesty of invisible
Godhead, so it ought to be impossible to doubt that "the Word became flesh," and
the eternal essence of the Son of God took man's true nature: lest either the
inexpressible marvels of his acts which were to follow or the infliction of
sufferings which He had to bear should overthrow the mystery of our Faith by
their inconsistency: seeing that no one at all can be justified save those
who believe the Lord Jesus to be both true God and true Man.
IV. The Manichoean heresy corrupts the Scriptures in order to disprove the
truth.
This peerless Faith, dearly-beloved, this Truth proclaimed throughout all
ages, is opposed by the devilish blasphemies of the Manichaeans: who to murder
the souls of the deceived have woven a deadly tissue of wicked doctrine out
of impious and forged lies, and over the ruins of their mad opinions men have
fallen headlong to such depths as to imagine a Christ with a fictitious body,
who presented nothing solid, nothing real to the eyes and touch of men[9],
but displayed an empty shape of fancy-flesh. For they wish it to be thought
unworthy of belief that God the Son of God placed Himself within a woman's
body and subjected His majesty to such a degradation as to be joined to our
fleshly nature and be born in the true body of human substance although this
is entirely the outcome of His power, not of His ill-treatment, and it is His
glorious condescension, not His being polluted that should be believed in.
For if yonder visible light is not marred by any of the uncleannesses with
which it is encompassed, and the brightness of the sun's rays, which is doubtless
a material creature, is not contaminated by any of the dirty or muddy places
to which it penetrates, is there anything whatever its quality which could
pollute the essence of that eternal and immaterial Light? seeing that by allying
Himself to that creature which He had made after His own image He furnished
it with purification and received no stain, and healed the wounds of its weakness
without suffering loss of power. And because this great and unspeakable mystery
of divine Godliness was announced by all the testimonies of the Holy Scriptures,
those opponents of the Truth of which we speak have rejected the law that was
given through Moses and the divinely inspired utterances[1] of the prophets,
and have tampered with the very pages of the gospels and apostles, by removing
or inserting certain things: forging for themselves under the Apostles' names
and under the words of the Saviour Himself many volumes of falsehood, whereby
to fortify their lying errors and instil deadly poison into the minds of those
to be deceived. For they saw that everything contradicted and made against
them and that not only by the New but also by the Old Testament their blasphemous
and treacherous folly was confuted. And yet persisting in their mad lies they
cease not to disturb the Church of God with their deceits, persuading those
miserable creatures whom they can ensnare to deny that man's nature was truly
taken by the Lord Jesus Christ; to deny that He was truly crucified for the
world's salvation: to deny that from His side wounded by the spear flowed the
blood of Redemption and the water of baptism[2]: to deny that He was buried
and raised again the third day: to deny that in sight of the disciples He was
lifted above all the heights of the skies to take His seat on the right hand
of the Father; and in order that when all the truth of the Apostles[1] Creed
was destroyed, there may be nothing to frighten the wicked or inspire the saints
with hope, to deny that the living and the dead must be judged by Christ; so
that those whom they have robbed of the power of these great mysteries may
learn to worship Christ in the sun and moon, and under the name of the Holy
Spirit to adore Manichaeus himself, the inventor of all these blasphemies.
V. Avoid all dealings with the heretics, but intercede with God for them.
To confirm
your hearts therefore, dearly-beloved, in the Faith and Truth, let to-day's
festival
help you all,
and let the catholic confession be fortified
by the testimony of the manifestation of the Saviour's infancy, while we anathematize
the blasphemy of those who deny the flesh of our nature in Christ: about which
the blessed Apostle John has forewarned us in no doubtful utterance, saying, "every
spirit which confesses Christ Jesus to have come in the flesh is of God: and
every spirit which destroys Jesus is not of God, and this is Antichrist[3]." Consequently
let no Christian have aught in common with men of this kind, let him have no
alliance or intercourse with such. Let it advantage the whole Church that many
of them in the mercy of God have been discovered, and that their own confession
has disclosed how sacrilegious their lives were. Let no one be deceived by
their discriminations between food and food, by their soiled raiment, by their
pale faces. Fasts are not holy which proceed not on the principle of abstinence
but with deceitful de sign. Let this be the end of their harming the unwary,
and deluding the ignorant; henceforth no one's fall shall be excusable: no
longer must he be held simple but extremely worthless and perverse who hereafter
shall be found entangled in detestable error. A practice countenanced by the
Church and Divinely instituted, not only do we not forbid, we even incite you
to, that you should supplicate the Lord even for such: since we also with tears
and mourning feel pity for the ruins of cheated souls, carrying out the Apostles'
example of loving-kindness[4], so as to be weak with those that are weak and
to "weep with those that weep[5]." For we hope that God's mercy can
be won by the many tears and due amendment of the fallen: because so long as
life remains in the body no man's restoration must be despaired of, but the
reform of all desired with the Lord's help, "who raiseth up them that
are crushed, looseth them that are chained, giveth light to the blind[6]: " to
whom is honour and glory for ever and ever. Amen.
SERMON XXXVI.
ON THE FEAST OF THE EPIPHANY, VI.
I. The story of the magi not only a byegone fact in history, but of everyday
application to ourselves.
The day,
dearly-beloved, on which Christ the Saviour of the world first appeared to
the nations must
be venerated
by us with holy worship: and to-day those
joys must be entertained in our hearts which existed in the breasts of the
three magi, when, aroused by the sign and leading of a new star, which they
believed to have been promised, they fell down in presence of the King of heaven
and earth. For that day has not so passed away that the mighty work, which
was then revealed, has passed away with it, and that nothing but the report
of the thing has come down to us for faith to receive and memory to celebrate;
seeing that, by the oft-repeated gift of God, our times daily enjoy the fruit
of what the first age possessed. And therefore, although the narrative which
is read to us from the Gospel[7] properly records those days on which the three
men, who had neither been taught by the prophets' predictions nor instructed
by the testimony of the law, came to acknowledge God from the furthest parts
of the East, yet we behold this same thing more clearly and abundantly carried
on now in the enlightenment of all those who are called, since the prophecy
of Isaiah is fulfilled when he says, "the Lord has laid bare His holy
arm in the sight of all the nations, and all the nations upon earth have seen
the salvation which is from the Lord our God ;" and again, "and those
to whom it has not been announced about Him shall see, and they who have not
heard, shall understand[8]." Hence when we see men devoted to worldly
wisdom and far from belief in Jesus Christ brought out of the depth of their
error and called to an acknowledgment of the true Light, it is undoubtedly
the brightness of the Divine grace that is at work: and whatever of new light
illumines the darkness of their hearts, comes from the rays of the same star:
so that it should both move with wonder, and going before lead to the adoration
of God the minds which it visited with its splendour. But if with careful thought
we wish to see how their threefold kind of gift is also offered by all who
come to Christ with the foot of faith, is not the same offering repeated in
the hearts of true believers? For he that acknowledges Christ the King of the
universe brings gold from the treasure of his heart: he that believes the Only-begotten
of God to have united man's true nature to Himself, offers myrrh; and he that
confesses Him in no wise inferior to the Father's majesty, worships Him in
a manner with incense.
II. Satan still carries on the wiles of Herod, and, as it were, personates
him in his opposition to Christ.
These
comparisons, dearly-beloved, being thoughtfully considered, we find Herod's
character also not to be wanting,
of which the devil himself is now
an unwearied imitator, just as he was then a secret instigator. For he is tortured
at the calling of all the nations, and racked at the daily destruction of his
power, grieving at his being everywhere deserted, and the true King adored
in all places. He prepares devices, he hatches plots, he bursts out into murders,
and that he may make use of the remnants of those whom he still deceives, is
consumed with envy in the persons of the Jews, lies treacherously in wait in
the persons of heretics, blazes out into cruelty in the persons of the heathen.
For he sees that the power of the eternal King is invincible Whose death has
extinguished the power of death itself; and therefore he has armed himself
with all his skill of injury against those who serve the true King; hardening
some by the pride that knowledge of the law engenders, debasing others by the
lies of false belief, and inciting others to the madness of persecution. Yet
the madness of this "Herod" is vanquished, and brought to nought
by Him who has crowned even infants with the glory of martyrdom, and has endued
His faithful ones with so unconquerable a love that in the Apostle's words
they dare to say, "who shall separate us from the love of Christ? shall
tribulation, or want, or persecution, Or hunger, or nakedness, or peril, or
the sword ? as it is written, For thy sake are we killed all the day long,
we are counted as sheep for the slaughter. But in all these things we overcome
on account of Him who loved us(9)."
III. The cessation of active persecution does not do away with the need of
continued vigilance: Satan has only changed his tactics.
Such courage
as this, dearly-beloved, we do not believe to have been needful only at those
times
in which the kings
of the world and all the powers of the
age were raging against God's people in an outburst of wickedness, thinking
it to redound to their greatest glory if they removed the Christian name from
the earth, but not knowing that God's Church grows through the frenzy of their
cruelty, since in the tortures and deaths of the martyrs, those whose number
was reckoned to be diminished were augmented through the force of example(1).
In fine, so much strength has our Faith gained by the attacks of persecutors
that royal princedoms have no greater ornament than that the lords of the world
are members of Christ; and their boast is not so much that they were born in
the purple as that they have been re-born in baptism. But because the stress
of former blasts has lulled, and with a cessation of fightings a measure of
tranquillity has long seemed to smile upon us, those divergences are carefully
to be guarded against which arise from the very reign of peace. For the adversary
having been proved ineffective in open persecutions now exercises a hidden
skill in doing cruel hurt, in order to overthrow by the stumbling-block of
pleasure those whom he could not strike with the blow of affliction. And so
seeing the faith of princes opposed to him and the indivisible Trinity of the
one Godhead as devoutly worshipped in palaces as in churches, he grieves at
the shedding of Christian blood being forbidden, and attacks the mode of life
of those whose death he cannot compass. The terror of confiscations he changes
into the fire of avarice, and corrupts with covetousness those whose spirit
he could not break by losses. For the malicious haughtiness which long use
has ingrained into his very nature has not laid aside its hatred, but changed
its character in order to subjugate the minds of the faithful by blandishments.
He inflames those with covetous desires whom he cannot distress with tortures:
he sows strifes, kindles passions, sets tongues a-wagging, and, lest more cautious
hearts should draw back from his lawless wiles, facilitates opportunities for
accomplishing crimes: because this is the only fruit of all his devices that
he who is not worshipped with the sacrifice of cattle and goats, and the burning
of incense, should be paid the homage of divers wicked deeds•.
IV. Timely repentance gains God's merciful consideration.
Our state
of peace(3), therefore, dearly-beloved, has its dangers, and it is vain for
those who
do not withstand
vicious desires to feel secure of the
liberty which is the privilege of their Faith. Men's hearts are shown by the
character of their works, and the fashion of their minds is betrayed by the
nature of their actions. For there are some, as the Apostle says, "who
profess that they know God, but deny Him by their deeds(4)." For the charge
of denial is truly incurred when the good which is heard in the sound of the
voice is not present in the conscience. Indeed, the frailty of man's nature
easily glides into faults: and because no sin is without its attractiveness,
deceptive pleasure is quickly acquiesced in. But we should run for spiritual
succour from the desires of the flesh: and the mind that has knowledge of its
God should turn away from the evil suggestion of the enemy. Avail thyself of
the long-suffering of God, and persist not in cherishing thy sin, because its
punishment is put off. The sinner must not feel secure of his impunity, because
if he loses the time for repentance he will find no place for mercy, as the
prophet says, "in death no one remembers thee; and in the realms below
who will confess to thee(5)?" But let him who experiences the difficulty
of self-amendment and restoration betake himself to the mercy of a befriending
God, and ask that the chains of evil habit may be broken off by Him "who
lifts up those that fall and raises all the crushed (6)." The prayer of
one that confesses will not be in vain since the merciful God "will grant
the desire of those that fear Him (6)," and will give what is asked, as
He gave the Source from Which to ask. Through our Lend Jesus Christ, Who liveth
and reigneth with the Father and the Holy Ghost for ever and ever. Amen.
SERMON XXXIX.
ON LENT, I.
I. The benefits of abstinence shown by the example of the Hebrews.
In former days, when the people of the Hebrews and all the tribes of Israel
were oppressed for their scandalous sins by the grievous tyranny of the Philistines,
in order that they might be able to overcome their enemies, as the sacred story
declares, they restored their powers of mind and body by the injunction of
a fast. For they understood that they had deserved that hard and wretched subjection
for their neglect of God's commands, and evil ways, and that it was in vain
for them to strive with arms unless they had first withstood their sin. Therefore
abstaining from food and drink, they applied the discipline of strict correction
to themselves, and in order to conquer their foes, first conquered the allurements
of the palate in themselves. And thus it came about that their fierce enemies
and cruel taskmasters yielded to them when fasting, whom they had held in subjection
when full. And so we too, dearly beloved, who are set in the midst of many
oppositions and conflicts, may be cured by a little carefulness, if only we
will use the same means. For our case is almost the same as theirs, seeing
that, as they were attacked by foes in the flesh so are we chiefly by spiritual
enemies. And if we can conquer them by God's grace enabling us to correct our
ways, the strength of our bodily enemies also will give way before us, and
by our self-amendment we shall weaken those who were rendered formidable to
us, not by their own merits but by our shortcomings.
II. Use Lent to vanquish the enemy, and be thus preparing for Eastertide.
Accordingly, dearly-beloved, that we may be able to overcome all our enemies,
let us seek Divine aid by the observance of the heavenly bidding, knowing that
we cannot otherwise prevail against our adversaries, unless we prevail against
our own selves. For we have many encounters with our own selves: the flesh
desires one thing against the spirit, and the spirit another thing against
the flesh (6a). And in this disagreement, if the desires of the body be stronger,
the mind will disgracefully lose its proper dignity, and it will be most disastrous
for that to serve which ought to have ruled. But if the mind, being subject
to its Ruler, and delighting in gifts from above, shall have trampled under
foot the allurements of earthly pleasure, and shall not have allowed sin to
reign in its mortal body(6a), reason will maintain a well-ordered supremacy,
and its strongholds no strategy of spiritual wickednesses will cast down: because
man has then only true peace and true freedom when the flesh is ruled by the
judgment of the mind, and the mind is directed by the will of God. And although
this state of preparedness, dearly-beloved, should always be maintained that
our ever-watchful foes may be overcome by unceasing diligence, yet now it must
be the more anxiously sought for and the more zealously cultivated when the
designs of our subtle foes themselves are conducted with keener craft than
ever. For knowing that the most hollowed days of Lent are now at hand, in the
keeping of which all past slothfulnesses are chastised, all negligences alerted
for, they direct all the force of their spite on this one thing, that they
who intend to celebrate the Lord's holy Passover may be found unclean in some
matter, and that cause of offence may arise where propitiation ought to have
been obtained.
III. Fights are necessary to prove our faith.
As we
approach then, dearly-beloved, the beginning of Lent, which is a time for
the more careful serving of the
Lord, because we are, as it were, entering
on a kind of contest in good works, let us prepare our souls for fighting with
temptations, and understand that the more zealous we are for our salvation,
the more determined must be the assaults of our opponents. But "stronger
is He that is in us than He that is against us (7)," and through Him are
we powerful in whose strength we rely: because it was for this that the LORD
allowed Himself to be tempted by the tempter, that we might be taught by His
example as well as fortified by His aid. For He conquered the adversary, as
ye have heard(8), by quotations from the law, not by actual strength, that
by this very thing He might do greater honour to man, and inflict a greater
punishment on the adversary by conquering the enemy of the human race not now
as God but as Man. He fought then, therefore, that we too might fight thereafter:
He conquered that we too might likewise conquer. For there are no works of
power, dearly-beloved, without the trials of temptations, there is no faith
without proof, no contest without a foe, no victory without conflict. This
life of ours is in the midst of snares, in the midst of battles; if we do not
wish to be deceived, we must watch: if we want to overcome, we must fight.
And therefore the most wise Solomon says, "My son in approaching the service
of GoD prepare thy soul for temptation (8a)." For He being a man full
of the wisdom of God, and knowing that the pursuit of religion involves laborious
struggles, foreseeing too the danger of the fight, forewarned the intending
combatant; lest haply, if the tempter came upon him in his ignorance, he might
find him unready and wound him unawares.
IV. The Christian's armour is both for defence and for attack.
So, dearly-beloved,
let us who instructed in Divine learning come wittingly to the present contest
and strife,
hear the Apostle when he says, "for
our struggle is not against flesh and blood, but against principalities and
powers, against the rulers of this dark world, against spiritual wickedness
in heavenly things(9)," and let us not forget that these our enemies feel
it is against them all is done that we strive to do for our salvation, and
that by the very fact of our seeking after some good thing we are challenging
our foes. For this is an old-standing quarrel between us and them fostered
by the devil's ill-will, so that they are tortured by our being justified,
because they have fallen from those good things to which we, God helping us,
are advancing. If, therefore, we are raised, they are prostrated: if we are
strengthened, they are weakened. Our cures are their blows, because they are
wounded by our wounds' cure. "Stand, therefore," dearly-beloved,
as the Apostle says, "having the loins of your mind girt in truth, and
your feet shod in the preparation of the gospel of peace, in all things taking
the shield of faith in which ye may be able to extinguish all the fiery darts
of the evil one, and put on the helmet of salvation and the sword of the Spirit,
which is the Word of God (1)." See, dearly-beloved, with what mighty weapons,
with what impregnable defences we are armed by our Leader, who is famous for
His many triumphs, the unconquered Master of the Christian warfare. He has
girt our loins with the belt of chastity, He has shod our feet with the bonds
of peace: because the unbelted soldier is quickly vanquished by the suggester
of immodesty, and he that is unshod is easily bitten by the serpent. He has
given the shield of faith for the protection of our whole body; on our head
has He set the helmet of salvation; our right hand has He furnished with a
sword, that is with the word of Truth: that the spiritual warrior may not only
be safe from wounds, but also may have strength to wound his assailant.
V. Abstinence not only from food but from other evil desires, especially from
wrath, is required in Lent.
Relying,
therefore, dearly-beloved, on these arms, let us enter actively and fearlessly
on the contest set before
us: so that in this fasting struggle we
may not rest satisfied with only this end, that we should think abstinence
from food alone desirable. For it is not enough that the substance of our flesh
should be reduced, if the strength of the soul be not also developed. When
the outer man is somewhat subdued, let the inner man be somewhat refreshed;
and when bodily excess is denied to our flesh, let our mind be invigorated
by spiritual delights. Let every Christian scrutinise himself, and earth severely
into his inmost heart: let him see that no discord cling there, no wrong desire
be harboured. Let chasteness drive incontinence far away; let the light of
truth dispel the shades of deception; let the swellings of pride subside; let
wrath yield to reason; let the darts of ill-treatment be shattered, and the
chidings of the tongue be bridled; let thoughts of revenge fall through, and
injuries be given over to oblivion. In fine, let "every plant which the
heavenly Father hath not planted be removed by the roots (2)." For then
only are the seeds of virtue well nourished in us, when every foreign germ
is uprooted from the field of wheat. If any one, therefore, has been fired
by the desire for vengeance against another, so that he has given him up to
prison or bound him with chains, let him make haste to forgive not only the
innocent, but also one who seems worthy of punishment, that he may with confidence
make use of the clause in the Lord's prayer and say, "Forgive us our debts,
as we also forgive our debtors (3)." Which petition the LORD marks with
peculiar emphasis, as if the efficacy of the whole rested on this condition,
by saying, "For if ye forgive men their sins, your Father which is in
heaven also will forgive you: but if ye forgive not men, neither will your
Father forgive you your Sins (3)."
VI. The right use of Lent will lead to a happy participation in Easter.
Accordingly, dearly-beloved, being mindful of our weakness, because we easily
fall into all kinds of faults, let us by no means neglect this special remedy
and most effectual healing of our wounds. Let us remit, that we may have remission:
let us grant the pardon which we crave: let us not be eager to be revenged
when we pray to be forgiven. Let us not pass over the groans of the poor with
deaf ear, but with prompt kindness bestow our mercy on the needy, that we may
deserve to find mercy in the judgment. And he that, aided by God's grace, shall
strain every nerve after this perfection, will keep this holy fast faithfully;
free from the leaven of the old wickedness, in the unleavened bread of sincerity
and truth (4), he will reach the blessed Passover, and by newness of life will
worthily rejoice in the mystery of man's reformation through Christ our LORD
Who with the Father and the Holy Spirit lives and reigns for ever and ever.
Amen.
SERMON XL.
ON LENT, II.
I. Progress and improvement always possible.
Although, dearly-beloved, as the Easter festival approaches, the very recurrence
of the season points out to us the Lenten fast, yet our words also must add
their exhortations which, the Lord helping us, may be not useless to the active
nor irksome to the devout. For since the idea of these days demands the increase
of all our religious performances, there is no one, I am sure, that does not
feel glad at being incited to good works. For though our nature which, so long
as we are mortal, will be changeable, is advancing to the highest pursuits
of virtue, yet always has the possibility of filling back, so has it always
the possibility of advancing. And this is the true justness of the perfect
that they should never assume themselves to be perfect, lest flagging in the
purpose of their yet unfinished journey, they should fall into the danger of
failure, through giving up the desire for progress. And, therefore, because
none of us, dearly beloved, is so perfect and holy as not to be s able to be
more perfect and more holy, let us all together, without difference of rank,
without distinction of desert, with pious eagerness pursue our race from what
we have attained to what we yet aspire to, and make some needful additions
to our regular devotions. For he that is not more attentive than usual to religion
in these days, is shown at other times to be not attentive enough.
II. Satan seeks to subtly his numerous lasses by fresh gains.
Hence
the reading of the Apostle's proclamation has sounded opportunely in our
ears, saying, "Behold now is the accepted time, behold now is the
day of salvation (5)." For what is more accepted than this time, what
more suitable to salvation than these days, in which war is proclaimed against
vices and progress is made in all virtues? Thou hadst indeed always to keep
watch, O Christian soul, against the enemy of thy salvation, lest any spot
should be exposed to the tempter's snares: but now greater wariness and keener
prudence must be employed by thee when that same foe of thine rages with fiercer
hatred. For now in all the world the power of his ancient sway is taken from
him, and the countless vessels of captivity are rescued from his grasp. The
people of all nations and of all tongues are breaking away from their cruel
plunderer, and now no race of men is found that does not struggle against the
tyrant's laws, while through all the borders of the earth many thousands of
thousands are being prepared to be reborn in Christ (6): and as the birth of
a new creature draws near, spiritual wickedness is being driven out by those
who were possessed by it. The blasphemous fury of the despoiled foe frets,
therefore, and seeks new gains because it has lost its ancient right. Unwearied
and ever wakeful, he snatches at any sheep he finds straying carelessIy from
the sacred folds, intent on leading them over the steeps of treasure anti down
the slopes of luxury into the abodes of death. And so he inflames their wrath,
feeds their hatreds, whets their desires, mocks at their continence, arouses
their gluttony.
III. The twofold nature of Christ shown at the Temptation.
For whom
would he not dare to try, who did not keep from his treacherous attempts
even on our LORD
Jesus Christ?
For, as the story of the Gospel has disclosed
(7), when our Saviour, Who was true God, that He might show Himself true Man
also, and banish all wicked and erroneous opinions, after the fast of 40 days
and nights, had experienced the hunger of human weakness, the devil, rejoicing
at having found in Him a sign of possible and mortal nature, in order to test
the power which he feared, said, "If Thou art the Son of God, command
that these stones become bread (8)." Doubtless the Almighty could do this,
and it was easy that at the Creator's command a creature of any kind should
change into the form that it was commanded: just as when He willed it, in the
marriage feast, He changed the water into wine: but here it better agreed with
His purposes of salvation that His haughty foe's cunning should be vanquished
by the Lord, not in the power of His Godhead, but by the mystery of His humiliation.
At length, when the devil had been put to flight and the tempter baffled in
all his arts, angels came to the Lord and ministered to Him, that He being
true Man and true God, His Manhood might be unsullied by those crafty questions,
and His Godhead displayed by those holy ministrations. And so let the sons
and disciples of the devil be confounded, who, being filled with the poison
of vipers, deceive the simple, denying in Christ the presence of both true
natures, whilst they rob either His Godhead of Manhood, or His Manhood of Godhead,
although both falsehoods are destroyed by a twofold and simultaneous proof:
for by His bodily hunger His perfect Manhood was shown, and by the attendant
angels His perfect Godhead.
IV. The fast should not end with abstinence front food, but lead to good deeds.
Therefore,
dearly-beloved, seeing that, as we are taught by our Redeemer's precept, "man lives not in bread alone, but in every word of God(9)," and
it is right that Christian people, whatever the amount of their abstinence,
should rather desire to satisfy themselves with the "Word of God" than
with bodily food, let us with ready devotion and eager faith enter upon the
celebration of the solemn fast, not with barren abstinence flora food, which
is often imposed on us by weakliness of body, or the disease of avarice, but
in bountiful benevolence: that in truth we may be of those of whom the very
Truth speaks, "blessed are they which hunger and thirst after righteousness,
for they shall be filled (1)." Let works of piety, therefore, be our delight,
and let us be filled with those kinds of food which feed us for eternity. Let
us rejoice in the replenishment of the poor, whom our bounty has satisfied.
Let us delight in the clothing of those whose nakedness we have covered with
needful raiment. Let our humaneness be felt by the sick in their illnesses,
by the weakly in their infirmities, by the exiles in their hardships, by the
orphans in their destitution, and by solitary widows in their sadness: in the
helping of whom there is no one that cannot carry out some amount of benevolence.
For no one's income is small, whose heart is big: and the measure of one's
mercy and goodness does not depend on the size of one's means. Wealth of goodwill
is never rightly lacking, even in a slender purse. Doubtless the expenditure
of the rich is greater, and that of the poor smaller, but there is no difference
in the fruit of their works, where the purpose of the workers is the same.
V. And still further it should lead to personal amendment and domestic harmony.
But, beloved, in this opportunity for the virtues' exercise there are also
other notable crowns, to be won by no dispersing abroad of granaries, by no
disbursement of money, if wantonness is repelled, if drunkenness is abandoned,
and the lusts of the flesh tamed by the laws of chastity: if hatreds pass into
affection, if enmities be turned into peace, if meekness extinguishes wrath,
if gentleness forgives wrongs, if in fine the conduct of master and of slaves
is so well ordered that the rule of the one is milder, and the discipline of
the other is more complete. It is by such observances then, dearly-beloved,
that God's mercy will be gained, the charge of sin wiped out, and the adorable
Easter festival devoutly kept. And this the pious Emperors of the Roman world
have long guarded with holy observance; for in honour of the Lord's Passion
and Resurrection they bend their lofty power, and relaxing the severity of
their decrees set free many of their prisoners: so that on the clays when the
world is saved by the Divine mercy, their clemency, which is modelled on the
Heavenly goodness, may be zealously followed by us. Let Christian peoples then
imitate their princes, and be incited to forbearance in their homes by these
royal examples. For it is not right that private laws should be severer than
public. Let faults be forgiven, let bonds be loosed offences wiped out, designs
of vengeance fall through, that the holy festival through the Divine and human
grace may find all happy, all innocent: through our Lord Jesus Christ Who with
the Father and the Holy Spirit liveth and reigneth God for endless ages of
ages. Amen.
SERMON XLII.
ON LENT, IV.
I. The Lenten fast an opportunity for restoring our purely.
In proposing
to preach this most holy and important fast to you, dearly beloved, how shall
I begin
more fitly
than by quoting the words of the Apostle, in whom
Christ Himself was speaking, and by reminding you of what we have read (2): "behold,
now is the acceptable time, behold now is the day of salvation." For though
there are no seasons which are not full of Divine blessings, and though access
is ever open to us to God's mercy through His grace, yet now all men's minds
should be moved with greater zeal to spiritual progress, and animated by larger
confidence, when the return of the day, on which we were redeemed, invites
us to all the duties of godliness: that we may keep the super-excellent mystery
of the Lord's passion with bodies and hearts purified. These great mysteries
do indeed require from us such unflagging devotion and unwearied reverence
that we should remain in God's sight always the same, as we ought to be found
on the Easter feast itself. But because few have this constancy, and, because
so long as the stricter observance is relaxed in consideration of the frailty
of the flesh, and so long as one's interests extend over all the various actions
of this life, even pious hearts must get some soils from the dust of the world,
the Divine Providence has with great beneficence taken care that the discipline
of the forty days should heal us and restore the purity of our minds, during
which the faults of other times might be redeemed by pious acts and removed
by chaste fasting.
II. Lent must be used far removing all our defilements, and of good works
there must be no stint.
As we
are therefore, dearly-beloved, about to enter on those mystic days which
are dedicated to the benefits of
fasting, let us take care to obey the Apostle's
precepts, cleansing "ourselves from every defilement of flesh and spirit
(3):" that by controlling the struggles that go on between our two natures,
the spirit which, if it is under the guidance of God, should be the governor
of the body, may uphold the dignity of its rule: so that we may give no offence
to any, nor be subject to the chidings of reprovers. For we shall be rightly
attacked with rebukes, and through our fault ungodly tongues will arm themselves
to do harm to religion, if the conduct of those that fast is at variance with
the standard of perfect purity. For our fast does not consist chiefly of mere
abstinence from food, nor are dainties withdrawn from our bodily appetites
with profit, unless the mind is recalled from wrong-doing and the tongue restrained
from slandering. This is a time of gentleness and long-suffering, of peace
and tranquillity: when all the pollutions of vice are to be eradicated and
continuance of virtue is to be attained by us. Now let godly minds boldly accustom
themselves to forgive faults, to pass over insults, and to forget wrongs. Now
let the faithful spirit train himself with the armour of righteousness on the
fight hand and on the left, that through honour and dishonour, through ill
repute and good repute, the conscience may be undisturbed in unwavering uprightness,
not puffed up by praise and not wearied out by revilings. The self-restraint
of the religious should not be gloomy, but sincere; no murmurs of complaint
should be heard from those who are never without the consolation of holy joys.
The decrease of worldly means should not be feared in the practice of works
of mercy. Christian poverty is always rich, because what it has is more than
what it has not. Nor does the poor man fear to labour in this world, to whom
it is given to possess all things in the Lord of all things. Therefore those
who do the things which are good must have no manner of fear lest the power
of doing should fail them; since in the gospel the widow's devotion is extolled
in the case of her two mites, and voluntary bounty gets its reward for a cup
of cold water (4). For the measure of our charitableness is fixed by the sincerity
of our feelings, and he that shows mercy on others will never want for mercy
himself. The holy widow of Sarepta discovered this, who offered the blessed
Elias in the time of famine one day's food, which was all she had, and putting
the prophet's hunger before her own needs, ungrudgingly gave up a handful of
corn and a little oil (5). But she did not lose what she gave in all faith,
and in the vessels emptied by her godly bounty a source of new plenty arose,
that the fulness of her substance might not be diminished by the holy purpose
to which she had put it, because she had never dreaded being brought to want.
III. As with the Saviour, so with us, the devil tries to make our very piety
its own snare.
But, dearly-beloved,
doubt not that the devil, who is the opponent of all virtues, is jealous
of these
good
desires, to which we are confident you are
prompted of your own selves, and that to this end he is arming the force of
his malice in order to make your very piety its own snare, and endeavouring
to overcome by boastfulness those whom he could not defeat by distrustfulness.
For the vice of pride is a near neighbour to good deeds, and arrogance ever
lies in wait hard by virtue: because it is hard for him that lives praise-worthily
not to be caught by man's praise unless, as it is written, "he that glorieth,
glorieth in the Lord[6].'' Whose intentions would that most naughty enemy not
dare to attack? whose fasting would he not seek to break down? seeing that,
as has been shown in the reading of the Gospel[6a], he did not restrain his
wiles even against the Saviour of the world Himself. For being exceedingly
afraid of His fast, which lasted 40 days and nights, he wished most cunningly
to discover whether this power of abstinence was given Him or His very own:
for he need not fear the defeat of all his treacherous designs, if Christ were
throughout subject to the same conditions as He is in body[7]. And so he first
craftily examined whether He were Himself the Creator of all things, such that
He could change the natures of material things as He pleased: secondly, whether
under the form of human flesh the Godhead lay concealed, to Whom it was easy
to make the air His chariot, and convey His earthly limbs through space. But
when the Lord preferred to resist him by the uprightness of His true Manhood,
than to display the power of His Godhead, to this he turns the craftiness of
his third design, that he might tempt by the lust of empire Him in Whom the
signs of Divine power had failed, and entice Him to the worship of himself
by promising the kingdoms of the world. But the devil's cleverness was rendered
foolish by God's wisdom, so that the proud foe was bound by that which he had
formerly bound, and did not fear to assail Him Whom it behoved to be slain
for the world.
IV. The perverse turn even their fasting into sin.
This adversary's
wiles then let us beware of, not only in the enticements of the palate, but
also
in our
purpose of abstinence. For he who knew how to
bring death upon mankind by means of food, knows also how to harm us through
our very fasting, and using the Manichaeans as his tools, as he once drove
men to take what was forbidden, so in the opposite direction he prompts them
to avoid what is allowed. It is indeed a helpful observance, which accustoms
one to scanty diet, and checks the appetite for dainties: but woe to the dogmatizing
of those whose very fasting is turned to sin. For they condemn the creature's
nature to the Creator's injury, and maintain that they are defiled by eating
those things of which they contend the devil, not God, is the author: although
absolutely nothing that exists is evil, nor is anything in nature included
in the actually bad. For the good Creator made all things good and the Maker
of the universe is one, "Who made the heaven and the earth, the sea and
all that is in them[8]." Of which whatever is granted to man for food
and drink,' is holy and clean after its kind. But if it is taken with immoderate
greed, it is the excess that disgraces the eaters and drinkers, not the nature
of the food or drink that defiles them. "For all things," as the
Apostle says, "are clean to the clean. But to the defiled and unbelieving
nothing is clean, but their mind and conscience is defiled[9]."
V. Be reasonable and seasonable in your fasting.
But ye,
dearly-beloved, the holy offspring of the catholic Mother, who have been
taught in the school
of Truth
by God's Spirit, moderate your liberty with
due reasonableness, knowing that it is good to abstain even from things lawful,
and at seasons of greater strictness to distinguish one food from another with
a view to giving up the use of some kinds, not to condemning their nature.
And so be not infected with the error of those who are corrupted merely by
their own ordinances, "serving the creature rather than the Creator[1],''
and offering a foolish abstinence to the service of the lights of heaven: seeing
that they have chosen to fast on the first and second days of the week in honour
of the sun and moon, proving themselves in this one instance of their perverseness
twice disloyal to God, twice blasphemous, by setting up their fast not only
in worship of the stars but also in contempt of the Lord's Resurrection. For
they reject the mystery of man's salvation and refuse to believe that Christ
our Lord in the true flesh of our nature was truly born, truly suffered, was
truly buried and was truly raised. And in consequence, condemn the day of our
rejoicing by the gloom of their fasting. And since to conceal their infidelity
they dare to be present at our meetings, at the Communion of the Mysteries[2]
they bring themselves sometimes, in order to ensure their concealment, to receive
Christ's Body with unworthy lips, though they altogether refuse to drink the
Blood of our Redemption. And this we make known to you, holy brethren, that
men of this sort may be detected by you by these signs, and that they whose
impious pretences have been discovered may be driven from the society of the
saints by priestly authority. For of such the blessed Apostle Paul in his foresight
warns God's Church, saying: "but we beseech you, brethren, that ye observe
those who make discussions and offences contrary to the doctrine which ye learnt
and turn away from them. For such persons serve not Christ the Lord but their
own belly, and by sweet words and fair speeches beguile the hearts of the innocent[3]."
VI. Make your fasting a reality by amendment in your lives.
Being therefore, dearly-beloved, fully instructed by these admonitions of
ours, which we have often repeated in your ears in protest against abominable
error, enter upon the holy days of Lent with Godly devoutness, and prepare
yourselves to win God's mercy by your own works of mercy. Quench your anger,
wipe out enmities, cherish unity, and vie with one another in the offices of
true humility. Rule your slaves and those who are put under you with fairness,
let none of them be tortured by imprisonment or chains. Forego vengeance, forgive
offences: exchange severity for gentleness, indignation for meekness, discord
for peace. Let all men find us self-restrained, peaceable, kind: that our fastings
may be acceptable to God. For in a word to Him we offer the sacrifice of true
abstinence and true Godliness, when we keep ourselves from all evil: the Almighty
God helping us through all, to Whom with the Son and Holy Spirit belongs one
Godhead and one Majesty, for ever and ever. Amen:
SERMON XLVI.
ON LENT, VIII.
I. Lent must be kept not only by avoiding bodily impurity but also by avoiding
errors of thought and faith.
We know
indeed, dearly-beloved, your devotion to be so warm that in the fasting,
which is the forerunner
of the Lord's Easter, many of you will have forestalled
our exhortations. But because the right practice of abstinence is needful not
only to the mortification of the flesh but also to the purification of the
mind, we desire your observance to be so complete that, as you cut down the
pleasures that be long to the lusts of the flesh, so you should banish the
errors that proceed from the imaginations of the heart. For he whose heart
is polluted with no misbelief prepares himself with true and reasonable purification
for the Paschal Feast, in which all the mysteries of our religion meet together.
For, as the Apostle says, that "all that is not of faith is sin[4]," the
fasting of those will be unprofitable and vain, whom the father of lying deceives
with his delusions, and who are not fed by Christ's true flesh. As then we
must with the whole heart obey the Divine commands and sound doctrine, so we
must use all foresight in abstaining from wicked imaginations. For the mind
then only keeps holy and spiritual fast when it rejects the food of error and
the poison of falsehood, which our crafty and wily foe plies us with more treacherously
now, when by the very return of the venerable Festival, the whole church generally
is admonished to understand the mysteries of its salvation. For he is the true
confessor and worshipper of Christ's resurrection, who is not confused about
His passion, nor deceived about His bodily nativity. For some are so ashamed
of the Gospel of the Cross of Christ, as to impudently nullify the punishment
which He underwent for the world's redemption, and have denied the very nature
of true flesh in the Lord, not understanding how the impossible and unchangeable
Deity of God's Word could have so far condescended for man's salvation, as
by His power not to lose His own properties, and in His mercy to take on Him
ours. And so in Christ, there is a twofold form but one person, and the Son
of God, who is at the same time Son of Man, is one Lord, accepting the condition
of a slave by the design of loving-kindness, not by the law of necessity, because
by His power He became humble, by His power passible, by His power mortal;
that for the destruction of the tyranny of sin and death, the weak nature in
Him might be capable of punishment, and the strong nature not lose aught of
its glory.
II. All the actions of Christ reveal the presence of the twofold nature.
And so,
dearly-beloved, when in reading or hearing the Gospel you find certain things
in our Lord
Jesus Christ
subjected to injuries and certain things illumined
by miracles, in such a way that in the same Person now the Humanity appears,
and now the Divinity shines out, do not put down any of these things to a delusion,
as if in Christ there is either Manhood alone or Godhead alone, but believe
both faithfully, worship both right humbly; so that in the union of the Word
and the Flesh there may be no separation, and the bodily proofs may not seem
delusive, because the divine signs were evident in Jesus. The attestations
to both natures in Him are true and abundant, and by the depth of the Divine
purpose all concur to this end, that the inviolable Word not being separated
from the passible flesh, the Godhead may be understood as in all things partaker
with the flesh and flesh with the Godhead. And, therefore, must the Christian
mind that would eschew lies and be the disciple of truth, use the Gospel-story
confidently, and, as if still in company with the Apostles themselves, distinguish
what is visibly done by the Lord, now by the spiritual understanding and now
by the bodily organs of sight. Assign to the man that He is born a boy of a
woman: assign to God that His mother's virginity is not harmed, either by conception
or by bearing. Recognize "the form of a slave" enwrapped in swaddling
clothes, lying in a manger, but acknowledge that it was the Lord's form that
was announced by angels, "proclaimed by the elements[5]," adored
by the wise men. Understand it of His humanity that he did not avoid the marriage
feast confess it Divine that he turned water into wine. Let your own feelings
explain to you why He shed tears over a dead friend: let His Divine power be
realized, when that same friend, after mouldering in the grave four days, is
brought to life and raised only by the command of His voice. To make clay with
spittle and earth was a work of the body: but to anoint therewith and enlighten
the eyes of the blind is an undoubted mark of that power which had reserved
for the revelation of its glory that which it had not allowed to the early
part of His natural life. It is truly human to relieve bodily fatigue with
rest in sleep: but it is truly Divine to quell the violence of raging storms
by a rebuking command. To set food before the hungry denotes human kindness
and a philanthropic spirit: but with five loaves and two fishes to satisfy
5,000 men, besides women and children, who would dare deny that to be the work
of Deity ? a Deity which, by the co-operation of the functions of true flesh,
showed not only itself in Manhood, but also Manhood in itself; for the old,
original wounds in man's nature could not be healed, except by the Word of
God taking to Himself flesh from the Virgin's womb, whereby in one and the
same Person flesh and the Word co-existed.
III. Hold fast to the statements of the Creed.
This belief
in the Lord's Incarnation, dearly-beloved, through which the whole Church
is Christ's body[6],
hold
firm with heart unshaken and abstain from
all the lies of heretics, and remember that your works of mercy will only then
profit you, and your strict continence only then bear fruit, when your minds
are unsoiled by any defilement from wrong opinions. Cast away the arguments
of this world's wisdom, for God hates them, and none can arrive by them at
the knowledge of the Truth, and keep fixed in your mind that which you say
in the Creed. Believe[7] the Son of God to be co-eternal with the Father by
Whom all things were made and without Whom nothing was made, born also according
to the flesh at the end of the times. Believe Him to have been in the body
crucified, dead, raised up, • and lifted above the heights of heavenly
powers, set on the Father's right hand, about to come in the same flesh in
which He ascended, to judge the living and the dead. For this is what the Apostle
proclaims to all the faithful, saying: "if ye be risen with Christ seek
the things which are above, where Christ is sitting on the right hand of God.
Set your mind on the things that are above, not on the things that are upon
the earth. For ye are dead, and your life is hid with Christ in God. For when
Christ, our life, shall appear, then shall ye also appear with Him in glory[8]."
IV. Use Lent for general improvement in the whole round of Christian duties.
Relying,
therefore, dearly-beloved, on so great a promise, be heavenly not only in
hope, but also in conduct
And though our minds must at all times be
set on holiness of mind and body, yet now during these 40 days of fasting bestir
yourselves[9] to yet more active works of piety, not only in the distribution
of alms, which are very effectual in attesting reform, but also in forgiving
offences, and in being merciful to those accused of wrongdoing, that the condition
which God has laid down between Himself and us may not be against us when we
pray. For when we say, in accordance with the Lord's teaching, "Forgive
us our debts, as we also forgive our debtors[1]," we ought with the whole
heart to carry out what we say. For then only will what we ask in the next
clause come to pass, that we be not led into temptation and freed from all
evils[2]: through our Lord Jesus Christ, Who with the Father and the Holy Spirit
lives and reigns for ever and ever. Amen.
SERMON XLIX.
ON LENT, XI.
I. The Lenten fast is incumbent on all alike.
On all days and seasons, indeed, dearly-beloved, some marks of the Divine
goodness are set, and no part of the year is destitute of sacred mysteries,
in order that, so long as proofs of our salvation meet us on all sides, we
may the more eagerly accept the never-ceasing calls of God's mercy. But all
that is bestowed on the restoration of human souls in the divers works and
gifts of grace is put before us more clearly and abundantly now, when no isolated
portions of the Faith are to be celebrated, but the whole together. For as
the Easter festival approaches, the greatest and most binding of fasts is kept,
and its observance is imposed on all the faithful without exception; because
no one is so holy that he ought not to be holier, nor so devout that he might
not be devouter. For who, that is set in the uncertainty of this life, can
be found either exempt from temptation, or free from fault? Who is there who
would not wish for additions to his virtue, or removal of his vice ? seeing
that adversity does us harm, and prosperity spoils us, and it is equally dangerous
not to have what we want at all, and to have it in the fullest measure. There
is a trap in the fulness of riches, a trap in the straits of poverty. The one
lifts us up in pride, the other incites us to complaint. Health tries us, sickness
tries us, so long as the one fosters carelessness and the other sadness. There
is a snare in security, a snare in fear; and it matters not whether the mind
which is given over to earthly thoughts, is taken up with pleasures or with
cares; for it is equally unhealthy to languish under empty delights, or to
labour under racking anxiety.
II. The broad road is crowded the narrow way of salvation nearly empty.
And thus
is perfectly fulfilled that assurance of the Truth, by which we learn that "narrow and steep is the way that leads to life[3];" and whilst
the breadth of the way that leads to death is crowded with a large company,
the steps are few of those that tread the path of safety. And wherefore is
the left road more thronged than the right, save that the multitude is prone
to wordly joys and carnal goods ? And although that which it desires is short-lived
and uncertain, yet men endure toil more willingly for the lust of pleasure
than for love of virtue. Thus while those who crave things visible are unnumbered,
those who prefer the eternal to the temporal are hardly to be found. And, therefore,
seeing that the blessed Apostle Paul says, "the things which are seen
are temporal, but the things which are not seen are eternal[4]," the path
of virtue lies hid and m concealment, to a certain extent, since "by hope
we were saved s," and true faith loves that above all things, which it
attains to without any intervention of the flesh. A great work and toil it
is then to keep our wayward heart from all sin, and, with the numberless allurements
of pleasure to ensnare it on all sides, not to let the vigour of the mind give
way to any attack. Who "toucheth pitch, and is not defiled thereby[6]
?" who is not weakened by the flesh ? who is not begrimed by the dust
? who, lastly, is of such purity as not to be polluted by those things without
which one cannot live ? For the Divine teaching commands by the Apostle's mouth
that "they who have wives" should "be as though they had none:
and those that weep as though they wept not; and those that rejoice as though
they rejoiced not; and those that buy as though they possessed not; and those
that use this world as though they used it not; for the fashion of this world
passeth away[7]." Blessed, therefore, is the mind that passes the time
of its pilgrimage in chaste sobriety, and loiters not in the things through
which it has to walk, so that, as a stranger rather than the possessor of its
earthly abode, it may not be wanting in human affections, and yet rest on the
Divine promises.
III. Satan is incited to fresh efforts at this season of the year.
And, dearly-beloved, no season requires and bestows this fortitude more than
the present, when by the observance of a special strictness a habit is acquired
which must be persevered in. For it is well known to you that this is the time
when throughout the world the devil waxes furious, and the Christian army has
to combat him, and any that have grown lukewarm and slothful, or that are absorbed
in worldly cares, must now be furnished with spiritual armour and their ardour
kindled for the fray by the heavenly trumpet, inasmuch as he, through whose
envy death came into the world[8], is now consumed with the strongest jealousy
and now tortured with the greatest vexation. For he sees[9] whole tribes of
the human race brought in afresh to the adoption of God's sons and the offspring
of the New Birth multiplied through the virgin fertility of the Church. He
sees himself robbed of all his tyrannic power, and driven from the hearts of
those he once possessed, while from either sex thousands of the old, the young,
the middle-aged are snatched away from him, and no one is debarred by sin either
of his own or original, where justification is not paid for deserts, but simply
given as a free gift. He sees, too, those that have lapsed, and have been deceived
by his treacherous snares, washed in the tears of penitence and, by the Apostle's
key unlocking the gates of mercy, admitted to the benefit of reconciliation'[1].
He feels, moreover, that the day of the Lord's Passion is at hand, and that
he is crushed by the power of that cross which in Christ, Who was free from
all debt of sin, was the world's ransom and not the penalty of sin.
IV.Self-examination by the standard of God's commands the right occupation
in Lent.
And so,
tha the malice of the fretting foe may effect nothing by its rage, a keener
devotion must
be awaked to the
performance of the Divine commands,
in order that we may enter on the season, when all the mysteries of the Divine
mercy meet together, with preparedness both of mind and body, invoking the
guidance and help of God, that we may be strong to fulfil all things through
Him, without Whom we can do nothing. For the injunction is laid on us, in order
that we may seek the aid of Him Who lays it Nor must any one excuse himself
by reason of his weakness, since He Who has granted the will, also gives the
power, as the blessed Apostle James says, "If any of you lack wisdom,
let him ask of God, Who giveth to all liberally and upbraideth not, and it
shall be given him[2]." Which of the faithful does not know what virtues
he ought to cultivate, and what vices to fight against ? Who is so partial
or so unskilled a judge of his own conscience as not to know what ought to
be removed, and what ought to be developed ? Surely no one is so devoid of
reason as not to understand the character of his mode of life, or not to know
the secrets of his heart. Let him not then please himself in everything, nor
judge himself according to the delights of the flesh, but place his every habit
in the scale of the Divine commands, where, some things being ordered to be
done and others forbidden, he can examine himself in a true balance by weighing
the actions of his life according to this standard. For the designing mercy
of God[3] has set up the brightest mirror in His commandments, wherein a man
may see his mind's face and realize its conformity or dissimilarity to God's
image: with the specific purpose that, at least, during the days of our Redemption
and Restoration, we may throw off awhile our carnal cares and restless occupations,
and betake ourselves from earthly matters to heavenly.
V. Forgiveness of our own sins requires that we should forgive others.
But because,
as it is written, "in many things we all stumble[4]," let
the feeling of mercy be first aroused and the faults of others against us be
forgotten; that we may not violate by any love of revenge that most holy compact,
to which we bind ourselves in the Lord's prayer, and when we say "forgive
us our debts as we also forgive our debtors," let us not be hard in forgiving,
because we must be possessed either with the desire for revenge, or with the
leniency of gentleness, and for man, who is ever exposed to the dangers of
temptations, it is more to be desired that his own faults should not need punishments
than that he should get the faults of others punished. And what is more suitable
to the Christian faith than that not only in the Church, but also in all men's
homes, there should be forgiveness of sins? Let threats be laid aside; let
bonds be loosed, for he who will not loose them will bind himself with them
much more disastrously. For whatsoever one man resolves upon against another,
he decrees against himself by his own terms. Whereas "blessed are the
merciful, for God shall have mercy on them[6] :" and He is just and kind
in His judgments, allowing some to be in the power of others to this end, that
under fair government may be preserved both the profitableness of discipline
and the kindliness of clemency, and that no one should dare to refuse that
pardon to another's shortcomings, which he wishes to receive for his own.
VI. Reconciliation between enemies and alms-giving are also Lenten duties.
Furthermore,
as the Lord says, that "the peacemakers are blessed, because
they shall be called sons of God[7]," let all discords and enmities be
laid aside, and let no one think to have a share in the Paschal feast that
has neglected to restore brotherly peace. For with the Father on high, he that
is not in charity with the brethren, will not be reckoned in the number of
His sons. Furthermore, in the distribution of alms and care of the poor, let
our Christian fast-times be fat and abound; and let each bestow on the weak
and destitute those dainties which he denies himself. Let pains be taken that
all may bless God with one mouth, and let him that gives some portion of substance
understand that he is a minister of the Divine mercy; for God has placed the
cause of the poor in the hand of the liberal man; that the sins which are washed
away either by the waters of baptism, or the tears of repentance, may be also
blotted out by alms-giving; for the Scripture says, "As water extinguisheth
fire, so alms extinguisheth sin[8]." Through our Lord Jesus Christ, &c.
SERMON LI.
A HOMILY DELIVERED ON THE SATURDAY BEFORE THE SECOND SUNDAY IN LENT--ON THE
TRANSFIGURATION, S. Mat.[1] . xvii. 1--13.
I. Peter's confession shown to lead up to the Transfiguration.
The Gospel lesson, dearly-beloved, which has reached the inner hearing of
our minds through our bodily ears, calls us to the understanding of a great
mystery, to which we shall by the help of God's grace the better attain, if
we turn our attention to what is narrated just before.
The Saviour of mankind, Jesus Christ, in founding that faith, which recalls
the wicked to righteousness and the dead to life, used to instruct His disciples
by admonitory teaching and by miraculous acts to the end that He, the Christ,
might be believed to be at once the Only-begotten of God and the Son of Man.
For the one without the other was of no avail to salvation, and it was equally
dangerous to have believed the Lord Jesus Christ to be either only God without
manhood, or only man without Godhead[9], since both had equally to be confessed,
because just as true manhood existed in His Godhead, so true Godhead existed
in His Manhood. To strengthen, therefore, their most wholesome knowledge of
this belief, the Lord had asked His disciples, among the various opinions of
others, what they themselves believed, or thought about Him: whereat the Apostle
Peter, by the revelation of the most High Father passing beyond things corporeal
and surmounting things human by the eyes of his mind, saw Him to be Son of
the living God, and acknowledged the glory of the Godhead, because he looked
not at the substance of His flesh and blood alone; and with this lofty faith
Christ was so well pleased that he received the fulness of blessing, and was
endued with the holy firmness of the inviolable Rock on which the Church should
be built and conquer the gates of hell and the laws of death, so that, in loosing
or binding the petitions of any whatsoever, only that should be ratified in
heaven which had been settled by the judgment of Peter.
II. The same continued.
But this
exalted and highly-praised understanding, dearly-beloved, had also to be
instructed on the mystery of
Christ's lower substance, lest the Apostle's
faith, being raised to the glory of confessing the Deity in Christ, should
deem the reception of our weakness unworthy of the impassible God, and incongruous,
and should believe the human nature to be so glorified in Him as to be incapable
of suffering punishment, or being dissolved in death. And, therefore, when
the Lord said that He must go to Jerusalem, and suffer many things from the
elders and scribes and chief of the priests, and the third day rise again,
the blessed Peter who, being illumined with light from above, was burning with
the heat of his confession, rejected their mocking insults and the disgrace
of the most cruel death, with, as he thought, a loyal and outspoken contempt,
but was checked by a kindly rebuke from Jesus and animated with the desire
to share His suffering. For the Saviour's exhortation that followed, instilled
and taught this, that they who wished to follow Him should deny themselves.
and count the loss of temporal flyings as light in the hope of things eternal;
because he alone could save his soul that did not fear to lose it for Christ.
In order, therefore, that the Apostles might entertain this happy, constant
courage with their whole heart, and have no tremblings about the harshness
of taking up the cross, and that they might not be ashamed of the punishment
of Christ, nor think what He endured disgraceful for themselves (for the bitterness
of suffering was to be displayed without despite to His; glorious power), Jesus
took Peter and James and his brother John, and ascending a very high' mountain
with them apart, showed them the brightness of His glory; because, although
they had recognised the majesty of God in Him, yet the power of His body, wherein
His Deity was contained, they did not know. And, therefore, rightly and significantly,
had He promised that certain of the disciples standing by should not taste
death till they saw "the Son of Man coming in His Kingdom[2]," that
is, in the kingly brilliance which, as specially belonging to the nature of
His assumed Manhood, He wished to be conspicuous to these three men. For the
unspeakable and unapproachable vision of the Godhead Itself which is reserved
tilt eternal life for the pure in heart, they could in no wise look upon and
see while still surrounded with mortal flesh. The Lord displays His glory,
therefore, before chosen witnesses, and invests that bodily shape which He
shared with others with such splendour, that His face was like the sun's brightness
and His garments equalled the whiteness of snow.
III.The object and the meaning of the Transfiguration.
And in
this Transfiguration the foremost object was to remove the offence of the
cross from the disciple's
heart, and to prevent their faith being disturbed
by the humiliation of His voluntary Passion by revealing to them the excellence
of His hidden dignity. But with no less foresight, the foundation was laid
of the Holy Church's hope, that the whole body of Christ might realize the
character of the change which it would have to receive, and that the members
might promise themselves a share in that honour which had already shone forth
in their Head. About which the Lord bad Himself said, when He spoke of the
majesty of His coming, "Then shall the righteous shine as the sun in their
Father's Kingdom[3]," whilst the blessed Apostle Paul bears witness to
the self-same thing, and says: "for I reckon that the sufferings of this
thee are not worthy to be compared with the future glory which shall be revealed
in us[4]:" and again, "for ye are dead, and your life is hid with
Christ in GOD. For when Christ our life shall appear, then shall ye also appear
with Him in glory[5]." But to confirm the Apostles and assist them to
all knowledge, still further instruction was conveyed by that miracle.
IV. The significance of the appearance of Moses and Elias.
For Moses
and Elias, that is the Law and the Prophets, appeared talking with the LORD;
that in the
presence
of those five men might most truly be fulfilled
what was said: "In two or three witnesses stands every word[6]." What
more stable, what more steadfast than this word, in the proclamation of which
the trumpet of the Old and of the New Testament joins, and the documentary
evidence of the ancient witnesses[7] combine with the teaching of the Gospel?
For the pages of both covenants[8] corroborate each other, and He Whom under
the veil of mysteries the types that went before had promised, is displayed
clearly and conspicously by the splendour of the present glory. Because, as
says the blessed John, "the law was given through Moses: but grace and
truth came through Jesus Christ[9]," in Whom is fulfilled both the promise
of prophetic figures and the purpose of the legal ordinances: for He both teaches
the truth of prophecy by His presence, and renders the commands possible through
grace.
V. S Peter's suggestion contrary to the Divine order.
The Apostle
Peter, therefore, being excited by the revelation of these mysteries, despising
things mundane
and
scorning things earthly, was seized with a sort
of frenzied craving for the things eternal, and being filled with rapture at
the whole vision, desired to make his abode with Jesus in the place where he
had been blessed with the manifestation of His glory. Whence also he says, "Lord,
it is good for us to be here: if thou wilt let us make three tabernacles[1],
one for Thee, one for Moses, and one for Elias." But to this proposal
the LORD made no answer, signifying that what he wanted was not indeed; wicked,
but contrary to the Divine order: since the world could not be saved, except;
by Christ's death, and by the LORD'S example the faithful were called upon
to believe that, although there ought not to be any doubt about the promises
of happiness, yet we should understand that amidst the trials of this life
we must ask for the power of endurance rather than the glory, because the joyousness
of reigning cannot precede the times of suffering.
VI. The import of the Father's voice from the cloud.
And so "while He was yet speaking, behold a bright cloud overshadowed
them, and behold a voice out of the cloud, saying, "This is My beloved
Son, in whom I am well pleased; hear ye Him." The Father was indeed present
in the Son, and in the LORD'S brightness, which He had tempered to the disciples'
sight, the Father's Essence was not separated from the Only-begotten: but,
in order to emphasize the two-fold personality, as the effulgence of the Son's
body displayed the Son to their sight, so the Father's voice from out the cloud
announced the Father to their hearing. And when this voice was heard, "the
disciples fell upon their faces, and were sore afraid," trembling at the
majesty, not only of the Father, but also of the Son: for they now had a deeper
insight into the undivided Deity of Both: and in their fear they did not separate
the One from the Other, because they doubted not in their faith[2]. That was
a wide and manifold testimony, therefore, and contained a fuller meaning than
struck the ear. For when the Father said, "This is My beloved Son, in
Whom, &c.," was it not clearly meant, "This is My Son," Whose
it is to be eternally from Me and with Me? because the Begetter is not anterior
to the Begotten, nor the Begotten posterior to the Begetter. "This is
My Son," Who is separated from Me, neither by Godhead, nor by power, nor
by eternity. "This is My Son," not adopted, but true-born, not created
from another source, but begotten of Me: nor yet made like Me from another
nature, but born equal to Me of My nature. "This is My Son," "through
Whom all things were made, and without Whom was nothing made[2a]" because
all things that I do He doth in like manner: and whatever I perform, He performs
with Me inseparably and without difference: for the Son is in the Father and
the Father in the Son[2a], and Our Unity is never divided: and though I am
One Who begot, and He the Other Whom I begot, yet is it wrong for you to think
anything of Him which is not possible of Me. "This is My Son," Who
sought not by grasping, and seized not in greediness[2a], that equality with
Me which He has, but remaining in the form of My glory, that He might carry
out Our common plan for the restoration of mankind, He lowered the unchangeable
Godhead even to the form of a slave.
VII. Who it is we have to hear.
"Here ye Him," therefore, unhesitatingly, in Whom I am throughout
well pleased, and by Whose preaching I am manifested, by Whose humiliation
I am glorified; because He is "the Truth and the Life[2b]," He is
My "Power and Wisdom[2b].'' "Hear ye Him," Whom the mysteries
of the Law have foretold, Whom the mouths of prophets have sung. "Hear
ye Him," Who redeems the world by His blood, Who binds the devil, and
carries off his chattels, Who destroys the bond of sin, and the compact of
the transgression. Hear ye Him, Who opens the way to heaven, and by the punishment
of the cross prepares for you the steps of ascent to the Kingdom? Why tremble
ye at being redeemed? why fear ye to be healed of your wounds? Let that happen
which Christ wills and I will. Cast away all fleshly fear, and arm yourselves
with faithful constancy; for it is unworthy that ye should fear in the Saviour's
Passion what by His good gift ye shall not have to fear even at your own end.
VIII. The Father's words have a universal application to the whole Church.
These
things, dearly-beloved, were said not for their profit only, who heard them
with their own ears,
but in
these three Apostles the whole Church has
learnt all that their eyes saw and their ears heard. Let all men's faith then
be established, according to the preaching of the most holy Gospel, and let
no one be ashamed of Christ's cross, through which the world was redeemed.
And let not any one fear to suffer for righteousness' sake, or doubt of the
fulfilment of the promises, for this reason, that through toil we pass to rest
and through death to life; since all the weakness of our humility was assumed
by Him, in Whom, if we abide in the acknowledgment and love of Him, we conquer
as He conquered, and receive what he promised, because, whether to the performance
of His commands or to the endurance of adversities, I the Father's fore-announcing
voice should always be sounding in our ears, saying, "This is My beloved
Son, in Whom I am well pleased; hear ye Him:" Who liveth and reigneth,
with the Father and the Holy Ghost, for ever and ever. Amen.
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